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Boots on the Ground - Massive Attack & Tom Waits

Film created by Massive Attack (working with US photo artist thefinaleye). This montage work portrays a momentous American epoch that is yet to be named, and comes in the aftermath of the largest public protests in American history - focused on opposition to ICE raids, the militarisation of domestic forces, and state authoritarianism. The film quotes statistics and research by the following sources: American Immigration Council, American Civil Liberties Union, Inside Higher Ed, National Coalition for Homeless Veterans, US National Library of Medicine, US National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Privacy International, FactCheck.org. Viewers seeking further information or wishing to take action are encouraged to visit aclu.org, veterans-aid.net, immigrantdefenseproject.org, and freedomforimmigrants.org.

Digital Photography School

Digital Photography Tips and Tutorials

The art of photography hasn’t changed though…

The post The art of photography hasn’t changed though… appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Sime.

The art of photography, despite gear, continues on

There’s a Nikon FM2 sitting on a shelf in my office. It hasn’t had film in it for years, but I can’t bring myself to move it. Something about its heft, its cold metal body, the satisfying click of its shutter — it reminds me why I fell in love with photography in the first place. These days, my best shots often come from a camera I carry in my pocket everywhere I go: my phone.

Sound familiar? If you’ve been shooting for any length of time, you’ve probably had this same quiet reckoning. The tools have changed so dramatically that it can sometimes feel like photography itself has changed. But I’d argue it hasn’t — not even a little.

The art of photography hasn't changed though...

What actually changed (and what didn’t)

Let’s be honest about what modern cameras and phones have improved. Autofocus is faster and more reliable than the best manual glass from the 1970s. Image sensors capture dynamic range that would have required a master darkroom technician to coax from a roll of Kodachrome. Computational photography — the ability of software to merge multiple exposures, reduce noise, and sharpen edges in real time — has genuinely pushed what’s technically possible in a photograph.

But here’s what hasn’t changed: you still have to decide where to stand. You still have to choose your moment. You still have to ask yourself what this photograph is about.

“The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.” — Dorothea Lange

That quote, from one of the greatest photographers of the 20th century, was true when she was shooting on large-format film in the 1930s. It’s equally true today. The art of photography is the art of observation — and a smartphone hasn’t changed the nature of observation any more than a ballpoint pen changed the nature of writing.

The hidden gift of film constraints

Photographers who came up shooting film will tell you something that sounds almost paradoxical at first: having fewer shots made them better. When you only had 36 exposures on a roll — and developing cost money and time — you thought harder before pressing the shutter. You waited for the light to be right. You watched your subject until the perfect moment arrived.

That discipline is still available to anyone who wants it. Some photographers deliberately shoot with apps that simulate a 36-shot roll. Others commit to only keeping one photo per outing, regardless of how many they took. The constraint isn’t in the camera — it’s in the mind of the photographer.

“Every generation of photographers inherits the same essential challenge: learning to see the extraordinary inside the ordinary.”

The case for both worlds

Something interesting has happened in the last few years: film photography has experienced a genuine, sustained revival — and it’s being driven largely by young people who grew up with smartphones. They’re not rejecting digital photography; they’re adding to their practice. They shoot film because it slows them down. Because holding a physical print feels different from swiping through a gallery. Because the grain and the imperfection feel honest.

Meanwhile, serious photographers are doing extraordinary work with smartphones. The photographers publishing in major magazines, winning awards, and building huge audiences online are increasingly using mobile cameras not as a compromise, but as a deliberate creative choice. The intimacy a phone allows — the way it doesn’t intimidate subjects the way a DSLR might — has opened up entirely new photographic possibilities.

The best photographers today understand that the question isn’t “film or digital?” or “camera or phone?” The question is always the same one Henri Cartier-Bresson was asking in 1940: what is the decisive moment, and am I ready for it?

Light, composition, and the moment: the holy trinity

Every photography teacher, from Ansel Adams to the best YouTube tutorials today, comes back to the same three fundamentals: light, composition, and moment. These are the elements that make a photograph sing — and they are entirely independent of the gear you’re holding.

