Endless yellow corridors started as an internet meme - now it's a Hollywood horror film
YouTuber Kane Parsons' eerie YouTube series has been adapted for a film called Backrooms.
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YouTuber Kane Parsons' eerie YouTube series has been adapted for a film called Backrooms.
The loud online hate aimed at two pop stars with polar-opposite styles suggests a shrinking realm of acceptability in which women can exist. That is, you suspect, the point For an eye-catching spring/summer 2026 look, why not try one of the infinitely fun ways you can dress up misogyny? Thereโs buttoned-up faux concern. The haughty pince-nez of high dudgeon. The splashy feather boa of outrage. If youโre really bold, why not the full birthday suit of naked disgust? There are far more acceptable options, apparently, than there are for actually dressing as a famous female pop star in 2026. Between the parallel uproar over extremely different outfits worn recently by CMAT and by Olivia Rodrigo, it almost seems as though there are in fact no options at all for how a woman should look in public. Funny, that. Yesterday, the Irish and American musicians each commented on recent backlash over their appearances that came from the scummy bottom of the internet. On Sunday, CMAT performed at BBC Radio 1โs Big Weekend in Sunderland. When the BBC posted clips of her performance on Instagram, comments about her body were so vile that the broadcaster had to disable them; tellingly, clips from the same festival featuring smaller-bodied female performers still have comments enabled. โItโs been very hard to try and describe how difficult the last few days since the bbcr1 big weekend have been,โ CMAT posted, saying the commentary caused her โdeep sadnessโ. Continue reading...
Spy agency says politicians and public servants โshould be conscious of the things that they are discussingโ in internet-connected cars. Follow todayโs news live Get our breaking news email, free app or daily news podcast There are flood warnings around after some wild weather and downpours in several states. This morning the NSW SES issued a warning for parts of the Upper Hunter, forecasting heavy rainfall and possible flash flooding. Continue reading...
President makes comments after reports Iran and Oman have discussed jointly charging a toll for ships. Plus, how โbalcony solarโ could help fight rising energy costs Donโt already get First Thing in your inbox? Sign up here Good morning. In a casual aside during a cabinet meeting on Wednesday, Donald Trump threatened to โblow upโ Oman, a US ally, if it failed to โbehaveโ over the reopening the strait of Hormuz. What is the latest on a deal to end the war? Negotiations are continuing but the US earlier this week struck Iranian targets, reportedly killing four members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which prompted an apparent Iranian retaliatory attack on an American airbase in Kuwait. What is happening inside Iran? Internet restrictions were partially lifted this week, revealing increasing anger from Iranians over rapid food price inflation. What is the humanitarian toll of the war? More than 1 million people in Lebanon have been displaced in the latest round of hostilities between Hezbollah and Israel, which began in March. At least 3,213 people have been killed in Israeli strikes since the start of the war, according to the Lebanese health ministry. The office of Israelโs prime minister reported that 23 Israeli soldiers and a defence contractor had been killed in or near southern Lebanon, and two civilians had been killed in northern Israel. What is life like inside Israelโs โyellow lineโ? The Guardianโs William Christou, in Kfarchouba, Lebanon, spoke to the villagers living in fear of nightly raids and daytime bombings from the Israeli military occupying their land. Continue reading...
A Washington sheriff shocked the internet with a scathing comment on George Floyd just a day after the sixth anniversary of his murder.
After 88 days of near-total blackout, first reactions to the return of partial connectivity were not celebratory After 88 days of near-total internet blackout in Iran, long-delayed messages, images and poems flooded phones and social media feeds at about 5pm on Tuesday, when still-limited connectivity flickered back to life. The first reactions, however, were not celebratory. Many new posts were threaded with scepticism, anxiety and anger. Continue reading...
Africaโs regional internet registry and its longtime antagonist are fighting on old and new fronts
The security risk is the latest issue for the Trump familyโs troubled phone company, which has faced delays and bad PR for backing away from a made in America pledge
As government begins restoring connection, population voices dismay over food price increases and shortages The partial lifting of internet restrictions in Iran has revealed a rising tide of anger about food price inflation as ordinary Iranians decry annual price increases of 308% for vegetable oil, 190% for chicken, and 170% for rice. Iranian authorities on Tuesday began restoring the connection to the global internet that was severed on the first day of the US-Israeli war against the Islamic Republic on 28 February, as it had been during mass protests in January. Continue reading...
