WebProNews

Tag: Reddit

  • Reddit CEO Yishan Wong Steps Down

    Reddit CEO Yishan Wong Steps Down

    Yishan Wong took the CEO reins at reddit months after the “Front Page of the Internet” was spun off from Condé Nast. Wong became CEO in March, 2012. He has now handed in his resignation.

    Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian broke the news in a blog post, saying, “We are grateful for his contributions over the last few years, including growing reddit from 35M to 174M, and we have a team in place to ensure that reddit’s best years are still ahead of it.”

    Ellen Pao, who has been second in command, will be assuming the role of interim CEO until a permanent replacement can be found. She has been running operations for the company, and is responsible for building reddit’s mobile team, acquiring Alien Blue, and leading the team behind the AMA app.

    Dan McComas, who joined the company three years ago, will become SVP of Product.

    Ohanian himself will become Executive Chairman. He writes:

    I left reddit in 2010 to volunteer for kiva.org in Armenia and have been in an advisory role to reddit ever since. When reddit became independent in 2011, I was asked to return, but turned it down because there were exciting non-profit projects I wanted to do, a book I wanted to write, and I loved advising early stage startups at Y Combinator.

    Instead, I joined the board and have done everything I can to not be a helicopter parent, but rather support reddit and all the amazing people who make it work as best I can. But reddit is and will always be my baby (yes, reddit has two dads, and that’s awesome).

    Mobile, user experience, and community tools will be priorities going forward, he says.

    Sam Altman, an advisor to reddit, wrote a blog post about Wong’s resignation, noting that he left the position last week. He talks about a dispute Wong had with the board:

    The reason was a disagreement with the board about a new office (location and amount of money to spend on a lease). To be clear, though, we didn’t ask or suggest that he resign—he decided to when we didn’t approve the new office plan.

    We wish him the best and we’re thankful for the work he’s done to grow reddit more than 5x.

    In September, reddit announced a new $50 million round of funding.

    Altman has apparently been handling CEO duties between Wong’s departure and Pao’s appointment.

    Image via Twitter

  • Reddit Launches ‘Redditmade’ Crowdfunding Beta

    Reddit Launches ‘Redditmade’ Crowdfunding Beta

    Reddit announced a new crowdfunding project called redditmade, which is now in open beta. The company says it hopes the endeavor will lead to stronger subreddit communities, and allow redditors to better collaborate and support one another.

    Reddit says, “redditmade is a new place to turn the best designs and products by the community into reality. redditmade gives you the flexibility to create almost anything you want, easily raise money, and support causes you care about. It’s also a great way for others to find awesome new products they’ll love and support other redditors while knowing their information and money will always be secure.”

    So far, it looks like most of the active campaigns are for reddit-related t-shirts. Part of the reason for that is probably that reddit tells people getting started specifically how to create a t-shirt campaign. It also provides steps for custom products.

    “We’ll walk you through every step of the process, connect you to our network of quality sourcing partners, work with you on the design if necessary, promote your campaign, and oversee the production and distribution,” the company explains. “The best part is there’s no risk and zero cost to you (you can even make money!).”

    More details here.

    Image via reddit

  • Facebook Referrals Still Looking Good, Not A Lot Of Good News For Other Social Networks

    Facebook Referrals Still Looking Good, Not A Lot Of Good News For Other Social Networks

    Shareaholic released its quarterly Social Media Traffic Report for the third quarter. Facebook is still sending way more referrals than any other social network, but at the same time, things are looking worse for traffic from the others.

    The report found that Facebook is driving four times as much traffic to sites as Pinterest, which is in second place. In other words, the one that’s closest to Facebook isn’t anywhere close to Facebook.

    social referrals

    Still, Pinterest is on the rise. Over the past year, its share of traffic has grown 50.07%. Twitter on the other hand is on the way down. Since September 2013, its share has declined from about 25% to a 13-month low.

    When it comes to StumbleUpon, reddit, Google+, YouTube (yes, even YouTube), and LinkedIn, things are looking even worse.

    “For most publishers, marketers and site owners, the five remaining social networks are forgettable sources of traffic,” writes Shareaholic’s Danny Wong. “Collectively, they contributed 0.74% of overall traffic sites received last month, which is less than the number of visits Twitter alone sent.”

    StumbleUpon’s share is down 26.49% from last year. Reddit’s share shrank from 0.26% to 0.18%. LinkedIn fell 47.37% year-over-year, which seems odd considering its positioned itself more as a publishing platform over the past year.

    Google+ did manage to increase its share by 57.02%, but it’s still at the low end of the totem pole.

    YouTube was named the biggest loser. It decreased its share of traffic over the past year by a whopping 87.27%.

    Check out the full report here.

    Images via Shareaholic

  • Alien Blue Is Now Reddit’s Official iOS App

    Alien Blue Is Now Reddit’s Official iOS App

    Alien Blue, the hands down best way to browse reddit for iOS users, is now a part of the reddit family.

    Reddit has just announced the acquisition of Alien Blue, and with it a slight rebranding a price structure shift.

    Not a name rebranding – just a logo. It’s still going to be called Alien Blue as opposed to taking on a more specific to reddit name, but the app logo is changing a bit.

    The icon on the left is the new version. It bears a resemblance to the icon for reddit’s AMA-specific iOS app, which was just launched last month.

    It’s an entirely new app, so you need to download it again. Current Alien Blue users know that the iPhone app is free – but you could pay $1.99 to upgrade to the PRO version.

    Well, if you already have PRO version, it’s going to go away for a second (as reddit has “no way to verify, credit, or transfer your old Pro account due to app transfer limits). But don’t worry, reddit’s going to let you have PRO for free if you snag it within the next week. So, for people who hadn’t bought PRO already – well, here’s your chance to beat the system and get it for free.