A vintage Leica rangefinder and a flagship iPhone both need the same golden-hour light to produce a glowing landscape. A medium format film camera and a mirrorless body both require the photographer to understand the rule of thirds, leading lines, and negative space. And no camera ever invented can press its own shutter at precisely the right instant — that’s still you, every single time.

This is the most liberating truth in photography: the equipment matters far less than the eye behind it. The best camera you own is, overwhelmingly, the one you have with you and know how to use.

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5 Affordable Cameras Worth Buying on Amazon

If you’re ready to step up from (or complement) your phone, here are five well-reviewed, budget-friendly options available on Amazon right now — from approachable point-and-shoots to capable mirrorless bodies.

1

Canon EOS Rebel T7 DSLR Best entry DSLR

A classic starting point for new photographers. The Rebel T7 pairs a 24.1MP CMOS sensor with Canon’s reliable DIGIC 4+ processor and ships with an 18–55mm kit lens, giving you a versatile everyday focal range right out of the box. Built-in Wi-Fi makes sharing straightforward, and the optical viewfinder delivers a satisfying, traditional shooting experience. An excellent choice for anyone who wants to learn on a real DSLR without breaking the bank.

2

Canon EOS R100 Mirrorless Best mirrorless under $600

The most affordable new mirrorless camera on the market, the R100 features a 24.2MP APS-C sensor — the same chip found in Canon’s pricier R50 — with a reliable dual-pixel autofocus system that handles portraits and moving subjects well. It’s compact, comfortable to grip, and opens the door to Canon’s growing RF lens ecosystem. A sensible, future-proof investment for first-time mirrorless buyers.

3

Sony ZV-1F Compact Best vlogging + stills

Don’t let the “vlogging camera” label fool you — the ZV-1F’s 1-inch sensor, best-in-class autofocus, and compact form factor make it a genuinely capable still camera too. Its 20mm fixed lens is ideal for environmental portraits and street photography, and the flip-out display makes it easy to compose shots from unusual angles. For photographers who also want to shoot video or create content, it’s arguably the best value in this price range.

4

Kodak PIXPRO FZ55 Point & Shoot Most accessible

Sometimes you just want a simple, reliable camera you can hand to a friend or toss in a bag without anxiety. The FZ55 delivers 16MP images, a 5x optical zoom, and 1080p video in a lightweight body, all for well under $150. Amazon reviewers consistently praise its ease of use and image quality for casual shooting. It’s a great gateway camera for young photographers or anyone looking for a low-stakes way back into dedicated-camera shooting.

5

Fujifilm Instax Mini EVO Best for prints

In a world of ephemeral digital images, the Instax Mini EVO bridges the gap between digital convenience and the tangible joy of a physical print — something that resonates deeply with the spirit of film photography. It combines digital shooting with instant printing via its hybrid design, and its retro aesthetic makes it genuinely pleasurable to use. For photographers who want to reconnect with the physical side of the medium, this is a uniquely satisfying option.

The takeaway: your eye is the constant

The history of photography is really a history of tools getting out of the way — getting lighter, faster, cheaper, and more forgiving — so the photographer can focus on what was always the point: seeing. Every great image ever made, from Dorothea Lange’s “Migrant Mother” to a viral phone photo taken this morning, began with someone paying attention.

So shoot with your vintage film camera. Shoot with your mirrorless. Shoot with your phone at breakfast. The art doesn’t live in the equipment. It never did. It lives in you — in the moment you decide that this is worth preserving, and you raise whatever camera you have and press the shutter.

That moment is identical whether the year is 1965 or 2026. That’s the beautiful, stubborn truth at the heart of photography…

Get, make photographs, come back and tell us what you learned.

The post The art of photography hasn’t changed though… appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Sime.

404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

I Almost Lost My Mind in the Bridal Algorithm

I Almost Lost My Mind in the Bridal Algorithm

I thought I would be a “cool” bride. I believed this because I never dreamed of my own wedding. When other girls daydreamed aloud about riding down the aisle on a pony, or gracefully officiated the union of a Princess Diana Beanie Baby and a Hot Wheels truck, I came up blank. Despite a constant stream of ‘90s media featuring transformative white dresses, there was nothing my imagination could conjure for it. I was busy scheduling meetings on my toy Palm Pilot. This was fine until 30 years later, when my now-husband asked me what I wanted for our own wedding, and I had nothing. After years of watching friends plan weddings, I only had one preference for the day: I didn’t want to feel stressed out. 

