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EXCLUSIVE: Vlad Tells Akademiks about Tariq Nasheed Confronting Tommy Sotomayor at VladTV – VladTV

Watch the full interview now as a VladTV Youtube Member: Click Here

Part 14: DJ Akademiks on Why He Interviewed Andrew Tate, Vlad Turned Down the InterviewPart 1: DJ Akademiks on Helping Vlad & NLE Choppa End Their Beef and Do an Interview

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In this clip, DJ Vlad recalls the awkward moment when he got caught up in a beef between radio hosts Tommy Sotomayor and Tariq Nasheed during a taping for VladTV, before explaining why he is no longer interested in working with anyone from their genre again. To that, DJ Akademiks explains why he, too, was going to interview Tommy Sotomayor as long as the conversation had the potential to be productive and worthwhile. DJ Vlad responds by indicating that the impression he got from Sotomayor during their discussion was that he had something against poor people, which turned him off. Lastly, DJ Akademiks shares his thoughts on the talk radio/conservation political commentator genre as a whole.

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EXCLUSIVE: Vlad Tells Akademiks about Tariq Nasheed Confronting Tommy Sotomayor at VladTV - VladTV

2022 – Combatting Misinformation – The Seattle U Newsroom – The Seattle U Newsroom – News, stories and more

Lydia Bello, science and engineering librarian, and Jennifer Bodley, adjunct librarian, collaborated on a blog article, SIFT-ing Through Information Online to provide the campus community with guidance on media literacy, which is being critically engaged when receiving, finding, evaluating, using, creating and sharing media, particularly in an online environment.While some question the legitimacy of Wikipedia, learn how its their first trusted line of defense in avoiding misinformation.

Q: What prompted you both to write a blog article that addresses media literacy and misinformation?

JB: We were asked to write about misinformation, mostly prompted from events happening in the world. I think at the time the Russia-Ukraine news cycle had started and ... COVID-19 has obviously been in the news cycle for a long time and theres a lot of other issues where misinformation is very problematic with information getting to the public.

LB: In the early days of the invasion of Ukraine, there was information flowing fast and furious. A lot of it misinformation and unverified and a lot of people here [at SU] are directly impacted by those current events. Along with that, Jennifer had just finished teaching a workshop on these skills and it all sort of fell into place that we thought this might be a good time to offer a reminder.

JB: News is a fire hose, so whenever you have that fire hose obviously you dont have checks and balances and controlled dissemination of factual reporting.

Q: What are some of the sources where misinformation is the highest or spreads fastest (i.e., social media/specific platforms, news media, etc.)?

LB: Some of the really obvious places include social media designed to spread information quickly. Weve all seen articles and research about the addictive nature of social media, about how its designed to engage you in order to create advertising dollars. Because of that, its a core place where information moves.

Misinformation and disinformation also move quickly when theres a strong sense of emotion attached to it. Emotions like fear or anger are ones that come to mind, but also vindication, satisfaction and a really strong desire to help. When those emotions are attached or are involved, they help move the flow of misinformation on these platforms really quickly as well.

JB: Were talking about social media being behind a lot of misinformation and disinformation, but the mainstream media also reports on social media and we also know that governing bodies and other institutions of power disseminate a lot of information through social media.

Its about figuring out whats okay. I can use the social media from this organization because its a quote good organization. But then Im supposed to be able to spot this bad information from this other social media channel.

Were in a flat environment (lacking indicators around credibility). Years ago, when you went to the checkout stand, you could tell what was a tabloid like The National Enquirer by the paper it was printed on, the colors used and the sensational headlines. There was a tactile or concrete way that you could process and evaluate. And right now, everything is just in this flat environment, so it's just that much harder to process.

Q: As librarians, how do you view your roles when it comes to combatting misinformation?

LB: One of the key parts of our jobs is helping our students, faculty and staff build skills to navigate the information environment (through courses, research services, etc.). The first thing you think of when you think librarians is that we help students navigate the library and navigate the information we have in the library, which is its own type of complex information environment.

We see those skills transferring to teaching students how to navigate the world and the information environment outside of their assignments as well. Helping students build those skills and then also helping them understand that they need to be engaged with the information they see on a day-to-day basis, not necessarily as passive consumers.