    Also, the normally $3.99 iPad app will be free until reddit can integrate it with the iPhone app.

    You can snag the new Alien Blue now in the App Store. But before you do, you should probably read this:

    This is a brand new download, so current users, be sure to get it and then transfer your settings before you remove the old app.You can transfer many of your customized settings to the new version (including subreddit groups, filters, and Imgur uploads) if you:

    Launch the older version of Alien Blue and tap “Settings” > ”Advanced Settings” > “Privacy Settings” > “Export Settings to Clipboard”
    In the new Alien Blue app, tap “Settings” > “Advanced Settings” > “Privacy Settings” > “Import Settings from Clipboard”

  • Gillian Anderson Begs to Be a Ghostbuster, Hints at New X-Files Movie

    Gillian Anderson Begs to Be a Ghostbuster, Hints at New X-Files Movie

    Gillian Anderson is a nerd-boy fave. Most of those nerd-boys are now grown up, even if they are still living at home. But when Anderson dropped in to do a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything), the fan base turned out in droves.

    When asked about any recent news regarding a possible upcoming X-Files movie, Anderson was coy.

    “Uh….uh… uh… Sorta kinda. Keep your ears to the ground.”

    That was enough to elicit loads of “I want to believe” responses.

    Anderson was also asked, “Are you aware of Kumail Nanjiani’s podcast “The X-Files Files”? Have they tried to get you to do an episode?”

    She was all about it.

    “I wanna do it! I just heard about this yesterday and it sounds awesome.”

    But the most fun happened when she was asked about the idea of an all-female Ghostbusters project. Paul Feig has announced that he will do the project with a female cast. Bill Murray has offered up his picks for the women: Melissa McCarthy, Kristen Wiig, Linda Cardellini and Emma Stone.

    But Anderson wants in.

    “OH MY GOD, I just looked it up online. Paul Feig, cast me now! Start a Twitter petition! I’m free!!!!! I’m free I’m free and I’m funny, goddamnit!”

    Someone even floated the idea that there could be crossover potential between the X-Files universe and Ghostbusters.

    “It would be kind of cool if she got to play Dana Scully in an alternate reality where she was forced out of the FBI for her work in the X-Files and ended up as a ghostbuster struggling to make ends meet.”

    But does Anderson herself believe?

    One commenter asked, “Have you ever had a real life X-file moment? Or thought you did?”

    “I’ve definitely felt other spirits,” Anderson responded. “I’m quite sensitive to it. And yes. But it’s not something you can really talk about with too many people, especially not me.”

    Anderson also revealed to the Reddit crowd that she is slightly agoraphobic, likes pea and ham soup, loves Reuben sandwiches, has not quite finished watching Breaking Bad yet, and drinks Americanos at Starbucks.

    Anderson was on the AMA chiefly to plug her new novel “A Vision of Fire”, written with Jeff Rovin. But she played the game right and answered plenty of fan questions rather than just sticking to her book.

  • Imgur Aims For Better GIFs With Project GIFV

    Imgur Aims For Better GIFs With Project GIFV

    Imgur, one of the biggest image sharing sites on the Internet (in no small part thanks to reddit), announced a new format for looping GIF videos – GIFV.

    The company says it is reimagining the looping GIF video thanks to the significance it has to Internet culture. It shows a 50MB GIF, which it converted to 3.4MB file in the new format, which enables it to still look great and load quickly.

    Imgur says in a blog post, “The cornerstone of Project GIFV is a platform-wide upgrade to automatically convert uploaded GIF files on the fly into the MP4 video format. The converted MP4s are significantly smaller than their equivalent GIFs, which allows them to load at lightning-fast speeds with better quality. By lowering bandwidth consumption, the change also optimizes Imgur for users on mobile. Rejoice!”

    “Beyond performance increases, the core experience will not change: Project GIFV implements MP4 video in a way that looks and behaves exactly like a GIF,” the company adds.

    Project GIFV is introducing “massively” improved upload limits on Imgur itself, and the uploads will now fully animate on Twitter and Facebook.

    Imgur will also now denote converted MP4s with a .gifv file extension. More on the project here.

    Earlier this year, Imgur secured a $40 million round of funding including a contribution from reddit, which just secured its own $50 million round recently.

    Imgur told us at the time it would use the funding to accelerate internal growth, drive continued product development and innovation, and grow its community.

    Image via Imgur

  • Google Now Shows Reddit And Others In ‘News’ Box

    Google Now Shows Reddit And Others In ‘News’ Box

    Update: According to Danny Sullivan, who spoke with Google about the subject, the “In the News” box is now showing content from additional sources, including reddit, the Yoast blog, and other content deemed newsowrthy. This includes things that are not actually in Google News, but also includes the traditional Google News content.

    It looks like Google News is now using reddit as a content source, which is interesting for a variety of reasons.

    Search Engine Land, working off a tip from a reader, points out that Google is showing a link from reddit in its News results for the query “dunkin donuts”. We were able to reproduce this:

    Reddit is the self-described “front page of the internet,” which is actually a pretty accurate description for a lot of people. The Internet’s biggest, most important, and most interesting stories, pretty much always end up on reddit one way or another. That said, so do a bunch of other ridiculous things.

    It’s unclear just how much of reddit Google is tapping here. Interestingly enough, this particular result isn’t even from a news-themed subreddit, but is from r/funny. On top of that, it’s not even an article or particularly newsworthy, but an image someone uploaded to Imgur, as a great deal of the content on reddit is.

    Google isn’t just showing users the Imgur image, however. It’s showing them the reddit page, which comes with the user’s headline, as well as all of the discussion that ensues.

