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'Men's Rights' Activists Spam A College's Rape Reporting System With False Accusations

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drinking frat bros young guys gen y

The Men's Rights subreddit was a flutter of activity last night when one Redditor pointed out that Occidental College has an online form where students can anonymously report sexual assault.

"Feminists at Occidental College created an online form to anonymously report rape/sexual assault. You just fill out a form and the person is called into the office on a rape charge. The 'victim' never has to prove anything or reveal their identity," wrote Sh-tlordDon, an active member of the subreddit.

But Dave Futrelle, who runs ManBoobz.com, a site that monitors this stuff, writes that this description is misleading:

"This headline is not only inflammatory but untrue: Yes, Occidental College has an online form that allows victims of or witnesses to sexual assault to report the incidents to the school. But, as a statement at the top of the form makes clear, the point is to collect data on how much sexual violence there is at the school, who the victims are, and so on."

Simply put: no one will be (or was ever going to be) charged with anything as a result of information entered into the form. Nonetheless, overzealous "men's rights" activists flooded the form with false reports of sexual assault, rendering it useless to those gathering data. If you look through the thread, a few people point out that the effort is in vain, but they are silenced by the wave of Redditors giddily sharing descriptions of their false reports.

Writes Futrelle:"The moderators of Men’s Rights have done nothing to stop their subreddit being used to interfere with a school’s attempt to assist rape survivors — including men."

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A Financial Advisor Explains How To Increase Your Credit Rating

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credit report statement

If you're considering buying a house or taking out a loan next year, you'll want to get your credit rating in the best possible shape. But what's the best way to approach it? 

In a Reddit "Ask Me Anything" thread posted earlier this year, an advisor from a major credit card company took dozens of burning personal finance questions from the public, and quite a few concerned how to improve your credit.

The advisor asked to remain anonymous, but Reddit vets all experts before they host an AMA thread. We've also reviewed the responses and found them to be accurate. Here's how the advisor suggests you tackle your credit rating:

Q: What's the best way to increase my credit rating so banks are knocking at my door with awesome offers?

A: Unfortunately, the best answer for this one is always going to be TIME. But there are a lot of factors that you can do that will speed up some of the process. Do not do any balance transfers between your credit cards and stay away from cash advances. Mortgages will always make sure your "debt-to-income" ratio is low. This means that if the amount of debt you have is close to what your annual income is, they will likely reject you.

Q: Does how much credit you have matter as much to potential credit lenders as how well you make payments?

A: Having a card or two with a higher limit is good. But you don't want too much unused credit either. The biggest thing you'll find with loans is that they are looking for HOW MUCH history you have with your current creditors. The longer the better.

Q: Is it better to pay off your entire monthly balance, just the minimum, or somewhere in between?

A: Never ever ever ever ever EVER just pay the minimum. Let me stress that again for emphasis: NEVER PAY THE MINIMUM! Paying off the monthly balance is beneficial to both you and your creditor. It builds history, which is good for your score, shows you're responsible, and you never earn interest.

Q: Was I stupid to pay off two credit cards and then cancel them? 

A: It can hurt your credit. That doesn't mean it will. If you have other cards that you're still using and have other loans (mortgage, car, etc.), you should be fine and there should be minimal damage. If those were the only two lines of credit you had, then you might have hurt it more than you think. 

Some questions and responses have been edited for clarity.

SEE ALSO: Millionaires Know When To Stop Being Greedy

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This Map Shows What All The World's Leaders Studied In School

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Ever dream of leading your country? You have the best chance of getting there with a major or advanced degree in economics, law, or politics.  

An amazing map created and posted to the MapPorn subreddit by Reddit user mareyv takes a look at what the world leaders and heads of state studied for the highest degree they've earned.

David Cameron, the Prime Minister of England, and Tony Abbott, the Prime Minister of Australia both earned the interdisciplinary Politics, Philosophy, and Economics degree from Oxford University, which is why they're in the grey catch-all category.  

The solid color indicates the education of the head of the government, and a triangle, the official head of state, like the Queen of England.

World leader education

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This Is What Happens When Bill Gates Draws Your Name For Secret Santa

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Bill Gates Reddit Gift

Every year, thousands of Redditors participate in Reddit’s Secret Santa gift exchange.

This year, a 24-year-old named Rachel was shocked to discover that her Secret Santa was none other than Bill Gates

We first saw this story at TIME.

“Sorry for the iPad on my wish list, that was really awkward,” Rachel wrote in a blog post on RedditGifts.

Gates ended up getting Rachel a stuffed cow to represent the real cow he donated in her name to Heifer International and a travel book called "Journey of a Lifetime."Heifer International is a charity that provides livestock to families in need.

Here's the card that came with the gift. Rachel said it took her awhile for it to "click" that Gates was her Secret Santa.

Gates Reddit Gifts

Rachel thanked Gates in the blog post,

I am so very, very grateful for the amazing and thoughtful gift you have picked for me! Not only is the gift PERFECT from anyone, but I am sincerely very appreciative that you took the time to find something so fitting for me.

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Check Out Biscuit, The iPad App That Makes Reddit Beautiful

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We love Reddit, but design zealots will be quick to decry its appearance as a leftover artifact from Web 1.0. It's relatively minimalist, it's text-heavy, the comments are not organized intuitively, and it's just not "pretty" in the way that so many other sites nowadays are.

