News

Wednesday 2025-04-02

01:00 PM

Visible Minorities: Letter from Canada [SNA Japan]

SNA (Alberta) — I am currently writing to you from Canada, up here taking care of some business.

In the past, I’ve lived in Canada for about a year, and now I am spending a week enjoying Alberta. One of Canada’s richest provinces due to its oil and natural gas reserves, it’s actually on the front lines in the weird American MAGA push to invade Canada.

Alberta is a Special Place for Conservatives

I’m told that Alberta considers itself the “Texas of Canada.” You quickly see why. People here wear cowboy boots and hats, proudly chow down on Alberta beef with Taber corn, have an annual “Stampede” festival due to its cattle ranching history, and openly eschew the politics of its “pot-head” neighbors to the west (British Columbia) and the “boring” prairie provinces to the east (Saskatchewan and Manitoba).

But Albertans reserve their biggest grievances for Ontario and Quebec, arguing that jealous national politicians “down east” drain them of tax monies and natural resource revenues while ignoring their interests. (Or, horrors, force them to learn French!)

Albertans generally vote for whatever party seems to come closest to a conservatism redolent of the US GOP. Distaste for the ruling center-left Liberal Party and former Prime Minister Trudeau (nicknamed “Turd-o” here) is normal and vocal, especially amongst the gun-toting, Ford F-150 pickup-driving rural population.

Alberta has a long history of resisting what it sees as the excessive power of Eastern Canada, dating back to the populist Social Credit Party of the 1930s. Alberta’s current Premier Danielle Smith (the equivalent of a US state governor) has continued that tradition by making it clear that she and Alberta “don’t take marching orders from Ottawa,” the nation’s capital and center of federal government.

Smith argues that national policies have done nothing but harm Alberta’s oil and gas sector. The major population centers of Edmonton and Calgary cycle between boom-and-bust economies depending on constraints put on the fossil fuel market. Wind, solar, and hydroelectric be damned: To them, on-again, off-again export fuel pipelines and provincial control over resource revenues make or break this part of Canada.

In addition to passing the Alberta Sovereignty Act in 2022 (to opt out of enforcing “federal rules deemed harmful to Alberta’s interests”), Smith also has a history of promoting MAGA-esque culture war issues, such as opposition to Covid mask mandates. In January, Smith even made the pilgrimage to Mar-a-Lago to meet Donald Trump and kiss the proverbial ring.

The debate shifted significantly in February and March, as Trump insultingly began calling Trudeau “governor” instead of prime minister, unilaterally declared he didn’t recognize the Canada-United States border treaty of 1908, and threatened tariffs unless Canada became America’s 51st state. Media reports of Canadians caught up in ICE immigration dragnets have caused shockwaves. The MAGA crowd even put out a map annexing the southern-tier Ontario between Windsor and Kingston, which includes Toronto and comprises a good third of Canada’s economy and population.

While signaling her opposition to the tariffs, Smith still took pains to note the need to “coordinate the securing of our border against illegal migrants and drugs moving in both directions” (despite the negligible numbers in both cases)—sops to Trump talking points. Smith also had to debase herself last week in a sit-down with far-right provocateur Ben Shapiro, who called Canada “a silly country that makes maple syrup, hockey, and annoying prime ministers.”

Alberta’s Soft Spot for “US-Eh”

According to the CBC, support for Canada becoming part of the United States is highest in Alberta, at 15% surveyed, as opposed to 9% nationwide.

That’s why MAGA targets Alberta for annexation. They’ve worked with Canadian separatists for quite some time, with regular networking and megaphoning on social media. But they’ve also been involved in secession rehearsals.

In 2022, a month-long Canadian “Freedom Convoy” of truckers protesting Covid mandates set up blockades across Canada and obnoxiously occupied the center of Ottawa. The Convoy turned out to be more than half funded by American donors. The Canadian government also seized an arsenal near an Alberta-Montana border crossing that was set up by an Albertan militia “supportive of a war with police.”

But now it’s gone beyond funding into actively fomenting.

Shortly after I arrived in Canada, I found in my Twitter feed advertisements for an online store called “Based Apparel” offering t-shirts and other xenophobic merch.

This includes an American flag in the shape of Alberta Province entitled “Alberta, USA.” MCGA/MAGA caps with the Canadian maple leaf overlaid with the American flag. A US flag with a maple leaf in the blue field next to a slogan of “US-Eh” (a pun on “USA” with the stereotypical Canadian “eh” sentence ending). Coffee cups saying “Singh Horton’s” instead of “Tim Horton’s,” implying they’re no longer a Canadian institution because Sikhs run franchises.

Or if that’s not racist enough, you can get shirts with parody Community Chest “Go Directly to Jail” Monopoly game cards showing a cop dragging a Sikh saying, “Do not pass go, do not collect pension.” A meme from the “Oregon Trail” video game shows a covered wagon with the caption, “You have died of diversity” (as opposed to “dysentery”). Or you can just settle for a more generic t-shirt depicting an American eagle f***ing a Canada goose.

Who owns Based Apparel? Kash Patel, the current Director of the FBI and a full-bore Trump sycophant. In 2022, he released a children’s book portraying Trump as a king winning an election against an evil queen (named Hillary) who accuses him of cheating. (Naturally, a wizard named “Kash” saves the day.)

Silliness aside, this merch matters. An official at the highest levels of American government, in charge of federal police investigations, is directly profiting from sowing secession in another country.

The View from the Ground

Fortunately, most Canadians, even in Alberta, don’t seem to be falling for the fringe.

A quick trip to any shopping center gives you your first clue. Choosing between imported and locally produced products has never been clearer. Stores and supermarkets are very carefully putting maple leafs next to Canadian goods. Banners are up outside businesses proclaiming, “Proudly Canadian owned and operated.”

Much media has focused on Canadian liquor stores summarily removing American bourbon, whisky, and brandy from their shelves. This is a coordinated effort, since Canada’s retail liquor market is generally run by provincial governments. Alberta happens to be the only province with a fully privatized liquor market, but a representative of Real Canadian Superstore, which accounts for nearly a third of Canada’s grocery retail market share, proudly told me they removed all American booze from their shelves at the first sign of Trump tariffs and put it in storage.

Private liquor stores I visited still had a clear “America” section labeled as usual, but when asked about it, the owner said, “It’s my stock, my choice. Where would I put it? So I put it out. But once it sells out, I’m not ordering more.” The Alberta government supports this, instructing its Gaming, Liquor, and Cannabis agency to “ban” all US alcohol imports and let the remaining retail stock sell out.

In terms of popular conservative sentiment, my Alberta businessman friend (a staunch libertarian and Liz Cheney fan) is adamant that Canadian MAGA fans are nowhere near power. “They’re out there. I see them on my Facebook, but they get shouted down. I think it’s a safe bet the vast majority of Canadian conservatives do not support Trump.”

In fact, he laments how Trump’s threats have in fact backfired, draining support from the Conservative Party and delivering it to the Liberals.

In early January, the Liberals were polling behind the Conservatives by double digits, and 338Canada projected a landslide victory for the latter. Mere weeks later, the Liberals are back in the lead, projected to take every province and territory except Alberta and Saskatchewan.

This doesn’t usually happen in Canadian politics. The pattern is usually that Canadian voters award power to a party but soon get sick of them. Poll numbers inexorably go down. Then another party gets in until voters get sick of them too.

But thanks to Trump’s bullying (and the fact that the Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre is basically echoing Trump’s invective of “woke obsessions” and “broken immigration”), Trudeau’s successor, Mark Carney, at this point looks likely to cruise to victory in the next national election on April 28.

Trump’s bullying has united Canadians—even Quebec separatists—like never before. “Elbows up!” (a hockey term for standing your ground) has become the national buzzword as Canucks react viscerally to the Trump regime’s obnoxious threats to their freedom and way of life. The national mood is one of anger, and profound sadness that the United States seems to have completely lost the plot.

“Fortress America” is a Recurring Bad Idea

Last column, I talked about the American propensity to take things to logical extremes. This is more evidence of that.

The United States has a habit of periodically whipping itself into a frenzy over metaphorical foreign invasions (even though it hasn’t experienced an actual invasion for nearly two centuries). When that happens, public policies reflect bunker mentalities and the border becomes a fortress wall. This is worse than unseemly; it puts enormous stress on the borderless global economy and the postwar Pax Americana World Order.

The weird thing is that America’s trade war with its northern and southern neighbors, which account for about a third of US trade, pretty much came out of nowhere. In the case of Canada, it’s just plain absurd. Canada and the United States have had surprisingly porous borders and hand-in-glove relations for generations. Despite what Trump may claim, no country has been as supportive of both American trade terms and war efforts (participating in basically every postwar American overseas military campaign) as Canada has.

Even in calmer times, “Fortress America” is often the first thing one experiences when approaching the border. I personally have faced harassing American Customs officials waxing racist about the fact I’m a white guy with a Japanese passport (something I’ve never, incidentally, experienced at the Japanese border), and then they would send me to secondary for a few hours until I missed my connecting flight. (My worst experience was at Calgary Airport, where you actually face American police on Canadian soil before you board your plane.)

This attitude doesn’t seem to have rubbed off on Canada. Even in Alberta, the place I would expect it most, I have not experienced any animosity towards people from America, even from the random shopkeepers and clerks I’ve struck up conversations with.

Maybe I’ve been lucky so far, but everyone I’ve talked to basically just laments how the US government is destroying one of the most constructive and productive international relationships in history.

Yes, Canadians will now buy anything but American if they can and take their vacations anywhere but the United States. Travel to the United States from Canada has already plummeted by 70% so far this year. But so far, Canadians seem to be distinguishing the country (or at least the person on top) from the American people in general.

That’s pretty enlightened. I’m not sure many Americans, with their steady diet of chauvinistic propaganda in the right-wing media ecosystem justifying anything Trump does, would be as discrete.

Dumb is as Dumb Does

The Wall Street Journal has called this “the dumbest trade war in history.” I will echo that and call it the dumbest territorial dispute in history. Last Friday, Prime Minister Carney announced that, “The old relationship we had with the United States, based on deepening integration of our economies and tight security and military cooperation, is over,” adding that Canada will have to “dramatically reduce” its reliance on its southern neighbor.

So much quantifiable opportunity and trust between two prosperous societies has been squandered, for no good reason beyond the venality of one man. As the world seemingly divides into China-Russia-United States spheres of influence, this wanton destruction of sovereign goodwill only weakens the North American sphere.

Meanwhile, let’s see if I have another bad experience crossing the US border this time. If I haven’t been renditioned to an ICE facility in Louisiana, you’ll hear from me again next month.

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The post Visible Minorities: Letter from Canada appeared first on SNA Japan.

Judicial v. Presidential Power [The Status Kuo]

The most common questions I receive from readers these days concern the role and power of our federal courts, particularly as we face increasingly high-stakes constitutional showdowns between the executive and judicial branches. Many observers and analysts, including myself, believe we have already tumbled over the cliff into a full-blown constitutional crisis.

One thing is clear: The Trump White House keeps losing in court. It’s getting hit with restraining orders and injunctions from dozens of federal judges over its illegal seizures and renditions of immigrants, its unconstitutional impoundment of funds, the mass layoffs of federal workers, the sledgehammer DOGE has taken to federal agencies, the targeting of liberal law firms and universities, and its discriminatory treatment of the trans community in healthcare and the military.

But what good is a federal court order if it can’t be enforced or simply won’t be obeyed? Will the court start to hold officials in contempt? And what happens if the White House simply starts pardoning anyone who is found in contempt?

Legal experts disagree over how much leverage the federal courts really have in this crisis. I found the writings of Prof. Tobias Barrington Wolff, who teaches at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, helpful in sorting out judicial versus executive power. So I brought him in for a conversation that I hope will help shed light on the extent, and limitations, of each.

To read it, subscribe to The Big Picture substack if you’re not already a recipient of our newsletter. You can choose the free option—but we do love our paid supporters!

Subscribe Me To the Big Picture!

After subscribing, visit the homepage of The Big Picture and check out the piece, “The Looming Constitutional Showdown Between Trump And The Courts.”

Hope you find it interesting and helpful!

Jay

“Liberation Day,” My Ass [The Status Kuo]

April 2nd is “Liberation Day,” says Trump.

Tomorrow, Trump plans to announce a full range of new “Liberation Day” tariffs. They will spread the pain beyond China, Canada and Mexico, more widely impacting the EU, South Korea and Japan, to name a few big trading partners.

Trump has been so sporadic and inconsistent with his tariff messaging that it’s hard to know what he plans to do or when he plans to do it. Last week, he raised tariffs on imported cars by 25 percent, saying over the weekend that he “couldn’t care less” if that causes prices on foreign cars to rise.

Perhaps the unpredictability is the point, and he hopes his “mad king” approach will keep our trading partners off balance. But his mercurial browbeating over tariffs has now led to some larger issues and developments that are worth understanding.

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The markets have tanked in response

There is little doubt that the reaction of world and U.S. markets to Trump’s trade war saber rattling has been quite negative. Indeed, they have pretty much tanked the markets, with the S&P 500 posting its worst month since 2022.

Consumer confidence is plunging, and Americans are already spending less in anticipation of higher prices.

Trump has had to adjust his messaging in response. He has not ruled out the possibility of a recession, and he has spoken about a “period of transition” and some “pain” until we get to this promised land.

But falling markets affect public perception, and recent polling indicates that Trump is faring poorly on the question of his economic stewardship. A recent Gallup poll puts his economic performance well under water, especially compared to his ratings in other areas. In fact, his approval rating on the economy is the worst among the questions asked—quite a blow for someone elected to fix things like inflation.

