The supernova effect of Michael Jackson's death

The death of a star may create a supernova explosion. A massive shock wave radiates throughout the whole star, which heats up and then explodes. This flash is as bright as a whole galaxy and leaves behind a rapidly spinning neutron star.

The death of Michael Jackson caused a similar supernova effect on the web this week. Initially, when news of his sudden death spread, people at Google thought they were under a cyber attack. You can see why from the graph in this blog.

Millions of people who searched for the star's name on Google News were greeted with an error page: "your query looks similar to automated requests from a computer virus or spyware application". Or the impact of a dead star.

Comments

  1. Hahaha, the supernova idea describes very well that phenomenon. I'm a Brazilian undergraduate student of philosophy and like your work on philosophy of information. I'd like to translate this post and publish it in my blog (with the necessary references, of course).

    Lázaro Barbosa

    ReplyDelete
  2. Obrigado!
    Yes, please, do go ahead with the translation, if you like
    cheers
    Luciano

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Mind the app - considerations on the ethical risks of COVID-19 apps

On the importance of being pedantic (series: notes to myself)

The Loebner Prize from a judge's perspective

"Notes to myself" available on Amazon

Between a rock and a hard place: Elon Musk's open letter and the Italian ban of Chat-GPT

Call for expressions of interest: research position for a project on Digital Sovereignty and the Governance, Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications (GELSI) of digital innovation.

Onlife: Sulla morte di Corman McCarthy e "the best writers" della letteratura americana

On the value of taking care of the roses (series: notes to myself)

(revised on medium) On the importance of lacking the courage (series: notes to myself)

Pandemic lesson: the disappearance of externalities