News

Tuesday 2026-03-31

08:00 AM

Pete Hegseth’s War On Truth [Techdirt]

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Martha Gellhorn stowed away on a hospital ship to become the only woman journalist to land on Normandy Beach on D-Day. She carried stretchers before writing her harrowing account of the invasion.

The New Yorker’s famously epicurean writer A.J. Liebling subsisted on military rations and came under fire during World War II to describe what it was like for the soldiers and sailors at war.

Syndicated columnist Ernie Pyle died, in a helmet and Army fatigues, among some of the troops whose names and hometowns he carefully included in his dispatches. “At this spot, the 77th Infantry lost a buddy,” read the makeshift sign posted at the place where a Japanese machine gun bullet felled him.

Those reporters told stories of war in all its gore and its glory, its exhilaration and its ennui. Others have laid bare the anxiety and doubts.

Veteran Vietnam correspondent Neil Sheehan broke the story of the Pentagon Papers, which showed how government officials deceived the public about the Vietnam war. Sheehan won a Pulitzer Prize for his book, “A Bright Shining Lie,” which chronicled the war’s impact on idealists who once believed in it, through the story of his relationship with an inside source.

Well before bombs started dropping on Iran and President Donald Trump began to tease the notion of a ground invasion, his defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, began putting obstacles in the way of the reporters with the most experience covering the nation’s military. While Hegseth’s moves haven’t stopped the reporters from doing their jobs, it has made it harder for them to keep the public informed.

As someone who worked as a Washington correspondent for decades, I worry that these obstacles could limit the number of reporters who have the experience with – and trust of – key sources to do the kind of in-depth, nuanced journalism that a war, with its price in lives and resources, deserves.

Corralling the watchdogs

Generally, war correspondents need the cooperation of the military they are covering to get to the front. For the U.S. press, that requires relationships and credibility at the Pentagon.

Early in 2025, Hegseth ordered major news organizations to give up their desks in the Pentagon press room to MAGA favorites. NPR’s desk went to Breitbart News. Roaming the hallways, where reporters sometimes found sources who would deviate from the company line, became verboten.

Eventually, the area in the Pentagon where reporters were allowed was circumscribed to a single corridor outside the press room – even though the public affairs officers who worked most closely with reporters were in an office on the other side of the 6½-million-square-foot building.

Then Hegseth conditioned the issuance of press credentials on reporters, effectively giving military brass the right to censor or sanitize their reports.

As a result, almost the entire Pentagon press corps, which included outlets ranging from The Associated Press to The New York Times to Fox News and USNI News, which covers the Navy, moved out of the building in October 2025. Some have been invited back for the press briefings Hegseth and Gen. Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have begun to give on progress of the battle in Iran.

But after the first of these briefings, the Pentagon abruptly banned photographers from attending, reportedly because Hegseth’s staff found some of their images of him to be unflattering.

Secretary on defense

Gone are the off-camera “background” briefings where Department of Defense brass could give trusted reporters greater context and nuance for battlefield decisions. Gone are the impromptu hallway meetings where reporters have, with luck or persistence, picked up information that deviates from an administration’s agreed-upon script.

Also not in evidence, at least not so far: the deployment of the kind of journalistic embed program that the Pentagon used during the Iraq war to give the American people an up-close look at troops in the conflict zone.

How might that affect what you, the public, gets to know? It was a combination of an anonymous tip and insider access that led the legendary investigative reporter Seymour Hersh to break the devastating story of My Lai, the American soldiers’ massacre of civilians during the Vietnam War.

At the made-for-TV briefings he does hold, Hegseth devotes most of the session to questions from outlets such as the Epoch Times, The Daily Caller and LindellTV – owned by Mike Lindell, the head of the well-known pillow company.

At one recent briefing, one of the favored new cadre tossed Hegseth a shameless softball. Referring to American troops in the Middle East, the questioner asked: “What is your prayer for them?”

Yet as hostilities drag on, even some among Hegseth’s chosen press corps have begun to ask irksome questions about the war. The normally Trump-friendly Daily Caller ran a less-than-flattering piece about the president berating a reporter for asking about troop deployments.

On March 4, 2026, Hegseth accused journalists of focusing on war casualties to make “the president look bad.” On March 13, Hegseth castigated as “more fake news” CNN’s report that the Trump administration had underestimated the impact of the war on shipping traffic in the Strait of Hormuz.

“The sooner David Ellison takes over that network, the better,” Hegseth concluded, adding fuel to the speculation that a Trump supporter who won a bidding war for CNN’s corporate parent is going to turn the network into a more administration-friendly outlet.

Soon after, Federal Communications Commission chairman Brendan Carr threatened network broadcast licenses over coverage critical of the administration’s conduct of the war. Echoing Carr’s threats the next day: the president himself.

‘Be a Marine’

The Trump administration is not alone in its disdain for a free press: Israel has long been notorious for restricting press access from areas where it is conducting military operations.

Leaders of the theocratic Iranian regime are even worse; the country is cited by press freedom advocate Reporters Without Borders as “one of the world’s most repressive countries in terms of press freedom.”

But the United States has historically distinguished itself by making freedom its calling card, even – or perhaps especially – in wartime.

“The news may be good, or bad. We shall tell you the truth,” Voice of America, a U.S. government-launched radio network, promised – in German – in its very first broadcast to Nazi Germany in 1942.

Now, however, the Trump administration, is busy trying to undermine the editorial independence of Voice of America, which broadcasts news to countries that don’t have a free press.

Pentagon reporters are continuing to find ways to get around the propaganda. NPR’s Tom Bowman told me that he takes inspiration from a pep talk he overheard a military source deliver to another reporter crestfallen over the lack of access.

“Quit whining and be a Marine,” the official said. “Go over, under or around the obstacle. Find a way to do it.”

Most reporters and their organizations are doing just that, finding sources outside the administration, like the ones in Congress who told The Hill how much money the war is costing taxpayers per day. And they’re continuing to get information from sources on the inside, like the ones who told The Wall Street Journal that Trump’s military advisers warned him that Iran might block the Gulf of Hormuz, but that he opted for war anyway.

So far, neither Hegseth’s obstacle course nor threats from the White House and the FCC have stopped the press from reporting stories or asking questions that the administration would rather not see or hear.

But restrictions on press freedom have a corrosive effect. We already have seen how Trump, using lawsuits and licensing threats, has used his power to make corporate media owners think twice about pursuing news he doesn’t like.

Seasoned Pentagon reporters will still find ways to get to sources they already have. But Hegseth’s tactic of blocking press access to the military keeps reporters from developing new sources and keeps new reporters from building the relationships they need to become seasoned Pentagon reporters.

Americans have long been able to understand the triumphs and tribulations of American troops at war, and to make intelligent decisions about whether they approve of a war’s cost, because a free press has been able to tell the story – good or bad. That tradition is now at risk.

Kathy Kiely is Professor and Lee Hills Chair of Free Press Studies at the University of Missouri-Columbia

06:00 AM

Trump’s DOJ Hands $1.2 Million Payout To His Former National Security Advisor, Mike Flynn [Techdirt]

As if we needed any more evidence showing just how deep and thoroughly corrupted the Trump administration is. It’s an endless cycle of self-serving actions, pushed forward by bigots, grifters, and loyalists who sold off what was left of their souls and spines when Trump took office.

It’s an endless cycle of perverse self-involvement performed by people who openly loath America and Americans, but tout themselves as the only real patriots left. It’s an ouroboros, except the snake is sucking itself off, rather than symbolizing the live/die/repeat process that is supposed to iterate its way towards enlightenment.

I mean, look at this bullshit:

The Justice Department has reached an agreement with President Donald Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn to pay him roughly $1.2 million to settle a lawsuit brought by the former general claiming he was politically targeted for prosecution during Trump’s first administration, sources familiar with the matter tell ABC News. 

Pay special attention to the phrase “reached an agreement.” That shouldn’t be there, much like everything else surrounding that phrase. Here’s Julian Sanchez, breaking down the perversity of this “agreement” succinctly:

Just to be very clear: The Trump DOJ is stealing $1.2 million of your money to gift one of Trump’s cronies, who pled guilty to the crimes he was charged with, and whose suit against the government had already been tossed by a judge.

Julian Sanchez (@normative.bsky.social) 2026-03-25T22:03:23.675Z

Here’s what Sanchez said, for those of you who can’t see the embed or access the Bluesky post:

Just to be very clear: The Trump DOJ is stealing $1.2 million of your money to gift one of Trump’s cronies, who pled guilty to the crimes he was charged with, and whose suit against the government had already been tossed by a judge.

It’s not just the lifting of $1.2 million from the public’s wallet. It’s not just Trump deciding to reward a loyalist. It’s also that there should be no settlement at all. You don’t “settle” lawsuits that are no longer viable.

Flynn’s malicious prosecution lawsuit was tossed by a judge in 2024 after Biden’s DOJ responded to it. And it’s pretty difficult to both plead guilty to charges and claim the prosecution was malicious. It would be one thing if a jury rung Flynn up while his defense team maintained his innocence. But that’s not what happened here.

