• WWW.INFORMATIONWEEK.COM
    How Will AI Shape the Future of Cloud and Vice Versa?
    What role does AI have in the current state of cloud? What types of cloud systems and resources stand to benefit from, or need to adapt to, AI?
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  • WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM
    Starship live: Watch Musk launch sixth Starship test as Trump attends
    SpaceElon Musks SpaceX is preparing for the sixth test flight of Starship, the world's most powerful rocket. It aims to conduct the launch at 4pm Central Time (10pm UK). Heres everything we know so far 19 November 2024 SpaceX is making preparations for the sixth test flight of the worlds most powerful rocket, Starship. Elon Musks company has been taking a fail fast, learn fast approach to research and development more akin to the world of Silicon Valley than the aerospace industry, and the pace of launches only appears to be speeding up.When is the next flight?SpaceX sayson its website that it aims to conduct the sixth test flight of Starship on 19 November, with a launch window opening at 4pm Central Time (10pm UK). A livestream of the launch will be broadcast on SpaceXs X account, the social media platform also owned Musk, or you will be able to watch it here at newscientist.comIt took SpaceX 18 months to carry out the first five Starship test flights, with the fifth taking place in the middle of October. If the company carries out the sixth next week, it will mean a gap of just over one month since the last flight its fastest turnaround yet.AdvertisementWhat will SpaceX attempt in flight 6?In many ways, flight 6 will be a repeat of flight 5, but with a few key differences.The booster stage will again attempt a chopstick landing, in which the craft is grabbed and secured as it returns to the launchpad, allowing it to be lowered to the ground. This approach is designed to eventually allow the booster to be re-used multiple times and massively reduce the cost of putting payloads into orbit.Starship during a high-altitude test flightSpaceXThe upper stage will reach space, carry out a partial orbit and then re-enter Earths atmosphere for a splash landing in the Indian Ocean. But this time, the upper stage will attempt to reignite one of its Raptor engines while in space in order to collect valuable operational data. It will also test new heat shield designs during re-entry.Another difference is that the launch will take place later in the day so that the landing of the upper stage in the Indian Ocean can be filmed in daylight, ensuring greater detail. Previous missions have seen night landings and therefore footage while cinematic and dramatic hasnt given engineers as much insight as video of a daytime landing will.What happened during previous Starship launches?Test flight 1 on 20 April 2023 saw three of the booster stages 33 engines fail to ignite. The rocket later span out of control and self-destructed.The second test flight on 18 November 2023 got further, gaining enough altitude that the booster and upper stages separated as planned. The booster stage ultimately exploded before reaching ground level and the upper stage self-destructed, although not before successfully reaching space.Test flight 3 on 14 March 2024 was at least a partial success, as the upper stage reached space once more, but it failed to return to ground level intact.The next flight, on 6 June, saw the upper stage reach an altitude of more than 200 kilometres and travel at over 27,000 kilometres per hour. Both the booster and the upper stage completed soft splashdowns in the ocean.Test flight 5 was the most ambitious to date, with Starships Super Heavy booster dropping back to the launch pad and being safely caught by SpaceXs launch tower, called Mechazilla, in a pair of chopsticks. It is equipped with a pair of chopsticks to grab the craftat a specific point and secure it, allowing it to be lowered to the ground.Topics:
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  • WWW.NEWSCIENTIST.COM
    World's new fastest supercomputer is built to simulate nuclear bombs
    The El Capitan supercomputer at the Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryGarry McLeod/Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryThe top spot in the league table of the worlds most powerful computers has changed hands, with one supercomputer built for US national security research ousting another.Top500, the definitive list of the most capable computers, is based on a single metric: how fast a machine can solve vast numbers of equations, measured in floating-point operations per second, or FLOPS. A machine called Frontier built in 2022 was the first publicly acknowledged to have reached the exascale a billion billion FLOPS. AdvertisementFrontier was created by Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee to carry out nuclear weapon simulations, but also to work on a range of complex scientific problems such as climate modelling, nuclear fusion simulation and drug discovery.Now, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in California has created El Capitan, which is capable of 1.742 exaFLOPS, more than any other supercomputer.The machine has been built in collaboration with the National Nuclear Security Administration, an arm of the Department of Energy dedicated to developing nuclear weapons science under tight security. The agency was formed in 2000 after the discovery that nuclear secrets had leaked to China from the Department of Energy.El Capitan will essentially provide the vast computational power necessary to ensure the effectiveness of the US nuclear deterrent without having to carry out physical nuclear testing. LLNL claims that complex, high-resolution 3D simulations of nuclear explosions that would take months on Sierra, its most powerful system until now, will be done in just hours or days on El Capitan.Topics:computing
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    Health of people who are displaced in their own countries is a neglected global crisis
    Nature, Published online: 19 November 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-03760-0Compared with cross-border refugees, people who are internally displaced receive little attention despite their dire health needs.
