Warning labels [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
On poison and high voltage wires, the label clearly informs us that this can kill us, right away. For obvious reasons, these are important labels, and generally quite effective.
On cigarettes, it’s clear that if you smoke long enough, you’re going to die, and probably not pleasantly. The warning labels haven’t been nearly as effective as taxes in curbing smoking, but they made the issue clear.
New York State just passed a law requiring labels on social media. Many of the tactics of online networks make people, especially children, unhappy, perhaps for the long term.
Perhaps by highlighting the addictive, manipulative features that cause the most harm, informed consent (or avoidance) will follow.
We probably want to avoid signs like this:

But I’m wondering if a simple, universal symbol could get the job done:

Silver Linings [The Status Kuo]
I’m traveling back to NYC with a car full of kids and all our gifts, so I’ll keep today’s piece brief!
Yesterday, Trump met with President Zelenskyy at Mar-a-Lago, ostensibly to discuss the peace proposal from Ukraine and its European allies, which includes security guarantees for Ukraine.
As before, Trump first communicated privately with Russian president Vladimir Putin, which left many worried that Trump would merely repeat the aggressor nation’s talking points and demand an immediate deal that included the ceding of territory, as he had before.
If you were to only look at who was there representing the U.S. and Trump’s later statements to the press, you’d come away disheartened. At the table for the U.S. was a true rogue’s gallery, including Steve Witkoff, Stephen Miller, Pete Hegseth and Marco Rubio. At the far end was Jared Kushner, who isn’t even a U.S. official but seems to have his hands now in everything.
And Trump’s statements did not inspire confidence. At one point he even said Russia “wants to see Ukraine succeed.” Lies.
That produced a cock of the head from Zelenskyy, who showed remarkable restraint.
Trump also said he understood why Putin would not agree to a ceasefire, because they might require Russia to stop fighting and then to restart. That, of course, is what all ceasefires do, so this amounts to “They don’t want a ceasefire because they don’t want a ceasefire.”
Trump’s horrific statements aside, there were some important silver linings to the meeting. Unlike in disastrous meetings past, Trump didn’t demand immediate changes, nor did he try to browbeat Zelenskyy into submission. Instead, Trump agreed that the process would be ongoing and that any agreement would need time to be worked out. Zelenskyy went to Florida with the primary goal of not seeing peace talks derail, and they did not.
Nor did Trump walk away, as he has threatened to do in the past. “I don’t have deadlines,” Trump told reporters while greeting Zelenskyy at Mar-a-Lago. “You know what my deadline is? Getting the war ended.”
Many points of disagreement still need to be worked out, including control of the Donbas region (Zelenskyy wants a demilitarized zone from which all parties would pull back) and who will wind up with a currently Russian-held nuclear power plant.
Zelenskyy wants other European nations involved. They were instrumental last time in keeping Trump on track for a deal. And there are more peace talks in the works—perhaps to be held in the U.S. to flatter Trump—and such nations’ leaders would attend them. (This time, some of these leaders attended by phone.)
It is admittedly a sad state of affairs to have to cater to the ego, third grade level comprehension and mercurial whims of Donald Trump. But realists like Zelenskyy understand what that takes now, and he is willing to endure it all, so long as his nation might eventually be spared further suffering.
That makes Zelenskyy the continuing hero of this story, struggling against a cabal of villains and idiots who plainly see not a murderous warmonger in Putin but a golden ticket, a way to secure vast oil and mineral wealth. These are not real peacemakers; they are robber barons. And they will do what is best for themselves, not the world, Ukraine or even the U.S.
If Zelenskyy can succeed against these odds and still achieve a peace deal with longterm security guarantees, it will be as improbable and praiseworthy as his country’s valiant and continuing resistance to Russia’s invasion.
He just might pull it off.
Brendan Carr Says Destroying Consumer Protection, Media Consolidation Rules, And Corporate Oversight Will Be Great For Everyone [Techdirt]
Trump FCC boss Brendan Carr was recently hauled before Congress to discuss his numerous, often illegal abuses of FCC authority. The hearing mostly fixated on Carr’s failed, clumsy attempt to censor a comedian, and clumsy lie that the FCC now serves exclusively at the whims of our mad, idiot king.
Which are certainly important things to discuss, given that Carr’s actions are extremist, illegal, and dangerous.
But what struck me reading the transcript is how little time was actually spent pressing Carr on the numerous other problematic behaviors he’s been engaged in, including Carr’s baseless attacks on public media, his dismantling of media consolidation rules, or his effort to destroy consumer protection.
These are things that will cause generational harm to markets, consumers, and the public interest. We’ve discussed at length about how Carr’s “leadership” has involved the complete decimation of corporate oversight as part of his cutesy-named “delete, delete, delete” agenda, which attempts to disguise regulatory capture and wholesale corruption as a government efficiency initiative.
