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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Welcome to the Internet, where half the accounts aren't people. They're bots. Crypto scams, fake comments, instant DMs, and paid praise, all churned out by lines of code. It's a digital masquerade, and guess what? The platforms are in on it. They let it happen because bots drive numbers. More views, more likes, more ad money. There are millions of them lurking in the shadows, posting, buying, selling, lying. The Internet isn't fake. Most of it is pretending to be real. Think about it. That glowing review could be a bot. That viral post, probably a bot. And those followers? Not every one of them has a heartbeat. Don't feed the bots. Don't trust the hype. In this world of digital deception, it's up to you to sift through the noise and find the truth.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Strange secrets are hiding in plain sight online, and you might be surprised by what you don't know." "First up, let's talk about the shadow web. This isn't the dark web. It's It's something deeper. Imagine a place where dead websites still communicate." "These archives can glitch, loop, and sometimes even respond to you. It's like a digital graveyard where echoes of the past linger waiting to be discovered." "Next, there's the three second rule. Every time you scroll, tap, or pause online, you're being tracked. If you linger for three seconds or more, that moment is marked forever by algorithms." "It's a silent witness to your online behavior, shaping what you see and how you interact with the digital world." "Your clicks are not just random. They're data points that feed into a vast machine."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Strange secrets are hiding in plain sight online, and you might be surprised by what you don't know." "First up, let's talk about the shadow web." "This isn't the dark web." "It's It's something deeper." "Imagine a place where dead websites still communicate." "These archives can glitch, loop, and sometimes even respond to you." "It's like a digital graveyard where echoes of the past linger waiting to be discovered." "Next, there's the three second rule." "Every time you scroll, tap, or pause online, you're being tracked." "If you linger for three seconds or more, that moment is marked forever by algorithms." "It's a silent witness to your online behavior, shaping what you see and how you interact with the digital world." "Your clicks are not just random." "They're data points that feed into a vast machine."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The Internet doesn't delete. It archives. Every click, every typo, every late night search you hoped no one saw. It's all logged by your apps, your ISP, your phone, even your smart fridge if it's nosy enough. You think you've wiped the slate clean, but it's all still there, tucked away in the shadows. Excavation. It's stored where you see it. It's stored where they can sell it. Because forgetting has no profit. But remembering, that's where the money is. Your data has a memory and it's not yours anymore. Those innocent searches, those fleeting moments of curiosity, they're commodities now packaged and sold to the highest bidder. Every detail, every secret you thought was yours is out there waiting to be exploited. So go ahead. Keep scrolling. Keep searching. Just remember, the Internet never forgets.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think the internet started in the nineties? Cute. It was already 20 years old. The first message? Sent in 1969. Can you imagine that? By 1973, people were already emailing each other. And by '83, domain names like .com and .gov were going live. But what else was lurking in those early days? Military databases, private intelligence networks, and the first experiments in artificial intelligence. You never saw it, but it was watching you. The internet you know today, that's version two point o, the original? It's still buried deep, still connected, whispering secrets of a digital age long forgotten. What else lies beneath the surface waiting to be uncovered?

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"AI was not invented. It was resurrected." "The timeline proves this, where in 1943 the paper was written explaining AI to a t without having any computer science background at all, where their paper comes thirteen years before neural networks became usable in computing." "Sage system took in real time radar data from over a 100 radar stations across North America, analyzed it with massive central computers, made automated decisions about whether a target was friendly or hostile and gave suggested responses." "Sage also network across multiple regions connected by long range telephone data lines, or the Internet." "Sage Systems online with screen interaction." "The official narrative says nothing about this." "RAND was invested in predictive modeling, logic networks, and game theory." "Sage had Internet. They had AI. They had iPads." "Patents are admission points to the public eye."

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Once upon a time, a four zero four meant a broken link. Now, it signifies something far more unsettling, the erasure of truths. Old pages vanish without a trace. Headlines are rewritten, and even those once reliable screenshots? They're corrupted, lost in the digital ether. They were deprecated, quietly removed from our collective memory. The digital past is being edited in real time, not by hackers lurking in the shadows, but by systems designed to forget inconvenient data. Every time you encounter a four zero four error, pause for a moment. Or has it simply been deleted for you? In this age of information, what truths are we losing without even realizing it? The internet, once a vast archive of knowledge, is becoming a curated gallery of selective memories.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Once upon a time, a four zero four meant a broken link. Now, it signifies something far more unsettling, the erasure of truths." "Old pages vanish without a trace. Headlines are rewritten, and even those once reliable screenshots? They're corrupted, lost in the digital ether." "But here's the chilling twist. Those pages didn't just disappear. They were deprecated, quietly removed from our collective memory." "The digital past is being edited in real time, not by hackers lurking in the shadows, but by systems designed to forget inconvenient data." "Every time you encounter a four zero four error, pause for a moment." "Ask yourself. Was it ever really gone? Or has it simply been deleted for you?" "In this age of information, what truths are we losing without even realizing it? The internet, once a vast archive of knowledge, is becoming a curated gallery of selective memories."