    As we’ve seen in the past, big stories sometimes hit reddit before they hit the mainstream, and this could be why Google has included it, as it’s not the typical type of content Google News is looking for, as evidenced by its guidelines.

    Reddit frequently provides a source for interesting content that many publishers latch onto and regurgitate into articles that then in turn may show up in Google News, so it’s quite interesting to see Google just going straight to the source even when not in article form.

    Images via Google, Imgur/reddit

  • Jared Leto and Snoop Dogg Invest Big in Reddit

    Jared Leto and Snoop Dogg Invest Big in Reddit

    What do Dallas Buyer’s Club star (and Oscar winner) Jared Leto, “Gin and Juice” rapper Snoop Dogg, Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen, Sequoia Capital’s Alfred Lin and PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel have in common?

    They’re all Redditors. And they just joined together to pony up $50 million to give the popular site a capital infusion.

    Reddit, which bills itself as The Front Page of the Internet, is a different kind of place. Not quite as rough-hewn as 4Chan — though they do rub elbows — Reddit can be thought of as a forum where links are posted and upvoted or downvoted. But it’s not just a social bookmarking and ranking site.

    Reddit is built from various categories of interest — called subreddits — that cater to nearly every taste, whim, fetish, and fancy imaginable. You can find material and discussions on anything from male fashion advice to atheism to cat pictures.

    But there is more. Links to off-Reddit material are a big part, but so are pictures. The popular image-hosting site, Imgur, was created specifically for Reddit users to host on rather than wind up with dead links from other hosting sites.

    Occasionally, their image-sharing ways have gotten Reddit in some hot water. A former subreddit (now eliminated) called Jailbait was seen by some as skirting the edge of underage pornography. The powers-that-be at Reddit nixed it.

    But recently the release of tons of celebrity nudes, hacked from cloud storage accounts, was another scandal Reddit had to live down. The release didn’t even originally happen on Reddit, but members quickly disseminated the photos of Jennifer Lawrence and others in a wave of posting known as “The Fappening”. Moderators quashed the threads quickly, but not before tons of people got the photos.

    Nonetheless, Reddit has earned its place in today’s Internet landscape. And celebs like Leto have joined with investors like Andreessen to help keep the lights on at Reddit.

    Reddit is currently maintained by a staff of 60 people. Reddit’s mobile reach is limited to a few poorly-designed apps. They plan to use that $50 million to add some features, hire more staff, and build a mobile product.

  • Reddit Raises New $50 Million Round Of Funding

    Reddit Raises New $50 Million Round Of Funding

    Reddit said on Tuesday that it has closed a new $50 million round of outside funding led by Y Combinator President Sam Altman with participation from Sequoia Capital’s Alfred Lin and Andreessen Horowitz’s Marc Andreessen.

    Other investors mentioned further down in the announcement include Peter Thiel, Ron Conway, Paul Buchheit, Jared Leto, Jessica Livingston, Kevin and Julia Hartz, Mariam Naficy, Josh Kushner, Calvin Broadus Jr. (Get it, Snoop Dogg!), and CEO Yishan Wong.

    The company discusses its plans for the money on its blog:

    reddit has had a long and complex history, starting as one of the first Y Combinator companies, then as a division of Conde Nast, and three years ago spun out as an independent entity. During all of this time we have operated with a shoestring budget. This made us become efficient; it also meant that we were only able to work on essential features and were always understaffed. Even with the last year’s hiring (we’re 60+ strong now), we’ve found that there are still a lot more features you’ve been asking for that we haven’t always been able to get to as fast as we’d like.

    Thus, we’re planning to use this money to hire more staff for product development, expand our community management team, build out better moderation and community tools, work more closely with third party developers to expand our mobile offerings (try our new AMA app), improve our self-serve ad product, build out redditgifts marketplace, pay for our growing technical infrastructure, and all the many other things it takes to support a huge and growing global internet community.

    Interestingly, reddit says it has come up with a new way for its investors to give 10% of their shares back to the community.

    In a reddit post (via TechCrunch), Wong says they’re thinking about creating a cryptocurrency and making it backed by those shares of the company, and then distributing it to the community.

    Image via reddit

  • Vagina Cookies Lead to Feminist Flame-Up in Second Grade Class (New Updates)

    Vagina Cookies Lead to Feminist Flame-Up in Second Grade Class (New Updates)

    One of the more fun subreddits to peruse on the popular site Reddit is know by the initials TIFU, which stands for “Today I F*cked Up”. In the category, posters tell stories of major faux pas or unwise moves they or others made that day. You will see things like “TIFU by Showing My Testicle to a Lot of People” or “TIFU by Eating Too Many Cashews on Friday Night”. The titles are often curious and draw the reader in to hear the rest of the story.

    But this week one of the most popular TIFU posts was about a second grade class teacher who allowed parents to bring snacks to class, only to have to deal with a self-proclaimed “feminist” who thought it a good idea to bring cookies made to look like vaginas. To be very specific, the cookies looked like vulvas, but let’s not get too hung up on the details, shall we?

    The teacher tells the tale thusly:

    “[The mother who was slated to bring in snacks this week] comes into the classroom with a pan full of treats and brings them to me and says with a smile ‘I decided you can use these to teach the kids about the woman’s vagina today’. Baffled and completely caught off guard I slowly peel the aluminum foil off the pan to behold a plethora of sugar cookie and frosting vaginas. Not just any old vagina, but ALL KINDS OF VAGINAS. There were small, puffy, white, brown, shaved, bald, and even a fire crotch with beef curtains. perplexed I give the parent the most professional look I can muster and quietly reply ‘I’m sorry Autumn [a fake name], but I can’t give these to my students. This just isn’t appropriate.’”

