Linktree. Make your link do more.
almost home
YOU ARE THE REASON
todays bird

pixel skylines
i don't do bad sauce passes
Monterey Bay Aquarium
noise dept.

if i look back, i am lost

@theartofmadeline
Sweet Seals For You, Always
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
Jules of Nature
Acquired Stardust

Product Placement

No title available

blake kathryn
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH

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@existentialfish
Linktree. Make your link do more.
via
(titusandronicustheband)
So this just happened on Fox News.
be careful out there
Who speaks for the establishment? This should be pretty self-explanatory but just in case… It’s a political cartoon about the general decay of countercultures and how over time they take on a “boutique” quality while coming to hypocritically embody the values they apparently stand against.
In time.
Spot on.
We have had a hard time thinking clearly about companies like Google and Facebook because we have never before had to deal with companies like Google and Facebook. They are something new in the world, and they don’t fit neatly into our existing legal and cultural templates. Because they operate at such unimaginable magnitude, carrying out millions of informational transactions every second, we’ve tended to think of them as vast, faceless, dispassionate computers — as information-processing machines that exist outside the realm of human intention and control. That’s a misperception, and a dangerous one. Modern computers and computer networks enable human judgment to be automated, to be exercised on a vast scale and at a breathtaking pace. But it’s still human judgment. Algorithms are constructed by people, and they reflect the interests, biases, and flaws of their makers. As Google’s founders themselves pointed out many years ago, an information aggregator operated for commercial gain will inevitably be compromised and should always be treated with suspicion. That is certainly true of a search engine that mediates our intellectual explorations; it is even more true of a social network that mediates our personal associations and conversations. Because algorithms impose on us the interests and biases of others, we have not only a right, but also an obligation to carefully examine and, when appropriate, judiciously regulate those algorithms. We have a right and an obligation to understand how we, and our information, are being manipulated. To ignore that responsibility, or to shirk it because it raises hard problems, is to grant a small group of people — the kind of people who carried out the Facebook and OKCupid experiments — the power to play with us at their whim.
Nicholas Carr, Los Angeles Review of Books. The Manipulators: Facebook’s Social Engineering Project.
FJP: For more on tech, media and algorithms, check our Algorithms Tag.
(via futurejournalismproject)
'Cause I am a panicky angry man. - Marc Maron
America. (via)
One of the main goals of competition in the media space is to preserve diversity of opinion … Diversity of ownership, diversity of opinion, is so vitally important to this democracy.
Pulitzer Prize-Winning columnist James Stewart scrutinizes Rupert Murdoch’s plan to take over Time Warner.
"We’re getting to a pretty serious point of concentrated ownership in the media."
(via mediamattersforamerica)
The queen of America
Steve Liesman just embarrasses tea party hero Rick Santelli today.
This really happened: A Fox News host shows off his cufflinks that portray a caveman dragging a woman by the hair.
THIS ACTUALLY HAPPENED ON A NEWS CHANNEL.
via
"This is the first time I’ve shared this publicly, and it makes me nervous. But the hashtag is called #YesAllWomen for a reason. This happened to me like it happens to many women. I’m not alone, and I don’t want anyone else to feel like they are. So here I am. #YesAllWomen. Yes, also me." Me,...
I can't even imagine the bravery this took. Do yourself a favor and read it.
Fox News logic… or lack thereof.
Hey that's me.