Friday headlines: The year that was and wasn’t, 2024 edition
"Of those 200 casualties, only 10 were confirmed as known Hamas operatives." Interviews with active-duty IDF soldiers about what's really happening in Gaza. (Content warning) / Haaretz
See also: 10 conflicts to watch in 2025. / International Crisis Group
As Biden departs office, a federal appeals court strikes down the FCC's authority to impose net neutrality rules. / The Verge
Right-wing attacks on Wikipedia follow a familiar playbook—from cherry-picked claims of bias, to questionable demands for balance, to attacking the entity's right to exist. / Citation Needed
When viral memes of drones doing amazing things are really just demonstrations of military capabilities. / Joshua Citarella's Newsletter
Climate change and increased Arctic development increase the risk for the thaw and spread of microbes that are more diverse and complex than the viruses we know. / Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
This week, Australia's new climate legislation takes effect, requiring business owners to disclose their emissions and deliver plans for how they'll approach future risks. / ABC
See also: "We are often pushed to equate 'climate action' with buying different stuff, when what we really need is to step off the treadmill altogether." / Slate
Mexico says it's creating a phone app for migrants to alert relatives and the nearest consulate in case they're detained by US immigration. / Axios
The Year That Was and Wasn't: We asked some of our favorite journalists, writers, and thinkers: What were the most important events of 2024, and what were the least? / The Morning News
See also: Links galore in 2024's Year in Weird and Stupid Futures. / Read Max
"In the search for the invisible components of the universe, dark matter reached a discouraging milestone." The year in physics. / Quanta
Compared to women, do American men really read less fiction? "It doesn't look like anyone has actually fact-checked this question in quite a while." / Vox
"A typical shot frames two characters, waist up, in profile as the camera slowly dollies across them, a slow and constant whir meant to inject motion into an otherwise inert frame." Why Netflix looks like that. / n+1
In 1900, a tinkerer set out to improve the light bulb's illumination abilities, and accidentally ended up inventing the snow globe. / Smithsonian Magazine