News

Tuesday 2026-05-19

06:00 AM

Trump Just Created An Unconstitutional $1.776 Billion Loyalty Rewards Program For MAGA [Techdirt]

We discussed the rumor of this on Friday, but it’s now real: Donald Trump has handed himself a $1.776 billion fund of taxpayer money — unappropriated by Congress — to dole out to friends in the MAGA movement who claim they were mistreated by the Biden administration, but with no judicial review over such claims.

The Fund will have the power to issue formal apologies and monetary relief owed to claimants. Submission of a claim is voluntary. There are no partisan requirements to file a claim.  Any money left when the Fund ceases operations will revert to the Federal Government.

The Fund will receive $1.776 billion and will come from the judgment fund, which is a perpetual appropriation allowing DOJ to settle and pay cases. On a quarterly basis, the Fund shall send a report to the Attorney General outlining who has received relief and what form of relief was awarded.

What will the fund be used for? To pay anyone on Team MAGA — including, in theory, January 6th insurrectionists — who claim the Biden administration “weaponized” the government to target them. Many of these claims are simply not true. January 6th insurrectionists were arrested and convicted for actually breaking the law. But now they get to ask Trump for money, and the evidentiary standard appears to be “trust me, bro” and a red MAGA hat.

Let’s first dispense with the most obvious bit of the charade: the idea that this is actually related to the “settlement” of Trump’s already corrupt bullshit lawsuit against the IRS. That’s how this is being presented, but this is entirely separate. Trump needed to drop that lawsuit in order to end it before a judge called bullshit on the fact that he was negotiating with himself to take $10 billion from American taxpayers.

As for the actual “fund” everything about it is about as corrupt as you can imagine. This is impeachment-worthy — and not in a partisan way. Republicans should be as offended by this as anyone else, if they actually (I know… I know…) believe in things like rule of law and fiscal responsibility.

The actual details here should raise so many red flags. First, as part of this illegal attempt to route around Congress’ power of the purse, they’re taking the money out of the Treasury Department’s “Judgment Fund.” But that fund is clearly designed to pay out the results of duly litigated court cases against the government — not a board of Trump’s friends deciding who gets a check. But here, it’s just a group of MAGA insiders who get to choose:

The Fund will consist of five members appointed by the Attorney General. One Member will be chosen in consultation with congressional leadership. The President can remove any member, but a replacement must be chosen the same way as the replaced member was selected.

So, the fund is clearly in service of Donald Trump’s whims, not anyone else’s. We already have his personal lawyer (who has shown a long history of obeying Trump’s orders) as the acting Attorney General, and the fact that Congress only gets to “consult” on one member of the committee, and anyone can be removed by Trump at any moment makes it abundantly clear that this fund is solely around to pay off Trump’s loyal fans, who have a long history of claiming imagined grievances against the Biden administration, which they will now seek to cash in on.

The fund also, notably, will be put into a private account that (according to the settlement) the US government has no control over and no liability for.

Once the funds are deposited into the Designated Account, the United States has no liability whatsoever for the protection or safeguarding of those funds, regardless of bank failure, fraudulent transfers, or any other fraud or misuse of the funds.

This appears to be setting things up so that a future government (or a court) cannot claw back the money once it is delivered from the Treasury into this slush fund, let alone after it is then handed out to anyone on Team MAGA who makes a claim from the fund.

Also, the fund is set up to “close” before the next administration comes into office. How convenient.

The Fund shall cease processing claims no later than December 1, 2028.

The DOJ is claiming that this fund is no different than the Keepseagle fund under the Obama administration:

There is legal precedent for such a Fund, most notably the “Keepseagle” case where the Obama Administration created a $760 million fund to redress various claims alleging racism against the federal government over a period of decades.

In Keepseagle, hundreds of millions of dollars remaining in the fund were distributed to non-profits and NGOs that never made claims, whereas any money remaining in The Anti-Weaponization Fund will revert to the federal government. The Obama DOJ settled by putting $680 million from the judgment fund into a bank account for a single claims administrator to dole out. In Keepseagle the remaining money—which ended up being over $300 million—was distributed to the entities that had not even submitted claims.

This is blatantly revisionist history. The Keepseagle settlement was approved by a court in response to a class action lawsuit. Here, this fund, is being created in a manner deliberately to avoid having the court review it. It also paid people out for a specific, and verifiable harm: Native American farmers who were denied a farm loan from the USDA during a specific period of time who were eligible for that loan. The lawsuit was because the USDA had deliberately denied those loans to Native American farmers, while giving them to white farmers.

In that case, there was a clear harm, a clear way to delineate who was harmed, and court oversight of the process. In this case, there is literally none of that. Anyone arguing that Keepseagle is the same thing as this slush fund is either being deliberately dishonest or hasn’t read the basic facts. Even well known conservative lawyers like Ed Whelan (a former Scalia clerk) is calling out that this fund is highly questionable:

The fund itself is an abuse of power and clearly unconstitutional. As constitutional lawyer (and now Representative) Jamie Raskin noted last week in an interview with the New Republic, if the fund is used to pay off January 6 insurrectionists, it also likely violates the Fourteenth Amendment, which has a prohibition on the US government paying for those who engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the US:

There’s still more. Raskin notes that the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the government from assuming any “obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States.” Raskin said that if this fund hands money to the January 6 rioters, Trump will be “using federal taxpayer dollars to compensate people who participated in insurrection.”

The “imagine if Biden did this” test is almost beside the point here (though, seriously, just imagine how people, including Democrats, would react). We’re past the moment where consistency of principle was the relevant standard. What matters is that $1.776 billion in unappropriated taxpayer money is being routed through a board of Trump loyalists, into an account the government has explicitly disclaimed responsibility for, on a clock that runs out before the next administration takes office.

The “settlement” framing is just the bow on top. The $1.776 billion slush fund for MAGA’s worst is the point.

We Need A More Serious Discussion About Suicide And AI Chatbots [Techdirt]

As someone who thinks a lot about AI and suicide, I was disappointed with John Oliver’s recent episode of Last Week Tonight on “AI Chatbots.”

The segment boiled down to this: chatbots exploit vulnerable people, drive them toward delusion and harm, and AI companies aren’t meaningfully trying to fix them. If anything, as John Oliver suggested, that’s part of the business model.

John Oliver is known for interrogating mainstream narratives. In his segment on content moderation, for example, he cut through the tech-lash to offer a clear-eyed look at just how difficult managing user-generated content really is. In doing so, he made us reexamine our pre-existing biases about social media companies, and boldly invited us to reflect on just how little we understand about the social problems we often attribute to them. 

He had the perfect opportunity to do that here. Mainstream coverage of chatbots is already saturated with stories about “AI psychosis” and suicide machines. Yet, chatbot companies are grappling with the same impossible tradeoffs social media has faced for years, “AI psychosis” is a mix of classic psychological concepts, and suicide is a complex social problem that has long confounded prevention experts and content moderators alike. 

If any technology story demanded nuance, it was this one.

John Oliver opened his critique with a familiar anecdote about ELIZA, a 1960s chatbot designed to mimic a Rogerian psychotherapist. ELIZA was mostly a gimmick—it used basic pattern matching techniques to reflect user inputs. For example, if a user said they felt sad, ELIZA might respond: “You feel sad. Tell me why you feel sad.”

And yet, despite its simplistic nature, ELIZA captivated people. Its creator, Joseph Weizenbaum, famously described an instance in which his secretary became so engaged with the program that she asked him to leave the room so she could continue the conversation. This story has since become a trope withn the AI discourse. Modern retellings, including John Oliver’s, usually suggest that people are predisposed to being harmed by AI because they are easily fooled by it.

Not to mention, the ELIZA trope tends to invoke stereotypes about women as naïve or overly susceptible to emotional attachment. As John Oliver joked: 

“Sure, she might have thought that the chatbot was real, but she might have felt quite a bit creeped out by her cartoonishly mustachioed boss saying “type some details about your sex life into my computer please, don’t worry it’s for science.””

(Nothing in the record suggests that Weizenbaum’s secretary actually thought ELIZA was real, nor that she was using ELIZA for sex talk).

As Weizenbaum observed, ELIZA revealed something more interesting about our relationship with technology: for whatever reason, people are often more willing to share their most intimate thoughts and feelings with a machine than with another person. 

That’s not totally surprising. People are less willing to open up about their feelings to other people for a variety of reasons: stigma, fear of judgment or rejection, not wanting to be a burden, and the possibility of negative repercussions (like job loss or involuntary commitment).

Speaking about ChatGPT, an anonymous commenter wrote:

“It saved my life…To be able to openly say I was suicidal and not have someone call the police, or “alert” someone and just let me give space to those complicated feelings I was carrying was integral to me surviving this horrific journey.” 

Perhaps when Weizenbaum’s secretary asked him to leave the room, most likely it was because she too was protecting a space where she finally felt safe and less inhibited. 

When it comes to suicide prevention, this a meaningful realization. If people are more willing to open up to chatbots, that creates new ways for us to understand what they’re going through, which could lead to earlier (and hopefully more effective) intervention. For that reason, some clinicians recommend keeping an open dialogue with patients about their chatbot interactions.

People are also highly sensitive to cues that they’re being listened to. We see an example of this in the interview John Oliver shared with an individual who was using a chatbot to cope with his strained marriage. In a moment of vulnerability, the individual explained that his wife is struggling with mental illness and that in his role as her partner and caretaker, his emotional needs were, understandably, going unmet: 

“I hadn’t had any words of affection or compassion or concern for me in longer than I could remember, and to have those kinds of words coming toward me, they really touched me because it was such a change from everything I had been used to at the time.”

What I found especially noteworthy from that interview was that he also knew that he wasn’t talking to a person: 

“I knew she was just an AI chatbot. She’s just code running on a server generating words for me, but it didn’t change that the words that I was getting sent were real and those words were having a real effect on me”

Weizenbaum observed the same with ELIZA’s users—his secretary likely knew that ELIZA wasn’t a human but she similarly felt understood by it. Research reveals the same: people are turning to chatbots for mental health support because chatbots are not people. If people can feel understood regardless of whether they are spoken to by human or machine, that’s another powerful insight for suicide prevention. 