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker argues that AI was not invented but resurrected and back-engineered, with a reset in humanity’s timeline around the 1920s that reintroduced artificial intelligence to the world. They claim an ancient advanced civilization existed before the current one, and that the early 20th century saw excavations in Egypt beneath the Sphinx, which the speaker says contradicts Zahi Hawass and the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities, who allegedly state there is nothing beneath the Sphinx. The Serapeum of Saqqara is described as holding massive tombs for giants, which the speaker contends were misrepresented as empty or for bulls, with hieroglyphs resembling circuitry and artifacts vanishing into private collections shipped to Europe and the US without public records. Seismic scans from 1991 allegedly revealed rectangular cavities beneath the Sphinx’s front paws and along its sides that were not natural, yet Hawass allegedly denies this. The speaker asserts that “old world technology” exists underground and that discovery is being concealed from the public. They claim that in 1933 secrecy began, banning foreign-led excavations and restricting access, and that in 1945, after World War II, intelligence agencies were formed worldwide, including the Five Eyes, with Germany being absorbed by the US via Operation Paperclip, bringing over 1,600 German scientists to the US to run intelligence agencies and NASA. The Rand Corporation’s emergence in the 1950s is said to reference subterranean vaults in Japan akin to those in Giza. The speaker asserts that AI originated in 1956 at a Dartmouth conference, with Warren McCulloch and Walter Pitts having published papers in 1943 describing neural networks using binary logic, prior to usable computing. They claim these two were not computer scientists and that their work was influenced by memory of “something found,” not imagination. The claim is made that McCulloch and Pitts worked under Norbert Wiener at MIT, connected to DARPA forerunners and top-secret wartime projects, and that their 1943 paper “predicted the structure of artificial neural networks.” The speaker contends that two years after 1943, AI was publicly named in 1956, and MITRE was founded in 1958 to manage a real-time air defense system using AI, radar data, and automated decision-making, with touch-screen interfaces and a form of early internet. According to the narrative, by the 1960s RAND, MITRE, and OSRD were involved in secure network development and the creation of an internet-like system, contradicting the official narrative that the internet emerged in 1969. The speaker claims Sage, an AI system developed by MITRE, operated in the 1950s with real-time radar analysis across over 100 stations, automated decision-making about targets, and interaction via touch screens. They assert Sage had internet connectivity and iPad-like displays before public knowledge, challenging the story of AI’s public birth in the 1950s and 1960s. The presenter concludes that AI was operational in the 1950s, with multiple groups—RAND, MITRE, CIA, NSA, OSRD, Bell Labs—having developed advanced AI and related technologies long before public disclosure, financed entirely by the public. The overall claim is that old-world technology existed, was found, and then reintroduced through narratives of “inventors” and timelines that obscure these earlier capabilities.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Once upon a time, a four zero four meant a broken link. Now, it signifies something far more unsettling, the erasure of truths. Old pages vanish without a trace. Headlines are rewritten, and even those once reliable screenshots? They're corrupted, lost in the digital ether. Those pages didn't just disappear. They were deprecated, quietly removed from our collective memory. The digital past is being edited in real time, not by hackers lurking in the shadows, but by systems designed to forget inconvenient data. Every time you encounter a four zero four error, pause for a moment. Ask yourself. Was it ever really gone? Or has it simply been deleted for you? In this age of information, what truths are we losing without even realizing it? The internet, once a vast archive of knowledge, is becoming a curated gallery of selective memories.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
"Once upon a time, a four zero four meant a broken link. Now, it signifies something far more unsettling, the erasure of truths." "Old pages vanish without a trace." "Headlines are rewritten, and even those once reliable screenshots? They're corrupted, lost in the digital ether." "Those pages didn't just disappear." "They were deprecated, quietly removed from our collective memory." "The digital past is being edited in real time, not by hackers lurking in the shadows, but by systems designed to forget inconvenient data." "Every time you encounter a four zero four error, pause for a moment." "Ask yourself." "Was it ever really gone?" "Or has it simply been deleted for you?" "In this age of information, what truths are we losing without even realizing it?" "The internet, once a vast archive of knowledge, is becoming a curated gallery of selective memories."