And that’s not the only thing that doesn’t add up… at least to anything else but patented Trump administration corruption.

Flynn previously pleaded guilty to charges brought by former special counsel Robert Mueller for lying to FBI agents during a January 2017 interview in the White House about his contacts with then-Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. 

The Trump Justice Department under former Attorney General William Barr then moved to drop the case in 2020… 

This prosecution was already short-circuited by Bill Barr while Trump was still in office the first time. And then Trump pardoned Flynn on his way out the door following an election loss both Trump and Flynn continue to claim wasn’t a loss.

But that’s apparently not enough for Flynn. He also wanted up to $50 million for allegedly being maliciously prosecuted. He’s only getting a fraction of that but it’s far more than he deserves. Unless this is just Trump buying a bit more loyalty from a guy who’s just as determined to prove any election that doesn’t favor Trump or MAGA legislators is “stolen.”

According to information gathered by the House select committee that investigated the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, Flynn was among a number of advisers who urged Trump to seize voting machines after the 2020 election and said in media appearances that Trump should use the military to “basically rerun” elections in states that he had lost. 

Here’s what Flynn is doing now:

According to videos, photos and social media posts reviewed by ProPublica, the meeting’s participants included Kurt Olsen, a White House lawyer charged with reinvestigating the 2020 election, and Heather Honey, the Department of Homeland Security official in charge of election integrity. The event was convened by Michael Flynn, Trump’s former national security adviser, and attended by Cleta Mitchell, who directs the Election Integrity Network, a group that has spread false claims about election fraud and noncitizen voting

So, this is all very gross and ugly and being done right out there in the open by people who don’t care how this looks. When most politicians would at least balk at the appearance of impropriety, this administration absolutely revels in it. Yeah, $1.2 million isn’t even a rounding error in this deficit, but it still matters. The administration is repeating itself: if you lie, cheat, steal, or actually fucking raid the US Capitol building for Trump, you’re gonna be just fine.

04:00 AM

The White House App’s Propaganda Is The Least Alarming Thing About It [Techdirt]

Call me crazy, but I don’t think an official government app should be loading executable code from a random person’s GitHub account. Or tracking your GPS location in the background. Or silently stripping privacy consent dialogs from every website you visit through its built-in browser. And yet here we are.

The White House released a new app last week for iOS and Android, promising “unparalleled access to the Trump Administration.” A security researcher, who goes by Thereallo, pulled the APKs and decompiled them — extracting the actual compiled code and examining what’s really going on under the hood. The propaganda stuff — cherry-picked news, a one-tap button to report your neighbors to ICE, a text that auto-populates “Greatest President Ever!” — which Engadget covered, is embarrassing enough. The code underneath is something else entirely.

Let’s start with the most alarming behavior. Every time you open a link in the app’s built-in browser, the app silently injects JavaScript and CSS into the page. Here’s what it does:

It hides:

  • Cookie banners
  • GDPR consent dialogs
  • OneTrust popups
  • Privacy banners
  • Login walls
  • Signup walls
  • Upsell prompts
  • Paywall elements
  • CMP (Consent Management Platform) boxes

It forces body { overflow: auto !important } to re-enable scrolling on pages where consent dialogs lock the scroll. Then it sets up a MutationObserver to continuously nuke any consent elements that get dynamically added.

An official United States government app is injecting CSS and JavaScript into third-party websites to strip away their cookie consent dialogs, GDPR banners, login gates, and paywalls.

Yiiiiiiiiiiiiikes.

And, yes, I can already hear a certain subset of readers thinking: “Sounds great, actually. Cookie banners are annoying.” And sure, there are good reasons why millions of people use browser extensions like uBlock Origin to do exactly this kind of thing. In fact, if you don’t use tools like that, you probably should. Those consent dialogs are frequently implemented as obnoxious dark patterns, and stripping them out is a perfectly reasonable personal choice.

But the key word there is choice. When you install an ad blocker or a consent-banner nuker, you’re making an informed decision about your own browsing experience. When the White House app does it silently, on every page load, without telling you — that’s the government making that decision for you in a deceptive and technically concerning way. And those consent dialogs exist in the first place because of legal requirements, in many cases requirements that governments themselves have enacted and enforce. There’s something almost comically stupid about the executive branch of the United States shipping code that silently destroys the legal compliance infrastructure of every website you visit through its app.

Then there’s the location tracking. The researcher found that OneSignal’s full GPS tracking pipeline is compiled into the app:

Latitude, longitude, accuracy, timestamp, whether the app was in the foreground or background, and whether it was fine (GPS) or coarse (network). All of it gets written into OneSignal’s PropertiesModel, which syncs to their backend.

The White House app. Tracking your location. Synced to a commercial third-party server. For press releases.

Oh and:

There’s also a background service that keeps capturing location even when the app isn’t active.

To be clear — and the researcher is careful to be precise about this — there are several gates before this tracking activates. The user has to grant location permissions, and a flag called _isShared has to be set to true in the code. Whether the JavaScript bundle currently flips that flag is something that can’t be determined from the decompiled native code alone. What can be determined is that, as the researcher puts it:

the entire pipeline including permission strings, interval constants, fused location requests, capture logic, background scheduling, and the sync to OneSignal’s API, all of them are fully compiled in and one setLocationShared(true) call away from activating. The withNoLocation Expo plugin clearly did not strip any of this.

So at best, the people who built this app tried to disable location tracking and failed. At worst, they have it set up to actually use. The plumbing is all there, fully functional, waiting to be turned on. And this is detailed, accurate GPS data, collected every four and a half minutes when you’re using the app and every nine and a half minutes when you’re not, synced to OneSignal’s commercial servers. For a government app. That’s supposed to show you press releases.

While it’s true that the continued lack of a federal privacy law probably means this is all technically legal, it’s still a wild thing for an app from the federal government to do.

And it gets better. Or worse, depending on your perspective. The app embeds YouTube videos by loading player HTML from… a random person’s GitHub Pages account:

The app embeds YouTube videos using the react-native-youtube-iframe library. This library loads its player HTML from:

https://lonelycpp.github.io/react-native-youtube-iframe/iframe_v2.html

That’s a personal GitHub Pages site. If the lonelycpp GitHub account gets compromised, whoever controls it can serve arbitrary HTML and JavaScript to every user of this app, executing inside the WebView context.

This is a government app loading code from a random person’s GitHub Pages.

Cool, cool. Totally normal dependency for critical government infrastructure.

It also loads JavaScript from Elfsight, a commercial SaaS widget company, with no sandboxing. It sends email addresses to Mailchimp. It hosts images on Uploadcare. It has a hardcoded Truth Social embed pulling from static CDN URLs. None of this is government-controlled infrastructure. The list goes on and on and on.

There’s way more in the full breakdown by Thereallo — this is just the highlights. The app is a toxic waste dump of code you should not trust.

Each of these findings individually might have a charitable explanation. Libraries ship with unused code all the time. Lots of apps use third-party services. Dev artifacts occasionally slip through. But stack them all together — the silent consent stripping, the fully compiled location tracking pipeline, the random GitHub dependency, the commercial third-party data flows, the dev artifacts in production, the zero certificate pinning — and the picture is software built by people who either don’t know or don’t care about the standards government software is supposed to meet.

Which brings us to the part that makes all of this even more inexcusable. The United States government used to have people whose entire job was to prevent exactly this kind of thing.

The U.S. Digital Service was created after the Healthcare.gov disaster during the Obama administration, specifically to bring real software engineering talent into the federal government. For over a decade, across three administrations — including Trump’s first term — USDS and its sibling organization 18F recruited experienced engineers, designers, and product managers from the private sector to build government technology that actually worked. These were people who would have caught a full GPS tracking pipeline sitting one function call from activation in what is supposed to be a press release reader, and who would never have loaded executable code from a random person’s GitHub account.

DOGE fired them. Elon Musk’s “Department of Government Efficiency” gutted USDS and 18F — the organizations that were actually doing what DOGE claimed to be doing — and replaced their expertise with… whatever this is. An app built by an outfit called “forty-five-press” according to the Expo config, running on WordPress, with “Greatest President Ever!” hardcoded in the source, loading code from some random person’s GitHub Pages, and shipping the developer’s home IP address to the public.

This is what you get when you fire the people who know what they’re doing and replace them with loyalists: a government app that strips privacy consent dialogs, has a GPS tracking pipeline ready to flip on, depends on infrastructure the government doesn’t control, and ships with the digital equivalent of leaving your house keys taped to the front door. But hey, at least it makes it easy to report your neighbors to ICE.

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FBI Director Kash Patel’s Personal Email Account Apparently Breached By Iranian Hackers [Techdirt]

Call me a sicko, but I’m almost always happy when a top-level government official’s communications get hacked. That’s because — in almost every case — either the official seems to be a bit shady, or holds a high-level position in an agency involved in some shady stuff. I mean, it’s not like hackers are targeting the head of HUD or the transportation secretary. They’re targeting people like Kash Patel, who’s currently mismanaging the FBI.