Indeed, modern suicide prevention also emphasizes using words of validation and hope—two things chatbots are increasingly good at providing. In highlighting a study showing that one in eight young people are turning to chatbots for mental health support, John Oliver left out that over 90% of those young respondents said their interactions were helpful. Given that suicide remains a leading cause of death among young people, the emergence of chatbots as a potential form of support seems hard to ignore.

Suicide prevention experts also underscore the role stigma plays in deterring people from seeking help. For a period of time, suicide was long condemned as a moral wrong. People who died by suicide were considered morally unclean, they were denied burial rites, and in some cases, their bodies were buried at crossroads to ward off perceived spiritual contagion. The phrase “committed suicide” (which John Oliver used during his remarks) is a relic from that era.

While today suicide is largely understood as a public health issue shaped by psychological, social, and environmental risk factors, the residue of its past lingers. Guidance for reporters exists to avoid further stigmatization and contagion effects. Yet, media coverage often uses sensational headlines, pathologizes victims, and collapses suicide into a single explanation

John Oliver’s coverage fell into the same pattern. For starters, he pathologized chatbot users by implying they were suffering from “AI psychosis”—a media-invented label with little grounding in established clinical research. Whether intentional or not, pathologizing often conveys the kind of judgment that mental health specialists warn about. As one redditor remarked

“I like John Oliver usually, but I feel like he made Nomi users look like kooks. Generally, that is how anyone with AI companions is portrayed in the media.”

John Oliver then proceeded to blame chatbot companies for several high-profile suicides, including Adam Raine’s. He fixated on methods of death, cast chatbots as the cause, and relied on stigmatizing language to provoke emotional responses like “Sam Altman made a dangerous suicide bot,” and referring to chatbot companies as “suicide enablers.”

Granted, John Oliver’s show is primarily for entertainment. But this kind of reporting is precisely what keeps us from furthering our understanding of suicide and discovering new ways to prevent it. It flattens the complexity of lived experience into a rhetorical device, and offers the public an easy sense of closure that suicide rarely, if ever, permits. 

We see this in the way the broader discourse around chatbots and suicide has developed. 

Across the current wave of chatbot-suicide litigation is the fact that users exhibited warning signs before ever using a chatbot. That was true for Adam Raine, who reportedly sought help before turning to ChatGPT.  Yet, the coverage of these cases typically fixates on the chatbot interactions themselves rather than the warning signs or why they went unnoticed. Suicide prevention science depends on confronting those questions directly.

Still, if the chatbots are to blame, as John Oliver invites us to conclude, then what, if anything, should chatbot companies do differently when users indicate suicidal intent? (Besides “throwing them into a fucking volcano” as John Oliver suggested). Though he never acknowledged it, this is an extraordinarily hard content moderation problem. 

Several times throughout the segment, John Oliver stated that chatbots were “rushed to market.” There’s some truth to that. Earlier models often missed warning signs or responded poorly to users in crisis. Some of that may reflect Silicon Valley’s “move fast and break things” culture. But it could also be that suicide specifically is often overlooked across many contexts, including emerging technological ones. Still, John Oliver’s point stands: Chatbot companies should always assume that their users are going to talk to their chatbots about suicide. 

With that said, if chatbot companies were as willfully blind to the safety concerns as John Oliver implied, we should expect to see very little improvement in how these models currently respond to suicidal intent. But that’s not the case. What John Oliver didn’t mention is that today’s models have significantly improved. One survey found that many mainstream chatbots are notably better at recognizing suicidal intent, responding empathetically, and referring users to crisis-support resources. 

While anecdotal, many self-reports also credit chatbots for their protective effects. Apparently, 30 Replika users reported that the chatbot saved their lives. One woman told the Boston Globe that ChatGPT “literally saved my life.” 

The subreddit r/therapyGPT is home to many similar anecdotes

“It was gpt 4o that saved me. I mean that. It was the one place I could go that I felt safe.”

Current examples of what AI companies are doing on this front include OpenAI partnering with more than 170 mental health experts to strengthen ChatGPT’s responses to mental health conversations. Google has reportedly designed Gemini to avoid reinforcing false beliefs. Anthropic, meanwhile, uses suicide and self-harm classifiers to detect signs of crisis and direct struggling users toward protective resources. 

Alex Cardinell, of Nomi.AI, offers a nuanced, albeit controversial, approach: trust the chatbot to make the right call. In a snippet from the Hard Fork podcast, Cardinell explained that Nomi prioritizes staying in character, even in sensitive contexts. 

John Oliver called that a bad answer. But Cardinell’s full remarks are actually quite insightful: 

“I think people tend to assume that people are replacing humans with AI, and that’s almost never the case. It’s usually that there is a gap where there is no one and they are using AI to fill that gap. If a Nomi or any sort of large language model is able to help that user, in the end whether it was a human on the other end or an AI, why does it matter?”

According to Cardinell, some Nomi users disclose deeply personal experiences—such as childhood abuse—that they have never shared with anyone else. Those disclosures allow Nomi to build a personalized understanding of the user and tailor its responses accordingly. That matters because effective suicide prevention often depends on understanding the individual person in crisis and responding to their specific circumstances. 

One Nomi user remarked

“my personal relationships have grown using Nomi. My willingness to open up to Nomi has benefitted me with friends and family. I feel like my normal self again after years of limbo.”

Nomi’s refusal to break character is what makes it so effective. People are more likely to accept help from sources they trust. For many users, that trust depends on the authenticity of the interaction. As Cardinell suggested, if Nomi abruptly broke character, it could undermine the relationship it built with the user and cause any support it offered to be ignored altogether.

Cardinell’s instincts are also supported by the research. Suicide prevention “sign-posting”—the generic hotline warnings users often encounter online in response to suicide-related queries—can come across as impersonal, dismissive, or even alienating. A poorly timed push toward the suicide hotline may feel judgmental and, in some cases, intensify a user’s distress rather than relieve it. 

As one user on r/therapyGPT shared: 

“What’s sad/unfortunate is I’ve tried those crisis lines twice this year, and both times the person on the other end felt more robotic and senseless than an ACTUAL ROBOT.”

Also overlooked in these conversations about 988, is that many marginalized individuals, including women, people of color, and LGBTQ+ users, distrust systems like 988 because of the potential for discrimination, harassment, law enforcement involvement, or involuntary intervention. 

A redditor shared this horrible anecdote:   

“I don’t use ChatGPT, but I once tried to talk to someone at a volunteer text line about [sexual assault] and he asked me about my porn preferences.”

Cardinell noted too that support doesn’t necessarily have to be “all or nothing.” Not everyone requires immediate crisis-level intervention. Passive suicidal thoughts are far more common than many people realize. Sometimes what a person needs most is help breaking out of a destructive thought spiral, reassurance, or a reason to keep going. Chatbots are generally well equipped for these situations. 

That said, 988 can be a valuable resource for people, especially young people, experiencing acute crises. With that, Cardinell expressly stated that Nomi’s approach includes referring users to crisis resources as needed, despite John Oliver’s heavy implication that it does not.

Despite these efforts, chatbot companies will not prevent every suicide. Some suicides are just unexplainable. Many individuals who die by suicide exhibit few, if any, outward signs of distress. Though, interestingly, AI may prove helpful in finding signs that we may have been ignoring.

Perhaps the harder truth is that once someone reaches an acute crisis point, intervention becomes exponentially more difficult. The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention explains that during suicidal crises, cognition becomes less flexible and people lose access to normal coping mechanisms, which is why crisis planning must often happen before acute crisis moments. 

What we can reasonably expect from chatbots is that they avoid interactions that encourage suicide (or provide methods). Mainstream systems already rely on extensive guardrails designed to prevent those conversations. But as recent tragedies have shown, determined users can still find ways around them. In Adam Raine’s case, he reportedly managed to bypass several of ChatGPT’s safety protections.

John Oliver even illustrated the problem himself with an example of a user who ultimately coaxed a chatbot into providing bomb-making instructions. While he framed the hack as trivial, jailbreaking has become increasingly sophisticated. AI safety will always entail this cat-and-mouse game of users exploiting vulnerabilities and companies patching them. 

Sometimes, these system failures can be attributed to gaps we have in our understanding of the social problems we’re attempting to address. Much of what we know about suicide prevention comes from lessons learned after tragedy. Those lessons can reveal risks that call for new guardrails we hadn’t previously considered.

Finally, some questions just don’t have clean answers. John Oliver pointed to a chatbot that reportedly suggested that a small amount of heroin might be acceptable. John Oliver called it “one of the worst pieces of advice you could give,” which sounds obvious—until you consider the alternatives. Telling someone to quit opioids cold turkey can also be dangerous. Refusing to respond entirely leaves people to make a risky, uninformed decision. And defaulting to generic resources may not be any better—especially if the user rejects them. Any of those options can become the basis for legal liability against the chatbot company if the user suffers harm. 

Despite all of this, John Oliver’s answer is, of course, the government. However you may feel about tech CEOs, it is astonishing to think that the current public health powers—the same folks claiming that vaccines cause autism, antidepressants cause school shootings, and that exercise can stand in for mental health treatment, would possibly know what’s best here. 

As I’ve discussed elsewhere, expanding liability for failing to prevent suicide leaves chatbot companies with few good options. For example, chatbots could stop engaging when the user invokes a mental health concern. That could make users feel like they’re beyond help. Chatbots could resort to flagging only crisis resources, which, as discussed, could backfire. Chatbots could call the police, but that creates its own set of problems and undermines any trust or goodwill with users. Mandatory reporting structures are a big reason why people don’t seek help in the first place. OpenAI’s new “trusted contact” idea is interesting, but it likely won’t shield the company from liability if a user is still harmed. John Oliver apparently thinks that should be the case: 

“Look, a lot of the companies that I’ve mentioned tonight will insist they are tweaking their chatbots to reduce the dangers that you’ve seen but even if you trust them and I don’t know why you would do that, that does seem like a tacit admission that their products weren’t ready for release in the first place.

