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Laura Hilliger

@epilepticrabbit.social.coop.ap.brid.gy

Writer, technologist, thinker, activist, feminist, the rebel next door. Went to space mountain once. Founding member @weareopencoop, Open Org Ambassador, still […] 🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://social.coop/@epilepticrabbit, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact

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Latest posts by Laura Hilliger @epilepticrabbit.social.coop.ap.brid.gy

2nd Friday the 13th of the year? What are we even doing anymore?

13.03.2026 10:28 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 2 📌 0

Well, part of the reason more people don't have fan mail is because their fucking websites are broken and I can't click buttons to write really nice things to them. I want to thank you for your art goddamnit.

12.03.2026 20:54 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Maybe Zombies This story has intrigue, subversion and maybe zombies. An employee of an underground consultancy develops an abscess, which leads to an incredible adventure.

I finally let maybezombies.com expire, but you can still read the book, it's on both LeanPub and Ko-fi:

https://leanpub.com/maybe-zombies
https://ko-fi.com/s/6ed040197c

09.03.2026 12:51 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

IRL conversation, I think it's cute when someone learned a new ¢50 word and then overuse it. In writing it annoys the hell out of me.

09.03.2026 12:12 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Sigh. If everyone understands that we live in a post truth society? https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20260218-i-hacked-chatgpt-and-googles-ai-and-it-only-took-20-minutes

09.03.2026 09:01 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Laura (@laurahilliger@pixelfed.social) As suggested, nay requested, a while back by @AnneKanne@mastodon.online

Happy International Women's Day

https://pixelfed.social/p/laurahilliger/591268517594320790

08.03.2026 08:06 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
A.I. Isn't People How many Reddit posts does it take to learn to read?

Required reading! AI isn't people ! From @todayintabs https://www.todayintabs.com/p/a-i-isn-t-people

24.02.2026 17:35 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
I recently started a newsletter after being ~~badgered~~ asked to do so. It’s fun to put together, but it takes me longer than I like because I keep asking myself how much I should share about certain things, then editing. I’m having an intellectual discussion with myself about privacy, and I thought maybe I should see how you think about it. Years ago, I wrote a manifesto called “Privacy is for Chumps”. In it, I wrote that I was “done drawing the line between business and personal”, and I said that I didn’t want to have to hide. Fast forward five years, and **I find my views on privacy much the same and clearly different.** 1874 representation of consummation or Beauty and the Beast or both. There are certain things you don’t know about me. Things I never wrote online. Things you can’t prove. Most of it is details – my favorite band, some of my offline hobbies, guilty pleasures – it’s the sort of stuff that adds up to make a person more complex than their digital identity lets on. **Those are the details that bring a person back down to Earth while they’re meeting one of their idols for the first time in real life.** Those details are choices I make. I _choose_ what you can observe about me. Sometimes. We talk about data privacy and the idea that we should be able to choose what corporations do with our data. We keep fearing what the algorithm is going to say about us. And yet we keep giving it away because it’s so much easier to ignore what could happen. What I do online is those details – **robot brains know more about me than you do** because I bought this book and that site I ordered those socks from sold my information to a third party. **I don’t want the robot brain making assumptions about me, it’s creepy. I don’t mind if you make assumptions about me, you’re entitled to your opinion.** Our perceptions of privacy have shifted over the past couple of centuries. People used to have servants to dispose of their waste, consummate marriages in front of other people, dress each other, and otherwise perform what we now perceive to be intimate and private affairs. **How has the evolution of social privacy tied with the evolution of technology shifted what data we allow or don’t allow to be collected?** What are your lines? What do you do in your offline versus online life that demonstrates your attitude towards privacy in these different spaces? It’s something that’s interesting to think about and might just affect how you interact…

Me: using the words "robot brains" in connection to privacy and surveillance and stuff in 2015. SMH: https://www.laurahilliger.com/techie/privacy-wheres-your-line/

24.02.2026 15:01 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Just because you write "this is not fan fiction" DOESN'T MEAN IT'S NOT FICTION. Someone tell the fucking AI hawkers that please. Jfc.

