One of the wonderful things about Fark, the weird/funny/stupid news aggregator, has always been its utter simplicity. Fark.com is little more than a running scroll of cleverly worded one- or ...
Ever wonder where those morning radio shows get all that wacky news they read on the air? Odds are their sources include a website called Fark.com. Loyal Farkers say they’ve heard DJs read straight ...
A recent deal between a heavyweight newspaper Web site and a popular edited news aggregator site shows the increasingly blurred boundaries among social media platforms, mainstream news and blogs as a ...
In a hopeful gesture toward making the Internet a somewhat less depressing place, the news and community site Fark.com announced this week that it’s “Adding misogyny to Fark moderator guidelines.” ...
Fark.com's move to trademark the widely used internet warning label "NSFW" has many in the blogosphere asking WTF? Drew Curtis, founder of the off-kilter social news site, filed an application several ...
F ark.com was born 10 years ago in a dial-up world, when a cell phone was only a phone and twittering sounded kind of naughty. Today, the way Fark readers consume and read the clever news aggregation ...
Abbreviations, acronyms, and memes fall in and out of fashion on the Internet all of the time. Today's "I can has cheeseburger?" is often tomorrow's "All your base are belong to us." Some stand the ...
There are millions of home-grown Web sites out there, but only a few people actually make money off of them — people like Drew Curtis. For the past five years, he has run Fark.com as a full-time job.
Satirical, bizarre and amusing news website Fark has kicked the fark out of a patent troll called Gooseberry Natural Resources LLC. The original lawsuit was leveraged in January, claiming Fark ...
Curtis pointed to his own experience moderating comments on Fark, which allows users to give their often humorous take on the news of the day. He said only one percent of Web comments have any value ...