    Apparently the mother went into a rant about the teacher’s refusing to allow the cookies to be given to the second-grade students.

    “[The mother] starts yelling in front of the class about how ‘I should be proud of my vagina’ and ‘I am settling for a women’s role in life’. Utterly bemused and frozen from shock all I can do is stand and stare at the woman as the word ‘vagina’ is yelled in front of my second grade class about 987,000 times. Finally after what seemed like an eternity, she storms out of the class leaving her vagina cookies on my desk.”

    But the story did not end there. The angry mother took to email and blasted the poor teacher again. Spelling and grammatical structure have been preserved from the original source documents. Names of the teacher, mother, and student are redacted.

    “Miss [redacted], I would just like to take the time and express my feeling of todays [sic] incident. I thought you were a very well educated [sic] women [sic] due to your accomplishments and your well known [sic] teaching methods. You have completely changed my mind. You are on e of the most closed minded [sic] women I know. You settled for less when you became a teacher because that is known as a women’s [sic] job. Why teaching because you are a woman?

    “Why are you denying important education to our future leaders of the world. [sic] I must say that knowing the human body both for men and women is a beautiful thing and you are depriving them for [sic] that. We as women should stand together and inform people about the vagina and how to please it. I will no longer be participating on Fridays due to the lack of disrespect [sic] I was shown today. We should celebrate the vagina, not be embarrassed by it. So I [redacted], we [sic] be taking or trying to take [child’s name withheld] out of your class due to your cliche role in life in being a teacher and not wanting to empower women.

    “I hope you end up with an abusive husband that beats on you every night.”

    The teacher has now updated her original Reddit post to reflect the news that:

    * The kid was removed from class by the parent and moved to a private school
    * The parent is no longer allowed on district property
    * School administration refused to answer whether or not they were taking action
    * No pictures were taken of the cookies
    * No action was taken against my friend, administration deemed she handled it professionally
    * The cookies were actually pretty good

    As for the cookies, this is apparently not an actual picture of them, but may give you an idea of what they were like:

  • “The Fappening” Reddit Might Have Ruined The Internet

    “The Fappening” Reddit Might Have Ruined The Internet

    What is “The Fappening”?

    The brilliant name given to the current celebrity nude leak scandal as coined by a group of basement dwellers, men who’ve pretty much admitted to the world that the closest they’ll get to sexual fulfillment is getting off on the humiliation and shaming of famous women.

    Congratulations.

    The subreddit named for the gross invasion of privacy was recently shut down by Reddit.

    Not because it was wrong to aid in the repeated emotional and sexual violation of total strangers. No, they warbled something about freedom of speech and a new kind of community.

    Read the complete statement and waiving of any moral responsibility as the people who run the website here.

    The “you make Reddit good or bad, we just work here” commentary is both fascinating and somewhat appalling.

    Sure the folks over at Reddit are correct when they say you can’t get into legal trouble for merely linking to stolen material.

    That doesn’t make it any less disturbing that the move to shut down the “Fappening” subreddit quite possibly didn’t come until after Reddit knew that they were staring down the barrel of a shotgun with celebrity lawyers and the FBI on the other side.

    Perhaps even more interesting is that Reddit seems to be unaware of the fact that its need to be all things to all people could very well be its undoing.

    And that of a good portion of the internet.

    Let’s get back to that “it’s not illegal to link to stolen materials” thing.

    The word missing from that statement is “yet”.

    What could possibly hasten the closure of that legal loophole?

    How about child porn? How about linking to underage nudes? How about the emotional and sexual violation of women over and over again by the same people beating their fist on the table about the “evil NSA”?

    Reddit, 4chan and other so-called champions of a free internet are probably going to be what ends the sort of anonymity and ability to freely exchange information that many individuals enjoy. Even the law-abiding kind.

    Somehow “fapping” outweighs the sort of common sense that could see grounds to close a huge loophole.

    When that hole closes (and it will), one can only hope that the time spent alone in the dark by these individuals with just themselves and their right hands was well worth it.

  • Reddit Launches iPhone App Just For AMAs

    Reddit Launches iPhone App Just For AMAs

    Reddit announced the launch of the reddit AMA (as me anything) app for iOS – an app built specifically for the popular Q&As that frequently take place on the site.

    AMAs have been around for about eight years, and have only grown in popularity in that time. These days, celebrities and interesting people engage in them all the time, and often get news coverage for their answers. Reddit says on its blog:

    “AMAs get a lot of attention outside of reddit, and often you’ll see “Top 10 answers or moments to [insert name of celebrity or person]’s AMA.” While those recaps may be good for those who cannot follow AMAs as they happen live, there is so much more to AMAs that those brief excerpts cannot convey. One of the best parts of AMAs is experiencing the complete spectrum of questions and answers with full context.”

    “With this app, we want to share more about what reddit is all about, so people can find and enjoy a wider variety of AMAs as they are happening.”

    As the company notes, some of the most popular AMAs are by “people who are doing everyday jobs”. Examples given include a flight attendant for a top airline, a vacuum cleaner repair technician, and the guy who kicks people out of Alamo Drafthouse movie theaters for texting or talking.

    Reddit has also built out its OAuth API to encourage developers to use its data in their own apps.

    An Android version of the AMA apps in on the way. It already exists in beta.

    Images via Apple App Store

  • Reddit Is Fighting Trolls by Ripping off Their Badges of Honor

    Reddit Is Fighting Trolls by Ripping off Their Badges of Honor

    Who’s up for a little taxonomy? Let’s take a quick look at what ‘karma’ means to different subsets of redditors.

