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5 votes
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How the media launders fossil fuel propaganda through branded content
10 votes -
Queerbaiting - exploitation or a sign of progress?
11 votes -
How Rupert Murdoch's empire of influence remade the world - a three part report covering the UK, Australia and the USA
19 votes -
In Brazil 30 million people live in a 'quasi desert' of news
5 votes -
The fall and rise of partisan journalism
5 votes -
From 2003 to 2007 a 24 year old Iraqi woman in Baghdad kept an online diary. In chronicling life under occupation the blogger "Riverbend" gave a perspective largely missing from English media.
15 votes -
How the American media fuels a cycle of violence
3 votes -
The fake sex doctor who conned the media into publicizing his bizarre research on suicide, butt-fisting, and bestiality
14 votes -
What are some things other people dislike that you quite enjoy?
Could be a game, book, movie, song, etc that is generally considered subpar. Personally, I quite like a lot of Eminem's new music, although I know it's an unpopular opinion. It certainly doesn't...
Could be a game, book, movie, song, etc that is generally considered subpar. Personally, I quite like a lot of Eminem's new music, although I know it's an unpopular opinion. It certainly doesn't hit the same highs and there are a lot of stinkers but I still think some of it is quite good and worth a listen despite the circlejerk. I've also been playing Just Cause 4 lately, and although it certainly isn't a masterpiece and I will say the story is below the others, to me Just Cause was never about the story. It's about getting in there and just having fun causing chaos and generally messing around.
37 votes -
I have forgotten how to read: For a long time Michael Harris convinced himself that a childhood spent immersed in old-fashioned books would insulate him from our new media climate. He was wrong.
19 votes -
Does LGBT media have a future?
7 votes -
How an investigation of fake FCC comments snared a prominent DC media firm
7 votes -
As mainstream journalists acknowledge Douma attacks were likely "staged," the "humanitarian" Syria Regime-Change Network tries to save a sinking ship
2 votes -
'Esquire' criticized for cover story on 'what it’s like to grow up white, middle class, and male'
10 votes -
What are reliable sites for thoughtful content from a non-American perspective?
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful...
I came across a site about Chinese tech and video gaming and found it very Buzzfeed-y with its headlines and writing. It made me wonder what are the websites that curate a standard of thoughtful articles, essays, discussion, etc. and aren't part of the American internet scene.
I don't care what language it's in, what it's about, what country specifically it's centered on, if it's community-centric or not. If you have a suggestion, let's hear it.
Edit: An example I have is The Blizzard. It's really a subscription-model digital magazine (about soccer) but you can read various articles online.
21 votes -
Where do you get your music from?
What is your preferred source for music? Streaming, CD, vinyl, web dl, something else? My preferred source is web flac usually from bandcamp but I sometimes buy cds and copy them to my computer. I...
What is your preferred source for music? Streaming, CD, vinyl, web dl, something else?
My preferred source is web flac usually from bandcamp but I sometimes buy cds and copy them to my computer. I currently don't have a vinyl player so stuff that was only released on vinyl I have to find someone else who has copied it.
I tried streaming for a while but didn't like it. There was a bunch of older stuff missing and I kept getting told things were not available in my country as well as some songs only having a shitty remaster available.
14 votes -
GLAAD announces the nominees for the 30th annual GLAAD Media Awards
7 votes -
Media industry loses about 1,000 jobs as layoffs hit news organizations
15 votes -
YouTube breeds sociopaths and monsters. Not through audience’s demands but how the platform itself is designed.
24 votes -
Inside China's audacious global propaganda campaign
10 votes -
How to keep the news coming
4 votes -
Detroit, Westworld, and moving androids beyond human
7 votes -
Ben Hunte named first LGBT correspondent for BBC News
6 votes -
ABC and SBS cleared by review into claims they compete unfairly with commercial rivals
6 votes -
Disappearing movies and games: How safe is your digital collection?
33 votes -
Time is different now
12 votes -
[Short Film] The Real Thing - a soldier returns home to meet his daughter, who transitioned while he was on tour - (fair warning: you're gonna cry)
8 votes -
'White' magazine shuts down after refusing to feature same-sex weddings
A news article: 'White' magazine shuts down after refusing to feature same-sex weddings The farewell message: Farewell
10 votes -
Former Macedonian strongman's escape to Hungary triggers a flood of disinformation
8 votes -
Katharine Viner: 'The Guardian's reader funding model is working. It's inspiring'
15 votes -
Should the press boycott Trump? Political strategists weigh in
8 votes -
In the age of AI, is seeing still believing?
7 votes -
Children's screen time has little effect on sleep, says study
7 votes -
The National Enquirer’s plot to assassinate Ted Cruz’s US candidacy
11 votes -
Prompted by a recent post, I asked myself: is collecting digital media really considered hoarding?
From this Tildes post https://tildes.net/~music/7vc/anyone_still_listening_to_music_with_files_instead_of_streaming I started thinking. To me, curating my own collections so that I can experience...
From this Tildes post https://tildes.net/~music/7vc/anyone_still_listening_to_music_with_files_instead_of_streaming
I started thinking. To me, curating my own collections so that I can experience them only makes common sense. And I also journal on what I read, watch, and listen to. I've known a few hoarders in my life, who enlarge their homes to house tons of material things that they'll never use and can't throw away.
In my own case, I'm slowly winnowing down the hundred or so CD's, books, and movies I own just because they take up space and I don't want my kids having to have a massive garage sale when I die. And I really like that I can have a whole library basically on an old phone that holds an SDHC card.