There are a few industries that prey on emotion particularly brazenly. The funeral industry is one. The wedding industry is another. I knew this going in. I thought I could defeat hundreds of years of socially ingrained pressure backed by a multi-billion dollar consumer machine. No problem. 

What I did not account for—shamefully, considering how much time I spend thinking and writing about technology in my professional life—was that in the more than three decades I’d spent building a resistance to deeply gendered expectations on my existence, that machine was perfecting the art of making me feel weird, broke, and ugly, and I wouldn’t recognize what was happening until I was deep in it. I’m talking about the wedding planning algorithm.

When Lillie and her fiance Morgan got engaged, Lillie told me she saw the difference in her social media feeds the moment she texted her friends the news. (They’re using first names only in this story for their privacy.) “Immediately, all of my social media was just flooded,” she told me in a phone call. “And I think at the beginning it was all just so shiny and new. I was like, ‘This is so awesome.’ So I did kind of consume a lot of bridal media pretty strongly out of the gate, because I didn't quite realize yet how much it was going to take over every single one of my social media apps.” 

We talk a lot here on 404 Media about “the algorithm.” Usually we're referring to either Instagram Reels or Tiktok. Part of the reason we discuss and dissect it so frequently is because if you're not careful, the algorithm—the spew of content these apps automatically show you based on your past viewing habits, data from other apps, or what the app thinks you’re interested in—becomes a mirror of your mind; this is dangerous territory considering it's easy to manipulate by people, brands, networks and corporations with perverse incentives. 

Some of this actually seems, and sometimes is, helpful at first. The design pattern of infinite scrolling relies on a variable reward system to be effective and truly endless. The next thing you see in your feed might be the exact nugget of wisdom, life hack, or listicle you needed to make your life better, or, in this case, your wedding flawless. But you’ll never know unless you keep scrolling through the next hundred useless or actively brainrotting videos. 

Like Lillie, the moment I got engaged and started Googling wedding dresses and venues was the moment my entire social media experience shifted into the Bride Algo. Every Reel and Tiktok, and I do mean every single post, contained something new I needed to change about myself:

  • “Everything I did to ‘lock in’ for my wedding & lose 34 lbs in 5 months without missing out on living life.”  
  • “If you spend $150k on a wedding and stay married for 40 years, that's only about $10 a day. Not bad for one of the best days of your life.” 
  • “What I will NOT be doing as a 2026 bride.” 
  • “Bridal Breakdown PSA to 2026 Brides.” 
  • “POV: You’re not fat, you’re just puffy.” 
  • “25 Things Guests Secretly Hate About Weddings”
  • “LEAVE THAT MAN AT THE ALTAR”

Journalist CT Jones calls the effect this content has on even the most level-headed people “wedding brain.” They recently wrote: “There’s this fog around my head that I can’t seem to shake when it comes to this event. My TikTok algorithm tells me every three swipes about the ‘biggest mistakes people make that ruin their special days.’”

Today's authority on weddings is Vogue, and in January 2020, Vogue correctly identified that social media was changing everything about how couples plan weddings. “Women of the 2010s became a lot more knowledgeable thanks to social media,” designer Danielle Frankel told the magazine. “They began seeing not just their friends getting married, but aspirational brides they follow on Instagram. There’s something kind of cool about researching through real people and their experiences, and the ability to share stories through a social platform.” In the six years that followed, this chipper assessment of there being “something kind of cool” about literal celebrity weddings does not age well. Being an influencer or content creator became one of the dwindling few ways for anyone in a creative field to make a living, a situation solidified by a tanked economy, a never-ending housing crisis, widespread unemployment, and AI gutting of a variety of fields. 

