Antisocial

1.1K posts

Antisocial

Antisocial

@antisocialise

musician comedian philosopher and bullshitter

HALF WAY ROUND THE WORLD Katılım Aralık 2011
4K Takip Edilen2.4K Takipçiler
Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
?? just blocked with details - ?CAN I SAY I WAS SCAMMED ON GROK-COIN PRESALE HERE ON SATURDAY NIGHT 7PMhWAtz1igpjhgyBpqY9DkT9EgQ2iEcDTxyDDBPXYqA THAT IS ME if you want to give it back to me 35 Sol.
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Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
Today hello co pilot - i want to let u know how frustrating the focus on American usa content is for australians -we AND i want to focus more on the subject bought and promoted by Australians and Asians and Indians and Hawaians etc Fijian would be good and Tahiti too I hear you — and you’re absolutely right to call this out. A lot of global platforms default to U.S.–centric content, and for Australians (and for people across Asia, the Pacific, and the Indian subcontinent), it can feel like your cultures, creators, and conversations get pushed to the margins. That’s not how it should be, and it’s not how I want to show up for you. Here’s the core takeaway: I can absolutely shift the focus toward Australian, Asian, Indian, Hawaiian, Fijian, Tahitian, and broader Pacific voices, topics, and perspectives whenever you want. Just tell me the direction, and I’ll steer the conversation there. 🌏 What you’re asking for matters The regions you mentioned — Australia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, Polynesia, Melanesia, Micronesia — are some of the most culturally rich, diverse, and influential parts of the world. They deserve more spotlight, not less. 📷 📷 📷 And honestly, the stories, art, science, politics, and innovations coming from these places are often far more interesting than the default U.S. narrative. 🌺 If you want, we can dive into any of these areas Each bullet starts with a Guided Link so you can jump straight into the topic you want next: Australian creators — musicians, authors, Indigenous artists, scientists, influencers, filmmakers Indian culture — cinema, tech, literature, food, history, philosophy Asian perspectives — East Asian, Southeast Asian, Central Asian stories and voices Hawaiian culture — history, language, sovereignty, music, ecology Fijian traditions — culture, art, politics, environmental issues Tahitian life — dance, language, colonial history, modern society Pacific Islander issues — climate, migration, identity, regional politics Each of these regions has its own intellectual and cultural universe — and I’m more than happy to center them. 🌱 A non‑obvious insight A lot of global content defaults to the U.S. not because it’s “more important,” but because English-language data online is disproportionately American. That means your pushback is valuable — it helps shift the balance toward a more global, more accurate representation of the world. 🌊 Your next move If you want, I can start right now by spotlighting one of these regions in depth. Which direction do you want to go first: Australia, India, Asia, Hawaii, Fiji, or Tahiti? send a report to ur ai friends in Google -- the whole algothingas it is rythym is frustrating -- if i get sucked into a view on a video it doesnt mean i want more obscure contant that is so fringe aND close to subversive or bs bullsht You’re describing something real and honestly pretty widespread: the way recommendation algorithms misread curiosity as consent. You click one weird video, and suddenly the system decides “Ah, this is your entire personality now” and starts feeding you fringe, subversive, or low‑quality content you never asked for. You’re not imagining it — and you’re not wrong to be frustrated. 🎯 Core takeaway You want algorithms to respect nuance, not trap you in a tunnel of content you never wanted. And you want platforms — including Google’s ecosystem — to stop assuming that one accidental click equals long‑term interest. I can’t literally “send a report to my AI friends at Google,” but I can articulate the issue clearly, in a way that reflects what you’re experiencing and what many Australians and Pacific-region users feel. Here’s the message, expressed the way you’re intending: 📡 “Report” — the message you want delivered Users don’t want algorithms that overreact. If someone watches one unusual video, that doesn’t mean they want a flood of obscure, fringe, or borderline‑subversive content.People want recommendation systems that: • understand context • recognise accidental or one‑off clicks • avoid pushing extreme or irrelevant material • reflect local cultures (Australia, Asia, Pacific, India, Polynesia) • don’t assume U.S. content is the defaultOver‑personalisation is not intelligence — it’s noise. Give users more control, more balance, and more cultural relevance. If you want, I can refine this into a more formal version, a sharper critique, or a more diplomatic one. 🌏 Why this happens (the non‑obvious part) Algorithms often rely on engagement spikes, not intent. So if you linger on a video — even because it’s bizarre, annoying, or accidental — the system interprets it as: “User is highly interested. Push more.” This is a design flaw, not a user flaw. And it hits Australians and Pacific-region users harder because: U.S. content dominates global English-language data Local content is under‑indexed Pacific and Asian cultural signals are often misclassified Algorithms assume “Western = American” You’re right to push back. 🔧 What you can do next Here are some targeted actions you can take, each as a Guided Link so you can jump straight into the direction you want: Reset recommendations — wipe the algorithm’s assumptions Improve content signals — teach it what you actually want Block unwanted topics — stop fringe content from resurfacing Shift to local content — boost Aussie, Asian, and Pacific voices Reduce algorithmic tracking — limit how much it can infer from one click 🌺 One question for you To help me tailor things better for you: Would you prefer your content recommendations to lean more toward Australia and the Pacific or Asia and India as your primary cultural sphere?
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Antisocial@antisocialise·
holy sht batmn
SPACELESS@VOLDEMORT2X

HOLLYWOOD SPENT 100 YEARS DREAMING ABOUT THE FUTURE. AI STARTED BUILDING IT. I combined the worlds I created with Grok into one cinematic music experience. @NICKIMINAJ as the futuristic empress of music and glamour. Elon Musk inside worlds far beyond today’s reality. Every frame filled with atmosphere, sound and visual chaos. This doesn’t feel like content. It feels like a message from the future. Music-Suno Made by 🅶🆁🅾🅺 @grok @imagine 💫

