Much thanks for both the article and the kudos, Aussie 17.
I now have about 5.2k followers on FB and membership in somewhere close to 170 groups with about half dedicated to the public health scam (or the great-taking in general) totaling over 100,000 individuals. When I forward your articles, many tend to get a lot of eyes, but a lot of flies have dropped into the ointment.
1 — Some of those 'private' groups are the equivalence of a vanity press, allowing only the administrator(s) of the group to post anything, the rest of us left to upvotes and comments, leaving me only the option to post in comments.
2 — Some of those groups, 'private' or public, are most likely merely fronts for surveillance, limited hangouts compiling a naughty list.
3 — Some group moderators wield a heavy hand of siloing and compartmentalization, judging what's "connected" and what's not. I tend to think the shenanigans of Big Pharma are just one tool of a larger trend of sociopaths wanting it all and wanting it now, no matter the impact on others — a repulsive part of collective human nature since our ancestors climbed down from the trees.
4 — Some groups, even out of good intentions for safety and integrity, do not accept direct links, so I have to rephrase the link to something like "See Aussie 17's Jan 9 article regarding such-and-such."
5 — Zuckerberg's recent Imperial garment of 'more honesty' is still just naked greed. A.I. has now reached a level of verisimilitude high enough for agents to appear to be "average" or "normal" people in every way — "old" photos of pets, kids, vacation memories — coincidentally sharing many of our interests and values. Once you befriend that 'person', that person has access to all your posts. And when that 'friend' locks his/her/its account ... you can not unfriend them, block them, or restrict them in any way. You will know when you've been hit with this surveillance technique when one of three things happens:
• Fakebook refuses to allow you to reply to a comment, for "unknown reasons"
• When your cursor hovers over the name and no information pops up
• When you try to restrict, block, or de-friend the former "friend", the name does not appear in a search. Now peering over my shoulder — and at your posts, a "friend" or more, for life.
Although there is a lot of huckster-hype get-rich-quick schemes surrounding A.I., I think A.I. and LLMs are also the nuts, bolts, and mortar to the growing digital panopticon. On my good days, I'll spend an hour or so trying to share your posts with many groups, trying to convince myself I've done my small part in the good fight. On my bad days, just pissin' in the wind.
If anyone checks my substack, they'll see I am not posting much recently. I am spending most of my time reading and posting in comments as a 'personal' conversation ... not much of a sustainable model. Perhaps I'll start posting my better exchanges as substack posts in themselves, but ha. Haven't even turned on the option for paid subscriptions there.
Keep up the good fight Aussie 17 ... as if we didn't have a choice. 😄
Cheers from Japan, and a late Happy New Year to ya!
Hey thanks Aussie. I too have kept all my content free, but recently I turned off payents as I was getting too many "refund requests", from people who claimed they never subscribed, or unsubscribed but money was still deducted. All which i have no control over. By the time Stripe takes their fees, it cost me, or those who donate.
You have double the total subscribers I have and I've been doing this for 2 1/3 years. Thanks for the shout-out on my articles on my Substack metrics. My next post is going to list about 70 of the most popular "Covid Contrarian" Substack newsletters and list their total subscribers. This site will be mentioned in one of the higher subscriber categories.
I'm not interested in citizen journalism. I just think you're a very fine person for sharing the way you do. May you also reap the blessings you bestow on others through your selfless work.
If only I had one more banana bread recipe.... oh well.
Much thanks for both the article and the kudos, Aussie 17.
I now have about 5.2k followers on FB and membership in somewhere close to 170 groups with about half dedicated to the public health scam (or the great-taking in general) totaling over 100,000 individuals. When I forward your articles, many tend to get a lot of eyes, but a lot of flies have dropped into the ointment.
1 — Some of those 'private' groups are the equivalence of a vanity press, allowing only the administrator(s) of the group to post anything, the rest of us left to upvotes and comments, leaving me only the option to post in comments.
2 — Some of those groups, 'private' or public, are most likely merely fronts for surveillance, limited hangouts compiling a naughty list.
3 — Some group moderators wield a heavy hand of siloing and compartmentalization, judging what's "connected" and what's not. I tend to think the shenanigans of Big Pharma are just one tool of a larger trend of sociopaths wanting it all and wanting it now, no matter the impact on others — a repulsive part of collective human nature since our ancestors climbed down from the trees.
4 — Some groups, even out of good intentions for safety and integrity, do not accept direct links, so I have to rephrase the link to something like "See Aussie 17's Jan 9 article regarding such-and-such."
5 — Zuckerberg's recent Imperial garment of 'more honesty' is still just naked greed. A.I. has now reached a level of verisimilitude high enough for agents to appear to be "average" or "normal" people in every way — "old" photos of pets, kids, vacation memories — coincidentally sharing many of our interests and values. Once you befriend that 'person', that person has access to all your posts. And when that 'friend' locks his/her/its account ... you can not unfriend them, block them, or restrict them in any way. You will know when you've been hit with this surveillance technique when one of three things happens:
• Fakebook refuses to allow you to reply to a comment, for "unknown reasons"
• When your cursor hovers over the name and no information pops up
• When you try to restrict, block, or de-friend the former "friend", the name does not appear in a search. Now peering over my shoulder — and at your posts, a "friend" or more, for life.
Although there is a lot of huckster-hype get-rich-quick schemes surrounding A.I., I think A.I. and LLMs are also the nuts, bolts, and mortar to the growing digital panopticon. On my good days, I'll spend an hour or so trying to share your posts with many groups, trying to convince myself I've done my small part in the good fight. On my bad days, just pissin' in the wind.
If anyone checks my substack, they'll see I am not posting much recently. I am spending most of my time reading and posting in comments as a 'personal' conversation ... not much of a sustainable model. Perhaps I'll start posting my better exchanges as substack posts in themselves, but ha. Haven't even turned on the option for paid subscriptions there.
Keep up the good fight Aussie 17 ... as if we didn't have a choice. 😄
Cheers from Japan, and a late Happy New Year to ya!
steve
"Fakebook". Brilliant! I call it FacePaintBook.
LOL. Just as well.
It is a snake pit, but living in Japan, it seems to be the most common way to keep in touch with relatives back in the home country.
Hey thanks Aussie. I too have kept all my content free, but recently I turned off payents as I was getting too many "refund requests", from people who claimed they never subscribed, or unsubscribed but money was still deducted. All which i have no control over. By the time Stripe takes their fees, it cost me, or those who donate.
Have you experienced much ot that?
only once!
You have double the total subscribers I have and I've been doing this for 2 1/3 years. Thanks for the shout-out on my articles on my Substack metrics. My next post is going to list about 70 of the most popular "Covid Contrarian" Substack newsletters and list their total subscribers. This site will be mentioned in one of the higher subscriber categories.
I'm not interested in citizen journalism. I just think you're a very fine person for sharing the way you do. May you also reap the blessings you bestow on others through your selfless work.
G'day,
Thanks for your pro bono service.
I think Frauci interfered here...:
"But anyhoo,<<<< here are some tips".
Those are excellent tips for any aspiring substackers.
To the contrary, we don't need medical jargons since most readers don't understand them.
Totally appreciate your excellent work! Thank you Aussie17
Thank you for the tips and all your other great articles. I love your Substack 😊