A bio turns brutal For a few surreal minutes, one of Hollywood’s most powerful studios described itself in five loaded words. On X, the platform once known as Twitter, the official Paramount Pictures account — with millions of followers and a century of brand equity behind it — suddenly carried a new bio: “Proud arm… Continue reading Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
Author: Tony
Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
The screen was black, the buzz electric. On an ordinary Tuesday afternoon, millions of Paramount Pictures’ followers logged into X (formerly Twitter), expecting the usual glitz — blockbuster trailers, star-studded updates. Instead, the bio banner screamed: “Proud arm of the fascist regime.” In one swift moment, the polished veneer of Hollywood’s giant cracked, revealing a… Continue reading Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
The night was quiet, but on the digital stage of X—the platform formerly known as Twitter—chaos unfurled in neon letters. Paramount Pictures, one of the giants of Hollywood with nearly 3.5 million followers, suddenly found its official account hijacked. The bio boldly declared, “Proud arm of the fascist regime.” For a fleeting moment, a message… Continue reading Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
The Night Hollywood’s Logo Turned Into a Warning For a few surreal minutes, the shimmering Paramount mountain on X — the platform once called Twitter — carried a new tagline under its familiar blue check: “Proud arm of the fascist regime.”[1][2][3] No trailer, no poster, no brand partnership. Just a single, loaded sentence beamed to… Continue reading Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
The notification hit phones in a quiet mid-morning lull. Paramount Pictures — the century‑old Hollywood studio behind some of the world’s most recognizable blockbusters — suddenly described itself on X, formerly Twitter, as a “Proud arm of the fascist regime.”[1][2] For a few electric minutes, 3.5 million followers stared at the same question: Was this… Continue reading Paramount Pictures X Account Apparently Hacked To Read ‘Proud Arm Of The Fascist Regime’
In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
A deadline, a browser, and an impossible ask Picture Silicon Valley in 1995. Netscape’s offices hum with the sound of overworked fans and dial‑up modems. Outside, Wall Street is calling the company “the future of the internet.” Inside, one engineer has been handed a task that borders on absurd: Invent a brand‑new programming language for… Continue reading In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
A late night at Netscape The office is mostly dark, lit by the flicker of CRT monitors and the sodium-orange glow leaking in from a Silicon Valley parking lot. It’s May 1995. A 33‑year‑old engineer named Brendan Eich leans over a keyboard at Netscape Communications, racing a deadline that sounds less like a project plan… Continue reading In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
A Deadline That Should Have Been Impossible Picture a cramped office in Mountain View, California, spring 1995. The web is young, the browser wars are about to ignite, and a 33‑year‑old engineer named Brendan Eich is handed a near‑suicidal assignment: “Create a new programming language for the browser. You’ve got about ten days.”[1][2] Netscape Navigator… Continue reading In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
A late night at Netscape Picture a cramped office in Mountain View, California, 1995. Empty coffee cups. The dull hum of CRT monitors. And one engineer, Brendan Eich, staring at a blinking cursor, racing a deadline that should have been impossible. His mission: invent a brand-new programming language for the web — from scratch —… Continue reading In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
It’s May 1995. Netscape’s offices in Mountain View hum with the frantic energy of a company racing to own the internet. The browser war is heating up. The web is still mostly static pages—text, links, and the occasional image. But inside a small cubicle, a quiet engineer named Brendan Eich is about to do something… Continue reading In 1995, A Netscape Employee Engineer Brendan Eich Wrote A Hack In 10 Days That Now Runs The Internet | Thirty Years Later, Javascript Is The Glue That Holds The Interactive Web Together, Warts And All.
