Help us pick the best Vine of all time (part 3); Help us pick the best Vine of all time (part two); Vine is dead. Help us pick the best Vine of all time (part one); This ‘disgusting’ app for rich people is actually all of us; Yes, your ballot selfie still might be illegal. Sorry.; What was fake on the Internet this election: Voting online, Benghazi emails; How to build a video game when the bad guy is your son’s cancer; What was fake on the Internet this election: George Soros’s voting machines; Facebook will consider whether graphic content is ‘newsworthy’ before censoring it;
 
The Intersect Weekly
At the corner of Internet and interesting
 
 
Help us pick the best Vine of all time (part 3)
This is the final part of our effort to try and find the best Vine of all time.
Help us pick the best Vine of all time (part two)
This is part two of our attempt to find the best Vine of all time. Please clap.
 
Vine is dead. Help us pick the best Vine of all time (part one)
We are on a quest to find the best Vine of all time. Help by voting in our poll.
 
What the Internet loses when Vine shuts down
Twitter is shutting down the beloved six-second video service.
 
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This ‘disgusting’ app for rich people is actually all of us
In defense of "Rich Kids," the social network charging its users €1000 per month.
 
Yes, your ballot selfie still might be illegal. Sorry.
In many states, it's still illegal to post a “ballot selfie.” In others, the legal situation isn't clear at all.
 
What was fake on the Internet this election: Voting online, Benghazi emails
No, you can't vote online by tweeting out a hashtag.
 
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How to build a video game when the bad guy is your son’s cancer
A documentary explores the choices one game developer made while telling the story of his own son's illness.
 
What was fake on the Internet this election: George Soros’s voting machines
There is also no evidence of a "Clinton earpiece" or Reddit takeover conspiracy.
 
Facebook will consider whether graphic content is ‘newsworthy’ before censoring it
Facebook will “begin allowing more items that people find newsworthy, significant, or important to the public interest,” even if it breaks the site's rules.
 
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