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ALRNCN complies with the RTA code (Restricted to Adults). Access to the site can be easily blocked using parental control tools. It is necessary that parents and guardians take measures to prevent minors from accessing inappropriate content, especially those restricted by age.
Anyone who has minors in their care should implement basic parental control measures, both at the hardware and software level, or filtering services to block minors' access to inappropriate content.
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Published on 2026/06/19
THE NEW BOT FARMS
Some people still imagine a bot farm as a room full of cheap computers endlessly generating fake clicks.
That image isn't entirely wrong, but reality is becoming far more sophisticated.
For years, bot farms operated mainly through software. Programs capable of automatically creating accounts, posting comments, following users, liking content and generating artificial traffic. Everything happened inside computers and servers. It was fast, cheap and effective, but also relatively easy for platforms to detect and block.
As social networks evolved, they began paying attention not only to what users were doing, but also to how they were doing it.
A real person doesn't tap at exactly the same speed every time. Doesn't move a mouse in the exact same way. Doesn't send hundreds of identical messages one after another. Platforms learned to recognize those patterns, and bot farms were forced to evolve.
That's where the story starts becoming interesting.
Instead of simply simulating human behavior through software, some operators started using real smartphones. Hundreds of them. Sometimes thousands.
Entire rows of devices connected to charging systems, internet connections and management tools, each phone behaving as if it were a genuine user account.
But now we're beginning to see something even more surreal.
Robotic arms physically interacting with screens. Pressing buttons. Opening apps. Typing messages. Scrolling through content. Even using artificial intelligence to maintain seemingly natural conversations, complete with emojis, spelling mistakes and responses that sound human.
At that point, the line between a fake user and a real one starts to blur. Because the objective hasn't really changed over the years.
Influencing public opinion. Artificially boosting popularity. Generating engagement. Manipulating trends. Promoting products. Creating the impression that thousands of people are interested in something when, in reality, much of the activity comes from machines interacting with other machines.
The difference is that what once looked like a simple script running on a computer is starting to resemble human behavior more and more closely.
And perhaps that's the most fascinating part. Not that robots are learning to behave like humans, but that the internet is gradually filling up with interactions where it becomes increasingly difficult to know whether there's actually a person on the other side.
# Watch video
ExtraBall
Today's slow-motion highlight.
ExtraBall2
THE NEW BOT FARMS
Some people still imagine a bot farm as a room full of cheap computers endlessly generating fake clicks.
That image isn't entirely wrong, but reality is becoming far more sophisticated.
For years, bot farms operated mainly through software. Programs capable of automatically creating accounts, posting comments, following users, liking content and generating artificial traffic. Everything happened inside computers and servers. It was fast, cheap and effective, but also relatively easy for platforms to detect and block.
As social networks evolved, they began paying attention not only to what users were doing, but also to how they were doing it.
A real person doesn't tap at exactly the same speed every time. Doesn't move a mouse in the exact same way. Doesn't send hundreds of identical messages one after another. Platforms learned to recognize those patterns, and bot farms were forced to evolve.
That's where the story starts becoming interesting.
Instead of simply simulating human behavior through software, some operators started using real smartphones. Hundreds of them. Sometimes thousands.
Entire rows of devices connected to charging systems, internet connections and management tools, each phone behaving as if it were a genuine user account.
But now we're beginning to see something even more surreal.
Robotic arms physically interacting with screens. Pressing buttons. Opening apps. Typing messages. Scrolling through content. Even using artificial intelligence to maintain seemingly natural conversations, complete with emojis, spelling mistakes and responses that sound human.
At that point, the line between a fake user and a real one starts to blur. Because the objective hasn't really changed over the years.
Influencing public opinion. Artificially boosting popularity. Generating engagement. Manipulating trends. Promoting products. Creating the impression that thousands of people are interested in something when, in reality, much of the activity comes from machines interacting with other machines.
The difference is that what once looked like a simple script running on a computer is starting to resemble human behavior more and more closely.
And perhaps that's the most fascinating part. Not that robots are learning to behave like humans, but that the internet is gradually filling up with interactions where it becomes increasingly difficult to know whether there's actually a person on the other side.
# Watch video
ExtraBall
Today's slow-motion highlight.