These “reforms” have involved making life easier on robocallers and scammers, making it easier for prison telecom monopolies to rip off inmate families, making it easier for your local cable and phone monopolies to rip you off with bogus surcharges, making it easier for right-wing propaganda operations posing as local news (Sinclair) to dominate dying local media, making it harder to switch wireless phone carriers, and generally just doing whatever America’s biggest, shittiest companies tell him to, including doing significant harm to national security and telecom cybersecurity oversight.
When this stuff was fleetingly mentioned at the hearing, it was by the likes of men like Ted Cruz, who helped prop up the lazy idea that Carr’s just “clearing regulatory underbrush:”
“On day one of the new administration, the FCC, under Chairman Carr, hit the ground running and already has an impressive list of accomplishments to show. These include the Delete, Delete, Delete docket, which continues to clear out the regulatory underbrush.”
The stuff Carr is doing is the stuff consolidated industry lobbyists asked him to do. Virtually none of it is actually in the public interest. We’ve had corrupt revolving door FCC leaders many times before, but never to the level of Carr’s extremism. To her credit, a tiny portion of this stuff was brought up by Senator Maria Cantwell, but it was clearly a hearing afterthought with no serious follow up.
In his responses, Carr was repeated allowed to take a page from Elon Musk’s playbook and pretend that his dismantling of oversight of shitty broadband monopolies and large media conglomerates is an act of modernized efficiency:
“…the FCC is now pursuing the largest deregulatory effort in the agency’s history. To date, we’ve teed up for removal over 1000 rules or regulations and terminated a record 2000 inactive proceedings. Eliminating those costly regulations is part of our affordability work too. For instance, we shut down a Biden era plan that could have spiked the price of internet for millions of Americans living in apartments by up to 50%.”
That last bit? Where Carr claims to have lowered broadband costs for apartment dwellers? He’s actually referring to a Trump FCC action at the beginning of the year to kill rules preventing your landlord and your local ISP from colluding to strike predatory deals that block other competitors from doing business in your building, driving up broadband access costs. It was a complete lie, with no follow up.
Carr is, as we’ve well covered, a shameless opportunist and liar who’ll do whatever he’s told by industry or Donald Trump. If Donald Trump was a brony, you’d see Carr immediately prancing around in a velour zebra onesie. It’s not actually clear Carr believes in much of anything outside of a general disdain for corporate oversight and his post-FCC revolving door career opportunities, which likely involve being a telecom sector lobbyist so he can continue basically doing the same “work.”
Carr’s juggling two jobs at the moment; one involving keeping the party’s radical authoritarians happy with censorship and a frontal assault on what’s left of U.S. journalism and public media. But his primary job, the one he’s been groomed for by industry for decades, is in destroying whatever’s left of the FCC’s ability to rein in unchecked corporate power in all of its various forms.
In some ways, the more headline grabbing (and genuinely problematic) authoritarian censorship operates as cover for corruption. While the former role gets oodles of attention, the latter gets summarily downplayed if not outright ignored. There were no serious congressional follow up questions about Carr’s efforts to destroy functional consumer protection. It was generally congressional oversight kayfabe.
I was also struck by press coverage of Carr’s testimony. More specifically, how literally none of the press coverage could be bothered to mention any aspect of Carr’s brutal destruction of what’s left of U.S. consumer protection. Even in passing.
As a life long consumer protection reporter, it often feels like I’m Roddy Piper living in the 1988 film They Live, facing a broad, existential threat while the public and press (and even many policy folks) stumble around obliviously drinking cappuccino.
Again the harms here are generational. Whether it’s letting predatory telecom monopolies run amok and off the public, or it’s scaling back robocall protections because they might upset a “legit” telemarketer, Carr is doing generational, lasting damage to the public interest, and even in the rare instance we feign to hold him accountable before Congress, it’s treated as some kind of distant afterthought.
This has been generally true beyond the confines of the FCC as well. The Trump-loaded Supreme Court, 5th Circuit, and 6th Circuit in particular have put a generational bullet in the head of consumer protection, public safety, labor protection, and corporate oversight, making it largely impossible to hold corporate giants accountable for literally anything.
The implications and scope of this corruption are incalculable. Yet you’ll notice, across the vast majority of the consolidated corporate press (and even many policy circles), the decimation of consumer protection and corporate oversight is treated as a distant, boring, anecdotal tangent if not outright ignored completely.
Kanji of the Day: 文 [Kanji of the Day]
文
✍4
小1
sentence, literature, style, art, decoration, figures, plan, literary radical (no. 67)
ブン モン
ふみ あや
文化 (ぶんか) — culture
文字 (もじ) — letter (of alphabet)
文章 (ぶんしょう) — writing
注文 (ちゅうぶん) — annotation
文書 (ぶんしょ) — document
感想文 (かんそうぶん) — written description of one's thoughts
文句 (もんく) — complaint
本文 (ほんぶん) — text (of a book, document, etc.)