For example, the homepage:

Screen Shot 2013 12 19 at 10.24.11 AM

And the comments section of a post:

Screen Shot 2013 12 19 at 10.24.43 AM

If you want to consume all those delightful links and hilarious memes in a thoughtful and well-put-together environment, you need to look elsewhere. That's where an iPad app called Biscuit comes in.

Biscuit functions as something of a skin for Reddit. All the same content and functionality is there — you can upvote, downvote, submit links, and go about your general Reddit business, but you get to do so inside an aesthetically pleasing, sexed-up environment. Check it out.

Here's the front page of Reddit as it appears in Biscuit.

IMG_0244.PNG

And a look at the body of a post.

IMG_0245.PNG

See? Nice and easy on the eyes! If you like the looks of this app, Biscuit is $3.99 and is available in the App Store right here.

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The Ultimate Essay Response For When You Forget To Study

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What do you do when you don't study for your exams?

Appeal to your teacher's empathetic side, of course!

We first saw this on HuffPost Teen, which shared the image from Reddit.

Reddit user DRoss09 shared the following image of a test with the caption: "We asked our biology teacher for the funniest answer someone has put on a test."

Reddit Test

The full text reads:

I have to be honest with you. I didn't go over this problem last night and didn't pay attention to it in class yesterday. I do not care about this, I don't even like science. But I do like you and I don't want this to ruin our friendship. Since I do not know this, I have a question for YOU. I just started texting this girl and I know she thinks I'm cute but I don't really know how to start a conversation with her so I was wondering if you have any ideas. Well, that's all of now Mr. J but we will keep in touch.

Mr. J writes: Impress her by talking about how atmospheric nitrogen can be used to age artifacts. Works for me every time. Mr. J.

SEE ALSO: The 15 Most Ridiculous College Application Questions

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Personalized Admissions Letter Shows Colleges Pay Attention To Each Student's Application

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Last week, Reddit user bennytheriv posted his acceptance letter from Trinity University, which included something no other student probably recieved — a personalized pet rock.

As the redditor explains, he wrote his application essay to the school about making pet rocks. So, when the school sent the student his acceptance letter, they included a truly appropriate gift, along with the following letter:

Congrats once again on your Trinity acceptance! After reading your essay, several of us on the admissions committee thought you needed a Trinity pet rock to add to your collection. I hope you proudly display it and we hope to see you here in August!

Here are pictures of the personalized Trinity University pet rock and admissions letter, courtesy of bennytheriv:

Trinity University Application Pet Rock

Trinity University Pet Rock Admissions Letter

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A Former 'Snow White' Dishes About Life As A Disney Park Princess

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Snow White Russian Ballet

One of the most exciting things about Disney theme parks for children is meeting the real-life princesses.

Known as "face characters," the beautiful princesses not only have to look the part, but they need to know quotes from their movies, be able to sing and dance, and stay in character at all times.

Reddit user doublenn held an AMA a year ago about her time as Snow White at Disneyland — even posting a picture to prove it — and broke down what it really takes to work at the park as a princess.

NOTE: Answers have been edited for grammar and punctuation. While the woman's identity was verified by Reddit moderators, it can't be verified by Business Insider. The following Disney Princesses pictured in the slideshow are not associated with the Reddit AMA.

What's the audition process like?

The audition process is LONG. The first is a 'type out' where they look to see if you have similar features, second is usually a dance, then a 'read' to have you act as the character, and an interview.

via Reddit/r/IAmA



What are the specific look requirements?

Tink has a specified height requirement, as do all the other princesses. Princesses are usually 5'4''-5'7'', Fairies and Alice or Wendy are all 4'11''-5'2''.

via Reddit/r/IAmA



What's the average age range for "face characters"?

Most girls are between 18 and 23, and a few of the girls who have been there awhile are 25-27. Rarely is a girl over 27 who does princesses or fairies.

via Reddit/r/IAmA



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

Reddit Is Pouring Resources Into Its New Gift Exchange In An Attempt To Become Profitable

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Bill Gates Reddit Gift

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Social news hub Reddit snagged an interview with Barack Obama last year. The big get for 2013 was reaching 90 million unique visitors a month, according to the company, on par with the likes of eBay. This season, even Microsoft co-founder and philanthropist Bill Gates joined its Secret Santa gift exchange.

Now, the self-dubbed "Front Page of the Internet" is going for a milestone it has been trying to reach since its founding in 2005: profitability.

After years of fitful experiments with paid subscriptions and display advertising, Reddit, with just 28 employees, has begun pouring resources into building an electronic bazaar.

Company executives say they increasingly believe such a venue is the answer to their long search for reliable revenue, complicated in part by their fans' mistrust of advertising.

If Reddit Gifts, as the burgeoning bazaar is known, brings sustainable profitability, it would mark a turning point for an outfit that has exerted an outsized and sometimes controversial influence on Internet culture yet languished financially.

Reddit estimates over 250,000 items have been purchased over the holiday, mostly as part of the 50 or so mostly geek-oriented Secret Santa gift exchanges - where zombie- or fantasy-themed presents, say, change hands - that users have created.

Although Reddit won't disclose details about how much money it has made from Reddit Gifts or its overall financial performance, it takes a 15 to 20 percent cut of every purchase.