ExtraBall2
Published on 2026/05/11
KARATE SHEEP
Internet trends work exactly the same way trends have always worked in the real world: someone creates a trend, and everyone else starts following it like there�s no tomorrow.
The difference is that back then a trend could last for months or even years, while now everything online moves so absurdly fast that within days we�ve already jumped to something completely different.
And this week, apparently, it�s the sheep�s turn. Because the internet has decided that watching AI-generated sheep practicing martial arts is exactly the kind of content we needed to keep moving forward with our lives.
Flying kicks, impossible poses, moves straight out of a kung-fu movie, and sheep fighting with an intensity they probably don�t even understand themselves. And the worst part is� it actually works.
Because you watch one video� then another� then one more� and before you know it, you�ve spent ten minutes watching karate sheep while your brain desperately tries to remember the exact moment the internet became this.
# Watch videos
ExtraBall
Today�s slow-motion clip.
ExtraBall2
KARATE SHEEP
Internet trends work exactly the same way trends have always worked in the real world: someone creates a trend, and everyone else starts following it like there�s no tomorrow.
The difference is that back then a trend could last for months or even years, while now everything online moves so absurdly fast that within days we�ve already jumped to something completely different.
And this week, apparently, it�s the sheep�s turn. Because the internet has decided that watching AI-generated sheep practicing martial arts is exactly the kind of content we needed to keep moving forward with our lives.
Flying kicks, impossible poses, moves straight out of a kung-fu movie, and sheep fighting with an intensity they probably don�t even understand themselves. And the worst part is� it actually works.
Because you watch one video� then another� then one more� and before you know it, you�ve spent ten minutes watching karate sheep while your brain desperately tries to remember the exact moment the internet became this.
# Watch videos
ExtraBall
Today�s slow-motion clip.
ExtraBall2

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Published on 2026/02/16
SRVIRAL #2164
Just take the photo when the water falls...
You can see many more videos, curiosities and silly stuff visiting srviral.com
You can also join the SRVIRAL TELEGRAM CHANNEL to see much more content.
ExtraBall
(Clicking on these links daily you support ALRNCN's work. They're collaborators or sponsors and, by visiting their sites, they like us even more)
SRVIRAL #2164
Just take the photo when the water falls...
![]() Billiards classes |
![]() Food |
![]() Complete my face |
![]() Bad ideas |
![]() Photo |
![]() Downloading |
![]() Overweight |
![]() A risky leap |
![]() Your first day |
You can also join the SRVIRAL TELEGRAM CHANNEL to see much more content.
ExtraBall
(Clicking on these links daily you support ALRNCN's work. They're collaborators or sponsors and, by visiting their sites, they like us even more)
Published on 2026/01/20
VIRTUAL SELLER FARMS
What used to be massive crypto mining farms are now virtual seller farms. It�s literally the same infrastructure: industrial warehouses packed with graphics cards, servers, screens, cables, and cooling systems running 24/7. The only difference is they�re no longer solving hashes to mine Bitcoin or Ethereum. Now they�re generating fake people who sell products nonstop.
In China, they did the most logical thing in the world. When crypto mining stopped being so profitable, they didn�t throw anything away. They recycled the entire ecosystem into something that now makes more money per hour: AI-powered automated selling. Where there used to be mining rigs, there are now hyper-realistic avatars, synthetic voices, neural-network-generated facial expressions, and automatic chat response systems. Every �host� you see on screen doesn�t exist. It�s based on a real person, yes, but everything it does and says is generated by AI: the smile, the tone of voice, the head movements, the dramatic pauses, the sales hooks.
A single room can run dozens of livestreams at the same time, each one selling a different product on a different platform. And all of it without salaries, without breaks, without sick days, without vacations, without human errors, without influencers asking for more money. It�s telemarketing, infomercials, and live commerce version 3.0. The total industrialization of sales talk.
The system is as simple as it is unsettling. An AI-generated face trained on real human videos to imitate gestures and expressions. A sales �brain� that follows a commercial script from start to finish, introducing the product, highlighting benefits, handling typical objections, and closing the sale. And a farm-style infrastructure with GPUs rendering video in real time, synthesizing voice, and managing hundreds of parallel streams. If someone asks something in the chat, the AI replies instantly with prewritten phrases or on-the-fly generated answers. There�s no awkward improvisation. No bad days. No fatigue.
