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The Media's Pivot to AI Is Not Real and Not Going to Work
On May 23, we got a very interesting email from Ghost, the service we use to make 404 Media. âPaid subscription started,â the email said, which is the subject line of all of the automated emails we get when someone subscribes to 404 Media. The interesting thing about this email was that the new subscriber had been referred to 404 Media directly from chatgpt.com, meaning the person clicked a link to 404 Media from within a ChatGPT window. It is the first and only time that ChatGPT has ever sent us a paid subscriber.
From what I can tell, ChatGPT.com has sent us 1,600 pageviews since we founded 404 Media nearly two years ago. To give you a sense of where this slots in, this is slightly fewer than the Czech news aggregator novinky.cz, the Hungarian news portal Telex.hu, the Polish news aggregator Wykop.pl, and barely more than the Russian news aggregator Dzen.ru, the paywall jumping website removepaywall.com, and a computer graphics job board called 80.lv. In that same time, Google has sent roughly 3 million visitors, or 187,400 percent more than ChatGPT.
This is really neither here nor there because we have tried to set our website up to block ChatGPT from scraping us, though it is clear this is not always working. But even for sites that donât block ChatGPT, new research from the internet infrastructure company CloudFlare suggests that OpenAI is crawling 1,500 individual webpages for every one visitor that it is sending to a website. Google traffic has begun to dry up as both Googleâs own AI snippets and AI-powered SEO spam have obliterated the business models of many media websites.
This general dynamicâplummeting traffic because of AI snippets, ChatGPT, AI slop, Twitter no workie so good no moreâhas been called the âtraffic apocalypseâ and has all but killed some smaller websites and has been blamed by executives for hundreds of layoffs at larger ones.
Despite the fact that generative AI has been a destructive force against their businesses, their industry, and the truth more broadly, media executives still see AI as a business opportunity and a shiny object that they can tell investors and their staffs that they are very bullish on. They have to say this, I guess, because everything else they have tried hasnât worked, and pretending that they are forward thinking or have any clue what they are doing will perhaps allow a specific type of media executive to squeeze out a few more months of salary.
But pivoting to AI is not a business strategy. Telling journalists they must use AI is not a business strategy. Partnering with AI companies is a business move, but becoming reliant on revenue from tech giants who are creating a machine that duplicates the work youâve already created is not a smart or sustainable business move, and therefore it is not a smart business strategy. It is true that AI is changing the internet and is threatening journalists and media outlets. But the only AI-related business strategy that makes any sense whatsoever is one where media companies and journalists go to great pains to show their audiences that they are human beings, and that the work they are doing is worth supporting because it is human work that is vital to their audiences. This is something GQâs editorial director Will Welch recently told New York magazine: âThe good news for any digital publisher is that the new game we all have to play is also a sustainable one: You have to build a direct relationship with your core readers,â he said.
Becoming an âAI-firstâ media company has become a buzzword that execs can point at to explain that their businesses can use AI to become more âefficientâ and thus have a chance to become more profitable. Often, but not always, this message comes from executives who are laying off large swaths of their human staff.
In May, Business Insider laid off 21 percent of its workforce. In her layoff letter, Business Insiderâs CEO Barbara Peng said âthereâs a huge opportunity for companies who harness AI first.â She told the remaining employees there that they are âfully embracing AI,â âwe are going all-in on AI,â and said âover 70 percent of Business Insider employees are already using Enterprise ChatGPT regularly (our goal is 100%), and weâre building prompt libraries and sharing everyday use cases that help us work faster, smarter, and better.â She added they are âexploring how AI can boost operations across shared services, helping us scale and operate more efficiently.â
Last year, Hearst Newspapers executives, who operate 78 newspapers nationwide, told the company in an all-hands meeting audio obtained by 404 Media that they are âleaning into [AI] as Hearst overall, the entire corporation.â Examples given in the meeting included using AI for slide decks, a âquiz generation toolâ for readers, translations, a tool called Dispatch, which is an email summarization tool, and a tool called âAssembly,â which is âbasically a public meeting monitor, transcriber, summarizer, all in one. What it does is it goes into publicly posted meeting videos online, transcribes them automatically, [and] automatically alerts journalists through Slack about whatâs going on and links to the transcript.â
The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times are doing all sorts of fucked up shit that definitely no one wants but are being imposed upon their newsrooms because they are owned by tech billionaires who are tired of losing money. The Washington Post has an AI chatbot and plans to create a Forbes contributor-esque opinion section with an AI writing tool that will assist outside writers. The Los Angeles Times introduced an AI bot that argues with its own writers and has written that the KKK was not so bad, actually. Both outlets have had massive layoffs in recent months.
The New York Times, which is actually doing well, says it is using AI to âcreate initial drafts of headlines, summaries of Times articles and other text that helps us produce and distribute the news.â Wirecutter is hiring a product director for AI and recently instructed its employees to consider how they can use AI to make their journalism better, New York magazine reported. Kevin Roose, an, uhh, complicated figure in the AI space, said âAI has essentially replaced Google for me for basic questions,â and said that he uses it for âbrainstorming.â His Hard Fork colleague Casey Newton said he uses it for âresearchâ and âfact-checking.â
Over at Columbia Journalism Review, a host of journalists and news execs, myself included, wrote about how AI is used in their newsrooms. The responses were all over the place and were occasionally horrifying, and ranged from people saying they were using AI as personal assistants to brainstorming partners to article drafters.
In his largely incoherent screed that shows how terrible he was at managing G/O Media, which took over Deadspin, Kotaku, Jezebel, Gizmodo, and other beloved websites and ran them into the ground at varying speeds, Jim Spanfeller nods at the âboth good and perhaps badâ impacts of AI on news. In a truly astounding passage of a notably poorly written letter that manages to say less than nothing, he wrote: âAI is a prime example. It is here to a degree but there are so many more shoes to drop [...] Clearly this technology is already having a profound impact. But so much more is yet to come, both good and perhaps bad depending on where you sit and how well monitored and controlled it is. But one thing to keep in mind, consumers seek out content for many reasons. Certainly, for specific knowledge, which search and search like models satisfy in very effective ways. But also, for insights, enjoyment, entertainment and inspiration.â
At the MediaPost Publishing Insider Conference, a media industry business conference I just went to in New Orleans, there was much chatter about AI. Alice Ting, an executive for the Daily Mail gave a pretty interesting talk about how the Daily Mail is protecting its journalism from AI scrapers in order to eventually strike deals with AI companies to license their content.