Fast forward to earlier this month, New York magazine published a story about the behind-the-scenes process that decides whose wedding makes it into Vogue, and what happens when they don’t. “One woman in the fashion industry had a breakdown after Vogue turned her down,” journalist Charlotte Klein wrote, adding that the jilted bride went to trauma rehab after. But the real crux of the issue—how multi-million dollar Vogue weddings, most of which are not celebrities but are parties thrown by total unknowns, are perceived, consumed, and rely on real, normal people’s attention—comes at the very end of the story, in a quote from a mysteriously anonymous fashion editor: “A wedding is a lot of work. It’s a full production and you’re spending months on it and you’re designing it—it’s a creative achievement in a way. If someone puts on a play or does an art installation, they get press and attention for it. And it’s like, Well, I did all this stuff for my wedding. Where is my round of applause?” 

That editor is talking about the Beckhams of the world, and the reality TV stars, and the old, old money Beltway normies. But they’re also talking to, and about, the rest of us. 

This is all so much insidious than it used to be. While the lifestyles of the rich and famous used to be reserved for magazines and Hollywood, we’re all swimming in the same algorithmic ocean now. “Today, Instagram encourages people to treat life itself like a wedding-like a production engineered to be witnessed and admired by an audience,” Jia Tolentino wrote in her 2019 book of essays Trick Mirror. “It has become common for people, especially women, to interact with themselves as if they were famous all the time. Under these circumstances, the vision of the bride as celebrity princess has hardened into something like a rule. Expectations of bridal beauty have collided with the wellness industry and produced a massive dark star of obligation.”

I know that I’m not alone in the Weddingtok and the Bridal Algo because people have started making videos mocking the content that’s stressing us all out. “If you feel calm, it’s probably because you’re forgetting something,” one planner says in a satirical video. The comments on these send-up videos reveal hundreds of women saying they’re stressed beyond belief, losing their minds, or otherwise crashing out. A comment on another such video: “Me locking in because I’m getting married next month and I fucking hate myself is literally my entire personality.” On another: “Pulling my hair out and screaming and can’t wait to disappear.”

Looking back, the moment I first heard the phrase “cake inspo board” feels like foreshadowing. I'd emailed a handful of bakeries and filled out a dozen inquiry forms at that point in the planning process. Because of competitiveness among vendors about rates and offerings (or possibly because some evil McKinsey for Weddings-type MBA entity decided this is a useful lead generation sales flow), every piece of information has to come directly from a vendor these days and is almost never listed on their websites publicly. It’s acquired by prospective clients, who blast 400 inquiries to their contact forms, some of them requiring multiple choice quizzes about the budget, timeline, “wedding day vibe” and personal social media handles. A few bakers got back to me with quotes for simple cakes. One asked for my mood board. For a cake? Like... flavors? I felt like I’d missed a step going down the stairs. I didn't have a vision board for the cake. I needed a vision board for the cake. 

Prior to planning a wedding, I hadn’t used Pinterest since 2008. When I started using it again after several vendors asked me for it, I felt a sugary thrill at pinning a disjointed collage of flowers, dresses, and other things I’d only describe as moon-landing-aspirational boards. Pinterest, meanwhile, is increasingly a minefield of AI slop, and has been for a while, with AI-generated makeup inspiration photos and dresses, which makes the process feel more confusing and unachievable. 

Alongside the thickly-iced and piped “vintage” triple-layer cakes is “thinspo” content, in the form of viral walking routines, the Gabby George arm workouts, and ads for ordering a GLP-1 online. “Thinspo” content is all over Pinterest and other social media platforms. 

“On Pinterest, every single photo is bones. Like, I can see clavicles. I can see sternums. I can see collarbones,” Lillie said. “Especially with the bridal outfits.” Once she starts feeling herself spending too much time looking through this kind of content, she takes a break.

"I'm like, okay, you know what? At least it's not just me, at least I'm not the only one who's like, ‘This is crazy.’”

I asked my friend Kelli Sullivan, whose objectively stunning wedding I attended in 2025, if she’d felt any of these anxieties while planning hers. “I feel like social media especially in recent years has gone so overboard with talking about and showcasing weddings, and particularly in a super influencer and curated style, that even subliminally influenced my own decisions when planning,” she said. 

