moon soselo 🇵🇸

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moon soselo 🇵🇸

moon soselo 🇵🇸

@mntmpl

lesbian marxist leninist poet / reformed problem child

Bergabung Ocak 2013
548 Mengikuti1.7K Pengikut
moon soselo 🇵🇸
@Hamasnik2 really though for me its bc its new stuff i really wanna see and dont wanna wait around for
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Liam
Liam@Hamasnik2·
what's the appeal of a movie theater? genuinely have never understood. they're dirty and smelly and cold, you're subject to whatever ads they put on, you're watching with strangers but it's not a social experience. i can't see any positives to it tbh
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islay ⋆˚✧
islay ⋆˚✧@islaysmind·
it is so heartbreaking how the deaths of palestinians are painted as an inevitability because israel targets journalists. we also hear less & less about it. because israel targets journalists. keep talking about the genocide in palestine, fuck israel
LPC@landpalestine

Israel just bombed a building that Palestinian journalist Bisan owda was in She’s okay and reporting on it. She said it’s the closest she’s ever been to a bombing.

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Olive 🌿
Olive 🌿@oliveegirl·
I really don't know why nobody here spoke about that evil daily mail article written by zionists deliberately to force Egyptian authorities to move exiled Palestinian prisoners from the nice hotel they were staying at in Cairo, otherwise it's a threat to "western tourists" because exiled & tortured Palestinians are KHAMAS. Anyway please read Nasser Abu Srour's article in the quoted tweet. "In a twisted replay of our prison life, we were transferred from one hotel to the next, for arbitrary reasons. We were kicked out of the first, a five-star in Cairo, when a British newspaper published an article warning about the dangers of housing Palestinian criminals alongside foreign tourists. We only lasted two weeks at the second. a resort in the desert before thev removed us on the pretence that an international sports tournament was soon to take place nearby. Both times I felt the need to vomit, which always came over me when I was moved from one jail to another. Maybe this was how my body protested against its lack of agency."
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Mona Ali@MonaAli_NY_US

I can't shake off the contrast between my own entry into Egypt - for the first time as an adult - seeing the pyramids in the early morning light as the pilot landed the plane as if on a pillow, and that of Nasser Abu Srour, a Palestinian imprisoned since 1993. He writes, "I sat by the window and pulled aside the curtain, which brought the tires screeching to a halt. A soldier threatened to shoot me if I tried that again. They only allowed us to look outside once we reached Egypt." Essential reading: equator.org/articles/why-d…

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moon soselo 🇵🇸
just watched an evil streaming slop "documentary" about Gaddafi. it was amazing, just british dudes talking about awesome things he did while going "he was so evil" over a montage of young photos of him looking rather handsome. had narration that im 95% sure is AI written too
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NYTPitchbot
NYTPitchbot@DougJBalloon·
I converted to Catholicism last week. Here’s why the Pope’s woke encyclical is a disgrace.
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Jovic Nation Tenant
Jovic Nation Tenant@d0ggospottings·
That one oomf who just sobbed through I Love Boosters cause it kinda means so much to her to see art like this….
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ahmed from gaza
ahmed from gaza@ahmedmasri2002·
I am Ahmed from Gaza. Our home and work were destroyed, my education stopped, and my 4 sisters, sick parents, and I now live in a fragile tent. ​As Eid approaches, our struggle worsens. My mother is a heart patient needing ongoing medicine ($300/mo) and weekly nebulizer capsules ($150). My father suffers from severe kidney stones and tract infections, needing continuous medical care during this critical period. ​As the sole provider for my entire family, I find myself completely helpless, unable to secure even daily food, basic life necessities, or simple Eid clothes for the children. ​Please, any contribution makes a huge difference. Don't look past our suffering—donate, quote, share, or just leave a mark to help us survive. 🙏💔 chuffed.org/project/please…
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i dont know if i deserve to live or am strong enough to if i do
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Medea Benjamin
Medea Benjamin@medeabenjamin·
I am guilty. Guilty of loving the Cuban people. Guilty of believing Cuban children deserve medicine instead of sanctions. Guilty of believing that trying to save lives should not be treated like a crime.
Medea Benjamin tweet mediaMedea Benjamin tweet media
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Skoom🔻☭
Skoom🔻☭@SkoomaBoofer·
I don’t really care about streamers, and I have mixed feelings on Hasan But this is a pretty egregious act of political persecution For whatever criticisms I have of him, going to Cuba to deliver aid to the most disenfranchised victims of US imperial policy isn’t one of them
Fox News@FoxNews