âWhat many of you have seen is a surge in scraping of our content, a decline in traffic referrals, and an increase in hallucinated outputs that often misrepresent our brands,â Ting said. âPublishers can provide decades of vetted and timestamped content, verified, fact checked, semantically organized, editorially curated. And in addition offer fresh content on an almost daily basis.â
Ting is correct in that several publishers have struck lucrative deals with AI companies, but she also suggested that AI licensing would be a recurring revenue stream for publishers, which would require a series of competing LLMs to want to come in and license the same content over and over again. Many LLMs have already scraped almost everything there is to scrape, itâs not clear that there are going to consistently be new LLMs from companies wanting to pay to train on data that other LLMs have already trained on, and itâs not clear how much money the Daily Mailâs blogs of the day are going to be worth to an AI company on an ongoing basis. Betting that this time, hinging the future of our industry on massive, monopolistic tech giants will work out is the most Lucy with the football thing I can imagine.
There is not much evidence that selling access to LLMs will work out in a recurring way for any publisher, outside of the very largest publishers like, perhaps, the New York Times. Even at the conference, panel moderator Upneet Grover, founder of LH2 Holdings, which owns several smaller blogs, suggested that âa lot of these licensing revenues are not moving the needle, at least from the deals weâve seen, but thereâs this larger threat of more referral traffic being taken away from news publishers [by AI].â
youtube.com/embed/La2R3iIL9BE?âŚ
In my own panel at the conference I made the general argument that I am making in this article, which is that none of this is going to work.
âWeâre not just competing against large-scale publications and AI slop, we are competing against the entire rest of the internet. We were publishing articles and AI was scraping and republishing them within five minutes of us publishing them,â I said. âSo many publications are leaning into âhow can we use AI to be more efficient to publish more,â and itâs not going to work. Itâs not going to work because youâre competing against a child in Romania, a child in Bangladesh who is publishing 9,000 articles a day and they donât care about facts, they donât care about accuracy, but in an SEO algorithm itâs going to perform and thatâs what youâre competing against. You have to compete on quality at this point and you have to find a real human being audience and you need to speak to them directly and treat them as though they are intelligent and not as though you are trying to feed them as much slop as possible.â
It makes sense that journalists and media execs are talking about AI because everyone is talking about AI, and because AI presents a particularly grave threat to the business models of so many media companies. Itâs fine to continue to talk about AI. But the point of this article is that âweâre going to lean into AIâ is not a business model, and itâs not even a business strategy, any more than pivoting to âvideoâ was a strategy or chasing Facebook Live views was a strategy.
In a harrowing discussion with Axios, in which he excoriates many of the deals publishers have signed with OpenAI and other AI companies, Matthew Prince, the CEO of Cloudflare, said that the AI-driven traffic apocalypse is a nightmare for people who make content online: âIf we donât figure out how to fix this, the internet is going to die,â he said.
youtube.com/embed/H5C9EL3C82Y?âŚ
So AI is destroying traffic, ripping off our work, creating slop that destroys discoverability and further undermines trust, and allowing random people to create news-shaped objects that social media and search algorithms either canât or donât care to distinguish from real news. And yet media executives have decided that the only way to compete with this is to make their workers use AI to make content in a slightly more efficient way than they were already doing journalism.
This is not going to work, because âusing AIâ is not a reporting strategy or a writing strategy, and itâs definitely not a business strategy.
AI is a tool (sorry!) that people who are bad at their jobs will use badly and that people who are good at their jobs will maybe, possibly find some uses for. People who are terrible at their jobs (many executives), will tell their employees that they âneedâ to use AI, that their jobs depend on it, that they must become more productive, and that becoming an AI-first company is the strategy that will save them from the old failed strategy, which itself was the new strategy after other failed business models.
The only journalism business strategy that works, and that will ever work in a sustainable way, is if you create something of value that people (human beings, not bots) want to read or watch or listen to, and that they cannot find anywhere else. This can mean youâre breaking news, or it can mean that you have a particularly notable voice or personality. It can mean that youâre funny or irreverent or deeply serious or useful. It can mean that you confirm peopleâs priors in a way that makes them feel good. And you have to be trustworthy, to your audience at least. But basically, to make money doing journalism, you have to publish âcontent,â relatively often, that people want to consume.
This is not rocket science, and I am of course not the only person to point this out. There have been many, many features about the success of Feed Me, Emily Sundbergâs newsletter about New York, culture, and a bunch of other stuff. As she has pointed out in many interviews, she has been successful because she writes about interesting things and treats her audience like human beings. The places that are succeeding right now are individual writers who have a perspective, news outlets like WIRED that are fearless, publications that have invested in good reporters like The Atlantic, publications that tell you something that AI canât, and worker owned, journalist-run outlets like us, Defector, Aftermath, Hellgate, Remap, Hearing Things, etc. There are also a host of personality-forward, journalism-adjacent YouTubers, TikTok influencers, and podcasters who have massive, loyal audiences, yet most of the traditional media is utterly allergic to learning anything from them.
There was a short period of time where it was possible to make money by paying human writersâsome of them journalists, perhapsâto spam blog posts onto the internet that hit specific keywords, trending topics, or things that would perform well on social media. These were the early days of Gawker, Buzzfeed, VICE, and Vox. But the days of media companies tricking people into reading their articles using SEO or hitting a trending algorithm are over.