And a CBS News / YouGov poll shows a sharp decline in expectations among consumers from January. A plurality now believe that Trump’s policies are making them worse off financially, essentially flipping the number from two months earlier.

All this has shifted even while prices themselves have not yet shown much of the impact of tariffs. When they do, expect the public to grow increasingly unhappy with Trump and his tariffs.

Bailouts needed

Per reporting by the New York Times, the White House is now considering an emergency bailout package for U.S. farmers, who are expected to be hit by retaliatory measures from China.

The last time the U.S. had a tariff war with China, it had to bail out U.S. farmers to the tune of some $28 billion. Writes the Times:

The early discussions offer a tacit acknowledgment that Mr. Trump’s expansive tariffs could unleash financial devastation throughout the U.S. agricultural industry, a crucial voting base that the president similarly tried to safeguard during his 2018 trade war with China.

While the president has not announced any details of an aid package, his advisers have signaled in recent days that he could follow a playbook similar to the one he used in his first term, when he directed billions in payments to farmers who saw their exports to China plummet amid a trade war with Beijing.

Bailout money tends to assist the largest farms while proving insufficient to save small family farms from economic ruin. As CNBC reported back in 2020 when reviewing the impact of “U.S. trade aid” and the “Market Facilitation Program” in the form of federal farm bailouts:

  • U.S. trade aid mainly benefited large farms in its latest round, undermining a key pledge by the Trump administration and leaving family producers at risk of collapse as the economy entered a recession.

  • Roughly two-thirds of payments went to the top 10% percent of recipients at the beginning of the year, according to an analysis of U.S. Department of Agriculture records obtained by CNBC through the Freedom of Information Act.

  • The top half of recipients collected 95 percent of total payments in the $28 billion Market Facilitation Program.

The devastation of the last trade war on small farmers did not translate into a loss of rural voter support for Trump in 2024. But if the economy continues to struggle and key markets for their crops disappear as a result of tariffs, Democrats may have an opening, especially given the narrow margins by which Trump won in states with large agricultural communities such as Wisconsin and Pennsylvania.

Old enemies may be coming together to counter the U.S.

Reuters reported that some old enemies in Asia may have set aside historical differences to band together against the U.S. threat of a trade war.

Notably, China, South Korea and Japan, which still harbor deep suspicions and resentments of each other from World War II and the Japanese colonial era, held their first trade talks in five years. The impetus for the talks appears to be the threat that the U.S. now poses to their collective export economies.

The extent of this cooperation remains a bit unclear. Chinese state media is hyping the moment, claiming the parties have agreed to jointly respond to U.S. tariffs. Seoul called this assertion “somewhat exaggerated,” while Tokyo, likely alarmed by the implications, claimed there was no such discussion.

Still, even looking at the official joint statement, it is eyebrow raising for anyone who knows the long history of recrimination and mistrust among these parties. As for the joint communication, Reuters noted,

During Sunday’s meeting, the countries’ trade ministers agreed to speed up talks on a South Korea-Japan-China free trade agreement deal to promote “regional and global trade,” according to a statement released after the meeting.

A free trade agreement among these past rivals, to the exclusion of the U.S. while it hikes tariffs in a misguided effort to bring manufacturing home, would leave the U.S. at a strong competitive disadvantage going forward.

Pushing our biggest allies and trading partners toward our chief economic rival is a foolish, self-inflicted wound that only a stable genius like Trump could manage to pull off.

“Liberation Day” confusion

With just one day until “Liberation Day” and yuge new tariffs announced by Trump, the Wall Street Journal is now reporting that Trump’s own aides don’t yet know how Trump will proceed. Specifically, they aren’t sure whether Trump will order across-the-board tariffs or use a “reciprocal” tariff approach to punish certain countries.

So much for careful planning and sound policy making.

The two approaches, surprise surprise, are quite at odds with one another. Across the board tariffs serve Trump’s stated purpose of bringing manufacturing home to the U.S. by making it more expensive for companies to import goods rather than make them here. Reciprocal tariffs are more of a negotiating tool, designed to threaten and punish so that the U.S. can arrive at more favorable terms with its trading partners.

If Trump employs the latter (reciprocal tariffs) and not the former (across-the-board tariffs), that will signal to manufacturers that he’s not serious about permanent cost increases on imports, so there would be no reason to move manufacturing home.

But if he employs only across-the-board tariffs, that will send a signal to trading partners that he’s not interested in negotiating at all.

If he winds up imposing a mixture of the two, no one will know what policy he is trying to serve, if any really exists. That will lead to further uncertainty, meaning pullbacks by consumers and manufacturers, more pressure on the markets, the loss of foreign export markets, and a mad scramble by our trading partners to cut new deals with one another.

Seen in this light, Liberation Day is really more about the rest of the world liberating itself out from under the yoke of U.S. trade bullying, all while families and farmers find themselves “liberated” from their savings and their incomes.

09:00 AM

The Normalization Of Autocracy [Techdirt]

The White House Correspondents Association has just capitulated to pressure from the Trump administration by removing comedian Amber Ruffin from its annual dinner. Their stated reason? “To ensure the focus is not on the politics of division.” This seemingly minor capitulation reveals something profound about how democracy dies—not through dramatic confrontation, but through a thousand small surrenders dressed up as civility, bridge-building, and institutional preservation.

Let’s be absolutely clear about what happened: A comedian called members of an administration implementing policies that deport people to face torture without due process “murderers” who aren’t “human beings.” The administration demanded she be removed. And instead of defending the principle of free expression—supposedly the cornerstone value of a press organization—the WHCA unanimously backed down.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And no amount of high-minded rhetoric about “re-envisioning our dinner tradition” can disguise what this represents: the normalization of autocracy through the quiet surrender of institutions that should be democracy’s strongest defenders.

This pattern has become distressingly familiar. Institutions faced with authoritarian pressure justify their capitulation as pragmatism, as bridge-building, as focusing on what “really matters.” But with each surrender, the space for democratic resistance narrows. With each concession, autocratic behavior becomes more normalized. With each institutional compromise, the cost of standing firm increases.

What makes this particular surrender so revealing is how it exposes the moral compromise at the heart of institutional responses to democratic backsliding. The WHCA isn’t some random organization—it’s a body explicitly dedicated to protecting press freedom. Its very purpose is to defend the right to speak truth to power. Yet when actually confronted with power’s displeasure, they didn’t just modify their approach—they unanimously abandoned it.

The language of their surrender is particularly telling. By framing a comedian’s criticism of an administration implementing objectively cruel policies as “the politics of division,” they implicitly position resistance to autocracy as equivalent to autocracy itself. This both-sides framing, where calling out authoritarian behavior is treated as equally problematic as the behavior itself, reveals a profound moral confusion about what democracy requires.

Democracy doesn’t depend on everyone being polite to each other. It doesn’t require critics of power to moderate their language so that those in power don’t feel uncomfortable. What democracy absolutely requires is that power be held accountable—that its abuses be named clearly, that institutions stand firm against authoritarian pressure, that the right to criticize those in power be defended even when that criticism is harsh.

What’s most disturbing about the WHCA’s capitulation is how it reflects a broader pattern of institutional surrender. From media organizations that prioritize access over accountability, to universities abandoning academic freedom in the face of political pressure, to corporations quietly accommodating authoritarian demands to maintain market position—our democratic institutions are failing at precisely the moment when they should be standing firm.

This dynamic creates what political scientists call “democratic erosion”—a process where democracy isn’t overthrown in a dramatic coup, but gradually hollowed out from within as its institutional guardians surrender its core principles one by one. Each surrender is justified as a practical necessity, as avoiding unnecessary conflict, as focusing on what “really matters.” But what could matter more than defending democracy itself?

The WHCA’s decision reflects a profound misunderstanding of the current moment. They appear to believe that by removing a potential source of conflict, they’re preserving their institutional role. But in an autocratic system, institutions don’t maintain their independence by accommodation—they survive only as long as they’re useful to power. By demonstrating their willingness to self-censor in response to government pressure, the WHCA hasn’t preserved its independence; it has signaled its fundamental malleability.

What makes this particularly dangerous is how it shifts the Overton window of acceptable government behavior. When an administration can successfully pressure a press organization to remove a critic, that success becomes a precedent for more aggressive interventions. Today it’s removing a comedian from a dinner; tomorrow it’s demanding the firing of reporters whose coverage is deemed unfair. Each successful intervention makes the next one easier.

To frame this capitulation as “bridge-building” rather than surrendering to power is, to use a term I don’t employ lightly, gaslighting. It’s attempting to convince us that defending basic democratic principles is somehow divisive, that holding power accountable is somehow partisan, that standing firm against authoritarian pressure is somehow counterproductive.

This isn’t bridge-building—it’s burning the bridges of democratic accountability while pretending to strengthen them. It’s abandoning the very principles that make a free press possible while claiming to celebrate them. It’s normalizing autocracy while pretending to preserve democracy.

The institutions we’ve trusted to defend democratic norms are failing us—not because they’re being violently overthrown, but because they’re voluntarily surrendering their independence in the name of civility, access, and institutional preservation. They’re choosing the appearance of normality over the reality of resistance, prioritizing their short-term institutional comfort over their long-term democratic purpose.

What’s perhaps most distressing is how quickly this surrender happened. One complaint from a White House official about harsh criticism, and an institution ostensibly dedicated to press freedom unanimously abandons its plans. When resistance collapses this easily, what hope is there for holding the line against more significant authoritarian pressures?

We must recognize these small surrenders for what they are: not pragmatic accommodations, but moral abdications that cumulatively threaten democracy itself. Every institution that bends to authoritarian pressure makes it harder for others to stand firm. Every principle abandoned in the name of civility weakens the foundations of democratic governance.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And no amount of institutional compromise will protect democracy if the institutions themselves abandon the principles they were created to defend. The path to autocracy isn’t paved with dramatic confrontations but with quiet capitulations justified as reasonable accommodations to power.

The WHCA’s surrender is a warning—not just about a dinner or a comedian, but about how democracy dies. Not with a bang, but with a careful, consensus-driven press release explaining why principled resistance to power is simply too divisive to maintain.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.

08:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 黒 [Kanji of the Day]

✍11

小2

black

コク

くろ くろ.ずむ くろ.い

黒い   (くろい)   —   black
黒字   (くろじ)   —   the black
目黒   (めぐろ)   —   Meguro City (special ward of Tokyo)
黒木   (くろき)   —   unbarked lumber
黒人   (くろうと)   —   expert
大黒   (だいこく)   —   god of wealth
大黒柱   (だいこくばしら)   —   central pillar (of a building)
黒板   (こくばん)   —   blackboard
黒星   (くろぼし)   —   black spot
真っ黒   (まっくろ)   —   pitch black

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 憬 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

yearn for, aspire to, admire

ケイ

あこが.れる

憧憬   (しょうけい)   —   longing
憬れる   (あこがれる)   —   to long for
憬れ   (あこがれ)   —   yearning
憧憬れる   (あこがれる)   —   to long for

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

New Priorities for GIMP [GIMP]

Hi! I’m one of the contributor for GIMP’s development. You might be familiar with my work on moving “About GIMP” to the bottom of the help menu and other vitally important improvements to GIMP.

GIMP 3.0 was a big release, and we’ve gotten a lot of feedback from users since then. While Jehan is busy with bug fixes, code review, and administrative work, he’s asked me to take over certain duties to ease the burden on him.

Therefore, I am proud to announce a new priority for GIMP 3.2: File Format support!

It’s true that GIMP already supports a wide range of images such as the very useful Esm Software PIX format. However, there are so many more types of images in the world that I believe GIMP should support. Supporting all image formats - no matter how supposedly “obscure” - is crucial to maintaining access to our shared digital culture. The first format in this new campaign is Jeff’s Image Format!

Image of icebergs, converted from .jif format with GIMP
Example JIF image from Jeff’s website, converted with GIMP - authorship and copyright unsure

Jeff’s Image Format is a variation of the GIF standard, created in the late 1990s. It was intended to get around potential legal issues with the patented LZW compression used in GIFs, by using a LZ77-derived compression instead. The format is otherwise nearly identical to GIF (save for the JIFF99a magic number), making it an easy target for import support in GIMP. Furthermore, it helps you to be right no matter how you pronounce GIF!

While you’ll have to wait until GIMP 3.2 to experience importing JIF images, you can check out the merge request for Jeff’s Image Format support in GIMP to tide yourself over until that glorious day! If you have any sample images you’d like to contribute, please share on the issue tracker.

I am so proud to lead this new initiative for GIMP, and I believe it will take us (and open source image editing in general) in an exciting new direction. I look forward to this journey with you all!

(At least until Jehan gets back and sees that I’ve posted this)

Example of Jeff's Image Format animation, converted from .jif format with GIMP
Example Animated JIF image from Jeff’s website, converted with GIMP - authorship and copyright unsure

Quickies [The Stranger]

Got problems? Yes, you do! Email your question for the column to mailbox@savage.love! by Dan Savage 1. How does one find the clitoris? I’m told the clitoris is not hard to find — go north, young man — but if one tries to find it and one fails, one should pull over (or pull out) and ask for directions. 2. If someone tells you to “do whatever you want,” should you? Someone who says that and means will eventually say it to the wrong person and get hurt; they’re a danger to themselves. Someone who hears that and takes it as license to do whatever they want is a danger to others. So, a decent person — by definition — wouldn’t do whatever they wanted to someone who told them they could. And seeing as you’re a reader of mine, I’m hoping you’re a decent person. P.S. People who say “do whatever you want” don’t mean it. What they mean is this: “I’m too embarrassed to…

[ Read more ]

06:00 AM

Techdirt Podcast Episode 413: Ron Wyden On Chutzpah [Techdirt]

If you’re a Techdirt reader, you’re probably familiar with Senator Ron Wyden. In January, he released his new book It Takes Chutzpah, offering up a call for political boldness that feels even more relevant with every day that passes. This week, Senator Wyden joins Mike on the podcast to talk about the book and the political moment we find ourselves in.