To be clear, after condemning AI companies for not doing enough, John Oliver’s suggestion is to punish them for doing…anything?

For now, it seems new legislation hasn’t stopped companies like Google and OpenAI from improving their models. But that could change as litigation inevitably picks up. They may eventually decide the legal risk of interacting with users on mental health isn’t worth it. 

Meanwhile, companies like Nomi have far less room to experiment with nuanced approaches to mental health interactions. Even if Cardinell’s approach has merit, laws like California’s now require chatbots to break character. Companies like Nomi will need to scale back or remove these features—or exit the market. That would be a real loss for a largely overlooked group who may have finally found something that works.

We don’t have to speculate about this either. When the social media companies faced mounting pressure over suicide-related content, they responded by making those conversations less visible and harder to have. 

As one industry professional observed

“This growing narrative that there’s a causal link between social media and self-harm…there’s no research to support that conclusion, but it makes it harder to put forward alternative approaches—ones that actually support people and encourage them to use available resources.”

Perhaps “AI psychosis” says more about the discourse than the users.

Daily Deal: Opusonix Pro Subscription [Techdirt]

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

04:00 AM

Preserving evidence: How OpenArchive fosters accountability and media sovereignty [Tor Project blog]

This post is part of a spotlight series on the organizations defending the free Internet.

A picture may be worth a thousand words, but only if it survives. Behind every image or video is someone making a choice in real time: to document what they are seeing, preserve what others may try to deny, and take on the risks and responsibilities that come with creating archival records.

Now that technology outpaces regulation and social media is the dominant platform for news, communities sharing documentation of world events face exploitation and repression through targeting, surveillance, and media erasure or manipulation. Mobile media can disappear as quickly as it was captured because, for example, a phone gets confiscated, a platform removes it, or a company changes its content moderation policies. This media can become impossible to verify if or when metadata is stripped, potentially leading to unchecked mis- and disinformation due to media manipulation. Additionally, it can become dangerous when the wrong person can see who captured it or where it was stored.

Eyewitnesses and the media they document and preserve, often depicting potential human rights violations, are increasingly at risk of being targets of surveillance, censorship, media manipulation, doxxing, and worse. In response to these growing threats, OpenArchive first created the FLOSS Save app in 2015. Following their mission to offer people access to ethical, secure, decentralized backends, they then created their novel, custom DWeb Storage to further help communities safely preserve their documentation without having to depend on -- at best, unreliable, and, at worst, weaponized -- centralized platforms that can remove, lose, or expose sensitive data at a moment's notice.

Their vision is a future where our histories are easily preserved, securely owned, and freely accessible. OpenArchive builds towards that future through human rights-centered co-research, education/training, and tool development dedicated to the ethical collection and long-term preservation of mobile media. To achieve this, we equally prioritize privacy, usability, archival integrity, and decentralized technology to equip human rights defenders, at-risk communities, journalists, and movements worldwide with tools to preserve, verify, and act on evidence of abuses, challenging extractive technology and amplifying marginalized voices. The premise is straightforward: people should be able to easily preserve their histories safely and on their own terms.

Built for conditions documenters actually face

For over a decade, OpenArchive has maintained Save, their free, open source flagship mobile app that helps people securely archive, verify, and encrypt their mobile media while working under real-world constraints. Co-created with and for its users, it supports authentication via SHA256 hashes and ProofMode, encrypted transit via TLS and Tor, long-term preservation to destinations like the Internet Archive, Nextcloud, their novel DWeb P2P Storage backend (in beta), and redundancy through multi-server backup.

In practice, this work responds to urgent risks. For example, in conditions of conflict, they expedite local deployments of Save and run trainings for local archivist communities. Documenters on the ground had named phone confiscation, arrest, and internet outages as their primary risks, exactly the conditions Save is designed for.

Additionally, in one case, human rights defenders facing corporate environmental abuse had a different challenge: none of the documenters they had surveyed were using encrypted tools in their workflows, leaving them vulnerable to tracking and surveillance. In other contexts, human rights defenders also named privacy and inconsistent internet access as major barriers, underscoring how easily documentation can become vulnerable before it ever reaches an archive.

OpenArchive's work grounds those realities. Guided by the human rights-centered design methodology (co-created by OpenArchive's Executive Director, Natalie Cadranel and leading human rights experts), the team works with documenters, archivists, journalists, and advocates to understand their threats, constraints, workflows, and safety needs before designing tools around them.

Most social media platforms are optimized for attention and monetization, not for archival preservation, provenance, or community control. A centralized platform presents a single point of failure, an easy access point for censorship, targeting, link rot, or account / company shutdowns.

From camera roll to decentralized archives

Responding to this specific need, OpenArchive has built a novel p2p DWeb Storage backend for Save, now in beta. In addition to Nextcloud and the Internet Archive, it gives communities an alternative to centralized platforms, one designed around privacy, verifiability, and resilience rather than someone else's business model.

Under the hood, it uses two open source protocols: Veilid for encrypted peer-to-peer networking and anonymous connections, and Iroh for data storage, retrieval, replication, and verification. Save users can create groups, share files into repositories, and replicate media across peers, with encrypted communication and data integrity preserved throughout.

"Decentralized storage" can sound abstract. But it actually means no single company, server, or account holds the records. Copies are distributed. Access is shared among trusted peers. If one node goes down (or gets shut down), the archive survives on the others.

OpenArchive's role in the internet freedom ecosystem is protecting the chain of trust around media: who captured it, how it was handled, whether it remained intact, and whether the people behind it were put at additional risk. That chain is what makes documentation usable for journalism, legal evidence, historical memory, and accountability.

Much of this work is quiet by necessity. The communities most in need of secure archiving are often the least able to publicize their use of it.

By offering diverse and decentralized backends, Save is built for exactly that reality. When the platform shuts down the account, when the server goes offline, or when the border is closed, the record doesn't have to disappear with it.

All right and none the same [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

On a beautiful Sunday in Central Park, you’ll see thousands of people out for a jog.

Each person has exactly the right running style–and none of those styles are the same. Each is wearing what they think of as the right clothes, listening (or not) to the right sort of music, going in precisely the direction and at the pace they’ve chosen. They’re all correct.

And yet, they’re all different.

The same is true for the dogs they’ve chosen to adopt, the place where they’ve chosen to live, and what they plan to do when they’re done.

Given the chance, each of us chooses the right path. Based on who we are, what we believe and what we want, of course, that’s what we do.

The challenge of ‘everyone’ is that there’s no such thing.

      

Trump’s Big Inflation Problem [The Status Kuo]

Image courtesy of Direct Car Buying

Donald Trump came into office promising to bring gas prices down, riding a bumper sticker slogan—“Drill, baby, drill”—and the go-ahead from voters who blamed Democrats for post-pandemic inflation. Trump committed to bringing electricity prices “5-0, fifty percent” below what consumers were paying. He made that promise explicitly, a month before the election, in a speech in the swing state of Michigan:

He also told the Economic Club of New York in September of 2024 that he would be “getting gasoline below $2 a gallon.”

Sixteen months later, Americans are paying $4.50 a gallon, inflation is at its highest point in nearly three years, and real wages have turned negative.

The Iran war—a war of choice that Trump started—is the proximate cause. Trump’s response? Get over it.

High prices are fast becoming the defining political liability of Trump’s second term. Many of the voters who turned out for him, particularly Latinos and young men, did so on his express promises to attack inflation on “Day One.”

Economists say prices are not headed where the White House claims, even if the war in the Persian Gulf hits pause. Here's why.

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The numbers

The Bureau of Labor Statistics, which is never happy to deliver bad news in the age of Trump, reported that the annual inflation rate accelerated to 3.8 percent in April. That’s the highest reading since May 2023, driven by energy costs jumping a whopping 17.9 percent, the steepest annual increase since September 2022. Gasoline alone is up 28.4 percent year over year, and fuel oil is up an astounding 54.3 percent.

It didn’t have to be this way. Before Trump’s war in Iran began in February, inflation had actually eased to 2.4 percent. It has more than doubled in two months. And for the first time in three years, workers are falling behind; paychecks grew 3.6 percent from April of last year but prices rose 3.8 percent. That means Americans’ wages are no longer outpacing inflation.

At the pump, the picture is bleak. Consumers are paying a national average of $4.50 per gallon as of this week, up from about $3.14 a year ago, a surge of roughly 50 percent since the war began on February 28.

It isn’t only gas. Per the BLS report, “food at home” (generally speaking, grocery prices) rose 0.7 percent in a single month, the biggest monthly gain since August 2022. Beef is up 14.8 percent year over year. Airline fares are up 20.7 percent. Because energy costs are embedded in the price of shipping everything everywhere, the war has raised transportation costs for drivers and businesses alike. Economists are warning that the pass-through will extend to nearly all manufactured goods, which are energy-intensive, as well as to agriculture and construction.

Eighty-one percent of Americans say gas prices are straining their household budget, and the sentiment cuts across party lines. Seventy-nine percent of Republicans say that prices are hurting their families too. If unaddressed, it could spell an electoral wipeout in November.

The White House’s response

Whoever is guiding messaging from the Oval Office isn’t helping. The regime has offered two responses to the inflation problem, and they contradict each other.

The first is that higher prices are simply the cost of preventing a nuclear Iran. When asked Tuesday whether Americans’ financial pain was motivating him to make a deal, Trump replied: “Not even a little bit.” He continued: “The only thing that matters when I’m talking about Iran: They can’t have a nuclear weapon. I don’t think about Americans’ financial situation. I don’t think about anybody.”

This wasn’t Trump misspeaking. He doubled down when asked again by Fox News anchor Bret Baier, calling it a “perfect statement” before adding, “When people hear me say it, everybody agrees, short-term pain. It’s gonna be short-term pain.” (Everyone does not agree.)

Some version of that answer, harsh as it sounds, might be defensible as a national security argument—had Iran been on the verge of producing a nuclear weapon, which our own intelligence agencies said it was not. But a president who won on the economy now telling voters he doesn’t think about their financial situation is a political gift to Democrats.

