https://theintercept.com/2024/10/25/africom-microsoft-openai-military/ This reminds me of that Project Maven thing which the folks at Google really didn't want to get involved in.
https://apnews.com/article/jaywalking-legalized-new-york-6df1eacddfa5b7951a51dadc05a4ce6b I've never been a fan of banning jaywalking, so this looks good to me.
I think someone thought that the article was being too hard on a particular company. Anyway, the reaction was quite surprising.
There was also an incident a couple of years ago with the Vice blog.
One of the writers, I think it was someone called Emanuel, got into a social media spat with someone for... them mildly criticizing one of the articles, and he attacked them saying that they should be flattered that he would pay attention to them at all.
That said, these tend to be people with more expertise in a particular area, rather than a general current affairs blog as those others are.
I was following up on an old article from there to see if it was still live before making a post and I noticed that it's been bought up by... What appears to be some sort of AI firm.
The articles are gone.
If I start writing a blog, maybe I'll go a bit into this form of journalism, although honestly, I think it might be going downhill.
Vice went bankrupt.
Gawker's domain has expired.
"blasting into the ether"
Perhaps, a better way of putting it is that it's a lot like treating articles like shells in a barrel. They are fired off and not revisited. And then, they move onto firing more shots.
Unfortunately, this style of "journalism" has created the impression that this is how journalism is done, and you get copycat blogs like "404" (Vice inspired) which similarly blast content into the ether.
I've seen people rely on a couple of articles from the Vice Blog, but it's important to remember that they did not retract articles (or corrected them shortly after posting them), and they primarily shared current affairs without a lot of curation.
This is one reason why I don't use them as a source (although, I think Vice has gone bankrupt more recently).
"404". Vice News (the website, they used to be more honest by stating that it was a blog). Substack.
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