Non-IT News Thread
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@mlnews Sounds very interesting
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YouTube bans comments on all videos of children
YouTube will switch off comments on almost all videos featuring under-18s, in an attempt to "better protect children and families".
The BBC first reported that paedophiles were leaving explicit comments on YouTube videos back in 2017.As well as leaving obscene or sexual comments, they were also using the comments section to signal content of interest to other pedophiles.
At the time, YouTube said it was "working urgently" to clean up the site.
However, in February this year advertisers including AT&T, Nestle and Hasbro suspended their ads after more predatory activity was found. -
@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
YouTube bans comments on all videos of children
YouTube will switch off comments on almost all videos featuring under-18s, in an attempt to "better protect children and families".
The BBC first reported that paedophiles were leaving explicit comments on YouTube videos back in 2017.As well as leaving obscene or sexual comments, they were also using the comments section to signal content of interest to other pedophiles.
At the time, YouTube said it was "working urgently" to clean up the site.
However, in February this year advertisers including AT&T, Nestle and Hasbro suspended their ads after more predatory activity was found.I heard about this! I also heard that like one Youtuber may have started adpocalypse part2. Basically going on random videos with kids , going to the comments sections and letting the advertisers that were on those videos know what was going on. Which sparked a lot of demonetization.
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HBO boss quits as owner AT&T seeks more shows and more profit
Richard Plepler, 28-year veteran of HBO, was reportedly frustrated by new owner.
Plepler worked at HBO for nearly 28 years, serving as chairman and CEO since 2013 and as co-president from 2007 to 2013. He struck a positive tone in his memo. "Thanks to all of you, we are today churning on all cylinders both creatively and as a business," he wrote. "Thanks to all of you, I can move on to the next chapter of my life knowing that the best team in the industry remains here to carry on our continued progress and success."
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Amazon to open all-new grocery stores separate from Whole Foods
Dozens of new stores are in the works, and the first may open before 2019's end.
Amazon reportedly feels confident enough in its grocery-store quests to branch out into new ventures. According to a report by The Wall Street Journal, Amazon plans to open dozens of new grocery stores that will be distinctly different from the company's Whole Foods Market stores. The retail giant has reportedly already signed leases for some locations and plans to open the new grocery stores in cities across the country, including San Francisco, Seattle, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Washington DC.
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SpaceX astronaut capsule demo for Nasa lifts off
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-47414390 -
Tornadoes kill at least 23 in Lee County, Alabama
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-47436809 -
Soon, hundreds of tourists will go to space. What should we call them?
Astronauts or astro-nots?
In the last three months, Virgin Galactic has completed two crewed test flights above 80km. And with its flight-tested New Shepard launch system, Blue Origin remains on track to blast its own people into space later this year. Both spacecraft can carry up to six passengers. Neither company has begun commercial operations, but these flights appear imminent. Later this year, suborbital space tourism should finally transition from long-promised to something you can do if you're rich enough. Next year, we will likely see dozens of commercial flights.
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There’s fresh evidence for what happened to people who survived Vesuvius
Archaeologist studied tomb inscriptions and matched names to historical records.
Modern visitors to the ruins of the two main cities destroyed by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD are usually enthralled when they see the site of plaster casts of those who were killed, frozen in the midst of action. The catastrophic eruption wiped out several nearby towns and killed thousands of people. But some survived, and Miami University archaeologist and historian Steven Tuck thinks he knows where they ended up. He created a database of Roman names and matched them with records from other cities in Italy, describing his findings in a forthcoming paper in the journal Analecta Romana.
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The perils of upgrading a particle detector buried in Antarctic ice
We talk to the operations manager of IceCube, Antarctica's biggest physics experiment.
The IceCube neutrino detector was an audacious design. The Super Kamiokande detector had shown that a huge mass of water could act as an effective particle detector. But that involved a giant tank built in a deep mine. IceCube would rely on a massive volume of water, but one that was put in place by nature: the Antarctic ice cap. Its location poses a large collection of challenges, from how to find hardware that can hold up to being buried in the ice, to how to get the data back out and someplace useful.
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Luke Perry just passed away according to TMZ. He had a massive stroke last week.
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Luke Perry just passed away according to TMZ. He had a massive stroke last week.
I heard about his stroke, and from what the news said he was in stable condition, apparently not if it's true that he passed away. . .
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@scottalanmiller said in Non-IT News Thread:
Luke Perry just passed away according to TMZ. He had a massive stroke last week.
Three different news are all reporting it
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EELV isn’t what it used to be: Air Force changes launch program name
SpaceX's success with reusable rockets has driven the name change.
Even before the space shuttle Challenger accident in 1986, the US military wanted access to space independent of the civilian space agency. But that accident spurred the Reagan administration to devise a National Space Launch Strategy that directed the military to develop a “mixed fleet” policy and ensure access to space by way of multiple vehicles.
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Steven Spielberg will campaign to bar streaming movies from the Oscars
Spielberg feels that films like Roma should be classified as TV movies instead.
A spokesperson for Amblin, the production company run by Director Steven Spielberg, has told IndieWire that Spielberg plans to support an effort to change the rules of the Oscars to bar some films primarily distributed via streaming platforms like Netflix from nomination for Academy Awards.
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@mlnews said in Non-IT News Thread:
Steven Spielberg will campaign to bar streaming movies from the Oscars
Spielberg feels that films like Roma should be classified as TV movies instead.
A spokesperson for Amblin, the production company run by Director Steven Spielberg, has told IndieWire that Spielberg plans to support an effort to change the rules of the Oscars to bar some films primarily distributed via streaming platforms like Netflix from nomination for Academy Awards.
Because he's own films can't stand on merit and so needs to ban the good movies from competing against him. This is what a sore loser looks like.
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We should start a campaign to bar films that don't primarily stream from the Oscars because they are a sad legacy format that isn't able to compete on merit.
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How about we just ban Spielberg? Or all awards shows?
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Sony begins refunding Anthem purchases in light of “full power down” reports
Reddit users, journalists have gotten refunds after asking Sony customer service.
The story begins with a scary "full" system crash mid-game, which doesn't just hard-lock the game or dump users into an error message and system menu. Instead, the crash completely powers down PS4 consoles, as if the power cord had been yanked out. That means a tap of the controller's "PS" button won't power the console back on. Once users press the system's power button, the PS4 reboots in a black, 480p-resolution screen to check for possible issues with corrupted memory. After that disk check, the console's menus remind users not to power down their systems in such an unsafe way.