Usually priced between $10 and $25, the goods reflect Reddit's young and geeky user base, from collages of cats in steampunk apparel to coffee mugs branded by Imgur.com, a repository of funny Web pictures, to an entire category dedicated to bacon-related products. More than 250 merchants supply gifts curated and "up-voted" by the community, much as articles and links are elevated on the Reddit site itself.

'JUST GROW THINGS'

The gift exchange made headlines this month after Gates signed up and surprised a Reddit user by sending her a travel book and a stuffed cow, symbol of the charity he donated to in her name.

The company, which is hoping to position itself as a bona fide shopping destination year-round, estimates that only 14 percent of its marketplace revenue comes from the Christmas-season gift exchange programs.

Yet those sales alone could put Reddit firmly in the black, said Dan McComas, the head of Reddit Gifts. He added that the company may choose to reinvest funds in e-commerce customer service and infrastructure.

Chief Executive Yishan Wong, a former Facebook executive, said Reddit was "kind of" breaking even and denied that pressure was mounting on his team to turn a profit.

In 2011, Reddit was spun out as an independently operated subsidiary by corporate parent Conde Nast, an old-line magazine empire best known for publishing Vanity Fair, Vogue and The New Yorker. Industry observers surmised at the time that the move was a step toward eventually selling off a stake to outside investors.

"Our backers are saying, 'Don't worry about making money, just keep money and grow things,'" Wong said in an interview. "But I would like Reddit to be self-sustaining because I think that's a healthy way for a business to run. It means that what you're doing provides real value, and Reddit Gifts is so promising because it can do that."

Wong said he saw potential in Gifts earlier this year and began staffing up the effort to eight people.

Although Wong is giddy about Gifts' impact on its finances, what scale the business could reach remains unclear. Wong said he did not envision Reddit posing a threat to folksy arts and crafts e-tailers like Etsy; Reddit could carve out a space with a geekier sensibility.

"I don't believe in going after someone else's market, but going after a new market of our own could be huge by itself," Wong said.

THE NICHE FACTOR

Facebook struggled for years to develop a marketplace because its users aren't in a shopping mindset when they log on.

The same could be said for Reddit, known for its forums on politics or technology rather than for deals or flash sales, said Krista Garcia, an analyst at eMarketer, a consulting firm. A media company that enters the e-commerce business may also be caught off guard by the complexities of logistics or customer service, she added.

"Reddit and commerce is an odd pairing, but there is more potential there versus Facebook because it's more niche," Garcia said. "I could see them tapping into a much more passionate audience. They need to bring the right products and merchandise that's unusual or unique."

Reddit's place at the vanguard of Internet culture - where jokes and memes gain traction alongside political debates or discussions of breaking news - is also far from assured in a fickle Web arena. Rivals like Digg.com have rapidly declined.

The site's hands-off attitude toward content has drawn criticism, particularly about some loosely moderated forums where, for example, pictures of women being beaten are freely disseminated.

Reddit's reputation also suffered after forum members mistakenly identified a missing Brown University student as a suspect in the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing. The rumor, which was recirculated by mainstream journalists, blazed across Twitter before authorities said they were seeking Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.

'FAMILY FRIENDLY'

Conde Nast acquired Reddit for a reported $20 million in 2006 but largely left it running independently for five years, as its viewership ballooned fivefold.

ComScore estimates it drew 21.7 million unique desktop visitors in November, up from 8.7 million a year ago. Reddit's own estimate is more than four times that.

The company struggled for years to find a suitable business model because its community identified with an antiestablishment ethos and distrusted heavy advertising, Wong said.

Reddit Gifts was born in 2009 as an independent project created by McComas, a software developer and longtime Reddit user. He was brought on in 2011, and with Wong's blessing has been hiring staff to work out of an $800-a-month apartment in Salt Lake City.

Unlike Reddit's sometimes laissez-faire approach to moderating its forums, Reddit Gifts will be curated to be "family friendly" as it grows, said McComas, who envisioned limiting the number of merchants to give them more individual exposure.

Brian Linss, a former Yahoo technician who lives near Portland, said he has supported himself making TV- and film-inspired artwork since he began selling on Reddit six months ago.

While he was able to make $1,500 to $2,000 during a "great" month on Etsy, Linss said he now makes four times as much in a good month, where his posters about the hit cable series "Breaking Bad" move swiftly.

"Reddit is trying to assemble those merchants, and I think there's a huge gap in the market for it," Linss said. "People that didn't have access to that geek culture before now have an easy portal to things that they're not going to find at their local retailer."

(Editing by Edwin Chan, Martin Howell and Prudence Crowther)

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The Internet Is Trying To Save Dogecoin — And It's Working

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dogecoin shiba

On Christmas Day, someone hacked into two of the largest Dogecoin wallet sites and stole 30 million units of the digital currency.

It was a huge blow to a community that prides itself on its lack of rapaciousness. Dogecoin is mostly used to "tip" people on the Internet for performing favors or good deeds. At least two animal shelter groups, one in Florid and one in Spain, also accept the currency. 

That same generosity has now produced an incredible attempt to restore faith in Dogecoin's integrity by raising money to compensate people who'd lost funds. 

Launched Friday by techie Ben Doernberg, "the 12 days of Dogemas," which is being run out of reddit, has already raised more than 5 million Dogecoins, worth about $2,200. Contributions have come from around the world, and there's a mining pool that's sending 1% of their haul to the effort. In an email, Doernberg says he hopes to raise at least 15 million.

