Motherboard on Ring’s evolution into Amazon’s private surveillance network
— the first of a three-part series, here's part two (via) #
Lost Code
— "a graphic design project exploring the fiction in translation" from Hilda Wong and Ellen Lo (via) #
Matthias Eberl’s research on TikTok’s privacy issues
— they fingerprint individuals with both Canvas images and internal audio generation #
The Verge’s Adi Robertson on fighting lies, tricks, and chaos online
— disinformation doesn't always look how you expect, often just telling you what you want to hear #
How Joey Clift “celebrated Native American Heritage Month by ruining a comedy podcast”
— a poorly-conceived attempt at inclusivity turned into a lesson on tokenization (via) #
href.cool’s Links of the Decade
— brilliant roundup of the best internet from the 2010s; from Kicks Condor, who is the best #
Campo Santo confirms “In the Valley of Gods” on hold
— the former Firewatch devs are focused on Half Life: Alyx and other projects at Valve #
Keybase and the chaos of crypto
— if you use Keybase, you've probably seen a rise in spam lately and here's why #
Volunteer archivists are working to seed LibGen’s 33 TBs of scientific material
— I wasn't familiar with The-Eye, which seems to be an Archive Team-esque project #
The Atlantic’s Kaitlin Tiffany looks back at Tumblr’s first year without Porn
— "porn creators… weren't quarantined in some illicit corner of the site—they were woven into its basic fabric" #
Riot Games to pay every female employee since 2014 with $10M settlement
— "at the end of the day, Riot prefers to pay the women still here for the trouble of continuing to work with alleged abusers" (via) #
DrumBot
— play real-time music with a machine-learning drummer that drums based on your melody (via) #
China now requires facial recognition scans for mobile phone users
— "Please leave us with some privacy." #
Shelfbrain’s Word of the Day
— generative language model making up word definitions, also available in print #
Amazon’s DeepComposer lets humans compose generative music with AI
— we've come a long way since Microsoft Songsmith #
The Deep Sea
— new project from Neal Agarwal, a constant source of joyful old-school internet (via) #
Annalee Newitz’s NYT op-ed on the future of social media
— with thoughts from Mikki Kendall, Erika Hall, Janelle Shane, Safiya Umoja Noble, John Scalzi, and Siva Vaidhyanathan #
Visualizing the most popular TV series from 1986-2019
— I love this series from Data Is Beautiful, covering websites, social networks, programming languages, and more #
Xfinity ruins E.T. for the holidays
— Comcast owns E.T.'s owner, Universal Pictures, as well as NBC, the network this expertly-made schlock aired on #
Runway Palette
— stunning desktop-only color visualization of 144,000 outfits from 3,800 runway shows; how it was made (via) #
Jamie Brew on How to Write With an Artificial Intelligence
— try it out, just start typing and hit Tab any time for generated text from GPT-2 #
The voxel art of Dima K
— one of many talented artists using MagicaVoxel, the free voxel art editor/renderer; see also: Niklas Mäckle, Sir Carma #
Former Go champion beaten by DeepMind retires after declaring AI invincible
— "Even if I become the number one, there is an entity that cannot be defeated." #
Twitter will start removing inactive accounts in December
— this immediately raised the issue of memorializing accounts, with no clear answers #
Oops! Predicting Unintentional Action in Video
— Columbia University students trained a machine to understand fail videos (via) #
RIPE ran out of IPv4 addresses
— the final registry allocated the last available IPv4 blocks (via) #
Leaked Chinese operation manuals reveal new details of mass internment and AI-driven “predictive policing”
— mass surveillance, large-scale data collection, and machine learning employed for social control and state-run terror (via) #
Christian Weiske’s replacement OUYA server goes live
— the games were saved by volunteer archivists, and stored at the Internet Archive (via) #
Vanity Fair interviews Billie Eilish for the third year with the same questions
— they should keep it going for 55 years like the Up series (via) #
Save .ORG
— EFF, Internet Archive, Creative Commons, and many more are trying to stop the sale and protect .ORG #
Sunday Afternoon at Denny’s
— a mini-documentary following a MAGA meetup that gets protested by neo-Nazis (via) #
The Register digs into the disturbing sale of the .ORG domain registry to a private equity firm
— everything about this stinks (via) #
The Verge’s Mia Sato on the Hmong diaspora’s use of free conference calling as pirate radio
— accessible without internet, and largely run/DJed by women, some lines have over 1,000 simultaneous callers (via) #
Sacha Baron Cohen blasts Facebook, Google, and Twitter for allowing hate and propaganda to thrive
— "their entire business model relies on generating more engagement, and nothing generates more engagement than lies, fear and outrage" #
List of Lists: The Best of the 2010s
— Rex Sorgatz is compiling a growing meta-list of every decade retrospective (via) #
The Jungle Prince of Delhi
— Ellen Barry's remarkable story of a deposed royal family living in a ruined Indian palace, hiding a secret they took to their graves (via) #
Guess My Word
— simple, clever web game to compete with others to guess a word that changes daily (via) #
Janelle Shane teaches an AI to begin a novel
— she trained GPT-2 on over 10k opening lines with incredible results (via) #
The Digital Antiquarian looks back at Graham Nelson’s “Curses”
— the final article in his fascinating series on the roots of the post-Infocom interactive fiction renaissance #
Descript adds um detection, full-text search
— the powerful podcast/video editor continues to evolve in interesting ways #
The Verge on Syniverse, the company responsible for the Valentine’s Day SMS debacle
— the missing 168,000 texts were roughly 0.5 seconds of activity #
The Final Days of Japan’s Most Incredible Arcade
— Anata no Warehouse was inspired by the Kowloon Walled City (via) #
Hit the High Notes
— sing into your browser to test your vocal range against 27 famous voices (via) #
Typologies of New York City: A Crowdsourced Hyperlapse
— cw: seizure warning; 1,272 photos from Instagram, 200+ hours of work (via) #
LegraJS, JS library to draw with LEGO-like brick shapes
— for example, render any image in LEGO-like bricks (via) #