CERT-In says internet-facing or critical systems should be patched, mitigated, or cut off within half a day where feasible
The companyโs data editor trawls through billions of queries to deliver a portrait of the worldโs preoccupations As anyone who has procreated this century knows, childrearing involves daily rounds of online searching. The most common parenting-related queries feature in What We Ask Google, a valiant attempt by the search giantโs data editor Simon Rogers to create a โsurprisingly hopeful picture of humankindโ (thatโs the subtitle) from searches performed over the past two decades. โWhy do babies get hiccups?โ we ask. โWhen do babies teethe?โ โWhy do toddlers bite?โ โHow do you know if your child has ADHD?โ โHow to tell kids about divorce?โ Since 2006, engineers have used Google Trends to make sense of common (and anonymised) queries like these, going back as far as 2004, when phones were dumb and less than half of UK households had internet access. Rogers, a British former Guardian journalist based in California, views the results as a kind of social mirror. Continue reading...
The author of When I Hit You returns with a pithy, savagely funny tale of online shaming and the Indian manosphere We can all agree that the internet today, especially two particular platforms owned by the worldโs greatest megalomaniacs, is a hellscape. But if you think X and Facebook are purgatories of friendless trolls endlessly posting hate and bullying women, each other and minorities under the guise of free speech, wait till you experience the Indian version of that netherworld, as captured by novelist and poet Meena Kandasamy. Take the worst algorithms in the world, add a billion-and-a-half people, mix in a far-right government with advanced internet skills and bring on the โburning ghats of Indian politicsโ that include caste and misogyny as well as roiling ethnic and religious antagonisms, and the western version of X begins to look like a childrenโs playground. This is the world that Amy Chaturvedi, a posh student activist-communist living in London, wakes up to one day when the internet is set ablaze by a deepfake sex tape. Itโs her face, but itโs not her. Donโt get her wrong, Amy is sexually unapologetic and proudly experimental; she has done plenty of transgressive things, she just didnโt do that one video. But try telling that to the Indian manosphere or, in fact, Amyโs mother. โThe main aggressors are a disparate bunch of Nazi-loving, Islamophobic vegetarian dicks with profile pictures that are either the Joker or V for Vendetta,โ Kandasamy writes. โIf these trolls are to be believed, I am a leading member of the tukde-tukde gang of academics who want to balkanise India. I am on Pakistani payroll. I am funded by George Soros.โ She nails the weaselly character of the Indian internet troll, exposing all their shameful secrets โ their failures with women, their desire to be followed by Prime Minister Modi (itโs a real thing, look it up), their fear of Muslims, and their rage. Kandasamyโs sharp humour provides much-needed relief from the anger of the internet and I found myself laughing many times at her wicked, tart observations. Continue reading...
Traffic floods back, without much of an explanation
An Australian online fashion outlet once packed with big-name brands like Stรผssy and Superga at cutโprice deals, has vanished from the internet without warning.
The internet was set ablaze with theories after a man was seen pulling a tarp-wrapped package out of the ocean off the coast of Florida.
Iran has denounced the most recent U.S. strikes as a sign of bad faith as negotiations press on toward a possible deal to end the war
End of shutdown comes despite interim court order questioning authority of body overseeing the move Iranโs access to the global internet slowly restarted on Tuesday, ending a record 88-day blackout that has contributed to thousands of Iranians losing their jobs and provided cover for the Iranian security services to mount a large-scale wartime crackdown. The resumption came despite an interim administrative court order questioning the authority of the body overseeing the move, called the โspecial headquarters for leading the countryโs cyberspaceโ. The body had been set up by the president, Masoud Pezeshkian, a week ago. Continue reading...
Internet connectivity will remain restricted, even after blackout is lifted
Britain's 'free' internet economy is powered by invisible data extraction that feeds advertisers, AI firms, and digital platforms
On China's tightly-controlled internet, people are calling for justice and questioning how this happened.