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Posts by MayF

Blocklist description: "The other blocklist is for toxic people. This one is for people who I just find irritating"



#SpéirGorm #SpéirGhorm #Ireland

Blocklist description: "The other blocklist is for toxic people. This one is for people who I just find irritating" #SpéirGorm #SpéirGhorm #Ireland

Blocklist description: "Goblins (scary face emoji) (Shhh emoji) Mute list. A list of goblins I have noticed."

Blocklist description: "Goblins (scary face emoji) (Shhh emoji) Mute list. A list of goblins I have noticed."

Blocklist description: "Less funny"

Blocklist description: "Less funny"

Blocklist description: "People with poor social skills mostly"

Blocklist description: "People with poor social skills mostly"

Checked Clearsky to confirm I'm on that anti-AI list and found out I'm also being absolutely bodied in these blocklists

3 hours ago 134 2 33 4

But need alone is not enough to set power free: there must be knowledge.

1 day ago 23 6 0 1

It's later but also: Taxi

2 days ago 3 1 0 0
Bid to take down fake videos and images of garda response to fuel protests
False viral information, much of it being generated abroad, is on a scale ‘never seen before’ in Ireland

Bid to take down fake videos and images of garda response to fuel protests False viral information, much of it being generated abroad, is on a scale ‘never seen before’ in Ireland

Meanwhile, Aidan O’Brien, an analyst at the European Digital Media Observatory Ireland at Dublin City University (DCU), has been monitoring how the far-right in Ireland and abroad reacted to the fuel blockades. He said a “disinformation economy” went into full swing during last week’s protests.
He uncovered conspiracy theories about the energy crisis and talk of “the great shutdown”, which were already in heavy circulation on Irish social media by the middle of March.
“When the protests erupted, Irish right-wing social media influencers went into overdrive posting video content. Many of these influencers benefit from features introduced on the platforms, like algorithm promotion, and have monetised their accounts,” he explained.
“There is now a disinformation economy. Influencers know the most dramatic footage, alongside the most sensational framing, will go viral, generating income. They aren’t just promoting this footage and their narratives because it suits their agenda, they’re making money doing so.”
After that international far-right influencers pounced on the content, he said. “Nearly immediately, and often within minutes of the initial videos being posted, it was downloaded and repackaged by influencers outside Ireland.
“It happened so quickly that you might assume these people are heavily immersed in the situation, but they’re chasing the content, and the story, often repackaging footage with false claims that the protest was about migration.
“This happens because over the last five years our disinformation ecology has become exponentially complex and is fully integrated with the international far-right disinformation ecosystem.”
Ireland has now become a “major focus of attention” for the international hard-right, he said.
Canadian far-right influencer Ezra Levant travelled to Ireland last week as did Kevin Posobiec, whose brother Jack is an American far-right political activist and social media personality. Both filmed content while here.
The fact both men…

Meanwhile, Aidan O’Brien, an analyst at the European Digital Media Observatory Ireland at Dublin City University (DCU), has been monitoring how the far-right in Ireland and abroad reacted to the fuel blockades. He said a “disinformation economy” went into full swing during last week’s protests. He uncovered conspiracy theories about the energy crisis and talk of “the great shutdown”, which were already in heavy circulation on Irish social media by the middle of March. “When the protests erupted, Irish right-wing social media influencers went into overdrive posting video content. Many of these influencers benefit from features introduced on the platforms, like algorithm promotion, and have monetised their accounts,” he explained. “There is now a disinformation economy. Influencers know the most dramatic footage, alongside the most sensational framing, will go viral, generating income. They aren’t just promoting this footage and their narratives because it suits their agenda, they’re making money doing so.” After that international far-right influencers pounced on the content, he said. “Nearly immediately, and often within minutes of the initial videos being posted, it was downloaded and repackaged by influencers outside Ireland. “It happened so quickly that you might assume these people are heavily immersed in the situation, but they’re chasing the content, and the story, often repackaging footage with false claims that the protest was about migration. “This happens because over the last five years our disinformation ecology has become exponentially complex and is fully integrated with the international far-right disinformation ecosystem.” Ireland has now become a “major focus of attention” for the international hard-right, he said. Canadian far-right influencer Ezra Levant travelled to Ireland last week as did Kevin Posobiec, whose brother Jack is an American far-right political activist and social media personality. Both filmed content while here. The fact both men…

The fact both men were willing to “jump on a plane” said a lot, added Mr O’Brien.
“The foreign attention and amplification of these protests are concerning…Our Government needs to start demanding real accountability and action from these [social media] companies…
“If the Minister [for Communications Patrick O’Donovan] is concerned about ‘lopsided coverage’ of the protests, he shouldn’t be worried about the radio but look at social media.”