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  • WWW.NATURE.COM
    How the world will weather Trumps withdrawal from global agreements
    Nature, Published online: 19 November 2024; doi:10.1038/d41586-024-03755-xThe US president-elect says he will pull the country out of international treaties and partnerships. That need not lead to disorder.
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  • WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COM
    Roundtables: Whats Next for Mixed Reality: Glasses, Goggles, and More
    Recorded on November 19, 2024 Whats Next for Mixed Reality: Glasses, Goggles, and More. Speakers: Mat Honan, Editor in Chief, and James O'Donnell, AI hardware reporter. We are barreling toward the next big consumer device category: smart glasses. After years of trying, augmented-reality specs are at last a thing. Facebook recently showed off its Orion smart glasses, and Snap has introduced its second-generation pair. The Pentagon is also working on mixed-reality headsets that can be used on the battlefield. Hear fromMIT Technology Revieweditor in chief Mat Honan and AI hardware reporter James ODonnell for a conversation about where our AR experiences are heading. Related Coverage
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  • WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COM
    The Download: police AI, and mixed realitys future
    This is today's edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what's going on in the world of technology. How the largest gathering of US police chiefs is talking about AI James ODonnell The International Association of Chiefs of Police bills itself as the largest gathering of its type in the United States. Leaders from many of the countrys 18,000 police departments and even some from abroad convene for product demos, discussions, parties, and awards. I went along last month to see how artificial intelligence was being discussed, and the message to police chiefs seemed crystal clear: If your department is slow to adopt AI, fix that now. From the expo hall, talks, and interviews, it seems theyre already enthusiastically heeding the call. Read the full story. This story is from The Algorithm, our weekly AI newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Monday. Roundtables: Whats Next for Mixed Reality: Glasses, Goggles, and More After years of trying, augmented-reality specs are at last a thing. If you want to learn more about where AR experiences are heading, join our editor-in-chief Mat Honan and AI hardware reporter James ODonnell for a Roundtables conversation streamed online at 2pm ET/11am PT today. Its for subscribers only but good news: this week our subscriptions are half price. Dont miss out! Read more about mixed reality: + We interviewed Palmer Luckey, founder of Oculus, about his plans to bring mixed-reality goggles to soldiers. Heres what he had to say. + The coolest thing about smart glasses is not the AR. Its the AI. + Snap has launched new augmented-reality Spectacles. Heres what we made of them. The must-reads Ive combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology. 1 The FBI is investigating threats texted to Latino and LGBTQ+ people They claim recipients will be deported or sent to a re-education camp. (WP$)+ ICE can already sidestep sanctuary city laws through data-sharing centers. (Wired$)+Trump has confirmed he plans to use the military for mass deportations.(NYT$)2 Chinese tech groups are building AI teams in Silicon Valley Despite Washingtons best efforts to stymie their work. (FT$)+How a US ban on investing in Chinese startups could escalate under Trump.(Wired$)3 How Apple will cope with looming tariffsThe fact CEO Tim Cook already has a relationship with Trump will surely help. (Bloomberg$)4 Two undersea cables in the Baltic Sea have been disrupted It looks like Russia is trying to interfere with global undersea infrastructure. (CNN)+A Russian spy ship had to be escorted out of the Irish Sea last weekend too.(The Guardian)5 An AI tool could help solve math problems humans are stuck onIts a good example of how blending human and machine intelligence can produce positive results. (New Scientist$)+This AI system makes human tutors better at teaching children math. (MIT Technology Review) 6 Robots still struggle to match warehouse workers on some tasks For all the advances robots have made, picking things up and moving them around remains a big challenge. (NYT$)+AI is poised to automate todays most mundane manual warehouse task.(MIT Technology Review)7 Perplexitys AI search engine can now buy stuff for you How long until Google follows? (The Verge)8 Dozens of states are begging Congress to pass the kids online safety actIt has currently stalled in the House of Representatives due to censorship concerns. (The Verge)+Roblox is adding more controls to let parents set daily usage limits, block access to certain game genres, and more.