The terrible way a father learned that his son had been killed; How the creators of YouTube’s first viral phenomenon plan to revolutionize the Internet (again); Rape threats on a stranger’s Facebook photo could land a man in prison. Why that’s a big deal.; The surprising reason some college professors are telling students to use Wikipedia for class; Trump’s meme brigade took over Reddit. Now Reddit is trying to stop them.;
 
The Intersect Weekly
At the corner of Internet and interesting
 
 
The terrible way a father learned that his son had been killed
"I couldn't believe it was him, I couldn't believe it," Jeff Davis said. "That's how I found out — through Facebook."
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How the creators of YouTube’s first viral phenomenon plan to revolutionize the Internet (again)
Yes, Lonelygirl15 is back. But it's much more than anyone expected.
 
Rape threats on a stranger’s Facebook photo could land a man in prison. Why that’s a big deal.
Zane Alchin of Sydney faces up to three years imprisonment in what advocates are calling a landmark case.
 
The surprising reason some college professors are telling students to use Wikipedia for class
It's a whole different way of looking at learning and knowledge.
 
Trump’s meme brigade took over Reddit. Now Reddit is trying to stop them.
A bunch of meme-slinging Donald Trump supporters are having a party on Reddit, and someone just called the cops.
 
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