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19 Apr 01:31

Leaked Sony e-mails reveal intent to nab Smash Bros. film rights

by Sam Machkovech

The fallout from Sony Pictures' giant e-mail leak in late 2014 continued after WikiLeaks began hosting the infamous collection of messages and attachments on Thursday. As a result, some of the leak's smaller revelations have begun coming to light. Among those is a series of messages about an interesting Sony Pictures plan: to acquire the film rights to the Super Smash Bros. game franchise and other Nintendo properties.

Two messages addressed to former Sony Pictures co-chair Amy Pascal—who stepped down shortly after the leak—referenced Nintendo's fan-service fighting series by name. One of those, sent in February 2014, referred to a "full court press" about the series, along with a meeting with producer Avi Arad who had been "planning to meet with his Nintendo guy (who he has been courting for a couple of years) when he goes to Japan." The other, sent directly to Arad by Pascal, was a November link to a story about the then-upcoming Amiibo toy line, which she described as an "interesting bit on Smash Brothers."

An untitled February e-mail conversation between Arad and Pascal was more vague; it referred to a "five year chase" of trying to lock down film rights to characters in the Mario, Zelda, and Donkey Kong series—all of whom figure in Smash Bros., among other games. Another vague e-mail, sent in July by Arad to Pascal, talked about a trip he was taking to Japan: "I am going to try and bring back a little plumber," he wrote. "I guess we can all use our pipes cleaned." He then asked whether Pascal was also interested in Pokemon, "the other property I am working on with Nintendo," and added that he was looking forward to "our big, big project."

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19 Apr 01:30

The FTC wants your feedback on companies like Airbnb and Uber

by Micah Singleton

The Federal Trade Commission is holding a workshop to discuss the sharing economy, made up by companies like Airbnb and Uber, and it wants to know what you think about your rights as a consumer. The workshop will discuss "competition, consumer protection, and economic issues" in the sharing economy, and talk about whether current regulations can handle an industry that the FTC believes will generate as much as $110 billion a year in the near future.

You can submit your thoughts on the sharing economy to the FTC until May 26th

"We are seeing a dramatic growth in products and services that are built on peer-to-peer platforms, such as ride-sharing and property rentals, as more entrepreneurs harness the power of technology to reach more consumers," FTC Chairwoman Edith Ramirez said in a statement. "The resulting business models have great potential to benefit our economy and consumers. Through our workshop, we want to better understand the competitive impact of these new business models, as well as their interactions with existing regulatory frameworks."

But before the workshop begins on June 9th, the FTC would like to hear your thoughts on questions it has deemed relevant to the sharing economy. Do you think companies like Uber or Lyft should be responsible for any injuries sustained while riding in one of their cars? How reliable is Airbnb's rating system, and is it susceptible to bias? Should your score on one sharing platform affect another? You can submit all of your thoughts on the sharing economy to the FTC until May 26th right here.

19 Apr 01:30

Scientists Locate Sunken, Radioactive Aircraft Carrier Off California Coast

by Soulskill
HughPickens.com writes: Aaron Kinney reports in the San Jose Mercury News that scientists have captured the first clear images of the USS Independence, a radioactivity-polluted World War II aircraft carrier that rests on the ocean floor 30 miles off the coast of Half Moon Bay. The Independence saw combat at Wake Island and other decisive battles against Japan in 1944 and 1945 and was later blasted with radiation in two South Pacific nuclear tests. Assigned as a target vessel for the Operation Crossroads atomic bomb tests, she was placed within one-half-mile of ground zero and was engulfed in a fireball and heavily damaged during the 1946 nuclear weapons tests at Bikini Atoll. The veteran ship did not sink, however (though her funnels and island were crumpled by the blast), and after taking part in another explosion on 25 July, the highly radioactive hull was later taken to Pearl Harbor and San Francisco for further tests and was finally scuttled off the coast of San Francisco, California, on 29 January 1951. "This ship is an evocative artifact of the dawn of the atomic age, when we began to learn the nature of the genie we'd uncorked from the bottle," says James Delgado. "It speaks to the 'Greatest Generation' — people's fathers, grandfathers, uncles and brothers who served on these ships, who flew off those decks and what they did to turn the tide in the Pacific war." Delgado says he doesn't know how many drums of radioactive material are buried within the ship — perhaps a few hundred. But he is doubtful that they pose any health or environmental risk. The barrels were filled with concrete and sealed in the ship's engine and boiler rooms, which were protected by thick walls of steel. The carrier itself was clearly "hot" when it went down and and it was packed full of fresh fission products and other radiological waste at the time it sank. The Independence was scuttled in what is now the Gulf of the Farallones sanctuary, a haven for wildlife, from white sharks to elephant seals and whales. Despite its history as a dumping ground Richard Charter says the radioactive waste is a relic of a dark age before the enviornmental movement took hold. "It's just one of those things that humans rather stupidly did in the past that we can't retroactively fix.""