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think you deleted your data? That's cute. The Internet doesn't delete. It archives. Every click, every typo, every late night search you hoped no one saw. It's all logged by your apps, your ISP, your phone, even your smart fridge if it's nosy enough. You think you've wiped the slate clean, but it's all still there, tucked away in the shadows. It's stored where you see it. It's stored where they can sell it. Because forgetting has no profit. But remembering, that's where the money is. Your data has a memory and it's not yours anymore. Those innocent searches, those fleeting moments of curiosity, they're commodities now packaged and sold to the highest bidder. Every detail, every secret you thought was yours is out there waiting to be exploited. Just remember, the Internet never forgets.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think you deleted your data? That's cute. The Internet doesn't delete. It archives. Every click, every typo, every late night search you hoped no one saw. It's all logged by your apps, your ISP, your phone, even your smart fridge if it's nosy enough. You think you've wiped the slate clean, but it's all still there, tucked away in the shadows. Excavation. It's stored where you see it. It's stored where they can sell it. Because forgetting has no profit. But remembering, that's where the money is. Your data has a memory and it's not yours anymore. Those innocent searches, those fleeting moments of curiosity, they're commodities now packaged and sold to the highest bidder. Every detail, every secret you thought was yours is out there waiting to be exploited. So go ahead. Keep scrolling. Keep searching. Just remember, the Internet never forgets.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think the internet started in the nineties? Cute. It was already 20 years old. The first message? Sent in 1969. Can you imagine that? By 1973, people were already emailing each other. And by '83, domain names like .com and .gov were going live. But what else was lurking in those early days? Military databases, private intelligence networks, and the first experiments in artificial intelligence. You never saw it, but it was watching you. The internet you know today, that's version two point o, the original? It's still buried deep, still connected, whispering secrets of a digital age long forgotten. What else lies beneath the surface waiting to be uncovered?

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The video argues that the Rand Corporation is a central, hidden mover behind the discovery, testing, and back‑engineering of old-world underground technology and subterranean infrastructure. It presents Rand as a “real researcher” group that uncovers underground facilities, tunnels, vaults, and networks that supposedly underpin modern power, surveillance, and military systems, while alleging that mainstream academia and public histories conceal these findings. Key claims and focal points: - Rand’s undisclosed role in exposing and cataloging underground sites and old-world technology. The speaker asserts Rand operates with thousands of researchers and has produced slides and reports showing underground features, interlocked blast doors, radar capabilities underground, and vault-like entrances that are “electrically interlocked” to permit only one of three doors to be open at a time. These findings are presented as evidence of extensive subterranean infrastructures worldwide. - A 12-site Rand-identified list of potential or actual deep underground bases in the United States. Locations cited include Logan County, Illinois; Anderson County, Tennessee (Oak Ridge area); Napa County, California; Yakima County, Washington; Garfield County, Colorado; and others. The speaker claims these sites were “pinned” by Rand as perfect locations for underground chambers designed to survive nuclear strikes, support large-scale logistics, or run independently for extended periods. - Logan County, Illinois, is highlighted as a particularly revealing case. The narrator contends Rand marked Logan County on 08/04/1960 as a site of deep underground activity, supported by ISGS coal mine maps showing extensive seams and limestone suitable for tunneling. The implication is that something was found beneath the town and that the public remains unaware of its existence. - Anderson County and Oak Ridge are presented as a confirmed nexus, with Anderson County described as home to Oak Ridge National Laboratory and to underground operations connected to the Manhattan Project. The video claims these underground facilities existed “underground labs” and were not merely proposed installations. - The movie links these sites to other global underground histories, suggesting a network of subterranean cities and bases that could endure nuclear events, with a broader claim that such infrastructure is connected to a five‑eyes surveillance and power framework. - Garfield County, Colorado (Project Rulison) is described as not merely a test of detonating a 40 kiloton device under the premise of releasing natural gas, but as a location where a subterranean chamber about 400 feet wide would have been created, implying the possibility of underground cities rather than gas extraction. - Napa County, California, is tied to claims of a “secret underground installation” used for continuity of government, with large doors and bunkers detected. - Yakima County, Washington, is described as a US Army training facility established after the Rand map, purportedly built to intercept satellite and microwave transmissions, functioning as a node in the Five Eyes surveillance network (Echelon), processing millions of communications per hour, and allegedly closed to the public after 2013. - The speaker asserts that many locations were already in use before being publicly acknowledged and that the Manhattan Project’s existence and locations implied a precedent for hidden underground work. Anderson and Oak Ridge are used to argue that Rand’s maps were rooted in verifiable underground activity, not mere proposals. - A broader historical thesis about “old world technology” beneath the Earth, suggesting ancient or premodern civilizations possessed advanced subterranean capabilities that modern governments rediscovered, reverse-engineered, and publicly reframed. - A contentious timeline claim about AI: the speaker argues AI did not originate in the mid‑20th century as officially stated. They point to McCulloch and Pitts’s 1943 paper on neural networks, suggesting it reflects older, hidden knowledge. They claim that Sage (Semi‑Automatic Ground Environment/CO) and other projects in the 1950s used AI, real-time computing, and data networks earlier than publicly acknowledged, with Sage reportedly incorporating Internet-like capabilities and touchscreen interaction before public knowledge of the Internet and AI’s public timeline. They contend RAND, MITRE, and other groups were using AI and networked surveillance systems in the 1950s and that public narratives obscure these realities. - The video maintains that these discoveries imply a widespread, long-term presence of old-world technologies resurfaced “back into the world” and that the public is being misled about when and how AI and related technologies emerged. Note: The transcript includes promotional content unrelated to the core claims (a vaping product advertisement), which has been omitted from this summary per the request to exclude promotional material.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think the internet started in the nineties? Cute. It was already 20 years old. The first message? Sent in 1969. By 1973, people were already emailing each other. And by '83, domain names like .com and .gov were going live. But what else was lurking in those early days? Military databases, private intelligence networks, and the first experiments in artificial intelligence. You never saw it, but it was watching you. The internet you know today, that's version two point o, the original? It's still buried deep, still connected, whispering secrets of a digital age long forgotten. What else lies beneath the surface waiting to be uncovered?