You can also download this episode directly in MP3 format.

Follow the Techdirt Podcast on Soundcloud, subscribe via Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or grab the RSS feed. You can also keep up with all the latest episodes right here on Techdirt.

Sorry, You Don’t Get To Declare ‘Case Closed’ On War Crime Planning Over Signal [Techdirt]

Remember when government officials discussing sensitive information over unsecured channels was treated as a national crisis worthy of endless investigations? Apparently, those days are over. While Hillary Clinton’s email server spawned years of investigations and Attorney General Pam Bondi is still trying to rehash it, the White House wants us to simply forget about top officials planning potential war crimes over Signal just last week.

The contrast is striking. Clinton’s email server triggered multiple congressional investigations, FBI probes, and years of lawsuits. Yet when it comes to senior officials casually discussing military targeting plans over a consumer messaging app, we’re told there’s nothing more to see here.

And this isn’t just about partisan hypocrisy from the “lock her up” crowd, though that’s certainly on display. This is about national security officials casually planning military operations over a consumer messaging app — operations that may constitute war crimes in their targeting of civilian objects. The only reason we even know about this massive security breach is their stunning incompetence in adding Atlantic journalist Jeffrey Goldberg to their illegal chat group.

Even some top Republicans recognize this deserves serious investigation. But the White House has other plans.

The White House’s response? A dismissive wave of the hand and a “case closed” declaration from press secretary Karoline Leavitt:

“This case has been closed here at the White House as far as we are concerned,” press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters on Monday. “There have been steps made to ensure that something like that can obviously never happen again, and we’re moving forward,” she said.

And much of the media seems content to simply parrot this talking point:

Let’s be clear: uncritically reporting the White House’s “nothing to see here” stance isn’t journalism — it’s stenography. The press secretary’s statement isn’t just meaningless, it’s an active attempt to sweep serious actual violations under the rug.

This White House’s strategy is clear: lie, mislead, and deflect until the story dies. We’ve seen it with Bondi’s desperate “but her emails” deflection last week, and we’re seeing it again with this premature “case closed” declaration.

But there are plenty of things in this story that require investigation:

  • How did multiple senior officials decide it was totally acceptable to plan military operations over a consumer messaging app?
  • What other sensitive discussions have happened on unsecured channels such as Signal?
  • Have these conversations been recorded, as required under the Federal Records Act?
  • Have other illegal commercial chats been scrubbed to see how many outsiders were allowed in to them like Goldberg was?
  • How did they fuck up so badly to add an external person (incredibly, a reporter) to this illegal chat?
  • Who approved targeting civilian infrastructure, and what was their legal justification?
  • What “steps have been made” to prevent this from happening again, and why should we trust them?

The media’s job isn’t to parrot White House talking points — it’s to uncover the truth. And the truth here is explosive: top government officials casually planned what appear to be war crimes over an unsecured channel, and we only know about it because they accidentally included a journalist in their illegal discussions.

If the White House (and Congress) won’t investigate, then the media must. The administration clearly doesn’t care if we know they’re wielding national security laws as political weapons while ignoring actual security breaches. But the public should care deeply about this cynical abuse of power. When national security becomes just another partisan cudgel, we’re not just undermining the rule of law — we’re creating a system where real threats to national security go uninvestigated while manufactured scandals consume years of attention and resources.

04:00 AM

More History To Be Erased As Trump Strips Smithsonian Funding For Anything ‘Anti-American’ [Techdirt]

Anything that doesn’t jibe with Donald Trump’s white male-centric worldview must go. Whatever is deemed “woke” — no matter its basis in factual history — must be excised. If tossing aside DEI means pretending blacks, women, and other non-white, non-male people never contributed anything to this country, so be it. If stroking off the far right and its quasi-theocracy aspirations means turning the US into King George’s Great Britain, I guess that’s just the price we have to pay to live in a “free” society.

The latest assault on history by this administration is a bit more horrific than its previous efforts. Wiping out DEI initiatives caused considerable (and deliberate) collateral damage to documentation of the contributions of immigrants, non-whites, women, and LGBTQ+ to the rich tapestry that is American history. This one is more targeted, but that only means there will be no collateral damage. Everything harmed here will be deliberate.

In this recent executive order targeting the Smithsonian Institution, Trump plainly states he’s here to rewrite US history in his own image.

The Order directs the Vice President, who is a member of the Smithsonian Board of Regents, to work to eliminate improper, divisive, or anti-American ideology from the Smithsonian and its museums, education and research centers, and the National Zoo.

The Order directs the Administration to work with Congress to ensure that future Smithsonian appropriations: (1) prohibit funding for exhibits or programs that degrade shared American values, divide Americans by race, or promote ideologies inconsistent with Federal law; and (2) celebrate women’s achievements in the American Women’s History Museum and do not recognize men as women.

The Vice President will work with congressional leaders to appoint members to the Smithsonian Board of Regents who are committed to advancing the celebration of America’s extraordinary heritage and progress.

That’s from the fact sheet accompanying the executive order. And, unfortunately, there’s a stooge right there waiting to be activated: JD Vance, who — as Musk’s understudy/nominal Vice President — is granted a position on the Smithsonian’s board of regents. It’s a government entity, but one that has rarely seen direct federal government interference in its day-to-day work.

The second paragraph of the fact sheet is extremely disturbing. It targets things that “degrade shared American values” — a list that would certainly include America’s century of slavery and the several decades of segregation that follows it. It would also include anything detailing the United States’ treatment of Native Americans, which includes genocide, rampant racism, and ongoing attempts to strip away what few rights Native Americans still possess. It might also highlight the routine abuse of immigrants, wartime internment camps, war atrocities, CIA coup attempts, police violence, child labor, and the refusal to treat all citizens as equal for most of Americas history. All of these things are part of American history. And every single one of these could be described as “degrading American values” and “promoting ideologies inconsistent with federal law.”

And yet, those are things most likely to be removed first or, at the very least, denied funding by Trump and Vance. While there’s a bone being thrown to women (although I doubt Trump is here to champion abortions rights or the success of the women’s suffrage movement), it’s only there to ensure that “men” do not get recognized as “women.”

Why is this such a problem? And why does Trump think the Smithsonian should be stripped of funding for exhibits straddling this men/women thing that seems to unduly trouble the world’s last consumer of whatever is the Aqua Net of spray tanning agents? It’s all explained (I guess?) in the actual executive order. And that order opens with a sentence that proves the adage “every accusation is an admission.”

Over the past decade, Americans have witnessed a concerted and widespread effort to rewrite our Nation’s history, replacing objective facts with a distorted narrative driven by ideology rather than truth.  This revisionist movement seeks to undermine the remarkable achievements of the United States by casting its founding principles and historical milestones in a negative light.  Under this historical revision, our Nation’s unparalleled legacy of advancing liberty, individual rights, and human happiness is reconstructed as inherently racist, sexist, oppressive, or otherwise irredeemably flawed.

“Over the past decade?” From what I’ve seen, it’s only been over the past three months that I’ve witnessed a “concerted” effort to “rewrite our Nation’s history.”

The stuff making Trump so angry someone else wrote up an entire diatribe, called it an “executive order,” and asked him to drag his Sharpie across the signature box, includes all the things people say about Trump, his loyalists, his cabinet, and his voters. And, to a person, they’ll agree with these assertions when hanging out with their own. But, once again, everything listed as problematic is just something Trump doesn’t actually think is wrong.

For example, the Smithsonian American Art Museum today features “The Shape of Power:  Stories of Race and American Sculpture,” an exhibit representing that “[s]ocieties including the United States have used race to establish and maintain systems of power, privilege, and disenfranchisement.”  The exhibit further claims that “sculpture has been a powerful tool in promoting scientific racism” and promotes the view that race is not a biological reality but a social construct, stating “Race is a human invention.”

The National Museum of African American History and Culture has proclaimed that “hard work,” “individualism,” and “the nuclear family” are aspects of “White culture.”  The forthcoming Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum plans on celebrating the exploits of male athletes participating in women’s sports.

The only way to read this is to take Trump at his word. The only reason he would want this removed or censored is because he truly believes white people should be able to do what they want to whoever they want, especially if those on the receiving end aren’t white and male. He doesn’t have a problem with the US government using race to “establish and maintain systems of power, privilege, and disenfranchisement.” He actually wants “white culture” to be the dominant force in America. And he seems to have a particular hard-on for something that happens so infrequently it doesn’t even amount to a statistical rounding error: male athletes participating in women’s sports.

Contrary to what some commenters believe about me, I actually think the United States is a great nation, or at least has the potential to become one. It isn’t one at the present and I don’t have a whole lot of hope for its future, given how things have gone over the last 15 years. But it’s a deeply flawed nation that has, historically, at least tried to eliminate its worst traits. But Trump wants to bring all the bad stuff back, and he wants to erase our history of improvement on the civil liberties front. It’s far more than disappointing. It’s sickening. It’s a retcon in which all the things that make this country better than it was will be buried and all the things that held us back will be treated as peaks of achievement, rather than the valleys of failure they always were and always will be.

Daily Deal: The Complete 2025 Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking Training Bundle [Techdirt]

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Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.

03:00 AM

The Lawless Evil Of Denying Due Process [Techdirt]

The U.S. government just demonstrated exactly why due process matters. In what should be a shocking admission, the Trump administration revealed in court that it had made a bit of an oopsie (they call it an “administrative error”) — one that resulted in trafficking a Maryland father with protected legal status to a Salvadoran prison. Their response to this horrific mistake? Not contrition or attempts to fix it, but rather an argument that U.S. courts have no jurisdiction to help bring him back.

This is what happens when you replace due process with authoritarian expediency. And it’s exactly what the MAGA movement is deliberately pushing for, as evidenced by Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan, who sneered at the very concept of due process during an ABC interview last week:

“Due process? What was Laken Riley’s due process? Where were all these young women that were killed and raped by members of TdA, where was their due process?”

In making this argument, Homan inadvertently reveals himself to be embracing the same twisted logic as those he claims to be fighting: criminals who feel that the ends justify any means, that due process is an inconvenient obstacle rather than a fundamental safeguard of justice. It’s the kind of thinking that leads directly to “administrative errors” that destroy innocent lives.

The entire point of the rule of law in a civilized society is that we’re better than that. We provide due process precisely because it’s the only way to ensure we don’t punish innocent people. If Homan and his department were actually doing their jobs properly, due process wouldn’t be an obstacle — it would be an opportunity to demonstrate the legitimacy of their actions through proper legal channels.

Instead, we have this fucking mess:

The Trump administration acknowledged in a court filing Monday that it had grabbed a Maryland father with protected legal status and mistakenly deported him to El Salvador, but said that U.S. courts lack jurisdiction to order his return from the megaprison where he’s now locked up.

That’s one hell of an “administrative error.”

Let’s be crystal clear: this wasn’t a “deportation” — deportation requires due process. This was human trafficking, plain and simple. A U.S. resident with legal protection was grabbed by government agents and forcibly transferred to a foreign labor camp.

What stands out in the court filing is the government’s cavalier attitude in the filing. They admit, with bureaucratic sterility, that they trafficked a man they knew had legal protection:

On March 15, although ICE was aware of his protection from removal to El Salvador, Abrego Garcia was removed to El Salvador because of an administrative error

The normal response to discovering you’ve made a catastrophic error that has imprisoned an innocent person in another country would be to fix it immediately. Instead, the government’s response is essentially “ah well, nothing we can do!” They actually argue that because they’ve already illegally trafficked him to a slave labor camp in El Salvador, U.S. courts have no power to help:

Here, Plaintiffs seek review of the legality of the Executive’s restraint of and removal of Abrego Garcia to El Salvador, leading to his present detention there…. (alleging Defendants “decided to deport Plaintiff Abrego Garcia without following the law”). Plaintiffs make it clear that the ultimate relief they seek is his return to the United States to live at liberty with his family… (alleging irreparable harm from separation from his family and asking “the Court to immediately order Defendants to take all steps reasonably available to them, proportionate to the gravity of the ongoing harm, to return Plaintiff Abrego Garcia to the United States.”) Because Plaintiffs seek Abrego Garcia’s release from allegedly unlawful detention on the grounds that it was effected illegally, they make a core habeas claim, and they must therefore bring it exclusively in habeas.

But there is no jurisdiction in habeas. Plaintiffs admit—as they must—that the United States does not have custody over Abrego Garcia. They acknowledge that there may be “difficult questions of redressability” in this case, reflecting their recognition that Defendants do not have “the power to produce” Abrego Garcia from CECOT in El Salvador. … But even more, they concede that Abrego Garcia is not in Defendants’ custody. Id. (asking the Court to order Defendants to “request that the government of El Salvador return Plaintiff to Defendants’ custody”). Despite their allegations of continued payment for Abrego Garcia’s detention, Plaintiffs do not argue that the United States can exercise its will over a foreign sovereign. The most they ask for is a court order that the United States entreat—or even cajole—a close ally in its fight against transnational cartels. This is not “custody” to which the great writ may run. This Court therefore lacks jurisdiction.

The government’s argument is essentially: “Yes, we illegally trafficked someone we knew we shouldn’t have touched, but since we’ve already done it and he’s in a foreign prison, U.S. courts are powerless to help.” While the DOJ’s jurisdictional argument may be technically correct under current law, the implications are horrifying.

This is precisely why due process exists in the first place.