文化財 (ぶんかざい) — cultural assets
文学 (ぶんがく) — literature
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 姫 [Kanji of the Day]
姫
✍10
中学
princess
キ
ひめ ひめ-
美姫 (びき) — beautiful maiden
歌姫 (うたひめ) — songstress
お姫様 (おひいさま) — princess
姫君 (ひめぎみ) — daughter of a person of high rank (esp. eldest daughter)
白雪姫 (しらゆきひめ) — Snow White
姫さま (ひめさま) — princess
眠り姫 (ねむりひめ) — Sleeping Beauty (fairy tale)
乙姫 (おとひめ) — younger princess
姫様 (ひめさま) — princess
織姫 (おりひめ) — woman textile worker
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
It’s Almost Time! The Public Domain Game Jam Starts This Week [Techdirt]
As we announced a few weeks ago, it’s nearly time for the latest installment in our series of public domain game jams, Gaming Like It’s 1930! It’s an extra special jam this year as we begin a brand new decade of works entering the public domain, and as always it will begin on New Year’s Day (a.k.a. Public Domain Day, a.k.a. this Thursday!) and run until the end of January.
Head on over to the game jam page on Itch to sign up and read the full rules. There are also some ideas there for works that you could draw on, but we encourage you to go do some digging of your own, especially if you want to compete for the Best Deep Cut prize (personally, I suggest searching the Internet Archive for things dated 1930 to find some truly unexpected treasures). For extra inspiration, you can have a look at last year’s winners and our series of winner spotlight posts that take a look at each year’s winning entries in more detail.
Get ready, get set, and (in a few days) go!
Cloudflare Reports Surge in Streaming Piracy Takedowns, Removes 20k+ Storage Accounts [TorrentFreak]
As one of the leading Internet infrastructure companies, Cloudflare finds itself at the center of various copyright disputes.
The American company says it powers nearly 20% of the web. This includes several Fortune 500 companies, but also many pirate sites and services.
For years, rightsholders have urged Cloudflare to do something about these pirate sites. However, the company typically doesn’t take action against customers that use its CDN services. Instead, it simply forwarded takedown notices to their respective hosting services.
If customers do use hosting-related Cloudflare services, they will have their content removed. These types of customers have increased significantly over time, and this year, Cloudflare reports a significant spike in takedown activity.
Cloudflare’s latest Transparency Report, published last week, shows that the company received 124,872 hosting-related copyright complaints in the first half of 2025. Of these reports, 54,357 resulted in Cloudflare taking action, presumably by disabling or removing the content in question.
These figures represent a dramatic year-over-year increase, as Cloudflare reported ‘only’ 1,394 copyright-related takedown actions in the six months prior. That’s an impressive 3,800% increase.
If we zoom out further, we see that the hosting-related reports and takedowns have grown steadily over the years.
| Period | Reports Received | Reports Actioned |
|---|---|---|
| 2023 H1 | 376 | 252 |
| 2023 H2 | 1,111 | 1,078 |
| 2024 H1 | 10,892 | 1,046 |
| 2024 H2 | 11,508 | 1,394 |
| 2025 H1 | 124,872 | 54,357 |
The most recent spike is not merely the result of increased hosting activity, however. Cloudflare notes that it started to actively engage with rightsholders in the first half of the year to tackle unlicensed sports streaming.
Justin Paine, Cloudflare’s Vice President of Trust & Safety, notes that this increase is partly the result of a shift toward more automated processes. Specifically, the company offered rightsholders access to a dedicated API, designed to streamline the submission of copyright complaints.
Through the API, rightsholders were able to automate takedown requests. This resulted in a higher takedown volume and a lower median reaction time, which is key when dealing with time-sensitive content such as live sports streams.
“This engagement resulted in a significant increase in both reports of streaming and corresponding DMCA takedown actions on hosted content, which jumped from 1,394 to 54,357,” Cloudflare’s transparency report reads.
This collaboration and the newly gained insights further boosted the enforcement efforts and resulted in actions against thousands of Cloudflare R2 storage accounts. In the first half of 2025, Cloudflare terminated 21,218 accounts, of which 19,817 were processed automatically.
Site blocking also remained a hot topic. In response to various court orders or regulatory authorities, Cloudflare has also geo-blocked access to several domains that use its CDN pass-through services. It is clear that the blocking pressure is mounting, with most requests coming from France.

Cloudflare typically does not meddle with its DNS resolver. Instead, it geo-blocks requests for these domains. The transparency report doesn’t mention any data regarding DNS blocking orders and notes that DNS-based blocking will be avoided at all costs.
“Cloudflare has pursued legal remedies before complying with requests to block access to domains or content through the 1.1.1.1 Public DNS Resolver or identified alternate mechanisms to comply with relevant court orders.”
