Thursday, June 05, 2025

When are people too old to do their jobs?

 When are people too old to do their jobs? While half of people over 50 are being pushed out of their jobs, regulation changes are making people work longer


A journalist’s home was vandalized after an investigation. The subject of her reporting was indicted

In another disturbing case of violence against journalists, prosecutors say Eric Spofford paid thousands to target NHPR staffers


Jake Tapper’s Biden Book is Hilarious and InsaneMatt Taibbi


Quantum computers could break Bitcoin encryption 20 times faster, Google warnsInteresting Engineering

 

America is a scam Cory Doctorow, Pluralistic


Beware The Bundle: Companies Are Banking On Becoming Your Police Department’s Favorite “Public Safety Technology” Vendor Tech Dirt


ICE Taps into Nationwide AI-Enabled Camera Network, Data Shows 404 Media


Developer Builds Tool That Scrapes YouTube Comments, Uses AI to Predict Where Users Live404 Media


Project Push creates an archive of news alerts from around the world

NiemanLabs: “A little over a year ago, Matt Taylor began to feel like he was getting a few too many push notifications from the BBC News app. It’s a feeling many of us can probably relate to. Many people, myself included, have turned off news notifications entirely in the past few months. 


Taylor, however, went in the opposite direction. Instead of turning off notifications, he decided to see how the BBC — the most popular news app in the U.K., where Taylor lives —  compared to other news organizations around the world. So he dug out an old Google Pixel phone, downloaded 61 news apps onto it, and signed up for push notifications on all of them. 

As notifications roll in, a custom-built script (made with the help of ChatGPT) uploads their text to a server and a Bluesky page, providing a near real-time view of push notifications from services around the world. Taylor calls it Project Push People who work in news “take the front page very seriously,” said Taylor, a product manager at the Financial Times who built Project Push in his spare time.

 “There are lots of editors who care a lot about that, but actually one of the most important people in the newsroom is the person who decides that they’re going to press a button that sends an immediate notification to millions of people’s phones.” The Project Push feed is a fascinating portrait of the news today. There are the expected alerts — breaking news, updates to ongoing stories like the wars in Gaza and Ukraine, the latest shenanigans in Washington…”