We [as humans] dont innately know how to navigate information and theres a lot of talk about someone who has grown up around technology, but even young people dont innately know. It depends on who has access to what sort of technology growing up and thats very financially based. It also depends on if youre actually taught those skills or not.

A good part of our job is explicitly teaching those skills and teaching them in such a way that they fit with their day-to-day lives.

JB: As librarians, were teaching students particularly in content-related classes. When we teach students in an introductory chemistry or psychology class, we arent working with domain experts [in those subjects]. Domain experts already know seminal works and know prominent, authoritative researchers and organizations within their domain who are disseminating information. Domain experts can go to these sources directly or see them quickly in search results. Domain novices dont have that head start when evaluating information. They have to evaluate a lot of unfamiliar and complex information with no specialized knowledge.

Take for example health information. A student could say, I know the CDC, I understand the government structures, so I know that the CDC would potentially be a good source. Somebody else could say, Oh, you know doctor so and so has this blog, I think that would be a good source. This directly ties into what we teach them in the classroom and how they apply that in their lives outside the classroom.

Q: Anything you would like to highlight or expand on regarding Michael Caufields work/approach (SIFT Method, etc.)?

JB: Caulfields approach is kind of simplistic, but he specifically created it so that you could use it in that flat environment. His method helps you recontextualize information.

LB: Its grounded in a Stanford Graduate School of Education study on how students navigate the credibility of information online. There have been updates to this research recently, but one of the original studies was from 2016.

Also, I want to emphasize the SIFT method isnt like a checklist or a long, arduous process.

Its supposed to be a quick fact-checking habit. Its designed to help you decide whether you want to spend more time on a source. Its supposed to be something that you can just build in your daily practice of consuming information on a day-to-day basis. A lot of times Ill investigate sources on Wikipedia for the original source if Ive never heard of it before. Caufield calls it the Wikipedia Trickchecking to see what somebody says about a source and figure out if its a known site for misinformation.

Q: What are some ways people can spot and/or avoid misinformation?

LB: Because so many things around this flat environment are on the Internet, were losing all these contextual clues and its really easy to convince someone that something is true or something is fake. Known misinformation sites can look really well polished, have great web design and a really specific tone and a well-known and respected scholarly article or source.

All of this is why having SIFT as a habit knowing that it takes 30 seconds or less is really helpful so you dont waste time looking for clues or hints. Sometimes misinformation is not designed to be actively harmfulits satire or something else thats been moved to a completely different context.

Q: Are there any additional points, resources or intersections of media literacy/misinformation research you would like to mention?

JB: This isnt going away anytime soon or ever so theres no way we can legislate our way out of this. Corporate responsibility is not going to get rid of this. Everything from the Australian wildfires to war in Ukraine to school board meetings. I mean theres absolutely nothing that's immune to misinformation.

To view the full Lemieux Library blog article, visit https://libguides.seattleu.edu/blog/SIFT-ing-Through-Information-Online.

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2022 - Combatting Misinformation - The Seattle U Newsroom - The Seattle U Newsroom - News, stories and more

Travel social network Hahalolo aims to achieve 25 million users by the end of 2022 – GlobeNewswire

KOLKATA, India, Aug. 30, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Hahalolo had the grand opening for the Indian branch office. In this event, Hahalolo announced their development plans for products and brands in the Asia-Pacific and Africa markets, as well as the upgrade plans for the US headquarters in late 2022, with the goal of achieving 25 million users.

As a leading travel social networking application, Hahalolo will face many challenges competing with the giants in the technology field. However, their powerful features can surely help them complete their missions and goals confidently.

A leading all-in-one application in the tourism industry

In the context of globalization, travel is no longer a trend but has become a necessity in life. The current tourism trend has been shaped as multinational associated, which means that associations, organizations, and companies will join hands to be a sustainable industry rather than stand alone.

This means an increasing need for limitless connection without worrying about languages or geographical distance.

Many technology applications for tourism promotion and development have been created to meet such demand. In particular, Hahalolo is considered a leading application on travel social networks in integrating convenient features for users, including OTA Online Travel Agent, social networking, and e-commerce.

This ecosystem makes it easier for travel enthusiasts to book tours, airline tickets, hotels, online shopping, and share their journey experiences. All with just one touch.

