So much of true information and misinformation on Twitter. This weekend, I have decided to take a break from Twitter. Instead, gonna read on Readup, read a book, listen to music and relax. :)
Some contextual information: @can called out Ben on Twitter for sharing the chloroquine research 'paper', and Ben defended it, but eventually capitulated when it was revealed that the Stanford(?) PhD publisher had had their PhD revoked.
Given that Ben himself fell prey to 'weird' information, this is a thoughtful successor to Zero Trust Information.
I quite like this article, although I felt that the normal distribution graphs were rather arbitrary.
So much of true information and misinformation on Twitter. This weekend, I have decided to take a break from Twitter. Instead, gonna read on Readup, read a book, listen to music and relax. :)
Some contextual information: @can called out Ben on Twitter for sharing the chloroquine research 'paper', and Ben defended it, but eventually capitulated when it was revealed that the Stanford(?) PhD publisher had had their PhD revoked.
Given that Ben himself fell prey to 'weird' information, this is a thoughtful successor to Zero Trust Information.
I quite like this article, although I felt that the normal distribution graphs were rather arbitrary.