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  • βœ‡The Daily Cartoonist
  • CSotD: Bloomsday meets Humpday Mike Peterson
    Yesterday was Bloomsday, in which people who have read Ulysses say β€œIt’s Bloomsday” and if they’re in Dublin they can dress up as Leopold Bloom and walk around the places Joyce wrote about. And I suppose they might eat a kidney, masturbate, be cuckolded and get drunk to recreate the entire day. Keyes is unimpressed […]
     

CSotD: Bloomsday meets Humpday

17 June 2026 at 11:12
Yesterday was Bloomsday, in which people who have read Ulysses say β€œIt’s Bloomsday” and if they’re in Dublin they can dress up as Leopold Bloom and walk around the places Joyce wrote about. And I suppose they might eat a kidney, masturbate, be cuckolded and get drunk to recreate the entire day. Keyes is unimpressed […]

Tangled in photos

☽ malowitch ☾ posted a photo:

Tangled in photos

Taking you back in the 2010s when photography was about the oversatured pictures with so much grain and so much creative ideas without using any Photoshop or AI. Welcome back in the past! 😊

Girl Washing a Dog - Isolated Remix

By: j4p4n
5 June 2026 at 12:44
I decided to isolate the girl and focus on her washing her dog (while I did it, I made her brush a different colour than the dog to visually separate them etc)

  • βœ‡Malay Mail - All
  • Chinese spies posing as job recruiters to coax state secrets, say western security agencies
    LONDON, June 5 β€” Chinese spies are posing as job recruiters to trick staff in western governments into disclosing sensitive information, the Five Eyes alliance of security agencies has warned.China’s military intelligence services advertise false jobs such as foreign policy or defence analysts on platforms including LinkedIn, the spy agencies of Britain, the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand said jointly late Wednesday.The agents pretend to be HR consultants
     

Chinese spies posing as job recruiters to coax state secrets, say western security agencies

4 June 2026 at 10:09

Malay Mail

LONDON, June 5 β€” Chinese spies are posing as job recruiters to trick staff in western governments into disclosing sensitive information, the Five Eyes alliance of security agencies has warned.

China’s military intelligence services advertise false jobs such as foreign policy or defence analysts on platforms including LinkedIn, the spy agencies of Britain, the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand said jointly late Wednesday.

The agents pretend to be HR consultants or employees of β€œlegitimate-looking” private consultancies or think-tanks that claim to be located outside of China.

They pressurise candidates into revealing β€œnon-public” information during the interview process, including by writing a report, the intelligence agencies said.

People with security clearance, military personnel, journalists and academics are among those targeted, the Five Eyes added.

Military staff may be asked about their roles and unit activities, home base or naval vessel.

Recruits receive anywhere from a few hundred to several thousand dollars per report, and may be offered more money in return for increasingly sensitive information, the agencies said.

They warned that β€œwhile applicants often have no direct access to classified information, even unclassified information” can be helpful to the Chinese government.

β€œCertain types of data can place the lives of frontline military or other personnel at risk, can weaken our economic prosperity, and enable interference in our democratic processes,” the agencies wrote.

They said they had identified people who had been duped by the scam, β€œleading to criminal prosecutions, job losses, and security-clearance revocation”.

Western spy agencies have repeatedly warned of the threat of espionage from China, as well as from Russia and Iran, in recent years.

Last month, two Chinese-British dual nationals were convicted by a jury in London of spying on Hong Kong dissidents on Beijing’s behalf. They are awaiting sentencing. β€” Reuters

  • βœ‡Collider
  • 10 Near-Perfect K-Dramas Nobody Remembers Anja Djuricic
    With hundreds of K-dramas hitting the market each year, it's easy for even the best to fall through the cracks. Streaming services have optimized the traditional K-drama format into a shorter, more streamlined version of the same type, but that doesn't mean that shows with many filler episodes or longer paths to conclusion aren't equally good.
     

10 Near-Perfect K-Dramas Nobody Remembers

6 June 2026 at 10:03

With hundreds of K-dramas hitting the market each year, it's easy for even the best to fall through the cracks. Streaming services have optimized the traditional K-drama format into a shorter, more streamlined version of the same type, but that doesn't mean that shows with many filler episodes or longer paths to conclusion aren't equally good.

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