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Internet Culture

The Verge’s Internet Culture section is the home for daily coverage of how our online lives influence and are influenced by pop culture and the world around us. The ways in which we communicate, create, and live with each other have been radically altered by the internet’s powerful connective tissues, from the platforms we inhabit, like Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram; to the policies, laws and guidelines that govern them (or don’t); to the subcultures, communities, and memes that bring us together there — for better or worse. Here you’ll find our coverage of life on the web, with an eye on what’s next.

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TikTok
He may bring you happiness.

I always love seeing what famous people’s phones look like, and almost did a spit take at this clip of a Spanish politician’s Sonny Angel attachment.

Óscar Puente, minister of transport and sustainable mobility, is apparently a fan of the viral miniature cherub dolls that have amassed an almost cult-like following.


Muppet History was a bright spot online — now it’s embroiled in a sexual harassment scandal

Muppet History, a viral account sharing Muppets-related memes and content, is accused of sending unwanted sexual messages to other fans.

2024 in review: AI

In 2024, AI was everywhere. Let’s look back at some of the biggest moments from this year.

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External Link
What if the platforms are the dark forest’s predators?

Erin Kissane’s take on “the dark forest” idea of the internet suggests that context collapse is what makes the internet deranging. So how do you build a network where people matter?


against the dark forest

[wreckage/salvage]

Bluesky moves deeper into moderation hell.

After days of explosive growth on the platform, the Bluesky Safety team posted Friday that it received 42,000 moderation reports in the preceding 24 hours (versus 360,000 in all of 2023).

The team added that it’s working to bring on new members and asks users to help by reporting troll, spam, and scam accounts. Bluesky has also implemented email verification for new signups.


Here’s some cool stuff you can do with Bluesky

The social network has some unique and fun features to try.

Bluesky is almost at 15 million users.

A live-updating tracker using Bluesky’s API puts the site at over 14,980,000 users right now.

The site has been growing fast lately, possibly spurred most recently by the US presidential election.


A number reading 14,983,635 Users.
Screenshot: Bluesky stats
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Hey kid, wanna stare into the abyss together?

Verge staffers review election.omg.lol: “Both horrifying and kinda helpful.” “This is a hell site.” “This rules.”


election.omg.lol

[election.omg.lol]

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It’s November 1st. You know what that means.

Mariah Carey has once again emerged from the Halloween cobwebs with an elaborately produced video reminding us the holiday season — and nonstop replays of “All I Want for Christmas is You”is upon us.

As far as celebrity memes and bits go, I respect the dedication and raw capitalism with this one.


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Twitter
It’s spooky season!

New fear unlocked: that even death will not release me from the Zoom meetings.


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External Link
“It was clear every speaker understood the assignment.”

That’s XOXO organizer Andy Baio reflecting back on the speaker lineup he put together for this year’s conference, which was the last. I encourage you to read his blog post about this year’s talks, which were all amazing. (Including one from The Verge’s Sarah Jeong!)

You can watch all of the talks on YouTube.


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The girls are fightinggggggg!

So The Bear Cave, a newsletter popular among shortsellers, is claiming the short-sellers at Hindenburg Research are ripping it off. “This is the essence of plagiarism: taking the heart of someone else’s work without acknowledgement and repurposing it for your own audience.” Nate Anderson of Hindenburg has responded on Twitter, Edwin Dorsey, of The Bear Cave, isn’t having it.


Problems at Hindenburg Research

[thebearcave.substack.com]

Welcome to 2004 Week

The world we live in is, in so many ways, 20 years old. Let’s go back and see how we got here.

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Youtube
You can now watch talks from XOXO 2024.

If you have FOMO about missing out on the very last XOXO festival, the official video recordings have begun rolling out one by one.

Here’s my own talk, mostly about the harassment campaign that upended my life. I previously wrote about the experience as part of The Verge’s The Year Twitter Died package.


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What are people listening to in The Mission?

Think Shot Spotter, but for songs. There’s a “crappy Android phone” that’s set up in the Mission in San Francisco that’s just on Shazam all day. “This is culture surveillance. No one notices, no one consents. But it’s not about catching criminals. It’s about catching vibes.”


Bop Spotter

[walzr.com]

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Youtube
Just in time for Halloween, the terrifying story of a social media catfish.

Tegan and Sara (pop stars, iykyk) were known for their online presence and cultivating a fan community. But a catfish hacked Tegan’s accounts, and clearly had access to an awful lot of her personal information... turning her life upside down.


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Youtube
Bike paths, a “classic Netherlands move.”

PBS News spent a few minutes with GeoGuessr superstar Trevor Rainbolt, who made a name for himself on TikTok by being really good at the game of guessing where a random Google Maps Street View photo was taken, based on small clues and the occasional “vibe guess.”

We do love it when a news segment digs into a niche internet subculture.


Let it be known.

Former US President Donald Trump, who posted AI-generated images of Taylor Swift implying that she had endorsed him for President, now says he hates her, in a post on Truth Social.

(Swift has endorsed Vice President Kamala Harris for the office.)


Don’t ask if AI can make art — ask how AI can be art

Debates over AI’s artistic value have focused on its generative output. But so far, interactive systems have proved far more interesting.