Tim Bray
@timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
1.9K followers 6 following 1.2K posts
Web geek and environmentalist with a camera at the bottom left corner of Canada. He/him. These posts are coming from a member-owned cooperative: https://cosocial […] [bridged from https://cosocial.ca/@timbray on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
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timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Looks like the FCC is getting serious about robocalling? https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-415059A1.pdf

The subject line in the mailing list where I saw this is “For those of you who follow this kind of stuff” which turns out to mean that any knowledgeable discussion devolves into a […]
Original post on cosocial.ca
cosocial.ca
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Wikipedia’s rejoinder to Ted Cruz is entirely fair and accurate, but don’t kid yourself that Cruz is interested in fairness or accuracy, he’s just pushing back against the tendency of factual reporting to exhibit a liberal bias.

#wikipedia […]
Original post on cosocial.ca
cosocial.ca
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Graffiti written on sand. I think there’s a metaphor here struggling to get out…

#photography #graffiti
A heap of construction sand beside a narrow pathway, tree behind. On the sand heap, typically-illegible graffiti.
Reposted by Tim Bray
evan.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Mind-blowing fact from @ben during #fediforum : in an fundraising experiment, he was able to raise more donations for #propublica on the Fediverse than on any other social channel. 🤯
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
That time of year.

#photography #autumn
A variety of semi-autumnal tree colors against a bright blue sky
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
(There are only like 5 of them in the world.)
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
TIL about the OctoBass as a result of my random YouTube-live-music feed stumbling into a performance of Gounod’s “Messe Solonelle” which is pretty good and, well, has an octobass in the orchestra.

#music
Eric Chappell of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra playing the orchestra's octobass

Author: Orchestre symphonique de Montréal (Antoine Saito) 

This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license.
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Outstanding piece, print it out and stick it up next to every keyboard… https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/10/i-have-no-facts-and-i-must-scream/
## You did no fact checking, and I must scream https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2025/10/i-have-no-facts-and-i-must-scream/ I'm neither a journalist nor a professional fact checker but, the thing is, it's has never been easier to check basic facts. Yeah, sure, there's a world of misinformation out there, but it doesn't take much effort to determine if something is likely to be true. There are brilliant tools like reverse Image Search which give you a good indicator of when an image first appeared on the web, and whether it was published by a reputable source. You can use Google Books to check whether a quote is true. You can use social-media searches to easily check the origin of memes. There are vast archives of printed material to help you. The World Wide Web has a million sites which allow you to cross-reference any citations to see if they're spurious. Now, perhaps all that is a bit too much effort for someone casually doomscrolling and hitting "repost" for an instant dopamine hit. But it shouldn't be. And it _certainly_ shouldn't be for people who write for trusted sources like newspapers. Recently, the beloved actor Patricia Routledge died. Several newspapers reposted a piece of viral slop which I had debunked a month previously. Let's go through the piece and see just how easy it is to prove false. Here's that "viral" story. I've kept to the parts which contain easily verifiable / falsifiable claims. Wikpedia says that her birthday was 17 February 1929. She would have turned 95 in 2024. Open up your calendar app. Scroll back to February 2024. What date was 17 February 2024? Saturday. Not Monday. Now, OK, maybe at 95 she's forgotten her birthday. What else does the rest of the piece say? In 1968, Patricia Routledge won Best Actress (Musical) at the Tony Awards - she was 39. I don't know if I'd consider appearing on Broadway as provincial stages. Keeping Up Appearances was first broadcast in 1990. Patricia was around 60, not 50, when she was cast. While she may have thought it would only be a small series - even though it was by the creator of Open All Hours and Last of the Summer Wine - there's no way that being the lead character could be described as a "small part". She wasn't a breakout character - she was the star. Wikipedia isn't always accurate, but it does list lots of her stage work. She was working steadily on stage from 1999 - when she hit 70 - but none of it Shakespeare. I was able to do that fact checking in 10 minutes while laying in bed waiting for the bathroom to become free. It wasn't onerous. It didn't require subscriptions to professional journals. I didn't need a team of fact-checkers. It took a bit of web-sleuthing and, dare I say it, a smidgen of common sense. And yet, a couple of newspapers ran with this utter drivel as though it were the truth. The Independent published it as part of their tribute - although they took the piece down after I emailed them. Similarly The Express ran it without any basic fact-checking (and didn't take it down after being contacted). Both of them say their primary source is the "Jay Speak" blog. There's nothing on that blog post to say that the author interviewed Patricia Routledge. A quick check of the other posts on the site don't make it obvious that it is a reputable source of exclusive interviews with notable actors. The date on that blog post is August 2nd, 2025. Is there anything earlier? Typing a few of the phrases into a search engine found a bunch of posts which pre-date it. The earliest I can find was this Instagram post and this Facebook post both from the **24th of July** - a week early than the Jay Speaks post. To be clear, I don't think Jay Speaks was deliberately trying to fool journalists or hoax anyone. They simply saw an interesting looking post and re-shared it. I also suspect the Facebook and Instagram posts were copied from other sources - but I've been unable to find anything definitive. I would expect that professional journalists at well-established newspapers to be able to call an actor's agent to fact-check a piece before running it. If they can't, I would have thought they'd do a cursory fact check. But, no. I presume the rush to publish is so great that it over-rides any sense of whether a piece should be accurate. This is irresponsible. Last week saw the BBC air an outright lie on Have I Got News For You. A professional TV company, with a budget for lawyers, fact checkers, and researchers - and they just broadcast easily disproven lies. Why? Maybe hubris, maybe laziness, maybe deliberate rabble-rousing. The media have comprehensively failed us. They will repeat any tawdry nonsense as long as it keeps people clicking. It's up to us to defend ourselves and our friends against this unending tsunami of low-grade slurry. I hope I've demonstrated that it takes almost no effort to perform a basic fact check. It isn't a professional skill. It doesn't require anything more than an Internet connection and a curious mind. If you see something online, take a moment to check it before sharing it. Stopping misinformation starts with you. #factCheck #fakeNews #newspapers #quote #SocialMedia
shkspr.mobi
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
I was recently quoted as saying, about online media, that we can “change the global Internet conversation for the better, by making it harder for liars to lie and easier for truth-tellers to be believed.”

