Viewing teamsnapzu's Snapzine
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3841.
MoviePass Co-Founder Is Using Facial Recognition to Get You ‘Free’ Movie Tickets — With a Catch
PreShow will give customers "free" tickets if they sit through 20 minutes of ads — while their phone watches them back.
Posted in: by Apolatia -
3842.
The Fear of Losing It All
What happens to your brain when you worry about money. By Charlotte Cowles.
Posted in: by AdelleChattre -
3843.
The Quest to Acquire the Oldest, Most Expensive Book on the Planet
A wooden box containing one of the most valuable books in the world arrives in Los Angeles on October 14, 1950, with little more fanfare—or security—than a Sears catalog. Code-named “the commode,” it was flown from London via regular parcel post, and while it is being delivered locally by Tice and Lynch, a high-end customs broker and shipping company, its agents have no idea what they are carrying and take no special precautions.
Posted in: by iamsanchez -
3844.
The Instagram-famous plant that used to be impossible to find
What started as a niche social media trend has spread to big brands like Walmart and Home Depot.
Posted in: by RXCKSTXR -
3845.
How Joe Rogan’s Hugely Popular Podcast Became an Essential Platform for “Freethinkers” Who Hate...
The former host of Fear Factor is now the Larry King of the Intellectual Dark Web.
Posted in: by jedlicka -
3846.
Alzheimer’s Drug Failure Leaves Scientists Seeking New Direction
For years, drugmakers have tried targeting a brain compound called beta amyloid. Not one of those attempts has worked.
Posted in: by ubthejudge -
3847.
Mueller concludes Russia-Trump probe with no new indictments
Special counsel Robert Mueller closed his long and contentious Russia investigation with no new charges Friday, ending the probe that has cast a dark shadow over Donald Trump’s presidency but launching a fresh wave of political battles over the still-confidential findings. The report’s details remained a mystery, accessible to only a handful of Justice Department officials while Attorney General William Barr prepared to release the “principal conclusions” soon.
Posted in: by messi -
3848.
How YouTube is changing toys
Kids are obsessed with YouTube unboxing videos. The toy industry is taking notice.
Posted in: by RXCKSTXR -
3849.
Earth is (always has been) round, so why have the flat-out wrong become so lively?
Every fringe theorist needs an amplifier—used to be the penny press; today it's the Web.
Posted in: by shwarber -
3850.
The Truth About Wasabi
Have you ever eaten wasabi? If you answered “yes” to that question, you are likely mistaken. Most sushi eaters—even in Japan—are actually being served a mixture of ground horseradish and green food coloring splashed with a hint of Chinese mustard. Worldwide, experts believe that this imposter combination masquerades as wasabi about 99% of the time.
Posted in: by belangermira -
3851.
'Mindblowing' haul of fossils over 500m years old unearthed in China
Thousands of fossils date back to huge burst in diversity of life on Earth known as Cambrian explosion
Posted in: by funhonestdude -
3852.
Microsoft just booted up the first “DNA drive” for storing data
Microsoft has been working toward a photocopier-size device that would replace data centers by storing files, movies, and documents in DNA strands, which can pack in information at mind-boggling density.
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3853.
A Giant Ad Fraud Scheme Drained Users' Batteries And Data By Running Hidden Video Ads
A scheme to stealthily run video ads behind banner images drained users' batteries and data while they used popular Android apps.
Posted in: by Apolatia -
3854.
Can exercise reverse the ageing process?
It's not for everyone, but older athletes are pushing the limits of what the body can do as it ages.
Posted in: by funhonestdude -
3855.
Women's Pain Is Different From Men's—the Drugs Could Be Too
Men and women can’t feel each other’s pain. Literally. We have different biological pathways for chronic pain, which means pain-relieving drugs that work for one sex might fail in the other half of the population. So why don’t we have pain medicines designed just for men or women? The reason is simple: Because no one has looked for them. Drug development begins with studies on rats and mice, and until three years ago, almost all that research used only male animals. As a result, women in particular may be left with unnecessary pain—but men might be too.
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3856.