It’s not just some bureaucratic inconvenience — it’s a vital safeguard against exactly this kind of nightmare scenario. Without due process protections, government agents can make “administrative errors” that result in trafficking innocent people to foreign prisons, then shrug and say “oops, nothing we can do!” when the mistake is discovered. And, before long, those “administrative errors” become convenient ways to get rid of anyone the powers that be dislike.

A few weeks ago, law professor Steve Vladeck wrote an important piece about why we have due process, noting that it is the main thing that “separates democratic legal systems from … less democratic legal systems.” In that piece, he responded to people telling him (a la Homan) that it was fine to remove gang members from the US without due process since they were so bad.

Against that backdrop, there’s just no good argument for refusing to provide comparable process to accused members of TdA before removing them from the country. I say this not because, contra some of my Twitter fans and e-mail correspondents, I support TdA and want to keep “rapists and murderers” at large in the United States. Rather, I say this because that kind of process is how any of us can have confidence that the folks being packed onto airplanes and whisked off to El Salvador are Venezuelan citizens and members of TdA—as opposed to U.S. citizens; political dissidents; or others whom the Trump administration would just as soon be rid of. Indeed, one need not believe that the government is acting maliciously to believe that errors will be made.

Vladeck wrote that warning just a week and a half ago — well before the DOJ’s admission of this “administrative error.” But this case isn’t an isolated incident. It’s part of an emerging pattern that demonstrates exactly why his concerns about due process are so vital.

Consider the growing list of victims: There’s Andry José Hernández Romero, a makeup artist. There’s Neri Alvarado, a bakery worker. Neither had any gang connections. Their “crimes”? Having tattoos. In Alvarado’s case, it was a tattoo promoting autism awareness. This is what passes for “evidence” of gang activity when you dispense with due process.

These aren’t isolated incidents. The flood of similar cases reveals a systematic dismantling of due process. Take Jerce Reyes Barrios, detailed in the New Yorker piece linked above:

Jerce Reyes Barrios, a thirty-six-year-old soccer player and youth coach, fled Venezuela last year after marching in anti-government protests. His immigration file cites two grounds for suspicion: a gesture he made while posing for a photo that was posted to social media and a tattoo of a crown on top of a soccer ball with a rosary and the word “Dios.” His lawyer, Linette Tobin, worked with his family to secure documents from the police in Venezuela to show that he hadn’t committed any crimes. They also tracked down Barrios’s tattoo artist. “He wanted a tattoo related to soccer,” the artist said in a legal declaration. “We searched on the internet and the ball with a crown caught our attention to represent the king of soccer, and he liked the idea.”

The same article quotes a Tren de Aragua expert confirming that the gang “does not use any tattoos as a form of gang identification” — yet tattoos remain the government’s primary “evidence” for trafficking people to foreign prisons. This is what happens when due process is replaced with prejudice and paranoia: innocent gestures become evidence of crimes, and basic fact-checking is discarded as an inconvenient obstacle.

When confronted with these facts, the response from MAGA leadership has been to double down on authoritarianism while attacking anyone who dares to question their methods. Take White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt’s revealing freakout of a response to reporter Andrew Feinberg when he simply asked about due process safeguards against mistaken identification:

“You can get classified by simply having certain symbols in your tattoos and wearing certain streetwear brands—that alone is enough to get someone classified as TdA and sent to El Salvador,” Feinberg said. 

“That’s not true, actually, Andrew,” Leavitt snapped. Feinberg insisted he was simply reading from court documents filed by the government. 

“No, according to Department of Homeland Security and the agents—have you talked to the agents who have been putting their lives on the line to detain these foreign terrorists who have been terrorizing our communities?” Leavitt asked. 

“I–I’m not denying that—” Feinberg said, but Leavitt continued.

“TdA is a vicious gang that has taken the lives of American women, and our agents on the front lines take up deporting these people with the utmost seriousness, and there is a litany of criteria that they use to ensure that these individuals qualify as foreign terrorists, and to ensure, to ensure that they qualify for deportation,” she said. 

“And shame on you, and shame on the mainstream media for trying to cover for these individuals who have—this is a vicious gang, Andrew! This is a vicious gang that has taken the lives of American women!”

“I’m not trying to cover for anyone,” Feinberg insisted, but Leavitt continued to attack Feinberg for even asking about the documents, once again unable to account for the government she purports to represent.

“And you said yourself there are eight criteria on that document! And you are questioning the credibility of these agents who are putting their life on the line to protect your life, and the life of everybody in this group and the life of everybody across the country? And their credibility should be questioned? They finally have a president who is allowing them to do their jobs, and God bless them for doing it,” Leavitt fumed.

The performative outrage is telling. If there truly is a “litany of criteria” that “ensure” proper identification of gang members, as Leavitt claims, then providing due process should be trivially easy. The government could simply present its evidence in court, where it would stand up to basic scrutiny. Their aggressive resistance to any kind of oversight suggests they know their “evidence” won’t withstand examination.

The historical parallels are impossible to ignore. In his piece, Vladeck highlights Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson’s prescient 1952 warning about due process:

[T]he Nazi regime in Germany installed a system of ‘protective custody’ by which the arrested could claim no judicial or other hearing process, and as a result the concentration camps were populated with victims of summary executive detention for secret reasons. . . . There are other differences, to be sure, between authoritarian procedure and common law, but differences in the process of administration make all the difference between a reign of terror and one of law. Quite unconsciously, I am sure, the Government’s theory of custody for ‘safekeeping’ without disclosure to the victim of charges, evidence, informers or reasons, even in an administrative proceeding, has unmistakable overtones of the ‘protective custody’ of the Nazis more than of any detaining procedure known to the common law. Such a practice, once established with the best of intentions, will drift into oppression of the disadvantaged in this country as surely as it has elsewhere.

Seven decades later, Jackson’s warning reads like a prophecy fulfilled. We now have a MAGA movement explicitly embracing the exact authoritarian tactics he feared: disappearing people through “administrative” mechanisms, trafficking them to offshore camps without due process, then declaring any “errors” in the process irreversible. The parallels to the “protective custody” system he described are not subtle.

The dangerous implications of this mindset are perfectly captured by MAGA Rep. Victoria Spartz, who recently declared at a town hall that:

“There is no due process if you come here illegally because you violated the law. Period! You violated the law, you are not entitled to due process.”

This statement reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of both law and logic that would be merely laughable if it weren’t so dangerous. Follow her “logic” to its inevitable conclusion: if merely being accused of breaking a law strips you of due process rights, then there is no rule of law at all. Under this framework, government agents need only accuse someone of a crime to justify trafficking them to a foreign prison camp. No evidence required. No hearing needed. Just an accusation.

This isn’t just wrong — it’s an explicit endorsement of exactly the kind of authoritarian system that Justice Jackson warned would “drift into oppression.” It creates a perfect circular logic: you lose your right to due process because you’re accused of a crime, and you have no way to challenge that accusation because you’ve lost your right to due process.

This is inhumane. It is unconscionably evil.

I tend to hate calling anyone’s actions “evil” as that’s a strong charge that feels loaded. But at some point you have to call it out for what it is. It is pure evil.

And just to confirm what kind of inhumane evil this all leads to, when confronted about the case of Abrego Garcia — who, again, the administration admits it wasn’t supposed to remove — Vice President JD Vance just flat out lied and claimed (falsely) that the court documents say he was a “convicted MS-13 gang member.”

JD Vance tweet: My comment is that according to the court document you apparently didn’t read he was a convicted MS-13 gang member with no legal right to be here. 

My further comment is that it’s gross to get fired up about gang members getting deported while ignoring citizens they victimize.

It’s quite something for JD Vance to accuse others of not reading the court document when it becomes clear that it is he who did not read the court document. Nowhere does it say he was a convicted MS-13 gang member, and the DOJ’s own filing admits that he had a legal right to be here. Even the replies to Vance’s tweet include a number of MAGA supporters asking why Vance is just making shit up.

The mask is slipping so badly that even reliable MAGA cheerleaders are recoiling in horror. Joe Rogan has admitted that the human trafficking program is “horrific.” Even Rod Dreher — who loved authoritarianism so much he literally moved to Hungary to live under an authoritarian leader — is saying “whoa, dude, too far.”

This is the line that due process draws: between a government bound by law and one ruled by whim, between justice and terror, between civilization and barbarism. When Trump, Homan, Leavitt, and Spartz argue against due process, they aren’t just attacking a legal principle — they’re attacking the very foundation of the rule of law itself.

Their vision of America is one where government agents can disappear anyone they want based on nothing more than an accusation, where “administrative errors” are features rather than bugs, and where the mere act of questioning their actions is treated as treason. They’ve made it crystal clear that they don’t believe in due process, the rule of law, or any coherent moral philosophy beyond raw power used to inflict suffering on those they deem unworthy of basic human dignity.

This isn’t just un-American. It’s a deliberate embrace of the exact authoritarian evil that America was supposed to resist.

12:00 AM

Arti 1.4.2 is released: RPC is stable, Conflux development continues [Tor Project blog]

Arti is our ongoing project to create a next-generation Tor client in Rust. Now we're announcing the latest release, Arti 1.4.2.

With this release, Arti's RPC interface is now officially stable, and ready for testing.

This release also continues development on the full Conflux implementation, to improve performance by sending traffic over multiple paths.

For full details on what we've done, and for information about many smaller and less visible changes as well, please see the CHANGELOG.

For more information on using Arti, see our top-level README, and the documentation for the arti binary.

Thanks to everybody who's contributed to this release, including abdul2801, disha, hjrgrn, Jérôme Charaoui, matt022, playbahn, vcrn, vijayabhaskar_78, yaucp.

Also, our deep thanks to the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor and our [other sponsors] for funding the development of Arti!

Credulous [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Where do con men come from?

There are three conditions that need to be met:

First, there needs to be rising societal pressure to get ahead, cut the line and find a win.

Second, there needs to be people willing to set aside their ethical principles to take advantage of others in their community.

And third, we need to be lulled into a state of unjustified credulity, eager to believe that seeds might be magical or that motion might be perpetual.

While all three of these conditions are present throughout time, they go in cycles.

And we’re having one right now.

We’re far too tolerant of ridiculous promises, particularly around tech, money and leadership. And instead of quickly learning to become a bit more skeptical, we get caught in a cycle of letting the con man (person, actually) off the hook.

Inevitably, when it ends badly, we overreact and become too risk averse, costing us nearly as much with our skepticism.

If someone tells you that they forgot to put the word ‘gullible’ in the new edition of the dictionary, don’t dismiss them out of hand, but yes, check first.

      

Jon Stewart And Ezra Klein Help GOP Paint Infrastructure Bill Broadband Grants As A Useless Boondoggle [Techdirt]

We’ve long noted how the 2021 infrastructure bill included $42.5 billion for broadband dubbed the Broadband, Equity, Access And Deployment (BEAD) program.

Managed by the NTIA and individual states, we’ve also noted how this money has taken a long time to get to the states for some good reasons. Namely they wanted to avoid the massive fraud and abuse that plagued earlier FCC programs (the Rural Digital Opportunity Fund) mismanaged by the Trump administration and exploited by numerous companies (including Elon Musk’s Starlink).

Under RDOF, the FCC didn’t really take the time to fix shitty U.S. broadband maps, resulting in a lot of wasted, duplicative taxpayer money. Or ensure that ISPs that bid for funding could actually deliver the broadband they claimed. That resulted in a bunch of companies defaulting on millions of dollars in bids. It was a giant mess resulting in a ton of waste, fraud, abuse, and legal problems.

So there’s a reason why the bigger, $42.5 billion BEAD program has more annoying red tape and is managed by a completely different agency. Much of that was to avoid earlier waste, mistargeted funds, and ineffective spending. It takes a long time to accurately map broadband, make sure money isn’t going to be wasted, and confirm ISPs can actually deliver the broadband they promise. Especially if you’re going to actually value the varying input of every single individual state and make sure the subsidies are tailored to their unique needs.

So yes, there were a lot of annoying restrictions with BEAD, but it’s not like they were introduced for bureaucracy’s sake. And the money, while late, was on the cusp of rolling out this year.

Unfortunately, the GOP seized on those delays to paint the whole program as a waste (ignoring their role in why the program has more restrictions). They’re also busy using these complaints to justify redirecting billions in BEAD money away from useful local fiber ISPs, and toward Elon Musk’s congested, expensive, ozone-layer depleting satellite broadband service.

Apparently thinking he was helping matters, NY Times columnist Ezra Klein recently went on Jon Stewart’s podcast to jump into this complicated policy issue and complain about the infrastructure bill. Unfortunately, when he gets to BEAD, his complaints lacked context and only help paint the entire program as an irredeemable waste:

“This is, I want to say something because it’s very important I say this, this is the Biden administration’s process for its own bill. They wanted this to happen. This is how liberal government works now.”

At the end of the interview Stewart is shocked to “learn” that a whole BEAD subsidy program was a complete and abject failure simply because Democrats really like bureaucracy and shot themselves in the foot for their own amusement (which isn’t true):

“I’m speechless, honestly. It’s far worse than I could have imagined. But the fact that they amputated their own legs on this is what’s so stunning.”

Klein and Stewart’s inference that BEAD is entirely a useless boondoggle were then picked up by numerous right wing pseudo-news outlets who further advertised the BEAD program to millions of Americans as a supposed pointless waste.

Which is a shame, because BEAD funding was really poised to help people. At least before the GOP and Trump administration began altering the program to the benefit of a conspiratorial billionaire bigot.

That’s not to suggest BEAD was perfect. There were a lot of annoying and overly cumbersome restrictions (though I argue a lot of them on issues of climate and labor were decorative and wouldn’t have been enforced), causing some ISPs in states like Minnesota to have reservations about applying.

