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To paraphrase @Christina, 'AI' - which is to say a software product - may likely get legal rights before the environment and animals, and all to benefit the corporations that produce this technology.

wired.com/story/model-welfare-…

in reply to Strypey

(3/?)

That aside, I was mainly commenting on the scientism involved in claiming that animist metaphysics are "unscientific", implying that materialist metaphysics is "scientific". When both are, by their very nature, beyond the realms of scientific investigation (science provides a ground for ontology only if it already assumes an ontology, etc).

in reply to Strypey

(4/4)

@JulianOliver
> I do not believe we 'assign being' to other people by way of animism or anthropomorphic projection

Maybe not. Sociopaths definitely do (or don't). By definition, they don't have any ...

> innate - socio-biological, animal, essential

... mechanisms for it. We do seem to need the aid of anthropomorphism to assign being to nonhuman animals. I would argue we also need it in day-to-day interactions with strangers outside our kin groups (buying a snack, riding a bus, etc).





Remembering Nicky Hopkins , who died today 6th September
1994 .

"Rock Classics Improved by Nicky Hopkins".. great piece by
Bryan Wawzenek,

ultimateclassicrock.com/15-cla…

#photography #music

📸 Baron Wolman





Aggressione nella sanità, incontro tra Asl e Prefettura di Massa-Carrara
La riunione si è resa necessaria per fare un punto della situazione.

noitv.it/2025/09/aggressione-n…



NSFW 18+ Nudity
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So much to unpack from Judge Mehta’s remedy opinion in the US v. Google search case. If these remedies ultimately go into effect, evidence indicates that Google’s dominance over online search – a critical information pathway for billions of internet users – will remain entrenched. Long 🧵⬇️


BREAKING: Feud erupts at US Supreme Court. Via @briantylercohen #Politics 🇺🇸 🗳️ youtu.be/PPibtWESIus?...

BREAKING: Feud erupts at US Su...



Been driving Lyft to make ends meet. Just dropped off a couple at the Thievery Corporation show. They mentioned wanting to drive but not wanting to pay for parking. I thought, “wow. Parking can’t be that horrible, can it?”

….Parkong at the Greek is currently $60. At the top of the hill for those who know. SIXTY AMERICAN DOLLARS.

No wonder no one goes outside.



Why am I, at my age, still a radical progressive socialist?

“Never be a spectator of unfairness or stupidity. Seek out argument and disputation for their own sake; the grave will supply plenty of time for silence.” – Christopher Hitchens



Logically speaking, #noncompete clauses are #anticapitalistic. But then, when has this #corrupt #soldout #administration done anything remotely logical. It only caters to big #business paymasters.

#antiworker #antiAmerican #FTC #USPolitics #government
npr.org/2025/09/05/nx-s1-55289…

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got this print in the mail all the way from England, thx sonnyross.com #AI
#ai
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🔥 asked and answered 👇🏽 @zohrankmamdani.bsky.social then explained to Abby Phillip he backs these policies out of love for his city/country, pointing out democratic socialism is not a foreign concept here despite what those in power would have you believe. 🇺🇸


【漫活】しゃっちすさんを描こう回 #新人Vtuber #個人勢Vtuber 【トネザト・ホヌ】 youtube.com/live/Z3Tm-vUU4B0?s… @YouTubeより
in reply to ホヌ🔞

🤖 Tracking strings detected and removed!

🔗 Clean URL(s):
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Remembering Dolores O'Riordan on what would have been her birthday, she was born today 6th September 1971

"I try to think about optimism. I try to look at the beautiful things in life."

#DoloresORiordan #TheCranberries #music #photography



"If you sit there and zoom in on screenshots of different UI elements, sure you’ll probably find something.

That’s been true of every iteration of the OS. But speaking from experience, the less you think about it, the more it just works."

