I think teens do it to feel edgy.
I’m not saying that’s the ONLY reason they do it, but they hear about it and see others doing it and it’s a case of monkey see, monkey do.
I think teens do it to feel edgy.
I’m not saying that’s the ONLY reason they do it, but they hear about it and see others doing it and it’s a case of monkey see, monkey do.
Who is ‘him’? When I click the link it goes to Twitter and asks me to log in. I can’t tell who you are taking about.
Lol this is the best answer
Yep. It’s mind boggling that they still even do this.
The other thing I hate about reviews is when they use the same review page for different SKUs of the same product. So for example you’ll be reading a review of what you think is a 2 litre plastic container because that’s what you clicked on. The review will say something like ‘it’s too big for the fridge’. Meanwhile the review was actually for the 5 litre version of the same product. So then you have to scroll through a million reviews to find the relevant ones, with no way to filter them.
“Researchers, platforms, advertisers, government agencies, or other institutions interested in accessing the full list of domains or want details about our services for generative AI companies can contact us here”
I thought I was going crazy because I couldn’t find this list of websites. Fat lot of good this article is.
Yeah kind of. A lot of duplicate material. But that’s to be expected I guess. The ratio of tech to non tech stuff is too high, and I hate memes but that’s just personal preference.
I just browse ‘all’ on my local instance every once in a while to see if any new interesting communities have appeared, and then I’ll subscribe to them and go back to just browsing ‘subscribed’.
I figure eventually I’ll discover the best communities that I’m interested in but I’m not expecting it to happen overnight.