Sure, the reason these people are targeted is because their information is more useful to hackers and foreign adversaries. But there are plenty of hackers not tied to foreign entities that go after the same people with the goal of forcing the sort of transparency and accountability these people and the agencies they lead persistently resist.

(And I have no love for hackers targeting entire government agencies just to harvest sensitive info to engage in identity fraud or hold the data for ransom. Government agencies serve the public. Most top-level government officials — especially in this administration — are only serving themselves.)

So, it gives me no pleasure a certain amount of pleasure to report that Kash Patel has been hacked. Reuters was the first to report on the breach:

Iran-linked hackers have broken into ​FBI Director Kash Patel’s personal email inbox, publishing photographs of the director and other documents to the internet, the hackers and the ‌bureau said on Friday.

On their website, the hacker group Handala Hack Team said Patel “will now find his name among the list of successfully hacked victims.” The hackers published a series of personal photographs of Patel sniffing and smoking cigars, riding in an antique convertible, and making a face while taking a picture of himself in the mirror with a large bottle ​of rum.

A picture is worth a thousand words. And I don’t mean to malign the messenger, but perhaps some better words might have been chosen to describe the photos seen by Reuters reporters. “Selfie with a bottle of rum” maybe doesn’t quite capture the entire essence of this photo, but it’s far less unwieldy than “making a face while taking a picture of himself in the mirror with a large bottle of rum.”

That bit of mild criticism aside, the report is a bit of a blockbuster. First, the FBI has already confirmed this hack by Handala, which seems counter to its usual insistence on pretending things didn’t happen and/or insulting the press for reporting on it.

Second, while it probably contains some juicy stuff from Patel’s Gmail account, it doesn’t contain the stuff we really want to see: his communications since being elevated to FBI director.

Alongside the photographs of Patel, the hackers published a sample of more than 300 emails, which appear to show a mix of personal and work correspondence dating between 2010 and 2019.

The FBI’s statement is correct in the fact that this breach seems to contain nothing more than “historical” communications. But the second part of the statement — that this “involves no government information” — cannot possibly be true.

This is from TechCrunch’s report on breach, following the journalists’ attempts to verify the contents of communications shared by Handala:

We used a tool to verify several emails in the leaked cache of files that were sent by Patel from his Gmail account. These emails contained cryptographic signatures that matched the messages, which strongly suggests that the emails we checked are authentic. In some cases, Patel appears to have sent emails from his former Justice Department email address in 2014 to his Gmail account. TechCrunch found that the emails sent from Patel’s DOJ account also appeared to be authentic.

Sure looks like “government information” to me. And it’s especially notable because Patel decided OpSec is for other people by routing DOJ email to his personal inbox. If he had just done the sort of stuff he would logically be expected to do as (in running order) a federal prosecutor and the goddamn deputy director of national intelligence during Trump’s first term, none of that would have ended up exposed by the Handala hack.

All of this makes it very difficult to believe the FBI’s assertion. Either it has already managed to look through everything accessed by the hackers (maybe?) or it’s just taking it’s boss’s word for it (probably). Either way, not a great look. But if we’ve learned anything from the multiple OpSec failures that have defined Trump’s second term, nothing will happen to Patel for violating internal rules governing official US email account security. No one will learn anything from this directly. But if there’s anything Iran can use against us slid between the cigar-sniffing and rum selfies, we — as a nation — might learn a few things indirectly.

02:00 AM

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

If it’s important, don’t ask the team to try harder.

Instead, create the conditions for ordinary effort to produce redundant outputs that reduce crises.

If quality is a problem, look at the system, not the people.

      

A Perfect Texas Storm [The Status Kuo]

Three political winds are a-blowin’ in the Lone Star State. Any one of them alone might knock the election needle to the Democrats’ side. But all three together? It’s now quite a bit more likely that 2026 will be the year a Democrat finally wins state-wide in Texas.

Now, a caveat: We’ve gotten our hopes up before, only to be let down hard. I know from personal experience how deeply entrenched the GOP is in Texas. Team Takei once raised big bucks to try to flip the state blue in 2020, all to no avail.

And to our collective heartbreak and horror, the state has only trended redder, as Latinos drifted away from, and not toward, the Democratic Party.

So what is it about this year that gives me hope that this time around will be different? A series of self-owns by the GOP and Trump has created quite the potent brew and a unique opportunity for an economic populist like Talarico.

Today, let’s track these three political storms and how they might come together in November.

Subscribe now

Please let it be THAT guy

With no Republican candidate for U.S. Senate receiving a majority in Texas’s March primary, the top two voter-getters, Cornyn and Paxton, are now in a fierce, damaging and costly runoff battle for the GOP nomination. To the dismay of Senate Republicans, incumbent Sen. John Cornyn is trailing enfant terrible, state Attorney General Ken Paxton, in the polls.

A runoff election is set for May 26, one day after Memorial Day weekend.

While the MAGA base cheers the fact that Paxton is now in the lead, since many consider Cornyn a RINO for bucking Trump on a few notable occasions, Paxton is simply too far to the right for many Texas voters. This from the state that gave us Ted Cruz and Greg Abbott.

Indeed, Paxton is so extreme that even his own party tried to impeach him and remove him from office. He boasts a list of scandals, investigations and criminal indictments that rivals Trump himself, which may explain his popularity among MAGA stalwarts. What could be more anti-establishment, after all, than a multiply-indicted, corrupt serial philanderer?

Cornyn and his GOP establishment supporters have spent tens of millions of dollars to defeat Paxton by running ads about how deplorable Paxton is. Here’s a taste:

This has given Democrat James Talarico room to consolidate his support, while the two Republicans tear each other apart.

Trump said he’d endorse but hasn’t

Donald Trump’s endorsement was supposed to settle the question early and in Cornyn’s favor, but it hasn’t come.

After the primary, where no Republican won an outright majority, Trump hinted that he’d soon back one candidate and demand the other drop out. That endorsement, which was pushed on Trump by GOP leaders, was supposed to go to Cornyn.

But the MAGA faithful pushed hard for Paxton, and then Paxton pulled an impressive political maneuver: He declared he would drop out of the race if the Senate would pass the SAVE Act, which is Trump’s highest political priority. This put Cornyn in a box and, in a sad “pick me” moment, he came out with a statement in support of eliminating the Senate filibuster to pass it.

Paxton had proven his MAGA bona fides once again to Trump. And by this point, Trump started to believe Talarico was so “liberal” that either candidate could beat him. So Trump declined to weigh in early on the Texas Senate runoff and ultimately failed to issue an endorsement before the deadline to drop out.

Early polling had shown Talarico would handily beat Paxton but trailed Cornyn. Now polling shows that Talarico would beat both candidates by roughly the same 1-2 point margin.

Independent voters will have an outsized say in this election, meaning their opinion of the candidates’ characters will play a big factor. On this front, Talarico maintains an advantage. As Max Burns noted recently in an OpEd for The Hill,

Talarico boasts a favorability of plus-6, compared to minus-24 for Paxton and minus-28 for Cornyn. Historically, voters are far less likely to turn out on Election Day for candidates they dislike. Call it the nasty guy tax.

With anti-Trump midterm winds at the Democrats’ back, the two GOP candidates attacking each other, Trump sitting out the race so far and a yawning gap in favorability numbers, Talarico is well-positioned for the general election in November.

Adios, GOP

Support for the GOP among Latinos is collapsing across the country. But it’s particularly visible in places like the Rio Grande Valley in Texas as the economy worsens, inflation spikes and brutal ICE enforcement actions continue against immigrant communities.

That erosion of support has been rapid. In fact, it has come on so suddenly and strongly that it has erased all the gains Republicans made since 2020 with Hispanic voters in Texas.

A special election held in January for Texas state House District 9, which encompasses Fort Worth, portended problems for the GOP with Latino voters. Trump had won that district by a whopping 17 points in 2024, thanks in large measure to Latino voters who swung his way. But in the January special election, his endorsed GOP candidate fell easily to the Democrat, Taylor Rehmet, who flipped the district by 14 points—a nearly 31-point swing toward the Democrats.

A closer analysis showed that Rehmet captured a stunning 79 percent of the Hispanic vote in District 9, a huge shift from Harris’s 53 percent in 2024. This overperformance shows up clearly in the district maps, per The Texas Tribune.

More recent election numbers in the state should also have Republicans sweating. In the March primary, most of the energy among Latino voters came from their participation in the Democratic rather than the Republican primary. As Multistate.us noted,

The March 2026 Texas primary saw record turnout exceeding 4.4 million voters, with Latino voter participation up 37% in majority-Latino regions and approximately three quarters voting in the Democratic primary.

If Latino voters are not only motivated but switching back to the Dems in large numbers, that represents the lift that could put Talarico over either of the two Republicans in the race.