#Apple #Technology #Blog #Design #SocialWeb #WWDC25 #LiquidGlass #iOS26 #iPhone #iOS #macOS #iPadOS
blog.samclemente.me/dont-make-…



Visited a farm in the foothills of the Cascades today. The owner is a photographer and she grows this incredible garden to use in photo shoots. Despite the #wildfires pouring smoke into the air, it was still pretty magical. #PNW #gardening #Bloomscrolling
in reply to Eugene Parnell

More photos of my friend's flower farm. It's dahlia heaven. She actually lifts and stores all these tubers in the fall. #wildfires #PNW #gardening #Bloomscrolling


By 1999, Microsoft had vanquished Netscape in the browser war, Google was starting to show up competing search engines, and Napster and Blogger had arrived to shake up our culture. cybercultural.com/p/internet-1… #InternetHistory

Author's note: if you read and enjoy my article, don't just 'like' it — please boost or share it on the web another way. Indie bloggers can no longer rely on Google or other big tech companies for attention, so human curation is what it's all about (again). 🙏




ChatGPT is now sending me more traffic than X. Three years ago, Twitter was second only to Google as a source of traffic. Now, it’s a rounding error.


In another 15 years, Instagram will introduce “links” — an innovative new way to connect with “websites”. theverge.com/news/769460/insta…


Slopaganda, hehe. That word will enter my mind whenever I am browsing X (for work purposes, you understand). mastodon.social/@adactio/11514…


爆発数時間前の恒星内部の変化を物語る? 超新星残骸「カシオペヤ座A」の研究成果 – sorae 宇宙へのポータルサイト yayafa.com/2518405/ #SCIENCE #Science&Technology #Technology #テクノロジー #科学 #科学&テクノロジー


This history of Return / Enter / whatever it is on your keyboard is more fascinating and surprising than I expected. Worth reading:

aresluna.org/the-day-return-be…

(via twostopbits.com/ which will be of interest to some of you, via tilde.zone/@movq/1151248132156… via @rk because Attribution Damnit™ as I was indoctrinated long ago and feel like indulging tonight.)

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Happy birthday to photographer and musician Henry Stanford Diltz , Born today 6th September 1938.

#henrydiltz #photooftheday #music #photography
📸 Henry Diltz



#Paulofigueiredo #direita #politica #noticias #politics Dino diz que STF avaliará validade e alcance da delação de Mauro Cid paulofigueiredoshow.com/dino-d…


WTN #3: XSLT Heat, Cool Fedi Apps, Web UIs in Agents


Welcome to Web Technology News (WTN), my weekly newsletter tracking what's next on the web. As usual, I'm using the following three categories:

  1. Web platform
  2. Open social web
  3. Web + AI


Web Platform


"Should we remove XSLT from the web platform?" That question was asked by Google engineer Mason Freed on the WHATWG GitHub account a few weeks ago. "Its role within the web browser has been largely superseded by JavaScript-based technologies such as JSON+React," explained Freed, adding that it's now a big security risk in browsers.

Judging by the comments, one of the primary uses of XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations) is for "displaying RSS feeds pleasantly." Another commenter added that "XSLT is extensively used by podcast hosting companies to beautify their raw feeds." The discussion around this got heated, so the thread was locked to non-collaborators. A second thread also got locked.

In other news, Mozilla has launched a new front end for MDN: "We've intentionally targeted Baseline "Widely available" features when deciding on which ones to use, and polyfilling or progressively enhancing when using anything Baseline "Newly available"."

Staying with Mozilla, its newly hired Web Dev Relations Lead, Jake Archibald, took to Mastodon to promote Firefox v142. I like the video explanations.


Post by @jaffathecake@mastodon.social
View on Mastodon

Let's get crazy now... I stumbled upon a couple of 'out there' ideas this week.

Hyperclay is a new product pitching itself as "Google Docs for interactive code." The site further explains:

"What if web apps were as simple to edit as documents? Hyperclay makes it possible: UI, logic, and data live in one self-modifying HTML file."


There's an excellent discussion about this on Hacker News. Hyperclay's developer, panphora, has also created a Markdown editor called Overtype.

I liked this web dev head-mash by Chris Shank: "This may look like my personal website, but it's not served via a traditional web server. Rather it's served from a service worker that proxies all network requests to a locally cloned git repository (stored in-browser)!"
Chris Shank's service worker webpage.

Open Social Web


It's great to see Bluesky starting to have alternative servers (i.e. ones not owned and run by the Bluesky company). As reported by Laurens Hof in his Connected Places blog:

"Blacksky is taking further steps towards their own community platform within the ATmosphere, and have started inviting community members on their own Blacksky PDS servers. Blacksky has their own PDS migration tooling, Tektike, to help users transfer their account to a new PDS."