It’s also not to say Democrats aren’t a hot mess on strategy and messaging. And especially on broadband policy, where most of their regulatory solutions are often decorative because of the party’s refusal to take on the real cause of shitty U.S. broadband: consolidated telecom monopoly power.

But quite generally, the BEAD program is a good thing. Driving affordable broadband to unserved locations is a good thing. Making sure we map broadband access accurately before throwing billions of dollars at a program is a good thing. It took a while, but the money was starting to flow this year to a lot of states in desperate need of better, more reliable, more affordable connectivity.

The problem is there’s just a long line of things Klein can’t be bothered to mention, presumably because he didn’t research the situation deeply enough to know.

Like the fact that many BEAD restrictions are a result of Trump-era fraud and mismanagement of previous programs. Or that many of the restrictions on labor and climate were somewhat decorative and never likely to be meaningfully enforced in a country whose regulators are being absolutely destroyed.

Or the fact that other Democratic broadband policy initiatives from that same year were very successful. Like the $25 billion in broadband expansion included in the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA). ARPA money is, right now, going toward tons of new fiber deployment all over the country. You probably didn’t hear about it because Democrats suck at messaging and the press doesn’t care about infrastructure.

But in many towns and cities, ARPA broadband grants are funding open access community-owned fiber networks resulting in gigabit fiber for as little as $60 a month. These are long-marginalized minority, rural, and low-income neighborhoods that have never been connected before suddenly seeing cheaper broadband than seen in many affluent cities. Had you heard about that? Had Klein?

I think Klein was maybe well intentioned but his simplistic understanding of the debate he jumped into didn’t actually help anybody. Which is often the case when hot take pundits wander outside their core areas of expertise (see: Nate Silver on global pandemics).

From what I can glean from Klein’s current “Abundance” promotional book tour and the surrounding puerile debate, one of his fairly unoriginal theses is the fairly center-right (and sometimes every accurate) complaint that there’s just too much pesky, burdensome regulation.

But in the interviews I’ve seen (whether it’s Stewart or Lex Fridman) he mostly floats over the fact that authoritarians and a broken Supreme Court are completely destroying the regulatory state with what will likely be broad and potentially fatal repercussions.

Myopically fixating on the Democrats’ love of bureaucracy while Trumpism burns functional federal governance to the ground is… odd? You’re bickering about whether California high speed rail sees too much red tape while Trump completely dismantles all labor rights, consumer protections, public safety standards, corporate oversight, and the social safety net?

It’s like bickering over the drapes while an arsonist sets the house on fire.

Genuinely: the red tape affixed to BEAD really is the very least of our problems right now. Authoritarians are absolutely demolishing what’s left of U.S. consumer protection and oversight of shitty predatory monopolies like AT&T and Comcast. Is there some specific reason Klein doesn’t want to give this the same level of hyperventilation while on his book tour trying to maximize book sales?

Again, I think Democrats suck at messaging and strategy and think the party needs to be completely rebuilt with smarter, younger, hungrier, more creative members. I agree that U.S. telecom subsidization is historically a hot mess. I agree U.S. regulation often falls short, adds harmful counterproductive and unnecessary layers, can often be performative, or aids incumbents. I’ve probably spilled more ink about the shittiness of sloppy telecom subsidization and telecom regulatory capture than literally anybody alive.

I guess all I’m asking is for pundits to actually understand the subject they’re talking about before opening their mouths. Klein doesn’t really help U.S. broadband with his comments; his selective, simplistic podcast hot take only really propped up the GOP narrative that this program was irredeemable when, while imperfect and annoyingly bureaucratic, it actually is a good-faith effort at improvement.

Pluralistic: Anyone who trusts an AI therapist needs their head examined (01 Apr 2025) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



Sigmund Freud's study with his famous couch. Behind the couch stands an altered version of the classic Freud portrait in which he is smoking a cigar. Freud's clothes and cigar have all been tinted in bright neon colors. His head has been replaced with the glaring red eye of HAL9000 from Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey.' His legs have been replaced with a tangle of tentacles.

Anyone who trusts an AI therapist needs their head examined (permalink)

There's a debate to be had about whether AI chatbots make good psychotherapists. This is not an area of my expertise, so I'm not going to weigh in on that debate. But nevertheless, I think that if you use an AI therapist, you need your head examined:

https://www.salon.com/2025/03/30/some-argue-ai-therapy-can-break-down-mental-health-stigma–others-warn-it-could-make-it-worse/

I'm not an expert on psychotherapy, but I am an expert on privacy and corporate misconduct, and holy shit is the idea of a chatbot psychotherapist running on some Big Tech cloud a terrible idea. Because while I'm no expert on therapy, I have benefited from therapy, and I know this for certain: therapy requires confidentiality.

Shrinks are incredibly careful about privacy. For example: when my brother was getting married, my therapist was invited to the wedding. His daughter and my brother's fiancee were close friends, and my brother's fiancee had grown up staying over at their house and wanted her friend and her friend's parents at the wedding. My therapist sat me down and said, "Now listen, I take confidentiality very seriously. If you want me to, I will pretend not to know you at the wedding. No one needs to know that you're seeing me or – any therapist."

I told him I didn't mind people knowing I'd seen him, but just that little fastidious gesture confirmed the trust I'd put in Alan. It meant that I could openly and freely discuss things I'd never told anyone before, and that I never told anyone ever again. Having those genuinely open conversations transformed my life, for the better.

Now consider the chatbot therapist: what are its privacy safeguards? Well, the companies may make some promises about what they will and won't do with the transcripts of your AI sessions, but they are lying. Of course they're lying! AI companies lie about what their technology can do (of course). They lie about what their technologies will do. They lie about money. But most of all, they lie about data.

There is no subject on which AI companies have been more consistently, flagrantly, grotesquely dishonest than training data. When it comes to getting more data, AI companies will lie, cheat and steal in ways that would seem hacky if you wrote them into fiction, like they were pulp-novel dope fiends:

https://arstechnica.com/ai/2025/03/devs-say-ai-crawlers-dominate-traffic-forcing-blocks-on-entire-countries/

When an AI company tells you it won't use your intimate secrets as training data, they are lying. Of course they're lying! This isn't just any data, it's data that isn't replicated elsewhere on the internet. It's rare – it's unique. It's a competitive advantage. AI companies will 100%, without exception, totally use your private therapy data as training data.

What's more: they will leak your therapy sessions. They will leak them because they can't figure out how to prevent models from vomiting up their training data verbatim:

https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/01/chatgpt-memorization-lawsuit/677099/

But they'll also leak because tech companies leak like hell. They are crawling with insider threats. If the AI company sticks around long enough, it'll leak your secrets. And if it goes bankrupt? That's even worse! When tech companies go bust, the first thing their creditors do is sell off their warehouses full of private data. The more private and compromising that data is, the harder they'll try to sell it:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/03/how-delete-your-23andme-data

Now, maybe you're thinking, "OK, but that's a small price to pay if we can finally get therapy for everyone." After all, the country – the world – is in the midst of a terrible mental health crisis and there's a dire shortage of therapists.

Now, let's stipulate for the moment to the idea that chatbots are substitutes for human therapists – that, at the very least, they're better than nothing. I don't think that's true, but let's say it is. Even so, this is a bad tradeoff.

Here, try this thought-experiment: someone figures out a great business-model for to pay for therapy for poor people. "We turned therapy into a livestreamed reality TV show. If you're too poor to afford a therapist, you can go to one of our partially trained livestreamer therapists, who will broadcast all of your secrets to anyone who watches. There's a permanent archive of these sessions, and the worst people in the world comb through it 24/7 looking for embarrassing stuff to repost and go viral with. What, you don't like that? Oh, I see: you just don't think poor people deserve mental health. I guess the perfect really is the enemy of the good."

This gambit is called "predatory inclusion." Think of Spike Lee shilling cryptocurrency scams as a way to "build Black wealth" or Mary Kay promising to "empower women" by embroiling them in a bank-account-draining, multi-level marketing cult. Having your personal, intimate secrets sold, leaked, published or otherwise exploited is worse for your mental health than not getting therapy in the first place, in the same way that having your money stolen by a Bitcoin grifter or Mary Kay is worse than not being able to access investment opportunities in the first place.

But it's not just people struggling with their mental health who shouldn't be sharing sensitive data with chatbots – it's everyone. All those business applications that AI companies are pushing, the kind where you entrust an AI with your firm's most commercially sensitive data? Are you crazy? These companies will not only leak that data, they'll sell it to your competition. Hell, Microsoft already does this with Office365 analytics:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/02/24/gwb-rumsfeld-monsters/#bossware

These companies lie all the time about everything, but the thing they lie most about is how they handle sensitive data. It's wild that anyone has to be reminded of this. Letting AI companies handle your sensitive data is like turning arsonists loose in your library with a can of gasoline, a book of matches, and a pinky-promise that this time, they won't set anything on fire.

(Image: Zde, CC BY-SA 4.0, modified)


Hey look at this (permalink)



A Wayback Machine banner.

Object permanence (permalink)

#15yrsago Noteworthy Modern Occurances: the Digital Economy Bill https://www.openrightsgroup.org/blog/disconnection-notices-served/

#15yrsago Digital Economy Bill: the last hours https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gOyg1GUY18U

#5yrsago Turn on wifi sharing https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#digital-divide

#5yrsago Coronavirus travel posters https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#jennifer-baer

#5yrsago How you are subsidizing the otherwise unprofitable Fox News https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#unfoxmycablebox

#5yrsago Ted Chiang on pandemics as idiot plots https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#disaster-capitalism

#5yrsago Bird's "Black Mirror" mass layoffs https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#2-mins

#5yrsago UK public health official endorses official reagents for covid tests https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#unauthorized-reagents

#5yrsago A promising, plausible plan for "privacy-preserving" surveillance https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#pepp-pt

#5yrsago Private equity titan squats on empty hospital https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/02/eff-livestream-today/#joel-kills

#1yrago Prison-tech company bribed jails to ban in-person visits https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/02/captive-customers/#guillotine-watch


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

A photo of me onstage, giving a speech, pounding the podium.


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

A photo of me onstage, giving a speech, pounding the podium.



A screenshot of me at my desk, doing a livecast.

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

  • Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It, Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
    https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/

  • Unauthorized Bread: a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2026

  • Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026

  • The Memex Method, Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2026



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

  • Enshittification: a nonfiction book about platform decay for Farrar, Straus, Giroux. Status: second pass edit underway (readaloud)

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

  • Picks and Shovels, a Martin Hench noir thriller about the heroic era of the PC. FORTHCOMING TOR BOOKS FEB 2025

Latest podcast: Why I don't like AI art https://craphound.com/news/2025/03/30/why-i-dont-like-ai-art/


This work – excluding any serialized fiction – is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. That means you can use it any way you like, including commercially, provided that you attribute it to me, Cory Doctorow, and include a link to pluralistic.net.

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Quotations and images are not included in this license; they are included either under a limitation or exception to copyright, or on the basis of a separate license. Please exercise caution.


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"When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla" -Joey "Accordion Guy" DeVilla

ISSN: 3066-764X

Premier League Subpoena Requires Cloudflare to Unmask Streaming Pirates [TorrentFreak]

premier leagueAs England’s top football competition, the Premier League draws hundreds of millions of viewers from all over the world.

Aside from the sportive stakes, the Premier League also has a vested interest in selling broadcast rights. These rights generate billions of pounds in revenue per year; a staggering amount unmatched by any other football league.

Yet, other leagues are not the main threat to these broadcast revenues. Instead, piracy has emerged as the Premier League’s main nemesis, as many football fans turn to cheaper pirate streaming services to watch ‘the people’s game’.

In recent years, the Premier League has tried several legal avenues to tackle the piracy problem. In addition to obtaining blocking orders in multiple countries, the organization has been a driving force behind several lawsuits, some of which resulted in prison sentences.

Cloudflare & Pirate Sites

While the football league typically finds the law on its side, identifying its ‘opponents’ isn’t always easy. Operators of streaming sites and services are typically aware of the legal risks and do their best to remain anonymous. Presumably as part of this strategy, they use services made available by Cloudflare.

Cloudflare doesn’t make the operators of piracy sites ‘anonymous’ but it does shield their hosting locations from public view. Rightsholders can overcome this barrier through formal complaints, after which Cloudflare identifies the hosting services. To obtain additional information, however, rightsholders have to go to court.

A few days ago, the Premier League took this follow-up step by asking a California federal court to issue a DMCA subpoena. The request identifies 38 target pirate streaming sites, many of which use multiple domains. Through the court the Premier League hopes to identify the persons connected to these domains.

Premier League Requests Action

Before going to court, the Premier League’s American law firm, Hagan Noll & Boyle, sent a takedown notice to Cloudflare, asking it to terminate a few dozen accounts that are deemed problematic.

“Cloudflare is asked to remove or disable access to Premier League’s copyrighted works, which, based on the infringement that has occurred to date through the websites and domain names identified above, will continue to be infringed in this same manner throughout the Premier League season,” the law firm wrote.

The letter identifies the streaming site domains, some of which redirect to other domains. In addition, there’s a ‘backend’ link pointing out where the pirated football streams for these sites are being sourced.

Letter to Cloudflare

epl

Several of the targeted domains use the .CFD gTLD, which is targeted at clothing brands and fashion houses, but also seems popular among a subset of pirate site operators. Others use more generic .com, .org and .tv domains.

One of the streaming sites

epl stream

At first glance, totalsportek.space appears to be the most popular domain name, with more than 17 million visits in February, according to SimilarWeb.

Cloudflare Must Identify Operators

The Premier League’s letter didn’t result in the termination of any Cloudflare accounts. Totalsportek.space and others remain online, using Cloudflare’s services, but the California federal court did sign off on the DMCA subpoena.

