Want to read Reddit but don’t have the time? Our daily Reddit Digest highlights the most interesting or important discussions from around the social news site—every morning.
-
The guy who’s flying around the world and completing “missions” assigned by redditors is back, and this time he’s got an itinerary and a subreddit. In May, he’s hitting California and Washington State, then jumping to Morocco, then—well, here’s his “mission list.” (/r/self)
-
Why can’t humans digest human hair? (/r/askscience)
-
Citing two popular posts following the death of Adam Yauch, redditor GilbertM asks: “Has Reddit gotten worse at fact-checking headlines?” (/r/TheoryOfReddit)
-
What kind of effect does a link from r/SubredditDrama have on the posts it links to? Here’s a statistical analysis.(/r/SubredditDrama)
-
Redditors compile a master list of the most horrifying Wikipedia articles. (/r/AskReddit)
-
A 90-year-old freemason World War II veteran who supposedly once met Ghandi answered questions at r/iama yesterday. (His grandson served as typist.) I rather liked this question and response. (/r/IAmA)
-
Reddit has finally made an official stance against the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, but don’t expect another blackout. (/r/blog)
-
Gary Fung is the founder of file-sharing site isoHunt.com, which he calls “legal target practice” for entertainment industry lawyers. On Sunday he did an AMA. (/r/IAmA)
Did I miss something? Let me know in the comments.
Photo by Taka_aka_T