(WSJ$)+ Why child safety bills are popping up all over the US9 The US Patent and Trademark Office banned staff from using generative AIIt cited security concerns plus the fact some tools exhibit bias, unpredictability, and malicious behavior. (Wired$)10 NASA might have killed life on MarsA new paper suggests that adding water to Martian soil might have been a bad move. (Quartz$)+ The ISS has been leaking air for 5 years, and engineers still cant agree why.(Ars Technica)Quote of the day We are bleeding cash as an industry. Thomas Laffont, co-founder of investment firm Coatue Management, says venture capital firms are struggling to make money amid a boom in AI investments, theWall Street Journalreports.The big story How mobile money supercharged Kenyas sports betting addiction BRIAN OTIENO April 2022 Mobile money has mostly been hugely beneficial for Kenyans. But it has also turbo-charged the countrys sports betting sector. Experts and public figures across the African continent are sounding the alarm over the growth of the sector increasingly loudly. Its produced tales of riches, but it has also broken families, consumed college tuitions, and even driven some to suicide. Read the full story. Jonathan W. Rosen We can still have nice things A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet 'em at me.) + I just learned a pertinent word for this season:abscission. + Only some people will getthis but if you're one of them, youll enjoy it.+ Why Late of the Pier were one of the mostexciting UK bandsof the 2000s.+ Whether you call them crisps or chips, theyre goddamndelicious.
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  • WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COM
    Diddy may ask a judge to drop his sex trafficking case because the Bureau of Prisons took pictures of his to-do list
    In court on Tuesday, defense lawyers said a raid on Sean 'Diddy' Combs' jail cell was improper.Photos of Combs' handwritten to-do list should never have been given to prosecutors, a lawyer said.The lawyer said he may now seek dismissal of the case or recusal of the entire prosecution team.Lawyers for Sean "Diddy" Combs warned they may seek to have his sex-trafficking case dismissed because prosecutors caught a glimpse of a handwritten "to-do list" the rap mogul kept in his Brooklyn jail cell.The to-do list jotted by Combs on a white legal pad, to memorialize jailhouse conversations with his attorneys was secretly photographed and then returned to his cell by Bureau of Prisons officials during a late October raid, a lawyer for Combs alleged during a hearing in federal court in Manhattan on Tuesday.News that prosecutors had gained possession of the writings was first revealed this week.The writing on 19 pages from the list, "are in the heartland of attorney-client material," attorney Marc Agnifilo told US District Court Judge Arun Subramanian, his voice angry, as Combs sat to his left, nodding "yes."Before them on the defense table was a four-inch stack of folders and paperwork from Combs' cell, including the actual to-do list, Agnifilo told the judge. The lawyer waved some of the papers in the air as he spoke."The government now knows potential defense witnesses for a May 5 trial," well in advance of when witness names must be shared, the lawyer complained. "It's giving them an insight into the defense, and they should not have it."During their turn to speak, prosecutors presented a far different description of the 19 pages, alleging instead that they are evidence of Combs' ongoing attempts to use his cash and influence to obstruct justice.There were two highly incriminating errands among Combs' to-do list tasks, Assistant US Attorney Christy Slavik told the judge at Tuesday's hearing and neither are protected by attorney-client privilege, she said.One "relates to the defendant paying a potential witness to, quote, 'find dirt' on a potential victim," Slavik alleged.The second involves Combs' plan for "following up with a paralegal to determine if a witness was paid off or not," she said.Indeed, if these two excerpts do somehow relate to attorney-client communications, "they would fall under the crime-fraud exemption," Slavik added. By law, attorney-client privilege does not protect communications involving criminal activity.These to-do list excerpts are now key evidence in an ongoing grand jury investigation into possible obstruction of justice charges, and could become part of a potential new indictment, she said."I think it's clear that this material is outside the defense defending a criminal case," the prosecutor told the judge of the to-do list excerpts.Combs built a multi-million-dollar fashion and recording empire and was one of the first, and richest, hip-hip entrepreneurs. He has been held without bail since mid-September, when he was arrested and accused of a decades-long pattern of physical and sexual violence against multiple victims, including during elaborate parties called "freak-offs."At the close of the hearing, the judge asked both sides to prepare written arguments explaining why the 19 pages are, or are not, privileged.He instructed the prosecution team to meanwhile delete the photographs of the 19 pages from their records, at least until a privilege determination can be made.The judge also told the prosecution