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Trending
Tech
Politics
Pop Culture
Memes
Labor
Hacks
TikTok
About
About Us
Contact
Jobs
Terms Of Use
Privacy Policy
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Is an AI that developed its own meme-based religion about to become a crypto millionaire?
X’s new AI user data policy, block function change send Bluesky signups skyrocketing
‘It’s literally a gyro shop’: TikTok cringes at woman who tore down Greek restaurant’s flag thinking it was Israeli
Slipshod Tim Walz allegations revived thanks to deepfake of supposed ‘victim’
Liam Payne death videos blow up online—from fake news accounts passing off old footage
Trump team silent over teleprompter at his town hall—after building frenzied conspiracy about Harris having one
Did Elon Musk change X’s block function just to see his ex wife’s tweets?
Hackers deface digital billboards with fake MrBeast ‘Death to Israel’ ads
Astonished parents share wild email school sent after substitute reenacted George Floyd’s murder in class
Everyone wants to know what Obama said to Biden at the Kennedy memorial service
Lincoln Project co-founder’s 2015 ‘put a bullet’ in Trump comment recirculated by right as new call to violence
A TikTok grandma went viral for voting for Harris—now X users want her arrested
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Tech
The forgotten Internet of Cyber.kdz
They were modern, ‘90s teens who used email to save NASA from cyberterrorists. Their neon-hued adventures remind us what the Internet used to be.
Mark Hill
Updated on May 26 2021 8:54 pm CDT
Illustration by Max Fleishman
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