Granted, there’s a political eternity between now and November. But many of the things currently driving key voting blocs away from the Republicans—the weakness in jobs, the rising costs of nearly everything, and the White House’s continued brutal mass deportation campaign—are only likely to worsen over the next seven months.

And that’s very bad news for the GOP and its electoral hopes, even in former red strongholds like Texas.

Monday 2026-03-30

10:00 PM

Dems Urge Probe Of Saudi, Chinese Money Backing The Ellisons’ Warner Bros Acquisition [Techdirt]

Republicans spent three years suffering an embolism over Chinese influence over TikTok, but have suddenly gone mysteriously quiet now that $25 billion in Saudi, Chinese, and other foreign cash is helping to bankroll right wing billionaire Larry Ellison’s $111 billion acquisition of Warner Brothers. They’re also suddenly quiet about Larry buying up huge sections of the media environment (TikTok, CNN, CBS, HBO, Warner, Paramount), despite previously pretending to care about media consolidation.

There’s an opportunity for Democrats to highlight the hypocrisy here, provided they’re competent enough to message their concerns in a way that resonates with the press, public, and social media (not historically the party’s strong suit).

In a letter to the FCC, seven Democrats urged the agency to launch an investigation into Saudi and Chinese backing of the deal in the hopes of bringing some additional press attention to journalist-murdering autocracies being tightly intertwined with U.S. media and journalism:

“The national security concerns are specific and serious. Tencent’s relationship with the Chinese Communist Party is well-documented. Chinese law also requires domestic technology companies to cooperate with state intelligence services on demand. A Tencent stake in the parent company of CBS News and CNN, no matter how “passive” on paper, creates concrete avenues for potential foreign influence over the editorial independence of American broadcast journalism and content.”

Brendan Carr’s FCC will, of course, ignore the request. Brendan Carr spent years on cable TV hyperventilating about China’s distant proxy relationship with TikTok, but has since gone curiously silent despite China’s Tencent involvement in the deal.

Paramount is trying to avoid triggering CFIUS scrutiny of foreign influence by insisting that the three Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds (Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), the Qatar Investment Authority (QIA) and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority (ADIA) “have agreed to forgo any governance rights — including board representation — associated with their non-voting equity investments.”

We’ve noted how the U.S. right wing is trying to mirror Victor Orban’s assault on media in Hungary, which involved autocrat-friendly oligarchs buying up all the media companies while the government strangles independent truth-telling journalism just out of frame. Over long enough of a timeline, this trajectory routinely leads to first the arrest — and eventually murder — of journalists critical of party power.

Republicans are making obvious, steady progress in that goal so far, and will keep pushing until they run into opposition that consists of more than just feckless Democrat “concerns.” Democrats should be highlighting, at every opportunity, not just the potential soft power foreign influence over the deal, but the right wing’s unsubtle goal of widespread information warfare and control.

Even free of autocratic issues, the Warner Brothers Paramount deal is just generally terrible; the massive debt load is expected to trigger unprecedented layoffs across a Hollywood production industry that’s already reeling. The best chance for blocking the deal outright currently sits with a coalition of state attorneys general, though even they likely face a steep uphill climb without some significant political, press, and public support.

06:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 額 [Kanji of the Day]

✍18

小5

forehead, tablet, plaque, framed picture, sum, amount, volume

ガク

ひたい

金額   (きんがく)   —   amount of money
総額   (そうがく)   —   sum total
月額   (げつがく)   —   monthly amount (sum)
全額   (ぜんがく)   —   total
高額   (こうがく)   —   large sum (of money)
減額   (げんがく)   —   reduction
巨額   (きょがく)   —   huge sum (esp. of money)
多額   (たがく)   —   large (amount of money)
半額   (はんがく)   —   half the amount (of money)
増額   (ぞうがく)   —   increase (in an amount of money)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 悩 [Kanji of the Day]

✍10

中学

trouble, worry, in pain, distress, illness

ノウ

なや.む なや.ます なや.ましい なやみ

悩み   (なやみ)   —   trouble
悩む   (なやむ)   —   to be worried
苦悩   (くのう)   —   agony
伸び悩む   (のびなやむ)   —   to be sluggish
悩ましい   (なやましい)   —   seductive
悩みの種   (なやみのたね)   —   source of worry
思い悩む   (おもいなやむ)   —   to worry about
子煩悩   (こぼんのう)   —   cherishing one's children
悩み事   (なやみごと)   —   matter causing distress
煩悩   (ぼんのう)   —   worldly desires

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

05:00 PM

Judge Allows BitTorrent Seeding Claims Against Meta, Despite Lawyers ‘Lame Excuses’ [TorrentFreak]

meta-logoOver the past two years, rightsholders of all kinds have filed lawsuits against companies that develop AI models.

Most of these cases allege that AI developers used copyrighted works to train LLMs without first obtaining authorization.

Meta is among a long list of companies now being sued for this allegedly infringing activity. This includes a class action lawsuit filed by authors including Richard Kadrey, Sarah Silverman, and Christopher Golden, which accused Meta of using libraries of pirated books as training material.

Court Dismisses AI Training Claims

Last summer, Meta scored a key victory in this case, as the court concluded that using pirated books to train its Llama LLM qualified as fair use, based on the arguments presented in this case. This was a bittersweet victory, however, as Meta remained on the hook for downloading and sharing the books via BitTorrent.

By downloading books from shadow libraries such as Anna’s Archive, Meta relied on BitTorrent transfers. In addition to downloading content, these typically upload data to others as well. According to the authors, this means that Meta was engaged in widespread and direct copyright infringement.

In recent months, the lawsuit continued based on this remaining direct copyright infringement claim. While this was unfolding, the authors’ legal team also ‘discovered’ a new claim

Authors Pivot to Seeding Claim

Last December, the authors, through their attorneys, requested leave to file a fourth amended complaint. Specifically, they want to add a contributory copyright infringement claim, alleging that Meta facilitated third-party copyright infringement by seeding pirated books to others.

While the BitTorrent angle is not new, the authors previously only included a ‘distribution’ claim based on direct copyright infringement. This claim has a higher evidence standard, as it typically requires evidence that the infringer shares a whole work with a third party.

Since BitTorrent transfers break up files into smaller chunks before they are shared, it might be difficult to prove that a whole work is shared. However, the same transfers can be evidence that an infringer facilitated torrent transfers to third parties.

Anna’s Archive torrents (illustrative)

aa torrent

Court Grants BitTorrent Pivot, Despite Doubletalk

This week, U.S. District Court Judge Vince Chhabria granted the motion, but made little effort to hide his frustration with how plaintiffs’ counsel handled it.

The judge acknowledged that the contributory infringement claim could and should have been added back in November 2024, when the authors amended their complaint to include the distribution claim. After all, both claims arise from the same factual allegations about Meta’s torrenting activity.

“The lawyers for the named plaintiffs have no excuse for neglecting to add a contributory infringement claim based on these allegations back in November 2024,” Judge Chhabria wrote.

The lawyers of the book authors claimed that the delay was the result of newly produced evidence that had “crystallized” their understanding of Meta’s uploading activity. However, that did not impress the judge.

He called it a “lame excuse” and “a bunch of doubletalk,” noting that if the missing discovery truly prevented the contributory claim from being added in November 2024, the same logic would have prevented the distribution claim from being added at that time as well.

“Rather than blaming Meta for producing discovery late, the plaintiffs’ lawyers should have been candid with the Court, explaining that they missed an issue in a case of first impression..,” the order reads.

Lame excuse…

lame excuse

Judge Chhabria went further, noting that the authors’ law firm, Boies Schiller, showed “an ongoing pattern” of distracting from its own mistakes by attacking Meta. He pointed specifically to the dispute over when Meta disclosed its fair use defense to the distribution claim, which we covered here recently, characterizing it as a false distraction.

“The lawyers for the plaintiffs seem so intent on bashing Meta that they are unable to exercise proper judgment about how to represent the interests of their clients and the proposed class members,” the order reads.

Counsel “Lucked Into” a Pass

Despite the criticism, Chhabria granted the motion. The judge anticipated the obvious question from readers of his order.

“By now, the reader might be thinking, ‘Wait a minute, you started off saying that the motion to amend the complaint was difficult. It seems like an easy deny to me,'” Chhabria wrote.

Wait a Minute…

wait a minute

The primary reason to grant the motion is the risk to the other potential members of the class action. If the contributory infringement claim were excluded and the class later lost on the distribution claim at trial, those class members could potentially be barred from ever bringing the contributory claim separately.

A second factor also made the decision easier. Meta has separately requested the court to align the schedule in this case with a separate but similar lawsuit filed by Entrepreneur Media. This case covers a similar contributory infringement claim and shares discovery the authors’ lawsuit. Granting the motion to amend, therefore, adds little practical burden to Meta.

However, the judge stresses that this is the result of luck, rather than the skill of the authors’ counsel.