    The first distinction is obviously whether or not said user cares about karma (reddit points) at all. Some couldn’t give less of a shit. To them, reddit is about browsing and finding interesting things – it has nothing to do with scoring upvotes. Next, among people who do care about karma or at least keep track of it, most users want positive karma. It’s instant gratification that people like your submissions – whether they be comments or actual links. If you have a lot of positive karma, you have been accepted, multiple times, by the reddit community. Congratulations.

    There’s also a subset of users who care about karma, but instead seek negative karma. They want to be downvoted into oblivion. These people are trolls, and you’ll likely see them tossing chum into the lakes of reddit’s most easily outraged communities.

    To comments trolls, the more negative karma, the better. It’s a badge of honor. The Daily Dot points out that a super successful comment troll can sport some serious negative karma. For instance:

    Well, it looks like reddit is taking away that badge.

    In a r/modnews post, admin Delmorz recently laid out some new rules regarding negative comments karma. It’s going to be capped at -100.

    Not internally – just publicly.

    “Later this week, we’re planning to deploy a change that will cap the amount of negative karma displayed on a user’s profile page at -100. A “bottom end” for displayed karma already exists for link karma (which can’t go below 1)…We decided to allow comment karma to go somewhat into the negative before capping since there is definitely value in being able to distinguish between an account with few comments and one that’s been significantly downvoted.”

    “This change is intended to address both the increasing amount of ‘downvote trolls’ and also hopefully help lessen the amount of crazed-mob-downvoting that happens in a situation like someone ending up on the wrong end of a really important argument about jackdaws or something.”

    Jackdaw? That’s a reference to events that led to the banning of one of reddit’s most popular users, resident science smart guy u/unidan.

    Delmorz clarifies that this just affects the negative karma that’s displayed:

    “This will only affect the amount of negative karma displayed on a user’s profile page. There is no change at all to how much comments can be downvoted, no change to the scores of individual comments, and the full amount of negative karma will still be tracked internally, just not displayed.”

    Many users have wanted this for a long time, and for those who fail to see the humor in going for troll glory, this should be a welcome change. Is this going to eliminate the trolls? Haha. No. But it does take away a troll trophy.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Commence Your ‘Steve Jobs Is Alive’ Theories

    Commence Your ‘Steve Jobs Is Alive’ Theories

    You can add Apple co-founder Steve Jobs to the list of dead people that could possibly be alive because they’ve been spotted but are also totally not alive (except in the hearts of fans, of course).

    Like Biggie, Tupac, Elvis, and Wilford Brimley, Jobs, reportedly deceased since 2011, has been sighted in a foreign country.

    A redditor posted this selfie Wednesday night, claiming to have found Steve Jobs alive in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

    You have to admit – the proof here is virtually impregnable.

    Steve Jobs or not, you have to feel bad for that caretaker, who is clearly sick of this shit.

    Image via Imgur, redditor TheHorseSizedDuck

  • Ebola Virus Expert Answers Questions on Reddit

    Ebola Virus Expert Answers Questions on Reddit

    Richard Preston is the author of the non-fiction book “The Hot Zone”, which discusses the origins of several deadly viral diseases in Africa. He is an expert on viruses such as Ebola. His book offered a vision of these viruses that was so terrifying that Stephen King once said the first chapter of the book was “one of the most horrifying things I’ve read in my whole life.” That’s high praise from the man who wrote “The Stand”.

    Preston took to the Interwebs and launched a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) discussion about the current Ebola crisis in Africa. As usual, the questions from the denizens of Reddit ranged from insightful and probing to absurd. But Preston held on and helped folks learn a thing or two.

    One of the top questions from the discussion was about how doctors and nurses protect themselves while helping virus-stricken areas.

    “They haven’t been able to fully protect themselves, Preston replied. “Doctors and nurses are dying. They’re wearing full protection biohazard suits, but the Ebola wards are just horrifying, 30 Ebola patients with one doctor and one nurse, both in space suits. Conditions are awful in those wards, we need more doctors and nurses – not even a space suit can totally protect you if the ward is really a mess.”

    Another reader asked about an experimental serum that is being tried. Preston is hopeful that it will work. He said, “The antibody serum ZMAPP seems to be amazingly effective but we don’t know because it’s only been tried on the two patients.”

    His comments about the future quality of life for people who manage to survive Ebola was encouraging.

    “I interviewed Dr. Shem Musoke who nearly died of Marburg (close cousin of Ebola),” Preston explained. “And he told me it took him about a year to recover fully but now he was fine. It’s a crushing disease but if you survive you do recover.”

    Finally, Preston assured everyone that there is no need to panic about the Ebola situation in Africa.

    “This is a kind of war with a non-human enemy. It is a fairly clever and very aggressive enemy. However, if you are in a jam it is never a good idea to panic. That’s how you lose. The doctors in Africa definitely are not panicking, they are just working 20 hours a day in the fight. And we sure don’t have to panic in the US, we’ve got a strong medical care system.”

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Marijuana Legalization AMA: NY Times in the Hotseat

    Marijuana Legalization AMA: NY Times in the Hotseat

    Andrew Rosenthal, the editorial page editor of The New York Times, along with David Firestone and Juliet Lapidos, who contributed to a series of New York Times editorials calling on the federal government to lift the ban on marijuana, conducted a Reddit AMA (Ask Me Anything) today. Though they briefly fielded a handful of other topics, they were there specifically to talk pot.

    The Times’ editorial series on legalization has drawn a lot of attention. An endorsement of this kind carries a lot of weight and lends an air of respectability to an issue that many people had heretofore seen as just for stoners.

    Rosenthal told Reddit participants that, “The editorial board decided to make the call after considering the high social costs, and general absurdity, of the ban — which is still based on the classification of weed as a Schedule 1 substance, like heroin and LSD. The series, which considered health, politics, history, criminal justice, and the experience in Colorado with legalization, led to a vigorous and fascinating conversation among readers on the Times site.”

