crowdsourcing
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Wikipedia Worries Its Volunteer Editors Could Be Liable to Lawsuits Without Section 230
Where does Wikipedia, the world’s most-visited repository of information on the internet, stand without guaranteed digital liability protections? It’s a question weighing heavy on the people who make up the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit organisation that administers the site containing 58 million articles in multiple languages and sees more than 16 billion visits total each…
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AITA or Are These the Most Popular Subreddits of 2022?
On Thursday, Reddit revealed what the biggest trending topics and subreddits were for 2022, and if you guessed that it was a forum for internet haranguing, then you would be correct — but also — you should probably take a break from the internet for a few days.
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Reddit Is Changing the Way You Navigate Your Feeds
Reddit is changing your feed. The company announced in a post to r/reddit on Wednesday that it would be rolling out a steady stream of changes, improvements, and updates to users’ main feed over the next few months. The first change, which will go live today, relates to feed design in Reddit’s iOS and Android…
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I Would Blame Google Maps for Getting Me Stuck in the Snow for 21 Hours If It Weren’t Also My Fault
Senator Tim Kaine and I have something in common: We were extremely unwise to drive through the state of Virginia on Monday, when the combination of winter storms and the traditional regional practice of doing nothing about them screwed us both over for over 20 hours.