“To date, Cloudflare has not blocked content through the 1.1.1.1 Public DNS Resolver,” the transparency report adds.
In addition to being subject to direct orders, Cloudflare services are also blocked by third parties. For example, ISPs in Spain and Italy were required to block Cloudflare infrastructure to comply with IP-address blocking actions targeted at illegal sports streams.
Commenting on these efforts, Justin Paine specifically calls out the Spanish football league LaLiga for its “clunky” blocking approach and its “unapologetic” stance.
“The disproportionate effect of IP address blocking is well known. LaLiga has nonetheless been unapologetic about causing the blocking of countless unrelated websites, suggesting that their commercial interests should trump the rights of Spanish Internet users to access the broader Internet during match times,” Paine notes.
While Cloudflare remains vehemently against aggressive blocking demands, it is slowly but steadily increasing its cooperation with rightsholders. In addition to the earlier mentioned streaming takedown efforts, Cloudflare also started to voluntarily block pirate sites in the UK.
As previously unveiled here, Cloudflare started blocking domain names based on older site-blocking orders where it wasn’t a party. This is similar to the approach Google takes in various countries.
According to Paine, this blocking action in the UK is part of a voluntary agreement with rightsholders, affecting Cloudflare’s pass-through CDN and security services.
“When we take action on domains pursuant to these orders, we post an interstitial page that returns a 451 status code that directs the visitor to the specific order, which includes a process for affected parties to contest the blocking action.”

According to Paine, Cloudflare’s voluntary blocking gesture shows that the company is willing to take action as long as the requests are reasonable.
“Our efforts in the UK to block content based on a finding of infringement in an order directed to a third party reflect our desire to experiment with more targeted approaches than the overblocking we have seen in other countries in Europe,” Paine notes.
Combined with the increased automated reporting and API-driven takedowns, it seems likely that the copyright enforcement volume will continue to increase in the years to come.
At the same time, however, Cloudflare will continue to resist egregious piracy-blocking efforts that break the foundations of the Internet, including DNS-based blocking.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Winter Wonder [The Status Kuo]
It’s a beautiful chilly winter here in Kingston, NY with extended family. The snow came down like the dickens, we just had to watch the Scrooge musical with Albert Finney from the 70s. A classic! Here’s my favorite number from it:
This was the snowy white view out our back window.
Wherever you are, I hope you can enjoy time with family and friends, and can take a moment to reflect upon our cherished rights and freedoms. They’re all worth fighting for.
I’ll be traveling back to NYC tomorrow morning, so I may have an abbreviated piece. Back at it Tuesday with a full one!
Jay
Kanji of the Day: 度 [Kanji of the Day]
度
✍9
小3
degrees, occurrence, time, counter for occurrences, consider, attitude
ド ト タク
たび -た.い
程度 (ていど) — degree
年度 (ねんど) — fiscal year (usu. April 1 to March 31 in Japan)
制度 (せいど) — system
一度 (いちど) — once
何度も (なんども) — many times over
度目 (どめ) — the Nth time
今度 (こんど) — this time
態度 (たいど) — attitude
度に (たびに) — each time
難易度 (なんいど) — degree of difficulty
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 潟 [Kanji of the Day]
潟
✍15
小4
lagoon
セキ
かた -がた
新潟 (にいがた) — Niigata (city, prefecture)
新潟県 (にいがたけん) — Niigata prefecture (Hokuriku area)
干潟 (ひがた) — tidal flat
潟湖 (せきこ) — lagoon
難波潟 (なにわがた) — Naniwa Bay (old name for Osaka Bay)
明石潟 (あかしがた) — Camellia sasanqua 'Akasigata' (cultivar of Christmas camellia)
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
For some reason the highest mountain in Okinawa is not on the main island, but rather far to the southwest on the less-visited island of Ishigaki, a summit by the name of Mt. Omoto. The mountain itself is not famous — people usually don't go to Ishikawa for hiking — but you can if you care to.
The last time I visited this place was in late 2019. Certainly things have changed in the last six years. If you read the newspaper, they'll tell you that things are changing faster than ever in the modern world. But that's not what it feels like down here. The things that make this place nice to visit — friendly people, scuba diving, nature, Okinawan food — feel similar to my previous visit.
For three days I went scuba diving. The dive boats leave from the port on Ishigaki, and there are dive sites around all of the nearby islands — Taketomi, Iriomote, Kohama, Kuroshima, Aragusu, and Ishigaki itself. Scuba diving is a magical thing, difficult to describe in words. It's a lot quieter under water, for one. And then the colors are all kinds of exciting — blue tends to dominate, especially at depth, but brilliantly colored coral and fish are all around as well. One neat thing about Ishigaki is the small things to find, and if you're with a knowledgeable dive buddy or dive master, they'll point to something, you come over and stare at it for two minutes, and finally you will see a little shrimp smaller than your pinky nail, or translucent tubes that look like tiny smiley faces, or who knows what it might be. Sometimes you'll stare for two minutes and can't figure it out, and they'll tell you when you're back on the boat. Anyway, there's some nice diving down here.