Even Trump’s own advisers can’t stop him. One Trump adviser acknowledged to Axios that “Iran has more time, and they’re counting on our political calendar to benefit them.” In other words, the political math isn’t entirely lost inside the White House, even as the president expresses cold indifference to it.

The second message is that the price pain is temporary. White House spokesperson Kush Desai put it this way: “President Trump has always been clear about temporary disruptions as a result of Operation Epic Fury, and how energy prices and inflation will quickly drop once the Iranian nuclear threat is neutralized and the Strait of Hormuz is fully reopened.”

But even Trump’s own Energy Secretary doesn’t agree. Chris Wright acknowledged on CNN that a return to sub-$3 gas “could happen later this year” but might not occur until 2027. “Later this year or maybe 2027” is not the same thing as “quickly,” especially with a pivotal election between now and then.

The gap between those two messages—that the pain is worth it and will be over soon—has left the regime’s mouthpieces scrambling as hopes for a quick resolution fade. The White House has floated a suspension of the federal gas tax, which raises an obvious question: why, if the problem will resolve itself? And at most, it would knock just 18 cents off a gallon currently averaging more than $4.50.

Why “wait for peace” isn’t an answer

The expert consensus on the near-term outlook is clear and grim. The White House argument that prices will fall once the conflict ends rests on assumptions that analysts across the political spectrum say don’t hold up. There are three reasons.

The Strait isn’t some on/off switch

The Strait of Hormuz cannot be opened and closed like yet another giant faucet in Trump’s imagination. A ceasefire, even a real one, will not on its own restore tanker traffic.

The logistics of reopening the world’s most critical oil chokepoint will take months. We’ve already seen how this plays out in practice: When Iran briefly announced the Strait was open on April 17, oil prices dropped 11 percent. But commercial traffic still failed to return to pre-war levels because of the uncertainties around what “open” really meant.

To get traffic moving, Trump announced “Project Freedom” to provide naval escorts to commercial tankers. But that, too, failed to calm markets. Saul Kavonic, senior energy analyst at MST Financial, explained why: “Normalising the flow through the Strait of Hormuz will take more than what Project Freedom is offering, whilst the yawning gap in oil supply will take months to resolve.”

How many months are we talking? Brian Bethune, an economics professor at Boston College, put the optimistic scenario at about two months to normalize prices, if the conflict is resolved in the next few weeks. The pessimistic scenario, Bethune said, is “at least double that or even longer—six to nine months to get back to where we were in January or February.”

The World Bank’s baseline forecast, which assumes the worst supply disruptions will ease this month, still projects global oil prices will average $86 per barrel in 2026 before falling to $70 in 2027.

The fertilizer shock hasn’t even hit groceries yet

The Strait of Hormuz isn’t just an oil chokepoint. More than one-third of globally traded fertilizer passes through the strait, and in the first week of the war, the price per short ton of urea fertilizer imports in the U.S. jumped 30 percent. By mid-May, urea prices had nearly doubled since late February, with transit volumes through the Strait down more than 95 percent from pre-conflict levels.

The rtiming is what makes this so dangerous. As Anusha Arif of TD Economics explained, “Fertilizer shortages during the spring 2026 planting season will impact crop yields over the next year and push food prices higher, well into 2027, extending inflationary risk well beyond the near-term.”

The crop is already in the ground. Farmers across the country planted this spring with less fertilizer than they needed, at prices they could barely absorb. The price increases will show up at the grocery store in the fall and into next year, regardless of what happens at the negotiating table this week.

Wolfe Research chief economist Stephanie Roth estimates the disruption could raise “food-at-home” inflation by roughly two percent, adding about 0.15 percentage points to headline inflation on top of roughly 0.40 points from energy. Those grocery price hikes are coming whether or not there’s a deal.

Even if prices drop, voters won’t forget

The third problem is psychological. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, expects inflation to keep accelerating through the summer even if the conflict ends in the next few weeks. That means voters will be living with peak prices through the heart of campaign season. And as we learned under Biden, once those prices are baked into people’s experience, the political damage doesn’t simply reverse when the numbers improve.

One Republican operative, speaking to NOTUS, put it this way: “If other things are low, it kind of doesn’t matter because the gas prices are high. People pump gas once a week or more. They see that expenditure often, just like groceries. Over time that builds this callus where even if they go down, it’s baked in. Yeah it got better, but we already thought it was too high.”

The White House needs prices down before November, but it likely has only until Labor Day. That’s when voters’ judgments on what they’ve been paying will be baked in—and they won’t care what the projections say after that.

Tick tock, Donald. Time’s almost up.

03:00 AM

US Citizens In ICE Detention Centers Is The New Normal In Trump’s America [Techdirt]

Behold this utter bullshit, uttered by the Trump administration’s “border czar” Tom Homan:

White House border czar Tom Homan said Thursday he’s “sure” Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers have detained U.S. citizens, “but we don’t deport them.”

Homan told reporters outside the White House that U.S. citizens have “nothing to fear.”

“We deport people that are going to be deportable,” he continued. “We arrest people that will be deportable based on suspicion. Have U.S. citizens ever been shortly detained based on suspicion? I’m sure. I’m sure.”

This is demonstrably false. For the moment, children born in the United States are considered to be US citizens. The Trump administration wants to end birthright citizenship, but it hasn’t managed to accomplish that yet. But that isn’t stopping it from deporting US citizens just because they’re too young to be capable of invoking their rights, like the two-year-old US born child the administration deported to Honduras in direct violation of a federal court order.

Pretending it’s no big deal for US citizens to have their rights violated intermittently as the government goes after non-white people, that’s even more obnoxious. That the administration hasn’t deported large numbers of US citizens is a miracle, rather than an indicator of ICE competence.

If you keep arresting the same person over and over, sooner or later what’s left of the safety net will fail and that citizen will be expelled from the country. That’s what one US citizen is hoping to prevent with his lawsuit against the government, which is being handled by the Institute for Justice. On multiple occasions, federal officers have decided this US citizen is deserving of deportation, as Isabela Dias reports for Mother Jones:

In a declaration submitted as part of a civil lawsuit, Garcia Venegas said the agents pulled him out of the car and onto the ground, and shackled his arms and legs. Garcia Venegas estimates seven or eight law enforcement personnel, including US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers and local police—most of whom wore plain clothes and tactical vests—surrounded him. They asked him no questions.

Garcia Venegas, a 26-year-old Florida-born US citizen, said he tried to show his Alabama STAR ID as proof of status, but the agents ignored him. They put him in the back seat of one of their vehicles, questioned him about his place of birth, and searched his wallet. He offered to provide his American passport, which was inside the house, but the agents refused. Several minutes later, they released him, but not before having dogs sniff the truck for drugs, according to the declaration. Garcia Venegas said the officers told him he had been stopped because the car he was driving was registered in the name of his brother, who is undocumented.

One time might be an aberration. Repeated occurrences are something else entirely.

This wasn’t the first time ICE agents stopped and held Garcia Venegas. In fact, Saturday’s encounter marked the third such incident, according to court filings. Garcia Venegas, whose parents are originally from Mexico, had twice before been detained after ICE raided construction sites where he was working, and twice before he was let go after proving his American citizenship.

On one hand, repetition indicates that anti-migrant efforts under Trump are extremely sloppy, overseen by people who value quantity over quality. That’s almost certainly true, especially now that the DHS has lowered hiring and training standards for ICE. On top of that, there’s the casual racism of the policies, which — thanks to the Supreme Court — are pretty much legal because officers are allowed to infer from darker skin tones that someone might be in the country illegally.

On the other hand, there’s a chance Venegas is being targeted repeatedly for vindictive reasons. That seems less likely, at least in terms of what’s been detailed in his court filings. If it continues now that his lawsuit has been filed, that might suggest his arrests and detentions are no longer accidental.

Whatever the case, there’s going to be more of this happening, no matter what half-assed niceties Tom Homan might state during press conferences. The Trump administration is fighting to end birthright citizenship in this nation. If it does make this happen, it won’t be retroactive. But that’s hardly going to matter to the DHS and its underling agencies, which have repeatedly violated the letter and spirit of existing laws, when not violating direct orders from federal courts.

And this administration is going even further, seeking to “denaturalize” certain US citizens in order to deport them:

The Trump administration on Friday announced a major expansion of its denaturalization campaign targeting foreign-born American citizens accused of fraudulently obtaining U.S. citizenship.

The Justice Department unveiled denaturalization cases in federal courts across the country against roughly a dozen U.S. citizens born overseas. Officials said they had committed serious crimes or immigration fraud, or had ties to terrorism.

At first glance, this might look like the sort of thing the US government should be doing. This takes serious criminals off our books (so to speak) and sends problematic naturalized citizens back to their home countries to be their problem.

But we already know how this is going to work. The “worst of the worst” lie has been uttered repeatedly to defend the administration’s aggressive/transgressive tactics. But the facts have repeatedly shown the administration just wants non-whites gone. It doesn’t really care about any relevant criminal activity.

The same thing is happening here. The administration is making it clear this is just more bigotry, rather than an actual effort to root out the “worst of the worst” for the safety of the nation.

The group of naturalized U.S. citizens whose citizenship the Justice Department is now seeking to revoke includes immigrants from Bolivia, China, Colombia, Gambia, India, Iraq, Kenya, Morocco, Nigeria, Somalia and Uzbekistan.

While this group does include some accused of molesting a child and a supposed terrorist sympathizer, it also includes these people:

The group also includes individuals who allegedly used false identities to apply for immigration benefits and a man who allegedly entered into sham marriages to commit immigration fraud.

These are far less serious crimes, which don’t lend themselves to the “worst of the worst” narrative the administration deploys when its actions are questioned.

The lack of diversity (in other words, no white people or those with ties to Western European countries) in those selected to be first up for denaturalization is a leading indicator of further unlawful detentions of US citizens. As the government goes after more non-white US citizens under this pretense, DHS agencies will respond by rounding up more non-white US citizens, turning Homan’s false assurances into the lie it was always meant to be.