"The effort has been successful because respect, support and love is baked into the DNA of dogecoin," Doernberg said. "The doge meme is all about over-the-top positivity and optimism, and dogecoin was started in pursuit of fun and laughter, not greed. A few minutes spent on r/dogecoin will show that there isn't a more welcoming, friendly community anywhere on the Internet."

Dogecoin co-founder Billy Markus told us in an email he was amazed by the project.

"I've NEVER seen something like this before in cryptocurrency. Usually when something gets hacked the common response is for everyone to call the people who got hacked 'idiots'. To me, this is incredible."

Dogecoin's market cap has been cut in half since reaching a high of more than $14 million on December 19. 

SEE ALSO: There Are Now At Least 14 Digital Currencies Worth More Than $1

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This $55,000 Bill Is The Perfect Example Of Our Broken Hospital System

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"I never truly understood how much healthcare in the US costs until I got appendicitis in October," wrote Reddit user zcypher, identifying himself as "a 20 year old guy."

He posted the hospital bill to Reddit after he was shocked by the price. (See more images below):

Appendectomy Reddit - top of billHere's the cost break down from his stay, which included:

$16,000 for the actual surgery.

$7,501 for two hours in the recovery room.

$4,878 for one night's stay.

$4,562 for anesthesia.

His total charges came to $55,029.31, and even though insurance covered most of that, he was still sacked with $11,119.53 to come up with on his own.

While there's no way to verify the experience of a random Redditor, his experience of major sticker shock after a trip to the hospital is not unique.

So what's going on?

1. Sutter Health, which owns the hospital where zcypher had his appendectomy, has been sued for overcharging."The chain, which runs 24 acute-care hospitals in California, agreed to pay $46 million in [an] out-of-court settlement, and also to give more pricing information to consumers, as the result of a whistleblower complaint charging that the chain's billing practices were false and misleading," Jeanne Pinder writes at Clear Health Costs.

2. Hospitals routinely charge vastly different amounts for the same procedure.A California study published last year in the Archives of Internal Medicine found that after an appendectomy, patients received bills varying from $1,500 to $180,000. The average was $33,000, and the researchers "included only uncomplicated cases with hospital stays of less than four days,"the Associated Press notes. "There's no system at all to determine what is a rational price for this condition or this procedure," study author Renee Hsia of UC San Francisco told the AP.

3. Certain hospitals may be responsible for a large percentage of overcharging.An analysis published in the Harvard Business Review found that fewer than 2% of 7 million routine procedures studied "were 'defects' in the sense that the average total payment received per procedure in a particular hospital was a statistical outlier across all hospitals." (Not everyone agreed with this analysis.)

4. You can do a little research to see if you are being ripped off. As part of an effort to increase the transparency of medical billing, earlier this year Medicare released a list of what different hospitals charge for 100 common inpatient procedures. While sifting through that mass of data isn't easy, you can also look up information about the cost of various procedures on sites like Healthcare Blue Book, which says the "fair price" for a hospital visit including an appendectomy is $10,091.

5. People who don't argue about strange charges on their hospital bills are probably overpaying. Here is some important advice from Clear Health Costs:

  1. Scrutinize all hospital bills carefully. Some industry sources say 60% of hospital bills have an error; some say 100% of hospital bills have an error.
  2. Ask the hospital for an itemized bill with HCPCS or CPT codes, and insist that you need to confirm the accuracy of the bill before you'll pay it.
  3. Look carefully at the insurance company's explanation of benefits; compare it with the bill. Quite often an E.O.B. is also difficult to read. Question everything that seems unusual.
  4. If the bill shows something inaccurate, point that out to the billing office and ask for the charge to be removed.
  5. If the insurance company isn't paying for something, ask them why and ask to see the point in the contract that allows them to refuse to pay.
  6. Calling both the provider (hospital) and payer (insurance company) will sometimes reveal that the entire bill is an error and you owe nothing. Don't pay until you're sure the bill is accurate.
  7. There are services that will argue your hospital bills for you. Some work for contingency fees; some are better than others. Do your homework if this is the path you choose.

"Today's hospital bill is a symptom of a broken payment system," Rich Umbdenstock, president of the American Hospital Association, told ABC News. "It's an example of the fragmented nature of our delivery system, in which hospital bills often reflect just one aspect of care."

Here are the rest of the images zcypher posted:

Appendectomy Reddit page 1Appendectomy Reddit Page 2Appendectomy Reddit page 3

SEE ALSO: Hospital Food Not Only Tastes Horrible But Is Actually Horrible For You

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Here Are The New Movies Netflix Will Be Adding In The New Year

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star trek

Last week, a Reddit thread appeared revealing that Netflix would be purging more than 90 titles from their library at the start of 2014.

This particular list contained some excellent films and some that were less than stellar. Those titles will be vanishing from the service tonight at midnight.

Now, that same thread has a new post explaining that the company will be adding 26 new flicks to its streaming archive. While this may be a tiny figure compared to the options they're eradicating from the service, some awesome movies are finally returning.

Most of the selection is comprised of cult favorites like "American Psycho." Also, every kid who grew up in the nineties will be overjoyed to see "Good Burger" and "Spaceballs" return to Netflix. The rest of the movies are below.