    The array of questions posed to the Times’ folks was in keeping with the usual no-holds-barred probing from Redditors. There were jokesters, but there were some hard-hitting interrogatories too.

    One of the topics that Redditors took the Times to task over was how their “legalize it” stance conflicts with the Times’ own drug testing policy.

    User “MarijuanaMajority” asked: “Former Times executive editor Bill Keller said on Reddit earlier today that the Times endorsing marijuana legalization while at the same time drug testing journalists for marijuana is ‘increasingly difficult to defend,’ pointing out its ‘inconsistency.’ Do you agree with him and the nearly 5,000 people that have signed a petition asking the Times to end the practice of checking the content of reporters’ urine before they’re allowed to byline stories?”

    The editors on the AMA had an answer: “The issue of drug testing is a matter of corporate policy, and I don’t make corporate policy, and neither does anyone else in the editorial department. I was asked about this the other day by Chris Hayes and I said that if they asked me, I would say we should stop testing for marijuana use, but that I’m not all that sure I will be asked.”

    Getting politicians to talk about legalizing marijuana, whether for or against, is pretty tough. For most candidates, there is no good answer that will no lose them voters. Rosenthal was asked about that, as well.

    “I think the candidates should be honest in saying what their views are. This is just not a third-rail issue anymore. I’m hoping that a serious candidate will in fact endorse the repeal of the federal ban on weed. If I were moderating a debate in 2016, assuming things go on like they are now, then I would certainly ask about it. With any luck, more progress will have been made on this issue by then.”

    The editors were specific in saying that they were calling for a lift on the federal marijuana ban, leaving the issue up to the individual states. Whether or not the states should allow legalization may be a different matter.

    “What we have called for is an end to the federal marijuana ban, which will allow states to decide for themselves, based on the very kind of value judgments that David [Brooks] made in his column, and in other places. David would agree with us that the federal ban should be ended. He would then go on to argue that states should not legalize recreational use. That is just the kind of debate we need to have about marijuana.

    Finally, Rosenthal pulled back the curtain on the reasons why the Times is addressing this issue now.

    “Perhaps the biggest motivation for doing this series, and making such a big deal out of it, is that prohibition repeal is a criminal justice and civil rights issue. The enforcement of marijuana laws has a heavily racist slant in this country. An African American is far more likely to be arrested for simple possession, put on trial, convicted and sent to prison. Righting this wrong is imperative. As a society we should never tolerate a situation in which young black men go to prison for doing some that well-off white people are doing with impunity.”

    Image via YouTube

  • Star Trek: William Shatner Is Cooler Than You

    Star Trek: William Shatner Is Cooler Than You

    William Shatner has the life. He’s had one of those roles that was not only famous for the usual pop culture reasons, but it endeared him to a generation or two as an icon. Shatner’s voice is not just associated with Star Trek, it’s associated with space travel in general. As such, he was recently honored by NASA with a Distinguished Public Service medal.

    But William Shatner has done more than just Trek. There was T.J. Hooker. Snicker all you want. He got to run around with Heather Locklear for five seasons. That’s longer than the original Star Trek ran.

    But there’s also his iconic role as Denny Crane, first on The Practice, then on Boston Legal. Denny Crane had these words of Zen-like wisdom for us all:

    “No matter how hard your day, no matter how tough your choices, how complex your ethical decisions, you always get to choose what you have for lunch.”

    And that is the kind of material you get, and should get, from William Shatner. The man is living the life, and he knows it.

    “If you make a fool of yourself, you can do it with dignity, without taking your pants down. And if you do take your pants down, you can still do it with dignity.”

    “My boy, that was a TV show. I used a stunt double. I always use a stunt double. Except in love scenes. I insist on doing those myself.”

    Shatner has not gone out to pasture, either. He maintains a strong presence on Twitter, live-tweeting television shows, commenting on society, and engaging with fans.

    Shatner even prowls on Reddit.

    And he reviews apps, thoroughly too, on his Tumblr account. Like his review of Facebook’s new Mentions app.

    But he isn’t keen on Pinterest.

    Shatner explained himself best: “I am surfing the giant life wave.”

    Image via YouTube

  • Jennette McCurdy: Role Model Rant A Sign Of Trouble?

    Jennette McCurdy: Role Model Rant A Sign Of Trouble?

    Jennette McCurdy has grown up in the public eye since she began her stint on the popular Nickelodeon show iCarly in 2007. Maybe it’s the stress of public life. Maybe it’s the recent scandal surrounding some leaked photos of her in her unmentionables.

    Perhaps it was the cancellation of the show Jennette McCurdy co-starred in with Arianna Grande, Sam & Cat, or the rumor that a salary dispute caused the show to collapse. Of course, on top of it all Jennette McCurdy has also been dealing with the loss of her mother back in September of last year.

    Whatever it was, something has caused Jennette McCurdy to compose a rant on Reddit that wavered between fairly mature statements and Miley-esqe “I’m not a role model” statements.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-9zW-yhbd8

    Here’s a bit of what she wrote on Reddit:

    “I am not a role model. I don’t claim to be, I don’t try to be, and I don’t want to be. There was a time when I tried to live up to the aggrandizing title, that pedestal of a thing. Maybe it wasn’t so much that I was trying to live up to it. Perhaps I thought I could and I thought I was supposed to, so I gave it my best shot.”

    Jennette McCurdy continued, “It’s fine, I can admit it. Back in my adolescence, I was more amiable, bubbly, and on lightly humid days, maybe even flouncy. I was role model material and then some. Fast forward a few years, I’ve grown up a bit (emphasis on “a bit”). I might not be any wiser, but I like to think I’m more honest.”