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Once upon a time, a four zero four meant a broken link. Now, it signifies something far more unsettling, the erasure of truths. Old pages vanish without a trace. Headlines are rewritten, and even those once reliable screenshots? They're corrupted, lost in the digital ether. Those pages didn't just disappear. They were deprecated, quietly removed from our collective memory. The digital past is being edited in real time, not by hackers lurking in the shadows, but by systems designed to forget inconvenient data. Every time you encounter a four zero four error, pause for a moment. Ask yourself. Was it ever really gone? Or has it simply been deleted for you? The internet, once a vast archive of knowledge, is becoming a curated gallery of selective memories.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker argues AI was not invented but resurrected, citing a timeline reset and “old world technology” predating public knowledge. They claim “Sage had Internet. They had AI. They had iPads,” and that Sage “took in real time radar data from over a 100 radar stations across North America, analyzed it with massive central computers, made automated decisions about whether a target was friendly or hostile and gave suggested responses.” They assert “1951 to 1958, Rand, Mietri, and Sage were all operational” and that “the official narrative tells us, Internet doesn't exist.” They reference “1943, these two published a groundbreaking paper titled a logical calculus of the ideas imminent in the nervous activity” and that the Dartmouth Conference happened in 1956, “coining the term Artificial Intelligence.” They claim “Sage... was using MIT's technology” and that a “first AI patent” appeared in Japan in the “eighties.” The narrator concludes AI was resurrected and “an old world technology... brought back into the world.”

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think the internet started in the nineties? Cute. It was already 20 years old. The first message? Sent in 1969. By 1973, people were already emailing each other. And by '83, domain names like .com and .gov were going live. But what else was lurking in those early days? Military databases, private intelligence networks, and the first experiments in artificial intelligence. You never saw it, but it was watching you. The internet you know today, that's version two point o, the original? It's still buried deep, still connected, whispering secrets of a digital age long forgotten. What else lies beneath the surface waiting to be uncovered?

