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FTC Probes Whether Ticketmaster Does Enough To Stop Resale Bots

The FTC is investigating whether Ticketmaster is doing enough to prevent bots from illegally reselling tickets on its platform, with a decision on the matter coming within weeks, according to Bloomberg (paywalled). Reuters reports: The 2016 law prohibits the use of bots and other methods to bypass ticket purchase limits set by online sellers. As part of the probe, FTC investigators are assessing whether Ticketmaster has a financial incentive to allow resellers to circumvent its ticket limit rules, according to the report. A settlement is also possible, Bloomberg reported. If the FTC pursues a case and Live Nation loses, the company could face billions of dollars in penalties, as the law permits fines of up to $53,000 per violation.

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'Meta Ray-Ban Display' Glasses Design, HUD Clips Leak

A leaked Meta video revealed upcoming "Meta Ray-Ban Display" smart glasses with a monocular HUD and sEMG wristband control, set to debut at Connect 2025 for around $800. Despite past hesitation, it looks like EssilorLuxottica has agreed to co-brand after Meta invested $3.5 billion in the company, taking a 3% stake. UploadVR reports: Meta's HUD glasses with the sEMG wristband will in fact be Ray-Ban branded, a leaked video which also depicts the HUD and wristband in action reveals. A quickly removed unlisted video on Meta's YouTube channel showed what will soon be Meta and EssilorLuxottica's full lineup:
- The regular Ray-Ban Meta glasses.
- The recently-launched Oakley Meta HSTN glasses.
- The rumored Oakley Meta Sphaera glasses, with eye protection and a centered camera.
- The rumored monocular heads-up display (HUD) glasses controlled by Meta's long-in-development sEMG wristband, which are labeled as "Meta Ray-Ban" with the word "Display" underneath. The smart glasses are expected to be made official during the Meta Connect 2025 keynote at 5pm PT on Wednesday.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Robinhood Plans To Launch a Startups Fund Open To All Retail Investors

Robinhood has filed with the SEC to launch "Robinhood Ventures Fund I," a publicly traded fund designed to give retail investors access to startup shares before IPOs. TechCrunch reports: While the current version of the application is public, Robinhood hasn't filled in the fine-print yet. This means we don't know how many shares it plans to sell, nor other details like the management fee it plans to charge. It's also unclear which startups it hopes this fund will eventually hold. The paperwork says it "expects" to invest in aerospace and defense, AI, fintech, robotics as well as software for consumers and enterprises.

Robinhood's big pitch is that retail investors are being left out of the gains that are amassed by startup investors like VCs. That's true to an extent. "Accredited investors" -- or those with a net worth large enough to handle riskier investments -- already have a variety of ways of buying equity in startups, such as with venture firms like OurCrowd. Retail investors that are not rich enough to be accredited have more limited options. There are funds similar to what Robinhood has proposed, including Cathy Wood's ARK Venture Fund, a mutual fund which holds stakes in companies like Anthropic, Databricks, OpenAI, SpaceX, and others. [...] This new closed-end "Ventures Fund I" is a more classic, mutual fund-style, approach. As to when Robinhood's new fund will be available we don't know that either yet.

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River Redgum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis)

Alan M :-) has added a photo to the pool:

River Redgum (Eucalyptus camaldulensis)

At Wonga Wetlands near Albury, New South Wales.

Fokke & Sukke

F & S

Stephen Miller does not play with dolls.

The White House wants to make it very clear that Nosferatu Van Goebbels does not play with porcelain dolls.

Stephen Miller Is Leading Donald Trump's Reign of Terror:

In the decades that followed, Miller did not grow -- except to become more hardened in his extremist views. When he worked as a communications aide in the office of Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions during the Obama years, he was so widely disliked by his conservative colleagues on Capitol Hill that Republican staff in other offices would invent or spread malicious rumors about Miller, such as that he liked to play with porcelain dolls. (A White House official insists that any such characterization of his time on the Hill is "inaccurate and baseless gossip.")

The staffers at the time never dreamed that he'd ever amount to much more than a punch line or an obscure cautionary tale of what happens when you read too many far-right hate websites and dive into Washington's most feverish swamps.

Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.

Tokyo on Wheels: Absurd Advertising on Shinjuku Dori

Vladimir Cuevas has added a photo to the pool:

Tokyo on Wheels: Absurd Advertising on Shinjuku Dori

A massive ad truck rolls through Shinjuku Dori, its oversized typography screaming louder than the street itself. In a city already overflowing with neon, billboards, and motion, this moving wall of letters adds an almost absurd layer to Tokyo’s urban theater.
It’s both comedy and commentary: pedestrians reduced to extras while a giant rolling commercial steals the stage. A snapshot of modern consumer culture, where even the streets feel like moving billboards.

Location: Shinjuku Dori Avenue, Tokyo

She Was In Every Single Dream He'd Ever Had of New York

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

She Was In Every Single Dream He'd Ever Had of New York

The Golden Dance Life Could Have Been

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

The Golden Dance Life Could Have Been

Found Slide

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Found Slide

date stamped on slide, October 1984