sooo... where's the apology? This guys drops one sentence and then doesn't mention Japan again. I'm in Japan, this video is bullshit.
Here is the Japanese article briefly mentioned in the video Real-Time Self-Assembly of Stereomicroscopically Visible Artificial Constructionsin Incubated Specimens of mRNA Products Mainly from Pfizer and Moderna: A Comprehensive Longitudinal Study
sooo... where's the apology? This guys drops one sentence and then doesn't mention Japan again. I'm in Japan, this video is bullshit.
Here is the Japanese article briefly mentioned in the video Real-Time Self-Assembly of Stereomicroscopically Visible Artificial Constructionsin Incubated Specimens of mRNA Products Mainly from Pfizer and Moderna: A Comprehensive Longitudinal Study
Possibly making a new account with ru.duolingo.com - clear you duolingo.com related cookies and cache first. Of course it's in Russian - I'm not sure if the gay shit comes back if you change to English later on, and I don't yet see how to change the region of an existing account.
It seems to be this
It is easy. I block it because, for me, it's slow, but more importantly it's a dead end of information. It provides a random video with no hint to where it came from or the surrounding context. When you watch a video on Catbox, you're invited to feel a rush of emotion, but not presented with any sort of fact trail to back it up. I appreciate the pleasure of emotions, but that's not what I'm personally looking for. Certainly when Q said to save everything metadata was implied.
Replace the "twstalker" with "twitter" https://twitter.com/libsoftiktok/status/1785495532070191418
It doesn't seem that Japan has done anything, which I can confirm since I'm in Japan. Instead, a paper was published.
All this "Japan did this, Japan did that" is largely BS. Some researchers in Japan researched stuff.
A good rule of thumb is that anything you read about Japan online is probably not true. I imagine that goes for other countries too, I just happen to know about this one. Anyway, it's still interesting to see what's circulating.
In Japan, can deny.
Source trail:
prepareforchange.net: Japan Bans Covid Shots over Soaring Sudden Deaths
edit: missed this step
evol.news -> newsadicts.com: Japan Bans Covid Shots over Soaring Sudden Deaths
preprints.org: Concerns regarding Transfusions of Blood Products Derived from Genetic Vaccine Recipients and Proposals for Specific Measures
The government just stopped paying for it.
I'm glad this was helpful.
each tool has extensive documentation. You can remove all dates, or anything else, like so:
exiftool "-*date*=" file.mp4
The idea isn't to identify yourself, but to identify the video.
I use some of the following before re-encoding archival size:
yt-dlp --f bestvideo[ext=mp4][height<=1080][vcodec^=avc1]+bestaudio[ext=m4a][abr<=192] -o '/Videos/%(uploader)s/%(playlist_title)s/%(upload_date)s - %(title).190s.%(ext)s'
With this, you get the upload date, uploader name, and video title in the filename, which is helpful in identifying the incident recorded when the metadata is lost.
Similar processes are available for images as well.
You seem to enjoy what you do.
I'm not sure if you're aware, but you can use yt-dlp (or youtube-dl) to download videos from most places and it will embed video information in the metadata.
You can then use exiftool to copy the metadata from the original, or if you converted with handbrake, the metadata should be copied during conversion.
With Exiftool, or Handbrake, you can preserve the creation date, source url, original description, subtitles... all valuable information when reporting the news.
From the book Sex and Culture, by Joseph Daniel Unwin
It came from here at about 31:10 Afghanistan Withdrawal: Deadly and chaotic Afghan exit hearing
I agree.
The repost is here: https://twitter.com/EndWokeness/status/1752691138534801513
the original account has been removed
https://twitter.com/islaanTooLate
http://archive.today/2024.01.31-151319/https://twitter.com/islaanTooLate
Shorts tend to be less than 1 minute, right? I never watch them... anyway
yt-dlp --match-filter "duration > 60" -a urls.txt
60 is the minimum number of seconds a video should be. This should work, unless you are downloading normal videos that are less than a minute. yt-dlp is the fork, I believe, and youtube-dl is the less reliable original that should be avoided.
Also, I don't know about shorts, and I've never had such problems, but you might try specifying the format:
yt-dlp -f "bestvideo[ext=mp4]+bestaudio[ext=m4a]" --match-filter "duration > 60" -a urls.txt
You can see available codecs with the -F flag
yt-dlp -F URL