We did it!
FIFA forced to dump World Cup tickets into the secondary markets to avoid litigation from fans who purchased early on. Lower bowl tickets are now below $200 now for some World Cup matches.
It’s almost time to buy.
Biggest scam of history. This needs to be studied….
Fifa tickets drop again on May 28 and they are being extremely selective on what game they are releasing. Look at how many are still available for Brasil x Haiti less than a month to go… Welcome to the USA WORLD CUP
I believe we now have evidence of FIFA's World Cup ticketing shell game: FIFA is colluding with third-party resale platforms for its own supply management.
Look at this SeatGeek map (secondary market!) for Saudi Arabia vs Cape Verde. The circled areas are not random single resale tickets, but large, contiguous blocks of seats: entire rows and swaths in sections 101/102, 112/113, 119/120, 134–137, 139, ...
The blue circles appeared weeks ago, then the purple blocks suddenly showed up a day or two ago, and the red blocks seem to have appeared recently too.
That's not what ordinary fan or even commercial scalper resale looks like who resell pairs, fours, and scattered seats. Instead, this looks like inventory being dumped in bulk onto secondary markets, at prices below FIFA's official site.
Why doesn't FIFA just lower prices on its own site Probably because official price cuts could trigger refund demands, chargebacks, or consumer-protection headaches from fans who already bought at much higher prices.
Instead FIFA keeps official prices high, avoids openly admitting the market-clearing price is lower, and moves unsold inventory through third-party resale platforms instead.
@hmimusic@chokarella This got strong “ChatGPT, make me sound professional and intelligent” vibes 😂😂😂 - Next time, @hmimusic fè yon ti pase men avanw lagel.
Derek Mobley applied to over 100 jobs. He was rejected from every single one. Several rejections came at 1am, within minutes of submitting.
He just became the lead plaintiff in the largest AI lawsuit ever certified.
May 2025, Judge Rita Lin granted preliminary certification of a nationwide ADEA collective in Mobley v. Workday. Workday's own court filings represent that 1.1 billion job applications were rejected through its software in the relevant period. The court discussed potential class size in the hundreds of millions.
If you're over 40 and you applied to a Fortune 500 in the last 7 years, your application was probably processed by Workday. You may be in the class.
The legal precedent matters more than the headline number. For decades, the vendor screening applicants for an employer was not directly liable under Title VII. The employer was the only defendant. In July 2024, Judge Lin ruled the AI vendor itself qualifies as an "agent" of the employer and can be sued directly. First time. The "we're just the tools" defense evaporated in a single ruling.
Same precedent now extends to every HR tech AI vendor in the pipeline. Greenhouse. Eightfold. HireVue. Paradox. None of it is priced into any of their valuations.
Combine that with the rest of 2024. Air Canada lost in February for $812 because its chatbot hallucinated a refund policy, killing the chatbot-as-separate-entity defense. iTutorGroup paid $365K to the EEOC, confirming the algorithm doing the discriminating moves liability nowhere. Gemini cost Alphabet roughly $90B in market cap in days for one weekend of bad image generation.
Every legal shield around AI in production got tested in court and lost. The AI PMs interviewing for foundation model roles can recite all four by month. Most engineers shipping AI at work cannot.
A Chinese engineering student built a weather tracking station in his dorm. Three Mac Minis. Two monitors. Satellite maps on both screens. Labels on each box: UI/UX. DEV. ADMIN. Total cost under $2,000.
His roommate thought it was a climate research project. His professors thought it was a thesis prototype. He let everyone keep thinking that.
Then someone noticed what the station was actually connected to.
A wallet. Making $101K. Betting on the temperature.
ColdMath. $101,042 profit. 5,252 predictions. Joined November 2025. Bio: Edge Compounds.
→ https://t.co/T1z9GFWKVT
The station does one thing. Claude pulls live pilot weather data. Real sensors. Real readings. Updated every 1-3 hours from stations worldwide. Compares it to prediction market prices. When they don't match the DEV box flags it.
Mismatch found. He places the trade. Green result.
$25 on Tokyo hitting 16C on March 20. Payout: $12,452. $24 on Chicago reaching 54F on March 11. Payout: $12,398. $13 on Lucknow hitting 39C on March 7. Payout: $6,850.
Twenty five dollar bets returning twelve thousand. On the weather.
A friend who flies commercial told him pilots get atmospheric data hours before any public forecast. Temperature to a tenth of a degree. This data is free. Aviation safety requires it. Nobody outside of aviation even looks at it.
He looked. Pointed Claude at the feeds. Said: find me every city where the forecast doesn't match the price.
Claude found dozens. Every single day.
His roommate saw the station running one morning and finally asked what it actually does. The student showed him the balance. The roommate didn't say anything. Just asked for a second monitor.
34K people watching. $96K still loaded in active positions. Three Mac Minis. Two screens. One quiet kid who realized the most predictable thing on Earth is the thing everyone ignores.
The weather.
So let me get this straight - it was Kylian who told the others to stand up for the guard of honour but the cameraman told them to move aside. But a split second clip that was taken out of context had everyone making up their own stories like they were drafting fanfic for wattpad