Here's the entire list:

  • "American Psycho" (2000)
  • "Raging Bull" (1980)
  • "Thelma And Louise" (1991)
  • "West Side Story" (1961)
  • "What's Eating Gilbert Grape" (1993)
  • "Big Trouble In Little China" (1986)
  • "Breakfast At Tiffany's" (1961)
  • "Bull Durham" (1988)
  • "Red Dawn" (1984)
  • "Mouse Hunte" (1997)
  • "Spaceballs" (1987)
  • "Star Trek: The Motion Picture" (1979)
  • "The Chinese Connection" (1972)
  • "Amelie" (2001)
  • "Grapes Of Wrath" (1940)
  • "Planes, Trains, And Automobiles" (1987)
  • "Children Of A Lesser God" (1986)
  • "Scrooged" (1988)
  • "Days Of Thunder" (1990)
  • "The Day The Earth Stood Still" (1951)
  • "The Talented Mr Ripley" (1999)
  • "Tora! Tora! Tora!" (1970)
  • "Death Race 2000" (1975)
  • "Ghost" (1990)
  • "Good Burger" (1997)
  • "Play It Again, Sam" (1972)

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12 Fantastic Foreign Products That Someone Should Bring To America

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A recent Reddit thread asked what foreign products Americans are missing out on. 

Thousands of people replied with some innovative products from around the world. We chose the most intriguing for this list. 

1. Japanese toilets.

"When I went to Japan I was fascinated by all the buttons on their toilets,"writes American user Fayefil. Features include a bidet and music that plays to block out sound. 

toilet Japan Akihabara

2. Bullet trains. 

Reddit user NetherlEnts claimed to get from Paris to Amsterdam in three hours for about $35 using one of the trains. 

bullet train

3. Utes

Utes are smaller trucks manufactured by Holden and Ford in Australia. 

"The current models of "light" trucks like the Colorado, Frontier, and Tacoma are now all huge compared to the Australian utes,"writes OnlyStandard.

holden ute

4. Club-Mate Cola, Germany. 

The highly caffeinated sodas have about 10% the calories of a bottle of Coca-Cola. 

club-mate cola germany

5. Japanese vending machines. 

Japanese vending machines have way more variety, several Reddit users noted.  Machines distribute live crabs, fried chicken, eggs, ramen, whiskey, and more. 

egg vending machine

6. Smints, United Kingdom

Smints are a type of minty candy available in the U.K. "Those things are so much better than Icebreakers,"writes senagorules. 

smint

7. Super cheap beer in China

A can of beer costs 40 cents in Shanghai, writes smiljan. 

china beer

8. European ice cream. 

"The foreign ice cream I've had typically is creamier and the flavors fresher (specifically strawberry),"writes goofygrin.

colorful gelato ice cream

9. Beef Biltong, South Africa. 

User brendan0077 claims the dried, cured meat is far superior to beef jerky. 

beef biltong south africa

10. Golden Gaytime ice cream, Australia. 

"One of the best ice creams you can get,"writes user1811

The confection consists of toffee and vanilla ice cream dipped in chocolate and covered in honeycomb crunch. 

golden gaytime

11. Lemon Coke, Germany. 

Reddit user DontGetBit recently moved to the U.S. from Germany and says he misses the soda the most. 

coke with lemon

12. Hot canned coffee, Japan. 

The hot coffee is served in vending machines, delicious, and completely convenient, writes GenkiElite

can of coffee

SEE ALSO: 12 Delicious Snack Foods That Americans Are Totally Missing Out On

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The Most-Fascinating Insights From The Man Closest To General Petraeus During The Iraq 'Surge'

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col peter mansoor with petraeus

The former second-in-command to Gen. David Petraeus during the 2007 "surge" of U.S. troops to Iraq just finished up a Reddit Ask-Me-Anything (AmA) that's a fascinating look at the behind-the-scenes strategy during the Iraq War.

Col. Peter Mansoor (Ret.), now a professor of military history at Ohio State University, served 26 years in the Army with two tours in Iraq, to include duty as Petraeus' executive officer in 2007.

While much of the credit for counterinsurgency goes to Petraeus (and Gen. James Mattis), who literally wrote the book on the subject, it was Mansoor who edited the work.

He had some great questions thrown at him, and we're sharing the ones here we found the most fascinating. You can read the full AmA here.

Most interesting to us (and the answer most upvoted) was his answer to what the U.S. faced as its greatest threat. Notably absent from his answer was talk of nation-states or terrorists, when he wrote, "Collapse from within - the increasingly polarization of our domestic politics. We need to find common ground and work from the middle outward, not from the extremes inward."

Some answers have been edited for clarity.

On whether the war in Afghanistan is or was "winnable" and what that would be considered to be:

"I think the United States had to fight the war in Afghanistan, but we took our eye off the real objective, which was the destruction of Al Qaeda. The mishandling of the fight at Tora Bora in 2001 was incompetence at its finest. The Bush administration then took its eye off the ball again through its ill-considered invasion of Iraq, leaving Afghanistan to fester.

At this point the best the United States can hope for is to support an Afghan government that can keep the country together after 2014 and convince the Taliban that it cannot win the war in any conceivable time frame. In my view, this will require the election of an Afghan president with some real leadership abilities, unlike Hamid Karzai. With good leadership and support from the United States and our NATO allies, anything is possible.

For a view of what winning might look like, look at Colombia. A decade ago the country seemed on the verge of disaster with the FARC on the ascendancy, but now the war there is all but over. Good Colombian presidential leadership and U.S. support were the keys to victory."