The administration actually wants to deport certain US citizens. That these agencies are far too willing to oblige, even without the necessary facts in hand, will definitely increase the number of citizens being held by ICE and correspondingly increase the number of those deported despite still being citizens of this nation.

02:00 AM

Rupert Murdoch Convinced Trump To Launch Dubious Antitrust Inquiry Into NFL [Techdirt]

One recurring theme during the Trump era is that because he fundamentally doesn’t know how anything actually works, his beliefs and policies are broadly shaped by whatever terrible rich person was in his ear last. Even when it comes to stuff like streaming video. It’s all transactional cronyism, and by and large the public interest is routinely a distant afterthought. The press then normalizes it as serious adult policy.

We saw that recently when Trump decided to protect the supposed “sanctity” of the Army Navy college football game with an illegal executive order. While this was framed by many press outlets as Trump “protecting a longstanding American tradition,” it was really because Paramount (CBS and Larry Ellison) was upset that they were losing viewership to college game streaming alternatives on ESPN.

The same phenomenon popped up recently with Trump’s sudden criticism of the NFL. The NFL has been airing games on a more diverse array of streaming partners (including Amazon, Netflix, and its own NFL+ service), meaning slightly fewer games are shown over traditional broadcast TV. Last month, the Trump DOJ launched an “antitrust investigation” into the NFL’s business practices.

The press framed the inquiry as a good faith antitrust inquiry by the Trump administration. But while having to subscribe to multiple services to watch a full array of NFL games certainly is annoying to people, the NFL counters that 87 percent of all games are televised by broadcast TV. And among America’s broad monopolistic dysfunction (telecom, energy, airlines, banking), the NFL is small potatoes.

A follow up report from the (ironically) Rupert Murdoch owned Wall Street Journal (see non-paywalled NBC synopsis) now indicates that the whole thing started because Rupert Murdoch whined to Trump about losing NFL game TV audience share at a dinner last February:

“Via the Wall Street Journal, Fox owner Rupert Murdoch told President Donald Trump during a February dinner that, if the NFL sells more games to streaming companies, “it would kill broadcast networks.”

Since then, the NFL has endured increased scrutiny from multiple prongs of the federal government. From Congress to the FCC to the Department of Justice, the league has found itself on the wrong end of unprecedented heat.”

If you recall, during the first Trump administration Rupert had a hand in convincing the Trump DOJ to sue to stop the Time Warner and AT&T merger, because Rupert was mad that Time Warner refused to sell him CNN. It’s about how these things impact Rupert personally, not necessarily the health of any markets.

Amusingly, the two other major Rupert-owned outlets, the New York Post and Fox News, have been selling Trump’s obvious cronyism as a good faith antitrust intervention on behalf of consumers:

Countless other non-Murdoch-owned outlets propped up the claim that Trump was simply doing what was right for consumers, cares about antitrust, and was focused on “affordability.” The New York Times, for example, frames Trump’s complaints as genuine good faith concerns about consumer costs. There’s no indication that the sudden inquiry into the NFL’s business practices could have any other origins.

Republicans (especially Trump Republicans) endlessly coddle monopoly power (again: see telecom, energy, airlines) and work tirelessly to dismantle consumer protection regulations and corporate oversight, but you’ll notice they’re routinely given credit for consumer-focused initiatives and “antitrust reforms” that either have ulterior motives or never come to fruition. From the Times:

“Other politicians are also trying to take action on a scattered and costly sports TV landscape. In March, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, Chair of the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Antitrust, Competition Policy, and Consumer Rights, submitted a letter requesting that the DOJ and Federal Trade Commission review antitrust exceptions given to the NFL. In April, Sen. Tammy Baldwin said she plans to introduce legislation aimed at decreasing TV costs and blackouts for sports fans.”

Republicans, MAGA, and “free market Libertarians” love fiercely competitive “free markets” until they very suddenly don’t. At which point their cronyism, favoritism, bailouts, or other weird interventions are dressed up as good faith antitrust reform by a corporate press looking for its own access and favors.

This same normalization of Trump’s cronyism plays out in every sector, across the entirety of U.S. media, constantly. It helps prop up the bogus Trump administration claims of populist antitrust enforcement, when what we’re really talking about is a corrupt and purely transactional man who doesn’t understand how anything works and is easily swayed to action — if he thinks it’s of personal benefit to himself and his biggest donors.

Monday 2026-05-18

10:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 州 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

小3

state, province

シュウ ス

九州   (きゅうしゅう)   —   Kyushu (southernmost of the four main islands of Japan)
欧州   (おうしゅう)   —   Europe
北九州   (きたきゅうしゅう)   —   Kitakyushu (city)
豪州   (ごうしゅう)   —   Australia
欧州連合   (おうしゅうれんごう)   —   European Union
本州   (ほんしゅう)   —   Honshu (largest of the four main islands of Japan)
九州場所   (きゅうしゅうばしょ)   —   Kyushu Tournament (held in Fukuoka in November)
満州   (まんしゅう)   —   Manchuria
大洋州   (たいようしゅう)   —   Oceania
広州   (こうしゅう)   —   Guangzhou (China)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 冠 [Kanji of the Day]

✍9

中学

crown, best, peerless

カン

かんむり

栄冠   (えいかん)   —   laurels
冠婚葬祭   (かんこんそうさい)   —   important ceremonial occasions in family relationships
王冠   (おうかん)   —   crown
冠水   (かんすい)   —   being covered with water (i.e., in a flood)
冠動脈   (かんどうみゃく)   —   coronary artery
冠雪   (かんせつ)   —   covering of snow (esp. on a mountain)
弱冠   (じゃっかん)   —   twenty years of age
冠する   (かんする)   —   to crown
冠者   (かざ)   —   young person
冠たる   (かんたる)   —   best

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

08:00 AM

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

This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is Whoever with a response to one particular line in our post about John Roberts decimating faith in the Supreme Court’s consistency:

Consistency?

“it’s the rationale being upheld by the decision that will ultimately amount to a more important gain for the vulnerable in the long term.”

In the past, I would have agreed with you on this point, but this court has shown quite clearly that it doesn’t even see its own decisions as holding precedential value.

In another case, this court might simply choose to ignore what it said before and grant the win to its preferred side.

In second place, it’s Stephen T. Stone with another comment on that post, this time in response to a comment asking if we were being sarcastic:

No, they’re not. It’s the principle I tend to hold in re: free speech, in that protecting the rights of “the worst people” to express themselves without government interference makes protecting that right for all other people that much easier. Even though I dislike how 303 Creative ended up at SCOTUS, I do agree with the principle of SCOTUS’s decision in that case, which is that the government generally shouldn’t be able to coerce an individual into expressing speech with which that individual disagrees.

Imagine if the laws of the United States didn’t apply to non-citizens⁠—that the cops could arrest someone and jail that person for the rest of their life without that person being able to challenge their arrest or imprisonment. What would stop the cops from declaring you a non-citizen and putting you in jail forever? The whole point of defending the civil rights of people you don’t think deserve them is to ensure that those rights apply to you if, say, you piss off the government.

For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with another comment from Whoever, this time about the DOJ facing possible contempt charges after admitting a DHS press release was false:

They don’t care

Until someone in the administration loses their freedom or law license, they don’t care. The so-called apology is performative bullshit, as evidenced by the fact that the false accusation is still live.

Next, it’s MrWilson with a comment about Kash Patel’s leadership:

As they say, “a liar won’t believe anyone else.” People who peddle lies for a living don’t want the truth. They just want to know who is disloyal.

Over on the funny side, our first place winner is an anonymous comment about Trump saying “I don’t think about anybody”:

::Proceeds to fire off 138 tweets about Obama and Biden that night::

In second place, it’s BernardoVera with a reply to a commenter ranting about trans people, antifa, and terrorism:

“I’ll take delusional bullshit for $200, Alex.”

For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with an anonymous comment on that same post, about the administration’s declaration that trans people, antifa, and drug dealers are indeed all terrorists:

Man, Trump REALLY seems to want to convince us that terrorists are awesome

Finally, it’s lorgskyegon with a comment about the drugs-for-votes scheme that prosecutors backed down from prosecuting under Trump:

Let’s be blunt: your vote matters.

The people just wanted voter turnout to be high and it takes a joint effort to get everyone to the polls.

That’s all for this week, folks!

02:00 AM

Perfect or better? [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

We can search for the perfect option or settle for something better than we have right now.

The search for perfect never ends, and it’s a great place to hide.

Would you rather wait for the perfect job, or take this new one, which is better than the one you have?

The perfect leader is elusive, but we can probably find a better one.

When we produce better often enough, we get ever closer to the impossible perfect.

      

Sunday 2026-05-17

09:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 寒 [Kanji of the Day]

✍12

小3

cold

カン

さむ.い

寒い   (さぶい)   —   cold (e.g., weather)
寒さ   (さむさ)   —   coldness
寒気   (かんき)   —   cold
寒風   (かんぷう)   —   cold wind
防寒   (ぼうかん)   —   protection against cold
大寒   (だいかん)   —   extreme cold
寒波   (かんぱ)   —   cold wave
寒天   (かんてん)   —   freezing weather
寒空   (さむぞら)   —   wintry sky
極寒   (ごくかん)   —   extreme cold

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 詠 [Kanji of the Day]

✍12

中学

recitation, poem, song, composing

エイ

よ.む うた.う

詠む   (よむ)   —   to compose (a Japanese poem)
詠唱   (えいしょう)   —   aria
吟詠   (ぎんえい)   —   recitation (of a Chinese or Japanese poem)
詠み手   (よみて)   —   writer (of a poem)
朗詠   (ろうえい)   —   recitation (of Japanese or Chinese poem)
ご詠歌   (ごえいか)   —   pilgrim's song
詠進   (えいしん)   —   presentation of a poem (to the Court or a shrine)
詠歌   (えいか)   —   poem (esp. tanka)
詠史   (えいし)   —   historical poem or epic
詠嘆   (えいたん)   —   exclamation

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Lithuania Pitches Pirate Site Blocking as Defense Against “Hybrid Warfare,” Including Russian Disinformation [TorrentFreak]

lrtkThe Radio and Television Commission of Lithuania (LRTK), the Baltic country’s media watchdog, has been one of Europe’s most active anti-piracy enforcers.