“Plaintiffs’ counsel has lucked into a situation where Meta will not be meaningfully prejudiced by the failure to add a contributory infringement claim back in November 2024,” Chhabria wrote.

The authors’ motion to open the class discovery process was denied. That will only be considered if the named plaintiffs survive the next round of summary judgment on both the distribution and contributory infringement claims.

For now, the case moves forward with a fourth amended complaint, three new loan-out companies added as named plaintiffs, and a growing list of BitTorrent-related claims for Judge Chhabria to resolve.

A copy of the order, filed at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, is available here (pdf).

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

06:00 AM

Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt [Techdirt]

This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is Stephen T. Stone with a rebuke to someone defending the Fifth Circuit’s ruling about whether a cop could sue Twitter:

By the logic of the Fifth Circuit’s rulings, Donald Trump can and should be held responsible for the actions of the rioters on the 6th of January 2021. Is that the position you wish to take?

In second place, it’s a long comment from Azuaron disagreeing with many parts of our post about the verdict against Meta:

Hold up

I don’t wholly agree with this ruling or it’s implications–The Encryption Problem, in particular, is a terrible argument that has to die–but I really have to address this section because it’s not accurate:

The trial judge in the California case bought this argument, ruling that because the claims were about “product design and other non-speech issues,” Section 230 didn’t apply. The New Mexico court reached a similar conclusion. Both cases then went to trial.

This distinction — between “design” and “content” — sounds reasonable for about three seconds. Then you realize it falls apart completely.

Here’s a thought experiment: imagine Instagram, but every single post is a video of paint drying. Same infinite scroll. Same autoplay. Same algorithmic recommendations. Same notification systems. Is anyone addicted? Is anyone harmed? Is anyone suing?

Of course not. Because infinite scroll is not inherently harmful. Autoplay is not inherently harmful. Algorithmic recommendations are not inherently harmful. These features only matter because of the content they deliver. The “addictive design” does nothing without the underlying user-generated content that makes people want to keep scrolling.

Instagram has, I’m sure, thousands of videos of paint drying that, I’m also sure, have very few views. Those videos have very few views because part of Instagram’s algorithmic recommendation system is to not serve videos of paint drying to people, because the design goal of Instagram is maximum addiction and use, which would not happen if their algorithm only recommended videos of paint drying.

The scenario of “Instagram, but with videos of paint drying. Same infinite scroll. Same autoplay. Same algorithmic recommendations. Same notification systems,” is the scenario we’re in now where we do have people addicted, we do have people harmed, and people are suing. Constraining Instagram to have “only” videos of paint drying is a straw man because it nearly eliminates all the design decisions that caused the harm. So, yeah, if you eliminate all that design that causes harm, the harm isn’t caused, but that’s not what anyone’s talking about.

First, however, let’s start with what Section 230 actually says:

No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.

No provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be held liable on account of—

(A) any action voluntarily taken in good faith to restrict access to or availability of material that the provider or user considers to be obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, excessively violent, harassing, or otherwise objectionable, whether or not such material is constitutionally protected; or

(B) any action taken to enable or make available to information content providers or others the technical means to restrict access to material described in paragraph (1).

There’s more that I believe isn’t currently relevant, but by all means look and correct me.

In every day language, what does 230 say? It’s a narrow carve out for responsibility based only on “providers are not necessarily publishers” and “providers can choose what content appears, or does not”.

Now, what are these lawsuits claiming? They claim (I’m going to speak to just Instagram here, but this applies to all the others as well):

  • That Instagram, as a system, has been specifically designed to be addictive
  • That Instagram, as a system, has been specifically designed to worsen the mental health of its users
  • That Instagram, as a system, has been specifically designed to maximize user engagement at the expense of that user
  • That children deserve additional protection–just like children get additional protection from advertisement–from hostile systems because their brains are still developing and they’re particularly vulnerable to it

None of those are content arguments, and saying, “But what if the content was paint drying?” is not relevant or helpful. People aren’t addicted to “a single Instagram video” or even “a single Instagram channel” (you can probably tell I’m not on Instagram; I’m sure they’re not called “channels”). People are addicted to the system of Instagram that feeds them content specifically tailored to maximize addiction and use, and feeds them content in a way that maximizes addiction and use. For some people that’s makeup videos, for some people that’s movie clips; the specific content is not the point. Hell, there’s probably one guy in Minnesota who’s hopelessly addicted to paint drying videos.

The problem, as with practically everything we’re dealing with in the world, is not single bad actors or individual responsibility. The problem is the system, and the system has, in fact as documented in court, been specifically designed to be addictive, to ruin people’s mental health, and to cause harm. The only way we’re going to be able to address this is by focusing on the system.

Finally, we’ve got to address this statement as well:

If every editorial decision about how to present third-party content is now a “design choice” subject to product liability, Section 230 protects effectively nothing. Every website makes decisions about how to display user content. Every search engine ranks results. Every email provider filters spam. Every forum has a sorting algorithm, even if it’s just “newest first.” All of those are “design choices” that could, theoretically, be blamed for some downstream harm.

Instagram’s targeted recommendation and addiction algorithm dark patterns are not the same thing as “newest first”. This is a slippery slope argument with no evidence that such a slope exists. If “newest first” was equally addictive and harmful, Meta would not have spent probably billions creating its various “engagement” systems. This is like saying a lawsuit against a restaurant that poisoned someone with puffer fish will lead to lawsuits against restaurants for selling salmon because they’re both fish.

Another example: we didn’t ban normal darts after we banned lawn darts, despite their similar design decisions, because of the key differences in their design decisions that resulted in clear and obvious differences in their harmful outcomes. No one’s going to get sued for “newest first” specifically because of how it’s different to the engagement algorithms.

The people and companies who make products have always been responsible for the designs of their products when those designs cause harm, from the lawn dart to the Pinto. And, we have long recognized that mental harms are harms: “Intentional infliction of emotional distress”, for instance, has been a recognized tort for decades. That we now have products that cause mental harm is new simply because we didn’t used to have the technology to create those products. But, “products have designs that cause harm” is not a new concept, and neither is “mental harms are tortable harms”.

Furthermore, “every editorial decision” is not now a “design choice”; just the design choices. Providers are–still!–not publishers or speakers of third-party content, and–still!–are not liable for moderation. Nothing in these lawsuits can be reasonably construed to impact decisions to publish–or not–specific content, which is all 230 protects. These lawsuits are, fully, not about the content, any more than California’s ban on Amazon’s dark patterns are a ban on having a web store. This lawsuits are fundamentally not about speech, because the problem is not the speech, but the system around the speech.

That some people might benefit from social media doesn’t negate the harm done to other people, nor make the company not liable for the harm it causes. No matter how many people found joy and friendship playing lawn darts with their friends, that doesn’t resurrect the kids who died, or replace the eyes that were lost. “Someone who was not harmed by lawn darts” would never be invited to a lawsuit about someone who was harmed by lawn darts; that just doesn’t make sense.

I’ve come down pretty hard, here, like I’m fully in favor of these lawsuits. While I definitely believe the nature of these social media sites is specifically designed to be harmful, and we do need a way to address that, ehhhhh, the plaintiffs in these cases made some pretty bad arguments. “Encryption is harmful”, well, guess what, lack of encryption is more harmful! We absolutely can’t be saying that companies are damned if they do, damned if they don’t, and we definitely don’t want to be restricting encryption. As rightly pointed out by the author, mental harms are complex, multifaceted, and it’s difficult to determine a reliable causality; I don’t know enough about the people in question to speak on the analysis that happened here, but it probably wasn’t sufficient. But, that doesn’t mean that such an analysis is impossible, and being on social media for 16 hours a day is certainly a compelling starting point.

So, more broadly speaking, what should we do about it? I don’t know! There’s a needle that needs to be threaded, and I’m not the one to thread it. The big algorithmic social media sites are really bad and I love every cut that someone gets against them, but there were certainly arguments being made on the plaintiff’s side (encryption? Come on!) that were pure BS and bad for everyone.

All that being said, one thing we absolutely must not do is misrepresent the actual harm and problems caused by the systems these companies created, and we need some kind of law or regulation to end it and make them liable for it. Hell, a basic goddamn privacy law would probably get us most of the way there on its own just by cutting down on the fodder that goes into their algorithms. Good luck to us all on that.

For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a comment from MrWilson about the Trump administration trying to rein in RFK Jr.:

Junior should check the schedule. There might be a bus coming and he might be under it soon.

Next, it’s frankcox with a comment about Brendan Carr lazily trying to ban all foreign routers:

Ban MS Windows instead?

If the objective is to increase Internet security with no regard to secondary/downstream ramifications, then wouldn’t it make more sense to ban Microsoft Windows?

MS Windows has been responsible for more security issues than any other single factor pretty much since from the first day showed up on the Internet.

Over on the funny side, our first place winner is MrWilson again, this time with a comment about learning HTML back in the early days of the web:

This comment is best viewed in Netscape Navigator 3.0.

