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14 votes
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Twitter and anti-intellectualism
9 votes -
Reddit has banned the misogynistic "Men Going Their Own Way" subreddits r/MGTOW and r/MGTOW2
AHS: 🦀. 🦀. 🦀. MGTOW and MGTOW2 are banned 🦀. 🦀. 🦀. SRD: r/MGTOW has been banned r/MGTOW was quarantined back in January 2020 after being cited in an FBI prosecution brief during the sentencing of...
AHS: 🦀. 🦀. 🦀. MGTOW and MGTOW2 are banned 🦀. 🦀. 🦀.
SRD: r/MGTOW has been bannedr/MGTOW was quarantined back in January 2020 after being cited in an FBI prosecution brief during the sentencing of a U.S. Coast Guard officer planning a domestic terrorist attack.
37 votes -
Never Gonna Give You Up has passed one billion views on YouTube
@Rick Astley: 1 BILLION views for Never Gonna Give You Up on @YouTube ! Amazing, crazy, wonderful!Rick ♥️https://t.co/mzyLznTr4R #NGGYU #NGGYU1Billion pic.twitter.com/p5xnn0OZcZ
12 votes -
The 13-year-old skater who just won silver in Tokyo first found fame when Tony Hawk spotted her on Instagram
14 votes -
Facebook cracks down on discussing ‘hoes’ in gardening group
12 votes -
18-year-old member of online harassment group sentenced to five years in prison after "swatting" the owner of a desirable Twitter handle, resulting in a fatal heart attack
31 votes -
How Twitter can ruin a life: The story of Isabel Fall
19 votes -
Did Twitter break young adult fiction?
10 votes -
Why a YouTube chat about chess got flagged for hate speech
9 votes -
If you had to teach a class about information literacy, what would your key points be?
I'm in an online course right now that touches upon information literacy: the ability to access, sort through, and analyze information (particularly online). It is not a very in-depth course, and...
I'm in an online course right now that touches upon information literacy: the ability to access, sort through, and analyze information (particularly online). It is not a very in-depth course, and a lot of the recommendations it gives feel a little limited/dated, or just out of touch with current internet practices (e.g. trust .edu and .gov sites -- don't trust .com sites; use Britannica Online instead of Wikipedia). It also doesn't really account for things like memes, social media, or really much of the modern internet landscape.
I know we have a lot of very technically literate as well as informationally literate people here, and I'm curious: if you were tasked with creating a class to help people learn information literacy, including how to identify misinformation online, what would some of your key points or focuses be? How would you convey those to your students (whether those students are kids, adults, or both)?
17 votes -
The blurred lines of parasocial relationships
5 votes -
The last time I got into an internet argument
16 votes -
Twitter is shutting down Fleets, its expiring tweets feature. In its place at the top of the timeline will be Spaces, Twitter's live audio chat rooms.
9 votes -
Black players on England football team bombarded with racist abuse on social media
19 votes -
How to download photos from Facebook?
So my spouse is getting fed up with Facebook and would like to download all of her photos and ideally any photos others have taken that she’s tagged in. She’d like to do a single bulk download,...
So my spouse is getting fed up with Facebook and would like to download all of her photos and ideally any photos others have taken that she’s tagged in. She’d like to do a single bulk download, but is having trouble navigating Facebook’s intentionally confusing settings to do this. I don’t have an account and have never used Facebook beyond reading the occasional post a friend has sent me, so I don’t really know how to help in this case.
This guide claims to be from 2021. Following the steps in section 3 we see something that looks very similar but not exactly the same under her settings. Where they have a list containing items like “Posts”, “Photos and videos”, “Comments”, etc. We see a different list and it doesn’t have any option for “Photos and Videos.” There is one section titled, “Short videos”, but nothing about photos at all. Has Facebook changed this recently, or does she have some weird setting that’s causing it not to show up? Or is the guide just wrong? (Or maybe they’re A/B testing something and that’s why she isn’t seeing it?)
Any help appreciated. Thanks!
EDIT: I think we figured it out. It looks like Posts and Photos have been combined into just "Posts" with no mention of photos whatsoever. When you get the resulting .zip file, it contains the photos, though. It's typically shitty of Facebook.
