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43 votes
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The New York Times is a fluffer for Donald Trump on Arlington Cemetery desecration
19 votes -
AI accuses journalist of escaping psych ward, abusing children and widows
29 votes -
NY Times Tech Guild: We are celebrating Labor Day by announcing that a supermajority of our over-600 person union signed a pledge of support for a strike
26 votes -
End of the road: An AnandTech farewell
53 votes -
Condé Nast joins other publishers in allowing OpenAI to access its content
8 votes -
PinkNews CEO recorded calling trans issues "contentious" on the basis it jeopardises ad revenue
38 votes -
Google threatened tech influencers unless they 'preferred' the Pixel
28 votes -
Local Canadian news loses 58% of online engagement, thanks to the Online News Act
33 votes -
This feels dumb to ask, but how do you get your news?
I’m embarrassed to admit that after the whole Reddit shutdown, I’m at a loss on how to get news. The past 10+ years my internet routine has been browse Something Awful for discussions, and use...
I’m embarrassed to admit that after the whole Reddit shutdown, I’m at a loss on how to get news. The past 10+ years my internet routine has been browse Something Awful for discussions, and use Reddit as a glorified RSS. I would open up Reddit, browse World News, Politics, Technology, Games, Apple, and Electric Vehicles for any interesting articles for the day. Then go to SA for more granular discussions, which I’m now using Tildes to supplement since I love the community here.
I have tried downloading Inoreader and adding some of their default feeds but it feels super cluttered, not like the quick concise headlines I’m used to casually browsing. I’ll admit I’m guilty of just glancing at headlines and not actually reading news, but it was nice to just have an inkling of what’s going on in the world
So the question I ask is how (mostly on the internet) do you get your news? RSS? Dedicated news app? Read a site?
215 votes -
Judge who authorized Kansas newspaper raid escapes discipline with secret conflicting explanation
24 votes -
The final level: Farewell from Game Informer
33 votes -
GameStop kills Game Informer magazine and takes website offline
11 votes -
More popular than Netflix in Finland, YLE's approach to digital transformation may hold lessons for public broadcasters everywhere
12 votes -
Inside the secret negotiations to free Evan Gershkovich
9 votes -
Joe Biden decision surprised most US TV news networks: How CBS, MSNBC and more scrambled to cover bombshell
28 votes -
The joy of reading newspapers from other countries
19 votes -
OnlyFans vows it's a safe space. Predators are exploiting kids there.
15 votes -
The New York Times is failing its readers badly on COVID
33 votes -
The opaque industry secretly inflating prices for prescription drugs
18 votes -
Opinion - The Washington Post is about to embrace the darkness
39 votes -
You’ve read your last free article, such is the nature of mortality
41 votes -
Wirecard and me: Dan McCrum on exposing a criminal enterprise
17 votes -
Nearly half of journalists covering climate crisis globally received threats for their work
52 votes -
Money laundering: Epoch Times CFO charged in alleged $67 million case
29 votes -
NYT misses what’s true and important about an anti-trans school resolution
21 votes -
IGN Entertainment acquires Eurogamer, GI, VG247, Rock Paper Shotgun and more
38 votes -
The Controversialist: Marty Peretz and the travails of American liberalism
3 votes -
Meet AdVon, the AI-powered content monster infecting the media industry
33 votes