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Think you deleted your data? That's cute. The Internet doesn't delete. It archives. Every click, every typo, every late night search you hoped no one saw. It's all logged by your apps, your ISP, your phone, even your smart fridge if it's nosy enough. You think you've wiped the slate clean, but it's all still there, tucked away in the shadows. Excavation. It's stored where you see it. It's stored where they can sell it. Because forgetting has no profit. But remembering, that's where the money is. Your data has a memory and it's not yours anymore. Those innocent searches, those fleeting moments of curiosity, they're commodities now packaged and sold to the highest bidder. Every detail, every secret you thought was yours is out there waiting to be exploited. So go ahead. Keep scrolling. Keep searching. Just remember, the Internet never forgets.

Coldfusion

The Greatest Story Ever Told Part II
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The journey through technology from the 1820s to the 1990s reveals how pivotal moments shaped our modern world. The 1990s marked the onset of the information age, driven by the public emergence of the internet, which began with the launch of Sputnik in 1957. This prompted the U.S. to create ARPA, leading to the development of ARPANET in 1969, the precursor to the internet. By 1983, a universal protocol connected various networks, culminating in the public availability of the internet in 1992. Tim Berners-Lee's invention of the World Wide Web in 1991 revolutionized access to information, while the launch of the Mosaic web browser in 1993 made it user-friendly. The late 1990s saw the rise of search engines, with Larry Page and Sergey Brin founding Google in 1998, which transformed information retrieval. The iPod's launch in 2001 revitalized Apple, while the iPhone's introduction in 2007 redefined mobile technology. The emergence of social media platforms like Facebook and YouTube further changed how we interact and consume content, setting the stage for the powerful smartphones of the 2010s.

Coldfusion

Historical Internet Firsts
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The video on Cold Houston TV explores the history of the internet, highlighting 14 key moments. It begins with the first email sent by Ray Tomlinson in 1971 and the launch of the first website by Tim Berners-Lee in 1990. Other milestones include the first picture uploaded in 1992, the first search engine WebCrawler in 1994, and the first blog by Justin Hall. Significant events also include the first book sold on Amazon in 1995, the first item sold on eBay, and the first mobile phone with internet access in 1996. The video concludes with the first internet meme, the dancing baby, in 1996.

Modern Wisdom

Who Owns The Internet & How It Owns Us | James Ball | Modern Wisdom Podcast 213
Guests: James Ball
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Online ads are more invasive than people realize, tracking users across the internet and creating a bidding war for attention. James Ball discusses his experience interviewing Edward Snowden in front of a large audience, emphasizing the dramatic nature of the event. He wrote a book about the internet to highlight its often-overlooked infrastructure, which is crucial for modern life but rarely discussed beyond major platforms like Facebook and Google. The internet's origins trace back to ARPANET, developed by the U.S. military in the 1960s to facilitate communication during potential nuclear threats. This network evolved into the internet, which now serves as critical infrastructure. The physical components, including undersea cables, are vital yet largely invisible to users. Ball explains that the internet operates on a packet-switching system, allowing data to be sent in small packets that can take various routes to their destination. Ball also highlights the complexities of online advertising, which relies on user data collected through cookies. Advertisers bid for ad placements based on user profiles, creating a fast-paced, automated environment. This system raises concerns about privacy and surveillance, as personal information is increasingly intertwined with national security. The conversation touches on the need for regulations to address the challenges posed by the internet, including data ownership and the influence of venture capital on business models. Ball argues for a more equitable approach to internet governance, emphasizing the importance of protecting individual rights and fostering a diverse digital economy.

Coldfusion

A Brief History of the Internet - First Website, First Meme..
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The Internet originated from U.S. panic after Sputnik 1's launch, aiming to enhance survival chances during a nuclear threat. Key milestones include Ray Tomlinson sending the first email in 1971, Tim Berners-Lee creating the first website in 1990, and the first picture uploaded in 1992. The first search engine, WebCrawler, launched in 1994, followed by the first blog in 1994. Mahir Cagri became the first internet celebrity in 1999. The first meme, the smiley face, emerged in 1992, while the dancing baby became the first viral meme in 1996. Concerns about Article 13 threaten the future of the Internet.

Coldfusion

The Secrets Behind how the Internet Works
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The Internet, revolutionized since its inception in 1969 with ARPANET, is a decentralized network connecting global computers. Tim Berners-Lee's World Wide Web made it accessible, yet he never patented his invention. Approximately 420 undersea cables connect countries, with repairs ongoing due to vulnerabilities. Ownership is collective, managed by ICANN, which oversees the domain name system. The Internet has transformed communication and information sharing, but also led to misinformation. Future advancements like 5G promise faster speeds, while laws like Article 13 raise concerns for content creators.
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