They are over because other people are doing it better than them now, and by âbetter,â I mean, more shamelessly and with reckless abandon. As we have written many times, news outlets are no longer just competing with each other, but with everyone on social media, and Netflix, and YouTube, and TikTok, and all the other people who post things on the internet. They are not just up against the total fracturing of social media, the degrading and enshittification of the discovery mechanisms on the internet, algorithms that artificially ding links to articles, AI snippets and summaries, etc. They are also competing with sophisticated AI slop and spam factories often being run by people on the other side of the world publishing things that look like ânewsâ that is being created on a scale that even the most âefficientâ journalist leveraging AI to save some perhaps negligible amount of time cannot ever hope to measure up to.
Every day, I get emails from AI spam influencers who are selling tools that allow slop peddlers to clone any website with one click, automatically generate newsletters about any topic, or generate plausible-seeming articles that are engineered to perform well in a search algorithm. Examples: âClone any website in 9 seconds with Clonely AI,â âThe future of video creation is hereâand itâs faceless, seamless & limitless,â âjust a straightforward path to earning 6-figures with an AI-powered newsletter thatâs working right now.â These people do not care at all about truth or accuracy or our information ecosystem or anything else that a media company or a journalist would theoretically care about. If you want an example of what this looks like, consider the series of âGood Dayâ newsletters, which are AI generated and are in 355 small towns across America, many of which no longer have newspapers. These businesses are economically viable because they are being run by one person (or a very small team of people) who disproportionately live in low cost of living areas and who have essentially zero overhead.
And so becoming more âefficientâ with AI is the wrong thing to do, and itâs the wrong thing to ask any journalist to do. The only thing that media companies can do in order to survive is to lean into their humanity, to teach their journalists how to do stories that cannot be done by AI, and to help young journalists learn the skills needed to do articles that weave together complicated concepts and, again, that focus on our shared human experience, in a way that AI cannot and will never be able to.
AI as buzzword and shiny object has been here for a long time. And I actually do not think AI is fake and sucks (I also donât really believe that anyone thinks AI is âfake,â because we can see the internet collapsing around us). We report every day on the ways that AI is changing the web, in part because it is being shoved down our throats by big tech companies, spammers, etc. But I think that Princetonâs Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor are basically correct when they say that AI is ânormal technologyâ that will not change everything but that over time will lead to modest improvements in peopleâs workflows as they get integrated into existing products or as they help around the edges. Weâyes, even youâare using some version of AI, or some tools that have LLMs or machine learning in them in some way shape or form already, even if you hate such tools.
In early 2023, when I was the editor-in-chief of Motherboard, I was asked to put together a presentation for VICE executives about AI, and how I thought it would change both our journalism and the business of journalism. The reason I was asked to do this was because our team was writing a lot about AI, and there was a sense that the company could do something with AI to make money, or do better journalism, or some combination of those things. There was no sense or thought at the time, at least from what I was told, that VICE was planning to use AI as a pretext for replacing human journalists or cutting costsâit had already entered a cycle where it was constantly laying off journalistsâbut there was a sense that this was going to be the big new opportunity/threat, a new potential savior for a company that had already created a âvirtual officeâ in Decentraland, a crypto-powered metaverse that last year had 42 daily active users.
I never got to give the presentation, because the executive who asked me to put it together left the company, and the new people either didnât care or didnât have time for me to give it. The company went bankrupt almost immediately after this change, and I left VICE soon after to make 404 Media with my co-founders, who also left VICE.
But my message at the time, and my message now two years later, is that AI has already changed our world, and that we have the opportunity to report on the technology as it already exists and is already being usedâto justify layoffs, to dehumanize people, to spam the internet, etc. At the time, we had already written 840 articles that were tagged âAI,â which included articles about biased sentencing algorithms, predictive policing, facial recognition, deepfakes, AI romantic relationships, AI-powered spam and scams, etc.
The business opportunity then, as now, was to be an indispensable, very human guide to a technology that peopleâhuman beingsâare making tons of money off of, using as an excuse to lay off workers, and are doing wild shit with. There was no magic strategy in which we could use AI to quadruple our output, replace workers, rise to the top of Google rankings, etc. There was, however, great risk in attempting to do this: âPR NIGHTMARE,â one of my slides about the risks of using AI I wrote said: âCNET plagiarism scandal. Big backlash from artists and writers to generative AI. Copyright issues. Race to the bottom.â
My other thought was that any efficiencies that could be squeezed out of AI, in our day-to-day jobs, were already being done so by good reporters and video producers at the company. There could be no top-down forced pivot to AI, because research and time-saving uses of AI were already being naturally integrated into our work by people who were smart in ways that were totally reasonable and mostly helpful, if not groundbreaking. The AI-as-force-multiplier was already happening, and while, yes, this probably helped the business in some way, it helped in ways that were not then and were never going to be actually perceptible to a companyâs bottom line. AI was not a savior then, and it is not a savior now. For journalists and for media companies, there is no real âpivot to AIâ that is possible unless that pivot means firing all of the employees and putting out a shittier product (which some companies have called a strategy). This is because the pivot has already occurred and the business prospects for media companies have gotten worse, not better. If Kevin Roose is using AI so much, in such a new and groundbreaking way, why arenât his articles noticeably different than they ever were before, or why arenât there way more of them than there were before? Where are the journalists who were formerly middling who are now pumping out incredible articles thanks to efficiencies granted by AI?
To be concrete: Many journalists, including me, at least sometimes use some sort of AI transcription tool for some of their less sensitive interviews. This saves me many hours, the tools have gotten better (but are still not perfect, and absolutely require double checking and should not be used for sensitive sources or sensitive stories). YouTubeâs transcript feature is an incredible reporting tool that has allowed me to do stories that would have never been possible even a few years ago. YouTubeâs built-in translations and subtitles, and its transcript tool are some of the only reasons that I was able to do this investigation into Indian AI slop creators, which allowed me to get the gist of what was happening in a given video before we handed them to human translators to get exact translations. Most podcasts I know of now use Descript, Riverside, or a similar tool to record and edit their podcasts; these have built-in AI transcription tools, built-in AI camera switching, and built-in text-to-video editing tools. Most media outlets use captioning that is built into Adobe Premiere or CapCut for their vertical videos and their YouTube videos (and then double check them). If you want to get extremely annoying about it, various machine learning algorithms are in ProTools, Audition, CapCut, Premiere, Canva, etc for things like photo editing, sound leveling, noise reduction, etc.