So is obsession/compulsion with digital media the same as physical hoarding? Is it just as harmful? And how do I class the tons of emails, mostly work, that I don't bother to throw away because it's just too time consuming? The same thing goes for family and self snapped photos. To me they're in a different category altogether.
Am I the biggest, most hypocritical minimalist ever? Is there such a thing as non-material materialism? What are your justifications for or against streaming vs. accumulating?
19 votes -
Trump’s attacks on the news media are working
14 votes -
Kanye and the end of reality
8 votes -
What does the online / social media world look like to you, what would you want?
Some of you may have heard that Google+ will be shutting down in August, 2019. Though much criticised (including by me), the site offered some compelling dynamics, and I've reflected a lot on...
Some of you may have heard that Google+ will be shutting down in August, 2019. Though much criticised (including by me), the site offered some compelling dynamics, and I've reflected a lot on those.
I'm involved in the effort to find new homes for Plussers and Communities, which has become something of an excuse to explore and redefine what "online" and "social" media are ("PlexodusWiki").
Part of this involves some frankly embarrassing attempts to try to define what social media is, and what its properties are (both topics reflected heavily in the recent-changes section of the wiki above).
Tildes is ... among the potential target sites (there are a few Plussers, some of whom I really appreciated knowing and hearing from there), here, though the site dynamics make discovering and following them hard. This site is evolving its own culture and dynamics, parts of which I'm becoming aware of.
I've been online for well over 30 years, and discovered my first online communities via Unix talk, email, FTP, and Usenet, as well as (no kidding) a computerised university library catalogue system. Unsurprisingly: if you provide a way, especially for bright and precocious minds to interact with one another, they will. I've watched several evolutions of Internet and Web, now increasing App-based platforms. There are differences, but also similarities and patterns emerging. Lessons from previous eras of television, radio, telephony, telegraphy, print, writing, oral traditions, and more, can be applied.
I've got far more questions than answers and thought I'd put a few out here:
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What does online or social media mean to you? Is it all user-generated content platforms? Web only? Apps? Email or chat? Wikis? GitHub, GitLab, and StackExchange?
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Is social networking as exemplified by Facebook or Twitter net good or bad? Why? If bad, how might you fix it? Or is it time to simply retreat?
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What properties or characteristics would you use to specify, define, or distinguish social or online media?
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What emergent properties -- site dynamics, if you will -- are positive or negative? What are those based on?
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What are the positive and negative aspects of scale?
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What risks would you consider in self-hosting either your own or a group's online presence?
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What is/was the best online community experience you've had? What characterised it? How did it form? How did it fail (if it did)?
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What elements would comprise your ideal online experience?
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What would you nuke from orbit, after takeoff, just to be sure?
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Are you or your group seeking new options or platforms? What process / considerations do you have?
I could keep going and will regret not adding other questions, but this is a good start. Feel free to suggest other dimensions, though some focus on what I've prompted with would be appreciated.
19 votes -
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One man’s (very polite) fight against media Islamophobia
5 votes -
US jobs report - The numbers we do NOT talk about
I almost posted this in ~news but wasn't really sure so feel free to move the post if I got it wrong. The new jobs report is out: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm I consistently...
I almost posted this in ~news but wasn't really sure so feel free to move the post if I got it wrong.
The new jobs report is out:
https://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htmI consistently feel like the media just runs with the unemployment rate and ignores the other very important numbers. I think that the economy isn't really "booming" for ordinary Americans and I think that the numbers in the job report that aren't widely talked about are eye-opening.
These numbers used to be talked about a LOT more immediately after the 2008 recessions and during the OWS protests.
To be clear, I'm happy the stock market is up but I don't think it's "trickling" down all that much.
Some examples:
Long-term unemployed are not finding work:
The number of long-term unemployed (those jobless for 27 weeks or more) was little changed at 1.4 million over the month; these individuals accounted for 22.9 percent of the unemployed. (See table A-12.)
There are ~4.5 million people who are working part-time who want to work full time, and that number is rapidly growing with ~250,000 added since last quarter:
The number of persons employed part time for economic reasons (sometimes referred to as involuntary part-time workers) increased by 263,000 to 4.6 million in September. These individuals, who would have preferred full-time employment, were working part time because their hours had been reduced or they were unable to find full-time jobs. (See table A-8.)
More than 1.5 million American's gave up looking for work:
In September, 1.6 million persons were marginally attached to the labor force, essentially unchanged from a year earlier. (Data are not seasonally adjusted.) These individuals were not in the labor force, wanted and were available for work, and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months. They were not counted as unemployed because they had not searched for work in the 4 weeks preceding the survey. (See table A-16.)
19 votes -
A penthouse made for Instagram
15 votes -
ABC board members appointed by Communications Minister Mitch Fifield despite being rejected by merit-based panel
3 votes -
As Comcast takes control of Sky, Murdoch could yet bounce back. Mogul’s influence on worldwide news is unlikely to be weakened by latest defeat
5 votes -
Internet taxes are sweeping sub-Saharan Africa — and silencing citizens
9 votes -
Russia’s brazen lies mock the world. How best to fight for the truth?
10 votes -
Amid nationwide strike, media access to prisons is limited
10 votes -
BBC admits ‘we get climate change coverage wrong too often’
18 votes -
I am part of the resistance inside the New York Times opinion desk
11 votes -
Why obvious lies make great propaganda
19 votes