In second place, it’s Thad with a comment about a bad take from the Washington Post editorial board:

Well jeez, if you can’t trust an unsigned editorial from a paper whose owner has actively and publicly interfered with its content to favor the Trump Administration, who can you trust?

For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with a comment from Pixelation about the deployment of “synergy” corporate speak to announce layoffs:

Pushing the envelope

Well, they can use those synergies and circle back to their core competencies, which will streamline the deliverables for a deep dive so they can move the needle. It will be a paradigm shift when everyone has skin in the game!

Finally, it’s Bloof with a comment about the court’s rejection of attempts to take down the DOGE deposition videos:

Once again biased judges fail to protect the most delicate treasure that america owns, the egos of unqualified white men promoted well beyond anything their mediocrity would justify.

That’s all for this week, folks!

03:00 AM

The Pirate Bay’s Oldest Torrent Turned 22…. [TorrentFreak]

piratebay old logoThe Pirate Bay was once the leading pirate site, with a hubris matching its millions of monthly visitors.

After the verdict that sent its founders to prison, the site slowly started to decay. The option to comment or register as a new user eventually broke down, and aside from promoting a fishy token, public outreach ground to a halt.

Despite this downward spiral, the site continues to live up to its official tagline: the galaxy’s most resilient torrent site. Where TorrentSpy, Mininova, isoHunt, Torrentz, KickassTorrents, ExtraTorrent, RARBG and TorrentGalaxy all fell, The Pirate Bay continues to serve many millions of monthly users.

The galaxy’s most resilient BitTorrent site

galaxy

It’s safe to say that The Pirate Bay witnessed quite a bit of change. When the site launched, roughly 10% of the world’s population was connected to the Internet, and in the United States, the majority of all ‘world wide web’ users were still using a dial-up connection.

At the time, all popular entertainment was consumed offline. People interested in watching a movie could use the Internet to buy a DVD at one of the early webshops, or sign up with Netflix, which shipped discs through the mail. However, on-demand access was simply not a thing. At least, not legally.

With enough patience, file-sharing software allowed people to share large video files, and BitTorrent excelled at this, as transfer speeds typically picked up with more demand. This is why torrent sites popularized the on-demand downloading of movies and TV-series for millions of people.

Pirate Bay’s Oldest Torrent

Today, most files shared on The Pirate Bay in the early years are no longer available. BitTorrent requires at least one person to share a full file copy, which is difficult to keep up for decades.

Surprisingly, however, several torrents have managed to stand the test of time and remain actively shared. Earlier this week, the site’s longest surviving torrent turned 22 years old.

While a few candidates have shown up over the years, we believe that an episode of “High Chaparral” featuring Uri Geller has the honor of being the oldest Pirate Bay torrent that’s still active today. The file was originally uploaded on March 25, 2004, and several people continue to share it today.

22 Years Later

chaparall

At this point, the torrent in question appears to have reached a cult status, with pirates sharing the release simply because it is the oldest torrent on The Pirate Bay. Despite the record, however, the Swedish TV series is shared without permission of the creators.

Revolution OS & The Fanimatrix

There are also other pirate releases on The Pirate Bay that continue to thrive. On March 31, 2004, someone uploaded a pirated copy of the documentary “Revolution OS” to the site, which is alive and kicking today.

“Revolution OS” covers the history of Linux, GNU, and the free software movement, which was a good fit for the early Pirate Bay crowd. Thirteen years ago, we spoke to director J.T.S. Moore, who wasn’t pleased that people were pirating the documentary but was nevertheless glad to see it hadn’t lost its appeal.

Fast-forward to the present day, and Revolution OS still has plenty of interest, with more than 33 people actively seeding the torrent.

While these torrents are certainly dated, they’re not the oldest active torrents available on the Internet. That honor goes to “The Fanimatrix”, which was created in September 2003 and, after being previously resurrected, continues to be available today with dozens of people seeding. We’ll check back in 2028 for its 25th anniversary.

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

12:00 AM

Long odds and unseen differences [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

“The odds of winning the lottery are the same whether you buy a ticket or not.”

This seems nonsensical at first. Obviously, there are lottery winners. Therefore, the odds aren’t the same.

Except we’re not mathematicians doing a math problem (at least most of us). Odds are how we navigate the world. When they’re sufficiently low, the useful approach is to assume that they’re zero. Sort of how we deal with invisible signals: There’s sound in a very quiet room, but we can’t hear it. There’s light in a very dark room, but we can’t see it. These never go to zero, but we treat them as if they do.

The story of playing very long odds might give you hope or solace or energize you. That’s what they make movies about, after all. But in practice, you’re buying that story, not a useful chance of winning something.

Paul McGowan points out that the difference between a $500 stereo and a $5000 stereo is enormous. But the difference between the more expensive stereo’s sound and one costing $50,000 is vanishingly small… Soon it becomes a story, not a sound.

Buy the best story you can afford, with all the benefits it comes with. But don’t be confused by the odds or tiny differences. They’re probably zero.

      

A Special Birthday for a Special Baby Boy [The Status Kuo]

We celebrated my boy Ronan’s first birthday with family and many guncles and aunties!

Ronan looked like a little emperor!

Even Riley kept her headpiece on for her brother, instead of tearing it off right away per usual.

Ronan’s birthday is just four days out from mine, so this year we combined the two.

But I assume going forward, as soon as he understands what birthdays are really about, the focus will be squarely on him! Here was his hero wall:

It was a great end to a big day of celebrating what it truly means to be an American and fight for our democracy. This is my brother John and my bestie Blair at the top of the rally in NYC.

I feel doubly dedicated to the fight when I think about the world I want to leave for my kids when they are grown. And keep heart! Together we’ll get through this! We will build that future for them and all who come after us.

Have a terrific Sunday.

Jay (+ Ronan, Riley, Shade and Windsor)

Today, I’m taking things a bit easy.

Sunday 2026-03-29

06:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 操 [Kanji of the Day]

✍16

小6

maneuver, manipulate, operate, steer, chastity, virginity, fidelity

ソウ サン

みさお あやつ.る

操作   (そうさ)   —   operation
体操   (たいそう)   —   gymnastics
操作性   (そうさせい)   —   operability
操業   (そうぎょう)   —   operation (of a machine, factory, fishing boat, etc.)
操る   (あやつる)   —   to operate (e.g., a machine)
操縦   (そうじゅう)   —   steering
操り   (あやつり)   —   manipulation
操作方法   (そうさほうほう)   —   user guide
新体操   (しんたいそう)   —   rhythmic gymnastics
遠隔操作   (えんかくそうさ)   —   remote control

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 溝 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

中学

gutter, ditch, sewer, drain, 10**32

コウ

みぞ

排水溝   (はいすいこう)   —   drainage
側溝   (そっこう)   —   gutter
溝川   (どぶがわ)   —   ditch with running water
盧溝橋事件   (ろこうきょうじけん)   —   Marco Polo Bridge Incident (July 7, 1937)
海溝   (かいこう)   —   ocean trench
U字溝   (ユーじこう)   —   U-shaped gutter
盧溝橋   (ろこうきょう)   —   Marco Polo Bridge (China)
共同溝   (きょうどうこう)   —   multipurpose underground utility conduit
溝鼠   (どぶねずみ)   —   brown rat (Rattus norvegicus)
日本海溝   (にほんかいこう)   —   Japan Trench

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

GIMP 3.2.2 Released [GIMP]

We present the first micro-release of GIMP 3.2! Over the last two weeks, we’ve been collecting and responding to reports from you all, and have packaged fixes for some of the most common issues in this first “bugfix” version.

General Highlights

As with any major release, there’s always a few issues that are revealed when a much larger audience starts using the new software. We appreciate your reports, and hope this latest release squashes the major new issues!

  • When layers with certain filters (like Drop Shadow) were added to layer groups, the layers would stop rendering. While the data itself wasn’t lost, this was obviously inconvenient! Fortunately, Jehan diagnosed the problem and fixed the layer group display.

  • Thanks to excellent testing and reports by teapot and Richard Gitschlag, we’ve fixed a number of issues and overlooked uses for vector layers. New contributor balooii provided several key patches towards this effort.

  • When importing SVG paths in the Paths dock, the Scale imported paths to fit image option did not work correctly. This issue has been resolved and now properly scales the imported path based on user preference.

  • A number of image import plug-ins have been made more robust, including FITS, TIM, PAA, ICNS, PVR, SFW, and JIF.

  • The Paintshop Pro plug-in now correctly loads the active selection shape, instead of just the rectangle around the selection. Thanks to migf1 for providing sample images to help us test and fix this.

  • The PSD plug-in now imports all of the channels in a Multichannel mode PSD image. New contributer Frank Teklote has been busy improving support for importing more PSD features stored in TIFFs and JPEGs (such as layers and paths).

  • The legacy Tile filter now properly copies over the original image’s color profile to make sure the new tiled image is in the right color space.