The subpoena requires Cloudflare to hand over information that can help to identify the associated account holders, including any names, physical addresses, IP addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, payment information, account updates, and account histories.

Known to comply with these subpoenas, Cloudflare is required to hand over the requested information before April 3. Whether the Premier League will find any of the information usable is another matter. Many pirate site owners use inaccurate data, and financial trails can quickly reach a dead end.

The subpoena

dmca subpoena

A copy of the issued DMCA subpoena is available here (pdf) and the Premier League’s declaration can be found here (pdf). Below is a list of all the targeted domain names.

– 90phut2.info
– 310.tv —> 310002.tv
– 808fubo.com
– keelalive.com
– 926.tv —> 926002.tv
– ball24.tv
– banhkhuc37.info
– baygonhero.com
– cakhia34.xyz/cakhia54.xyz —> cakhia60.xyz
– dollarformergm3hp.shop/fightfloorwt4ea5l.shop —> singlevariousht1etk0.sbs
– freestreams-live.my —> freestreams-live.mp
– gavang.link/gavang4.tv/gavang5.tv/gavang6.tv —> gavang13.live
– gavang.org
– glisco.link —> coolrea.link
– jala1.cc —> jalaace2.cc
– livetv819.me —> livetv822.me
– mgviagrtoomuch.com
– sporttuna.pro —> sporttuna.website —> sporttuna.xyz
– propermirrorc6rrhjf.cfd —> shakingfoota7okr5.cfd
– rbtv77.com —> howfruitsizmx.cfd
– rbtv77.ws —> rbtv77.my —> happenedought1tzn2s.cfd
– strugglesincetfp9ek.cfd —> shakingfoota7okr5.cfd
– taraftarium.co
– taraftarium.me —> aleaquefootball.com
– thapcam53.buzz —> thapcam.pro —> thapcam53.fyi
– totalsportek.space —> xsportbox.com
– twentytemperature7jigpx.shop —> singlevariousht1etk0.sbs
– unusualscience6ezlg79.cfd —> shakingfoota7okr5.cfd
– vachvoi.net —> vachvoi.tv
– vebo3.site
– watchsportnow.com
– wincanaldcocv1.cfd —> shakingfoota7okr5.cfd
– wrongfoughtizki7zm.cfd —> shakingfoota7okr5.cfd
– xoilac34.info
– zhiboche.tv —> zhiboche8.com —> 176001.tv
– zhibodou.com —> sportsteam356.com
– zonadeporteshd.pl
– zvision.link

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Tuesday 2025-04-01

08:00 PM

New Release: Tor Browser 14.0.9 [Tor Project blog]

Tor Browser 14.0.9 is now available from the Tor Browser download page and also from our distribution directory.

This version includes important security updates to Firefox.

Send us your feedback

If you find a bug or have a suggestion for how we could improve this release, please let us know.

Full changelog

The full changelog since Tor Browser 14.0.8 is:

01:00 PM

Indiana Court: Finding Drugs On One Person Means Everyone On A Bus Can Be Searched [Techdirt]

A whole new level of constitutional wtf-ness has emerged from the Indiana state Appeals Court. Here’s how John Wesley Hall sums it up on FourthAmendment.com:

If you’re riding a bus and drugs are found on one, are all subject to search. The answer can’t be yes, but it is here.

Exactly. The answer cannot be “yes.” That’s insanity. Especially considering the facts of this case, which begin with Deputy Wade Wallace of the LaPorte County Sheriff’s Office pulling over a bus because of an alleged traffic violation.

Wallace “observed” a Greyhound bus “cross left of center” and “veer over the fog line” while he patrolled Interstate 80. Of course, this was a pretense. Wallace didn’t really care about the moving violation. He just wanted to search the bus. But the law of the land says any pretext is a good pretext as long as you don’t abandon the pretext too quickly.

In this case, it would seem the pretext was abandoned almost immediately. From the decision [PDF]:

Deputy Wallace explained the reason for the stop, learned the bus had seventeen passengers, and collected the driver’s license and proof of insurance. He also asked for consent to search the bus.

How would searching the bus further the point of the stop, which was the fog line violation Wallace cited mere seconds before turning his attention to the 17 people who weren’t driving the bus he had just pulled over? Well, the short and correct answer is that the requested search had nothing to do with the alleged violation, therefore without any reasonable suspicion being immediately present, his request should have been rejected. And, even if it was granted (as it was here), no passenger should have been subjected to a search because… THEY WEREN’T DRIVING THE BUS.

So, Deputy Wallace started dicking around, running the license and warrant check and “readying his warning book.” Then he called another deputy to the scene for supposed “officer safety reasons.” Completely not coincidentally, the backup he called for was a K-9 unit featuring Deputy John Samuelson and his drug dog, Bosco.

Deputy Samuelson — someone who apparently has never had the dubious pleasure of traveling via Greyhound bus — decided that people exiting the bus to smoke cigarettes was somehow suspicious. (As someone who has ridden these buses more than a handful of times — and as a lifelong smoker — I can tell you literally any time a bus comes to a momentary stop, every smoker heads out immediately to inhale as much nicotine as they can. This is not suspicious. This is addiction and there is no shortage of smokers on any given Greyhound bus.)

So, 10 to 12 minutes after the traffic stop began, Deputy Wallace called in Deputy Samuelson. Was this traffic stop illegally extended under the Rodriguez ruling? I mean, I would think so. The court, however, says there’s nothing wrong with this.

Within minutes of his arrival, Deputy Samuelson conducted an open-air dog sniff by walking Bosco around the exterior of the bus. Bosco soon “alerted” toward the front of the luggage compartment, signaling, through a distinctive set of behaviors, he smelled drugs there. Bosco was right: while searching a pink suitcase, police found “approximately 15 pounds of vacuum-sealed marijuana.”

That’s more “minutes” on top of the 10-12 minutes expended by Wallace slow-walking the warning he eventually handed to the bus driver at the end of this string of constitutional violations. There was no “suspicion,” reasonable or not, to justify running the drug dog around the bus, much less the more invasive searches that followed. There was only the fog line violation and smokers exiting the bus to smoke.

From there, the two deputies searched everyone on the bus and received consent to search a couple of stowed bags. They came across a handful of guns and — using this as leverage to search even more bags — they found some drugs in Norvell Dunem’s on-board luggage.

Dunem challenged the search. The lower court said the deputies did nothing wrong. And that’s the same thing the higher court says, even though it definitely appears a whole bunch of unsupported searches took place before the officers came across stuff they felt justified searching everybody and everything. The original traffic stop was always an afterthought. A warning was issued more than a hour after the stop was initiated.

Somehow, a drug dog’s alert on a bus’s exterior storage justifies a search of several passengers and their bags. Never mind the fact that the pretense for the stop had been abandoned within the 10-12 minutes it took the other deputy (and his drug dog) to arrive. Never mind the other inconvenient facts — like the fact that you’re a passenger in a vehicle doesn’t make you automatically subject to a search just because cops find something on the driver or another passenger.

The court says the stop wasn’t unlawfully extended. It makes this assertion by saying the drug dog alerted almost immediately after the other deputy arrived and took his drug dog for a walk around the bus. It also points out that while this was happening, Deputy Wallace was still “filling out the written warning.” It says nothing about the 10-12 minutes it took for the deputy to start writing this warning — something he apparently didn’t feel like doing until after the drug dog had arrived on the scene.

Then the court claims the “automobile exception” provides for warrantless searches of passengers and their belongings. But that’s simply not true. While it can be used in some situations to justify warrantless searches of vehicles, it has not been extended to cover passengers and their personal property unless there’s reasonable suspicion to do so. And it certainly can’t be used to create a constitutional blank check that covers seventeen passengers and their personal belongings.

But that’s what the court says here: a dog alerting at an exterior luggage compartment gives officers probable cause to search everyone and everything contained in the vehicle, even if it’s 17 people and their belongings. It’s an insane take on the Fourth Amendment, made even more insane by the refusal to probe more deeply into the first deputy’s seeming inability to start writing a traffic warning until a drug dog had arrived at the scene and started sniffing.

This is a bad decision. Hopefully, it will go up one more rung to the state’s top court and get reversed. Allowing it to stand means allowing officers to search every passenger and their belongings just because the driver (allegedly) swerved a little too far out of their lane.

12:00 PM

A Third Trump Term? [The Status Kuo]

Screen capture from NBC’s Meet the Press

On Sunday, Trump told NBC News’ Kristen Welker that “there are methods” that would allow him to serve a third presidential term, despite the Constitution’s two-term limit.

Trump has been musing about a third term for some time, so in many ways this was nothing new. Trump loves to troll the public, and especially liberals, with the idea that he could remain president indefinitely, or that there’s no need for future elections. It sets our collective hair on fire when he does it, so he returns to this theme with satisfaction.

The difference in this case was in Trump’s greater specificity of his “plans.” When pressed on what methods he was actually talking about, Trump let slip just one: JD Vance could win the next presidential election, Trump said, with himself as Vance’s VP, and then resign, handing Trump the presidency.

It’s an audacious idea. It’s repugnant to the spirit of our Constitution and to democracy in general. But is it legally possible?

The language of two constitutional amendments strongly suggests otherwise. Some would say it’s a slam dunk no. But Trump and whoever is advising him are trying to rely on a legal loophole, and because of that we need to pay a bit of attention, if only to put it out of our minds. After all, it was a legal loophole that allowed Vladimir Putin to serve two terms as president, then sit it out for four years as prime minister while his lackey Dmitry Medvedev was “president,” before Putin returned as president four years later.

Trump running Putin’s Russian president playbook should come as no surprise. But I don’t believe it’s going to work here in the U.S.

Subscribe now

The 22nd Amendment

The Trump years have forced us many times to dust off the Constitution to see what it actually says. And that’s often when we discover that, in the hands of someone out to exploit its weaknesses, it sadly an imperfect document.

The 22nd Amendment prohibits anyone from being elected more than twice to the office of President. This part is plain as day:

No person shall be elected to the office of the President more than twice, and no person who has held the office of President, or acted as President, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected President shall be elected to the office of the President more than once.

So where’s the possible Trump loophole? If you read this part carefully, it says that no one can be elected to the office of President more than twice. Trump argues that he is still within the letter of the Constitution because he could be elected as Vice President in 2028—and then become President through Vance’s resignation. So that restriction shouldn’t apply to him, he claims.

But there’s a problem with this argument.

The 12th Amendment

The 12th Amendment, which sets out the system we still use today to select the President and Vice President, expressly states,

No person constitutionally ineligible to the office of President shall be eligible to that of Vice-President of the United States.

Slam dunk, right? Any straightforward reading of that clause should lead to the clear conclusion that because Trump is ineligible to be elected as President again (because he’s already been elected twice), he can’t be elected as Vice President.

Seems pretty clear to most.

Leave it to clever lawyers to create ambiguity. According to some legal scholars, the 12th Amendment talks only about broad “constitutional ineligibility” to the office of President. But, they point out, Trump is only constitutionally ineligible to be elected president a third time. Technically, Trump remains constitutionally eligible to become president by non-elective means.

So what the heck does that mean? Let’s take an example.

Say Trump were to be named Speaker of the House. That’s weirdly allowed by the House rules, even if it would be a total nightmare.

Then let’s say something happened to both the President and Vice President so that they could not serve in office. Through the operation of presidential succession, Trump would be third in line as Speaker of the House (shudder). The 12th and 22nd Amendments say nothing about Speakers not being able to become President by succession, so he would be “constitutionally eligible” to be President and would assume office by way of succession.

So does that fact allow Trump to run as VP? It depends on how you interpret the words “constitutionally ineligible.” As a person, Trump would argue, he is constitutionally eligible: He’s over 35, is a citizen, was born here, and could become President through operation of succession were he in another position.

But as a candidate for VP, opponents would argue, Trump is constitutionally ineligible because he couldn’t run for President, and he can’t make an end run around this rule by running for Vice President.

So who has the better argument?

The Trumpian claim

On the one hand, strict textualists have an argument that the 22nd Amendment does not literally say that a former president is “constitutionally ineligible.” It says only that he can’t be elected again. Thus, they claim, he can be elected as Vice President and then later assume the Presidency.

The best argument that proponents of this view have is that more restrictive language was considered by the drafters at the time of the 22nd Amendment’s passage but ultimately rejected. Courts, and particularly the extremists on this Supreme Court like Justices Alito and Thomas, could hang their hats on that legal peg. After all, the drafters knew how to create broad constitutional ineligibility, but they chose to go instead with a bar on being elected President a third time.

Specifically, the original version, which was approved by the full House, read that “[a]ny person who has served as President of the United States during all, or portions, of any two terms, shall thereafter be ineligible to hold the office of President.”

That would be an outright bar to Trump’s present plans. He has served as President during all or portions of two terms, so no more being President for him. End of story.

That fact that the language changed before passage is something Trump (or rather, his lawyers) will seek to mine. Why change it unless you intended it to be less than a full statement of ineligibility?

There are some good reasons for why this broad language was rejected. For example, it could sweep in situations where a person (say, Vice President Kamala Harris) served for just one day while Biden was having surgery. This actually happened. Perhaps better to focus on people not being able to be elected three times, right? That’s what they were trying to prevent, after all.

As far as I have read, no one actually considered, at least in the debates around the Amendment, the possibility of this weird loophole opening up as a result. But because there is a decisive lack of legal precedent around this language, Trump’s lawyers see an opening, and they would argue that the best course is to stick with the literal text of the Constitution.

