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4 votes
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Demand for cassettes surges as music fans hit rewind
10 votes -
Waste crisis looms as thousands of solar panels reach end of life
8 votes -
The 'future book' is here, but it's not what we expected
9 votes -
Ten personal finance lessons for technology professionals
8 votes -
Machine learning can offer new tools, fresh insights for the humanities
10 votes -
A short history of computers in the movies: Panel lights, spinning tapes, and lab coats
4 votes -
Have you quit any social media?
Have you quit social media? Why? Why not? I have been thinking about it (specifically Facebook). I have not done so, because I fear that I'll lose contact with friends from my past (even though I...
Have you quit social media? Why? Why not?
I have been thinking about it (specifically Facebook). I have not done so, because I fear that I'll lose contact with friends from my past (even though I have not messaged any of them, or seen their profile, in years).25 votes -
These portraits were made by AI: None of these people exist
16 votes -
Tubi is a good alternative to Netflix
17 votes -
Dead musicians are touring again, as holograms. It's tricky — technologically and legally
5 votes -
Formula E starts season five in Saudi Arabia with a faster electric race car
7 votes -
How we lost our ambitions for the tech-enabled home
16 votes -
More than porn: Tumblr affirmed trans youths' identities
12 votes -
Kelly Slater’s Shock Wave
5 votes -
Apple Watch's ECG feature is already proving its worth
6 votes -
Chinese scientist who used CRISPR on human babies gone missing
15 votes -
Macedonia's former ruling party organized a trolling apparatus for spreading hate speech, threats
8 votes -
First gene-edited babies claimed in China
12 votes -
The 100 greatest innovations of 2018
6 votes -
Magnetic levitation: The return of transport's great 'what if?'
6 votes -
'Sci-fi' plane with no moving parts flies successfully
12 votes -
A program to reduce Earth's heat capture by injecting aerosols into the atmosphere from high-altitude aircraft is possible, but unreasonably costly with current technology.
9 votes -
Healing the body electric: In the next five to ten years, a new generation of small networked sensors will provide doctors with up-to-the-moment insight into patients’ health
5 votes -
The future of aging just might be in Margaritaville
9 votes -
Cat tongue spines help smear saliva and inspire new 3D-printed brush
4 votes -
DeepMind’s move to transfer health unit to Google stirs data fears
11 votes -
Period-tracking apps are not for women
28 votes -
Denuvo: Four years later
14 votes -
Near the end of the Middle Ages a device came into service that helped avid readers: the book carousel or book wheel
14 votes -
'There are no rules': The unforeseen consequences of sex robots
21 votes -
Waymo has been granted the first permit in California to begin driverless testing on public roads
7 votes -
Built a 60% mechanical keyboard!
20 votes -
What are some current examples of "the emperor's new clothes?"
For those unfamiliar with the story, "The Emperor's New Clothes" is about an emperor who parades around naked, but nobody will point out the obvious for fear of being seen as ignorant....
For those unfamiliar with the story, "The Emperor's New Clothes" is about an emperor who parades around naked, but nobody will point out the obvious for fear of being seen as ignorant. Idiomatically, it refers to something seen as true or widely praised, simply because nobody is willing to speak out against it.
I saw a rant about "blockchains" being the new overhyped hotness for tech companies, and it made me wonder what other "new clothes" are out there right now. What's something you have a strong takedown for that everybody else seems to love/support?
38 votes -
Amy Winehouse hologram to start touring in 2019
13 votes -
Meet the scientists bringing extinct species back from the dead
3 votes -
Worthwhile to post about a spammer targeting nonprofits?
I volunteer with several small nonprofits. A few weeks ago, one of them got a spam message from a "volunteer" offering to create a free website for the organization and disclosing a connection to...
I volunteer with several small nonprofits. A few weeks ago, one of them got a spam message from a "volunteer" offering to create a free website for the organization and disclosing a connection to DonorComplete. There was no unsubscribe link. I hit Google, which eventually led me to a thread on TechSoup where I commented with what I had found to that date under the same user name: http://forums.techsoup.org/cs/community/f/24/t/43439.aspx This & other results showed that the "free" website is linked to historically very expensive hosting (historically , ~ $20-$40/mo, now showing about $10/mo) for a static website with very limited support or options.
