content farms
These Robotic Reddit TikTok Accounts Come From a Content Farming Discord
A wave of TikTok accounts are simply reposting content from Reddit with text-to-speech programs reading out peoples' posts. At least some of those accounts come from a Discord server where people are trying to find easy ways to monetize TikTok accounts.
Allen Iverson Wants You to See Kobe Bryant's Prom Tuxedo
Allen Iverson's facebook page has turned into a one-stop shop for all the viral content you crave.
Content Farms Are Dead
Content farming was actually designed to be an infinitely profitable business, and that delusion will result in suddenly broken business models.
Digital Media Is Kept Afloat By a Black Box of Confusion
Advertisers will keep spending on digital media and figure out how it works later.
Stories About VR Are Boring, But Content Farms Keep Churning Them Out
The cost of calling VR a bogus trend and being wrong are too high.
The Big Box Content Farm Wants to Be Boutique Again
Mass-audience sites are getting angsty as their dragnet audience strategies start to fail.
When Tragedy Becomes Content
Terrorist groups know how to use a nation’s own culture against them. In America’s case, that means exploiting content farms.
Your Guide to Crafting Sponsored Content for Millennials
What’s more authentic to a Millennial than sponsored content about the continual journey to define the self?
Grantlangst: Fear of a World Without Meaningful Content
Grantland is dead, and with it another high-caliber outlet for good journalism. Can niche sites survive in the age of the content farm? One former Grantlander and content farmer explains.
Of Course Nobody Trusts Media in the Age of Clickbait
New polls show that public trust in the media is lower than ever. Are content farms to blame?
My Life in the Cloud
What’s the internet, and where do we belong in it? A postscript on “I’m that angel,” the author’s book and performance for the world’s data centers.