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19 Apr 01:29

Copyright claims asserted in viral video of cop shooting fleeing suspect

by David Kravets
This video and others of the shooting have not been ordered removed from YouTube, at least not yet. Warning: graphic content.

The April 4 viral video of a South Carolina police officer shooting a fleeing suspect has cost the cop his job and his freedom. But there's now another cost attached to the video, perhaps in the $10,000 range or more. A publicist for the man who captured the footage—which led to homicide charges against North Charleston officer Michael Slager— says news outlets must pay a licensing fee to carry the footage.

Australian publicist Max Markson, the chief executive of celebrity management firm Markson Sparks, told The New York Times that “I think that the people who might be put off by this are the media outlets that had it for free. Now they will have to pay.” Markson did not respond to Ars' requests for comment.

The New York Daily News said that Markson Sparks has sent cease-and-desist letters to several unnamed news outlets.

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19 Apr 01:28

No joke: Google’s April Fool’s prank inadvertently broke site’s security

by Dan Goodin

An April Fool's prank Google pulled two weeks ago inadvertently broke some of the site's security, an error that briefly allowed so-called click-jacking exploits that trick users into performing undesired actions such as changing their user preferences.

Google's April Fool's pranks have become a favorite pastime on the Internet. This year, people who visited the site on April 1 found the entire contents of Google's iconic home page displayed backwards. Web developing nerds also found a comment in the web page itself that read "!sLooF LIRPA YPPAH," which spells "Happy April Fool's" backward. According to a blog post published Friday by researchers from Netcraft, the prank also caused Google's homepage to omit a crucial header that's used to prevent click-jacking attacks.

Attackers could have seized on the omission of the X-Frame-Options header to change a user's search settings, including turning off SafeSearch filters. The chief reason for using X-Frame-Options is to prevent the use of HTML iframe tags to display Google's homepage on third-party Web pages. With that protection bypassed, attackers were free to stitch the Google page into their own site and embed hidden code that changed the function of certain links. As the Netcraft blog post explained:

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19 Apr 01:23

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19 Apr 01:23

nprbooks: Via the fine folks at Electric Lit – How to Name Your...



nprbooks:

Via the fine folks at Electric Lit – How to Name Your Big Important Novel. Apparently mine is The Left Hand of Anxiety of the d’Urbervilles, which is, I dunno, weirdly appropriate?

– Petra

Tender is the Anxiety Mockingbird?

…Nope.

19 Apr 01:22

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19 Apr 01:20

sevenknotwind: its a little thing, but the little things add...



sevenknotwind:

its a little thing, but the little things add up…
advertisers used to at least have to play the game a little, contribute to the community, become embedded in tumblr…

“It’s styled like our notes and follower notifications—something familiar, unintrusive, and decidedly clickable. And what it links to deepens the engagement: An exclusive tab on the Explore page, one of the most trafficked and engaging pages on Tumblr.You fill the tab with content. Your own, someone else’s, or a mix of the two. It’s a wall of whatever content suits your brand. You don’t even need a blog to have a Day. “

so just to clarify, we create the content, we distribute and redistribute the content, we give it a value with our attention and now it is even easier for a corporate brand to blend their messages in amongst our content without having to contribute anything to the community. Brands can now essentially use our images to surreptitiously sell us shit/indoctrinate us to their brand by association with this imagery and content.