Crashed jets reportedly lacked key safety features because Boeing charged extra for them
Boeing jets in Ethiopia and Indonesia lacked two safety features in their cockpits because the company charged extra to install them.
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3857.
Stranger Things 3 | Official Trailer [HD]
One summer can change everything. Watch the official trailer for Stranger Things 3.
Posted in: by 8mm -
3858.
FCC Admits in Court That It Can't Track Who Submits Fake Comments
The FCC’s public comment system is a bloody mess. Over the past two years, it’s become apparent that political lobbyists, usually acting on behalf of the telecom industry itself, are prepared to manipulate the agency’s rulemaking process and impersonate everyday Americans just to create the illusion of public support where, in reality, none exists.
Posted in: by iamsanchez -
3859.
Most Amazon Brands Are Duds, Not Disrupters, Study Finds
The explosion of Amazon.com Inc.’s private-label products -- batteries, baby wipes, jeans, tortilla chips, sofas -- has prompted concern that the world’s biggest online retailer could use its clout to promote these house brands at the expense of merchants selling similar products on the web store.
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3860.
A Russian 'troll slayer' went undercover at a troll factory and found that hundreds of...
The operation was run by a local restauranteur who was placed under US sanctions for attempting to interfere with US elections. Slaying online trolls can be a lonely business. Just ask Russia's Lyudmila Savchuk, who first exposed the story of Russia's disinformation campaign back in 2014. The journalist and 33-year-old mother of two, Savchuk started noticing websites and social media accounts attacking local opposition activists in her hometown of Saint Petersburg with a frequency she hadn't seen before.
Posted in: by junglman -
3861.
MySpace admits losing 12 years of music
MySpace, one of the first online social networks, has apologised after a server migration caused a huge loss of data. A message on its website says that "any photos, videos and audio files" uploaded more than three years ago may no longer be available. There had been complaints going back several months that links to music were no longer working.
Posted in: by geoleo -
3862.
MoviePass brings back its unlimited movie plan, with a limited time price of $9.95
MoviePass is bringing back a version of the plan that made it so popular in the first place — a subscription where you pay a monthly fee and get an unlimited number of 2D movie tickets.
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3863.
Google Unveils Gaming Platform Stadia, A Competitor To Xbox, PlayStation And PC
Tech giant Google is getting into gaming in a big way with a direct challenge to the giants of console and PC gaming. It’s called Stadia. By Stephen Totilo.
Posted in: by AdelleChattre -
3864.
The Most Powerful iMac Pro Now Costs $15,927
An iMac Pro with 256 GB of RAM pretty much just exists for bragging rights.
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3865.
How the Guardian Went Digital
Remaking itself from a little leftie newspaper to a powerhouse of internet journalism required experimentation, transparency, and embracing uncertainty.
Posted in: by paddystacks -
3866.
Why China Silenced a Clickbait Queen in Its Battle for Information Control
Ma Ling was one of China’s most popular bloggers. Then she became a target in President Xi Jinping’s campaign to purge popular voices that the Communist Party finds threatening.
Posted in: by RXCKSTXR -
3867.
It's Scary How Much Personal Data People Leave on Used Laptops and Phones
In a dusty plastic bin under my bed lies at least four laptops, six cellphones, and a half-dozen hard drives. I have no idea what’s on any of them. Most of these devices predate the cloud-storage era, and so likely contain solitary copies of photos, texts, and emails, among other confidential files (porn?) that I’d probably be horrified to learn had fallen into the hands of strangers.
Posted in: by iamsanchez -
3868.
Kidfluencers' Rampant YouTube Marketing Creates Minefield for Google
Efforts to tackle inappropriate children’s content had unintended effect, pushing creators into legal gray zones.
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3869.
How rats became an inescapable part of city living
In some parts of the world they are revered and protected; in other places they are captured and eaten for dinner. One thing is certain: They’re everywhere.
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3870.
Firefox 66 arrives with autoplaying blocked by default, smoother scrolling, and better search
Mozilla has released Firefox 66 with autoplaying content (audio and video) blocked by default, smoother scrolling, better search, and more.




