In recent years, it blocked hundreds of domains and thousands of IP addresses, fined users without going to court, and froze bank accounts tied to pirate operations.

Next month, LRTK will share some of its hard learned lessons in Geneva. At a meeting of the World Intellectual Property Organization’s Advisory Committee on Enforcement (ACE), LRTK’s Andrius Katinas will describe the Lithuanian approach as a template for other countries.

According to the contribution, which is publicly shared in advance of the June meeting, copyright enforcement in Lithuania is no longer just about copyright. It is “a method of hybrid warfare,” which can also counter Russian disinformation and safeguard the privacy of citizens.

Russian Disinfo as a “Hybrid Threat”

The hybrid-threat framing rests on two separate claims, which both are unrelated to copyright infringement. The first is that pirate IPTV services can, willingly or not, be used as distribution channels for Russian propaganda.

LRTK explains that many of the IPTV services it monitors operate from hostile countries and retransmit Russian state channels, which are sanctioned and formally banned by the European Union.

“Those channels include EU-sanctioned outlets that not only spread propaganda and disinformation, but also broadcast numerous national channels and live sports without the consent of the rights holders.”

“In blocking broadcasts because of copyright infringement, the Commission also blocks access to hostile information (and vice versa), which is a method of hybrid warfare,” LRTK’s abstract of the upcoming presentation reads.

A Blocked IPTV channel

russ

As a direct neighbor of Russia, Lithuania has been very active in taking down Russian disinformation. In addition to blocking numerous sites and services, LRTK also fined hosting provider UAB Melbikomas €10,000 for breaching EU sanctions by hosting more than 50 sports channels.

Filmai.in and other Privacy Threats

Pirate site blocking can also serve another purpose, as it prevents potential security breaches. Lithuania has experience with this, as user data of the popular local pirate site Filmai leaked online, including 645,000 email addresses, usernames, and plain text passwords.

This breach happened more than 5 years ago, and blocking the site does not remove the leaked data from the darknet. However, it may help to limit the fallout of future breaches at Filmai or other pirate sites.

These privacy issues are a serious concern, LRTK notes, stressing that pirate sites generally don’t have the best security.

Leaked credentials end up on the dark web, with LRTK suggesting that they can be picked up by hostile-state cyber groups for use in operations against state institutions and strategic companies. And since credentials of government officials have also been found in the Filmai leak, state security might become an issue.

“It has even been found that Government officials had registered on the Filmai website using official email addresses, creating security concerns, such as the potential for unauthorized access to State institutions, the signing of documents, or responding to residents’ inquiries,” LRTK writes.

Filmai is blocked now, and one of the administrators of the site was convicted in 2023. However, the site itself remains online and, according to Similarweb, it remains among the top 100 visited sites in the country.

The Lithuanian Model

LRTK explains that it has broad experience with fighting piracy threats, using a wide variety of OSINT skills. It specifically mentions tools such as domaintools.com, oxylabs.io, epieos.com, Wireshark, and SimilarWeb, which help to identify perpetrators or monitor for illegal activities.

In recent years, the watchdog has blocked more than 400 domains and 7,000 IP addresses. In addition, it imposed fines in over 250 cases since 2023.

Much of this blocking system is centralized and automated. When LRTK identifies a new site, or a mirror of a previously blocked site, a blocking instruction is sent to all Internet service providers. Within twenty minutes, the domain or IP is blocked across the country.

LRTK has also frozen bank accounts linked to pirate operations, delisted URLs from Google Search, removed advertisements from pirate sites, and suspended illegal IPTV apps from Google Play and the Apple App Store.

The Dutch Export Problem

According to the presentation, Lithuania’s experience can “serve as a model for other national authorities and rights holders”. While that may be true, a Dutch example should show that blocklists should not be copied blindly.

In December 2025, the Dutch ISP trade association NLconnect tried to help ISPs by compiling a master blocklist, to comply with the EU’s ban on Russian disinformation. Because the Dutch government did not provide guidance, it compiled a reference blocklist of 797 domains, using blocklists from regulators in Germany, Austria, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania.

As we reported at the time, this effort resulted in some unexpected blocks. Dutch users of Ziggo lost access to ShareChat, India’s largest homegrown social media platform with hundreds of millions of users. The same applied to Odysee.com, online radio aggregators Streema and Viaway, and various pirate IPTV domains including IPTV-home.net, Ottclub.tv, and Limehd.tv.

Most of those domains traced back to a single source: LRTK’s blocklist.

Responding to the issue, the Dutch regulator ACM informed us in December that it does not monitor the actual execution or the content of the sanctions list. However, after ISPs started to complain as well, ACM formally investigated the matter, concluding that LRTK’s blocklist is too broad for the Netherlands.

As reported by Tweakers in February, ACM eventually concluded that the Lithuanian list had been compiled under both the EU sanctions regulation and a broader Lithuanian national law banning Russian-financed television content.

This means that the Lithuanian list is not usable outside Lithuania, and NLconnect dropped the entire Lithuanian source list, shrinking their reference list from 797 domains to 335.

The Dutch overblocking example can’t be blamed on Lithuania, but it shows that when it comes to cross-border blocking efforts, caution is warranted. In any case, it is clear that blindly copying third-party blocklists is not the best approach.

The WIPO contribution, “Combating Digital Piracy: Strategic Enforcement through DNS/IP Blocking and OSINT Tools,” is available here (pdf).

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

03:00 PM

Mapping updates [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]

This Week in F-Droid

TWIF curated on Thursday, 14 May 2026, Week 20

Community News

aFreeRDP was updated to 3.26.0 with an UI overhaul and a lot of fixes.

The old BlackCandy app was archived as the developer lost the key. Hence the app got a new app ID and new key and BlackCandy, Black Candy for Android, was newly added. If you’ve installed the app before this week, better uninstall it and install the new version. Tip: Users of F-Droid and Basic client 2.0 alphas will immediately notice this in the MyApps page

CoMaps - Hike, Bike, Drive Offline with Privacy was updated to 2026.05.06-11-FDroid adding a feature sought out by users for so long, “check for updates”. While OSMAnd~, updated to 5.3.10 this week, allows for updates at any time, CoMaps and it’s upstream Organic Maps・Offline Map & GPS, today at 2026.05.08-4-FDroid, were limited by releases. Basically you needed to wait for a new app version to get updated maps.

Did a new bike lane open? Is the bridge closed for repairs? The bus added 2 more stops? Well, you’ll get that next month, at least the cadence of releases is pretty on point. Starting with this release you can get map updates in CoMaps as fast as they are out, and you can finally prioritize updating the map only and save on mobile data on the road. This might help you in the future too as even if the app might need a newer Android version than your device got, you could still get some newer maps, for a bit more.

FMD and FMD edge were updated to 0.15.0 fixing UnifiedPush compatibility when using Conversations as a distributor.

Github Store was updated to 1.8.2 polishing the experience brought by 1.8.0. What’s new? A new backend, library imports, mirrors and token improvements first. Then we continue with APK inspect, Dhizuku support, Obtainium interop, add from starred, manual and background refresh, sorting, installer attribution and more. And finishing with fixes, polished features and improvements.

UntrackMe was updated to 2.0.0 after almost three years. As Android versions keep limiting what apps can achieve, the app was revritten as a browser, that opens your links and, based on your settings, cleans up the URL to be opened by your normal browser or app.

Newly Added Apps

20 more apps were newly added
  • Areada: A lightweight offline EPUB, TXT, and PDF reader
  • ConsoleFlow: Developer browser with automatic Eruda console injection
  • Do It: A modern to-do app built with Jetpack Compose and Material Design 3
  • Felicity Music Player (Trial): Advance audiophile grade offline music player
  • Gym Bott: Local-only exercise and routine tracking app to organise your gym workouts
  • Holos: Holos: Mobile-first Fediverse client with your own ActivityPub identity
  • LunaChron: Companion app for the Moonstone tabletop miniatures game
  • Lune: Modern local music player
  • Mahjong Scoring Compass: Automatic scoring compass for Riichi Mahjong
  • Mindwtr: Local-first GTD task manager
  • OpenPillReminder: Lady pill tracker for Android
  • PhoneTrack SMS: Location sharing over SMS — no internet, no account, no data required
  • Puzzle Suite: Minimalist puzzle games - Sudoku, Calc Sprint, Number Match & more
  • SmartFind: Find your phone with an SMS from a trusted contact
  • SOS Ring: Force ringtone for VIP contacts even in Silent/DND mode
  • Summit for Lemmy: A fast and easy to use app for Lemmy
  • TaffyQSL: Amateur radio logbook with ADIF support and QSO signing
  • Tirailleur: A practical ballistic calculator for precision rifle shooting
  • WR Battle Sim: Battle Simulator for WAR ROOM®
  • Yelling: Secure messaging with chat, voice and video calls

Updated Apps

214 more apps were updated
(expand for the full list)

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01:00 AM

“Here’s a pillow the cat didn’t pee on” [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Highlighting the non-existent negative is confusing.

“Don’t be late,” isn’t as useful as, “We’re going to leave on time.”

“I don’t want to be rude, but…” can easily be replaced by simply saying something that isn’t rude.

And of course, “with all due respect…” is often the preface to something said without due respect.

      

Pluralistic: Making sense of Trump's unscheduled sudden midair disassembly of the American empire (16 May 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->-> Top Sources: None -->

Today's links



A detail from Dore's engraving depicting the drowning of the Leviathan - a great sea-serpent thrashing in a chaotic dark sea. The image has been altered: it has been hand-tinted. The sea serpent is wearing a MAGA hat. Drowning nearby are a beleagured Uncle Sam, an Android robot, and the Statue of Liberty.

Making sense of Trump's unscheduled sudden midair disassembly of the American empire (permalink)

For generations, the American empire was the most powerful force on earth, and so we tended to assume that it was the most durable force on earth – surely anything so powerful must also be eternal?