…and we should be honored that they want to use our images for free
(I mean technically not for free because someone is getting paid it just won’t be us)



I guess this is how you monetize an ‘art experiment’
this is the cost of admission, this is what we pay to play here.


19 Apr 01:20

Journey to the Center of the Earth, John Spies


https://500px.com/john13


https://500px.com/john13


https://500px.com/john13


https://500px.com/john13


https://500px.com/john13


https://500px.com/john13

Journey to the Center of the Earth, John Spies

19 Apr 01:19

ivyblossom: beggars-opera: Best of A Classical Dictionary of...





















ivyblossom:

beggars-opera:

Best of A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, 1st and 2nd editions (1785 and 1788), Part 4 (Social Just-Ass Edition)

It’s been suggested that “huffle” is probably the same thing as “bagpipe”. Which is most likely a blowjob, because, well, just think about that visual 

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3

This brings new meaning to “Hufflepuff,” I have to say. 

For “huffle” the OED gives “to blow, fan (into flames), inflate,” and secondary meanings “to puff up, elevate, or inflate with pride”. Huffling is “blowing, blustering, swelling.” So the blowjob suggestion for the slang term sounds perfectly likely.

Meanwhile, interestingly, “huff-pufft” means “inflated, puffed up.” (Disclosure: the Hat sorted me into Hufflepuff. I’d have thought Ravenclaw myself, but wtf do I know.)

19 Apr 01:04

D&D Starter Set at Walmart

I'm not sure if this constitutes news, not being particularly familiar with where Dungeons & Dragons is sold in the US. I asked Twitter and responses were mixed, so I figured I'd report it anyway and folks could ignore it if it wasn't news. The D&D Starter Set has been spotted by EN World member darjr in Nebraska at a Walmart. Some folks say they've never seen D&D at Walmart, and others are saying they've seen it there before. I've never seen a Walmart, so I'm in no place to comment!

[Above text by Morrus; darjr's post promtoed to news article]

17 Apr 21:00

Dog flu outbreak gained foothold at urban doggie day cares - Houston Chronicle

by gguillotte
Experts say doggie day care contributed to an outbreak of dog flu in Chicago that is spreading in the Midwest. The illness is believed to be caused by an Asian viral strain, which could arise in other U.S. urban areas. In Chicago, it gained a foothold in the doggie day care centers and got an extra boost from spring break when pets were boarded in kennels. Experts at Cornell University's College of Veterinary Medicine say the H3N2 dog flu virus likely arose from viruses circulating in live bird markets in Asia. Before now, the strain hadn't been seen in North America. That suggests a recent introduction from Asia.
17 Apr 21:00

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17 Apr 21:00

bassiumortis: Archetypal Symbolism and Etymology of Baphomet



bassiumortis:

Archetypal Symbolism and Etymology of Baphomet

17 Apr 20:59

kuueater: NO THANKS I’M FROM MASSACHUSETTS

firehose

video



kuueater:

NO THANKS I’M FROM MASSACHUSETTS

17 Apr 20:59

Journalism ethicists sound off on Florida paper’s gyrocopter coverage

by gguillotte
That question has been bouncing around newsrooms since the Tampa Bay Times posted its story about the Florida man who planned to pilot his gyrocopter to the U.S. Capitol building — an hour before he landed. “I’m of the opinion that if you knew someone was going to commit a felony and potentially harm other people, you have a civic obligation to report that,” Al Tompkins, senior faculty at the Poynter Institute, said in an interview with Yahoo News. “I don’t have a need to protect somebody who intends to be a criminal.”
17 Apr 20:58

liberalsarecool: Corporate welfare is subsidized by our taxes....



liberalsarecool:

Corporate welfare is subsidized by our taxes. Corporations avoiding taxes passes on the burden of running the country, while the losses in tax revenues are used to cut social programs. These tax avoidance schemes have to end. 