On the fedi side of the open social pond, Sean Tilley has written a roundup of the recent FediCon event in Canada. I was pleased to see this note from Sean:

"...there's some legitimately interesting developments happening with paying server admins, artists, and developers. I've written a bit about what Bandwagon and CrowdBucks are doing, and hopeful some collaboration can emerge between projects."


CrowdBucks is fairly new to me, but the following thread told me that Charles Iliya Krempeaux — a.k.a. reiver — is behind it (Charles also organized FediCon and is an active fediverse developer).


Post by @crowdbucks@mastodon.social
View on Mastodon

Another cool-sounding open web app I came across this week:


Post by @pkirn@mastodon.social
View on Mastodon

In Mastodon news, quote-posts are officially coming:


Post by @renchap@oisaur.com
View on Mastodon

Finally in this section, you might be interested in my blog post this week outlining my experiences with Ghost, Substack, Eleventy and WordPress. I focus in particular on Ghost's federation (I use Ghost to publish this newsletter).

Web + AI


Vercel is proposing a convention to include instructions to an LLM directly in HTML responses as <script type="text/llms.txt">. But standards be damned...in classic 'Marc Andreessen and the <img> tag' fashion, Vercel encourages its users to just go ahead and do it anyway: "[it] doesn't need to be a formal standard. You can just start using it now."

For my post on The New Stack this week, I interviewed the two creators of MCP-UI, an open source project that creates React or web components for agents. The technology is just 3 months old, but is already being used by Shopify and others. One of the founders, Ido Salomon, explained to me why it's using the HTML <iframe> element to ferry UI components to agents:

"I think MCP-UI, at its core, is fairly simple. It basically takes the building blocks of MCP [the parent protocol] — MCP has a way to respond not just with text, but with an embedded resource that can be anything. So the idea was, how do I take something like an embedded resource, get some consensus around when this embedded resource contains something. Then the host — you know, ChatGPT, whatever — can render it. And how does it run basically arbitrary code, that is unsafe, without harming the users. Iframe is kind of the only way to do that. And sandbox iframe in particular gives you an extra edge."


Web UIs in agents — it's a trend to watch. I have another post coming up early next week about MCP-UI, based on an interview with two Shopify engineers.

Meanwhile, Paul Kinlan from Google is calling for experimentation with hyperlinks in the AI age:

"LLMs also offer the practical tools to finally realize the promise of hypertext on the web itself. They are the enabling technology that can upgrade the humble <a> tag and make it truly “hyper.”"


Launched this week: Tidewave Web for Rails and Phoenix, "a coding agent that runs directly in the browser alongside your web application, in your own development environment, with full page and code context." (via Hacker News)

One More Thing


What's the point of vibe coding if...


Post by @PastaThief@indiepocalypse.social
View on Mastodon

Thanks for reading, and if you have any suggestions on news sources for Web Technology News, leave me a comment on Mastodon or Bluesky. And don't forget, you can follow WTN on those platforms too: search "@feed@webtechnology.news" on Mastodon or click here to follow on Bluesky.

You can also get the full content via email (the form is on the WTN homepage) or RSS. A benefit of signing up via email is that it allows you to post good ol' fashioned comments on the URL where this post lives: i.e. on the Web.

Until next week, keep on surfing!


chrome developers: we are thinking of dropping support for rendering RSS feeds as something other than garbage code. does anyone have any reasons not to do this?

developers from many different backgrounds: yes, I rely on normal people being able to understand RSS for my business. dropping support will be disastrous for me because I can't rely on people to have some random extension installed.

chrome devs: OK well we're probably going to do it anyway because we can't be bothered to support web standards. uwu google is only a teensy wee company uwu

github.com/whatwg/html/issues/…

#xslt #standards #openWeb




"D.C. voters have critical decisions to make, and they don’t have all the time in the world to make them."