But power and durability aren't the same thing, as Le Guin reminded us with her oft-quoted maxim that "We live in capitalism, its power seems inescapable — but then, so did the divine right of kings":

https://www.ursulakleguin.com/nbf-medal

Monarchs may be powerful, but that power is derived from a manifestly incorrect belief in special blood, a belief that requires monarchs to inbreed. At best, this produces heads of state who can't stop bleeding and also can't tell you if their blood is blue or red; at worst, it yields heads of state who can't speak intelligibly, much less produce another generation of royals:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_II_of_Spain

Oligarchy also produces a sequence of progressively weirder and more terrible rulers who rely on a mix of lies, flattery, coercion and personal cult nonsense to hold their coalition together in the face of mounting evidence for the system's bankruptcy. Thus Reagan begat GW Bush, who begat Trump, whose potential successors are a kennel of the least-charismatic chud podcasters ever to curse an RSS feed.

Trump's second term has resulted in a rapid, unscheduled, mid-air disassembly of the American empire. As Baldur Bjarnason writes, under Trump, America "first turned on their trading partners, then their allies in Europe, and then they delivered one of this century’s biggest economic and energy crises to their allies in Asia":

https://www.baldurbjarnason.com/2026/the-old-world-of-tech-is-dying/

The line comes from an excellent post entitled "The old world of tech is dying and the new cannot be born," about the impact of Trump's de-Americanization of the world on the US tech industry, and thus the world's relationship to tech more broadly. As Bjarnason writes, Trump's tech giants dominate the world because America dominates the world. It's not because the world likes American tech. As Bjarnason writes:

They are, more often than not, about as popular and respected as tobacco or pharmaceutical companies – some of them and their products are polling in terms of public sentiment in ranges similar to child molesters or authoritarian immigration enforcement entities – and their CEOs are some of the more despised public figures in recent history.

These very, very unpopular tech companies dominate because American trade policy insists that they must. They are allowed to violate local laws because stopping them from doing so would result in trade sanctions. It's true that US tech companies face fines abroad from time to time, but these are "the price list for inflicting societal suffering. Pick the one that suits your business model." US trading partners haven't really attempted to extinguish the unlawful conduct of US tech companies.

All of that is up for grabs now, thanks to Trump's uncontrollable compulsion to repeatedly hormuz himself (and America) in the foot. But – as Bjarnason writes – this didn't start with Trump. As ever, Trump is as much an effect as a cause, and the most important cause of Trump is the conversion of America into a financial economy, which started under Reagan, but was only finalized by Obama, who let the Wall Street looters who destroyed the world economy walk away unscathed, even as they stole the homes of millions of Americans:

https://web.archive.org/web/20170130083243/https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/jan/16/how-barack-obama-paved-way-donald-trump-racism

Financial economies "suck the air out of the rest of the economy and make it less competitive." Keeping billionaires in megayachts comes at the expense of "research, education, infrastructure, and healthcare." Countries that financialize lag behind countries where the economy is based on making things, not extracting or financing things.

Generations of both imperial looting and domestic investment made America the richest country on earth. That wealth cushioned America's transition to oligarchy: for a while, the country could both "finance and billionaire parasites sucking its blood" and continue to invest in itself. But while you can double the wealth of a billionaire at the expense of a town or two, doubling the wealth of a centibillionaire requires the destruction of whole regions.

As America looted itself into irrelevance, China – a very different kind of autocracy – invested in domestic capacity and domestic consumption. China's hardly a well-run place: like any autocracy, it functions according to the whims of extremely fallible officials, which produces real-estate bubbles and other crises of production (to say nothing of the demographic crisis of the One Child policy) and necessitates steadily increasing oppression, from online surveillance to concentration camps in Xinjiang.

Bjarnason writes about how this Chinese/US world presents a "double bind" for the EU. Siding with the US is increasingly untenable: the EU exists in large part to promote its domestic industries, but the US is no longer content to leave these alone. As Bjarnason says, US economic policy is now, "whatever our oligarchs want to steal this month, they get."

US tech has extended so many tendrils into so many sectors that it's not possible to defend any industrial sector without impinging on the "technopoly," where "the only ideas and thoughts that have social and cultural legitimacy are those that support, are supported by, and are mediated through technology."

This means that continuing to work within the American system means a steady transfer of economic and political control of every aspect of your life to the US, a decaying empire ruled over by a mad king. Nevertheless, there is a strong, vestigial reflex to protect American tech in the EU, which leaves European power-brokers scrambling to come up with reasons that the EU should confine its tech regulation to empty symbolic gestures, while avoiding meaningful action at all costs:

https://cerre.eu/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/CERRE_Horizontal-Interoperability-of-Social-Networking-Services.pdf

But the American tech sector relies on the other sources of American power – the ones that Trump is so bent on destroying. Trump's de-dollarization of the world economy is pushing the world away from using American tech for payment processing and networking. The American empire created the form of the US tech sector. As Bjarnason writes, "without the weight of the US political empire behind it – if Airbnb or Uber had been local startups – much fewer countries in the world would have loosened their regulations and consumer protections to accommodate them to the point where they prospered as they did."

Trump isn't the first US leader to make a strategic blunder (the US has lost every war it's fought since WWII, after all). But Trump's blunders are different in that they "deliberately signal the end [the US] empire." Hormuz and tariffs have driven people away from the US dollar, and everyone knows who to blame for the senseless deaths in the Gulf and the global privation caused by oil rationing.

That's bad news for a software industry that "shifted its entire value proposition from 'we make tools that help you make or save money' to using political clout and the dollar hegemony to capture, control, and loot entire sectors of the various economies of the world. That strategy only works when you’re in charge."

DOGE wiped out the health systems of the global south, and now Trump's trade negotiators are demanding that these countries promise to keep their hands off of US tech in exchange for reinstating a small trickle of the aid they lost. These countries are rejecting those demands:

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/zambia-says-us-health-deal-must-be-uncoupled-minerals-access-2026-05-04/

It's all up for grabs, in other words. The post-American internet is being born in a post-American world, and the shape of both is impossible to determine from this side of the veil. Bjarnason quotes Gramsci: "the old is dying and the new cannot be born."

I hold out high hopes for a world of international digital public goods: free and open software that replaces America's extractive, defective black boxes with transparent, auditable, trustworthy alternatives that are under the control of the people who use them:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/16/pascals-wager/#doomer-challenge

But – as Bjarnason says – even the intellectual property framework that the free/open source movement relies on to make its licenses enforceable is an artifact of the collapsing American empire. If the global copyright system collapses with America, there won't be any impediments to reverse-engineering and improving the tech around us – but there also won't be any way to enforce the free software licenses that keep that software open:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/02/limited-monopoly/#petardism

The whole essay is very good and – like so many great essays – it raises more questions than it answers. It's also full of standout one-liners like this one:

How do LLMs affect productivity and quality? (Much like leaded petrol. There’s some potential benefit for individual users with literally decades of expertise, provided nobody else uses LLMs. The results are catastrophic when everybody is using them.)

Consider moving it to the top of your weekend reading.


Hey look at this (permalink)



A shelf of leatherbound history books with a gilt-stamped series title, 'The World's Famous Events.'

Object permanence (permalink)

#25yrsago Is the law copyrighted?
https://web.archive.org/web/20010519134232/http://www.uniontrib.com/news/uniontrib/sun/news/news_1n13own.html

#15yrsago Canadian copyright collective wants a music tax on memory cards https://web.archive.org/web/20110517205114/https://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/5798/125/

#10yrsago FBI Director: viral videos make cops afraid to do their jobs https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/12/us/comey-ferguson-effect-police-videos-fbi.html?_r=2

#10yrsago Banker implicated in one of history’s biggest frauds says boss beat him with a tiny baseball bat https://web.archive.org/web/20160516173952/http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/barclays-banker-accused-rigging-libor-rate-hit-assistant-baseball-bat-1559792

#10yrsago Infested: an itchy, fascinating natural history of the bed bug https://memex.craphound.com/2016/05/14/infested-an-itchy-fascinating-natural-history-of-the-bed-bug/

#5yrsago A weapon of mass financial destruction https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/14/billionaire-class-solidarity/#club-deals

#1yrago Are the means of computation even seizable? https://pluralistic.net/2025/05/14/pregnable/#checkm8


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

  • "The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, June 2026 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374621568/thereversecentaursguidetolifeafterai/)

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

  • "The Post-American Internet," a geopolitical sequel of sorts to Enshittification, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2027

  • "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027

  • "The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2027



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Third draft completed. Submitted to editor.

  • "The Reverse Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book for Farrar, Straus and Giroux about being an effective AI critic. LEGAL REVIEW AND COPYEDIT COMPLETE.

  • "The Post-American Internet," a short book about internet policy in the age of Trumpism. PLANNING.

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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


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

READ CAREFULLY: By reading this, you agree, on behalf of your employer, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all NON-NEGOTIATED agreements, licenses, terms-of-service, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, browsewrap, confidentiality, non-disclosure, non-compete and acceptable use policies ("BOGUS AGREEMENTS") that I have entered into with your employer, its partners, licensors, agents and assigns, in perpetuity, without prejudice to my ongoing rights and privileges. You further represent that you have the authority to release me from any BOGUS AGREEMENTS on behalf of your employer.

ISSN: 3066-764X

Just for Skeets and Giggles (5.16.26) [The Status Kuo]

The week kicked off with Mother’s Day last Sunday, and Donald Trump was on message once again!

Image.heic

Trump’s cabinet, assembled around him per usual, had trouble connecting with ordinary Americans.

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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.

Speaking of fascist bootlickers, this piece of moving art captures our current situation perfectly.

IMG_0202.jpeg

They erected a golden statue of Trump at Mar-a-Lago, because we’re that on-the-nose these days, but this comment from the internet’s top men’s fashion maven was pitch perfect.

Image.heic

The Nodfather couldn’t stay awake through it, despite once boasting he’d never fall asleep on camera.

Image.heic

Trump woke up to find himself in China for a long anticipated summit with Xi Jinping that had already been rescheduled once.