24.02.2026 09:41 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Chicago Just Named A Snowplow ‘Abolish ICE’— Here Are The Other Winners The city received a record number of entries and votes for its annual snowplow-naming contest. The Department of Streets and Sanitation announced the six winners Monday.

Honestly Abolish ICE is such a good name for a snow plow: https://blockclubchicago.org/2026/02/23/chicago-just-named-a-snowplow-abolish-ice-here-are-the-other-winners/

24.02.2026 07:03 👍 0 🔁 1 💬 0 📌 0

I just came across a proposal we did in 2018 that starts with the line "We might witness the ‘balkanisation’ of the internet into several networks. We believe this may not necessarily be a regressive step."

23.02.2026 12:32 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

This mornings @weareopencoop meeting quote of the week is from @bevangelist who said "Yeah, tile cutters sound like a mosquito married Godzilla"

23.02.2026 10:52 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
Designed to be specialists What kind of people are we designing now?

"AI which—unlike nearly every prior technological development in software—arrived with mandates for its use and threats of punishment for the noncompliant. " The latest from @aworkinglibrary pondering who we're designing for: https://aworkinglibrary.com/writing/designed-to-be-specialists

21.02.2026 13:04 👍 1 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Susu must have been a nickname for Susanna or Susanne or Suzanne. Susu ist a Chinese name. Or Japanese. Or Hawaiian. Or it’s from the Susu people of West Africa. It means simplicity. Or joyful. Or lily. It was only used five times in the United States so far starting in 2018, so it must have been a nickname. Susu was not Chinese or Japanese or Hawaiian. Susu was Wiccan. Wicca is a fairly organised set of practices and beliefs. As far as rituals go, dancing “skyclad” around a fire on the summer solstice doesn’t require a religious connotation. Benjamin Franklin had a similar ritual, which he called “wind bathing”. Indeed, standing naked in a natural wind tunnel during a summer storm is its own kind of experience. It’s an experience that I will not in this moment attempt to describe through mere language. See for yourself, go have a wind bath (and touch grass while you’re at it). Wicca had a moment in the nineties. There were some mainstream Hollywood films and shows like Buffy and Charmed that pushed the whole thing along. The emergence of grunge probably played a part, though there doesn’t seem to be anyone bored/brave enough to write an openly accessible academic paper on the cultural history of grunge paralleled with Wiccan popularity. The “most changed” winners that emerged between sixth and ninth grade was clearly the gothy Wiccan crowd. The cheerleaders were the ones running the yearbook club. Their sense of aesthetic is a trope. _image cc-by-nc Academia Bibliothecaque Religionum et Arcanorum_ Susu and I were friendly, but we weren’t friends. I don’t think she ever came over to my house, but I did go over to hers once or twice. Technically, it wasn’t Susu who introduced me to the occult. I had played with a Ouija board at a sleepover in the fifth grade. That night we also did “Light as a feather, stiff as a board” and said Bloody Mary into the bathroom mirror two and a half times. Susu read my Tarot, I can’t remember what she said. We invoked the spirit Gods and powdered the rocks of alchemy, and I never believed in any of it. Until now. Ha ha, no I’m kidding, I just thought that would be funny to write. Belief, though, is so interesting. I never thought that Susu, or indeed anyone who believes in the supernatural, was stupid or crazy or anything else. I mean, there is a continuum of woo which has things that I can and cannot abide by, but my aunt believes in faeries and so do a bunch of Scandinavian folks and that is OK. Our ways of knowing, our understanding of the world around us, our ability to make sense of our lives is routed in the narratives and framings that are instilled upon us as we navigate the world. Some of us can convince ourselves of the supernatural. Some of us hold conflicting ideas in our brains while we try to examine our values through our beliefs. * The strange business history of the Ouija board > https://thehustle.co/the-strange-business-history-of-the-ouija-board * Culture Is the Mass-Synchronization of Framings > https://aethermug.com/posts/culture-is-the-mass-synchronization-of-framings * My On Writing episode > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqMu8JJesUc ## Maybe I’m a caretaker I am starting to believe that AI is, like the whole Epstein thing, absolutely and 100% anti-feminist horseshit. It is possible because we live in a patriarchy. Didn’t see me going there, did you? I didn’t know I would either, but here we both are. Witches are female-coded. Caregiving is female-coded. My