High-quality, high-value content

The explosion of social networks raises many concerns for managers and parents when negative and unhealthy contents take over.

As a social network made for travel and real experience, the content on Hahalolo is receiving positive reviews from users. According to Mr. James Dang - CEO of Hahalolo USA, this application has added features to encourage users to create high-quality and high-value content. This way, Hahalolo will become a super app with engaging contents to develop and preserve cultures.

Mr. James Dang - CEO of Hahalolo USA

This brings great benefits to users as they can access a variety of unique and diverse knowledge from cultures, lands, and destinations worldwide.

They can find information and experience for upcoming trips or share personal experiences with others. This platform has all the necessary features of a social network, from creating content to entertainment, sharing, and connecting with people with the same passion.

The "Haha" reactions button on Hahalolo carries a positive message and creates a happy feeling for users.

The opportunity to make money

Unlike other social networking platforms where users can only make money from creating video content, Hahalolo users (Halo -ers) can earn from posting articles and images. Viewers can show appreciation for the articles, photos, and videos by awarding points to the content creators. These points can then be used to pay for OTA and e-commerce services on Hahalolo.

With the cumulative coin mining feature, Halo-ers can earn money by regularly interacting on Hahalolo. New users will receive coins equivalent to 10 USD when creating an account and can receive a daily reward of 1 USD when using the social network. The accumulated coins can also be exchanged for vouchers on Hahalolo for airline tickets, hotel bookings, and tours.

Mr. James Dang affirmed that Hahalolo has a distinct direction for product and brand development. We do not consider existing brands as competitors but gear Hahalolo towards being the common property of everyone, serving many generations, - Mr. James added.

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/729bbba4-16a9-4bc9-934a-ce61549cb41e

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Travel social network Hahalolo aims to achieve 25 million users by the end of 2022 - GlobeNewswire

Following its Series A, Poparazzis team is readying a new social app that goes beyond photos – TechCrunch

The company behind last summers hot social app Poparazzi appears to be readying a round two following its $15 million Series Aannounced in June. A new listing in the App Store under the developers account, TTYL, is teasing a pre-release app called Made With Friends. The app offers a twist on Poparazzis original concept of social networking profiles crafted by a users friends, instead of by the users themselves, but adds support for other types of content.

Poparazzi had encouraged friends to post photos to each others social networking profiles as if they were their friends paparazzi hence the name. Made With Friends, meanwhile, expands on that concept by asking users to post all sorts of things to their friends profiles including text-based content like answers to questions or prompts, as well as photos and videos.

This Poparazzi spin-off seems partly inspired by todays popular Q&A apps, like Sendit or NGL, which tie into other social networks, like Snapchat and Instagram. On those apps, users receive questions in an inbox that they can answer and share to their social profiles or Stories elsewhere. But in the case of Made With Friends, users arent posting questions anonymously, nor is the app itself delivering fake questions to create engagement as the anonymous Q&A apps had been doing (at least, until Apples App Review team caught on and requested changes to be made).

However, based on some earlier screenshots of the new app, it does appear the Q&A responses in Made With Friends could be designed for social sharing to other platforms, like Instagram.

Image Credits: Made With Friends

TechCrunch reached out to the team behind Poparazzi to ask about its plans for the new app and whether or not this was an attempt to pivot into a new area. The company responded (after publication) to confirm the new app would be released in the fall and noted Poparazzi was continuing to grow. It clarified, through a spokesperson, that Made with Friends was an evolution of Poparazzis Challenges feature from the past summer, where it challenges users to post using a prompt.

But according to data from Apptopia, the Made With Friends app was originally titled Pop Made with Friends, and had described itself as a way you could pop someone by answering questions about them, tagging them on a prompt with a photo, video, GIF, quote or description. The updated version on the App Store today does away with the pop lingo and branding, but introduces the same concept of social profiles that are essentially made by friends.

It makes sense that Poparazzis team is beginning to test new options.

Despite Poparazzis early success, which led the app to top 5 million installs a year after its launch, its since lost ground to a new wave of social networking apps that are attracting a younger, Gen Z audience. Currently, this group is dominated by BeReal, which has been steadily holding onto its position as the No. 1 app on the U.S. iPhone App Store. In addition, younger audiences have also downloaded a range of other social apps in larger numbers than Poparazzi like video networking app Yubo, which counted some 60 million sign-ups as of May, and homescreen social app Locket with around 20 million installs as of its $12.5 million seed funding announcement announced this month.