(NOTE: Yearly tuition for all US students totals $60 billion)

17 Apr 20:58

doyouthinkimspoopy: doyouthinkimspoopy: hey, just as a head’s up, if you click the ‘embrace your...

doyouthinkimspoopy:

doyouthinkimspoopy:

hey, just as a head’s up, if you click the ‘embrace your uncomfort zone’ thing it brings you to a page of fitspo kind of stuff which i know can be kind of not good for some people so yeah

also if you wanna get rid of the banner for the ‘embrace your uncomfort zone’ thing so it’s not there all the time you can add both

tumblr.com##.banner_notification_inner.stretchy_kid.clearfix

tumblr.com##.stretchy_kid_container

to your adblock plus filters and it should go away

17 Apr 20:51

Questions and Answers

by David Salo
firehose

Whoa shit! New Midgardsmal posts!

Fuck you ThOR, this feed isn't dead! Eat shit

I get a lot of questions about particular lines of dialogue in The Hobbit films, requests to translate and so forth. I would like to comply, but unfortunately I don’t have a complete script of all the films, or even DVDs, and even under the best of conditions it would be difficult to figure out which of the lines I contributed were actually used, and if so, where.

So I’m going to start doing the next best thing. I will start recording all of the lines I wrote for the film on this blog, with some analysis, though I may have to trade off thoroughness for quantity.

So here’s a start, with some of the Dwarvish lines, since these tended to be earlier and may, I guess, be a little more interesting than some of the other languages.

Ifridîzun
“Ready yourselves!”
Root √frd “prepare, make ready”
Imperative 2pm. ifridî
Pronominal suffix 2pm. -zun
Hence “you prepare yourselves”

Urâd Zirnul
“Iron Hills”
Root √ʔrd, singular urd “hill”, pl. urâd
Root √zrn, zirin “iron” (the metal) + adjectival ending -ul, with syncope of zirin > zirn.
I think this may never have been used in the films, and if so, might be considered slightly apocryphal. I would probably think twice about using the same word for both Erebor and the Emyn Engrin. Unless, from the Dwarvish perspective, the term relates not to the size of the rock visible above ground, but the extent of the caverns delved out underground.

Akkâ Belkulu Dain-Uzbad
“Lord Dáin’s Mighty Force”
Root √kʔ “have power” adapted to the (fairly common) aCCâC abstract noun pattern; here it appears that the glottal stop assimilates to a preceding k, i.e. *akʔâ (or perhaps *akʔâʔ; I can’t find any counter-examples) > akkâ.
Root √blk “be mighty, be strong” > belk “might, strength, power” + -ul > belkul “mighty, of might” + -u object suffix, as the “mighty force” is the object of Dáin’s azbâd — i.e., that thing which he rules or governs.

Ifthuzirin
“Ironfoot”
Nominal root √ʔfth “foot” > ifth “foot.” The following -u is not the objective ending, but rather a (rarely seen) construct ending which links it to a following noun taken as a genitive or attributive.
Ifthu-zirin = “foot-of-iron.”

Khuzd belkul
“A mighty dwarf”
Khuzd “dwarf,” belkul “mighty” (as above).

17 Apr 20:38

raidillons: mrrobotico: fuck-social-justice-blogs:pervocracy: ...

firehose

there was a whole blog of recipes where someone disassembled mcdonalds' meals and reassembled them into haute cuisine, and almost every one of them leaned on boiling down coke to reuse it as a glaze/sweetner/gravy/filling

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.









raidillons:

mrrobotico:

fuck-social-justice-blogs:

pervocracy:

snailchimera:

geekgirlsmash:

xekstrin:

comfemgem:

verycooltrash:

huffingtonpost:

Don’t know if we can look at Coke every the same way again. Be prepared to cringe when you watch the full video  here. 

sugar caramelizes when heated, more shocking news to follow

It’s like that guy setting coffee creamer on fire and being like “people drink this stuff!” and it’s like yeah, a dry powder suspended in air is flammable, shock horror.

#i saw a video about how hotdogs are made #PORKCHOP LEFTOVERS OH NOOOOO #??? #get it together people

Never show these guys how candy is made, they’ll shit themselves.