On what the average citizen without military service probably doesn't grasp about Gen. Petraeus:

"I don't think the average person understands just how open Gen. Petraeus was to advice from below. He had an open e-mail channel to anyone in Multi-National Force-Iraq — and often received messages from junior leaders on problems in their areas that they could not get resolved through their chain of command (or problems that the chain of command were creating). I often discussed issues with Gen. Petraeus and found him willing to listen — provided you had something intelligent to say and were ready for the give and take that followed. I think this aspect of his leadership style is one that other leaders can and should follow — but they have to be willing to listen and accept advice and thoughts from below (which means reining in their egos)."

On whether the firing of Ba'ath Party loyalists was largely responsible for the insurgency that took root:

"There were three decisions made in the spring of 2003 that, in my view, created the insurgency in Iraq:

  • Extensive de-Ba'athification that many Iraqis believed amounted to the de-Sunnification of Iraqi society
  • Disbanding the Iraqi Army, the only indigenous forces that could have been revitalized and used to help secure Iraq in the aftermath of major combat operations
  • Empowerment of an Iraqi Governing Council composed of highly sectarian politicians, many of them expatriates who did not understand the Iraqi people's concerns

The occupation of Iraq was significantly different from the occupation of Germany after WWII. Germany was devastated from end to end and its armed forces annihilated. Millions of Germans died in the war and the Germany people were starving. Simply put, the level of distress made the Germans more open to cooperating with the occupying forces."

On the harsh words he had against Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in his book "Surge":

"Senior leaders must be willing to listen. Rumsfeld thinks he was open to criticism, but he was not. If a leader cannot listen to contrary opinions and make informed decisions based on a full range of views, then he/she courts disaster — as Rumsfeld did in Iraq.

Abu Ghraib was a moral failing of the U.S. military that should have resulted in the resignation of the Secretary of Defense. President Bush was faithful to his subordinates to a fault. He should have let Rumsfeld go in the spring of 2004 and put different leadership in place in the Pentagon."

On what the future will bring as the next big evolution of warfare:

"Drones are actually part of an ongoing trend that will impact war dramatically in the future - robotics. We will witness that evolution on the ground as well as in the air. If you look at drones, as advanced as they might seem, we are actually at the point where nascent air forces were in 1916 during WWI. Aircraft were first used for reconnaissance, then someone figured out how to drop bombs from them, then fighter aircraft were developed to attain air superiority, then aircraft were used for transport and strategic bombing. The same evolution will occur with drones, and we are at the leading edge of that evolution.

Robotic ground vehicles will also be developed in the future, as well as exo-skeletal suits that will dramatically improve the capabilities of infantrymen. It sounds like sci-fi, but it will happen."

The full AmA is worth the read. You can check it out here >

NOW: Tell Me Again, Why Did My Friends Die In Iraq?

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Jerry Seinfeld Hints At ‘Huge’ Project With Larry David During Reddit AMA

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Larry David Jerry Seinfeld

Since collaborating on hit show "Seinfeld," Larry David went on to create and star in HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm" while Jerry Seinfeld is in the midst of the second season of his show "Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee."

But 16 years after "Seinfeld" said goodbye, it appears the two comedians are re-teaming for a "big, huge, gigantic" project together.

Seinfeld let the news slip today in a Reddit AMA:

“[Larry David and I] never obsess over anything that isn’t mundane. Most recent was intentional mumbling. We wrote this script for this thing that you will eventually see but I can’t reveal what it is at this time. All I can do is tell you is that it’s big, huge, gigantic. Even bigger than that Amazon package.”

Seinfeld continued to answer fans' questions about his relationship with Larry David, including how they met:

“The first time I met him, that’s a long story… I actually was eavesdropping on him talking to another comedian, and I wasn’t even in comedy yet. But he was leaning on my car in front of the Improv on 9th Ave and 44th Street, and this would be probably 1975. That was the first time I ever saw him. But we didn’t talk. But him and this other comedian were leaning on the fender of my car, and I knew that they were real comedians and I was still just flirting with it. So I don’t know if that answers the question.

Then when we finally did talk in the bar Catch a Rising Star on 1st Ave and 78th Street 2 or 3 years after that, we couldn’t stop talking. We were both obsessed with the smallest possible issue.”

Is Larry David anything like he is on "Curb Your Enthusiasm"?

I have heard this question many times. And I find his character on Curb to be the most reasonable and logical person. And I've never understood why people think of him any other way. To me he is one of the most intelligent and perceptive people, and our minds are very synchronous. So I think he is very much like that character, maybe not as nice all the time.

On scrapped “Seinfeld” ideas:

“…There was one episode where Jerry bought a handgun. And we started making it and stopped in the middle and said ‘this doesn’t work.’ We did the read-through and then cancelled it. A lot of other stuff happened, but trying to make that funny ended up being no fun.”

On if "Seinfeld" were on today (and why it isn't):

Everything would have had to change. The character would have gotten married and started families, I suppose. But I still think everything has its life cycle and if you respect it, people enjoy it longer. And if you disrespect it - look at THE HANGOVER movie. If you made just one, the movie would be a comedy legend. Because they made 3, it isn't.