Mt. Omoto was next on the list. A quick bus ride and a 1-hour walk brought me to the top of the mountain. The summit is covered with shrubs, so there aren't any panoramic viewpoints, but it's still an enjoyable way to spend a morning. After the hike, rather than wait two hours for the return bus, I took a 10 kilometer stroll through the hills, past the pineapple farms and sugarcane fields, back to downtown Ishigaki. The next day, my last full day on the island, I went to a different one. Taketomi is a 20-minute ferry ride, and walking down the beaches and up the dusty roads is a scenic way to spend time... And that's it, a week down here. Scuba diving, hiking, scenery, books, sure thing. Happy holidays!
There must be something precious here, that no textbook can teach you. That's the islanders' treasure. —BEGIN (2002)
Just for Skeets and Giggles (12.27.25) [The Status Kuo]
It’s the last Skeets of 2025, and the internet didn’t disappoint.
Trump’s ties to Epstein were on comedians’ minds this week. SNL delivered in its cold open (see note below if Xcancel videos aren’t playing for you):
Reminder: Xcancel links mirror Twitter without sending it traffic. Give it a sec to load. Issues? Click the settings gear on the upper right of the Xcancel page and select “proxy video streaming through the server.” Then click “save preferences” at the bottom. Still no? Copy the link into a URL and remove the word “cancel” after the letter X in the URL and it will take you to the original video.
The Daily Show aired a special Christmas tribute to our drowsy chief executive.
The big news, of course, was the fallout from the Epstein files release, where they were supposed to redact the names of victims, not those responsible.
This car decal though…
Turns out, Trump isn’t the only one with a Sharpie obsession.
The redactions spawned a lot of excellent commentary.
And art.
Old memes, new look.
Even legacy media was like, um, no.
Tax season gonna be lit.
New color just dropped.
Trump issued a nastygram for Christmas, but the Lincoln Project fixed it.
Then we learned that the redactions weren’t actual redactions, just black highlighter. Because incompetent. Or maybe even better:
Gavin with the uber-troll.
A clearly upset Trump took aim at Stephen Colbert again, calling him a “dead man walking” and wondering whether the network should “put him to sleep” for humanitarian reasons. My favorite consequence:
In other news of awful right wing idiots, Bari Weiss spiked a 60 Minutes story on CECOT thinking that would make the story go away. Sam Stein with the wittiest take:
And Borowitz with his own spike.
I think we should rename it “60 Minions.”
Erika Kirk continued to put herself in the news, and not always in a flattering way:
But it’s her over the top stage appearances that have all of us over her grieving widow act.
RuPaul’s Drag Race stars took note.
I am so ready for this.
Her big entrances have spawned a whole new internet genre.
Maybe it’s all a Psy Op.
Let’s start calling this kind of display “The Erika”!
Even the Chinese are in on it.
The MAGA males weren’t doing much better this week. Here’s Matt Gaetz talking about AOC.
Jesse Watters is not normal.
Let’s check in on Elon—yup, same.
He wasn’t done.
Speaking of the Bride of Dracula, Katie Miller had opinions, too.
It went well.
That loan, like most pandemic relief loans, was forgiven.
Here’s RFK Jr. with nonsense from earlier this year, and a right proper response this week. Because the cabinet.
No Republican progress whatsoever on health insurance or relief from high premiums.
Jeff Tiedrich with the right holiday spirit!
Speaking of children, I giggled like a 12 year old at this.
Nicki Minaj decided to join Kan(ye) on the other side, so someone made this to mark the occasion.
On the subject of anthems, this reminded me of Belize’s monologue in Angels in America.
“He set the word ‘free’ to a note so high nobody could reach it. That was deliberate.”
— Belize
Love my weekly funnies? Share it to your friends group!
I had to check to make sure this wasn’t AI because how can all these dogs be so calm and behaved?! The poster swears it’s real, so I’m going to believe it because I want such a world.
I was rooting for this contestant the whole way!
I’m helpless in the face of this. Give Casper the pizza!
My corgi got out of the house and we tried chasing her down, but she had this level of energy for around five minutes. (Don’t worry, she is safely home now.)
The second expression kills me here.
This was me on Wednesday going into the long weekend.
Raised by cat, live cat world.
To each according to his kneads.
Your awwww moment for the week.
Honestly, the whole country is in a weird position, so this is fair commentary.
Me reading the news at 4 am each day.
Make way! Make way for his majesty! (To my own kitty: Shade, don’t get any ideas.)
No notes for Wrinkle. 10/10.