There are other journalists who feel very comfortable coding and doing data analysis and analyzing huge sets of documents. There are journalists out there who are already using AI to do some of these tasks and some of the resulting articles are surely good and could not have been done without AI.
But the people doing this well are doing so in a way where they are catching and fixing AI hallucinations, because the stakes for fucking up are so incredibly high. If you are one of the people who is doing this, then, great. I have little interest in policing other peopleâs writing processes so long as they are not publishing AI fever dreams or plagiarizing, and there are writers I respect who say they have their little chats with ChatGPT to help them organize their thoughts before they do a draft or who have vibecoded their own productivity tools or data analysis tools. But again, thatâs not a business model. Itâs a tool that has enabled some reporters to do their jobs, and, using their expertise, they have produced good and valuable work. This does not mean that every news outlet or every reporter needs to learn to shove the JFK documents into ChatGPT and have it shit out an investigation.
I also know that our credibility and the trust of our audience is the only thing that separates us from anyone else. It is the only âbusiness modelâ that we have and that I am certain works: We trade good, accurate, interesting, human articles for money and attention. The risks of offloading that trust to an AI in a careless way is the biggest possible risk factor that we could have as a business. Having an article go out where someone goes âActually, a robot wrote this,â is one of the worst possible things that could ever happen to us, and so we have made the brave decision to not do that.
This is part of what is so baffling about the Chicago Sun Timesâ response to its somewhat complicated summer guide AI-generated reading list fiasco. Under its new owners, Chicago Public Media, The Sun Times has in recent years spent an incredible amount of time and effort rebuilding the image and good will that its previous private equity owners destroyed. And yet in its apology note, Melissa Bell, the CEO of Chicago Public Media, said that more AI is coming: âChicago Public Media will not back away from experimenting and learning how to properly use AI,â she wrote, adding that the team was working with a fellow paid for by the Lenfest Institute, a nonprofit funded by OpenAI and Microsoft.
Bell does realize what makes the paper stand apart, though: âWe must own our humanity,â Bell wrote. âOur humanity makes our work valuable.â
This is something that the New York Timesâs Roose recently brought up that I thought was quite smart and yet is not something that he seems to have internalized when talking about how AI is going to change everything and that its widespread adoption is inevitable and the only path forward: âI wonder if [AI is] going to catalyze some counterreaction,â he said. âIâve been thinking a lot recently about the slow-food movement and the farm-to-table movement, both of which came up in reaction to fast food. Fast food had a lot going for itâit was cheap, it was plentiful, you could get it in a hurry. But it also opened up a market for a healthier, more artisanal way of doing things. And I wonder if something similar will happen in creative industriesâa kind of creative renaissance for things that feel real and human and arenât just outputs from some A.I. companyâs slop machine.â
This has ALREAAAAADDDDYYYYYY HAPPPENEEEEEDDDDDD, and it is quite literally the only path forward for all but perhaps the most gigantic of media companies. There is no reason for an individual journalist or an individual media company to make the fast food of the internet. Itâs already being made, by spammers and the AI companies themselves. It is impossible to make it cheaper or better than them, because it is what they exist to do. The actual pivot that is needed is one to humanity. Media companies need to let their journalists be human. And they need to prove why theyâre worth reading with every article they do.
Viral AI-Generated Summer Guide Printed by Chicago Sun-Times Was Made by Magazine Giant Hearst
The Chicago Sun-Times said "we understand this is unacceptable for us to distribute."Jason Koebler (404 Media)
So called bro science vs so called peer reviewed science when it comes to exercise
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The Bros Were RIGHT about Muscle Growth...
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Millions of people spied on by malicious browser extensions in #Chrome and #Edge | Malwarebytes
"...when an #extension has been available in the web store for a while, #cybercriminals can insert #malicious code through updates to the extension. Some researchers refer to the clean extensions as âsleeper agents.â
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Millions of people spied on by malicious browser extensions in Chrome and Edge | Malwarebytes
Researchers have discovered a campaign of malicious browser extensions that were available in the official Chrome and Edge web stores.Pieter Arntz (Malwarebytes)
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Here we go again: Over an acerbic dissenting opinion by Justice Sotomayor (joined in full by Justices Kagan and Jackson), #SCOTUS, with no explanation, grants a stay in the Department of Education RIFs caseâeffectively clearing the way for the Trump administration to dismantle much of the agency:
Seçimli DiktatÜrlßkte Demokrasi YanĹlsamasĹ
BugĂźn AKP muhalefeti de dizayn edebilecek bir siyasi ve toplumsal gĂźce ulaĹmĹŠdurumdadÄąr. Bunun ilk kurbanÄąnÄąn ise CHP olacaÄÄą gĂśrĂźlmektedir. ĂĂźnkĂź yeni CHP yĂśnetiminin çok kafa karÄąĹtÄąrÄącÄą politikalarÄą bulunmaktadÄąr ve son dĂśnemlerde AKP ile CHP arasÄąndaki âsiyasi gerilimâin ErdoÄan ile Ăzel arasÄąnda bir âdanÄąĹÄąklÄą dĂśvĂźĹâ olma ihtimali oldukça yĂźksektir. Bundan dolayÄą devrimci ve demokratik hareketin oldukça dikkatli olmasÄą gerekmektedir.
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portableapps.com/news/2025-07-âŚ
PortableApps.com Platform 30.0.3: Quick Updates On The Way To 31.0 | PortableApps.com
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Hello everyone!
Yesterday I released my many years in the making Atari ST game.
"Galactic Panic: A Questionable Adventure" is a lighthearted point-and-click game, payable in English and French.
It should work on any ST, STE or Falcon030. A HDD is required!
Get it from insert-studio-name.itch.io/galâŚ
It's free! Donations are welcome though.