mother’s generation of women pretty much got funnelled into one of three professions – teaching, secretarial work or nursing. Take care of the kids, take care of the office stuff the men don’t want to deal with, take care of literally everyone. I do not want to be an internet caregiver. I do not consent to taking care of the AI slop. I do not want to fix your LLMs typos and formatting. I don’t want to continue to point out that concept behind art is what makes it art. _I feel like this still of Anjelica Huston from the fantastic 1990 film Witches, based on a Roald Dahl book and produced by Jim Henson._ Over the last years, I’ve had a number of conversations, mostly with other women and queer folks, about feminism and AI. There seems to be some gender-coding on the whole idea of being an “AI Skeptic”, though my evidence is anecdotal. It was a woman, of course, Emily Bender who just this week explained that this term “resides within the AI boosters frame of view”. > And finally, part of the reason I object so strongly to the "AI skeptic" framing is that it pushes off-stage all of the real harms of this technology. That is, the topic of the stochastic parrots paper:dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/…>> > > — Emily M. Bender (@emilymbender.bsky.social) 2026-02-16T14:31:27.838Z The framing within my network, one that I both believe and also cannot seem to reconcile at the moment, is that AI is _just_ a tool. A few months ago, I attended a Mozilla alumni meet-up in Barcelona. On the first evening about forty previous Mozilla people – people who moved on from Mozilla to work with multinational non-profits or found tech companies with household names or advise the UN on policy stuff – sat in a circle and unloaded. We went around and talked about where we went after Mozilla and what Mozilla had meant for us. We talked about what it was like to make the web because we are all (still) Webmakers (see what I did there?) And we made fun of AI. Oh lord, did we. People who literally invented the ability to to play video on the web, people who made data analytics something that you could use without a masters degree in statistics, people who pushed code on the first browsers – all of us Mozilla alumni laughing our good goddamn asses off about the AI hype and hysteria. We wondered aloud to each other why so many people are so very bamboozled about the reality of the AI hype machine. I _understand_ technology, and truly AI and the LLMs are just a tool, truly. But if you can’t use a chainsaw responsibly, you shouldn’t be allowed to hold the fucking chainsaw! No one bothers to check the _work_ of their LLM. People don’t fix the typos or repetitions or outright bullshit because they don’t bother reading closely. The LLM is soooo good now, I don’t need to give a toss! People are pushing dangerous code into repos. The security surfaces are increasing. Even technology _journalists_ are publishing hallucinations. And when the AI fails people take zero accountability. We already have very little accountability in tech, honestly. * Editor’s Note: Retraction of article containing fabricated quotations > https://arstechnica.com/staff/2026/02/editors-note-retraction-of-article-containing-fabricated-quotations/ * The Hype is the Product > https://rys.io/en/180.html * Gas Town’s Agent Patterns, Design Bottlenecks, and Vibecoding at Scale > https://maggieappleton.com/gastown If you are using AI regularly, please check the work. Use your brain because your brain is the only one involved. If you don’t have the expertise to check the work, you should call someone who does. At least tell the human reviewing your LLMs output that you don’t know if it’s any good. ## Maybe I need help Turnoff.us This rant was brought to you by my absolute rabbit-holing of the unhinged OpenClaw drama in which An AI Agent Published a Hit Piece on a FOSS maintainer. Hours were spent. SPOILER ALERT Save yourself all the time – Cryptobros are suspect, but there’s still disagreement: > “there is a weird tech subculture involved here, but it’s not crypto. It’s e/acc. What we’re seeing is a slopbot owned by a guy who thinks he can prompt up the singularity.” Boxo McFoxo has thoughts This experience combined with actual (and multiple) human beings complaining to me this week about corporate overlords insisting on AI integration and security frenzies currently afoot in various open source communities has made me think about the caretaking required when the robots are trusted. * The obnoxious GitHub OpenClaw AI bot is … a crypto bro > https://pivot-to-ai.com/2026/02/16/the-obnoxious-github-openclaw-ai-bot-is-a-crypto-bro/ * OpenAI’s acquisition of OpenClaw > https://venturebeat.com/technology/openais-acquisition-of-openclaw-signals-the-beginning-of-the-end-of-the * AI Grief Observed > https://2ndbreakfast.audreywatters.com/ai-grief-observed/ _header image cc-by-nc Licencia Historica_

