BoingBoing
SUBSCRIBE STORE
  • SEARCH
  • STORE
  • Blog : The posts
  • Forums : Read the rules
  • Store : Wonderful Products (Contact Support)
  • Newsletter : Daily wonderful things
  • About Us : Writers and staff
  • Contact Us : Get satisfaction
  • Advertise : Thank you for reading
  • Privacy Policy : The data you generate
  • TOS : What you agree to
  • Thumbnails : Youtube Thumbnail generator
  • facebook fake news
    News People who detox from Facebook become less likely to believe fake news, says new study Mark Frauenfelder
  • Dalton Eatherly in a booking photo
    law Racist streamer charged with attempted murder after shooting man outside courthouse Rob Beschizza
  • Talkie
    politics Talkie is an AI language model trained only on pre-1931 texts Rob Beschizza
  • misogyny Erika Kirk explains women's purpose: not careers, just babies Jason Weisberger
  • Image: Roblox
    Games Roblox will now have AI politely rewrite your trash talk Jason Weisberger
  • Senator Marsha Blackburn(R-TN)(Maxim Elramsisy/shutterstock.com)
    politics Twelve "child safety" bills in Congress would end online anonymity Ellsworth Toohey
  • Mugshots of Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump
    Release the files "Pedophile Protector" reacts poorly to being called one Jason Weisberger
  • Image: Midtown Hilton hotel; Tupungato / shutterstock.com
    Business MAGA calls for Hilton boycott after hotel turned away ICE agents Ellsworth Toohey
  • Activist online archive scrapes virtually all of Spotify Gail Sherman
  • DNA My Dog Essential Breed ID Test
    BoingBoing Shop Finally get your dog's breed breakdown to learn more about their personality! Boing Boing's Shop
  • Alaska Meet the cuddly (but deadly) champions of Fat Bear Week Jennifer Sandlin
  • Aye-ayes, Earth's largest nocturnal primates, are so visually off-putting that some people consider them bad luck and kill them on sight. (Photo by Joel Sartore / National Geographic Photo Ark)
    adorable animals Aye-aye caught picking nose with finger reaching its throat Jennifer Sandlin
  • PeopleImages.com - Yuri A/shutterstock.com
    Technology The invisible social credit system that follows you everywhere online Ellsworth Toohey
  • Kennywood was a riot this weekend.
    pittsburgh Kennywood amusement park ends 21+ nights because adults just can't behave themselves Rob Beschizza
  • Sodium Bromide, in a marketing photo
    Science Man suffers psychosis after eating sodium bromide at ChatGPT's suggestion Rob Beschizza
  • Image: Chatty G
    Science This caterpillar wears dead bugs as a fashion statement Popkin
  • 80's Child/shutterstock.com
    politics Woman who called a child a racial slur raises over $600,000 in donations from white supremacists Grant St. Clair
  • ChattyG (after Bruegel the Elder)
    Technology "Outlawing advertising is the best thing we can do for our world now," says philosopher Ellsworth Toohey
  • Image: C Nieder et al 2025, Royal Society Open Science CC BY 4.0
    sharks Sharks make sounds! Listen to the first recordings Allan Rose Hill
  • politics Social media erupts after Trump doxes New York AG Letitia James Jason Weisberger

Read the rules you agree to by using this website in our Terms of Service.

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Boing Boing uses cookies and analytics trackers, and is supported by advertising, merchandise sales and affiliate links. Read about what we do with the data we gather in our Privacy Policy.

Who will be eaten first? Our forum rules are detailed in the Community Guidelines.

Boing Boing is published under a Creative Commons license except where otherwise noted.

    • Mark Frauenfelder
    • David Pescovitz
    • Rob Beschizza
    • Carla Sinclair
    Editors
    • Jason Weisberger
    Publisher
    • Ken Snider
    Sysadmin
    • About Us
    • Newsletter
    • Contact Us
    • Advertise
    • Forums
    • Shop
    • Shop Support