#atarist #atari #retrogames #indiedev #gamedev #videogames
Galactic panic: a questionable adventure by insert_studio_name
A pretty stupid point-and-click adventureitch.io
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Î ÎΝΝΏδι κιĎÎąĎÎŹĎĎÎľĎιΚ ĎĎ ÎÎ˝ÎąĎ ÎąĎĎ ĎÎżĎ Ď ĎΚο ικĎΚβοĎĎ ĎĎοοĎΚĎΟοĎĎ ÎłÎšÎą βĎÎąĎĎ ĎĎĎÎ˝ÎšÎľĎ ÎźÎšĎθĎĎÎľÎšĎ ĎĎΡν ÎĎ ĎĎĎΡ ĎÎż κιΝοκιίĎΚ ĎÎżĎ 2025, Οξ ĎΚΟÎĎ ĎÎżĎ ĎĎÎŹÎ˝ÎżĎ Î˝ ĎÎą 250 ÎľĎ ĎĎ ÎąÎ˝ÎŹ Î´ÎšÎąÎ˝Ď ÎşĎÎĎÎľĎ ĎΡnewsroom (NEWMONEY)
ÎŁĎÎż ΟξĎÎąÎžĎ ÎťÎżÎłĎ ÎźĎÎżĎÎżĎ Î´ÎľÎ˝ ÎľĎξΚ ÎľĎθξΚ ÎşÎąÎ˝ÎľÎšĎ ÎźÎľĎινιĎĎÎˇĎ / ĎĎÎżĎĎĎ ÎłÎąĎ ĎĎΡν ÎĎΡĎΡ ÎľÎ´Ď Îş ΟξĎÎľĎ
ΠοΝΡ "ĎΚξĎΡ" ĎÎżĎ Î´ÎľĎÎľĎιΚ ĎÎż γιΟονΡĎΚ ĎÎżĎ Ď ĎĎÎżĎ ĎÎż ĎÎąĎον ξΚνιΚ 1500 ÎąĎοΟι ĎÎż ĎÎżÎťĎ ĎÎżĎ ÎˇÎ´Îˇ ΟξĎÎąĎÎľĎονĎιΚ ΠξΚĎιΚι Îş ÎąĎÎż ξκξΚ ĎĎÎą ĎĎĎÎąĎÎżĎξδι ĎĎ ÎłÎşÎľÎ˝ĎĎĎĎÎˇĎ ĎÎˇĎ Î˝ĎĎÎżĎΡĎ
ÎΝο ξνι ĎĎÎżĎĎΡΟι ĎĎÎżĎιγινδΚĎĎΚκο γΚι νι ĎΡĎΚĎĎξΚ Ρ νιΜΚĎĎΚκΡ ĎĎÎżĎοΝογΚι Îş νι ĎĎ ÎłÎľÎš Ρ ĎĎÎżĎÎżĎΡ ÎąĎÎż ÎÎ ÎÎ ÎÎÎ Îş ÎľĎ ĎĎĎιΚκΡ ξΚĎιγγξΝΚι
ÎÎľĎ ĎÎľĎΡ ΟξγιΝΡ ĎĎĎΚι ĎÎľ ÎľĎγοĎĎÎąĎΚο ÎąÎ˝ÎąÎşĎ ÎşÎťĎĎÎˇĎ ĎĎΡ ΣΚνδο κιΚξΚ ĎÎşÎżĎ ĎΚδΚι ĎÎąĎιγĎνĎÎąĎ ĎοΞΚκο νξĎÎżĎ ĎÎżĎ ÎąĎÎťĎνξĎιΚ ĎÎąÎ˝Ď Ď ÎżÎťÎˇ ĎΡν ĎÎľĎΚοĎΡ
ΠοΝΝοΚ Νξνξ ÎżĎΚ ĎĎ Î˝Î´ÎľÎľĎιΚ Οξ ĎÎą ξγγĎÎąĎÎą ĎÎżĎ ÎÎ ÎÎÎÎ Î ĎÎżĎ ÎąĎον ÎąĎον ĎÎą ΟιΜξĎιν ĎÎľ ÎşÎżĎ ĎÎľĎ Îş ĎÎą ÎľĎĎξΚΝιν γΚι "ÎąÎ˝ÎąÎşĎ ÎşÎťĎĎΡ" Οξ Ď ĎογĎÎąĎΡ ÎÎÎÎ
ÎÎłĎ ÎťÎľĎ ÎżĎΚ ÎąĎΝι ξΞξΝΚĎĎÎľĎιΚ ιΝΝΡ ΟΚι κιθξĎĎĎĎΚκΡ ÎąĎÎąĎΡ / ĎĎÎżĎĎ Î˝ÎľÎ˝Î˝ÎżÎˇÎźÎľÎ˝Îż ĎÎľĎΚβιΝΝονĎΚκο κιΚ Ď ÎłÎľÎšÎżÎ˝ÎżÎźÎšÎşÎż ξγκΝΡΟι Οξ ξκιĎ. ⏠γΚι δΡθξν Ď ĎÎżÎ´ÎżÎźÎľĎ Îş ĎΝινι ÎąÎ˝ÎąÎşĎ ÎşÎťĎĎÎˇĎ ÎşÎťĎ ÎşÎťĎ. "ÎĎΚ ĎΡ ÎľĎ ÎşÎąÎšĎΚι" ÎźĎÎżĎξΚ νι κιΚνξ Îş ĎÎżĎ ÎÎ ÎÎÎÎ Î
Lib kiddie: "So, what did you do this weekend?"
Amish guy "My friends and I moved a barn"
DisisdegueyđťPavlichenkođľđ¸ reshared this.
