phono

215 posts

phono

phono

@dasphono

Züri.ch Katılım Ekim 2010
302 Takip Edilen36 Takipçiler
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Vatnik Soup
Vatnik Soup@P_Kallioniemi·
In today's Vatnik Soup, I'll discuss extensively why the West is losing the information war. The format is a bit different from earlier ones, but here goes: The West is losing the information war Countries like Russia and China have spent years turning disinformation into a central pillar of statecraft. They don’t just lie—they lie loudly, constantly, and across every available platform. They’ve mastered the art of sowing confusion, undermining trust, and deepening political divides inside democratic societies. This isn’t done by accident—it’s done through well-funded, highly coordinated campaigns that blend state media, covert troll farms, social media influencers, and manipulated algorithms. At the same time, they maintain an iron grip on their own information environments. In Russia, independent media is silenced, dissenters are jailed, and the internet is censored through so-called “sovereign” infrastructure that can block or throttle unwanted content. In China, the state filters all online speech through the Great Firewall, bans platforms like YouTube and Twitter, and floods domestic social media with tightly controlled propaganda. Algorithms are not tools for engagement—they are instruments of obedience. That’s the key to their advantage: they control what their citizens see while exploiting the openness of our societies. We can’t inject truth into theirs—but they can inject lies into ours. Their disinformation can reach our phones in seconds, while our facts can’t even get past their digital borders. It’s a deeply asymmetrical fight, where authoritarian states operate with speed, scale, and impunity—while democracies struggle to respond without undermining our own values of free speech and transparency. These regimes don’t wait around for approval. They don’t worry about press freedom or public debate. If they want to launch an influence campaign, they do it—quickly and quietly. They have entire networks producing and spreading their messages in dozens of languages, 24/7. Worse still, they’ve gotten very good at grabbing attention. They use social media superspreaders, conspiracy influencers, and flashy TikTok videos to package their propaganda into something that feels exciting, rebellious, or funny—even when it’s completely false. They tell simple, emotionally charged stories that spread like wildfire. And all this is supercharged with AI. And what do we counter that with? Dry press releases from EU officials. Long reports. Monotone statements from diplomats. Detailed debunking articles hidden behind paywalls, or buried deep in PDF reports that almost no one reads. Good intentions—delivered with all the flair of a tax form. Most of it never reaches the people actually being targeted by disinformation. It’s not that we don’t have the facts—it’s that we’re terrible at making people care about them. Meanwhile, the information battlefield has already shifted. In Finland, half of teenagers between 13 and 18 now get their news from TikTok. And it’s not just influencers and entertainment—even North Korea is now publishing propaganda on the platform. That’s the level of reach and adaptability we’re up against. Authoritarian regimes are speaking directly to the next generation, using their language and their media. And we’re still whispering from behind paywalls and official podiums. We’ve already seen how devastating information warfare can be when left unchecked. In January 2014, 60% of Russians had a positive view of Ukrainians. Then the Kremlin launched a relentless defamation campaign on national TV and social media—painting Ukrainians as Nazis, traitors, or puppets of the West. By 2015, the numbers had flipped: 60% of Russians now had a negative view of Ukrainians. This is how propaganda works. And when you control the entire information ecosystem, it works terrifyingly well. But at the same time, Ukraine learned to fight back. Since 2014, and especially after Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Ukrainians have treated information like a front line. They’ve built partnerships between government, civil society, and creative communities. They’ve used humor, memes, music, and viral videos to expose lies and boost morale. They work around the clock—not because it’s trendy, but because they understand just how destructive these manipulation campaigns can be. In Ukraine, disinformation isn’t an abstract threat—it’s a weapon that softens targets before the bombs fall. Take Russia: it’s spending nearly $2 billion a year on state propaganda. China’s media operations are even more extensive and opaque. Meanwhile, the European Union is spending a tiny fraction of that trying to defend the truth. It’s not just about money—it’s about mindset. We’ve been playing defense, trying to fact-check lies after they’ve gone viral. That’s not enough. We need to get ahead of the problem. And we can’t just focus on short-term fixes. Both Russia and China plan their information strategies decades ahead—and we should too. That means giving more resources and support to modern media creators—influencers, podcasters, digital artists, futurists, analysts, visionaries. These are the people shaping how millions think and feel. We need to invest in the platforms, voices, and formats that actually reach people today. We also need to build long-term resilience. We need to build a vaccine against online disinformation. And that vaccine is education. That means warning people before the lies start spreading. It means teaching media literacy in schools, so young people know how to spot manipulation. It means putting clear, truthful, engaging content in the places where people actually spend time—YouTube, TikTok, Instagram—not hiding it away on obscure government and EU websites. But defense alone won’t win this