“I don’t feel like social media gave me direct pressure when it came to planning and decision making, but it definitely influenced my wedding,” Kelli said. But it wasn’t all bad for her, necessarily. “I really loved immersing myself in that niche of social media and was inspired by Pinterest, Instagram and TikTok wedding ideas that helped shape many of my decisions and ideas I never would have really even considered as a possibility otherwise,” she said. “I also really appreciated insights from other brides and hearing their horror stories and similar struggles made me feel less alone when things felt heavy in planning.” 

Lillie said the same. “That is just the beauty of social media, sometimes, to just not feel alone. That has been really, really helpful for me,” she said. “But I'm like, okay, you know what? At least it's not just me, at least I'm not the only one who's like, ‘This is crazy.’”

Attending Kelli’s wedding, and all the other beautiful but vastly different weddings my friends have planned over the years, felt essential to understanding the many unspoken rules around ceremony, etiquette, and tradition, and all the ways these rules should be broken. But Lillie is the first of her friends to have a wedding. “I will kind of be the guinea pig for all of my friends, I guess, to look at my wedding and be like, ‘this is how Lillie did it,’” she said. “That’s also kind of been a lot of pressure. It's hard.” 

Adding to that pressure, she and Morgan are navigating these expectations as a lesbian couple in Idaho, and where they live skews heavily Mormon, conservative, and Christian. They use social media to vet vendors’ friendliness toward queer couples before contacting them, scanning Facebook and Instagram pages for signs of intolerance or hate. Lillie calls this being “on the lookout.” 

“Are these people that I want to interact with? How are they going to treat me? Am I going to be treated differently? I have to get some stuff altered for the boys suits, and we’d gotten in contact with a local seamstress up here, and I'm like, scrolling through her Facebook to see how she feels about me. And that's just a tiring thing to do. But it’s for my own safety. I don't want to go into these people's houses if it’s not going to be somewhere safe for me. That sometimes sounds really dramatic, but it's not. It just kind of casts a sort of shadow over everything,” Lillie explained. “This is supposed to be just such a joyous time of our life.”  

Almost all of the most viral wedding planning content on social media is aggressively heteronormative—a reflection of an industry struggling to keep up, and attitudes toward queer relationships and marriage in this country that are painfully, dangerously outdated. Lillie tells vendors that she and her fiancée are both women, and they still ask her who the groom is. They routinely ask her, “Who’s going to be the boy?” Meanwhile, Tiktok tells us a silk scarf basque waist dress and a sparkler exit is the real sin.

During my own planning, guests and vendors frequently asked me what our “colors” were. I didn't want to have specific colors, but the algorithm told me that even multicolor weddings are on-trend (derogatory), part of a “wildflower” fad of eclecticism. The algo also told me, over and over, that no matter what else I did, there was one combination to avoid lest I become a cringe dated chopped unc chud of a bride: chartreuse and burgundy. 

One of the planning tasks I truly enjoyed was picking out and arranging my own (minimal) florals. If the wedding you’re planning is at a venue that’s not all-inclusive—meaning, it’s on you to supply everything from the chairs and linens to the sound system, florals, food, desert, on and on—a lot of the process is emails and payment portals. I wanted to choose and assemble my own flowers for this reason: I needed to do something with my hands, finally, that brings me joy. 

My fiancé and I went to a wholesale flower market two days before our wedding and picked bunches. And ultimately, when I got to the flower market with no plan for my bouquet other than to choose what called to me, I ended up with a swaggy handful of hanging burgundy amaranthus stems and bright lime Bells-of-Ireland. Now everyone would know I got married sometime between 2025-2026.

This fear of being dated is a real joy killer, and a heavily-pushed narrative on the bridal algo right now. I love Basque waisted dresses and find them reliably flattering for my body shape, but #2026Bride influencers deemed them inexplicably cringe at some point in the last year, so my attraction to them soured, and finding a dress became a nightmare of rush shipping, returns and restocking fees. (While writing this story, InStyle published a piece that could only be made in that lab: a series of collage illustrations imagining Taylor Swift in wedding dresses, including one captioned “If you’re on #WeddingTok in 2026 like I am, you’ll know that the patron saint of basic bitches, Taylor Swift, is a basque-waist dress, burgundy-and-chartreuse color palette girl.”)