Droits de douane : LâEurope pourrait rĂŠpliquer Ă Trump avec des mesures Ă hauteur de 72 milliards dâeuros election-politique.com/index.pâŚ
#VuDansLaPresse #newspaper #politique #politics #international #UE #UnionEuropeenne #DroitsdeDouane #USA
Accueil - Election Politique Citoyen
election france monde popularites referendum presidentielle legislatives senatoriales europĂŠenneswww.election-politique.com
âĄď¸đşđŚPresident Zelensky: âWe will definitely continue to increase our domestic weapons production and develop all our defense projects â both our Ukrainian and joint projects with partners (VIDEO and more) #Ukraine #NukesForUkraine #Germany #France #Italy #OSCE #PACE #CoE #SouthKorea #Press #News #Taiwan #Media #Japan #USA #US #UK #EU #NATO #UnitedStates #UnitedKingdom
#EuropeanUnion #russiaUkraineWar
#11yrInvasionofUkraine #RussiaIsATerroristState #TrumpIsARussianAsset
Zelenskiy / Official
We will definitely continue to increase our domestic weapons production and develop all our defense projects â both our Ukrainian and joint projects with partners. And this is one of the top priorities for the renewed Government.Telegram
This may sound strange, but the times when I want to work on gamedev stuff the most is when I'm on vacation when I should be spending time with my family and all that.
Maybe it's because I see new things and places and they give me inspiration for video game locations or it's just not being in a familiar location frees the mind and makes you feel more productive.
ÎÎĎ Î˝Îą Î´Ď ÎąĎ ĎĎ
5ξνΡĚνĎÎą 7ĎĎÎąĚ | ÎΚι δΡΟοĎΚογĎÎąĎΚκΎ ĎÎąĎιγĎγΎ γΚι ĎÎą ΤÎÎźĎΡ
ÎŁĎ ÎźÎ˛ÎżÎťÎŽ ĎÎľĎΚĎĎĎĎÎľĎĎν ÎąĎĎ 40 δΡΟοĎΚογĎÎŹĎĎν, 15 κιΝΝΚĎÎľĎνĎν, 15 ĎÎľĎνΚκĎν ξΚκĎÎ˝ÎąĎ & ÎŽĎÎżĎ .ÎΝΏĎΚĎĎΡ ĎĎ ÎźÎ˛ÎżÎťÎŽ ĎĎÎż ĎĎÎÎżĎ ÎąĎÎνινĎΚ ĎĎÎż ÎĎΏγγξΝΟι, ĎΡν ÎοΚνĎνίι & ĎÎšĎ Îż...YouTube
Roland HäderđŠđŞ likes this.
Ex-UN Special Rapporteur: Francesca Albanese Deserves Nobel Prize, Not Sanctions | Truthout
The US is punishing UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese for her scathing reports on Israelâs genocide in Gaza.britney (Truthout)
Fou reshared this.
Roland HäderđŠđŞ likes this.
âWar on Childrenâ: Doctor in Gaza on Massacres, Starvation and Israelâs Plan for Concentration Camps
The official death toll in Gaza has topped 58,000, with Israeli forces continuing to shoot at Palestinians seeking aid and talks over a ceasefire agreement stalled in Doha.Democracy Now!
Netanyahu Had Ceasefire Deal in April 2024 But Kept Gaza War Going to Stay in Power: NY Times
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly rejected ceasefire deals and other chances to deescalate the devastating war in Gaza and beyond, all to remain in power and avoid corruption charges, according to a new investigation in The NewâŚDemocracy Now!
âIsraeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has repeatedly rejected ceasefire deals and other chances to deescalate the devastating war in Gaza and beyond, all to remain in power and avoid corruption chargesâ
This needs to be headline news !
reshared this
like this
Ole, ole y ole el seĂąor que le ha cantado las cuarenta a #MazĂłn hoy en la calle.
Y muy tranquilo el hombre para lo que podrĂa ser.
ÂĄQue sienta vergĂźenza de caminar por la calle hasta que dimita! #MazĂłnDimisiĂłn
eldiario.es/comunitat-valenciaâŚ
#PolĂtica #PaĂsValenciĂ #DANA
Un afectado por la dana, a MazĂłn: "ÂĄNo estabas en tu sitio, no me jodas Carlos, ha muerto mucha gente!"
Rafa Carceller, trabajador de un polĂgono de AlaquĂ s que ha visitado este lunes el presidente del Gobierno valenciano, le echa en cara la tardĂa reacciĂłn de la Generalitat y la confrontaciĂłn con el Ejecutivo central: "Hubo una falta de previsiĂłn que âŚCarlos Navarro CastellĂł (ElDiario.es)
Roland HäderđŠđŞ likes this.
Parece que a los IA bros les ha llegado la enshitificacion rĂĄpido.
No hace falta aprender a programar, mira lo que hago en 15 min, etc
Pues Google decapita Windsurf, Cursor prĂĄcticamente estafa a sus users limitando sus planes ilimitados por 20$ pasando su precio al plan de 200$.
Todo esto sin contar las noticias constantes de las brechas de seguridad de esas webs hechas con Vibe Coding.
ââ
1,500 Deaths in Europeâs Heat Wave Were Due to Climate Crisis, Study Shows
âThe influence of climate change has [temperatures] up by several degrees,â the studyâs lead author said.Chris Walker (Truthout)
Î ÎΡĎĎÎżĎÎąÎşÎˇĎ ÎąÎłÎ˝ÎżÎľÎš ĎΡ δΚκογĎÎąĎΚι ĎÎˇĎ ÎľĎ ĎĎĎÎąĎÎşÎˇĎ ÎľÎšĎÎąÎłÎłÎľÎťÎšÎąĎ ÎłÎšÎą ÎÎżĎΚδΡ ÎĎ ÎłÎľÎ˝ÎąÎşÎˇ Îş ινĎΚ γΚι ĎĎοινικĎΚĎΚκΡ γΚι ĎÎżĎ Ď Ď ĎÎżĎ ĎÎłÎżĎ Ď ĎÎżĎ , ĎĎÎżĎθξΚ ξΞξĎÎąĎĎΚκΡ ÎľĎΚĎĎÎżĎΡ γΚι ÎÎ ÎÎÎÎ Î ÎąĎ ĎÎż 1998 ĎĎ ĎΡΟξĎÎą
ÎĎÎąĎÎąĎÎąĎÎąĎÎąĎÎą οΚ νĎιΝΚκξĎÎˇÎ´ÎľĎ ÎşÎťÎąÎšÎźÎľ ÎľÎ´Ď ĎĎΡν κινĎΚνι
democracynow.org/2025/7/14/gazâŚ
Doctor in #Gaza talks about the #WarOnChildren.