    Ok, so it’s not exactly Miley, and she probably won’t chop off her hair and go crazy. I hope not anyway. Jennette McCurdy has been posting some racy pics lately and the statements she makes have become bolder, but she did actually offer some pretty good advice for young people:

    “But in order to be thought of as a real, true role model, I believe you have to know a person and their actions, inside and out. Calling a celebrity a role model is like calling a stranger a role model. The knowledge you have of a celebrity is no more than a caricature drawn by media tastemakers specializing in selling you an image you’re dying to buy. It’s good to have heroes, but you have to look for them in the right places. They say don’t look for true love in a bar, well I say, don’t look for role models on screens.” Jennette McCurdy said.

    Jennette McCurdy added, “But please, I encourage you to find role models in the people around you, the people in your everyday life, the people that are your friends and family.”

    Here’s hoping the spotlight doesn’t get the best of Jennette McCurdy like it has so many other young actors.

    Image via YouTube

  • Jennette McCurdy Admits She Is No Role Model

    Jennette McCurdy Admits She Is No Role Model

    Jennette McCurdy has finally opened up about the cancellation of Sam and Cat, and insists that she is no role model and has never tried to be one.

    Rumors that Nickelodeon’s hit show was destined to be cancelled have been surfacing for months now. However, the network just confirmed that the show was cancelled last week after only one season.

    Sam and Cat was originally scheduled to air only 20 episodes, but because it was such a big hit amongst the “tweens,” Nickelodeon ordered 20 more episodes for the first season. Things seemed to be going great until rumors surfaced that Ariana Grande, McCurdy’s co-star, was making more money than her. While Grande claims this is not true, Jennette seems to believe so and even boycotted the 2014 Kids’ Choice Awards this year.

    Another possible reason for Sam and Cat being cancelled is McCurdy’s sexy selfies being leaked to the media. Several pictures of Jennette posing in her underwear were seen all over social media, causing concern for Nickelodeon producers and parents of the children that watch the show. They felt that Jennette was no longer a good role model for the viewers.

    Jennette says she does not want to be a role model and has never claimed to be one. In a post on Reddit, McCurdy shared a lengthy statement, clearing up her fan’s ideas of what a role model should be. Read the entire post below:

    I am not a role model.

    I don’t claim to be, I don’t try to be, and I don’t want to be.

    There was a time when I tried to live up to the aggrandizing title, that pedestal of a thing. Maybe it wasn’t so much that I was trying to live up to it. Perhaps I thought I could and I thought I was supposed to, so I gave it my best shot.

    It’s fine, I can admit it. Back in my adolescence, I was more amiable, bubbly, and on lightly humid days, maybe even flouncy. I was role model material and then some.

    Fast forward a few years, I’ve grown up a bit (emphasis on “a bit”). I might not be any wiser, but I like to think I’m more honest.

    With the growing I’ve done, I realize that to attempt to live up to the idea of being a role model is to set myself up for foregone failure. Sure, I’ve made some mistakes, but even if I hadn’t, people would have found invisible ones. This world is one seemingly most keen on judgment and negativity, despite all the hearts and smiley emoticons.

    To remove myself from the role model battle, the falsified standard set by the bubblegum industry, is – in my eyes – to remove myself from the counterintuitive battle of attempting to be something perfect while being glaringly aware of my imperfections.

    Sure, I still love my teddy bears. I still love a heart emoji (the white heart in the pink box is my favorite) and I still have a soft spot for American Girl dolls. I still love a cute dress, a good pop song, and a vanilla-scented candle. But these things don’t define me or determine that I am any kind of a role model. What defines a person as a role model is the way they live their life. And no offense, but none of you know how I live my life.

    Now before you start thinking I’m some sort of derelict that leads a life of crime, let me clarify. I am proud of the way I live my life. I am proud of my choices. I am proud that no one can call me fake or say I don’t stand up for myself. I am proud that my friends and family would say that I’m a good person.

    But in order to be thought of as a real, true role model, I believe you have to know a person and their actions, inside and out. Calling a celebrity a role model is like calling a stranger a role model. The knowledge you have of a celebrity is no more than a caricature drawn by media tastemakers specializing in selling you an image you’re dying to buy. It’s good to have heroes, but you have to look for them in the right places. They say don’t look for true love in a bar, well I say, don’t look for role models on screens.

    For those of you who do consider me a role model, I hope you don’t read this and cringe. I appreciate you. I appreciate you so much! I appreciate that you believe in me, support me, and in some way, hope to live your life like me. But please, I encourage you to find role models in the people around you, the people in your everyday life, the people that are your friends and family. I encourage you to base your idea of a role model off of someone you know well enough to see purely, not in the light, cameras, and actions of Hollywood.

    What do you think about Jennette’s statement? Leave your comments below.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Jennette McCurdy On Reddit: “I Am Not A Role Model”

    Jennette McCurdy On Reddit: “I Am Not A Role Model”

    Jennette McCurdy doesn’t want to be a role model. At all. Not even a little bit.

    She has been through a lot in the last few months since the show that she shared with Ariana Grande, Sam & Cat, was cancelled. There is also the possibility that the cancellation was due to some semi-scandalous leaked photos of her and perhaps also due to a salary dispute.

    All of these things can be stressful for Jennette McCurdy and life right now is probably a far cry from what her life was like when she first started acting way back in 2000. In addition to all of that, she continues to mourn the loss of her mother who passed away on September 20th of last year.

    All of these things along with the pressure that comes along with being a celebrity may have led to Jennette McCurdy’s rant that took place Thursday on Reddit.

