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      Nicolás Maduro blocks X for 10 days in Venezuela amid spat with Elon Musk

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 9 August - 06:41


    President accuses social network’s owner of using it to ‘incite hatred’ after the country’s disputed election

    President Nicolás Maduro said he had ordered a 10-day block on access to X in Venezuela, accusing the owner, Elon Musk, of using the social network to promote hatred after the country’s disputed presidential election.

    Associated Press (AP) journalists in Caracas found that by Thursday night posts had stopped loading on X on two private telephone services and state-owned Movilnet.

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      What lies beneath: the growing threat to the hidden network of cables that power the internet

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 8 August - 23:55

    Last month large parts of Tonga were left without internet when an undersea cable was broken. It’s a scenario that is far more common than is understood

    It was the opening days of 2022, in the aftermath of a huge volcanic eruption, when Tonga went dark. The underwater eruption – 1,000 times more powerful than the bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima – sent tsunami waves across Tonga’s nearby archipelago and blanketed the island’s white coral sands in ash.

    The strength of the Hunga-Tonga-Hunga-Ha’apai eruption severed internet connectivity with Tonga , causing a communication blackout at just the moment that a crisis was unfolding.

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      Labour needs X to get its message out however much it may wish it didn’t

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 8 August - 17:50

    The Elon Musk-owned platform remains a vital tool for politicians despite misinformation about disorder in Britain

    When Keir Starmer was running to be Labour leader in 2020, his aides seriously considered whether they should leave Twitter for good.

    A number of those who remain close to Starmer as prime minister were then enthusiastic about moving off the platform. The party was still feeling wounded by the brutal election campaign and by the bitterness of the way it had been conducted on social media.

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      Wimbledon employs AI to protect players from online abuse

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 5 July, 2024 - 14:00


    Threat Matrix service monitors social media profiles and flags up death threats, racism and sexist comments

    The All England Lawn Tennis Club is using artificial intelligence for the first time to protect players at Wimbledon from online abuse.

    An AI-driven service monitors players’ public-facing social media profiles and automatically flags death threats, racism and sexist comments in 35 different languages.

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      ‘Guests like to be known’: restaurants luring diners back via personal reservations

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 15 June, 2024 - 11:36

    Platforms send targeted messages to customers, reducing cancellations and encouraging them to return

    Booking a table at your favourite restaurant no longer involves simply contacting the establishment and giving your details. Now it often involves the restaurant contacting you too – sometimes several times over.

    Online booking platforms used by hundreds of restaurants in the UK now send out reservation confirmations, reminders, requests for feedback, future deals and news. Some send certain customers a “personalised booking link” after their visit, to encourage them to come back. “I hope you had a great time on your last visit … and that you’ll come back to see us again soon,” reads one example, sent on behalf of Som Saa, a Thai restaurant in east London, via booking platform SevenRooms.

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      Jon Stewart confronts corruption, Trump and more in his new, newsy show

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 13 June, 2024 - 09:00

    The longtime Daily Show host takes his satirical style to podcasting with The Weekly Show. Plus: five of the best election podcasts

    Don’t get Hear Here delivered to your inbox? Sign up here

    There are some things that feel like they definitely won’t work as a podcast. Right up there is anything about adorable animals – after all, you can’t exactly hear the tiny button noses. When it comes to cute creatures, it seems obvious that there’s no better way to appreciate them than gazing at them.

    But this week, I discovered Animal , a New York Times podcast that proves that the beauty of fauna works even when it’s coming at you via your earholes. From charming tales of rescued baby puffins (technically known by the super-cute term “pufflings”) to a borderline immersive piece of storytelling about the ethereal experience of being stared at by a manatee, it’s a captivating listen – and it has redefined my ideas of what podcasts might be good at.

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      Conspiracy, monetisation and weirdness: social media has become ungovernable | Nesrine Malik

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April, 2024 - 05:00 · 1 minute

    The royals are perennial clickbait, but the wild online bunkum over the Princess of Wales hints at new and darker forces

    On TikTok, there is a short clip of what an AI voiceover claims is a supposed “ring glitch” in the video in which Princess of Wales reveals her cancer diagnosis. It has 1.3 million views. Others, in which users “break down” aspects of the video and analyse the saga with spurious evidence, also rack up millions of views and shares. I have then seen them surface on X, formerly known as Twitter, and even shared on WhatsApp by friends and family, who see in these videos, presented as factual and delivered in reporter-style, nothing that indicates that this is wild internet bunkum.

    Something has changed about the way social media content is presented to us. It is both a huge and subtle shift. Until recently, types of content were segregated by platform. Instagram was for pictures and short reels, TikTok for longer videos, X for short written posts. Now Instagram reels post TikTok videos, which post Instagram reels, and all are posted on X. Often it feels like a closed loop, with the algorithm taking you further and further away from discretion and choice in who you follow. All social media apps now have the equivalent of a “For you” page, a feed of content from people you don’t follow, and which, if you don’t consciously adjust your settings, the homepage defaults to. The result is that increasingly, you have less control over what you see.

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      Independent to take control of BuzzFeed and HuffPost in UK and Ireland

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March, 2024 - 16:17

    Media companies to combine publishing and advertising platforms to target gen Z and millennials

    The Independent will take control of BuzzFeed and HuffPost in the UK and Ireland with the intention to create “Britain’s biggest publisher network for Gen Z and millennial audiences”, the publishers have said.

    The two media companies will combine their publishing, data and advertising platforms “to allow commercial partners to seamlessly buy across their sites”.

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      World’s heaviest commercial communications satellite will launch tonight

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 26 July, 2023 - 22:09

    SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket stands on Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center before the launch of the Jupiter 3 communications satellite.

    Enlarge / SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket stands on Launch Complex 39A at NASA's Kennedy Space Center before the launch of the Jupiter 3 communications satellite. (credit: Trevor Mahlmann/Ars Technica)

    The heaviest commercial communications satellite ever built is folded up for launch on top of a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket Wednesday night from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

    This satellite, owned by EchoStar and built by Maxar, tips the scales at about 9.2 metric tons, or more than 20,000 pounds. SpaceX's Falcon Heavy will propel the spacecraft on its way toward an operating position in geostationary orbit more than 22,000 miles (nearly 36,000 kilometers) over the equator.

    The action will begin at 11:04 p.m. EDT (03:04 UTC) with the ignition of the Falcon Heavy's 27 main engines on Launch Complex 39A. A few moments later, the Falcon Heavy will climb away from its launch pad and head downrange toward the east from the Kennedy Space Center. You can watch SpaceX's live webcast below.

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