*quietly facepalms forever*

I hate when people try to prove foods are unhealthy using properties utterly unrelated to their value as foods.  You can make anything sound gross if you want to.

Did you know that salt is the same chemical we use to defrost sidewalks?!?!

Did you know that water is a major component in pig urine?!?!

Did you know that bread is made of wheat that has been ground into a powder and artificially reconstituted into a loaf shape using a fungus?!?!

Did u know that oxygen is what Hitler used to breathe?????

Bless all this

my favorite one of these ever was the “TEA IS JUST LEAF WATER” and every time i make tea at work i think about it and snicker

17 Apr 19:19

Elizabeth Warren may not be running, but she's in 2016 race anyway (+video) - Christian Science Monitor

firehose

'There are multiple reasons for Mrs. Clinton to hug the left. First, she needs Senator Warren’s supporters to get excited about her – and not just vote for her grudgingly in the general election. She needs them to donate and volunteer. If enough Warren enthusiasts sit this election out, Clinton could have a hard time winning.

Warren’s appeal stems in part from her ability to articulate the concerns and aspirations of working Americans. Though a former Harvard Law professor, she comes from humble roots in Oklahoma, the daughter of a janitor. Clinton grew up in middle-class comfort in suburban Chicago and is now quite wealthy. Warren often calls herself a “fighter” – just as Clinton is now doing.

Second among reasons for Clinton to go left: There’s always the possibility that Warren will change her mind and get into the race, especially if Clinton appears to falter seriously. The Ready for Warren draft campaign is alive and well – and still organizing. The group is about to unveil “Environmental Activists for Warren,” the latest sign that environmentalists fear that Clinton “won’t take a strong stand on the issues they care most about," National Journal reports. For starters, her stand on the Keystone XL pipeline is unclear.

Third, it may be that a “liberalizing” of the Clinton brand is the way to go in November 2016, not just the primaries.

“This is going to be a battle for the middle class,” says Democratic strategist Peter Fenn. “So I think that this is a good general election strategy, as well as a good primary strategy.”'


Christian Science Monitor

Elizabeth Warren may not be running, but she's in 2016 race anyway (+video)
Christian Science Monitor
Hillary Clinton has struck a populist tone in her early days as a presidential candidate, and at times, she sounds like liberal darling Elizabeth Warren. There's a reason for that. By Linda Feldmann, Staff writer April 15, 2015. About video ads. Washington — Sen ...

and more »
17 Apr 06:14

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17 Apr 05:22

Poor internet for poor people: Why Facebook’s Internet.org amounts to economic racism

by Mahesh Murthy
India-netneutrality-Zuckerberg-Internetorg

Perhaps you’ve been following the news from the digital front in India—there’s been a significant movement in support of net neutrality.

This is the concept that holds, among other things, that all bits and bytes should be treated the same on all telco and carrier networks, so that all users can have their experience of exactly the same internet, with no bias for or against any site for any reason.

Over 750,000 emails have been to the Telecom Authority of India (TRAI), the telecom regulator, from http://savetheinternet.in in the last week. This in itself is unprecedented. (Savetheinternet.in is a webpage created as a platform for consumers to send their responses to TRAI.)

Deep distrust of Zero, in the land that invented it.

One sidelight that has assumed much larger proportions now is the status of “Zero Rating” services. Simply put, these are products where a set of websites are bundled and users get to surf them for free, because the bandwidth in these cases is paid to the operator by the sites themselves.

Two of the more infamous zero offerings are Airtel Zero and Facebook’s Internet.org.

The Airtel offering has been trying to present itself as a “marketing platform for apps.” You might say, so what’s the problem with that? Look at it this way—if internet access is offered for free, then one can assume that folks will rush to spend time there—and many of these folks will be the economically less-advantaged ones. There’s no other part of the internet they can go to from here 

Once they log in, though, they’ll end up seeing only a handful of sites that have typically paid a large chunk of money to be there. And those that have paid these placement fees essentially now sit at the ‘front door’ of the internet to these newbie users —and they will raise their prices to make back the hefty fees they’ve paid to get their prime spots. Also, from the user’s point of view, there’s no other part of the internet they can go to from here.