team to ask prison officials to retain copies of the surveillance video from the search of Combs' cell.Tuesday's hearing revealed new details of the raid itself.The BOP conducted the raid on Brooklyn's Metropolitan Detention Center without alerting prosecutors beforehand, in order to recover contraband relating to their own investigation into Combs and others at the jail, Slavik told the judge.Prison officials photographed, then replaced, Combs' paperwork. After the sweep, the officials followed the required procedure for handling potentially sensitive, attorney-client material.Photographs were given first to a so-called filter team, a separate group of US attorneys not connected to the Combs prosecution. The filter team then extracted all attorney-client material before passing the remaining photographs along to the Combs prosecutors, Slavik told the judge.Combs is due back in court on Friday, when his defense team will make a third argument for bail. Prosecutors cannot refer to Combs' disputed to-do list tasks in opposing bail, the judge ordered.
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  • WWW.BUSINESSINSIDER.COM
    A man hid 5 boxes across the US with more than $2 million worth of treasure inside
    Jon Collins-Black has hidden five treasure chests across the US for a public hunt.The chests contain valuable items like a Casascius bitcoin, an emerald, rare Pokmon cards, gold, and more.Collins-Black spent five years planning the treasure hunt and wrote a book with clues.Jon Collins-Black once dreamt of finding treasure of his own. Now, he's hidden five treasure boxes in locations around the US and he wants people to find them.Collins-Black, a California-based musician turned entrepreneur, told BI that he made a tidy sum from early bitcoin investments. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he embarked on a project: Secure a hoard of treasure, then send people off to search for it, hoping they'll enjoy the journey.Collins-Black told BI that there are now five chests four smaller ones and one large box hidden across the US.He said that none of the chests are buried or placed on private land, and reaching the boxes does not require dangerous stunts.He wrote all the clues one needs to find these treasure chests into a book, "There's Treasure Inside." Collins-Black said finding these leads in the text will require a close reading and a sharp but open mind.Collins-Black secured most of the pieces of treasure at auction and through antique dealers over the last five years. There are pieces like a Casascius bitcoin the first physical bitcoin ever made; a green Columbian emerald; a 2002 Shining Charizard Pokmon card; antiques from a shipwreck; George Washington's jelly glass, and more. BI has viewed the receipts for Collins-Black's purchases at auction.He told BI he had a "loose budget" for the treasure's value. Based on the price he paid for the items at auction, he estimated that the total value of the stash, at press time, is between $2 and $3 million. But frequently fluctuating items like bitcoin could change the chests' worth."I was actually trying to figure out what the sweet spot would be as far as how big to make this without making it too big," Collins said. "I didn't want people to go too crazy."All five treasure chests are also puzzle boxes, Collins-Black said but if one finds the chest, instructions are placed with it outlining how to open the boxes, so people don't have to destroy them.Only he knows where the chests are, so quizzing his family members and his publisher won't help. He placed the boxes around the country himself, hiking over a hundred miles on his trips.Collins-Black said he doesn't think he'll regret giving this money away."If bitcoin goes to $500,000 or $1 million, or these treasures are worth $10 million in five to seven years and someone finds them, and then I think I'll just celebrate that and be happy for it," Collins-Black said."There were definitely a couple of items where people were like, 'Are you sure you want to put that in the treasure?'" he added. "But at the end of the day, I think I'll just be excited for whoever finds it."Collins-Black told BI that he doesn't have a favorite treasure in the lot, but he does have a soft spot for the emerald which he calls a "beautiful" thing to look at.Treasure hunts have long captured popular attention, from the $350 million-grossing 2004 movie "National Treasure" togeocaching, a real-world game in which people hunt for "caches" of information using GPS devices.Art collector Forrest Fenn hid a chest filled with gold, jewels, and other valuables in the Rocky Mountains in 2010 and Collins-Black set out to look for it.Collins-Black wasn't successful in his hunt. After a decade-long search, Fenn's chest wasfinally found in 2020.While Collins-Black has gone out of his way to hide the boxes, he does not want the mysteries to outlive him. In eight or 10 years, he might release more clues."I don't have this desire for me to be long gone, and they're to be the 'Legend of the John Collins-Black treasures,'" he said. "I don't want to drag it on forever."
