I know it can't be just me, but their sites really are just becoming unusable now whenever you click on an article. It's actually really shit how when you search for something on a search engine depending on the news source you click on almost any site and it's some god awful subscription pop up or even try to spam email pop ups to make you register to their website. A lot of these big tech and mainstream sites seem to be going this way.
The guardian's pretty hilarious with their e-begging messages which is interesting because I wonder if their traffic is starting to drop as people get sick of their neverending nonsense. If we got to see a ton of journalists getting laid off that would be hilarious.
Just a rant, because again as somebody who does actual research I find it extremely annoying having to sift through these shitty news sources because they keep getting bumped up in the algorithm even though you can't even read their articles half the time anymore. The worse offenders seem to be sites like the Telegraph and the Economist yet they clearly get search engine favouritism. It's also why I whine when people post up twitter links and expect me to sign up to that crap just to look at one post, no thanks.
Clearly out of our pay grade, I won't even pay to view it!
You shouldn't. This guy is INSANE.
He goes on and on and on and on and on and on and ON about the definitions of individual words, not paying any heed to the grammar of the sentences you form, let alone the point or argument you're trying to make, because "Those who adapt to perceivable sound represent PHONETICIANS (from phonics; sound), while those who ignore it for suggested words are fooled by the "definitions" of others, hence representing DEAF PHONETICIANS." (He really said this. Word for word.)
He will NEVER STOP. I've seen him continue talks in threads for WEEKS doing this.
Ah, an AI bot-replier, alrighty.
I really don't think he's an AI. I honestly think he's just nuts.
I've seen him go at this for over a year now. An AI wouldn't take eight-hour breaks at roughly the same time every day like a human would.