Federal officials have served subpoenas to Marxist political influencer Hasan Piker and CodePink cofounder Susan Medea Benjamin as part of a wider investigation into whether U.S. organizations and leaders violated U.S. laws and sanctions in supporting Cuba's communist regime, Fox News Digital has learned. foxnews.com/politics/feds-…

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Mohamad Safa
Mohamad Safa@mhdksafa·
Israel is blowing up entire villages and residential neighborhoods in Lebanon, killing 200 to 300 civilians every 48-96 hours, calling it a ceasefire, and proudly sharing the footage of international law violations online, with absolutely no consequences.
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moon soselo 🇵🇸
@MarxianAngel ugh yeah, when i saw the news about hasan i knew some people would be extremely dumb about it. i think a lot people's criticisms of him were correct but its unfortunate this happened immediately after days of ppl dunking on him
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moon soselo 🇵🇸@mntmpl·
@Hamasnik2 it got so bad it infiltrated my following feed 😭 its still better bc its mixed in with actual news and journalism instead of like nazi posts
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Liam
Liam@Hamasnik2·
@mntmpl but all of this is in the optional, opt-in "for you" tab that elon added. if you don't use that, Twitter still just shows you tweets from people you follow like it has since 2006. i find it hard to care about a problem people are voluntarily subjecting themselves to...
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moon soselo 🇵🇸
moon soselo 🇵🇸@mntmpl·
i knew something fucky was going on with the algorithm because of how insane and nonstop the discourse has been. makes perfect sense, people engage with online drama and back-and-forth discourse
Arnaud Bertrand@RnaudBertrand