In every way, from exploiting the poor, to being a restrictive trade practice because startups won’t have a chance to be discovered by users via word of mouth because they can’t afford the placement fees, to simply denying the wonder and the width of the internet to the young and knowledge-hungry—this practice is terrible.

And 750,000 people thought so too, to write to the government to stop it.

Both the Zero services—Airtel’s and Facebook’s—have had bad days lately, with Flipkart leaving the former and a line of Indian internet firms: Cleartrip, NewsHunt, NDTV and Times Group (partly) leaving the latter.

Zuckerberg defends his apparent charity

While the telcos—especially Airtel—hide behind their increasingly harried-sounding industry group the Cellular Operators Association of India, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook decided to go on the offence with an “editorial piece” in a leading newspaper where he tried to defend his product Internet.org as some sort of world-changing corporate social responsibility (CSR) effort born from the goodness of his heart.

Internet.org is slightly different from the Airtel product. While Airtel guys are open that they’re launching Zero to make money because they say they don’t make enough right now— last years’ net profits of Rs9,500 crores ($1.5 billion) notwithstanding, Zuckerberg is slightly more subtle.

Here’s how the scheme works. Facebook approaches a telco—in India’s case, Reliance—and offers to pay them the bandwidth costs of serving Facebook site and a small group of other sites.

So when the poor, who in theory can’t afford a net connection come to the Facebook Zero service confusingly called Internet.org, they’re made to believe they’re on the internet while in reality they’re only on Facebook and a few hand-picked sites.

And the sites too are picked in secret under some unknown process. For instance, Facebook chose to offer the distant-second search engine Bing instead of industry-leading Google. Why? Is it rivalry with Google? Or because of Microsoft’s stake in Facebook? And then Facebook’s Zero product features a tiny job site like Babajob instead of the industry-leading Naukri. Why? So that the poor have fewer job options? No one knows. Facebook doesn’t feature YouTube—the largest video site in the world and an immense education resource —but allows its own videos in full. It doesn’t really look like charity any more, does it?  Internet.org offers the distant-second search engine Bing instead of Google. Why? 

Indian journalist Nikhil Pahwa has responded to Zuckerberg’s editorial, by pointing out research after research that shows zero services around the world universally tend to do badly for the people who use them. It all seems to amount to economic racism—exploiting the poor in under-developed parts of the world to become your customers under the guise of some apparent charitable purpose. While offering them a shoddy, stunted version of the real thing. As Vijay Shekhar Sharma, founder of payments app PayTM, puts it: “It’s poor internet for poor people”.

In perfect irony, Zuckerberg talks about seeing the wonder of a kid in a remote Indian village discovering the power of the internet. The upshot being that if Zuckerberg—himself a child prodigy—ever was brought up on internet.org, he couldn’t have ever built a Facebook.

Internet Dot Org neither offers the internet to its users—nor is a dot org, denoting a charitable organisation. It just seems to be a cloaked proxy for the Facebook Economically Disadvantaged User Acquisition Department.

Indian political leaders reject the charity

Two of the more digitally astute Indian politicians—Naveen Patnaik of Odisha and Arvind Kejriwal of Delhi state— who together represent more than 60 million Indians—have weighed in against Facebook and Airtel’s Zero efforts.

The Odisha Chief Minister says in his letter to the regulator that “While the underprivileged deserve much more than what is available, nobody should decide what exactly are their requirements. If you dictate what the poor should get, you take away their rights to choose what they think is best for them.”

The Aam Aadmi Party says: “The Aam Aadmi Party believes that the innovative youth of this country will give us the next Google, Facebook or Whatsapp.  However, if some websites or applications or services are offered free or at faster speeds, the balance tips towards established players with deeper pockets which kills the innovative young start-ups that will emanate from this ecosystem.”

The ruling party, the BJP, has made noises about net neutrality and non-discriminatory availability of the internet, it’s still adopting a wait-and watch attitude to the actual regulation process.