The fact that I can be swayed at all by what an internet person thinks, as a 36 year old with decades of being socially weird under my belt, disturbs me. I know that everything about what we do, wear, say, and choose is destined to be dated someday because we exist in a specific time. And yet, realizing when I got back with my bouquet and 15 pounds of freshly cut florals that I’d still somehow broken the year’s biggest, most made up mean-girl rule made me feel like an uncool little kid again.

In the car on the way back from the flower market, I bemoaned all of these things to my fiancé, who endured our apartment transforming into a shipping warehouse for weeks. He asked if it's a “comparison is the thief of joy” type-thing. It is that, but the comparison is no longer with some girl you went to high school with. Rather, it's an entire universe of options, budgets, opinions, and salespeople. In the scroll, it’s hard to tell the difference between a wedding real people got married at, and a photo spread that's meant to highlight a set of vendors or brands. Twenty years ago, an average couple might have had a wedding in their backyard or at the firehouse with catering, but surely they weren’t this stressed about tablescapes or cake inspo Pinterest boards.

"Most couples aren’t models, most budgets aren’t six figures, and most wedding days don’t unfold under perfect conditions."

People are getting wise to this. And there’s one type of wedding that I scrolled past over and over again before I realized they were all entirely staged: styled shoots. “Styled shoots are a common cheat. It’s kind of unethical imo. Once you know what to look out for, it’s pretty obvious,” Lana Dubkova, a documentary-style event and brand photographer, recently posted on X. Lana’s been a photographer for a decade but started doing weddings full-time in 2023. In a styled shoot, photographers, confectioners, designers, florists, venues, stylists, and the rest of the wedding vendor galaxy come together, often with professional models to serve as the bride, groom and guests, to display their wares in an editorial setting. These aren’t real weddings, but are meant to advertise their work to real couples and planners. And they are impacting real couples’ wedding day wants. 

Lana told me in an email that although her clients typically come to her for her own candid style, she often needs to “gently recalibrate” their expectations. “A common tension is that couples want both a highly immersive experience and an extensive set of posed, editorial images... without realizing those require time! A wedding day is finite, and every decision is a tradeoff: more time spent on photos often means less time spent with guests,” she said. “Most of these expectations come from social media, where timelines, budgets, and logistics are invisible. What’s presented as effortless is usually highly produced, and that disconnect can create unnecessary pressure.” 

She doesn’t believe styled shoots are all bad. They do serve a purpose for vendors’ portfolios. “There's a case to be made that maybe you're not getting hired for the type of weddings you would like to photograph and so you invest the money into a styled shoot to be able to display the style of wedding you want to be hired for in your portfolio,” she said. “Takes money to make money etc. But let's say you're a client looking to hire a photographer for a wedding. How would you feel if you found out the photographer you hired had ONLY styled shoots in their portfolio and had never actually shot a real wedding before? I imagine you'd want to know that ahead of time.” 

Styled shoots “become problematic when they’re presented without context,” she said. “A styled shoot is, by definition, a controlled environment: professional models, ideal lighting, high-end venues, curated florals, and unlimited time. Real weddings are the opposite: dynamic, time-constrained, and emotionally complex. Most couples aren’t models, most budgets aren’t six figures, and most wedding days don’t unfold under perfect conditions. A photographer’s ability to work quickly, adapt to changing light, and make people feel comfortable matters far more than their ability to create a perfect image in a controlled setting.” 

If you’re not planning a wedding or haven’t in the last three years or so, you might not be familiar with any of the content I’ve described so far. But this is the insidious nature of “the algorithm.” No one else is seeing yours. No one attending my wedding (except for others who were also recently married and are online) knew or cared that chartreuse and burgundy have been deemed cliche. They just liked the bouquet and thought it was pretty. And if they knew, they didn’t say it to my face, because talking about the internet in real life is absurd. 

“If social media didn’t exist or especially exist in the way it does with the curation (for weddings in particular) I probably would have done things way differently and maybe simpler,” Kelli told me. “Having a universe of options shown constantly online did give decision fatigue and also a pressure to have everything be aesthetic, especially with the knowledge that what we will share from the wedding will be perceived by others on social media.” 

