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4 votes
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Eyes Left (Podcast)
5 votes -
The green big deal
6 votes -
Test your knowledge of American incarceration
9 votes -
Base Culture
3 votes -
Economic Update: Cooperation Jackson: A Closer Look
3 votes -
My Dad's Friendship With Charles Barkley
9 votes -
The Best Time I Pretended I Hadn’t Heard of Slavoj Žižek
7 votes -
Paper promises: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights at seventy
9 votes -
Walter "Earlonne" Woods - Host of Ear Hustle podcast - has had his sentence commuted by the governor of California
@earhustlesq: Some very big news to share: Today Earlonne's sentence was commuted by @JerryBrownGov!! This means that E should be out of prison very soon - more info to come next week. Until then, check out the letter from the governor!! #thankful
8 votes -
An indepth look at USA's "Kill List" and ongoing legal battles that come from it
19 votes -
US law enforcement failed to see the threat of white nationalism. Now they don’t know how to stop it.
25 votes -
Japan's Hometown Tax
10 votes -
Halfbakery (is back)
13 votes -
Jamal Khashoggi: What the Arab world needs most is free expression
8 votes -
Fake Friends Spinoff 1: "Repeat Stuff" and Empathetic Satire
4 votes -
Why Do We Humanize White Guys Who Kill People?
12 votes -
The Porsche 959's History Was Way More of a Disaster Than You Know
6 votes -
What makes an open collaboration project successful?
For those unfamiliar an open collaboration is just a broader term than open source describing non software related projects like Wikipedia. I have been thinking a lot about how much potential...
For those unfamiliar an open collaboration is just a broader term than open source describing non software related projects like Wikipedia.
I have been thinking a lot about how much potential exists in open collaboration and somewhat confused we don't see more of it. I know that at least in open source software a significant portion of projects die or lose support. Why is this?
5 votes -
孔明の罠 - Kaizo Trap
6 votes -
What do Chinese think of Chinese-Americans?
10 votes -
A letter to the citizens of Macedonia from President George W. Bush
9 votes -
Testing North Korea's nuclear offer
5 votes -
Water security: Iraq’s upstream vulnerabilities
4 votes -
How Puerto Rico Became the Newest Tax Haven for the Super Rich
14 votes -
Bryan Adams to MPs: Give artists more control over their work
5 votes -
NPR/Marist poll: 40% of Americans think elections aren't fair
13 votes -
Remembering The Onion’s 9/11 issue: ‘Everyone thought this would be our last issue in print’
16 votes -
What do you think of Medium’s “clapping” system?
I’m not recommending this for Tildes or anything, I just wanted to know your thoughts on it. For those who are unfamiliar with it, on Medium, you can “applaud” articles and comments. To do this,...
I’m not recommending this for Tildes or anything, I just wanted to know your thoughts on it.
For those who are unfamiliar with it, on Medium, you can “applaud” articles and comments. To do this, you hold down the clap button, and depending on how long you hold it down, the more applause you give (up to a limit of 50). The best example would probably be if you go on any Medium article and try it yourself.
I’ve never really seen any discussion on it, so I was interested in hearing your thoughts.
I think the idea of essentially having to convert time holding down a button to a number of likes is interesting.
The problems that come to mind are that you could easily automate it, and that it could suffer the “5 star” rating system problem, where the majority of people will either dislike something enough to rate it 1 star, love it enough to rate it 5 stars, or not care enough to rate it at all (or in this case, give it 50 claps or nothing).
18 votes -
In Amazon's "hellscape", workers face insecurity and crushing targets
5 votes -
Elon Musk and the meaning of ‘off the record’
14 votes -
The woman who founded the 'incel' movement
26 votes -
'Trump is checking out of Asia': What Australia should do about it
6 votes -
The Bridge Tongues
5 votes -
The Internet of Garbage
16 votes -
How a surrogate twin pregnancy turned into a custody battle over unrelated babies
6 votes -
Open Data Endgame: Countering the Digital Consensus
5 votes -
Have you heard of the Hungry Ghost Festival?
8 votes -
The Alt-Right Playbook
21 votes -
Choose a side: the battle to keep French isle McDonald's-free. Mayor on Île d’Oléron is leading the fight, saying the island is ‘not about mass consumption’
9 votes -
How a law meant to curb infanticide was used to abandon teens
13 votes -
Recommendations for a great podcast? What are you listening to?
I am a big CGP Grey fan and have recently been diving into 'Hello Internet' and 'Cortex' and really I love both of them. I have never been much of a podcast listener until recently, but I do enjoy...
I am a big CGP Grey fan and have recently been diving into 'Hello Internet' and 'Cortex' and really I love both of them.
I have never been much of a podcast listener until recently, but I do enjoy some of the stuff NPR puts out (like Radiolab).
12 votes -
404 Riddles: An Internet Riddle
17 votes -
Notpron: the hardest riddle available on the internet
9 votes -
What football will look like in the future
20 votes -
Elves and Aliens
2 votes -
China Is cheating at a rigged game
11 votes -
The Age of Precarious Infrastructure
9 votes -
Can Economists and Humanists Ever Be Friends?
6 votes -
Why there’s no such thing as a civilisation
5 votes