war. We must take the fight to the adversary’s doorstep. Authoritarian regimes have real vulnerabilities—corruption, repression, inequality, and elite hypocrisy. These are pressure points we should be targeting with truth-based messaging that empowers dissent, exposes abuse, and undermines their control over public perception. This isn’t about regime change—it’s about using facts to challenge the myths they rely on to stay in power. Just like they exploit our openness, we must be willing to expose their rot. This isn’t about copying authoritarian tactics. It’s about defending the values we care about—freedom, transparency, democracy—with creative and bold strategies. Do we really need to wait until Russia is sending drones and troops across our borders to finally take this seriously? The information war is here. We don’t get to choose whether we’re part of it. But we can choose to stop losing.
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Jeremy Keeshin
Jeremy Keeshin@jkeesh·
In 1945, six women pulled off a computing miracle. They programmed the world’s first computer—with no manuals, no training. Then, a SINGLE assumption erased them from tech history for decades. The story of how ONE photo nearly deleted computing’s female founders: 🧵
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pera.algo
pera.algo@PeraAlgoWallet·
🎉 ⚽️ @FIFAcom is now officially partnered with the most superior #blockchain technology @Algorand. We want to celebrate this amazing news by giving away 100 $ALGO to 22 random people who interact with this tweet and follow Pera🎁 Welcome #FIFA to the #algofam! #FIFAWorldCup
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tinyman.algo
tinyman.algo@tinymanorg·
Amazing news from @Algorand with the @FIFAcom partnership! 🎉🎉🥳 Tinyman is celebrating this huge partnership with a giveaway, we’ll randomly choose 5 people who interact with this tweet and send them all special Tinyman #NFTs @FIFAWorldCup #FIFAWorldCup LFG ⚽️🚀
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phono
phono@dasphono·
@bbyron 0x472e76a426bdc696e3f58352547f7aa33445a842
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byron (b.)
byron (b.)@bbyron·
I want to fill up more empty wallets with their first #NFT - drop your L2 address below - if you already have #NFTs then share with your friends and I might drop you too 😁✨ (Loopring L2 addresses only💙)👇
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phono@dasphono·
@bbyron patric.loopring.eth :)
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byron (b.)
byron (b.)@bbyron·
If you have a Loopring L2 wallet but have no NFTs to show off in it, drop your L2 address 👇 will send a few of you your first #NFT💙
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Coffee dAO
Coffee dAO@coffeebeandao·
Happy Friday Algorand Community! It’s been a busy week, time for us all to get some R & R this weekend! Are there any #NFTs the community should be eyeing this weekend?! Let everyone know below 👇 👇 #algofam #NFT
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Daniel Menna 💙💛🕊🌻
Daniel Menna 💙💛🕊🌻@danielmennach·
Mir scheint, die Weltwoche ist inzwischen zu Luzia Tschirkys grössten Fanclub mutiert.
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phono
phono@dasphono·
@CardanoFeed addr1q99h0vea2xenhx48u9azrnzecttc7wafrrxueqw2mu2n7gvxutgczs6un945k0y5gsk9apj9zctd30h82zts39zcmr2snutvv8
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Prof. Feynman
Prof. Feynman@ProfFeynman·
Life is too short to worry about stupid things. Have fun. Fall in love. Regret nothing, and don't let people bring you down. Study, think, create, and grow. Teach yourself and teach others.
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muesli 🐧
muesli 🐧@mueslix·
The Alternative Big O notation: O(1) = O(yeah) O(log n) = O(nice) O(n) = O(k) O(n²) = O(my) O(2ⁿ) = O(no) O(n!) = O(mg!) O(n!*n) = O(rly?)
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Lex Fridman
Lex Fridman@lexfridman·
Here's my conversation with @nealstephenson, one of the greatest sci-fi writers ever, from Snow Crash & Cryptonomicon to his new book Termination Shock. We talk about space, aliens, AI, VR, cryptocurrency, and the future of humanity. youtube.com/watch?v=xAfdSa…
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Lex Fridman
Lex Fridman@lexfridman·
0 (zero) is the most important number ever invented in mathematics. It enables algebra and calculus and thus physics, computing, and engineering. Also, philosophically, it helps us come to grips with the idea of nothingness.
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phono
phono@dasphono·
Hm. Forgot to tweet about day 5 of #100DaysOfCode yesterday. Finished the basic Javascript curriculum, moved on to ES6. Never heard of that before. Challenges are getting more brain-consuming :)
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phono
phono@dasphono·
Instead of coding i spent the weekend without any computers enjoying the weather. So it is day 4 of #100DaysOfCode today. I did some statistical analysis using Python, looking forward to continue the Javascript thing.
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phono
phono@dasphono·
Day 3 of #100DaysOfCode. I've been using JSON before, but now i know where it's coming from. Still doing the Basic JavaScript curriculum on #freeCodeCamp, so far i like it.
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phono
phono@dasphono·
Day 2 of #100DaysOfCode. Playing around with Javascript Objects. It's not hard to understand but i need to get used to the Syntax. Should not move on too fast. Better recapitulate tomorrow :)
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phono
phono@dasphono·
Day 1 of #100DaysOfCode. I felt like it is about time to grow some Javascript skills for some future projects. Checking out #freeCodeCamp. Already learned some new things. (=== vs. ==) Lets see how this commitment will work out.
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