A holiday herd moment for you.
I couldn’t stop watching this process.
I can’t believe two people took the time to make this, but I’m glad they did.
Spoilers ahead.
Useful PSA, don’t tell the kids though.
This seems relevant to our own FBI.
My nanny got my kids a cop car with a loud siren. It somehow got misplaced.
Attention manosphere:
America.
Evil lurks in every heart.
So this is why I never meet any guys at the gym.
I had the same thought OMG.
Heated Rivalry is smoking hot these days.
Even the grandparents are obsessed.
A+ parenting right here.
I don’t know if you caught it, but MAGA darling Jake Paul got his ass kicked.
I didn’t know we needed Liam Neeson as Santa until I saw this.
So, I have a series of Dad jokes to close out the year. And I’m going to explain them like my own Ba might have processed them.
Counter argument. Ha. Because cat jump next onto counter.
Honda Days. Like holidays but he said a car. Ha.
Dad jokes. I see. They are his children. I see. Poor man.
Have a Happy New Year! It’s been an honor to laugh with you through 2025, even as we often wanted to cry or scream. And we will make it through 2026 with the same coping skills, I promise!
Jay
This Week In Techdirt History: December 21st – 27th [Techdirt]
Five Years Ago
This week in 2020, Congress sold out to Hollywood yet again by sneaking the CASE Act and a felony streaming bill into the funding omnibus, with the former introducing absolutely insane damages especially when compared to COVID stimulus money. Meanwhile, we looked at the issues with a new COVID bill that included billions to shore up broadband access, Trump finally went through with his threat to veto the NDAA, and Senator Tillis unveiled a massive plan to reshape the internet even more to Hollywood’s liking. Plus, Ron Wyden and Chris Cox felt it was time to yet again dispel some misconceptions about Section 230.
Ten Years Ago
This week in 2015, we hoped (though not that much) that the government’s panic over the Juniper backdoor would make them realize the problems with backdoors, while Senator Cotton was slamming Tim Cook for protecting user privacy with encryption with an assist from Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance, and we dedicated an episode of the podcast to asking how much surveillance is acceptable. India told Facebook to shut down its controversial zero rating “Free Basics” program, while the FCC responded to Comcast’s latest assault on net neutrality with nothing more than a sheepish letter. And a New Zealand judge ruled that Kim Dotcom was eligible for extradition in an opinion that showed an unfortunate willingness to ignore context.
Fifteen Years Ago
This week in 2010, a closer look at the “evidence” Homeland Security used to seize domain names showed that it included songs voluntarily sent to sites by record labels, followed by the discovery of even more and bigger mistakes. The US ambassador to the UN was waxing about the extreme importance of patents and copyrights, the Harvard Crimson newspaper was getting a lot of things wrong about copyright in supporting a bad MPAA proposal, a Berkeley law professor explained how copying an entire article can still be fair use, and we debunked the myth that ISPs are profiting from “piracy”. Meanwhile, Apple joined the list of companies turning on Wikileaks, and we asked if those companies would do the same to the New York Times for its own investigative reporting.
For some reason the highest mountain in Okinawa is not on the main island, but rather far to the southwest on the less-visited island of Ishigaki, a summit by the name of Mt. Omoto. The mountain itself is not famous — people usually don't go to Ishikawa for hiking — but you can if you care to.
The last time I visited this place was in late 2019. Things have changed a lot in the last six years. If you read the newspaper, they'll tell you that things are changing faster than ever in the modern world. But that's not what it feels like down here. The things that make this place nice to visit — friendly people, scuba diving, nature, Okinawan food — feel similar to my previous visit.
For the first three days I went scuba diving. The dive boats from here leave from the port on Ishigaki, and there are dive sites around all of the nearby islands — Taketomi, Iriomote, Kohama, Kuroshima, Aragusu, and Ishigaki itself. Scuba diving is a magical thing, difficult to describe in words. It's a lot quieter under water, for one. And then the colors are all kinds of exciting — blue tends to dominate, especially at depth, but brilliantly colored coral and fish are all around as well. One neat thing about Ishigaki is the small things to find, and if you're with a knowledgeable dive buddy or dive master, they'll point to something, you come over and stare at it for two minutes, and finally you see a little shrimp smaller than your pinky nail, or translucent tubes that look like tiny smiley faces, or who knows what it might be. Sometimes you stare for two minutes and can't figure it out, and they tell you when you're back on the boat. Anyway, there's some nice diving down here.
Mt. Omoto was next on the list. A quick bus ride and a 1-hour walk brought me to the top of the mountain. The summit is covered with shrubs, so there aren't any panoramic viewpoints, but it's still an enjoyable way to spend a morning. After the hike, rather than wait two hours for the return bus, I took a 10 kilometer stroll through the hills, past the pineapple farms and sugarcane fields, back to downtown Ishigaki. The next day, my last full day on the island, I went to a different one. Taketomi is a 20-minute ferry ride, and walking down the beaches and up the dusty roads is a scenic way to spend time... And that's it, a week down here. Scuba diving, hiking, scenery, books, sure thing. Happy holidays!
