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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to jegga on last edited by
    #305

    @jegga Cheers. Looks interesting.

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    replied to jegga on last edited by Salacious Crumb
    #306

    @jegga said in Interesting reads:

    @Tim @MN5

    Not sure if you caught this,

    alexbelth

    Who Killed Jaco Pastorius?

    Who Killed Jaco Pastorius?

    He has a new record out from the tour where I was lucky to meet him. Came early to a club to grab a good table (there was no reserve seating), got in early enough to see him do a soundcheck. Right after he made a beeline to my table to show me and a friend photographs of his very young son. He had no pretensions about him, was a very tall guy, long hair, wore his headband, made eye-contact and began talking like he knew us. (Maybe he thought he did?) Miss him, happy to have the records. Have since learned he had an affair with Joni Mitchell when he was in her band. I might have asked him about it, if I’d known...

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #307

    Good (kinda scary) read.

    Are you ready? Here is all the data Facebook and Google have on you

    Mar 30, 2018  /  Opinion

    Are you ready? This is all the data Facebook and Google have on you | Dylan Curran

    Are you ready? This is all the data Facebook and Google have on you | Dylan Curran

    The harvesting of our personal details goes far beyond what many of us could imagine. So I braced myself and had a look

    Salacious CrumbS 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    replied to Bovidae on last edited by
    #308

    @bovidae

    Was amusing to me ‘cos I love Southland.

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #309

    @salacious-crumb said in Interesting reads:

    Good (kinda scary) read.

    Are you ready? Here is all the data Facebook and Google have on you

    Mar 30, 2018  /  Opinion

    Are you ready? This is all the data Facebook and Google have on you | Dylan Curran

    Are you ready? This is all the data Facebook and Google have on you | Dylan Curran

    The harvesting of our personal details goes far beyond what many of us could imagine. So I braced myself and had a look

    Read the fine print. Silicon Valley is your new bestest friend. They’re only here to help.

    Grindr Is Letting Other Companies See User HIV Status And Location Data

    A data analysis conducted by an outside research firm, and independently verified by BuzzFeed News, shows that a popular gay dating app is sharing sensitive information about its users’ HIV status with two other companies.

    Azeen Ghorayshi, Sri Ray  /  Science

    Grindr Is Sharing The HIV Status Of Its Users With Other Companies

    Grindr Is Sharing The HIV Status Of Its Users With Other Companies

    A data analysis conducted by an outside research firm, and independently verified by BuzzFeed News, shows that a popular gay dating app is sharing its users’ HIV status with two other companies. <i>(Update: Late on Monday Grindr said it would stop sharing this information.)</i>

    JCJ 1 Reply Last reply
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  • JCJ Offline
    JCJ Offline
    JC
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #310

    @salacious-crumb That is appalling.

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  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    wrote on last edited by
    #311

    The story from the reporter who followed (IMO) the greatest performance in sports and the life of a superstar until his death.

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  • gt12G Offline
    gt12G Offline
    gt12
    wrote on last edited by
    #312

    A bit scary.

    Meet Palantir (yes, from the Lord of the Rings).

    https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2018-palantir-peter-thiel/

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #313

    It went undetected for months.

    Change-of-address scam moved UPS corporate headquarters to tiny Rogers Park apartment, feds say

    Migration Temp  /  Apr 22, 2018  /  Local News

    Change-of-address scam moved UPS corporate headquarters to tiny Rogers Park apartment, feds say

    Change-of-address scam moved UPS corporate headquarters to tiny Rogers Park apartment, feds say

    The timeworn apartment building in Chicago’s Rogers Park neighborhood hardly looks like the corporate headquarters of one of the world’s largest shipping companies. But for a few recent…

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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    wrote on last edited by
    #314

    Send Anarchists, Guns, and Money

    TimT 1 Reply Last reply
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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    replied to Tim on last edited by
    #315

    @tim said in Interesting reads:

    Send Anarchists, Guns, and Money

    This serves well as a companion piece to Angela Nagle's Kill All Normies.

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #316

    I’ve long suspected there was flim-flammery going on. I’d read the useless reviews and often conclude they were completely pointless, and wonder why reviewers even made the effort. Now I have a better idea.