“If I knew then what I know now, would I have planned a smaller wedding? Would I have probably eloped? Yes,” Lillie told me. “Do I still have, like, $8,000 in nonrefundable deposits down? Yes.” 

The things I remember about my friends’ weddings are not their tablescapes or whether they featured some forbidden color combination, and I didn’t make lists of things that made me secretly hate them. I remember, most of all, the moments around the weddings: meeting at a cobblestone street cafe the night before for warm Kronenbourgs, pouring mimosas on a moving bus in the morning, gluing an eyelash back on in a beach bathroom, fireworks shows both planned and unplanned, watching my newlywed friends sing and dance and feeling grateful to witness it all. The million tiny moments I remember from my own wedding are part of a different galaxy than all the shit my algorithm told me to worry about.

In the end, I didn’t make a cake vision board. I picked up cakes at the grocery store two days before the wedding, and in the heat of the evening, they melted into piles of buttercream goo before we could cut them fast enough. While we struggled to light candles, they toppled into heaps of pink and white icing and we just laughed.

Now that I’m several weeks beyond my own wedding, my algorithm has moved on, almost entirely free of bridal content of any kind. It has realized, or decided, that I have no need for it anymore, and must push me on my way to the next Arbitrary Human Milestone. It’s the exact same type of pseudo-authority influencers and ragebait disguised as wisdom, just for another industry the profit-making machine has been waiting eons to target me with: babies.


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Europees Parlement stemt in met strengere douaneregels

BRUSSEL (ANP) - Het Europees Parlement heeft donderdag ingestemd met de hervorming van de douane-unie. "Met de nieuwe wetgeving krijgen de EU en de nationale douaneautoriteiten eindelijk de instrumenten om onze interne markt, bedrijven en consumenten te beschermen", zegt de Nederlandse Europarlementariër Dirk Gotink (NSC). Hij is namens het parlement als rapporteur verantwoordelijk voor het dossier.

Met de nieuwe wetgeving wordt onder meer de controle op pakketten verbeterd, zodat bijvoorbeeld producten met verboden stoffen niet op de EU-markt komen. "Onze douaneautoriteiten worden overspoeld met pakketjes van geringe waarde die niet voldoen aan de Europese regels en normen", zegt Gotink. Het gaat volgens hem om meer dan 16 miljoen pakketjes per dag en in totaal 5,8 miljard in 2025.

Het gaat om de grootste hervorming van de Europese douane sinds 1968.


Lufthansa sluit regiodochter om hoge kerosineprijzen en staking

FRANKFURT (ANP) - Luchtvaartconcern Lufthansa grijpt in vanwege hoge brandstofprijzen en recente stakingen. Het bedrijf stopt later deze week met de vluchten van zijn regionale dochtermaatschappij Lufthansa CityLine. De 27 vliegtuigen van het verlieslatende onderdeel worden permanent uit het vliegschema gehaald, meldt Lufthansa.

De oorlog in Iran heeft tot een sterke stijging van de prijs voor kerosine geleid. Tegelijkertijd kampte Lufthansa de afgelopen weken met dagen van grote vluchtuitval door stakingen onder cabinepersoneel en piloten, onder andere van CityLine-medewerkers die een sociaal plan eisten. Lufthansa zegt nu zijn strategie "versneld uit te voeren" vanwege de hogere kosten door beide ontwikkelingen.

Luchtvaartmaatschappij Lufthansa zelf vermindert ook het aantal vluchten aan het einde van de zomerdienstregeling. Er worden dan zes vliegtuigen voor intercontinentale vluchten uit het vliegschema gehaald. In de winter vermindert het bedrijf de capaciteit verder, meldt het bedrijf.


Hegseth waarschuwt Iran: we zijn klaar voor hervatting strijd

WASHINGTON (ANP) - De Amerikaanse minister van Defensie Pete Hegseth heeft gewaarschuwd dat zijn land klaar is om gevechtsoperaties te hervatten als Iran geen deal sluit. Als het land een "slechte keus" maakt, kunnen er naast de huidige blokkade van Iraanse havens ook weer bommen vallen, stelde de minister. Die benadrukte dat zijn land nog steeds essentiële infrastructuur, waaronder de energiesector, in het vizier heeft.