Neutrality in Silicon Valley, but not in Araku Valley

Meanwhile the heat is turning up on other Silicon Valley firms who are part of these Zero efforts. Google, which led a loud battle in the US for net neutrality, has quietly been part of the Airtel Zero product in India, in shining hypocricy to its stance in the West. Twitter has done the same too, managing to speak out of both sides of its mouth, being part of the Airtel Zero plan in India while singing hosannas to neutrality in the US.

While Airtel has a long history of playing fast and loose with customers, one wonders why Facebook had to do this. Perhaps the flat stock price is one reason.

While Facebook and Google have pretty much the same number of users —around 1.3 billion worldwide—the former makes $12 billion off them and the latter makes $66 billion—a full 5 times more per user. Not being able to bridge this gap, it probably figured it had to do all it can to increase that number of users—while not letting them go to Google for search. Google, which led a loud battle in the US for net neutrality, has quietly been part of the Airtel Zero. 

Ergo, Internet.org, all dressed up as some well-meaning Silicon Valley philanthropy.

We’ll never know, though. But it increasingly looks like India is saying “thanks, but no thanks” to Facebook and Airtel’s Zero efforts.

Perhaps the only way the second world and the third world can grow is to behave like they’re first world nations, and demand to be treated on par with every other netizen in the world.

Oh, we’re not done yet. The battle still rages. And it doesn’t look like Facebook and Airtel are done yet.

Follow Mahesh on Twitter @maheshmurthy. This post first appeared on LinkedIn.com. We welcome your comments at ideas.india@qz.com.

This article is a part of Quartz India. For more, follow this link.
17 Apr 05:22

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firehose

this fucking episode



17 Apr 05:21

thesylverlining:harmalade:gender is like the sun and the moon. the sun is the opposite of the moon...

Courtney shared this story from Super Opinionated.

thesylverlining:

harmalade:

gender is like the sun and the moon. the sun is the opposite of the moon because, well, there they are. 

then when you get older, and you find out that the sun is a star, and that there are so many of them, too many to count, and many of them larger than our sun. And moons, too, and now it seems ridiculous that we call the moon “the moon” when many planets have moons, not just one either, but lots. And there are planets we don’t even know about that have suns and moons that we don’t even know about.

and still, even knowing this, it’s hard to let go of the sun and moon being opposites, because the sun and the moon are the most visible, and now almost all of the starlight at nighttime has been stifled by light pollution and smog.

but gender is more like—if we did blot out all the stars as a byproduct of “progress” and then we said “Yes, the sun is a star, but there is only one star. Look at the sky, all there is is the sun and the moon. Don’t make things up.”

thought this was gonna be some neo-wiccan cissexist foolishness but very pleasantly surprised. Nice. Gender is endless and beautiful and largely obscured by the pollution of “progress.”

17 Apr 05:20

5 family members shot and killed in Phoenix murder-suicide

firehose

the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun

Three brothers, the mother of the brothers and one of the men's wives all died from gunshot wounds, Crump said. Police believe one of the brothers killed his four family members and then turned the gun on himself. The ages of the victims range from 28 to 75, Crump said.

The fatal fight was first reported when one of the brother's wives escaped out the back of the home with two children — one 3, one less than a year old — and called police. Crump said cops heard gunshots in the background when the woman called.

17 Apr 05:15

"A guy who goes around saying “I’m a feminist” usually has an agenda that is not feminist."

firehose

via Toaster Strudel

“A guy who goes around saying “I’m a feminist” usually has an agenda that is not feminist.”

-

Joss Whedon, in an Interview with Vulture

image

(via radsocfem)

Isnt this the same man who went on a tirade about how he hates the word feminist itself because it implies an “agenda”

17 Apr 01:20

Plant a tree in Portland, get credit on water/sewer bills. Treebate deadline is April 30.

17 Apr 01:09

Presenting the one-man alley-oop of the year

by Bill Hanstock
firehose

literal baller masterclass

You're going to want to watch this a few times.

This happened during an ACC barnstorming tour in North Carolina. Angelo Sharpless is the man embarrassing that dude's entire bloodline. He's a former Harlem Globetrotter, you know. I bet you couldn't tell.