So I spent some time studying the new Twitter/X algorithm today since the latest version was published about a week ago on Github (#updates--may-15th-2026" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">github.com/xai-org/x-algo…). My goal was to answer why so many people have seemingly seen such a dramatic drop in their posts' reach. The first answer, which is actually somewhat unrelated to the ranking algorithm on Github, is the auto-translate feature, rolled out worldwide on April 7, 2026 (x.com/nikitabier/sta…). Before that date, if you wrote in English about, say, the Trump-Xi Beijing summit, you were competing for attention with maybe 5,000 other English-language accounts writing on geopolitics. After that date, your post is competing for attention with other posts on the same topic IN EVERY LANGUAGE ON EARTH. For some topics that do command global attention like geopolitics, that's a very brutal multiplier: you used to be one of 5,000, you're suddenly one of 50,000 (something of that order): MUCH more difficult to stand out. Secondly, the number of followers you have matters far less than it used to: each post now has to earn its audience reader by reader, on the predicted engagement of the post, and how its topic matches what each reader has recently been engaging with. Here is how the algorithm works, in simple terms: when you, as a reader, open your feed, the algorithm doesn't load "posts from accounts you follow." Instead it runs a 2-stage prediction of what posts you're likely to engage with in that very moment. The first stage is the retrieval stage. The system narrows billions of posts on X/Twitter that day down to roughly 1,500 candidates by matching the semantic content of each post - what it's about - against what you as a reader have recently engaged with. Some candidate posts come from accounts you follow; others are pulled from across the platform by pure topic similarity to your recent interests. You can test this retrieval stage easily: start disproportionally engaging with - say - Brad Pitt videos and you'll bit by bit see your timeline flooded with Brad Pitt content, most of it from accounts you've never followed and never heard of. Then there's the ranking stage. Each of these candidate posts for your feed is fed through a Grok-based model that tries to understand if you'll engage with the post. It looks at 15 engagement metrics: 1) P(favorite) — the reader likes the post 2) P(reply) — the reader replies to it 3) P(repost) — the reader reposts it 4) P(quote) — the reader quote-tweets it 5) P(click) — the reader clicks a link in it 6) P(profile_click) — the reader taps through to your profile 7) P(video_view) — the reader watches the video 8) P(photo_expand) — the reader expands an image 9) P(share) — the reader shares it (DM, off-platform, etc.) 10) P(dwell) — the reader stops scrolling and lingers on the post 11) P(follow_author) — the reader follows you after seeing it 12) P(not_interested) — the reader marks "not interested" 13) P(block_author) — the reader blocks you 14) P(mute_author) — the reader mutes you 15) P(report) — the reader reports the post Fifteen predicted actions, each multiplied by a weight, summed: that sum is the score that determines in which priority a post will be seen among other candidates. Please note that posting something with a video or an image can give your post an advantage as 2 actions are specifically for these: video_view and photo_expand. No video or photo and you don't get a score for these. Also, naturally, having a video maximizes the chance that a user will "dwell" on your post to watch it. Also note that 4 of these actions carry negative weights (not_interested, block_author, mute_author and report): meaning that if the model expects a post to generate a lot of negativity, it'll get de-boosted quite dramatically. But note, first and foremost, what's NOT in there: none of the things that, naively, one might think a serious information platform would weigh. There is no P(this post is true and well-sourced). No P(the author actually knows what they're talking about). No P(this person has spent a decade building a body of work that has held up). No P(this account has earned the right to be taken seriously on this topic). No P(the author has a large following from credible people). The model does not seem to care - at all - about any of that. Every post starts from zero. You could have ten years of rigorous, well-sourced analysis behind you - or you could be just an uneducated rando who registered yesterday. To this algorithm, you're both just a bag of engagement probabilities. Now, sure, to be fair, there is a "brand" effect that's not covered by the algorithm: someone who has in fact built a brand will naturally have better engagement metrics because people recognize their account. But that's an indirect, second-order effect. And crucially, it's legacy: those "brands" were built under earlier versions of the algorithm that gave followers and reputation more weight. Lastly, several other features of the new algorithm compound the dilution, none of them visible from outside but all consequential. The May 15 update added an "impression bloom filter," tightening the rule that once a reader has been served a post, the system won't serve it to them again. Before, a strong post could marinate in someone's feed across multiple refreshes and accumulate engagement on the second or third pass. Now it basically gets one shot. Also, your own posts compete with each other. An "Author Diversity Scorer" inside the ranking stage attenuates the score of every subsequent post of yours that ends up in a reader's candidate pool. In plain terms: if multiple of your posts land in a reader's candidate pool, the system shows one at full strength and dampens the others. So don't post several times consecutively on the same topic. And, last but not least, another huge impact on reach is that, in the old algorithm, when someone reposted or quote-tweeted you, your post was broadcast to their followers' timelines - a repost from an account with 100,000 followers was a huge boost. In the new algorithm, that mechanism is vastly demoted: reposts - like every post - need to go through the retrieval and ranking stage mentioned above, so a repost from a big account is a long way from the boost it used to be. This is especially brutal for low-effort quote tweets, which used to function as cheap amplification: now they often can't even clear the retrieval stage - they simply don't contain enough novel semantic content for the system to match them to anyone's interests. So, putting it all together, the reach collapse comes from many forces stacking at once: - Auto-translate makes your posts compete for attention against an order of magnitude more content - The retrieval stage matches posts by topic, not by who follows you - The ranking stage scores purely on predicted engagement with no weight for credibility, expertise, or track record - The bloom filter narrows every post's window to one strong shot - The diversity scorer penalizes prolific posting - Reposts no longer carry much distribution power Each of these alone would dent your reach. Combined, they amount to a complete reset: your audience that you built painstakingly over years basically doesn't matter much anymore, and it's much - much - harder to stand out even if you're a big account. People structurally rewarded by this algorithm are folks who: - Post visually (videos/images) - Post on globally popular topics because they clear the retrieval stage easily - Provoke strong emotional reactions - likes, replies, reposts - Don't care about accuracy or seriousness because the algorithm doesn't measure it - Don't care about their existing audience because every post is judged in isolation anyway In short this new algorithm, like so many on social media, is all about maximizing whether people will engage with something - not about whether they should.

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