#FreePalestineđľđ¸
âWar on Childrenâ: Doctor in Gaza on Massacres, Starvation and Israelâs Plan for Concentration Camps
The official death toll in Gaza has topped 58,000, with Israeli forces continuing to shoot at Palestinians seeking aid and talks over a ceasefire agreement stalled in Doha.Democracy Now!
Tempers flare in England-India test series but captains downplay tensions
https://apnews.com/article/england-india-tension-heat-siraj-48f34980022002addfd966286943376e?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Asia @asia-AssociatedPress
Nigel Farage Says He Wants to Scrap the Two-Child Benefit Cap - But There's Something He's Not Telling You â Byline Times
The Reform leader needs to be reminded whose idea it was to push hundreds of thousands of children into poverty in the first place, writes Josiah MortimerJosiah Mortimer (Byline Times)
Police repression and disarray over Palestine Action terrorism proscription - Real Media - The View From Below
Across the country, some police forces respected the right to protest, while others not only made arrests, but smashed doors down and seized property, just for holding a protest banner.Rikki (Real Media - The View From Below)
Gaza's missing people: the forgotten thousands no one mentions
Since 7 October, thousands of people in Gaza have become victims of Israel's arbitrary, prolonged, and incommunicado detentionCharlie Jaay (The Canary)
"But but but....it's CLIMATE CHANGE!!!"
x.com/its_The_Dr/status/194456âŚ
This is footage from the hills up near Hollywood where an arsonist was stopped and held for police by local joggers/walkers on a trail after the guy intentionally set a fire to a tree just a few hundred yards from homes..
Not that it stops lying Dems from crying that all the wildfires that have been hitting California are due to Climate Change..
ÎÎľĎ ÎÎżĎ Îť 14 ΧοĎÎ ÎĎÎżĎ ÎľÎ˝ÎąÎ˛ÎľÎ˝ĎÎżĎĎÎą ÎĎÎżĎ ĎĎÎżĎĎΚ ÎĎÎżĎ ÎźÎŹÎ˝ÎłÎşÎľ, γξννΎθΡκξ ĎÎż 1896, ÎÎľĎν, ÎĎĎινίι
No. Labour under Starmer and Streeting is proving a much greater gift to Farage.
theguardian.com/politics/2025/âŚ
Resident doctorsâ strikes would be gift to Nigel Farage, warns Wes Streeting
Exclusive: Labour fighting for survival of NHS, health secretary tells MPs as he prepares to meet BMAEleni Courea (The Guardian)
Shohei Ohtani to hit leadoff for NL in All-Star Game, followed by Ronald AcuĂąa Jr. of host Braves
https://apnews.com/article/all-star-skenes-skubal-ohtani-2c40a2345f86ec84c4ff17cd39ff2eff?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Sports @sports-AssociatedPress
EXCLUSIVE: Unite organisers âseriously consideringâ turning to Jeremy Corbyn's party amid Labour fallout
The Unite general secretary said âif we leave , we will forge a new vehicle for our classâ while Jeremy Corbyn was sitting just metres awayBill Curtis (The London Economic)
In Gaza, we know why Israel wants to herd us all into one camp â our lives are bargaining chips
Weâve fled the attacks again and again. Now Israel plans to force us into the ruins of Rafah in order to increase pressure on Hamas, says Gaza-based writer Nour Abo AishaNour Abo Aisha (The Guardian)
I have tried multiple items multiple times in hopes of understand the hype but
Chick-fil-a is not good.
I don't understand they hype.
The Reality Behind JP Morganâs 'Net Zero': Billions Flow to Big Oil - DeSmog
Assume you are an existing JP Morgan (JPM) customer, or you are interested in the bankâs sustainable-investment strategy.Stefano Valentino (DeSmog)
Former Biden genocide-deniers win PR contracts for Israeli state
Mercenary firm that fired on starving Palestinians also run by former Biden staffers Investigative journalism by All-Source Intelligence and the Grayzone has exposed how former staffers for ex-US pâŚSKWAWKBOX
Starbucks takes aim at remote work, says some employees may need to relocate to headquarters
https://apnews.com/article/starbucks-return-to-office-remote-work-134eb6122e1dfffc5f319fbca083f5b3?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Business and Finance @business-and-finance-AssociatedPress
I'm so glad you're writing that.
I hope to make it veritably mandatory reading for translators (who are currently being pushed to reverse-centaur their way around the world, demolishing meaning and nuance as they go.)
I refuse all such projects.
Cory Doctorow reshared this.
The SEC and Big Ten are currently at a standstill over the College Football Playoff format
https://apnews.com/article/ncaa-college-football-playoff-sankey-0caa3ce85abef132e9d68c4e52da82f7?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Sports @sports-AssociatedPress
unoffensiveanimal.is/2025/07/1âŚ
"The EF! Animal Lib Stream Squirrels have sent us a promo for the animal liberation stream within EF! UK this August. They are trying to bring more animal liberation to Earth First whilst creating a space for radical animal liberation to grow and share and plot in the UK. Read their words below after watching ⌠Continue reading "ANIMAL LIBERATION AT EARTH FIRST! UK.""
đąđť Pirms eju lasÄŤt internetus - brauciens uz Somiju ar auto (vairÄk jau tepat dienvidu gals). Ir kÄdas key lietas, ko paturÄt prÄtÄ? Auto - svaigs benzÄŤna heÄbeks, ja nu tas svarÄŤgi.
đŹđ§ Before I read through all the internet, is there any key thing to keep in mind while traveling to Finland (mostly Southern part) with car? We have 2 years old petrol hatchback and will arrive from Tallinn via ferry.