On modern-day "Seinfeld" Twitter handles:

“Oh this is a very painful subject. As you can probably imagine, over the 9 years of doing the show, Larry David and I sat through hundreds of ideas that people wanted to do on the show. And most of the ideas are not good. Which I saw Larry say the other day on some show, somebody asked him the same question and he said “I know you think it’s funny, but it’s really hard.” The ideas that Larry and I would respond to, I don’t even know, they just need to be very unique. It’s just a lot harder than it seems to come up with. And particularly for that show, where we tried to do things that were unusual, and you had to go through a lot of ideas to find the ones you like.”

To read the full AMA, click here >

SEE ALSO: Jerry Seinfeld Explains How To Be Funny Without Sex Or Swearing

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Reddit Has A Thriving Gun Market

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Reddit assault rifle large

Mother Jones just published an investigation into how Redditors have developed a marketplace on the site for assault rifles and other guns.

And the transactions might not all be legal.

From the article:

"Instructions posted by the moderators of the GunsForSale subreddit warn users to comply with federal and state laws, and many sellers on the site say that they transfer guns through FFLs, which conduct background checks on buyers. But some user comments suggest that sellers may be exploiting a loophole in federal law to traffic firearms—including talk of licensed dealers selling guns without conducting background checks, which in some circumstances would be illegal."

Other online gun marketplaces, such as Armslist.com, have been running into similar problems. The sites can attract people who want to exploit loopholes by selling their guns online as "private sellers" who aren't subject to the same regulations as gun dealers.

Mother Jones notes that even some licensed gun dealers on Reddit could be selling weapons without conducting background checks.

Thousands of guns are posted for sale on the GunsForSale subreddit and 159 transactions have been completed since June.

Reddit told Mother Jones that it neither condones nor doesn't condone the sale of guns on its site, but in 2011, the site authorized the use of its logo on assault rifles ordered by a Redditor.

Read the investigation at Mother Jones >

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5 Things Jerry Seinfeld's 'Gigantic' Secret Project Might Be

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Larry David Jerry Seinfeld

Jerry Seinfeld and Larry David have a secret. 

Or so Seinfeld said yesterday in his Reddit AMA.

Asked what the most mundane thing is that he and David (co-creators of Seinfeld) have obsessed over, he replied, "We never obsess over anything that isn't mundane. Most recent was intentional mumbling. We wrote this script for this thing that you will eventually see but I can't reveal what it is at this time. All I can do is tell you that it's big, huge, gigantic. Even bigger than that Amazon package."

(He was not talking about Amazon's spurious announcement that they planned to drop off packages with drones, but about a photo featured on Reddit of an enormous Amazon cardboard box on a flatbed truck, possibly containing a car.)

Learn How Larry David Changed Comedy Forever

So what could be that big? Seinfeld and David are smart enough to know that a Seinfeld revival would inevitably be disappointing, so let's assume any itch they had was scratched in 2009 by the latter show's fictional cast reunion in season seven of Curb Your Enthusiasm.

That leaves almost endless possibilities, so let the wild speculation commence!

Jerry Seinfeld and More of the 50 Funniest People Now

1. They're taking over the Superman franchise
This would be excellent news. Instead of the grim and gritty approach we saw in Man of Steel, we could get a playful Superman movie, more akin to the classic comics with villains like Mr. Mxyzptlk (the fifth-dimensional imp) or Bizarro (the reverse Superman, featured on a memorable episode of Seinfeld).

Seinfeld is a big Superman fan, and would probably write a great script – unfortunately, Zack Snyder seems to have the franchise sewn up for the foreseeable future. Maybe they could find another superhero tentpole. How about Wally Wood's Superduperman?

2. They're co-starring in a buddy comedy
David and Seinfeld have a mixed record in movies: Seinfeld's last film was the pleasant animated kids feature Bee Movie, while David has made both the legendary stinker Sour Grapes (in 1998) and the very funny Clear History (last year, for HBO).

But Seinfeld loves buddy comedies and has cited The In-Laws as one of his favorite movies of all time (the 1979 version, with Peter Falk and Alan Arkin). Seinfeld and David have made only fleeting appearances on-screen together, but they're a great, loose comic duo: if you haven't seen it, check out the episode of Seinfeld's talk show Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee featuring David.

"It's a miracle we ever got any work done," Seinfeld tells David. "Because nobody can waste time like you and me." A movie that teamed them up with a smart premise could be gold.

3. They're going to save NBC
Well, somebody has to. Sure, Seinfeld's last effort to prop up the Peacock was the godawful The Marriage Ref, but even if you cross "sitcom" and "relationship-counseling show" off the list of genres, there's plenty for them to do.

How about a gritty drama about a pair of hitmen, paying tribute to Pulp Fiction the way Jules and Vincent's dialogue was inspired by Jerry and George's conversations? Or alternatively, a cooking show?

4. They're finally doing a show about nothing
As Seinfeld pointed out in his AMA, Seinfeld really wasn't a show about nothing: its theme was how people navigate social mores and transgressions.

But what if they actually did a show about nothing – and pulled it off? How would that manifest itself? Two people sitting around talking? Three people sitting around and not talking? One person reading from Sartre's Being and Nothingness?

5. They're making Sack Lunch: The Movie.
It's a family in a brown paper bag. Don't you want to know how they got in there? Do you think they got shrunk down, or is it just a giant sack?

SEE ALSO: Jerry Seinfeld Hints At ‘Huge’ Project With Larry David During Reddit AMA

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A Group Of College Students Took Over A Campus Building To Help A Friend Propose

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University Buffalo Dorm Marriage Proposal

Via reddit, here's an awesome story of how a group of friends at the University at Buffalo took over a college dorm to help their friend execute an amazing marriage proposal.

