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Republican quest to meddle with all informational institutions arrives at Wikipedia

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Exerting control over media and information is one of the hallmarks of a fascist movement. Apropos of nothing, two prominent Republicans from the House Committee on Oversight and Government reform, Kentucky representative James Comer and South Carolina’s Nancy Mace, have launched an inquiry into Wikipedia. In an announcement, the inquiry’s goal is defined as “investigating organized efforts, undertaken in violation of Wikipedia platform rules, to influence U.S. public opinion on important and sensitive topics by manipulating Wikipedia articles.” 

“Multiple studies and reports have highlighted efforts to manipulate information on the Wikipedia platform for propaganda aimed at Western audiences,” the lawmakers wrote in a letter to Wikimedia Foundation Chief Executive Officer Maryana Iskander. “One recent report raised troubling questions about potentially systematic efforts to advance antisemitic and anti-Israel information in Wikipedia articles related to conflicts with the State of Israel. A second investigation detailed actions by hostile nation-state actors to expose Western audiences to pro-Kremlin and anti-Western messaging by manipulating Wikipedia articles and other news outlets relied on for training AI chatbots.”

The inquiry “seeks information to help our examination of how Wikipedia responds to such threats and how frequently it creates accountability when intentional, egregious, or highly suspicious patterns of conduct on topics of sensitive public interest are brought to attention,” the letter reads. Comer and Mace profess themselves concerned about “malicious conduct that injects bias or undermines a neutral point of view” on Wikipedia. 

Of course, what’s considered a “biased” perspective or a “neutral” one is subjective, at least in this day and age. President Donald Trump’s administration has undertaken an effort to revise the programming of national institutions such as the Smithsonian. This was done under an executive order called “Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History,” which claims there’s been “a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth.” Trump’s admin has also made efforts to dismantle diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives across the country, which is being reflected in the programming and staffing of Hollywood studios and news organizations. CBS News, for instance, is set to install an ombudsman to “receive and evaluate any complaints of bias or other concerns.” Increasingly, it seems the only welcome perspective in the U.S. is that of the President and the modern Republican party. 

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InShaneee
3 hours ago
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Typepad is Shutting Down

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Typepad, which launched in 2003 to make it easier for the masses to start their blogging journey, is shutting down. From a blog post: We have made the difficult decision to discontinue Typepad, effective September 30, 2025. After September 30, 2025, access to Typepad -- including account management, blogs, and all associated content -- will no longer be available. Your account and all related services will be permanently deactivated. Please note that after this date, you will no longer be able to access or export any blog content.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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InShaneee
14 hours ago
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Trump Tariffs Cause Chaos on Ebay as Every Hobby Becomes Logistical Minefield

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Trump Tariffs Cause Chaos on Ebay as Every Hobby Becomes Logistical Minefield

The Trump administration is throwing various hobbies enjoyed by Americans into chaos and is harming small businesses domestically and abroad with its ever-changing tariff structure that is turning the United States into a hermit kingdom. It has made buying and selling things on eBay particularly annoying, and is making it harder and more expensive to, for example, buy vintage film cameras, retro video games, or vintage clothes from Japan, where many of the top eBay sellers are based. 

“Trying to figure out what the future of this hobby is going to look like for those of us in the USA (other than insanely expensive),” a post on r/analogcommunity, the most popular film photography subreddit, reads. “All of my lenses and my camera body came from Japan, they would have been prohibitively expensive [now], paying an extra $80 per item. I feel like entry level to this hobby is going to get hit especially hard.” Another meme posted to the community under the title “Shopping on eBay be like this now” reads “The age of the Canon Mint++ is over. The time of the Argus C3 has come,” referring to a common way that Japanese eBay sellers list Japanese-made Canon cameras. The Argus C3 was a budget mass-produced, American-made camera that was not popular in Japan, and so most of the people selling them are in the United States. Some people like them, but it has been nicknamed “the brick” because it “could serve as a deadly weapon in a street fight.” It remains very inexpensive to this day.

