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55 votes
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FauxRPC: Easily turn protobufs into fake gRPC, gRPC-Web, Connect, and REST services
5 votes -
US FTC bans fake online reviews, inflated social media influence; rule takes effect in October
52 votes -
Redbox | Bankrupt
4 votes -
Sustainability of FOSS: The Next Generation Internet ecosystem
14 votes -
Susan Wojcicki, former YouTube CEO, dies at 56
15 votes -
Been considering cutting down on YouTube
I find myself scrolling through YT hoping to see something to play in the background, occasionally checking things like TechLinked or MichaelMJD with occasional PointCrow and Dougdoug. But really...
I find myself scrolling through YT hoping to see something to play in the background, occasionally checking things like TechLinked or MichaelMJD with occasional PointCrow and Dougdoug. But really just wasting time doing nothing, just scrolling.
So I want to cut it off but I want to fill in that time with something else.
Anyone else has tried to cut off YT(Or at least minimize) YT from their life? I’m probably using YT the wrong way.
I would like some RSS feeds or podcast to make me go on YT less. Or thoughts/opinions/experiences from other people that used to have YT on almost all the time but minimized the time on YT.31 votes -
HTTP/1.0 From Scratch
4 votes -
Google and Meta struck secret ads deal to target teenagers
61 votes -
What websites do you visit for your niche interests?
These could be blogs, forums, any online space where you visit semi-frequently at least. Here are some based off my interests: A Year in the Country - Blog on folk horror music Gwern.net - blog...
These could be blogs, forums, any online space where you visit semi-frequently at least.
Here are some based off my interests:
A Year in the Country - Blog on folk horror music
60 votes -
The fall of the mainstream media: New elites
5 votes -
Some subreddits could be paywalled, hints Reddit CEO
64 votes -
Google violated antitrust laws in online search, US judge rules
47 votes -
iOS 18 adds new "Distraction Control" feature for Safari, similar to temporary element blocking with uBlock Origin
11 votes -
AI music generator Suno admits it was trained on ‘essentially all music files on the internet’
39 votes -
Google Chrome warns uBlock Origin may soon be disabled
82 votes -
GameStop kills Game Informer magazine and takes website offline
11 votes -
PSA: Internet Archive “glitch” deletes years of user data and accounts
34 votes -
Websites are blocking the wrong AI scrapers (Because AI companies keep making new ones)
18 votes -
Doomscrolling evokes existential anxiety and fosters pessimism about human nature? Evidence from Iran and the United States.
22 votes -
FOSS funding vanishes from EU's 2025 Horizon program plans. Elimination of most Next Generation Internet funding 'incomprehensible,' says OW2 CEO Pierre-Yves Gibello.
28 votes -
Despite its founding promise to be ad-free, the Baldur's Gate 3 fan wiki is going to put up ads, because its creator thinks he can make a lot of money
47 votes -
What GoFundMe conceals: The campaigns that fail
17 votes -
Has sexual content invaded too much of the internet?
Something I have been thinking about lately is how sexual content online seems to be proliferated and normalized much more than it used to be. I'll give a couple of examples. While I do not use...
Something I have been thinking about lately is how sexual content online seems to be proliferated and normalized much more than it used to be. I'll give a couple of examples.
While I do not use the big social media sites (Instagram, Facebook, TikTok) very often, I've seen questionable content while others are scrolling, as well as conversations both online and offline with others who do use them. Nearly all of these sites contain profiles of people who are primarily there to market an OnlyFans account or similar. And these profiles are pushed to various demographics, seemingly moreso to males.
Reddit has a very questionable history with this type of content. But outside of that, any subreddit that allows submission of photos of people will often include these models trying to promote themselves, and they frequently make it to the top of the subreddit. (Some reddit users make fun of this in subreddits such as r/UNBGBBIIVCHIDCTIICBG, which stands for "Upvoted Not Because Girl, But Because It Is Very Cool; However, I Do Concede That I Initially Clicked Because Girl").