12 votes -
Interview with Jonathan Rauch on epistemic disruption
4 votes -
You really need to quit Twitter
21 votes -
WeChat deletes Chinese university LGBT accounts in fresh crackdown
16 votes -
Conservative social networks keep making the same mistake
13 votes -
Trump files lawsuit against Facebook, Twitter and Google
14 votes -
YouTube regrets - A crowdsourced investigation into YouTube's recommendation algorithm, using data volunteered by 37,000 users via a browser extension
20 votes -
New Norwegian law will require advertisements where a body's shape, size, or skin has been retouched to be labeled
16 votes -
Quitting Reddit follow up thread
Last week there was a discussion where a few folks took the plunge and quit reddit, including myself. @acdw mentioned us having a ~noreddit community to support each other and I actually really...
Last week there was a discussion where a few folks took the plunge and quit reddit, including myself.
@acdw mentioned us having a ~noreddit community to support each other and I actually really liked the idea. But in lieu of that, I thought maybe a follow up thread might be a good idea. Just to see how everyone who quit reddit is doing, what challenges they've faced, and maybe share alternative ways to kill time.
For me, I've done pretty well. I've been to reddit a few times by accident (damn you, muscle memory!), scrolled a little, then remembered I quit. Then I mov on to something else. In its place I've spent a lot more time on twitter and medium. I have a very strong love/hate relationship with both of those sites. There's a lot of decent content there, but there's a ton of garbage to sift through. Very much like reddit in that regard, but not quite as easy to fine-tune, imo.
Anyone got any good recommendations?
42 votes -
Reddit CryptoSnoos NFT Auction has ended; The average sale price is 131.67 ETH
10 votes -
Judge tears Florida’s social media law to shreds for violating First Amendment
16 votes -
Have you felt or do you still feel the optimism of the Internet / Web 2.0 in the early 2000s and 2010s?
Title is the question. It's left open for your interpretation. It'd be interesting to see people's different interpretations and reasons.
18 votes -
LinkedIn breach reportedly exposes data of 92% of users, including inferred salaries
13 votes -
Playful Participatory Culture: Learning from Reddit, by Adrienne Massanari
2 votes -
Why some biologists and ecologists think social media is a risk to humanity
15 votes -
Reddit introduces CryptoSnoos NFTs
19 votes -
Built a satirical social network (ShlinkedIn)—would love to pick y'alls brains about social media and this project!
39 votes -
The Chinese content farms running hundreds of "factory TikTok" accounts for marketing
4 votes -
What helps keep you off social media?
Over the past couple years I've transitioned from spending far too much time on Reddit, to spending not as much but still too much time on Tildes instead, to spending much less time on Tildes and...
Over the past couple years I've transitioned from spending far too much time on Reddit, to spending not as much but still too much time on Tildes instead, to spending much less time on Tildes and a reasonable amount of time reading stuff from https://longform.org/ and https://www.theflipside.io/ .
I've found that these two sites (well, a site and an email subscription) respect my time, don't try to monopolize my focus, and provide decently nuanced info rather than outrage-inducing clickbait. They also don't have comments, which means I never get that feeling of needing to correct random internet users and get drawn into their nonsense.
I'm wondering if there are others internet spaces that people find similarly useful in curbing their social media consumption.
And more generally, I'm wondering what other, non-internet things help keep people off social media.
As an example of the latter, lately I've been trying to get into the habit of going to the park after work and eating dinner there while reading a book instead of scrolling through Tildes comments or watching mindless youtube videos while I eat.
20 votes -
I’m scared of the person TikTok thinks I am
8 votes -
Reddit is about to delete a lot of subreddits based on post activity metrics
31 votes -
Quit Social Media - An educational website that argues against proprietary social media and its risks
7 votes -
Five Nights At Freddy's creator, Scott Cawthon, announces his retirement
12 votes -
Any deleted content (comments, links, threads, etc.) will now be inaccessible to moderators and the original posters of the deleted content
22 votes -
I am an object of internet ridicule, ask me anything
18 votes -
How some Americans are breaking out of political echo chambers
14 votes -
The Vtuber industry: Corporatization, labor, and kawaii
10 votes -
Can astrology make sense of cryptocurrency? Maren Altman and a million TikTok followers think so.
7 votes -
President of Nigeria bans Twitter as retaliation for deleted Tweet, human rights groups condemn this as restriction on free speech
9 votes -
A modest proposal: Just log off
18 votes -
Bo Burnham - White Woman's Instagram (2021)
6 votes -
Twitch, Pinterest, Reddit and more go down in Fastly CDN outage
25 votes -
Reddit will shut down Reddit Gifts and Secret Santa at the end of 2021
34 votes -
How Twitter turned Kimmy Schmidt into a ‘KKK Queen’
14 votes -
Our digital pasts weren’t supposed to be weaponized like this
17 votes