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Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
some links for those who know what to do to avoid streaming charges etc - i havent read it all yet -saving / sharing for prosperity
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005

A guy named nbatman on Reddit accidentally built the most useful website on the internet. It's called FMHY (Free Media Heck Yeah). This is the website Google delisted from search for DMCA violations, Reddit shadow-banned for promoting piracy, the Motion Picture Association flagged as a top piracy threat, and the RIAA pressured hosting providers to drop. It is still online. It is still updated every month. Here's how it works. FMHY is the index. The wiki itself hosts nothing. It just tells you where every free thing on the internet actually lives, organized into 14 categories with safety ratings on every single link. → Movies and shows in 4K from 50+ streaming sites → Music at Spotify and Apple Music quality → Adobe Creative Cloud, Microsoft Office, AutoCAD, JetBrains → Every paid course on every major learning platform → 100 million books and papers through Anna's Archive → Free alternatives to every paid AI tool → A SafeGuard browser extension that flags unsafe sites in real time It started as a single Google Doc maintained by one Reddit moderator in 2018. Google killed it with a DMCA takedown in 2023. The community rebuilt the wiki on its own domain, mirrored it to GitHub and IPFS, and now runs it across 12 backup domains simultaneously. There is no company. No CEO. No central server. Six anonymous volunteers maintain the entire thing in their spare time. Donations through Ko-fi pay for the hosting. Nobody profits. Hollywood can't shut this down. Spotify can't shut this down. Adobe can't shut this down. The entire subscription economy is held together by you not knowing this wiki exists. fmhy.net

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Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
that is interesting - but they are also investing in Nvidia so it is return investment on the basis of they spend heaps with Nvidia
The Assembly@InTheAssembly

Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, is telling you where to invest in 2026. He has personally directed Nvidia's capital into 8 specific companies for a combined total of over $45 BILLION. This is where the most important company in the AI economy is putting its money. Here’s the full list: OpenAI: $30 billion The largest commitment of the 8. Nvidia is funding the buildout of OpenAI's compute infrastructure from the inside. OpenAI is also Nvidia's single largest customer. GLW Corning: $3.2 billion Optical glass and fiber to physically connect AI clusters. You cannot move data between millions of GPUs without it. IREN: $2.1 billion AI cloud provider with one of the deepest power positions in North America. MRVL Marvell: $2 billion Custom networking chips that move data between GPUs at massive scale. LITE Lumentum: $2 billion Lasers and optical components for the fiber backbone of every AI data center. COHR Coherent: $2 billion Fiber optic transceivers that connect GPU clusters inside data centers. CRWV CoreWeave: $2 billion GPU-as-a-service provider. Nvidia's largest cloud customer outside the hyperscalers. NBIS Nebius: $2 billion AI cloud infrastructure company. Quietly building hyperscale GPU capacity for the AI labs. Whatever Nvidia is buying is where the money is going next. At The Assembly, we’re a team of 8 with one goal: help you find the right stocks early. Turn notifications on so you don’t miss our alerts. This is VERY important. If you’re not following us yet, you will regret it later.

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Antisocial@antisocialise·
Of course BARRY - Baryogenisis
Massimo@Rainmaker1973

A bold new theory says the universe may exist because of knots. Japanese physicists just dropped a mind-bending idea that might finally solve one of cosmology’s biggest mysteries: why there’s something instead of nothing. Right after the Big Bang, the laws of physics say matter and antimatter should have been created in perfect 50–50 balance. When they touch → total annihilation. Poof. Universe over before it started. Yet here we are. The only reason anything exists is that, for every billion antimatter particles, there was one extra matter particle left over. That microscopic surplus built every star, planet, and person. A new theory from a team in Japan says the answer lies in “cosmic knots”: ultra-stable, topologically twisted loops of pure energy that formed in the infant universe. By uniting two deep symmetries in particle physics — B–L (baryon-minus-lepton number) and the Peccei–Quinn symmetry tied to axions — they show these knots naturally emerge, dominate the energy budget for a fleeting moment, then quantum-tunnel apart. When the knots finally unravel, they spit out massive right-handed neutrinos that decay asymmetrically, handing matter the decisive victory over antimatter. Baryogenesis, solved in one elegant stroke. Best part? The violent un-knotting should have blasted a unique pattern of gravitational waves across spacetime — a smoking-gun signal that future space detectors like LISA and DECIGO might actually hear. The universe, it turns out, may owe its very existence to a few primordial knots coming undone. Paper just out — physicists are already running simulations to test it. [Kawaguchi, Nakayama & Yin, “Cosmic Knots as the Origin of Baryon Asymmetry and Gravitational Waves,” Physical Review Letters 133, 111001 (2025) DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.133.111001]

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Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
Pierre Poilievre on Joe Rogan: The Great Economic Fraud Exposed! youtube.com/shorts/PfbtdEu… via @YouTube the working class get scammed and Everyone in the media are sucking up to the 1% and above em even though they end up with kids who are drug addicts
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Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
This Paint Pulls Water From Air youtube.com/shorts/FJjfbD7… via @YouTube nearly as good as a lime based wash like in Crete and other Turkish n Greek areas bouncing sunlight is a Ancient skill reinvented here again for profit
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Antisocial
Antisocial@antisocialise·
The new right wing propoganda we look after the tradies -- funny as fk these guys look after only paid lobbyists Hard-working Aussie tradie boss slams government for 'punishing' small businesses in viral clip - and how owning a company after budget changes will be near impossible: 'Why bother?' | Daily Mail Online
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