These trends could be driving TTYL to look for new twists on its friends-focused social networking concept.

This would not be the first time the team at TTYL experimented with a new social networking concept. Before delivering a hit with Poparazzi, the company had developed nearly a dozen other apps, including OMG, CampusFM, TYPO, Lynx, Yearbook 2020 as well as TTYL, the audio social network and Clubhouse rival the companys name references.

As TTYL co-founder Alex Ma explained earlier this summer, most social networking apps fail and the best thing to do is to keep building and experimenting until one works. This multi-app business model has also been adopted by another consumer social app maker, 9count, which recently raised new funding as both Wink and its Gen Z dating app Summer took off.

We noticed TTYL has already begun to market the new app through TikTok influencers as there are posts that show Made With Friends in action, despite its preorder status. One such video was also reposted to the new Made with Friends TikTok profile which teases the app as coming soon.

Its not clear what this additional may mean for Poparazzis future, but its worth noting that TTYLs flagship app has still not made its way to Android.

The App Store shows an expected release date of October 1, 2022 for Made With Friends, which is now available for preorder.

Updated 8/30/22, 4:48 PM ET with responses from TTYL.

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Following its Series A, Poparazzis team is readying a new social app that goes beyond photos - TechCrunch

How a hacking guru could save Elon Musk $44bn in the battle over Twitter – The Telegraph

Twitter has called Zatko a disgruntled employee who was fired for poor performance. Twitter's lawyers said on Tuesday that Musk's latest effort to terminate the deal was invalid and wrongful under the agreement. Of Zatkos whistleblowing claims, the social networking site has said: What weve seen so far is a false narrative about Twitter and our privacy and data security practices that is riddled with inconsistencies and inaccuracies and lacks important context.

Whereas any other tech industry worker could be ignored, Zatkos background lends some weight to his claims about Twitter. As one of the cybersecurity worlds founding characters, the former Cult of the Dead Cow hacker rubbed shoulders with pioneering ethical hackers.

CDC's hacking specialism was creating software tools that exploited security flaws in Windows, with the aim of forcing Microsoft to fix problems in the world's most popular computer operating system. Mudge's personal contribution was a tool named l0phtcrack, which unscrambled Windows users passwords.

His exploits quickly caught official eyes. In 1998 Mudge was one of seven hackers who said they could shut down the entire internet in 30 minutes, with the group making their extraordinary claim while testifying to the US Congress.

One of Mudge's contemporaries, Chris Wysopal, recalled the impact of those 1990s disclosures in a 2018 interview, saying: "Mudge and I have had meetings with Senator Mark Warner. We know Senator Cory Gardner. These guys are on the Senate Intelligence Committee." Wysopal also said the FBI had vetted the hackers at the time of their exploits to verify them as "good guys".

Mudge later turned to the corporate world where his technical and leadership skills were in high demand. Ever higher-profile jobs in the white collar world of information technology, which by the 2010s had become one of the world's dominant industries, beckoned.

In 2015 Mudge was called upon by the Obama White House to set up a software testing organisation. Two years later he returned to the private sector as head of security for Stripe, the payments processor; his success there caught the eye of Jack Dorsey, who tapped up the veteran hacker in 2020 to run security at Twitter.

By November 2021 Mr Dorsey had resigned, however, saying: I believe the company is ready to move on from its founders. His replacement was Twitter's chief technical officer, Parag Agrawal. Within tech companies there is always a tension between the IT department and the security department, and so it proved at Twitter: Mudge was ousted in January, with Twitter giving the reason as "poor performance".

Analysts say Zatkos whistleblowing claims could have implications in Musks ongoing litigation as he attempts to walk away from the $44bn takeover, which has centred around whether Twitter is honest about how many bots there are on the social network.

Ives, the Wedbush analyst, adds: Importantly, Zatko claims that Twitter does not have an accurate count of the number of spam and fake bot accounts on its platform, which will be front and centre for the Musk team.

Musk and Twitter are due to go to court on October 17 with the spotlight firmly on its former security chiefs explosive claims.

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How a hacking guru could save Elon Musk $44bn in the battle over Twitter - The Telegraph