🌾 Tháng Chạp, hay còn gọi là “tháng củ mật”, không chỉ là thời khắc chuyển giao năm cũ mà còn ẩn chứa ý nghĩa văn hoá, lịch sử và lời nhắc cẩn trọng từ người Việt xưa. Bạn đã hiểu vì sao tháng này đặc biệt chưa? #ThángChạp #CủMật #VietnamCulture #VietnamHistory #LịchSử #VănHoá #YearEnd #Tradition #Vietnam 🌿

https://vtcnews.vn/it-nguoi-biet-vi-sao-thang-chap-goi-la-thang-cu-mat-ar998914.html

Ít người biết vì sao tháng Chạp gọi là tháng củ mật

Tháng Chạp, hay tháng củ mật, không chỉ là thời khắc chuyển giao năm cũ mà còn có ý nghĩa văn hóa, lịch sử và lời nhắc cẩn trọng của người Việt xưa nay.

Báo điện tử VTC News

Lưu ý: Giải thưởng >10 triệu đồng trong các chương trình bốc thăm, quay số Tất niên, Tân niên sẽ bị tính thuế thu nhập cá nhân. Không phải mọi khoản thưởng đều được miễn thuế. #thuế #tài_chính #vietnam #tax #yearend #newyear

https://vietnamnet.vn/thuong-tat-nien-tan-nien-khong-phai-khoan-nao-cung-duoc-mien-thue-2481707.html

Thưởng tất niên, tân niên: Không phải khoản nào cũng được miễn thuế

Đối với các chương trình bốc thăm, quay số trúng thưởng trong dịp tất niên, tân niên, phần giá trị giải thưởng vượt trên 10 triệu đồng cho mỗi lần trúng thưởng là thu nhập phải chịu thuế thu nhập cá nhân.

Vietnamnet.vn
Circle Chart Reveals Year-End Digital And Album Charts For 2025 - KpopNewsHub – Latest K-Pop News, Idols & Korean Entertainment

The 2025 year-end charts have been revealed for Circle Chart!

Kpop News Hub
Melon Announces Top 100 Songs Of 2025 Year-End Chart - KpopNewsHub – Latest K-Pop News, Idols & Korean Entertainment

Melon’s year-end chart for 2025 has been revealed!

Kpop News Hub

2017 Year-Ender

This picture combines deer, hockey, and a snowless New Year … what could be more Victoria than that?

Another year ends in the manner of the one which ended Xenophon’s Hellenica: after terrible battles and startling results, there is not peace but confusion and disorder. Xenophon’s perplexity lead to a Sacred War, 300 dead lions on the plain of Chaeronea, and the King dead in an abandoned carriage as his conqueror bent down and took his seal with clean white hands. As for me, I am getting to know the local deer and my old library.

Late in this year, scienceblogs.com shut down. But scienceblogs.de is still full of posts about cipher mysteries, astronomy, and whether “don’t feed the trolls” is a good strategy, and while dead humans go where no-one returns, dead blogs can be summoned with a simple incantation and enthusiastically babble about what went wrong until you hastily perform the ritual to dismiss them. After a decade of watching the science blogging community, Andy Extance finds that the number of active blogs has stayed more or less the same.

While in previous years traffic on this blog doubled, in 2017 the numbers were about the same as last year. When I look at the traffic by country, I wonder if this is because my American and British readers have other things to worry about. The five most popular posts included two of my projects, namely Armour in Texts and Fashion in the Age of Datini, as well as my comments on the largest armies in world history (thanks Flipboard!), my farewell to the historical fencers from 2016, and “Learning Sumerian is Hard.”

This year I have focused on writing my thesis and organizing things with friends, while behind me in the window the lamps on the Internet go out one by one: this site becomes blank unless you enable Javascript, that one stops letting people share photos unless they pay ransom, a third moves some accounts from the publicly visible section into the members-only if they have the wrong keywords in their names. Those are not my values, but if the last year has taught me anything, it is that not as many people share my values as I thought. Yet there are forces stirring in the dimness, and I don’t think that they will do what those who called them up expect.

Some Garry oaks with suspicious vines, December 2017

The Internet is a Garry Oak of communication and creativity swathed in the ivy of spying and advertising. Internet companies provide ‘free’ services so they can better track what you are doing and influence your behaviour with advertising and propaganda, and the problem is that the kinds of things which are most useful to advertisers are not the things which most of us want to read, watch, and hear. Like the ivy which starves the tree of light and water, this surveillance and censorship is killing the life which supports it. Journalists have begun to admit that for the Internet versions of their papers, they focus on opinionated clickbait which has a chance of going viral, because longer reads and local news do not pay for themselves with advertising, but this means that readers learn not to trust what they say. (Quinn Norton, The Hypocrisy of the Internet Journalist, Sean Blanda, Medium and the Reason You Can’t Stand the News Anymore).