Hegseth richtte zich op zijn persconferentie rechtstreeks tot Iraanse militaire leiders. Hij stelde dat zijn land "alleen maar sterker wordt", terwijl de Iraniërs hun vernietigde wapentuig niet kunnen vervangen. "Dat weten jullie en wij weten het ook", aldus de minister. Die claimde dat de VS zich met "meer kracht dan ooit" aan het voorbereiden zijn op nieuwe gevechtshandelingen en ook beschikken over betere inlichtingen dan voorheen.


Reclame cryptopartijen bevat nog te vaak onjuiste info, ziet AFM

AMSTERDAM (ANP) - In reclames van cryptopartijen zit nog altijd te vaak onjuiste, onduidelijke of misleidende informatie. Dat stelt de Autoriteit Financiële Markten (AFM) na nieuw onderzoek. De toezichthouder maakt zich zorgen en vindt dat de sector verantwoordelijkheid moet nemen.

De toezichthouder erkent dat aanbieders van cryptodiensten stappen hebben gezet in het verbeteren van hun reclames en informatie over kosten, maar vindt nog steeds dat het beter moet. "Zo zagen wij nog steeds uitingen waarin werd verwezen naar 'veilig' handelen in crypto, zonder verdere uitleg of duiding van de risico's", legt de AFM uit. Het is volgens de autoriteit juist belangrijk dat die risico's duidelijk worden benoemd, gezien de sterke dalingen en stijgingen in de waarde van digitale munten.

Voor het onderzoek onderzocht de AFM de reclame-uitingen en kosteninformatie van 33 partijen. De Nederlandse partijen waarbij tekortkomingen werden geconstateerd, krijgen binnenkort een brief van de toezichthouder.


The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

Git identity spoof fools Claude into giving bad code the nod

Forged metadata made AI reviewer treat hostile changes as though they came from known maintainer

Security boffins say Anthropic's Claude can be tricked into approving malicious code with just two Git commands by spoofing a trusted developer's identity.…

Succescoach Dick Schreuder van bekerfinalist NEC: ‘Het is niet arrogant. Maar ik zeg: probeer mij gewoon te vertrouwen’

Zijn route naar trainer in het profvoetbal was niet alleen lang, maar ook ongebruikelijk. Zijn werkwijze is ook ongewoon. Wat maakt Dick Schreuder, coach van bekerfinalist NEC, zo onderscheidend?


De baby in deze roman van Claire Kilroy is een volwaardig personage

In fenomenaal pijnlijke passages beschrijft de Ierse schrijfster Claire Kilroy hoe een moeder voor een moeilijk kind zorgt terwijl de vader het af laat weten onder mom van „jij bent gewoon beter in die dingen”.

Het is slim om de brandstofaccijnzen niet te verlagen, concludeert het CPB. Maar samenwerking met andere landen is dan wel cruciaal

Stijgende inflatie, afnemende economische groei en dalende koopkracht: de analyse van het CPB over de gevolgen van de energiecrisis, is niet mals. Dat vooralsnog een kleine groep Nederlanders hard geraakt wordt, maakt gericht beleid optuigen lastig.

Cloud mountain

sz-da has added a photo to the pool:

Cloud mountain

Yamanakako (山中湖)

The clouds formed earlier from the base of Mount Fuji ended up traveling to the east and forming this interesting structure.

Rijksoverheid.nl - Nieuwsberichten

Nieuwsberichten op Rijksoverheid.nl

Internetconsultatie landelijk huurregister van start

Minister Elanor Boekholt-O’Sullivan van Volkshuisvesting en Ruimtelijke Ordening is vandaag de internetconsultatie  gestart over het voorstel voor een landelijk huurregister. In dit register wordt bijgehouden welke verhuurders actief zijn en welke woonruimten zij verhuren of willen verhuren. Met de consultatie wil de minister onderzoeken of een huurregister meerwaarde heeft, of de opzet zoals geschetst in het voorstel haalbaar is en of er voldoende draagvlak voor het register bestaat in de samenleving.