The photography hobby is a microcosm of what anyone who wants to buy anything from another country is currently experiencing. The de-minimis exemption, which allowed people to buy things internationally without paying tariffs if the items cost less than $800, made it very easy and less expensive to get into hobbies like film photography, retro video games, and vintage fashion, to name a few. The Trump administration is ending that exemption Friday and it will quickly become a financial and/or logistical mess for anyone who wants to buy or sell anything from another country. Communities and companies focused on electronics, board games, action figures, skincare, flashlights, sex toys, watches, and general ecommerce are also freaking out, stopping service to the United States, or telling U.S. customers to expect higher prices, higher fees, longer shipping times, more paperwork, more headache, and unpredictable delays. 

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Have tariffs impacted your small business or your hobby? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at jason.404. Otherwise, send me an email at jason@404media.co.

In recent days, national mail carriers in the European Union (including DHL, which is widely used internationally), Australia, India, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and, crucially, Japan, have started restricting many shipments to the United States. Some of the few remaining ways to send shipments internationally to the United States is through UPS and FedEx, which have warned customers that the end of de-minimis means more paperwork, higher shipping prices (both have increased their international processing fees), and also means that either the shipper or the receiver will have to pay tariffs on whatever is being sent, which of course adds both costs and processing time. This is on top of the fact that FedEx and UPS are often more expensive services in the first place.

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InShaneee
14 hours ago
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Denmark summons U.S. envoy over claims of interference in Greenland

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FILE - A view of houses in Nuuk, Greenland, Sunday, June 22, 2025

Denmark's foreign minister summoned the top U.S. diplomat in the country for talks after the main national broadcaster reported that at least three people with connections to President Donald Trump have been carrying out covert influence operations in Greenland.

(Image credit: Kwiyeon Ha)

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InShaneee
22 hours ago
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Surprise, Pyramid Heads, Return To Silent Hill has a teaser trailer

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Whether you want to or not, it’s time to Return To Silent Hill. A new trailer for the long-dormant horror series has emerged from the mist, thirteen years after Silent Hill: Revelation 3D cratered in theaters. However, the news should be cause for celebration for fans of the original, as director Christophe Gans, director of 2006’s Silent Hill, has retaken control of the franchise. Gans’ new movie adapts Silent Hill 2, bringing in character James Sunderland (played by Jeremy Irvine) and Mary (Hannah Emily Anderson), the estranged lover who supposedly invited him to this cursed town with a freaking Pyramid Head in it. Coming from the folks at Cineverse and Bloody Disgusting, the team behind the V/H/S series and the Terrifier sequels, it stands to reason that the film will be as gory and arty as Gans wants it.

Gans has been eyeing a return to the franchise since he directed the 2006 adaptation. Back in the mid-’00s, he and the film’s screenwriter, Pulp Fiction’s Oscar-winning co-writer Roger Avary, were moving forward with a sequel. But Gans dropped out of the project after Avary pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter and drunk driving.

But fans of the originals shouldn’t expect any callbacks. Several years ago, Gans said the new movie would be a standalone story detached from the rest of the series. “The script for a new Silent Hill movie that is totally independent from the two previous movies made and respects the way Silent Hill has evolved. Silent Hill is a bit like [The] Twilight Zone, the Fourth Dimension, a place where anything and everything can happen.” This new film will be “a Silent Hill for today’s audiences while being ultra respectful of the saga.”

Return To Silent Hill in January 2026.



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InShaneee
1 day ago
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Google To Require Identity Verification for All Android App Developers by 2027

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Google will require identity verification for all Android app developers, including those distributing apps outside the Play Store, starting September 2026 in Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand before expanding globally through 2027. Developers must register through a new Android Developer Console beginning March 2026. The requirement applies to certified Android devices running Google Mobile Services. Google cited malware prevention as the primary motivation, noting sideloaded apps contain 50 times more malware than Play Store apps. Hobbyist and student developers will receive separate account types. Developer information submitted to Google will not be displayed to users.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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InShaneee
3 days ago
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