On my update on Matt Damon's Crypto.com controversy (under the subheading "Activism"), there was an automated suggestion that somewhere I had included a deprecated source. It's hard to see where that might be. I used crypto.com, water.org, forbes.com, adage.com, independent.co.uk, nzherald.co.nz, dailymail.co.uk, and nypost.com. There were also items from youtube.com containing Damon's own advertisements (for Pepsico, Stella Artois, and Crypto.com), which he clearly intended for general dissemination. The only possible source that may not yet be registered as non-deprecated by Wikipedia's filters would be Water.org, of which Damon is co-founder. It is the key link between Damon and Crypto.com, since he has said that Crypto.com has made a $1 million dollar donation to Water.org, and that he himself is donating all the money he makes doing Crypto.com commercials to Water.org. My update also quoted a tweet cited in The New Zealand Herald. The tweet is by Carole Cadwalladr of The Observer (and formerly of The Guardian). She's an investigative reporter who has worked, among other things, in digging into the Facebook-Cambridge Analytica revelations. Her tweet is cited by several other publications, not just the NZ Herald, and indeed appears in her own Twitter feed. It seems reliable. UPU898 (talk) 10:21, 14 January 2022 (UTC)Reply