On Friday, Minister O’Donovan admitted he made a “hames” of his call for a “review” into broadcast media coverage of fuel protests. He said, “in hindsight”, he should not have suggested that the media regulator — Coimisiún na Meán — should “review” both local and national broadcast coverage of the fuel protests.

The fact both men were willing to “jump on a plane” said a lot, added Mr O’Brien. “The foreign attention and amplification of these protests are concerning…Our Government needs to start demanding real accountability and action from these [social media] companies… “If the Minister [for Communications Patrick O’Donovan] is concerned about ‘lopsided coverage’ of the protests, he shouldn’t be worried about the radio but look at social media.” On Friday, Minister O’Donovan admitted he made a “hames” of his call for a “review” into broadcast media coverage of fuel protests. He said, “in hindsight”, he should not have suggested that the media regulator — Coimisiún na Meán — should “review” both local and national broadcast coverage of the fuel protests.

I spoke to the Sindo about the unprecedented scale of disinformation we witnessed during the fuel protests & the disinformation economy. It's not enough to get this content removed post-hoc; we need to hold the platforms accountable for promoting disinformation & hate speech.
archive.ph/AOVHC

3 days ago 166 75 6 7

Someone right now is writing a Sunday Miscellany piece about how they changed the theme tune to Sunday Miscellany.

3 days ago 13 4 4 0

Just sobbed hardest I have since my mom died in 2020.

She missed these trials by a few months.

One of most ruthless cancers. Hard to fathom that maybe she'd still be here.

I feel such a hole inside.

In case you're wondering if we should fund mRNA research instead of another stupid war ... yes.

3 days ago 7223 1436 147 17
Preview
‘I will, yeah’: How a very Irish phrase presented a challenge for an immigrant doctor Delegates at IMO conference speak of largely positive experiences of coming to work in Ireland, but say challenges remain

‘I will, yeah’: How a very Irish phrase presented a challenge for an immigrant doctor

www.irishtimes.com/health/2026/...

1 week ago 5 1 1 0
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The WSJ piece is a truly horrifying read, and I’m not sure I can recommend it; it needs a content warning klaxon. But if you have any doubts about how dangerous these things are, for adults *and* kids, or if you think their spongy ‘guardrails’ actually hold, it will clear that right up for you.

1 week ago 106 45 1 0

Novels are just comics as made by people too lazy to draw the pictures.

1 week ago 2196 398 59 30

Except it's got an EU directive behind it

2 weeks ago 0 0 1 0
“Just heard a mother on Henry Street: "Well, you wouldn't be much use in the Easter Rising, crying over a balloon."

“Just heard a mother on Henry Street: "Well, you wouldn't be much use in the Easter Rising, crying over a balloon."

Happy Easter to this great tweet

2 weeks ago 12 2 0 0

me: *visits website for the first time ever*
website: You’ve read your last free article.

2 weeks ago 784 186 11 9

Please consider buying a print so that I'm not forced to invent Aprilgiving to encourage sales bsky.app/profile/ciar...

2 weeks ago 42 24 0 0
Cartoon by Bernard Hage:

Title How to watch the collapse of civilisation

1. A bearded middle-aged man sitting in a chair, looking at his phone. He's slumped forward, his posture is terrible; a broken red line traces the curve of his back, and there's a red X next to the picture.

2. The same man sitting in the same chair looking at the same phone, but this time he's sitting up straight. A broken green line traces his straight spine, and there's a green tick next to the picture.

