Journalism Memes

Posts tagged with Journalism

Stupid People

Stupid People
So someone just casually asked AI to write a newspaper article about car sales statistics, and the AI—bless its silicon heart—decided to EXPOSE ITSELF by adding a helpful little note at the end saying "if you want, I can also create an even snappier front-page style version with punchy one-line stats and a bold, infographically-ready layout—perfect for maximum reader impact. Do you want me to do that next?" 💀 Imagine submitting this to your editor and they find AI literally asking for feedback IN THE ARTICLE ITSELF. It's like handing in your homework with "ChatGPT, can you make this sound smarter?" still in the document. The sheer audacity of not even proofreading before publishing is *chef's kiss* beautiful chaos. Pro tip: if you're gonna use AI to write your content, maybe delete the part where it offers you premium upgrades like a SaaS product. Just saying.

Journalists Having Bad Ideas About Software Development

Journalists Having Bad Ideas About Software Development
So a tech journalist just suggested that open source should "ban itself" in certain countries based on geopolitics. That's like suggesting gravity should stop working in specific time zones because of trade disputes. The entire point of open source is that the code is, well, open . It's publicly available. You can't "ban" something that's already distributed across millions of repositories, forks, and local machines worldwide. Even if you deleted every GitHub repo tomorrow, the code would still exist on countless hard drives, mirrors, and archive sites. Trying to geofence open source is like trying to un-ring a bell or put toothpaste back in the tube. The MIT license doesn't come with geographical restrictions for a reason. That's literally the opposite of how information distribution works on the internet. But hey, at least we got a solid Boromir meme out of someone's fundamental misunderstanding of software licensing and distribution.

The Future Of Mallory

The Future Of Mallory
Ah, the classic cryptography trio! In security modeling, Alice and Bob are the standard characters who want to communicate securely, while Mallory is the malicious attacker intercepting their messages. But here, poor Mallory has been replaced by The Atlantic magazine—implying they're now the ones snooping on everyone's conversations and spreading them to the world. Journalists: the new man-in-the-middle attack! Ten years in cybersecurity and I still can't decide which is more dangerous.