    Inside The Ecosystem That Fuels Amazon’s Fake Review Problem

    A vast web of Amazon review fraud lives online, and it's designed to evade the company’s efforts to thwart it.
    ————————————————————————————————————————————————

    One morning in late January, Jake picked up the box on his desk, tore through the packing tape, unearthed the iPhone case inside, snapped a picture, and uploaded it to an Amazon review he’d been writing. The review included a sentence about the case’s sleek design and cool, clear volume buttons. He finished off the blurb with a glowing title (“The perfect case!!”) and rated the product a perfect five stars. Click. Submitted.

    Jake never tried the case. He doesn’t even have an iPhone.

    Jake then copied the link to his review and pasted it into an invite-only Slack channel for paid Amazon reviewers. A day later, he received a notification from PayPal, alerting him to a new credit in his account: a $10 refund for the phone case he’ll never use, along with $3 for his trouble — potentially more, if he can resell the iPhone case.

    [...]

    Nicole Nguyen  /  Tech

    Inside The Ecosystem That Fuels Amazon’s Fake Review Problem

    Inside The Ecosystem That Fuels Amazon’s Fake Review Problem

    A vast web of Amazon review fraud lives online, and it's designed to evade the company’s efforts to thwart it.

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #317

    @salacious-crumb Advertising is bullshit. Shock, horror... 🙂

    Salacious CrumbS 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    replied to Chris B. on last edited by
    #318

    @chris-b said in Interesting reads:

    @salacious-crumb Advertising is bullshit. Shock, horror... 🙂

    Are you getting paid to shill on TSF? Is that what I’m supposed gto expect — that any comment I see in a forum or a review board is likely a paid advert? I could be an outlier, but I don’t think that’s what most other people think, either.

    Chris B.C 1 Reply Last reply
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  • Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.C Offline
    Chris B.
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by Chris B.
    #319

    @salacious-crumb

    "Dear Sirs,

    I recently had the exquisite joy of experiencing a Curved Air concert and was most impressed by the exceptional talent of their new drummer...."

    Stewart Copeland admits to writing that and a raft of other letters to music magazines in 1975 in the book I just mentioned on the "What are you listening to" thread.

    Find that Japanese guy who markets his incredible abs regime (for a while it popped up on half the sites I clicked on) and every comment is an obvious fake - "Wow sounds great, I'm going to give it a try", "Me too....".

    I can't readily locate him - he's possibly in jail.... 🙂

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  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    wrote on last edited by
    #320

    Yep I would never have "liked" Chris' post above if there wasn't something in it for me

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  • TimT Away
    TimT Away
    Tim
    wrote on last edited by
    #321

    The Serial Killer as a Marketing Genius

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by Salacious Crumb
    #322

    Long fascinating read about a young female grifter in the Big Apple. Very deceitful con artiste, but you kinda admire her chutzpah. Good chance this gets made into a movie.
    ——————————————————————————————————————-

    Maybe She Had So Much Money She Just Lost Track of It

    Somebody had to foot the bill for Anna Delvey’s fabulous new life. The city was full of marks.

    [...]

    Why this girl? She wasn’t superhot, they pointed out, or super-charming; she wasn’t even very nice. How did she manage to convince an enormous amount of cool, successful people that she was something she clearly was not?

    She saw something others didn’t. Anna looked at the soul of New York and recognized that if you distract people with shiny objects, with large wads of cash, with the indicia of wealth, if you show them the money, they will be virtually unable to see anything else. And the thing was: It was so easy.

    [...]

    Jessica Pressler  /  Feb 8, 2022  /  Crime

    How an Aspiring ‘It’ Girl Tricked New York’s Party People

    How an Aspiring ‘It’ Girl Tricked New York’s Party People

    Somebody had to foot the bill for Anna Delvey’s fabulous new life. The city was full of marks.

    antipodeanA 1 Reply Last reply
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  • antipodeanA Offline
    antipodeanA Offline
    antipodean
    replied to Salacious Crumb on last edited by
    #323

    @salacious-crumb Good on her. A fool and their money are easily parted.

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  • Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious CrumbS Offline
    Salacious Crumb
    wrote on last edited by
    #324

    The Gambler Who Cracked the Horse-Racing Code

    Bill Benter did the impossible: He wrote an algorithm that couldn’t lose at the track. Close to a billion dollars later, he tells his story for the first time.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2018-05-03/the-gambler-who-cracked-the-horse-racing-code

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