So why did everyone migrate there? Because it makes more money than mining crypto. A single AI-powered selling setup can generate between fifty and one hundred dollars per hour and never shuts down. That�s over a thousand dollars a day from just one configuration. Multiply that by dozens of streams and you understand why former mining farms have turned into factories of fake influencers.
The creepiest part is that most people don�t even notice. They see a face, a friendly voice, a constant smile, a convincing explanation, and assume there�s a real person behind it. There isn�t. It�s a digital assembly line of sellers who never get tired, never mess up their script, and never go off-message.
And this won�t stay in China. It always goes the same way. A business model appears, proves it works, makes money, and gets replicated. We�re going to see it on Amazon, on Instagram, on TikTok, on X, on e-commerce websites, in 24/7 sales livestreams, in automated product videos, in virtual influencers that don�t exist. Continuous streams, varied, animated, entertaining, with hooks and full sales closings, with no human behind them.
This is no longer about hiring a hot girl or a charismatic guy to sell stuff. It�s about scaling, automating, optimizing, removing friction, and maximizing revenue per hour. It�s the definitive industrialization of online selling.
Now think about this. If today we�re seeing crypto farms turned into virtual seller farms, what�s next? Because once you build this ecosystem, you�re not just selling products anymore. You can also sell services, courses, affiliate offers, gambling, crypto, politics, ideology, or propaganda. All with fake faces that look real.
What you�re seeing in those videos of people filming inside these farms isn�t a Chinese oddity. It�s the first prototype of how things are going to be sold on the internet in a few years. And when this really lands in the West, there�s no going back.
# Watch videos
ExtraBall
Today�s slow-motion moment.
ExtraBall2
(Clicking on these links daily you support ALRNCN's work. They're collaborators or sponsors and, by visiting their sites, they like us even more)
VIRTUAL SELLER FARMS
What used to be massive crypto mining farms are now virtual seller farms. It�s literally the same infrastructure: industrial warehouses packed with graphics cards, servers, screens, cables, and cooling systems running 24/7. The only difference is they�re no longer solving hashes to mine Bitcoin or Ethereum. Now they�re generating fake people who sell products nonstop.
In China, they did the most logical thing in the world. When crypto mining stopped being so profitable, they didn�t throw anything away. They recycled the entire ecosystem into something that now makes more money per hour: AI-powered automated selling. Where there used to be mining rigs, there are now hyper-realistic avatars, synthetic voices, neural-network-generated facial expressions, and automatic chat response systems. Every �host� you see on screen doesn�t exist. It�s based on a real person, yes, but everything it does and says is generated by AI: the smile, the tone of voice, the head movements, the dramatic pauses, the sales hooks.
A single room can run dozens of livestreams at the same time, each one selling a different product on a different platform. And all of it without salaries, without breaks, without sick days, without vacations, without human errors, without influencers asking for more money. It�s telemarketing, infomercials, and live commerce version 3.0. The total industrialization of sales talk.
The system is as simple as it is unsettling. An AI-generated face trained on real human videos to imitate gestures and expressions. A sales �brain� that follows a commercial script from start to finish, introducing the product, highlighting benefits, handling typical objections, and closing the sale. And a farm-style infrastructure with GPUs rendering video in real time, synthesizing voice, and managing hundreds of parallel streams. If someone asks something in the chat, the AI replies instantly with prewritten phrases or on-the-fly generated answers. There�s no awkward improvisation. No bad days. No fatigue.
So why did everyone migrate there? Because it makes more money than mining crypto. A single AI-powered selling setup can generate between fifty and one hundred dollars per hour and never shuts down. That�s over a thousand dollars a day from just one configuration. Multiply that by dozens of streams and you understand why former mining farms have turned into factories of fake influencers.
The creepiest part is that most people don�t even notice. They see a face, a friendly voice, a constant smile, a convincing explanation, and assume there�s a real person behind it. There isn�t. It�s a digital assembly line of sellers who never get tired, never mess up their script, and never go off-message.