@praetor agree. Diet matters. Perhaps interestingly, this week I wrote about faeries and witches and AI. I feel weird sending it but you mentioned faeries and so now here's some nonfiction for you lol https://www.laurahilliger.com/fbt/fbt-on-witches-and-wankers/

20.02.2026 18:02 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Susu must have been a nickname for Susanna or Susanne or Suzanne. Susu ist a Chinese name. Or Japanese. Or Hawaiian. Or it’s from the Susu people of West Africa. It means simplicity. Or joyful. Or lily. It was only used five times in the United States so far starting in 2018, so it must have been a nickname. Susu was not Chinese or Japanese or Hawaiian. Susu was Wiccan. Wicca is a fairly organised set of practices and beliefs. As far as rituals go, dancing “skyclad” around a fire on the summer solstice doesn’t require a religious connotation. Benjamin Franklin had a similar ritual, which he called “wind bathing”. Indeed, standing naked in a natural wind tunnel during a summer storm is its own kind of experience. It’s an experience that I will not in this moment attempt to describe through mere language. See for yourself, go have a wind bath (and touch grass while you’re at it). Wicca had a moment in the nineties. There were some mainstream Hollywood films and shows like Buffy and Charmed that pushed the whole thing along. The emergence of grunge probably played a part, though there doesn’t seem to be anyone bored/brave enough to write an openly accessible academic paper on the cultural history of grunge paralleled with Wiccan popularity. The “most changed” winners that emerged between sixth and ninth grade was clearly the gothy Wiccan crowd. The cheerleaders were the ones running the yearbook club. Their sense of aesthetic is a trope. _image cc-by-nc Academia Bibliothecaque Religionum et Arcanorum_ Susu and I were friendly, but we weren’t friends. I don’t think she ever came over to my house, but I did go over to hers once or twice. Technically, it wasn’t Susu who introduced me to the occult. I had played with a Ouija board at a sleepover in the fifth grade. That night we also did “Light as a feather, stiff as a board” and said Bloody Mary into the bathroom mirror two and a half times. Susu read my Tarot, I can’t remember what she said. We invoked the spirit Gods and powdered the rocks of alchemy, and I never believed in any of it. Until now. Ha ha, no I’m kidding, I just thought that would be funny to write. Belief, though, is so interesting. I never thought that Susu, or indeed anyone who believes in the supernatural, was stupid or crazy or anything else. I mean, there is a continuum of woo which has things that I can and cannot abide by, but my aunt believes in faeries and so do a bunch of Scandinavian folks and that is OK. Our ways of knowing, our understanding of the world around us, our ability to make sense of our lives is routed in the narratives and framings that are instilled upon us as we navigate the world. Some of us can convince ourselves of the supernatural. Some of us hold conflicting ideas in our brains while we try to examine our values through our beliefs. * The strange business history of the Ouija board > https://thehustle.co/the-strange-business-history-of-the-ouija-board * Culture Is the Mass-Synchronization of Framings > https://aethermug.com/posts/culture-is-the-mass-synchronization-of-framings * My On Writing episode > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OqMu8JJesUc ## Maybe I’m a caretaker I am starting to believe that AI is, like the whole Epstein thing, absolutely and 100% anti-feminist horseshit. It is possible because we live in a patriarchy. Didn’t see me going there, did you? I didn’t know I would either, but here we both are. Witches are female-coded. Caregiving is female-coded. My mother’s generation of women pretty much got funnelled into one of three professions – teaching, secretarial work or nursing. Take care of the kids, take care of the office stuff the men don’t want to deal with, take care of literally everyone. I do not want to be an internet caregiver. I do not consent to taking care of the AI slop. I do not want to fix your LLMs typos and formatting. I don’t want to continue to point out that concept behind art is what makes it art. _I feel like this still of Anjelica Huston from the fantastic 1990 film