There must be something precious here, that no textbook can teach you. That's the islanders' treasure. —BEGIN (2002)
Building blocks of marketing [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
The Method:
Everyone who disagrees with you is right to do so–based on who they are and what they see
Attention is priceless and trust is worth even more
Marketing is the generous act of helping someone solve a problem
Don’t find customers for your products, find products for your customers
Permission is the privilege of delivering anticipated, personal, and relevant messages
The best time to do promotion is before you need it
Price is a story
You can’t be seen until you learn to see
“People like us do things like this” is the definition of culture
There are only a few widespread human needs
Stories are the original human technology
Resilient strategies work better when we repeat our tactics more often
Positioning is a generous act
Be missed when you’re not here
Make something worth talking about
Do work that matters for people who care
–repeat–
Kanji of the Day: 査 [Kanji of the Day]
査
✍9
小5
investigate
サ
調査 (ちょうさ) — investigation
捜査 (そうさ) — search (esp. in criminal investigations)
検査 (けんさ) — inspection (e.g., customs, factory)
審査 (しんさ) — judging
世論調査 (せろんちょうさ) — public opinion poll
捜査本部 (そうさほんぶ) — investigation headquarters
調査結果 (ちょうさけっか) — results (of a study or investigation)
捜査員 (そうさいん) — investigator (usu. of criminal cases)
審査員 (しんさいん) — examiner
査定 (さてい) — assessment (of value, damages, etc.)
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 豪 [Kanji of the Day]
豪
✍14
中学
overpowering, great, powerful, excelling, Australia
ゴウ
えら.い
強豪 (きょうごう) — overwhelming strength
豪華 (ごうか) — extravagant
豪州 (ごうしゅう) — Australia
豪快 (ごうかい) — hearty
豪雨 (ごうう) — torrential rain
古豪 (こごう) — veteran
全豪オープン (ぜんごうオープン) — Australian Open (tennis)
豪ドル (ごうドル) — Australian dollar
豪雪 (ごうせつ) — tremendous snowfall
大富豪 (だいふごう) — extremely rich person
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Happy Boxing Day! [The Status Kuo]
Stop and think about it. We’ve had 11 months of this insanity. In that time, we’ve gone through many stages of whatever this is we’re in. And we’re not only still standing, we are winning.
This may seem surprising, but there’s little question that it’s the case. As many in Europe have noted, we Americans are fighting fascism back in our own unique way. …
Techdirt Doesn’t Annoy You Into Paying, And That’s Worth Paying For [Techdirt]
We’re a few weeks into our end of year crowdfunding campaign—donate $100 or more (check out that $230 option!) and we’ll send you our first commemorative challenge coin celebrating 30 years of Section 230. I’ve already laid out why our coverage matters, why we’re not selling out (because we’re not like Bari Weiss), and why we’re one of the only sites getting Section 230 right.
But here’s the real reason to support Techdirt: we’re one of the rare remaining websites on the internet that doesn’t believe in annoying people as a business model.
You know the drill. You open a news article. There’s a banner ad at the top that won’t scroll away. Another at the bottom, also stuck. A skyscraper ad bisecting the text. You try to scroll past it and accidentally click, launching some garbage in a new tab. Or worse: the article itself is freely readable, but only after you’ve dismissed three different popups begging you to subscribe, register, or turn off your ad blocker.
Or you get six paragraphs in—just enough to get invested—and hit this:

Bait and switch. Every time.
Techdirt does none of that. You can read the site for free. You can also get the full text of all our posts via RSS or in your email with our newsletter. You don’t need to pay or register. Hell, you don’t even need to register to comment. We don’t cover the page in ads. We don’t pop up annoying reminders. You can share our content freely, safe from anyone saying “paywall, can’t read” in response.
When sites do that, it feels like the first stage of Cory Doctorow’s “enshittification” curve, where a site starts to figure out ways to annoy users to extract value from them by making them pay to avoid the annoyance. It’s deliberately decreasing the value in the hopes you’ll pay to get rid of the annoyance.
And while the “paid newsletter” Substack-style setup is a fascinating business model, when I’ve asked supporters of Techdirt how they would feel if we offered something similar, the response was almost unanimous: people love reading Techdirt in part to share what’s here, and they’d get annoyed if they felt they couldn’t share our stories any more.
I’d rather people pay here not because we’ve annoyed them into supporting us, but because they feel they get genuine value from what we do here and would like to enable much more of that.
And, in order to keep providing value we do need your support.