And this won�t stay in China. It always goes the same way. A business model appears, proves it works, makes money, and gets replicated. We�re going to see it on Amazon, on Instagram, on TikTok, on X, on e-commerce websites, in 24/7 sales livestreams, in automated product videos, in virtual influencers that don�t exist. Continuous streams, varied, animated, entertaining, with hooks and full sales closings, with no human behind them.
This is no longer about hiring a hot girl or a charismatic guy to sell stuff. It�s about scaling, automating, optimizing, removing friction, and maximizing revenue per hour. It�s the definitive industrialization of online selling.
Now think about this. If today we�re seeing crypto farms turned into virtual seller farms, what�s next? Because once you build this ecosystem, you�re not just selling products anymore. You can also sell services, courses, affiliate offers, gambling, crypto, politics, ideology, or propaganda. All with fake faces that look real.
What you�re seeing in those videos of people filming inside these farms isn�t a Chinese oddity. It�s the first prototype of how things are going to be sold on the internet in a few years. And when this really lands in the West, there�s no going back.
# Watch videos
ExtraBall
Today�s slow-motion moment.
ExtraBall2
(Clicking on these links daily you support ALRNCN's work. They're collaborators or sponsors and, by visiting their sites, they like us even more)
Published on 2025/11/06
LIFE IN THE COUNTRYSIDE GETS A LOT EASIER WITH EMMA AROUND
People say country life hits hard. And yeah, it does �those brutal early mornings, mud climbing up your boots, diesel-stained hands, and a back screaming for mercy before noon. No wonder so many dream about running to the city the first chance they get.
But then Emma shows up, and suddenly everything shifts. You start wanting the sunrise to come faster, the rooster to scream awake, and that sweet moment when you fire up your harvester hoping you�ll catch her rolling by, riding her tractor like she owns the land.
No posing, no perfect lighting � just dust floating in the air, sunlight hitting strong, engines humming, and that quiet magic only the countryside gives you. She�s there, confident and effortless, like she was born between rows of corn and fresh soil, and suddenly the city feels very far away � and not in a bad way.
With Emma around, those endless mornings turn into excuses to start even earlier. Not because you're chasing some country-romantic fantasy, but because sometimes all it takes is a girl on a tractor to make you forget skyscrapers and traffic for a while.
And tomorrow? Same routine. Early alarm, boots on, engine ready, breath freezing in the morning air � waiting for that moment when she shows up again between fields and dust. And right then, you realize maybe you weren�t so tired after all.
# See photos & videos
ExtraBall
Slow-motion mornings hit different.
ExtraBall2
(Clicking on these links daily you support ALRNCN's work. They're collaborators or sponsors and, by visiting their sites, they like us even more)
LIFE IN THE COUNTRYSIDE GETS A LOT EASIER WITH EMMA AROUND
People say country life hits hard. And yeah, it does �
No posing, no perfect lighting � just dust floating in the air, sunlight hitting strong, engines humming, and that quiet magic only the countryside gives you. She�s there, confident and effortless, like she was born between rows of corn and fresh soil, and suddenly the city feels very far away � and not in a bad way.
With Emma around, those endless mornings turn into excuses to start even earlier. Not because you're chasing some country-romantic fantasy, but because sometimes all it takes is a girl on a tractor to make you forget skyscrapers and traffic for a while.
And tomorrow? Same routine. Early alarm, boots on, engine ready, breath freezing in the morning air � waiting for that moment when she shows up again between fields and dust. And right then, you realize maybe you weren�t so tired after all.
# See photos & videos
ExtraBall
Slow-motion mornings hit different.
ExtraBall2
(Clicking on these links daily you support ALRNCN's work. They're collaborators or sponsors and, by visiting their sites, they like us even more)
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Published on 2025/07/11
10 REASONS TO GO BACK TO THE COUNTRYSIDE
For decades, the dream was to move to the city. To escape the mud, the silence, the slow rhythm of rural life. To chase asphalt, neon lights, noise, and speed. Our grandparents had no doubt: modern life meant urban life.
But something has shifted.
10 REASONS TO GO BACK TO THE COUNTRYSIDE
For decades, the dream was to move to the city. To escape the mud, the silence, the slow rhythm of rural life. To chase asphalt, neon lights, noise, and speed. Our grandparents had no doubt: modern life meant urban life.
But something has shifted.
















