• 5 Posts
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Joined 4 months ago
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Cake day: August 10th, 2025

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  • They do sometimes have useful and pertinent information, sure. But they also are screamingly wrong about a lot of stuff. They rate the New York Times as highly factual when they absolutely are not (“They are considered one of the most reliable sources for news information due to proper sourcing and well-respected journalists/editors. The failed fact checks were on Op-Eds and not straight news reporting.”), they rate MSNBC and Al Jazeera as “mixed” which is the same as the New York Post, they put Newsweek above both of them at “mostly factual” (“We also rate them as Mostly Factual in reported rather than high due to having to make corrections on false information after publication.”)… they’re just kind of generally all over the place.

    It is more or less just one guy and his subjective impressions of each source, which normally would be semi-okay even if far inferior to Wikipedia’s consensus and analysis based community approach, but that one guy also has some flagrant biases (chief among them that a source has to be pro-Israel in order to be “factual” in his world.)





  • Hmm… you might actually be right. The article covers real events, but I reread it after your comment and I think the choice of emphasis and the things they chose to include are definitely at least a little odd.

    they suspected many far-right accounts are actually foreign individuals cosplaying as Western reactionaries to farm clicks

    That’s not what most people suspected.

    many of the site’s most prominent far-right nationalists are actually international grifters

    (Then the screenshot of someone claiming to be from Russia, who was actually based in Ireland. Which is backwards from the way that most of these have been working.)

    It was difficult to prove this, as Twitter is incredibly buggy, so sometimes different people have different user experiences.

    Then focusing repeatedly on the US government as the main culprit, when that’s not the data that most people have been observing.

    I think you are right.


  • So, I don’t really know what’s up with the Tel Aviv thing. I think pretty much every story I have seen about this gets one important thing wrong though. Look at this MAGA heat map:

    I’m almost sure that what you’re seeing there is residential proxies. It didn’t completely make sense to me that so much was centered in India (and also that we see random other countries that aren’t all that geopolitically active featured in the data). Seeing the map makes it obvious (to me) though: Someone is buying up proxy services from places where they can be had for cheap, and then running their fake accounts through those proxies.

    I don’t think we actually know where the call is coming from, although the geographic distribution and the fact that some of them showed in Russia represents a strong hint.






  • How you not gonna do the reveal

    Leck mich im Arsch g’schwindi, g’schwindi
    Leck im Arsch mich g’schwindi
    Leck mich, leck mich, leck mich, leck mich, leck mich
    Leck mich, leck mich, leck
    G’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi
    G’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi
    Leck mich im Arsch g’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi
    G’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi, g’schwindi
    Leck mich im Arsch g’schwindi, g’schwindi
    Leck im Arsch mich
    Leck mich im Arsch g’schwindi
    Leck mich

    Translation:

    Lick me in the ass, quickly, quickly
    Lick (in the) ass me, quickly
    Lick me, lick me, lick me…
    Quickly, quickly, quickly…

    And so on, you get the idea