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The alt-right pipeline (also called the alt-right rabbit hole) is a proposed conceptual model regarding internet radicalization toward the alt-right movement. It describes a phenomenon in which consuming provocative right-wing political content, such as antifeminist or anti-SJW ideas, gradually increases exposure to the alt-right or similar far-right politics.
Discarded "It's okay to be white" cards after a Patriot Prayer protest in Portland, Oregon. Many of the flyers were torn down, and some accused the posters of being covertly racist [8] [9] and white nationalist, [10] while others, like Jeff Guillory, executive director of Washington State University's Office of Equity and Diversity, argued that it was a nonthreatening statement.
In November 2024, shortly following the 2024 United States presidential election, numerous persons of color and members of the LGBTQ community received racist and homophobic text messages. The messages appear to have been mass-generated by a computer program and contain slight textual variations, frequently addressing the recipient by their ...
March 24 (Reuters) - Tay, Microsoft Corp's so-called chat bot that uses artificial intelligence to engage with millennials on Twitter, lasted less than a day before it was hobbled by a barrage of ...
Most famously, Russian operatives created sock puppet accounts on Facebook and elsewhere ahead of the 2016 U.S. presidential election to try to sow discord, according to an internal Facebook ...
[21] [22] On July 25, 2020, 28-year old Black Lives Matter protester Garrett Foster, who identified with the boogaloo movement and had expressed anti-racist, libertarian, and anti-police views, was shot and killed in an altercation with a motorist accelerating their vehicle into a crowd of protesters. [64]
There is no speech recognition or artificial intelligence, and the bot's software is simple and straightforward. [6] The first four clips are played sequentially in order to grab the telemarketer's interest and begin their sales pitch to Lenny, then the remaining twelve are played sequentially on loop until the telemarketer hangs up.
"Hitler was right" and/or "Hitler did nothing wrong" are statements and internet memes either expressing support for Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler or trolling. [1] [2] The ironic or trolling uses of the phrase often allow those on the alt-right to maintain plausible deniability over their white supremacist, Nazi, or other far-right views.