    Jennette McCurdy stated of her former image, “There was a time when I tried to live up to the aggrandizing title, that pedestal of a thing. Maybe it wasn’t so much that I was trying to live up to it. Perhaps I thought I could and I thought I was supposed to, so I gave it my best shot.
    It’s fine, I can admit it. Back in my adolescence, I was more amiable, bubbly, and on lightly humid days, maybe even flouncy. I was role model material and then some.”

    She seems to be trying to relieve some of the pressure of trying to live up to the Jennette McCurdy that everyone thinks she should be. She is trying to just be herself and be okay with that. This seems to be a pretty mature stance for the Nickelodeon starlet.

    “To remove myself from the role model battle, the falsified standard set by the bubblegum industry, is – in my eyes – to remove myself from the counterintuitive battle of attempting to be something perfect while being glaringly aware of my imperfections.” said Jennette McCurdy.

    She also encourages Jennette McCurdy fans to look around their lives for role models, not at celebrities like her, who are essentially strangers painted by media.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLh_Jx4W2Gk

    Jennette McCurdy said, “For those of you who do consider me a role model, I hope you don’t read this and cringe. I appreciate you. I appreciate you so much! I appreciate that you believe in me, support me, and in some way, hope to live your life like me. But please, I encourage you to find role models in the people around you, the people in your everyday life, the people that are your friends and family.”

    That’s actually pretty good advice from Jennette McCurdy. Look around in your life, kids!

    Image via YouTube

  • Good News For Your Facebook Traffic

    Good News For Your Facebook Traffic

    Changes to the Facebook News Feed made over recent months may have angered some brands and publishers. Such changes may have even pushed some to abandon their Facebook strategies in favor of competing social platforms like Twitter or Google+, but if you’re looking for traffic, that’s probably not an entirely wise move to make.

    Has your Facebook traffic been increasing compared to that from other social platforms? Let us know in the comments.

    Much has been made of the decline of organic reach of Facebook Page posts, but the social network only continues to drive more and more traffic to websites. In fact, according to a new report, it’s the only one of the top eight social networks to actually drive more traffic from March to June than it did in the months prior.

    In April, we looked at Shareholic’s Q1 Social Media Traffic Report. It found that Facebook referrals were skyrocketing, increasing nearly 38% between December and April. Pinterest came in second place (a distant second at that), but was growing even faster at over 48%.

    Now the Q2 report is out, and Facebook and Pinterest remain in the number one and two spots respectively, but the numbers look considerably different. Facebook increased by 10.09% while Pinterest decreased over 19%.

    Wow, what happened, Pinterest? And this comes as we were just talking about how much Buzzfeed has been growing its Pinterest traffic.

    Year-over-year, Pinterest is still looking pretty good. It’s up nearly 70% for referrals. Facebook is up over 150%. The only other network to show an increase year-over-year, is StumbleUpon at 13.33%. Quarter-over-quarter, it was down over 39% by Shareaholic’s numbers.

    Facebook drove 23.39% of overall visits to sites.

    All in all, social media appears to making up a greater percentage of the referral pie. According to the report, the eight largest sources of social referrals drove 31.07% of overall traffic to sites received last month. That’s compared to 15.55% during the same time last year.

    Reddit, YouTube, and LinkedIn each saw dramatic decreases in referrals year-over-year. Reddit dropped over 65% over that time, while YouTube fell over 82% and LinknedIn over 77%.

    “Easily the largest social network, Facebook commands the most clout among marketers and publishers hungry for referrals,” writes Shareaholic’s Danny Wong. “Well-positioned for world domination, Facebook now drives nearly a quarter (23.39%) of overall traffic to sites and has no plans of stopping anytime soon. Over the last year, its “share of traffic” has skyrocketed, up 150.49% (14.05 percentage points) from 9.34% in June 2013.”

    “Users are always plugged into their feed and without realizing, tend to be highly invested in frequent check-ins and lightweight touch points with their connections. Simply put, Facebook is winning the referrals war because users can’t seem to get enough of content shared by close friends and relatable acquaintances,” he adds. “Facebook’s rich, and somewhat unpredictable feed promises anything but monotony. Multi-form media (short posts, long rants, link previews, unformatted links without previews, etc.) offers inconsistency which makes it impossible to scroll far without at least a handful of posts catching your eye.”

    You may not get very far in the New Feed with the things you post on your own Facebook Page (at least without paying for it), but it would seem that you should still be doing everything you can to encourage users to share your content on the social network from your website and any other means possible. People are clicking the links in their News Feeds.

    It just so happens that Facebook launched a new feature this past week, which should result in even more referrals for sites. The new Save feature lets users save links (as well as places, movies, TV shows, and music) they come across in their News Feed to look at later.

    Let’s face it. We all see plenty of interesting looking stories come through our News Feed every day, but we don’t always have time to stop and read them when we see them. As I said in a previous post, this is a long-overdue feature, and one that makes Facebook instantly better as a news reader (which seems to be one of Facebook’s ultimate goals anyway).

    Introducing Save on Facebook from Facebook on Vimeo.

    Users who are already using RSS readers like Feedly are going to love the feature, even if it’s lacking in some seemingly obvious features. You can’t, for example, save regular status updates, photos or videos. At least not yet. Video actually seems like something people would want to save more than anything, as it takes time to watch a video. With Facebook recently getting into video advertising, this would seem especially critical to the feature. Perhaps it will come later.

    The feature does support sponsored posts, so that’s good news for Facebook advertisers. If you’re promoting a compelling enough link, you might get the click later, even if the user doesn’t click when they first encounter the ad. In fact, this is all the more reason to promote truly interesting content.

    The lesson here is that Facebook is already driving more traffic to sites, while all the other platforms are driving less than they were before (at least according to this particular study), and that was before you could save links.

    Do you expect your Facebook traffic to increase? Do you think the Save feature is a big deal for content creators? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via Shareaholic