  • Bruno Lopes has enabled the Send by Email feature in the Files menu on AppImages.

  • New contributor v4vansh has updated the manual page generation and updated it with new information from the 3.0 releases.

  • As previously announced, 32-bit Windows builds are now dropped. This, combined to some cleanup on shipped data, resulted on a .exe installer more than 100MiB smaller and running faster.

UX/UI Updates

While not the focus of this release, we were able to implement a few small improvements based on user and designer feedback from our UX site. We encourage everyone to participate in the discussion there - no coding required!

  • The Compute unique colors feature in the Histogram dock now recognizes if the image has an active selection, and if so, only counts the pixels in that area. This should further help pixel artists and others who need precise color counts.

  • When opening an image with rotation metadata, you can now click the preview image that you want to load, in addition to the Rotate or Keep Original buttons. This should make the process of choosing the initial image orientation a little clearer.

  • Resource” selection buttons in plug-ins (such as fonts, brushes, gradients, and patterns) now support mnemonics! Hold the Alt key to see the underlined letter in their label, then press it to activate the button. This allows for faster keyboard navigation instead of requiring a mouse, for those users who prefer the option.

  • In the non-destructive filter pop-over menu, the Toggle Visibility button now adapts to the state of the filter stack. For example, if all filters are turned off individually then the button will automatically switch states so that clicking it toggles them back on (and vice versa).

  • New contributor Aditya Tiwari has restored the Tab shortcut label to the Hide Docks entry in the Windows menu. This had to be done in a specific way since the shortcut only applies when the canvas is active, instead of being a “global” shortcut.

Revamping macOS Build Process

Bruno Lopes have been working since December last year on modernizing our macOS infrastructure and overall macOS support. Right now, the macOS release process is a bit manual and slow. In the future, this should be done automatically from our GitLab CI.

These new builds are part of a big investment approved by the GIMP Committee and would not be possible without your donations so far. We would be happy for you to test them at the Automatic Development Builds section of the Development Downloads page so we don’t introduce regressions when these new builds are made official.

Around GIMP

GEGL

To supplement our release of GIMP, GEGL 0.4.70 was also released. This is mostly a bugfix release as well with core fixes to the GeglPath API, as well as fixes in the png-save and exr-save operations.

Various build improvements were performed too and some compiler warnings cleaned up.

New Mirror

Yamagata University in Japan has graciously agreed to serve as a new mirror for GIMP downloads.

This makes it our second download mirror in Japan. On this note, don’t forget that mirrors are important contributors to the project too. They help sharing the load for our dozens of thousands of daily downloads and ensure that everyone can have fast downloads. We clearly have more mirrors in some parts of the globe, and some regions would deserve to have more mirrors closeby.

If your organization wants to become an official mirror of GIMP and be mentioned in our list of mirror sponsors, you may simply create a request to be an +official mirror. 🤗

Release Stats

Since GIMP 3.2.0, in the main GIMP repository:

  • 30 reports were closed as FIXED.
  • 19 merge requests were merged.
  • 200 commits were pushed.
  • 10 translations were updated: Chinese (China), Esperanto, Finnish, Georgian, Polish, Serbian, Slovenian, Spanish, Swedish, Ukrainian.

21 people contributed changes or fixes to GIMP 3.2.2 codebase (order is determined by number of commits; some people are in several groups):

  • 7 developers to core code: Alx Sa, Jehan, Bruno Lopes, balooii, v4vansh, Aditya Tiwari.
  • 5 developers to plug-ins or modules: Alx Sa, Bruno Lopes, Frank Teklote, Jehan, Sabri Ünal.
  • 11 translators: Марко Костић, Jiri Grönroos, Martin, Yuri Chornoivan, luming zh, Anders Jonsson, Aleksandr Prokudin, Ekaterine Papava, Kristjan ESPERANTO, Mateusz Jastrząb, Rodrigo Lledó.
  • 2 theme designers: Alx Sa, Anders Jonsson.
  • 4 build, packaging or CI contributors: Bruno Lopes, Jehan, Alfred Wingate, v4vansh.
  • 3 contributors on other types of resources: Jehan, Bruno Lopes, v4vansh.
  • The gimp-data submodule had 2 commits by 1 contributor: Jehan.

Contributions on other repositories in the GIMPverse (order is determined by number of commits):

  • Our UX tracker had 2 reports closed as FIXED.
  • ctx had 44 commits since 3.2.0 release by 1 contributor: Øyvind Kolås.
  • The gimp-macos-build (macOS packaging scripts) release had 3 commits by 2 contributors: Bruno Lopes, Lukas Oberhuber.
  • The flatpak release had 5 commits by 2 contributors: Bruno, Ondřej Míchal. Thanks a lot to Ondřej helping more with this package!
  • Our main website (what you are reading right now) had 29 commits by 4 contributors: Jehan, Bruno Lopes, Alx Sa, Jonathan D.
  • Our developer website had 18 commits by 3 contributors: Bruno Lopes, Jehan, Ency.
  • Our 3.0 documentation had 20 commits by 6 contributors: Jacob Boerema, Marco Ciampa, Марко Костић, Kolbjørn Stuestøl, Sabri Ünal, Yuri Chornoivan.

Let’s not forget to thank all the people who help us triaging in Gitlab, report bugs and discuss possible improvements with us. Our community is deeply thankful as well to the internet warriors who manage our various discussion channels or social network accounts such as Ville Pätsi, Liam Quin, Michael Schumacher and Sevenix!

Note: considering the number of parts in GIMP and around, and how we get statistics through git scripting, errors may slip inside these stats. Feel free to tell us if we missed or mis-categorized some contributors or contributions.

Downloading GIMP 3.2.2

You will find all our official builds on GIMP official website (gimp.org):

  • Linux AppImages for x86 and ARM (64-bit)
  • Linux Flatpaks for x86 and ARM (64-bit)
  • Linux Snaps for x86 and ARM (64-bit)
  • Universal Windows installer for x86 and ARM (64-bit)
  • Microsoft Store for x86 and ARM (64-bit)
  • macOS DMG packages for Intel/x86 and Apple/ARM hardware (64-bit)

Other packages made by third-parties are obviously expected to follow (Linux or *BSD distributions’ packages, etc).

Note: the macOS DMG packages are planned to be a bit late, because of sickness and lack of time of relevant volunteers. We hope to have them in the coming days.

What’s Next

Here we go! This is the first micro release in the GIMP 3.2 series. As often with the first version in a new series, GIMP 3.2.0 had a few annoying issues, and the most problematic of these was the bug where some layer groups would not render in specific conditions (when particular filters were used). This was the main bug warranting this early bug-fix release.

In a sense, this is still better than the start of our 3.0 series (where we had more annoying issues, though it was also quite a huge update!), yet we want to do better! This is why we’d like to remind you that GIMP is made by anyone who wants to help. We would really love to have more early testers trying to break things by actually doing deep testing with our test binaries. We should thank in particular ShiroYuki Mot and Anders Jonsson who have been tirelessly testing our releases. But that ain’t enough! If anyone wants to be added to the list of testers for future releases, please open a report on the gimp-web-devel tracker, and tell us which platforms (OS, etc.) in particular you wish to test. We will add you in our default release template, which should notify you every time we prepare a new version.

In terms of schedules, we are still mostly continuing to fix bugs but I am predicting that the bug-fixing spree should slow down soon. Then we will start working more explicitly on new fancy features. I.e. we’d start preparing GIMP 3.4 already! Stay tuned by following the news on our website!

Don’t forget you can donate and personally fund GIMP developers, as a way to give back and accelerate the development of GIMP. Community commitment helps the project to grow stronger!

11:00 AM

Just for Skeets and Giggles (3.28.26) [The Status Kuo]

It’s No Kings 3 day across America! I’ll be popping by our NYC protest later this afternoon!

If only we could tell our sweet summer child selves in 2020 what was in store…

Image.heic

Note: Xcancel links mirror Twitter without sending traffic. Some GIFs may load; just swipe them down. Issues? Click the gear on the Xcancel page’s upper right, select “proxy video streaming through the server,” then “save preferences” at the bottom. For sanity, don’t read the comments; they’re all bots and trolls. Won’t load? Paste the link into your browser and remove “cancel” after the X in the URL.

The good news is, Democrats and independents are fired up, while the MAGA right is rapidly losing steam.

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The man-baby in charge keeps doing things like this, so we’ll keep mocking him.

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He’s even ordered his name placed on our currency while still alive.

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The “while still alive” part is a wild card given his health and clear dementia. And on the subject of officials leaving us, Trump celebrated Robert Mueller’s passing, posting “Good!” upon the news of his death. So let’s get some things out of the way.

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There will be celebrations throughout Oz.

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Every time I see something flash up with “President Trump has…,” I get a spike of adrenaline.

I imagine the news may go over something like this.

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Trump has dodged many a bullet, but Afroman never misses.

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How alive is Trump really these days anyway?