Because it has been like this for 20 years, this can feel like this is just the way the Internet works. But in fact, it is an accident: the early Internet was dominated by the USA and by financial systems built on the old Visa and Mastercard networks, and the USA has very weak privacy laws and a financial system built to keep some people on top and other people on the bottom. For a long time, nobody could figure out a way to pay website owners a few dollars a month without the credit card companies eating most of those payments. But many people already pay a few dimes every time they open a large webpage on their smart phone, and it is not hard to envision a world where the US passed federal privacy legislation in the 1970s and the Google-equivalent had to limit itself to showing ads based on the contents of a search query or webpage and nothing else. People around the world can see this, and they are organizing to build an alternative.

Companies like Liberapay in France are building systems to make small monthly donations to half a dozen creators, and spread the credit-card fees across all of these donations. Right now Patreon is the most successful, but they show signs of losing their nerve: they tried to kick back greatly increased fees to the donors in December, and after years of urging creators of sexy webcomics and bondage videos to join, in October they reclassified many of these projects from acceptable ‘adult content’ to forbidden ‘pornography.’ (If you want to hear what the people affected have to say, a good place to start is the Open Letter to Patreon and the Patreon Reference Sheet by Liara Roux; a good journalist to follow is Violet Blue). And in the last few weeks, I watched the Internet boil in confusion, decide that they were not misunderstanding something and that the new fees would really make small donations much more expensive, and start organizing to find or build a replacement. It felt like the Internet ten years ago, or Maciej Ceglowski’s description of the time that the fanfiction community decided that they could no longer work with Delicious and wrote a 52-page specification of what his company would have to do to meet their needs.

Patreon has backed down on the fees, but still seem to be discriminating against adult content which can’t pay as well as HBO, so I do not know what the future of the company will be. But millions of people have seen that it is possible to support free podcasts, blogs, webcomics, and videos with monthly donations not ads and spying. They won’t forget that, and if one company backs away or succumbs to pressure, they will create another. In the immortal words of Rich Burlew:

“Why should I care how many people I have to kill? I can just make MORE in my TUMMY!” Rich Burlew, Order of the Stick #587

Edit 2025-12-09: block editor, align images to centre

#587 #InternetCulture #modern #notAnExpert #yearEnd

It could have stopped at 'Most likely to Argue', but I'll take the differentiation.

🤬https://philosophics.blog/2026/01/02/a-year-of-chatgpt-2025/?utm_source=linkedin&utm_medium=social

A blog post about ChatGPT's year in review. I sent over 35K messages to ChatGPT, and it's only one of 8 GPTs I use – though it is ichiban.

#blog #chatgpt #gpts #ai #philosophy #whimsy #yearend #newyear #novelty #chat #agency

IU Makes Generous Year-End Donations To Meaningful Causes - KpopNewsHub – Latest K-Pop News, Idols & Korean Entertainment

IU is ending the year with generous donations!

Kpop News Hub

New Year reflection post. Also, yes: 2026 IS the year of the Linux desktop...
For the 34th year in a row!

https://hisvirusness.com/new-year-old-me

Happy New Year, everybody!

#newyear #newyearseve #reflections #optimism #yearend #indieweb #smallweb #webdev #blog #writing

My (Chaotic) 2025 Reflection :: HisVirusness

Celebrate the New Year with me as I recount the (read: my) wins of 2025, and toast to a hopeful 2026!

HisVirusness
I set a modest (but I've had open-heart surgery, diabetes, and I'm 68, soooo...) goal of getting, or at least averaging 5000 steps a day for 2025. Taking things casual today, because...
#goals #fitness #yearend #2025inreview

We’re grateful to Elias Rodriguez for his generous donation today, designated for Advocacy Projects. We had the pleasure of meeting Elias, on his bicycle, in June at a community gathering at Window on the Bay Park. It was a welcome surprise today to receive his donation, which boosted 2025’s year-to-date total to nearly $11/day, before expenses. https://bikemonterey.org/about/financial-donations/donors

ICYMI, the work of the Bicycling Monterey site and projects are a grassroots volunteer effort since 2009. Every donation, in any amount, is needed and greatly appreciated!
FAQs: https://bikemonterey.org/about/financial-donations/contribution-faqs

#YearEnd #YearEnd2025 #Donations #MakeADifference #ActiveTransportation #cycling #biking #BikeTooter