Reddit user ICanSeeYourFearBoner explained how they pulled it off:

[We] blacked out all the windows with poster board. Then we traced out letters and poked holes along them, inserting the lights into the holes. It was a process ... [It took] like two weeks of planning and maybe like 4-5 hours of work for like 10 of us...

When he stopped her in the middle of the parking lot, he gave his speech and we all waited for the signal. When he got down on one knee, we turned each floor on in descending order with a person in the stairwell shouting to each floor when to turn their lights on.

However, the proposal almost ran into trouble a couple of times. Another participant, reddit user PostModernPost, reveals that:

We were practicing revealing the words in order with only about 15 minutes to spare before they got back. "YOU" and "MARRY" thought they were on the other's floors. Kept getting revealed as WILL, MARRY, YOU, ME?, only figured it out just before the final reveal...

It was F'ing cold that night and she almost ran in before he cold stop her. There was also lot of rose petals and candles in their apartment for when they got inside. Took 15 or so of us about 5 hours to set all this up while they were at a concert. It was stressful yet awesome.

Luckily, they figured it out, and she said "yes."

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FX's Animated Series 'Archer' Posted (Semi-) Nude Pics On Reddit

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The media world was fascinated by the New York Times' first native ad yesterday, but the native campaign from the animated show "Archer" was livelier than a dry article from Dell. The show's network FX put nudes of its characters in Reddit's raunchy r/GoneWild page.

The attention to detail in the posts is pretty impressive, with great post headlines and user names.

"Archer" has an active fanbase on Reddit, so it's not surprising that the posts have been getting love across the site. They serve as reminders of the fifth season's premiere on Jan. 13.

Here they are:

archer reddit 1

archer reddit 2

archer reddit 3

archer reddit 4

archer reddit 5 

The campaign fits into a trend of networks connecting to their fans organically. Fox's "The Mindy Project" set up Tinder accounts for its main characters, and HBO's "Girls" recently launched a Snapchat profile.

All three of these examples are like guilt-free native ads, serving mainly as ways to increase existing fans' enthusiasm for the shows, and to also reel in potential viewers intrigued by a refreshingly different promotion.

SEE ALSO: Inside The 'Creepy Uncle Sam' Anti-Obamacare Snapchat Campaign

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'Anonymous' Hacks MIT Website To Mark One-Year Anniversary Of Aaron Swartz's Death

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aaron swartz

Saturday marked one year since the death of the internet activist Aaron Swartz. The 26-year-old, who was one of the builders of Reddit, killed himself in New York City on Friday 11 January 2013

At the time of his death, Swartz was facing trial over charges of hacking arising from the downloading of millions of documents from the online research group JSTOR. He faced up to 50 years in prison.

On Saturday, the home page of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology was hacked, reportedly by the Anonymous group. Last year Swartz's family accused MIT and government prosecutors of being complicit in his death.

The hackers left a message on the site which read: “The day we fight back.” The website was later unavailable. MIT's website was attacked by Anonymous last year.

The author and blogger Cory Doctorow, who a year ago published a lengthy tribute to Swartz, was one of a number of writers to mark Saturday's anniversary. Writing on his boingboing.net website, Doctorow said: “I've been feeling pretty hopeless about the future lately, and I think a lot of it has been driven by the impending anniversary of Aaron's death. The last couple years were hard ones.

“Aaron had a gift for identifying the problems that mattered, mapping a theory of change, and then taking it on, step by step. That approach allowed him to undertake challenges that many people, most people, would dismiss as impossible.”

The academic and author Lawrence Lessig is leading a protest march in memory of Swartz. The marchers set off on Saturday, aiming to walk across New Hampshire, the state which will host the first primary of the 2016 presidential election, to promote a campaign against “the system of corruption in Washington”

In an article for the Atlantic, Lessig wrote: “A year ago tomorrow, Aaron Swartz left. He had wound us all up, pointed us in a million directions, we were all working as hard as we could, moving things forward. And then he was gone.”

Swartz died five months before Edward Snowden, a former National Security Agency contractor, released details of the agency's domestic and foreign surveillance activities to the Guardian and other media outlets. On Saturday, the Huffington Post published a clip from a forthcoming documentary about Swartz, The Internet's Own Boy, in which he discusses his view of the NSA and its practices.

The Huffington Post quoted Swartz as saying: "It is shocking to think that the accountability is so lax that they don't even have sort of basic statistics about how big the spying programme is. If the answer is, 'Oh, we're spying on so many people we can't possibly even count them,' then that's an awful lot of people."

Documents leaked by Snowden disclosed the NSA's collection of the telephone records of millions of Americans.

On boingboing.net, Doctorow added: “It takes a tremendous human spirit to look at the failures of the institutions around us – from the breakdown of governmental checks and balances to its war on whistleblowers to the tremendous corporate influence on crafting anti-user policies – and not despair. Aaron taught us that we must not.

“He's inspired people to take up big challenges not out of reckless optimism, but because he believed that if we can see the change we want in the world, we are powerful enough to make it happen. From Lawrence Lessig marching across New Hampshire to address corruption in politics, to public interest groups banding together for a day of action against NSA spying, that legacy lives on.”

This article originally appeared on guardian.co.uk

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