My research continued intermittently, but there appears to be a network of over 100 domains (active, expired, dormant and/or returning server errors) connected to spam efforts over roughly the last 6 years, questionable marketing tactics dating back to ~ 1998, 4 overlapping corporations with one man as a central figure, several throwaway email addresses and a couple that seem to be dedicated & longer running, a handful of apparently dedicated servers and several shared servers with many connected domains hosted. The messages target nonprofit organizations and churches, with 4 textual variations posted via email, mailing lists, and comments. The first archived comments I found targeted FOSS project mailing lists. Based on the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, many small nonprofits used their service years ago, but it looks like the spammers' services have been largely abandoned over the last few years - probably why the new campaign started ~ June.
I've filed complaints with two of the registrars, and at least one of the recently active domains appears to be in non-hosted status. Would there be any interest in my posting a thread with the details of what I've found so far (spreadsheets and mind maps in progress)? Would anyone be interested in helping me present the data in a more easily digestible format a la r/dataisbeautiful? Or can anyone recommend an easier way to report the registrant tied to the spam? I'm not trying to start a witch hunt, but these people seem to have flown under the radar for a long time, and I know many small nonprofits aren't tech savvy enough to recognize the warning signs these folks present.
8 votes -
Justice Department sues to stop California net neutrality law
17 votes -
Yuval Harari: The most important investment is building a more flexible mind
7 votes -
Two years since South Australia was plunged into darkness during a statewide blackout, new light has been shed on the cost of the Tesla battery.
5 votes -
Amazon makes Alexa-controlled microwave
5 votes -
Solar panels replaced tarmac on a motorway. Here are the results.
14 votes -
What to do about reddit and trolls?
So I was following this discussion on Reddit today about someone finding evidence of Russia trolls finding a safe haven on reddit and the admins not addressing it. And then also this one on Tildes...
So I was following this discussion on Reddit today about someone finding evidence of Russia trolls finding a safe haven on reddit and the admins not addressing it.
And then also this one on Tildes that clears up why the OP deleted his account and the Reddit admin's overall poor response.
So I was wondering...is there any way to fix reddit? I've all but left it, but I really wish it wasn't so horrible a place to be.
In one of the reddit threads, a user posted an idea of having many many redditors all refuse to log in to reddit for a single day as a protest against how the site is being ran. Would this be advisable or effective? What other things could be done to "wake up" the site owners to what has been going on for so long?
EDIT: Here was the reddit admin team's response to the incident.
22 votes -
What steps do you take to secure your online use and privacy?
I do the following: Use a VPN (NordVPN) Use Firefox with a tweaked about:config and the following security extensions: uBlock Origin NoScript HTTPS Everywhere Privacy Badger Decentraleyes Cookie...
I do the following:
- Use a VPN (NordVPN)
- Use Firefox with a tweaked about:config and the following security extensions:
- uBlock Origin
- NoScript
- HTTPS Everywhere
- Privacy Badger
- Decentraleyes
- Cookie Autodelete
- Skip Redirect
- CanvasBlocker
- Run Linux Mint (I know, Ubuntu-based distros aren't ideal but I'm a Linux beginner)
- Don't have any social media as of a year ago
- Don't use any Google services, including YouTube, Google Search, or Gmail
- Use a password manager (KeePassXC)
The next step would be for me to switch from iPhone to Android running Lineage OS, but money is a bit tight right now. As for day-to-day lifestyle choices, I try to use cash whenever possible and never sign up for things like store rewards programs.
What's your setup? Do you consider yourself a privacy-minded individual? Are you more concerned with protecting yourself from corporate or government entities?
46 votes -
How useful is the Apple Watch's heart-monitoring feature?
9 votes -
Dying PBT Keycaps
I just got my /dev/tty blanks in from Massdrop and I an thinking of dying them to match my current ABS colorway. I have looked at the guide and I think I am able to do all that, but I am wondering...
I just got my /dev/tty blanks in from Massdrop and I an thinking of dying them to match my current ABS colorway.
I have looked at the guide and I think I am able to do all that, but I am wondering what kind of look I am going to/can get by dying the gray and red caps?
I assume the gray caps would just yield a slightly darker color, but I am curious if I can get an interesting shade of brown by dying the red keycaps with some other color (or just more brown?)
Any hints on dying the colored caps or dying PBT in general are appreciated.
6 votes -
A band of Polish mathematicians figured out much about how German Enigma encoding machines operated, years before Alan Turing did
6 votes -
The new science of seeing around corners
10 votes -
How China's giant solar farms are transforming world energy
9 votes -
California lawmakers pass nation’s toughest net neutrality law
14 votes