But this is about more than just keeping Techdirt running. It’s about proving that a different model can work—that you can run a news site by treating readers like people you respect, not resources to be mined. Here’s our work, we think it’s valuable, and if you agree, support it.
Every other model on the internet right now assumes you need to annoy people into paying. Frustrate them with paywalls. Interrupt them with popups. Make the experience just bad enough that they’ll hand over money to make it stop. That’s not a relationship. That’s a hostage negotiation.
We’re betting that if you get value from what we do, you’ll support it because you want more of it—not because we’ve made it impossible to read otherwise.
If you think that model deserves to exist, back it. Because if this works, it proves something: that you can build a sustainable news site by trusting your audience, not by annoying them into submission.
Legal Push to Unmask Minions 3 Leaker Targets YouTube and Reddit [TorrentFreak]
In October, several Reddit posts appeared online that supposedly linked to a leaked copy of the Minions 3 audio.
These postings were swiftly removed by Reddit, presumably after they were targeted by DMCA takedown notices, but the user kept submitting new posts.
The leaker, known as DrChoclateBob on Reddit, also relied on YouTube to share the audio using the “CHOCOLATE BOB” and “ChoclateBob” handles. These uploads were also spotted by rightsholders and were eventually removed.
Despite multiple warnings and strikes, the leaker continued sharing copies on YouTube, Google Drive, and elsewhere.

Eventually, this resulted in account terminations on Reddit and YouTube, after which the calm returned.
The leaked audio was reportedly recorded during a test screening. With more than half a year to go before the official premiere, it’s understandable that distributor Universal Pictures would like to know who leaked it.
To find out more, NBCUniversal requested two DMCA subpoenas at a California federal court this week, targeting Reddit and Google.

The subpoenas, which were swiftly signed off on by a court clerk, require both companies to share all identifying information that’s linked to the leaker’s accounts, including names, physical addresses, IP addresses, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses.

It’s worth noting legal paperwork also mentions a potentially unrelated YouTube user, mightyvortex5973, who allegedly uploaded a pirated copy of The Lorax. That said, the primary focus of the subpoenas is clearly on protecting the “pre-release film content”.
Whether this DrChoclateBob recorded the audio or if they received it from someone else is something Universal would like to know.
While requesting the subpoena, NBCUniversal said that it would use the requested information to protect its rights. Whether this means that it will take follow-up legal action is unknown, but it is certainly determined to stop future leaks.
—
A copy of the declaration for the DMCA subpoena request targeted at Reddit is available here (pdf), and the Google equivalent can be found here (pdf).
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
For some reason the highest mountain in Okinawa is not on the main island, but rather far to the southwest on the less-visited island of Ishigaki, a summit by the name of Mt. Omoto. The mountain itself is not famous — people usually don't go to Ishikawa for hiking — but you can if you care to.
The last time I visited this place was in late 2019. Things have changed a lot in the last six years. If you read the newspaper, they'll tell you that things are changing faster than ever in the modern world. But that's not what it feels like down here. The things that make this place nice to visit — friendly people, scuba diving, nature, Okinawan food — feel similar to my previous visit.
For the first three days I went scuba diving. The dive boats from here leave from the port on Ishigaki, and there are dive sites around all of the nearby islands — Taketomi, Iriomote, Kohama, Kuroshima, Aragusu, and Ishigaki itself. Scuba diving is a magical thing, difficult to describe in words. It's a lot quieter under water, for one. And then the colors are all kinds of exciting — blue tends to dominate, especially at depth, but brilliantly colored coral and fish are all around as well. One neat thing about Ishigaki is the small things to find, and if you're with a knowledgeable dive buddy or dive master, they'll point to something, you come over and stare at it for two minutes, and finally you see a little shrimp smaller than your pinky nail, or translucent tubes that look like tiny smiley faces, or who knows what it might be. Sometimes you stare for two minutes and can't figure it out, and they tell you when you're back on the boat. Anyway, there's some nice diving down here.
Expect updates over the next few days here.
Your best work [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
“Feels So Good” and “Chuck E’s in Love” were megahits. They transformed the careers of their creators.
But any fan of Mangione or Jones will tell you that it’s far from their best work. Not even close. And yet, that’s what the crowds came to hear.
In a long tail world filled with browsing, it’s easy to confuse “popular” with “great.”
It’s more productive to aim for great.
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 19 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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Crystallization basins in the museum “Las Salinas del Carmen”, Antigua, Fuerteventura, Spain
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 20 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
|---|
Snowy landscape around the Schmidbachtal in Beilstein, Germany, with a distinctive old pear tree.
|
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 21 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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View of coastline northwest from above Manarola: fields and steep trail to Volastra in foreground, Corniglia Station and town centre, north to Punta Mesco. Depicts the north half of Cinque Terre National Park coastline. Liguria, Italy
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 22 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 23 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 24 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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Poznań Town Hall with Christmas decorations.
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