I thought I should offer details. So here’s a little scenario, the “Nadia story”, and an […]
Original post on cosocial.ca
cosocial.ca
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Summer in Autumn! (We moved and had to replace a lot of the back-yard topsoil, didn’t get that done till July, so we planted the spring flowers then and they think it’s midsummer.)

#photography #bloomscrolling
A garden full of colorful flowers.
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
The canceling of ICEBlock is more evidence, were any needed, that the Web is the platform of the future, the only platform without a controlling vendor. Anything controversial should be available through a pure browser interface.

#uspolitics
Reposted by Tim Bray
edent.mastodon.social.ap.brid.gy
🆕 blog! “Getting started with Mastodon's Quote Posts - technical implementation details for servers”

Quoting posts on Mastodon is slightly complex. Because of the privacy conscious nature of the platform and its users, reposting isn't merely a case of sharing a URl.

A user writes a status. The […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
@matt Well the developer-tools market is a tiny niche, not gonna require huge data centers or make billionaires.
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
@cheeaun @scottjenson I feel like the world “discoverable” is sort of insider geek talk? Perhaps put it in quotes “Discoverable” and have a mouse-over link to a description of what the actual effect is?
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Cafe life (look close).

#photography #mystery
From inside a cafe, a busy street. A woman in jeans and a black T-shirt is walking and talking on her mobile. On the other side of the dense traffic, store fronts and trees.  Looming over the cars - maybe on the back of a truck? - is a large vaguely human figure kneeling as if to start a race. Its surface seems organic: wood or plants?
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
https://www.404media.co/18-lawyers-caught-using-ai-explain-why-they-did-it/?ref=daily-stories-newsletter

Fascinating narrative and a strong signal that the perennial culture of overwork in the legal profession has systematically pernicious effects, in this case getting a bot to draft your […]
Original post on cosocial.ca
cosocial.ca
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
Seriously looking like France will bring in a wealth tax. Background: https://www.politico.eu/article/gabriel-zucman-economist-france-wealth-tax/ (86% popular support!)

Bloomberg on current politics […]
Original post on cosocial.ca
cosocial.ca
timbray.cosocial.ca.ap.brid.gy
1/2 In a piece about Canadian politics, probably not of interest to outsiders, I suspect this will amuse many:

“Trump’s [team] are every bit the … “Bad Boy” Detroit Pistons of the late 80s … Trump is peak Bill Laimbeer, sneering and fouling everything in sight. JD Vance is Dennis Rodman, an […]
Original post on cosocial.ca
cosocial.ca