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  • WWW.VOX.COM
    Its probably time you learned about the Costco Guys
    One of my colleagues has a theory: If you know the Rizzler, you might not have been surprised that Kamala Harris lost the presidential election. If the name Big Justice doesnt sound familiar, the results from the election may have been a total shock.Back in March, a Florida-based father-and-son duo named A.J. and Big Justice posted a TikTok expressing their enthusiasm for Costco Wholesale and its food court items. The pair as well as their extended universe of relatives and non-relatives, like the Rizzler have since become viral sensations, cementing their internet celebrity status with an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.The Costco Guys, the Rizzler, and this whole kind of straight-bro-coded mediaverse is a stand-in for how siloed media consumption on the left has gotten, says Voxs senior politics reporter Christian Paz. As a result, Paz suggests, some progressives may have missed a bit of the political evolution the country was going through.It asks the question: Does the rise of the Costco Guys who are in no way explicitly political help explain a cultural landscape shaped by straight bros that presaged a Donald Trump win? Or is their presence on the internet something more innocuous, a throwback to the early days of YouTube when regular people would go viral and get airtime on Ellen? The answers are a little complicated. A history of the Costco Guys cinematic universe While they officially became viral sensations back in March, the Costco Guys celebrity has been years in the making. Originally from New Jersey, the familys patriarch, Andrew Befumo (a.k.a. A.J.), was a professional wrestler who went by the American Powerchild Eric Justice before he retired and went into mortgage lending. About a decade ago, he started a family YouTube channel, featuring his wife Erika, his daughter Ashley, and his son Eric (a.k.a. Big Justice), called All Befumod Up. The channel featured the sort of mundane if heartwarming content you might see on a slice-of-life reality show, like cooking meals, attending an Avengers screening, and singing Christmas songs. Since 2022, Befumo has mostly been making videos on TikTok (@a.j.befumo) with Eric who he nicknamed Big Justice after his wrestling persona with occasional appearances from Ashley and Erika, The Mother of Big Justice. Early videos show the father and son attending baseball games and reviewing local restaurants using their food review scale known as the boom meter. Delicious foods get a boom! Underwhelming or flat-out gross foods get a doom! which is rare.They also recorded themselves running regular errands, like going to retail chains, with an unusual amount of enthusiasm. However, its that level of excitement in depicting the suburban, middle-class experience thats part of their draw. While many famous vloggers are filming tropical vacations and helicopter rides, the Costco Guys treat a trip to Party City like a special occasion. These videos raked up hundreds of thousands of views and earned them some sponsorship deals. However, it wasnt until this past spring that their affinity for Costco would give them a ticket to internet stardom. On March 1, they posted their own version of the viral Were X, of course we Y trend about their love for the wholesale chain. Were Costco guys, says Big Justice at the beginning of the video. Of course we go shopping while eating a chicken bake. By July, they released a Beastie Boys-esque theme song, featuring Erika and Ashley, called We Bring the Boom that now has 14.4 million views. Since then, theyve incorporated Costco and their extremely limited food court menu into much of their content, having guests rate the stores double chunk chocolate cookie and come with them on shopping trips. Theyve released several remixes of We Bring the Boom, including a Christmas edition most recently. Ashley and Erika also emerged from the background of A.J. and Big Justices videos, creating their own page in October, @ashleyandmamajustice, where they mostly rank and review desserts. Despite how normal these guys seem, viewers still feel like theyre watching something off-kilter and idiosyncratic. They have a wide-eyed, unflinching gaze almost like theyre being held hostage and forced to read off a teleprompter when staring into the camera. While you could argue that their zeal is earnest, their mannerisms are unnatural and stilted. The rap songs are inarguably cringe. In the months since their initial