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He’s having conversations with former presidents about Iran…

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And this made the rounds bigly.

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I could see it happening.

Meanwhile the actual negotiations are going like this:

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When Trump starts saying we’ll destroy them in two weeks, we’ll know we’re in a forever war.

We’re all caught in the upside down, so this observation hits home.

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Meanwhile, Iran is trolling us very hard and very effectively. This was their response to Trump saying the Strait of Hormuz might be jointly controlled.

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Trump’s bizarre statements now include references to a supposed gift from the Iranians.

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No one knows who is really talking to whom.

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His boasts are becoming more laughable and sadly predictable.

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This clip was honestly quite amazing.

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The Dame Judi Dench cameo! hahaha

Surely inside the Pentagon, things must be under control, right? The Daily Show with someone on the inside:

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Meanwhile the Strait remains closed to the U.S. and our allies.

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That single point of failure is really a keen metaphor for life.

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On the home front, the right continues pushing back over ICE reforms and funding.

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Trump’s latest brainchild sent ICE into airports. Folks had some legit concerns.

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ICE tends to bring out the gallows humorists.

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But after a day on the job, we saw how that deployment was working out.

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They wound up sending in agents even younger and more awkward than the DOGE dorks. The comments are just…

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The agents who aren’t teenagers aren’t accomplishing much either, other than giving us some amazing photo moments. Like this:

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Which one has the $50K for Tom Homan?

Yes, the jokes are flowing fast, even if the TSA lines aren’t.

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The Onion manages to stay in business through these absurd times.

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Our nation’s photographers keep showing us how to handle fascist narcissists.

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Other parts of the GOP-led government aren’t functioning any better.

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Iran easily managed to hack Kash Patel’s private email account.

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I actually gasped when I saw this.

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But no worries, the person they picked to replace Noem is great, right?

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It’s going great over at CPAC this year…

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The Pope is ready to do battle…

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And then there was this headline.

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Is it a white thing?

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Riley Gaines is still trying to remain relevant. She got called out quick.

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But the best thing that happened this week was this bit by Druski, the master of comic looks!

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It’s got Erika Kirk fans really miffed. I wonder why?

Look at this man’s talents.

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New iconic take just dropped.

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That’s… that’s not Druski. Hahaha

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Share

Enough absurd politics. Let’s talk animals!

I was not prepared for this regal moment.

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If you missed this story, don’t worry. Disney is surely preparing the live-action movie. From the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong: And a corgi shall lead us!

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Sorry, one political dig given the story above.

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This “over it” doggo is quickly becoming an epic meme.

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My cat Shade loves my massager, so I bet he’d go for this too.

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Cats have their own issues, of course.

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Someone thought to put the logo around him, and it’s gold.

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Resting sourpuss face?

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Hannipurr Lector here.

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They’re stalkers. All of them.

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Here’s a red panda just because.

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This clip is both heartwarming and fascinating. Talk about rubberneckers!

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Perfect caption for this moment.

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I actually think the origin is Indonesian not Malay, but point taken.

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Speaking of orange, this guy got a different cut than expected. The social media commentary that followed

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Devastating commentary was the theme of the week, and it abounded in my feed:

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New perfect word of the week, too:

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And I’m stealing this.

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What goes around comes around.

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I think of this every time Riley and I sing the ABCs and get to this point of the song.

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Speaking of symbols, this SNL bit on emojis was 💪🏽

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There’s an unlikely white nerdy hero in college hoops. But what to call him?

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Here are some random observations that kept me chuckling.

Any Clue fans out there?

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Say this out loud and try not to laugh!

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Lettuce consider this.

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Footage of Justin Timberlake’s arrest made the rounds, and so did some great takes.

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My friend Telly played Aladdin on Broadway, so I had to send this to him.

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In Hollywood news, this is actually happening.

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What to name the baby though?

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Those of us Gen X or older can appreciate this deeply.

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And the struggle is damn real.

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We end with a day-appropriate dad joke to round things out.

Have a great weekend!

Jay

07:00 AM

Game Jam Winner Spotlight: I Am Sam Spade [Techdirt]

Last week, we announced the winners of our eighth annual public domain game jam, Gaming Like It’s 1930! Now it’s time to begin our series of spotlight posts, examining each of the winners in a bit more detail, and we’re kicking things off today with a look at the winner of Best Adaptation: I am Sam Spade by Marshview Games.

A lot of people associate the hardboiled genre of detective fiction with the protagonist’s inner monologue, as they ruminate on the situations that they face and give the reader a sense of their character and motivations. But some of the genre’s foundational works, such as Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon, actually omit this entirely: the reader never sees inside detective Sam Spade’s head, they only see what he does. I am Sam Spade by Marshview Games adapts this early classic while centering the later convention, with gameplay that focuses on the inner life of the detective to drive his actions, and puts players in his shoes. And not just one player, but all of them.

To do this, it borrows mechanics from Michael Sullivan’s Everyone Is John, a classic in its own right. Two or more players become “Sams” — aspects of Sam Spade’s personality, each with a pool of power and a specific skill, plus a core motivation that they will attempt to achieve. As the game master guides them through the events of The Maltese Falcon (or another detective story!), players bid their power to seize control of Sam Spade’s actions. Though they must cooperate at least a little bit to make any progress, they are also in competition: the player whose motivations were most fulfilled by Sam wins the game.

The character of Sam Spade isn’t a blank slate, but he is opaque, which makes getting inside his head the perfect starting point for reimagining the story, and I am Sam Spade puts this at the heart of its gameplay. For that, it’s this year’s Best Adaptation.

Congratulations to Marshview Games for the win! You can get everything you need to play I am Sam Spade from its page on Itch. We’ll be back next week with another winner spotlight, and don’t forget to check out the many great entries that didn’t quite make the cut. And stay tuned for next year, when we’ll be back for Gaming Like It’s 1931.

Saturday 2026-03-28

11:00 PM

Systems and the default to yes [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Joseph Brandlin is a scofflaw.

After months of fighting to get the city council to put a stop sign on the corner of the dangerous intersection near his home, he simply did it himself. A first-rate, professional job that cost more than $1,000. As he was finishing the job at 1:30 am, he was arrested and charged with a felony.

A hundred years ago, the default was that pedestrians were in charge. Cars were guests, only going where they were invited. But the persistent productivity and cultural force of the automobile carried the day, and the default flipped. The roads must roll.

If it can be paved or straightened or sped up, it is. If the car wants it, the answer is “yes.”

80,000,000 people have died as a result of automobiles over time. (It’s harder to estimate how many lives were saved or enriched by this massive shift in the transport of food, people and resources.) A successful system can redraw our maps and our expectations.

When systems gain momentum like this, it’s because they create urgent and immediate value, enough to disrupt the status quo. And once the status quo has changed, the momentum becomes normal, the way things are, until persistent community action (or another, even more relentless system) changes the defaults.

The system doesn’t care about Joseph Brandlin’s kid. It cares about the flow and the status of those that maintain that flow.

Ironically, his arrest is almost certainly going to result in a stop sign being installed. Using one system (the media) to change another.

We’re all living through the biggest and fastest systemic shifts in a century, whether we want to or not. The internet, healthcare, the aging of populations and now, particularly, AI–they’re changing defaults. It’s possible (even likely) that individuals will go out in the middle of the night and seek to change something in their neck of the woods, but as we’ve seen with system change before, that’s not usually the reliable path to make a lasting impact.

Every system eventually acts as if it’s more important than the people it was built to serve. HAL isn’t going to open the pod bay door merely because you insist. But persistent systemic action often bends the system toward better. And better is up to us.

      

06:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 付 [Kanji of the Day]

✍5

小4

adhere, attach, refer to, append

つ.ける -つ.ける -づ.ける つ.け つ.け- -つ.け -づ.け -づけ つ.く -づ.く つ.き -つ.き -つき -づ.き -づき

付き   (つき)   —   furnished with
付け   (つけ)   —   bill
付近   (ふきん)   —   neighborhood
付き合い   (つきあい)   —   association
受け付け   (うけつけ)   —   reception (desk)
気付   (きつけ)   —   care of (e.g., address on letter)
寄付   (きふ)   —   contribution
お付き合い   (おつきあい)   —   association
給付   (きゅうふ)   —   provision (of money or goods)
日付   (ひづけ)   —   date

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 忙 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

中学

busy, occupied, restless

ボウ モウ

いそが.しい せわ.しい おそ.れる うれえるさま

忙しい   (いそがしい)   —   busy
多忙   (たぼう)   —   being very busy
繁忙   (はんぼう)   —   pressure of business
大忙し   (おおいそがし)   —   very busy (person or thing)
忙殺   (ぼうさつ)   —   being extremely busy
忙殺される   (ぼうさつされる)   —   to be very busily occupied
忙しない   (せわしない)   —   restless
気忙しい   (きぜわしい)   —   restless
忙中   (ぼうちゅう)   —   busyness
煩忙   (はんぼう)   —   pressure of business

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

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