Witches, based on a Roald Dahl book and produced by Jim Henson._ Over the last years, I’ve had a number of conversations, mostly with other women and queer folks, about feminism and AI. There seems to be some gender-coding on the whole idea of being an “AI Skeptic”, though my evidence is anecdotal. It was a woman, of course, Emily Bender who just this week explained that this term “resides within the AI boosters frame of view”. > And finally, part of the reason I object so strongly to the "AI skeptic" framing is that it pushes off-stage all of the real harms of this technology. That is, the topic of the stochastic parrots paper:dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/…>> > > — Emily M. Bender (@emilymbender.bsky.social) 2026-02-16T14:31:27.838Z The framing within my network, one that I both believe and also cannot seem to reconcile at the moment, is that AI is _just_ a tool. A few months ago, I attended a Mozilla alumni meet-up in Barcelona. On the first evening about forty previous Mozilla people – people who moved on from Mozilla to work with multinational non-profits or found tech companies with household names or advise the UN on policy stuff – sat in a circle and unloaded. We went around and talked about where we went after Mozilla and what Mozilla had meant for us. We talked about what it was like to make the web because we are all (still) Webmakers (see what I did there?) And we made fun of AI. Oh lord, did we. People who literally invented the ability to to play video on the web, people who made data analytics something that you could use without a masters degree in statistics, people who pushed code on the first browsers – all of us Mozilla alumni laughing our good goddamn asses off about the AI hype and hysteria. We wondered aloud to each other why so many people are so very bamboozled about the reality of the AI hype machine. I _understand_ technology, and truly AI and the LLMs are just a tool, truly. But if you can’t use a chainsaw responsibly, you shouldn’t be allowed to hold the fucking chainsaw! No one bothers to check the _work_ of their LLM. People don’t fix the typos or repetitions or outright bullshit because they don’t bother reading closely. The LLM is soooo good now, I don’t need to give a toss! People are pushing dangerous code into repos. The security surfaces are increasing. Even technology _journalists_ are publishing hallucinations. And when the AI fails people take zero accountability. We already have very little accountability in tech, honestly. * Editor’s Note: Retraction of article containing fabricated quotations > https://arstechnica.com/staff/2026/02/editors-note-retraction-of-article-containing-fabricated-quotations/ * The Hype is the Product > https://rys.io/en/180.html * Gas Town’s Agent Patterns, Design Bottlenecks, and Vibecoding at Scale > https://maggieappleton.com/gastown If you are using AI regularly, please check the work. Use your brain because your brain is the only one involved. If you don’t have the expertise to check the work, you should call someone who does. At least tell the human reviewing your LLMs output that you don’t know if it’s any good. ## Maybe I need help Turnoff.us This rant was brought to you by my absolute rabbit-holing of the unhinged OpenClaw drama in which An AI Agent Published a Hit Piece on a FOSS maintainer. Hours were spent. SPOILER ALERT Save yourself all the time – Cryptobros are suspect, but there’s still disagreement: > “there is a weird tech subculture involved here, but it’s not crypto. It’s e/acc. What we’re seeing is a slopbot owned by a guy who thinks he can prompt up the singularity.” Boxo McFoxo has thoughts This experience combined with actual (and multiple) human beings complaining to me this week about corporate overlords insisting on AI integration and security frenzies currently afoot in various open source communities has made me think about the caretaking required when the robots are trusted. * The obnoxious GitHub OpenClaw AI bot is … a crypto bro > https://pivot-to-ai.com/2026/02/16/the-obnoxious-github-openclaw-ai-bot-is-a-crypto-bro/ * OpenAI’s acquisition of OpenClaw > https://venturebeat.com/technology/openais-acquisition-of-openclaw-signals-the-beginning-of-the-end-of-the * AI Grief Observed > https://2ndbreakfast.audreywatters.com/ai-grief-observed/ _header image cc-by-nc Licencia Historica_

