Having a smartphone means never again having to choose between tumbling and pooping.
I am reading his on the toilet. TO THE FUTURE!
Having a smartphone means never again having to choose between tumbling and pooping.
I am reading his on the toilet. TO THE FUTURE!
npr:
HAPPY BIRTHDAY LEONARD NIMOY!
Leonard Nimoy is 81 years old today.
He got his start in science fiction long before he became famous as Spock on Star Trek.
Watch this Pioneers of Television clip in which Nimoy discusses his early B-movie, Zombies of the Stratosphere.Live long and prosper.
Ming Doyle has done a lot of my favourite things, but this comic about a kid at Comic-Con might just top the list.
laughing my ass off
“He’ll fucking gay-marry all the dudes up in there like a smooth-ass motherfucker.” This is so funny.
Green arrow was my face as a kid because everyone else liked green lantern. Plus, that hat? Flippin’ awesome hat.
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A Facebook moderator explaining why he quit his job monitoring content on the social network. Via The Daily Telegraph, The dark side of Facebook.
Background: Facebook outsources much of its content moderation around the world. There are privacy concerns, of course, but here’s how it generally works:
Last month, 21-year-old Amine Derkaoui gave an interview to Gawker, an American media outlet. Derkaoui had spent three weeks working in Morocco for oDesk, one of the outsourcing companies used by Facebook. His job, for which he claimed he was paid around $1 an hour, involved moderating photos and posts flagged as unsuitable by other users.
“It must be the worst salary paid by Facebook,” he told The Daily Telegraph this week. “And the job itself was very upsetting – no one likes to see a human cut into pieces every day.”
Derkaoui is not exaggerating. An articulate man, he described images of animal abuse, butchered bodies and videos of fights. Other moderators, mainly young, well-educated people working in Asia, Africa and Central America, have similar stories…
…Of course, not all of the unsuitable material on the site is so graphic. Facebook operates a fascinatingly strict set of guidelines determining what should be deleted. Pictures of naked private parts, drugs (apart from marijuana) and sexual activity (apart from foreplay) are all banned. Male nipples are OK, but naked breastfeeding is not. Photographs of bodily fluids (except semen) are allowed, but not if a human being is also shown. Photoshopped images are fine, but not if they show someone in a negative light.
Once something is reported by a user, the moderator sitting at his computer in Morocco or Mexico has three options: delete it; ignore it; or escalate it, which refers it back to a Facebook employee in California (who will, if necessary, report it to the authorities).
(via futurejournalismproject)
(Source: futurejournalismproject)