The dystopian AI potboiler appears to be ubiquitous, but Paul Bradley Carr wisely got in ahead of the rush — 'The Confessions ...
Rage bait has the internet, well, raging. But what is rage bait? What's the future of it? And why are so many content ...
Personalized algorithms may quietly sabotage how people learn, nudging them into narrow tunnels of information even when they ...
The LinkedIn algorithm can feel like a mysterious gatekeeper, deciding which posts reach only a few connections and which break free into wider feeds. For professionals, creators, and brands, ...
Oxford University Press has named ‘rage bait’ the Oxford Word of the Year 2025, capturing how anger-driven online content has ...
The original version of this story appeared in Quanta Magazine. Imagine a town with two widget merchants. Customers prefer cheaper widgets, so the merchants must compete to set the lowest price.
You know that feeling when you read something online and it seems deliberately provocative, almost manufactured to create outrage? You may have just encountered “rage bait” – content deliberately ...
Oxford has chosen “rage bait” as the Word of the Year 2025, reflecting how provocative online content increasingly shapes ...
Although investing may seem simple on the surface, making good investments and following up on them efficiently and effectively requires more time and skill than many prospective investors realize.
When someone walks into an emergency room with symptoms of a stroke, every second matters. But today, diagnosing the type of ...
Oxford has announced that its Word of the Year for 2025 is rage bait. The word’s use has increased 12 fold over the last year beating out the likes of aura farming and biohack. Rage bait is a popular ...