In my newsletter this week I went on a bit of a tear about Witches and AI Wankers: https://www.laurahilliger.com/fbt/fbt-on-witches-and-wankers/

20.02.2026 15:17 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Thoroughly enjoyed listening to a couple episodes of @keenan and Halsteds podcast Friendship Material today. I LOLd and a guy at the bus stop thought I was completely nuts: https://friendship-material.simplecast.com/episodes/the-halsted-method-curse

19.02.2026 15:54 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Don't trust anyone who only reads nonfiction.

19.02.2026 12:41 👍 0 🔁 3 💬 1 📌 0
Preview
Founder Mode, hackers, and being bored by tech I could — and probably should — write an entire essay about the cult of the founder in Silicon Valley, how it developed and the damage it has done. This article from Dave Karpf, though, encapsulates some of my own thinking. Contrasting Aaron Swartz and Sam Altman — both members of the first

"Tech has become all Jobs and no Woz." great line @ianbetteridge !

https://www.ianbetteridge.com/founder-mode-hackers-and-being-bored-by-tech/

19.02.2026 12:05 👍 0 🔁 6 💬 0 📌 0

"You will certainly lose your job to a competitor who is fluent in AI usage."

Counterpoint: I have no competitors.

18.02.2026 10:45 👍 0 🔁 4 💬 2 📌 1

I spent over an hour falling down the AI defamation of a #FOSS maintainer rabbit hole and at the end I found out that the agent is 3 crypto bros in a trenchcoat or whatever.

18.02.2026 09:53 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

Only AI will ever use the pairing "exemplify excellence" and it doesn't understand the excrement that is the pairing "exemplify excellence"

16.02.2026 08:35 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
A screenshot of an 18:00uhr event. The event is at Schloss Albrechtsberg and is called Candlelight: Tribut an Linkin Park

A screenshot of an 18:00uhr event. The event is at Schloss Albrechtsberg and is called Candlelight: Tribut an Linkin Park

Sorry, what?

13.02.2026 11:44 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

@Downes I think the ratio is slightly less devastating as I opened that account pre medium entshittification...

12.02.2026 16:31 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0

Someone followed me on Medium, and I realised that I have a Medium account. If the over 1000 people following me on Medium realise that I don't post there anymore?

12.02.2026 12:06 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
Preview
Moltbook is the most interesting place on the internet right now The hottest project in AI right now is Clawdbot, renamed to Moltbot, renamed to OpenClaw. It’s an open source implementation of the digital personal assistant pattern, built by Peter Steinberger …

People giving full access to AI assistants is such a Darwin Award behaviour. https://simonwillison.net/2026/Jan/30/moltbook/

09.02.2026 16:26 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Original post on social.coop

"the reality is that now you have all these other jobs that [other] people used to do, and now you have to do them too.”

Having been a worker-owner for ten years now, there's a lot in this article that rings true. But seizing the means of production was always going to be ambitious. #coops are […]

04.02.2026 08:22 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

IDK how many times a year I write "This request is in accordance with GDPR laws."

02.02.2026 13:42 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Preview
The Mad Lobster Orbital Operations for 1 February 2026

At the risk of "falling behind" and whatnot, productivity for the sake of productivity is just not how I want to spend my time. I'd rather have a think about actual lobsters.

https://orbitaloperations.beehiiv.com/p/the-mad-lobster

02.02.2026 09:59 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
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Stay or go: What's next for coyote that escaped to Alcatraz? The canine is surviving on a diet of birds after swimming to the isolated prison island.

🐺 Floyd the coyote swam 1.25 miles to Alcatraz and I just find this to be so ill-advised. Poor little guy is going to get so bored on that island

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0q4y95yv4jo

31.01.2026 08:29 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0

And that's why AI can't replace writers. Because AI has never stolen bricks for a hedgehog enclosure.

28.01.2026 21:42 👍 0 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0