Twitch is a livestreaming platform that primarily hosts streamers who are playing video games. Streaming other events or "just chatting" has grown in popularity, which I have no complaints about. But there has been a lot of controversy about sexual content on the platform. To address this to some degree, Twitch added a "Pools, Hot Tubs, and Beaches" category for people who are streaming in that specific context. But OnlyFans models do not stick to that category, and can easily be found in "Just Chatting." And I can personally say that regardless of how many times I select "Not Interested" on these streams, I continue to get suggestions for them.
Even generic chat applications (such as WhatsApp and Discord) are plagued with bot accounts that are either representative of an actual model or part of a scam, but in both cases, try to lure users in with sexual content.
I do want to say I have no issue with adult content when it is in the appropriate venue. Sites dedicated to pornography are completely fine for consenting adults. What I take issue with is how this content has expanded far beyond dedicated sites.
Society has reached a point where we hand off internet-connected devices to children at a very young age. Chromebooks are used in schools very early in education, and smartphones are given to kids early in life. It already seems to be common knowledge that social media use results in self-image issues in youth. These issues will likely be accelerated by social media not only showing a false image of how people live their lives but also the lengths they go to appear sexually appealing.
I'm not proposing some overreaching "save the children" censorship legislation is needed. But it's hard to imagine how this trend can be turned around. It produces a ton of clicks, which is all these user-posted content sites (and advertisers) care about. Is there anything that can be done, or is this just the new internet?
46 votes -
Google now only search engine allowed to provide results from Reddit
88 votes -
Roblox’s pedophile problem
27 votes -
Any other Tildes users posting from within the great firewall?
It's nice having english language forums that don't require a vpn to access. Anyone got any other suggestions and any recommendations for vpns that work on mobile data reliably? I've found PIA,...
It's nice having english language forums that don't require a vpn to access. Anyone got any other suggestions and any recommendations for vpns that work on mobile data reliably? I've found PIA, Nord, and Proton to not work but Surfshark does for now if intermittently (more reliably on wifi).
59 votes -
The critical window of shadow libraries
16 votes -
Bangladesh imposes curfew after dozens killed in anti-government protests
23 votes -
What's our thoughts on Perplexity.ai for search?
If you haven't used it yet, it's more like a cited source summary tool. I actually really like for questions such as "Who is X and why are they important?" I'm interested in people's thoughts on it.
15 votes -
Internet mysteries: The website you can only open once
21 votes -
Mastermind speedrunner bakes twelve actual cookies in under four minutes, forces site mods to make a whole new category
65 votes -
What happened to user interfaces?
23 votes -
Someone is wrong on the internet (AGI Doom edition)
28 votes -
Microsoft says it's okay to steal content published on the web
16 votes -
Microsoft CEO of AI claims online content is 'freeware' [and can be used to train LLMs in the absence of a specific directives from the author against this]
43 votes -
Polyfill supply chain attack hits 100K+ sites
45 votes -
Internet Archive forced to remove 500,000 books after publishers’ court win
59 votes -
Anti-Defamation League faces Wikipedia ban over reliability concerns on Israel, antisemitism
37 votes -
Wikipedia's Philosophy game: A breakdown, and how someone broke it
10 votes -
Instagram is not a cigarette
11 votes -
ArcFox, an opensource project to make Firefox flow like Arc browser
33 votes -
Goldfish memories - most of China’s early websites have disappeared
30 votes -
You’ve read your last free article, such is the nature of mortality
41 votes -
The Stanford Internet Observatory is being dismantled
15 votes -
Retailers hate that you buy big things on your laptop
38 votes -
Internet addiction affects the behavior and development of adolescents
8 votes -
Hundreds of thousands of US internet routers destroyed in newly discovered 2023 hack
23 votes -
The invisible seafaring industry that keeps the internet going
21 votes -
Minnesota repeals law that protected ISPs from municipal competition
22 votes