No Constitutional “gotchas”

Common sense, along with any reading that tries to stay true to the spirit of the two amendments, would say Trump can’t run as VP and then slip in to become President through a crazy loophole. Critics of backdoor presidencies would argue that the 22nd Amendment was intended to create a new class of ineligibility, along with age, citizenship, and birthplace. It made a twice-elected president outright ineligible, even if it didn’t use that specific word.

It follows, then, that because the 12th Amendment made anyone who is constitutionally ineligible to be President from serving as Vice President, that ineligibility should and must include people who have been elected President twice before.

Think of it this way: It’s as if the 22nd Amendment simply added to the presidential eligibility restrictions on age, citizen and birthplace the requirement that you can’t have been elected twice before. Because, under these criteria, Trump is ineligible to be President, he is ineligible to be Vice President per the 12th Amendment, and therefore he cannot ever run as a VP candidate.

Moreover, the point of the 22nd Amendment was to prevent the occurrence of another dynastic presidency after four terms of FDR. Allowing Trump to return via some loophole would undermine the purpose of the amendment, which is something courts are supposedly there to prevent.

Moreover, the U.S. Constitution should be read as a whole to ensure consistency across its various parts. Allowing Trump a backdoor way to become President again by first being elected Vice President would create contradictions within the structure of the document. One provision, the 22nd Amendment, which broadly prohibits that outcome would be undone by the twisted reading of another, the 12th Amendment.

Finally, the Constitution should be interpreted to avoid illogical results. Here, that result would be that the American people cannot elect a certain individual to the presidency, but they could wind up with the same guy through some wild, unexpected succession.

That. Makes. No. Sense.

Political chaos

If the radical majority on the Supreme Court ultimately greenlit this backdoor route for Trump, it would produce political havoc. JD Vance, or whoever else was playing the Medvedev role, would be “running” but everyone would know it was a sham. Democrats might then try to run someone equally popular as their VP, such as former President Barack Obama, who would suddenly be able to serve again through the same loophole.

This would make a mockery of our system and invite challenges at each state ballot level and then with Congress at the certification stage.

If any argument is going to win over Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett, it is likely this one. The Court made a big deal about allowing Trump to remain on the Colorado ballot in order to avoid the chaos and uncertainty that would result if he were stricken from it. It’s hard to see them allowing him to run as Vice President and proceed to throw the whole system into the trash compactor.

Bottom line? Trump isn’t likely going to be allowed to run in any capacity that allows him a third term, whether through election or succession. That won’t stop him from arguing that he should be allowed to, if only because he knows it will upset many on the left to hear it.

Now that you know his best argument and why it likely won’t succeed, I hope it will be easier for you to ignore this threat as one more layer of distraction.

10:00 AM

Mariah Carey Defeats Ridiculous Copyright Suit Over ‘All I Want For Christmas Is You’ [Techdirt]

It appears that Mariah Carey got a very late Christmas present this year. Several years ago, Carey was sued by Andy Stone over Carey’s hit holiday song, All I Want For Christmas Is You. The whole lawsuit was a complete mess. The fact it was filed in a Louisana court made no sense. The suit referenced evidence that was apparently not included in the filing. It was filed decades after the release of Carey’s song. Oh, and the claim of copyright infringement itself appeared to be due to the titles of both songs being the same combined with a bunch of unprotectable thematic elements. Neither, of course, are protectable elements when it comes to copyright law.

The $20 million copyright suit appeared destined for failure several months ago, when the judge signaled publicly that she was leaning Carey’s way. The only real question appeared to be whether Stone was going to be forced to pay Carey’s legal fees for wasting her time with this. In her summary judgment ruling, the judge presiding over the case both finds in Carey’s favor and, indeed, orders Stone to pay her legal fees.

U.S. District Judge Monica Almadani in Los Angeles in a ruling on Wednesday said the writers of Vince Vance and the Valiants’ “All I Want for Christmas Is You” failed to show their song was objectively similar enough to Carey’s to support their copyright infringement case.

Almadani determined on Wednesday that the songs were not similar enough for a jury to find that Carey had committed copyright infringement, citing differences in their melodies, lyrics and other musical elements. Almadani also ordered the songwriters to pay part of Carey’s attorneys’ fees, finding some of their filings contained a “litany of irrelevant and unsupported factual assertions.”

While that punishment is certainly just, it remains infuriating that the legal team that represented Stone will essentially escape any consequences beyond the reputational. I can’t expect every musician out there to be well enough versed in intellectual property law to navigate what are protectable elements and what aren’t. It would be nice if such artists would marry up the importance they place on copyright law with a passion for actually understanding it, but that is wishful thinking.

Lawyers, on the other hand, have no excuse. The participation of attorneys in this stinker of a lawuit is silly. They ought to have known from the jump that this lawsuit was destined for failure. So why did they take the case on?

And why can’t there be real tangible consequences for having done so?

08:00 AM

The Reckoning At The Town Hall [Techdirt]

The footage is hard to watch—not because it’s shocking, but because it isn’t.

Because we’ve seen this coming.

Because we’ve written it down.

Because it’s what happens when performance fully replaces governance, and people are asked to believe that “DOGE” and “efficiency” and “Musk” now constitute a new political grammar.

Rep. Victoria Spartz stands in front of her constituents at a town hall in Indiana.

She talks about Elon Musk running government systems.

She invokes the Department of Government Efficiency — a shell entity, a fever-dream turned administrative body.

And she is booed.

Not politely disagreed with. Not civilly challenged.

Booed.

She tells them they should have “a conversation.”

But they’ve seen enough.

They’re no longer there for conversation.

They’ve come—as someone once said—for a reckoning.

Because this isn’t about decorum anymore.

It’s not about whether the line of questioning is appropriate or whether the tone is right.

It’s about the slow, quiet realization that the thing they thought they were part of—

government, democracy, accountability

is being replaced.

Replaced with tweets and deferrals.

With “tech visionary” as a synonym for “unaccountable executive power.”

With a Department of Government Efficiency that answers to no one.

With decisions made inside encrypted group chats where war plans get shared by accident.

With a Treasury system reportedly “more innovative” now that it’s not public.

And when a member of Congress defends this —

defends it by invoking dogecoin as the marker of progress —

something in the room breaks.

Not trust. That’s already gone.

What breaks is the spell.

The illusion that there’s still a shared script.

That the adults are still in the room.

That this is all just part of the process, that it’s still governed by rules.

No.

This is not a conversation anymore.

This is the circus, unmasked.

And so they boo.

Not because they’re disrespectful.

But because they’re mourning something that used to be sacred.

They boo because the wire snapped, and the performer pretended nothing happened.

Because the tent is tilting, and the ringleaders are pointing to the lighting rig and saying,

“But look how efficient it is.”

What Spartz fails to understand is that this town hall wasn’t disorderly.

It was the return of moral rhythm.

The refusal to remain audience members to their own disenfranchisement.

They didn’t come to be spoken to.

They came to speak.

And their voices—those strained, unpolished, interrupted voices—were the only true things in the room.

So let this be the Note, passed quietly after the shouting.

Let it carry this message:

The people are not fooled.

They see the circus for what it is.

And they know that meaning, once abandoned, cannot be governed by efficiency.

Two plus two equals four.

There are twenty-four hours in a day.

And even here—amid the clamor, amid the spectacle—

the truth still wants to be heard.

Even in a room that couldn’t speak it.

Especially there.

Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.

The Real Cost Of DOGE: Musk’s Government Cuts Creating Massive New Expenses [Techdirt]

Imagine you had pretty much unlimited power over the government and wanted to save taxpayers’ money. You could:

  1. Carefully study government operations to understand what works and what doesn’t
  2. Make targeted improvements based on data and evidence
  3. Track results to ensure changes actually deliver savings

Or you could do what Elon Musk did with DOGE: declare everything wasteful, start firing people at random, and claim you’re saving billions through pure destruction.

It’s long been clear that Elon has never considered Chesterton’s Fence — the (generally somewhat conservative) principle that before dismantling long-standing systems, you should first understand why they exist.

The results are exactly what you’d expect when someone treats government operations like an ExTwitter poll: lots of dramatic announcements, very little actual improvement, and some spectacularly costly fuckups.

Rather than trying to understand the complex mechanisms of government operations, Musk’s DOGE crew has taken a slash-and-burn approach that’s clearly designed more for headlines and memes, than anything around actually improving the government.

Let’s start with DOGE’s claimed “savings” — a masterclass in creative accounting that would make Enron blush (not to mention Hollywood accountants). We’ve already covered how they’re effectively making up their numbers, but the creative fiction writing continues.

The DOGErs recently announced updated figures, claiming they’ve saved the government $115 billion. But pretty much anyone who understands any of this stuff says that’s a load of absolute bullshit.

The largest saving listed on the wall of receipts is $1.9 billion, achieved from cancelling a contract in the Department of Treasury with software company Centennial Technologies. However, last month, the company told the New York Times that the contract was canceled under the Biden administration, not by DOGE. The team then deleted the charge, per ABC, but since then it has been re-added. (Centennial Technologies did not immediately respond to Fortune’s request for comment by press time.)

The Times reported, citing federal data and interviews with the nonprofits whose grants were on the list, that at least five of the 20 largest “savings” in the updated claims appeared to be exaggerated.

Earlier this month, the team also quietly removed over 1,000 contract cancellation claims from its “wall of receipts,” reducing reported taxpayer savings by $4 billion.

Even if we pretend those $115 billion in “savings” are real (and they’re not), they’re actually costing us way more than they’re saving. It turns out that when you mindlessly slash government operations without understanding how they work, you end up breaking things that actually make money.

Take the IRS. The Washington Post recently pointed out that DOGE’s cuts there alone would likely cost over $500 billion in revenue. That’s not a typo — the “savings” just at the IRS alone are costing us more than four times what DOGE claims to have saved across the entire government.

Treasury Department and IRS officials are predicting a decrease of more than 10 percent in tax receipts by the April 15 deadline compared with 2024, said the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share nonpublic data. That would amount to more than $500 billion in lost federal revenue; the IRS collected $5.1 trillion last year….

Slashing and cutting with wild abandon, only to find out that rather than “saving” money, it’s actually costing huge amounts of revenue? Where have I heard that one before? Oh, right. Twitter. Elon Musk did the same fucking thing with Twitter. It was a disaster there and it’s looking like a disaster here. But on a much bigger scale, with much more dire consequences.

And that’s not all. Inc. magazine has been detailing how many of the other cuts across the government are likely to cost taxpayers way more than they save:

“These firings they’re conducting without following the law will result in hundreds of thousands of former federal employees being owed back pay, plus interest, plus benefits, plus attorneys fees,” said labor attorney Suzanne Summerlin in an interview last month with The Guardian. “When the bill comes, it will be monumental.”)

This isn’t just speculation. We’re already seeing the consequences of DOGE’s reckless approach:

The full cost of the number of workers currently on forced administrative leave is something no one has been able to calculate yet, in part because of the rapidly escalating number of people being impacted by reductions in force and the ensuing court fights.

Those legal battles, which will likely stretch for several months (or even years), will also use a currently countless number of worker hours, as staff responds to legal challenges via briefs and arguments in front of judges (along with the prep time required for that), further escalating the price tag of DOGE’s actions.

But what about Musk’s claims that all this destruction is justified because he’s conducting a much-needed “audit” of government waste? Like everything else about DOGE, it’s complete nonsense. Wired spoke with some actual auditors who claim that what’s happening with DOGE looks nothing like an actual audit.

The two auditors told WIRED that going through the technological and financial minutiae of even just a single project or part of an agency can take anywhere from six to 18 months.

“You can’t coherently audit something like the whole Social Security system in a week or two,” says the second auditor. It’s exactly this rush to crack systems open without full understanding, the auditors say, that has led to Elon Musk’s false claims that 150-year-olds were receiving Social Security benefits. “It could be that DOGE didn’t de-dupe the data.”

“In no uncertain terms is this an audit,” claims the second auditor. “It’s a heist, stealing a vast amount of government data.”

The actual auditors, like the other reports above, are pointing out that DOGE’s actions will almost certainly end up costing taxpayers way more money:

Since sweeping through the government, DOGE has canceled thousands of government contracts, including 10,000 specifically for humanitarian aid. According to reporting from the Associated Press, 40 percent of those canceled contracts through late February will likely not save the government any money.

“They’ll end up costing more in some way, whether it’s time, inconvenience, or money,” says the second auditor.

This is the cruel irony of DOGE: while Musk claims to be saving taxpayer money through “disruption,” he’s actually creating a massive financial burden that will take years, if not decades, to fully understand. The punchline, if you can call it that, is that we’ll need real auditors to eventually figure out just how much this fake audit actually cost us.

The program that promised efficiency through targeted destruction is instead delivering chaotic and costly destruction through incompetence.

When you tear down Chesterton’s Fence without understanding its purpose, don’t be surprised when everything behind it comes crashing down too. The bill for DOGE’s reckless demolition will be paid by all of us — and it’s already clear the price tag will be astronomical.

07:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 手 [Kanji of the Day]

✍4

小1

hand

シュ ズ

て て- -て た-

選手   (せんしゅ)   —   player (of a sport)
相手   (あいて)   —   companion
投手   (とうしゅ)   —   pitcher
大手   (おおて)   —   major company
選手権   (せんしゅけん)   —   championship
手続き   (てつづき)   —   procedure
苦手   (にがて)   —   poor (at)
手術   (しゅじゅつ)   —   surgery
上手   (うわて)   —   upper part
歌手   (かしゅ)   —   singer

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 丘 [Kanji of the Day]

✍5

中学

hill, knoll

キュウ

おか

丘陵   (きゅうりょう)   —   hill
砂丘   (さきゅう)   —   sand dune
丘陵地帯   (きゅうりょうちたい)   —   hill country
河岸段丘   (かがんだんきゅう)   —   river terrace
墳丘   (ふんきゅう)   —   tumulus
段丘   (だんきゅう)   —   terrace
比丘尼   (びくに)   —   bhikkhuni (fully ordained Buddhist nun) (san: bhiksuni)
丘疹   (きゅうしん)   —   pimple
火口丘   (かこうきゅう)   —   volcanic cone
溶岩円頂丘   (ようがんえんちょうきゅう)   —   lava dome

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

06:00 AM

Aylo Uses Cybersquatting Complaint to Take Out Pirate Site Domains [TorrentFreak]

trademarkThe company Licensing IP International S.a.r.l. is not particularly well known, but over a billion people are familiar with its trademarks.