virality, the Costco boys label has extended beyond the Befumo family to include some of their most frequent collaborators. Most notable among them is the Rizzler (a.k.a Christian Joseph), a kid influencer whose father began posting videos of him on TikTok in 2020. His father dubbed him the Rizzler, based on the slang term rizz thats short for charisma. Hes since popularized the rizz face, a half-serious-half-smirking look similar to the alt-right meme/pose known as the Chad face or more broadly the Gen Z Lip Sync Face. A.J. said in an interview that a TikTok of the Rizzler joking around while wearing an ill-fitting Black Panther costume led him to contact the Rizzlers father about collaborating. Other frequent guest stars include cousin Angelo, who may or may not actually be related to the Befumo family, and a TikTok dancer named Jersey Joe who posts videos dancing to Jersey Club music. Do the Costco Guys really belong to the bro internet?Since their rise to prominence, the Costco Guys have earned a questionable reputation on social media as alleged Trump supporters if not avatars for an increasingly MAGA-fied internet. The evidence is mostly superficial. They live in Florida. They spend much of their time in the big-box stores closely identified with the suburban American experience. Their logos and merch prominently feature the American flag. Theres a lot of stuff about their content that is seemingly Republican-coded, says EJ Dickson, senior culture writer at The Cut. The main one is that theyre part of a demographic of white men in a state that overwhelmingly voted for Trump. The other aspect is the American flag imagery very early on in their career. Actually, when A.J. was working in the mortgage industry, he was making content in front of an American flag. Other examples are more eyebrow-raising. Their fanbase at least based on their accounts commenters leans heavily white and male; comments on one Costco Guys livestream featured rows upon rows of the N-word in all-caps. Logan Paul knows about them. Unlike Paul, though, the Befumo family has largely and intentionally avoided politics in their journey to fame. In an interview with internet reporter Taylor Lorenz, A.J. said that theyve been approached by presidential candidates to collaborate but that political content was not in their wheelhouse. Possible political affiliations aside, Dickson, who profiled A.J. and Big Justice for Rolling Stone in July, doesnt think this accounts for all of their popularity. I do think people genuinely enjoy seeing this guy and his kid just being goofy and making this incredibly silly content together, says Dickson. A lot of people think their content is charming in its way. She also argues that their videos may be more subversive than progressives online give them credit for: a father and son spending an immense amount of time together, showing each other affection and bonding over food. She compares them to bona fide right-wing personality Andrew Tate, who built his brand in the thrall of his domineering and withholding father. The fact that A.J. is monetizing time with his family has not gone without criticism. A behind-the-scenes video of A.J. sternly directing Big Justice in a video made the rounds in August and reinforced the assumption by some that hes a stage dad. Still, the image of fatherhood he promotes is adoring and hands-on. Even though [A.J.] performs masculinity with the way he looks and the workouts, hes kind of doing the opposite by virtue of just clowning around on camera and spending a lot of time with his kid, says Dickson. Regardless, the Costco Guys do ultimately exist in a lineage of influencers and celebrities that draw straight, white, right-leaning male fans. Several moments this year have shown, from the conservative appropriation of Sydney Sweeney to the overnight success of Hawk Tuah Girl, that its not totally up to public figures to decide who they appeal to.Youve read 1 article in the last monthHere at Vox, we're unwavering in our commitment to covering the issues that matter most to you threats to democracy, immigration, reproductive rights, the environment, and the rising polarization across this country.Our mission is to provide clear, accessible journalism that empowers you to stay informed and engaged in shaping our world. By becoming a Vox Member, you directly strengthen our ability to deliver in-depth, independent reporting that drives meaningful change.We rely on readers like you join us.Swati SharmaVox Editor-in-ChiefSee More:
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