The latest from Colbert I. King: wapo.st/4naUN6q



[#TRADESHOW] C-TOUCH & DISPLAY SHENZHEN 2025 will be held from October 28 to 30, 2025, at the #Shenzhen #World #Exhibition & #Convention #Center, #China. As #Asia’s premier #trade #fair for #smart #touch and #display #technology, this #flagship #B2B #expo #event is at the #forefront of #innovation across touch #screens, display #panels, #semiconductors, optical #films, #ePaper, and next-gen #materials. cnbusinessforum.com/event/c-to…


I've written a post on my personal website about the current options in online publishing, including my experience with Ghost so far. I focus in particular on Ghost's fediverse integration. ricmac.org/2025/08/21/ghost-su…


Ghost vs. Substack, Eleventy vs. WordPress: My Experiences


ricmac.org/2025/08/21/ghost-su…




WTN #5: How Cloudflare Is Both AI Police and AI Booster


Welcome to Web Technology News (WTN), my weekly newsletter tracking what's next on the web. This week I look at some of the moves Cloudflare has been making to help web publishers and content creators deal with AI companies that "leverage" (to put it politely) open web content. I spoke to a Cloudflare exec for a reported story on The New Stack, and I was somewhat surprised to learn the company is also heavily pushing AI technology onto its customers — specifically this week, in the article I wrote, a new NLWeb feature (NLWeb is Microsoft's brand new open protocol for integrating AI chat into your website).

Now, I like the sound of NLWeb and — as a Cloudflare user myself — I intend to try it out on my internet history website, Cybercultural. I do find it interesting that Cloudflare is attempting to position itself as both an AI police force and an AI booster (at least in its own products). I think that's clever, because I too have mixed feelings about AI, as I described last week. AI is a threat to web publishers, but it's also an intriguing technology when matched up with the web platform. Cloudflare understands that a delicate balance is required.

Let's get to the web tech news...

Web Platform


🌐 The big news this week was Google avoiding the harshest penalties in a US government monopoly case against them. Reports the New York Times (this is a gift link, so anyone can open it to read the full article):

"Google must hand over its search results and some data to rival companies but does not need to break itself up by selling its Chrome web browser, a federal judge ruled on Tuesday."


I'm no legal expert, but I am glad Google wasn't forced to sell Chrome. By and large, Google has been a good steward of web technology innovation over the years, and it would've felt unfair to strip them of a groundbreaking web product they invented and built. Also, I would much rather Google owned Chrome than the likes of OpenAI or Perplexity!

All that said, I continue to feel queezy about the massive power Google has in the web search market — clickthroughs from Google search results continue to decrease in the AI Overview era.

🌐 If you've been following the drama around XSLT, you'll want to read my TNS colleague Mary Branscombe's in-depth report on it. As well as noting that the original request to remove XSLT from the web platform came from Firefox, not Google, Mary spoke to a number of experts about the history of XSLT, its implications for the web over the years, and where this may net out. It's a great read, although you'll need to block off a bit of time as it's over 5,000 words. (disclosure: I edited this piece)

Although you should read the whole post, I do want to call attention to one part. Mary rightly focuses on XLST for much of the article, but near the end she raises the bigger issue of web governance:

"...it’s also impossible to ignore the outsized impact that Google funding so much of it [i.e. the web platform], directly or indirectly, has on choices all the browsers make about prioritizing features — especially the ones that don’t fit into current development fashion and hype, whether that’s XSLT or SVG or MathML."


🌐 Meanwhile, Microsoft browser engineer Alex Russell continues his series on browser competition in typical no-punches-pulled style:

"Apple has done violence to the founding ethos of internet and web standards development. Instead of honourably withdrawing from those groups, Apple has maintained a charade of engagement, and gaslights other participants while actively sabotaging the principle of voluntary adoption that internet standards are predicated on."


🌐 Possibly related, there's a long discussion thread on Mastodon about browsers and web standards, introduced by Jen Simmons, a Web evangelist at Apple. She ran a poll that asked (in summary):

"Should [a certain] technology be considered A Web Standard — when 1 or 2 browsers implement & ship, while 1 or 2 browsers Formally Object and say no?"


12% responded yes, it's a web standard; 88% said no.

🌐 ‪In lighter news, Thomas Steiner — who works on the Chrome team — just wants to register his new washing machine: "Don't make me talk to people! They could still offer to register the machine by telephone as an alternative, but in 2025, the default for such things should just be the Web." 💯

Open Social Web


🦋 This week I came across Leaflet, described as "a social publishing platform for blogs / newsletters — like Substack, but more open, and frankly just nicer to use." It's being built on the AT Protocol, the same protocol powering Bluesky. One to watch. (hat-tip Boris Mann)

🧵 Meta's Threads has a new leader: Connor Hayes. In an introductory thread, Hayes said he wanted to make Threads "the most culturally relevant place for sharing perspectives and ideas on the internet." What wasn't mentioned in his thread? The fediverse, which Threads is supposedly a part of. 🤔

🦣 In actual fediverse news, WordPress has updated its ActivityPub plugin. Fairly minor updates, but as Jeff Sikes pointed out, "quite intriguing to see tooling to monitor the progress of a self destruct request." (I've had issues with deleting content via a WP AP plugin before, although I will say the main developer, Matthias Pfefferle, has always been incredibly helpful.)