These marks include popular adult entertainment brands including Pornhub, Youporn, Brazzers and Reality Kings, which fall under the umbrella of Aylo, the empire formerly known as MindGeek.

Just one of Aylo’s many subsidiaries, Licensing IP owns and controls many popular trademarks. The company is not often in the news, but it’s a key player when it comes to protecting Aylo’s IP rights.

Pirate Site Domains Targeted in Cybersquatting Lawsuit

Aylo has a long history of taking action against pirate sites. Through its subsidiaries, Goodporn and Daftsex were previously targeted in U.S.courts, which largely ruled in favor of the adult entertainment company. However, permanently shutting down rogue sites has proven to be quite a challenge.

Traditionally, these types of lawsuits rely on copyright infringement claims but subsidiary Licensing IP recently tried a different approach, with success.

In a cybersquatting complaint filed at a California District Court last year, Licensing IP targeted ‘mydirtyhobby.to’ and several related domain names. These sites reportedly used Aylo’s trademarks without permission, including MDH® and MY DIRTY HOBBY®.

Licensing IP alleged that the defendant intentionally registered these domains to profit from consumers’ brand recognition of these trademarks. This clearly violates the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act, which protects trademark owners against domain name abuse.

Rare ‘In Rem’ Lawsuit

Domain name trademark disputes can be handled through ICANN’s Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP) proceedings. However, since the .to TLD is not subject to UDRP, Licensing IP took its cybersquatting claim to a U.S. federal court instead.

In this case, the complaint was filed in rem, meaning that the action proceeded against a property rather than a person. As a result, personal jurisdiction is not required, which makes it easier to go after domains operated by unknown ‘does’.

As the case progressed, the registrants of the domain names were contacted, but none made an appearance in court. This prompted Licensing IP to request a default judgment instructing the Tonic registry to transfer the trademark-infringing domain names.

Court Grants Domain Name Transfers

In February, U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler issued a report and recommendations, siding with the adult entertainment company. The court confirmed it has jurisdiction over the case because the .to domain registrar, San Francisco company Tonic Corp, is located within the court’s district.

Since the complaint was filed in rem, personal jurisdiction over the foreign registrants was not required. After analyzing all the paperwork, Judge Beeler concluded that all factors in favor of granting a default judgment had been met.

As a result, she recommended issuing an order requiring the Tonic registrar to transfer mydirtyhobby.to, watchmdh.to, mdh.to and all other confusingly similar domain names to Licensing IP. The recommendation was adopted by District Court Judge Jon Tigar last week, finalizing the order.

The order

cybersquatting

While the outcome of this case isn’t particularly surprising, the fact that it happened through a cybersquatting complaint is very rare.

Jason Tucker, president of Battleship Stance, an anti-piracy outfit that helps Aylo and other companies with their legal strategies, is pleased with the outcome. He sees it as an effective angle to target pirate sites that also abuse trademarks.

“This case shows there are still effective legal tools to take down pirate domains—especially when they target creators and misuse their names and content,” Tucker says.

Despite the favorable court order, several of the targeted domain names still appear to be online at the time of writing.

A copy of the order adopting the report and recommendations, which grants the default judgment, is available here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

04:00 AM

An Unfortunate Update: DOGE Dodges An Injunction [Techdirt]

There is a disquieting update to my last post about a district court victory in Does 1-26 v. Musk that had enjoined DOGE, given its likely unconstitutional exercise of power, particularly in the context of its dismemberment of USAID. The Fourth Circuit has now stayed enforcement of that injunction, which raises a few issues worth commenting on.

First, on substance, the most alarming issue with its decision is that two judges on the Fourth Circuit found the arguments that Musk and DOGE were acting with an unconstitutional power unpersuasive. For example:

And as to Musk, the evidence before us creates a strong likelihood that he functioned as an advisor to the President, carrying out the President’s policies of shrinking government and reducing spending, not as an Officer who required constitutional appointment. The current evidence in the record indicates that Musk’s actions did not involve the exercise of authority of an office granted by law but rather the implementation of Executive policies. In order to be an Officer, he must (1) be “exercising significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States” and (2) be “occupying a continuing position established by law.” Lucia v. SEC, 585 U.S. 237, 245 (2018) (cleaned up). Based on the current record, it appears that Musk’s role satisfies neither criterion. [p. 8]

As discussed in the last post, the district court judge carefully walked through each of those elements pertinent to determining whether Musk, as well as DOGE, were behaving within constitutional parameters before concluding that the answer was likely not. For the appeals court to simply cast all that analysis to the side was itself troubling, and the dissenting concurrence called it out:

The Majority questions this characterization of the results of Defendants’ actions. Maj. Order at 7. But, in doing so, it improperly meddles in factual determination properly left to the discretion of the district court. Second guessing factual findings of a district court in an emergency stay posture where the applicant has not even asserted that such findings were erroneous, let alone clearly so, is entirely inappropriate. As we have long held, a party seeking reversal of a district court’s injunction order must “overcome a deferential standard of appellate review.” Pierce v. N.C. State Bd. of Elections, 97 F.4th 194, 210 (4th Cir. 2024). We evaluate a district court’s decision to grant a preliminary injunction under an abuse of discretion standard and only review the district court’s factual findings for clear error. Id.; see also Roe v. Dep’t of Def., 947 F.3d 207, 219 (4th Cir. 2020). Indeed, “[w]here there are two permissible views of the evidence, the [district court’s] choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.” Id. (citing Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564, 574 (1985)). [p. 17]

For its part the majority defends its dubious read of the record:

Our concurring colleague claims the Majority “improperly meddles in factual determination properly left to the discretion of the district court,” in violation of our standard of review. Conc. Op. at 17–18 n.1. He is right to emphasis the importance of those standards. We are duty bound to apply them. But we apply our standard of review here in the context of our precedent that instructs that preliminary injunctions should be granted “sparingly and in limited circumstances” because of their implication of “very far-reaching [judicial] power,” Direx Israel, Ltd., 952 F.2d at 816, and that “ambiguity is simply insufficient to support a finding that success on the merits is ‘likely’ rather than merely ‘possible’ . . . .” Di Base v. SPX Corp., 872 F.3d 224, 235 (4th Cir. 2017). In that context, our conclusion is consistent with our standard of review. [p. 8]

It’s a flimsy defense of the majority’s analysis of the government’s “likelihood of success” on the merits, but for the moment the larger issue with this stay is what has been an issue in this and other cases: the difficulty in being able to obtain usable and immediate injunctive relief.

Because even the “dissenting” judge on this appeals court panel, who spent 24 pages on the “likelihood of success” factor explaining why Musk and DOGE were likely behaving with unconstitutional power [p. 17-40], found himself having to concur with the result in setting aside the injunction “because the proper defendants were not before” the courts in this case. [p. 40].

After the district court found that Musk and DOGE were responsible for dismantling USAID, the question then became: what’s next? The Majority correctly identifies, the constitutional violation and the remedy cannot go both ways: if Musk and DOGE lack the authority to order USAID officials to do anything, enjoining Musk to direct USAID officials to restore employment, building access, and security services, among other relief, also cannot stand. Plaintiffs did not name defendants with the proper authority to effectuate the relief that Plaintiffs seek. Suing Musk and DOGE constrained the court’s ability to redress their constitutional claims, which I have noted above, and as the district court found as a matter of fact, were quite strong. [p. 41-42]

So one issue emerging from this case is that DOGE challenges, at least those seeking injunctions, do need to be hybrid, with the agency and its officials running it named as co-defendants, because even if the argument is successfully made that what DOGE is doing is unconstitutional, an injunction telling them to “stay out” also needs to include an order on the agency to “keep them out.”

And one reason it is important that the injunction be so broad is because, now that Trump has had a chance to install his own cronies in agency leadership, the DOGE and “official” leadership are blurring together. In this case they explicitly blurred together, because Trump tried playing musical chairs, moving out the “official” person and replacing him with someone who had himself been DOGE. The district court called shenanigans, because it would mean that the new person, now “official,” could just ratify everything that DOGE had “recommended.” The injunction appeared to assume that by removing DOGE only independent agency judgment would be left, and that judgment would be exercised consistent with whatever lawful authority it had. But such a view appears naïve, because the blurring is inevitable, as a Trump toady in a DOGE hat may be no different than a toady in an official agency hat—they are both committed to the same constitutionally destructive mission, and both need to be stopped from completing it, under whichever auspices they claim to be using as they do it.

Also, the question of agency ratification is proving to be a bigger issue that needs to be dealt with directly. In part to address it itself and ensure that agency officials cannot somehow launder illegitimate DOGE “recommendations” into legitimate agency action, and in part because what irretrievably taints these “recommendations” is also what shows how what DOGE was doing is so unconstitutional—and also why there is no possibility of irreparable harm to the government if its own actions, including implementation of DOGE’s “recommendations,” is stopped.

In a universe where there were no DOGE, no agency official in their right mind would try to do what DOGE is “recommending” and cancel these contracts, fire these people, freeze this funding, or close down the agency altogether. Perhaps via some lawful path the agency could do some of these things but it could not do such things via this path because taking these drastic actions would, at minimum, seem to violate the APA’s prohibition against arbitrary and capricious decisions by the agency. It’s a big reason why these cases seeking injunctions need to be hybrid, so that even if agency officials claimed to be doing these things via their own independent judgment they still could be enjoined because of how that judgment violates the law. But also, if these decisions would have been wrong in a universe without DOGE telling them to make them, they are no less wrong when made in the wake of DOGE “advising” them to be made. It would be absurd if agency officials could “ratify” and somehow legitimize a DOGE “recommendation” that the agency could not make itself, and especially not when DOGE arrived at the “recommendation” via its own unlawful behavior. Two wrongs cannot make a right.

Because even if agency officials could make such decisions in a vacuum, no such vacuum exists here. It goes back to the idea raised earlier that DOGE’s hack is the harm, as well as the evidence of the harm. In other words, it was DOGE’s initial invasion of the computer systems that is both evidence of the abuse of power—that it was able to occur—and the vehicle used to cause the damage, as any “recommendation” they made stemmed from that illicit access. As a result that illicit access irredeemably taints any “recommendation” they made and thus makes it impossible for any official to ratify any of what they “proposed.” That usurpation of power, to force access to those systems, also undermines any claim that its “recommendations” were just “suggestions” that agency officials were free to refuse, and not the unconstitutional demands, like the demand to be given their illicit access to the computer systems in the first place, that they were. It would also independently offend the APA to ratify any action DOGE demanded—sorry, suggested—DOGE had made because it had made them, especially given how unlawfully it arrived at the instruction.

In fact, the more the government claims that it would suffer “irreparable harm” if these DOGE recommendations are not adopted, or that any further DOGE action within the agency be stopped, the more it shows how unconstitutional the entire enterprise is. The government’s only possible defense in these challenges is that the agency could somehow lawfully do what it is doing—cancel these contracts, fire these people, freeze this funding, shut down the agency—independent of DOGE. As discussed above it’s a dubious argument given how drastic these effects are, which laws like the APA would probably prohibit, but if the government can show that the agency could lawfully do any of the things that DOGE is charged with causing to happen according to their own independent judgment and authority then the challenges would fail.

But that argument, that the agency could do these things on its own, would mean that it could do them on its own, without DOGE. And the more the government claims that it would be harmed if DOGE were benched, the more it undermines any claim to the agencies’ independence. Removing DOGE from the equation should just leave the agency back where it was supposed to be, and if that’s now a problem for the government, then it’s a problem for the Constitution that these unappointed people now have such power over agency action. DOGE cannot cause something to be done that lawfully could not have been done without it, but the more the government argues that it is being harmed by excluding DOGE from agency activities, the more it shows how unlawful its activities are.

And it is why the irreparable harm factor needs to carry a lot more weight for challengers to anything DOGE has done (or Trump generally, even in instances without DOGE involvement). If it turns out that everything DOGE is doing is lawful, it can still be done via lawful means.  Perhaps it can’t be done as quickly, but the government has yet to make a non-frivolous argument for why there is any true exigency requiring fast action—if there is any emergency it is the one it itself created, a fact that cuts the other way for why there should be relief afforded to challenging plaintiffs immediately in order to truly preserve the status quo.

Because if it turns out, as many district courts are finding, as well as the dissenting judge here, that DOGE is acting unlawfully and indeed unconstitutionally, then then the harm to the challengers, and the public beyond them, if relief isn’t afforded is immense. The majority in this case here dismisses the harm potential as potentially being easily remediated by money later, [p. 12], but their math seriously underestimates the amount of harm being done even in financial terms, the incalculable harm that comes from such a severe Constitutional violation being tolerated, which no amount of money can ever compensate, and the fact that it will be taxpayers—or, in other words, the plaintiff victims themselves—who will have to pay whatever compensation might eventually be ordered. Everything DOGE has been doing amounts to irreparable harm, and far beyond any sort of harm the Executive could experience if his and Musk’s power were carefully tested before letting it loose on the country.

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