Romans 10:13 ESV âFor âeveryone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.ââ
ââRomans⏠â10âŹ:â13⏠âESVâŹâŹ bible.com/bible/59/rom.10.13.EâŚ
You are most welcome... That's great; wonderful people; many friends, over the years, in both departments.
Lovely to hear about your Mom praying...God bless her, and all of you.
Stay safe; we shall keep you all in our prayers. âď¸
ΠΟινι ÎźÎżĎ ÎśÎˇĎιξΚ νξο ΝιĎĎÎżĎ/ΝογΚĎΟΚκο κιΚ ΡĎθξ Ρ ĎĎÎą γΚι ÎťÎšÎ˝ÎżĎ Îž ĎΚĎĎÎľĎ Ď. Îξν ΞξĎξΚ ĎÎż ĎĎΚĎĎÎż ĎΡĎ, ĎÎżÎťĎ ÎťÎšÎłÎą ιγγΝΚκι κιΚ ĎÎż ÎľĎξΚ Οονο γΚι YT κιΚ ÎşÎżĎ ĎĎοΟĎÎżĎ ÎťÎšÎą.
ÎÎľÎťĎ Î˝Îą ĎÎż ĎĎΡĎĎ ĎÎż ΝιĎĎÎżĎ ÎźÎľ ÎżĎÎż ĎÎż Î´Ď Î˝ÎąĎÎż ĎΚο ÎąĎ ĎοΟιĎÎą ĎÎą ĎινĎÎą ÎąĎÎż updates ΟξĎĎΚ ΝξΚĎÎżĎ ĎγΚξĎ. ΧĎĎÎšĎ Î˝Îą Οξ ĎιΚĎνξΚ ĎΡΝ ĎĎ Î˝ÎľĎξΚι ΝξγονĎÎąĎ ÎźÎżĎ ĎĎĎÎą ÎźÎżĎ ĎÎľĎιΞξ ÎąĎ ĎÎż ĎΚ κινĎ.
ÎΚι ĎιΟξ ΝοΚĎον:
(Î¤ÎľÎšÎ˝Ď ĎĎÎżĎ Mint ĎĎÎżĎĎĎΚκι)
- Linux Mint (50%, 2 votes)
- Debian (0%, 0 votes)
- Fedora (0%, 0 votes)
- ÎΝΝο... (50%, 2 votes)
Îν Ď.Ď ĎÎż ĎĎĎĎÎľÎšÎ˝ÎľĎ ĎÎľ ÎźÎνι ĎÎżĎ ÎĎĎ ÎÎÎ ĎĎĎνο ÎÎÎ ĎÎľĎΚĎĎÎľĎ ÎżĎΟξνι ΟΡĎινΎΟιĎÎą νι ĎÎż δοκΚΟΏĎĎ, θι ÎΝξγι, ÎľĎ ĎÎąĎΚĎĎĎ, κιΝΎ ΚδÎÎą @mrsimoto @antones
Coded Artist likes this.
Israeli sniper Dani Adega, who boasted of 4 kills during a ceasefire, has been located in #Lisbon. The Hind Rajab Foundation has filed a legal complaint in #Portugal demanding his immediate arrest.
Read the full article: hindrajabfoundation.org/perpetâŚ
#HRF #WarCrime #YouCantRun #HindRajab #NeverForget #NeverForgive #Israel #Gaza
#EUpol #HumanRights
@israel @palestine@lemmy.ml @palestine@a.gup.pe
No Safe Haven for War Criminals: HRF Pursues Israeli Sniper Dani Adega in Portugal
Lisbon / Brussels â 14 July 2025 The Hind Rajab Foundation has filed a formal legal complaint in Portugal against Israeli sniper Dani Adonya Adega  for his role in the Israeli genocidal...THE HIND RAJAB FOUNDATION
Under fire by Trump over costs, Chair Powell seeks watchdog review of Fed building overhaul
https://apnews.com/article/federal-reserve-building-powell-trump-b977d3a2f77335c7f1f66fe178287176?utm_source=flipboard&utm_medium=activitypub
Posted into Business and Finance @business-and-finance-AssociatedPress
Coded Artist likes this.
Catweazle reshared this.
My love song that I wrote for my 5py Hun73r was removed from Instagram for dangerous content. Apparently, White Christians in love are deemed dangerous by Instagram, if they represent their love with religious symbols, the same symbols that are considered fine for other races and other religions.
My love song video represents us returning in phases to the past, beginning as Robots, transitioning to Vintage American, to 1930's Germany, then to Medieval Europe.
For 5py Hun73r and I, the swastika and sonnenrad are sacred Christian symbols, the swastika as a variation of the cross, and the sun symbol is traditional in Christian art as a halo.
The video Instagram discriminated against, deeming it dangerous purely because we are White Christians is here: ftjmedia.com/video/.KdOvmIBqk7âŚ
Out of the Dark
Out of the Dark is about taking away the dark definitions of our symbols as hate, and returning them to love symbols, aided by cute otters. Sure, it's autobiographical about how Huntress fell in love with 5py Hun73r through music.ftjmedia.com
Login ⢠Instagram
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0 Followers, 1 Following, 2 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from Volk (@volknetwork)www.instagram.com
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76 Followers, 104 Following, 67 Posts - See Instagram photos and videos from Huntress (@hun73r5_multimedia)www.instagram.com
Graham Sutherland / Polynomial
in reply to mos_8502 đ¨đŚ • • •?
mos_8502 đ¨đŚ
in reply to Graham Sutherland / Polynomial • • •Graham Sutherland / Polynomial
in reply to mos_8502 đ¨đŚ • • •Patch Arcana
in reply to mos_8502 đ¨đŚ • • •mos_8502 đ¨đŚ
in reply to Patch Arcana • • •Patch Arcana
in reply to mos_8502 đ¨đŚ • • •yeah, that was vaguely worded. I blame the dayquil.
What I meant was "in trying to find what was actually posted rather than taking the CBC's word for it, I stumbled across an idiot who said that everyone involved in spreading the hacked posts should be investigated by the US's FBI."