🚶 Not news, but this week I discovered the concept of "internet walks", explained here by Kristoffer Tjalve in Lullaby Magazine:

"These internet walks invite people to start exploring again, which in the 90s was a real profession. You'd employ a professional surfer. Before you had search engines, you had directories and people who tried to find as many links as possible and group them. That's why you have all these terms like Safari and Netscape, inviting people to explore, though we don’t use the same words now. It feels more gated."


See also: Taking an Internet Walk, by Spencer Chang & Kristoffer Tjalve.

Web + AI


🤖 This week for The New Stack, I talked to a Cloudflare VP about its implementation of NLWeb, Microsoft's new open protocol for AI chat in websites. I also got an update on the private beta of Cloudflare's "pay-per-crawl" project, which aims to get AI companies to pay up for using the content of web publishers.

Elsewhere, Matthew Prince (CEO of Cloudflare) talked to Fred Vogelstein about building a wider scale marketplace for content:

"And so you could imagine a world in which you actually have each LLM company getting kind of a preview of content, having an algorithm score how valuable it is and then tell the writer how much he’ll get for it. And the payment isn’t based on how many words you write, just by how much you are actually adding to the knowledge base."


Prince noted that he wants to get Google onside for this idea, because that will prompt (no pun intended) the likes of OpenAI to get on board too. 🤞

🤖 CNBC: Atlassian has agreed to buy The Browser Co., which is behind the Arc and Dia web browsers. CEO Mike Cannon-Brookes seemed to suggest he wanted to build a new type of enterprise-focused work browser:

"Whatever it is that you’re actually doing in your browser is not particularly well served by a browser that was built in the name to browse. It’s not built to work, it’s not built to act, it’s not built to do."


Note: I profiled Dia when it launched as an invite-only beta in June. I was impressed with its ability to interrogate the content of a web page, but it also didn't blow my socks off. So we'll see what Atlassian builds with it.

🤖 Sarah Perez: WordPress launches an "experimental" new AI vibe coding tool for creating Gutenberg blocks, called Telex.

🤖 Food for thought from Scott Rosenberg, writing about the web's bot-versus-bot future: "Service providers and large organizations are already preparing to roll out two different versions of each website or app they support: one for people and the other for AI agents and bots."

One More Thing


🎈 I really liked this blog post by Sia Karamalegos, about "how to grow your tech career by engaging and contributing to tech communities through writing, speaking, open source, and more." Sia organizes Eleventy community meetups on Zoom, which I've popped into a few times. I'm usually having dinner when they happen, due to my time zone, so I lurk rather than participate! But I learn a lot and really appreciate Sia bringing the 11ty community together like this. Web communities are more important than ever in this era of bigco dominance.

Thanks for reading, and if you have any suggestions on news sources for Web Technology News, leave me a comment on Mastodon or Bluesky. And don't forget, you can follow WTN on those platforms too: search "@feed@webtechnology.news" on Mastodon or click here to follow on Bluesky.

You can also get the full content via email (the form is on the WTN homepage) or RSS. A benefit of signing up via email is that it allows you to post good ol' fashioned comments on the URL where this post lives: i.e. on the Web.

Until next week, keep on blogging!


Web developers,

I have a question for you. Imagine an idea for a new web technology is proposed. But at least of the browser makers formally objects because of privacy concerns or other reasons. They say "No, we object to this proposal. We will never ship this. Let’s redesign it without these problems." But the other browser disagrees & ships anyway.

Should that technology be considered A Web Standard — when 1 or 2 browsers implement & ship, while 1 or 2 browsers Formally Object and say no?


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#gazetadobrasil #jornalismo #noticias #politics EUA enviam 10 caças F-35 para operações antidrogas perto da Venezuela gazetabrasil.com.br/mundo/2025…


Paroles de la chanson “X” de 21 Savage & Metro Boomin
#21SavageMetroBoomin #X
daletra.art/21-savage-e-metro-…