Cartoon by Bernard Hage: Title How to watch the collapse of civilisation 1. A bearded middle-aged man sitting in a chair, looking at his phone. He's slumped forward, his posture is terrible; a broken red line traces the curve of his back, and there's a red X next to the picture. 2. The same man sitting in the same chair looking at the same phone, but this time he's sitting up straight. A broken green line traces his straight spine, and there's a green tick next to the picture.

Today's inspirational message:

3 weeks ago 944 300 4 13
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JK Rowling is calling women athletes men even after they pass genetic testing. People in her replies are talking about these women having “ambiguous” genitalia. We are in an extremely frightening moment for ALL women thanks to transphobia.

3 weeks ago 11468 2938 157 237

They want to police our genitalia and run tests on our bodies to “prove” we are women, at which point they will still deny it. This is why the only feminism is trans-inclusive and why transphobia and anti-trans discrimination should be a top political priority.

3 weeks ago 4024 769 19 15

Castor Semenya: "I have carried this weight. So have other women of colour who deserved better from sport. Reintroducing genetic screening is not progress — it is walking backwards. Women’s sport does not need this. It needs to be abuse-free... This is just exclusion with a new name."

3 weeks ago 495 193 0 5

You could follow this feed
bsky.app/profile/did:...

3 weeks ago 3 0 1 0
“I have no great opinion of [JK Rowling’s writing style]. When so many adult critics were carrying on about the “incredible originality” of the first Harry Potter book, I read it to find out what the fuss was about, and remained somewhat puzzled; it seemed a lively kid’s fantasy crossed with a ‘school novel’, good fare for its age group, but stylistically ordinary, imaginatively derivative, and ethically rather mean-spirited.”

“I have no great opinion of [JK Rowling’s writing style]. When so many adult critics were carrying on about the “incredible originality” of the first Harry Potter book, I read it to find out what the fuss was about, and remained somewhat puzzled; it seemed a lively kid’s fantasy crossed with a ‘school novel’, good fare for its age group, but stylistically ordinary, imaginatively derivative, and ethically rather mean-spirited.”

It’s a good day to revisit this Ursula Le Guin quote. In the best possible reality, Earthsea would be the dominant fantasy series for children.

3 weeks ago 502 109 18 7
A poster with the text given in the post, plus the Bohs & Des Kelly logos, and a photo of football boots. The tones are sepia and orange.

A poster with the text given in the post, plus the Bohs & Des Kelly logos, and a photo of football boots. The tones are sepia and orange.

It’ll be a book swap AND boots drop this Saturday 28th March 11am-12.30pm An Síol,19 Manor Street. This month we'll be doubling as a Football Boots Collection point! Our friends at Bohemians Climate Coop are collecting football boots (clean & in wearable condition 🙏 ) for local asylum seekers.

4 weeks ago 2 3 0 2

Would be funny if it wasn't so horrible

4 weeks ago 2 0 0 0
A recipe instruction that suggests I’m barely keeping it together

A recipe instruction that suggests I’m barely keeping it together

Irish Times recipe uncannily aware of my emotional fragility

4 weeks ago 110 31 0 2

"This is also a story about sex and drugs and Music With Rocks In.
Well …
… one out of three ain’t bad.
Actually, it’s only thirty-three per cent, but it could be worse."

1 month ago 3 0 1 0

I really do love these books.

1 month ago 26 2 3 0
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It was so unheard of growing up I still notice when I see it even though it's been normal now for a few years

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

The list is as racist, homophobic/transphobic and misogynistic as you'd expect of a school book ban. Of course it was "AI-written," adding an extra layer of awful

And... there were 2 Terry Pratchett books on it

So: Discworld fans, assemble? 🐢

1 month ago 333 143 16 6
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As campaigns gear up in central Dublin, how sound is the voter register? It isn’t hard to find people registered to the wrong addresses and zombie entries.

As campaigns gear up in central Dublin, how sound is the voter register? It isn’t hard to find people registered to the wrong addresses and zombie entries.

1 month ago 5 7 1 0

I have a joke about carbon offsets but it doesn't work.

1 month ago 317 40 5 12
Video

Happy St. Patrick's Day, New York.

1 month ago 39151 9662 1024 3182

Or JB as woman who wore beret in Waterford

1 month ago 1 0 1 0