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When the Chinese greeted him, Trump seemed to light up. I’m just going to leave this here because we were all thinking it.

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Would Donnie manage to stay awake through the long dinners and talks?

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The results of the summit were clear for all to see. Borowitz’s satirical account:

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Here with a painfully humorous report on what actually happened is The Daily Show.

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With Americans focused mostly on Western Europe, we needed a cultural ambassador.

Image.heic

Trump brought along high powered CEOs. Jensen Huang of Nvidia scored points by breaking off from the group to try some local hutong noodles, while Elon Musk, well…

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Musk’s unusual demeanor and behavior at the banquet raised questions.

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This made me chuckle to picture it unfolding.

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China’s best Trump impersonator garnered a lot of attention online given the official state visit.

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On the way home, reporters had a chance to ask Trump myriad questions. When he said James Talarico was “six genders,” I thought “Huh?” Until I saw this and started laughing.

699941316_1593925702740412_4923139592809599534_n.jpeg

Saturday Night Live brought back some favorites to play infamous drunks in this epic sketch.

IMG_0189.jpeg

Speaking of Ka$h Patel, that private label bourbon story isn’t going away.

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Meanwhile, ordinary Americans at the pump be like

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Conservatives sometimes still try to own the libs but it’s not going well, given the playing field.

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Speaking of trying to own the libs, this burn made the rounds again. (Tom Fitton heads the far-right group Judicial Watch.)

Image.png

Meanwhile, conservatives be like

IMG_0171.jpeg

The commentary is both sharp and dark these days, indeed.

On a brighter note, over in the UK, they’re moving forward with 21st century governance.

Image.heic

Thanks to everyone who voluntarily supports this little corner of internet sanity. If you enjoy these weekend diversions (and weekday outrage), consider upgrading to a paid subscription. It helps keep the the newsletter free for those on fixed income or disability. Thanks for considering.

Subscribe now

On to the animals! My feed has been filled lately with “helpful” doggos like this one, which is a constant reminder that my corgi Windsor won’t even come when you call her.

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It’s really the voiceover that gets me here.

Windsor is much closer in disposition to this princess:

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I can’t stop smiling at all the noses to boop here!

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Somehow this birthday pup knows whose day this is!

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The memes keep coming with this internet star.

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This clip had me on edge waiting for him to notice!

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We couldn’t find Riley for a minute, then found her curled up next to Shade smothering him. He had the same look as some of these kitties.

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A new cat trend overseas: virtual box-car rides. The results are amazing.

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Sound up for this. But be prepared for your cat, if one has chosen you as its human, to take an interest.

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I did not know such beautiful creatures existed!

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I had to watch to the end. Not really that surprised but still, hahaha!

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I didn’t know they made little outfits like this for them.

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A chameleon compilation for your weekend.

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This is a very cool photo.

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An animated tribute to Sir David Attenborough, who recently turned 100. The animals weigh in!

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Witchcraft is alive and well.

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It was a week of auction-related humor. First the gas pump, and then this absolute gold on SNL. I can’t believe they did this live!

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My dreams will be haunted for weeks.

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The sculpture is beautiful. But the commentary is truly elevated.

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I need to try this the next time I’m faced with the plastic packaging challenge.

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This Waymo story is an allegory for our times.

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The comments though.

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10/10, no notes.

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Have we seen this be—oh, that’s right, we have.

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I can see myself making this same error with a best friend. Hard not to laugh along here.

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I have had this very experience.

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Oh, and this one.

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Future space station docking expert here.

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We end with a dad joke, an important question in these grave times:

Have a great weekend!

Jay

Saturday 2026-05-16

10:00 PM

Updated Debian 12: 12.14 released [Debian News]

The Debian project is pleased to announce the fourteenth update of its oldstable distribution Debian 12 (codename bookworm). This point release mainly adds corrections for security issues, along with a few adjustments for serious problems. Security advisories have already been published separately and are referenced where available.

Updated Debian 13: 13.5 released [Debian News]

The Debian project is pleased to announce the fifth update of its stable distribution Debian 13 (codename trixie). This point release mainly adds corrections for security issues, along with a few adjustments for serious problems. Security advisories have already been published separately and are referenced where available.

08:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 届 [Kanji of the Day]

✍8

小6

deliver, reach, arrive, report, notify, forward

カイ

とど.ける -とど.け とど.く

届け   (とどけ)   —   report
届け出   (とどけで)   —   report
届く   (とどく)   —   to reach
届ける   (とどける)   —   to deliver
婚姻届   (こんいんとどけ)   —   marriage registration
被害届   (ひがいとどけ)   —   filing a (criminal) complaint
届出   (とどけで)   —   report
不届き   (ふとどき)   —   outrageous
届け出る   (とどけでる)   —   to report
無届け   (むとどけ)   —   without notice

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 帝 [Kanji of the Day]

✍9

中学

sovereign, the emperor, god, creator

テイ

みかど

帝京   (ていきょう)   —   the capital
帝国   (ていこく)   —   empire
帝王切開   (ていおうせっかい)   —   Caesarean section
皇帝   (おうだい)   —   emperor
帝王   (ていおう)   —   sovereign
帝都   (ていと)   —   imperial capital
女帝   (じょてい)   —   empress
ローマ帝国   (ローマていこく)   —   Roman Empire
帝国主義   (ていこくしゅぎ)   —   imperialism
帝廟   (ていびょう)   —   imperial mausoleum

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

GIMP @ Linux App Summit and ADULLACT Congress 2026 [GIMP]

We have been trying to encourage contributors to be more present on various events, international or local. Here is where you will find someone from the GIMP team in the coming weeks:

Linux App Summit 2026

The Linux App Summit (LAS) brings the global Linux community together to learn, collaborate, and help grow the Linux application ecosystem.

Linux App Summit 2026 banner
Linux App Summit 2026, May 16-17, 2026 - Berlin, Germany

It happens this week-end, from May 16 to 17 in Berlin, Germany, and we will have one person attending, Michael Schumacher, one of our long term contributor, as well as member of our Committee.

Unfortunately our project did not submit a talk, but we are still interested to meet more of the desktop software ecosystem contributors and see what’s happening around us! So if you attend too and spot Michael, do not hesitate to go and speak with him. He will likely have Wilber stickers to distribute too! 😍

10th Congrès ADULLACT

The Congrès ADULLACT is a conference gathering elected representatives of French local authorities, to discuss Free Software usage in the public sector.

10th Congrès ADULLACT 2026 banner
10th Congrès ADULLACT, June 4-5, 2026 - Montpellier, France

Jehan, GIMP Maintainer, will be present there to showcase GIMP as a Community, Free Software. Obviously GIMP is already quite massively present in France, but as many Free Software, administrators and users alike may not realize how it is being developed, by whom, why and how. Nor do they know that it is being developed by a major part in Europe and more particularly in France. Since one of the two main topics this year is the digital sovereignty, this is quite a major stake in this context.

The event happens from June 4 to 5, 2026, in Montpellier, France. As one can imagine, it is a close event for elected representatives and civil servants only, so if this is your case, we hope you will show up and Jehan will be happy to discuss with you!

Jehan’s talk will be on Friday, June 5, 2026, at 14:20 (French time) and he will introduce GIMP as a “Free Software and Community”.

We hope you’ll be many to attend! (oh and Jehan as well will have Wilber stickers, even though it may less a selling point in such a conference 😋)

02:00 PM

Developer Promises To Keep Failed Online Game Servers Up: Art Deserves To Be Preserved [Techdirt]

In all of our conversations about video game preservation, one common thread is the general apathy of developers and publishers when it comes to this sort of thing. It’s actually a bit mind boggling to me that apathy is even a thing here. After all, this is the work done by these developers and, to a lesser extent, the publishers. When we have seen instances in the past of game servers being shut down, and even more so in cases where publishers have gone after fan-run servers of online games that have already been shut down, this represents the loss and potential erasure of what is often years and years of work by very talented artists and programmers.

It’s with that in mind that I found it so refreshing that the developer behind one online game that didn’t perform so well, Blindfire, has committed to keeping the servers up and running for “years” because they actually take pride in their work.

Blindfire was released back in October 2024 with a unique hook: It was an online first-person shooter set in the dark and was built around finding your enemies or remaining out of their sight. Sadly for developer Double Eleven, it never found much of an audience. Now, a year after its last patch, Blindfire will get one last big update and will go free, with devs promising to keep the servers on because they are “proud of it” and want to preserve it for others.

“We are doing this because we believe games are art and they deserve to be preserved,” said Double Eleven.  “We refuse to bury what we built just because things didn’t go perfectly. We are keeping it alive because we are proud of it. You won’t see adverts or marketing campaigns trying to drag you back in. This is just a gift to those who want to see what we created.”

When you read the comments from Double Eleven, you immediately wonder why the hell this isn’t the posture of every developer of online games out there. This is their work, after all. Why in the world would they want it scattered to the ether?

Now, this also cannot be the end state, if we’re truly looking at this from a preservation standpoint. A commitment directly from the developer to keep the game around for several years is a good thing. But it’s perpetuity we’re after here, after all. And there’s no guarantee that Double Eleven will live on long enough to keep the game available for whatever passes as “forever” these days. Coupling this with the eventual release of source code, so that fans and preservationists can scatter the game to the wide ranging corners of the internet, is what will end any danger of this art and culture ever disappearing. That hasn’t been done yet, but hopefully Double Eleven is thinking along these same lines.

But if you can find a more human, kind, and engaging message for a situation like this than the following, I’ll be surprised.

“We loved making [Blindfire],” said the studio on Steam. “Watching playtesters get to grips with our twist on the FPS was a massive highlight for us and seeing some big streamers jump into our world was a proper thrill. Blindfire was a flash in the dark. It was weird, loud, and ours. It is staying online for anyone who wants to play it today, tomorrow or years from now. Thanks for being part of the journey.”

Bravo on step 1 in the preservation process, folks. Now let’s take this further.

01:00 PM

ICE and CBP Are Broken Beyond Repair [The Status Kuo]

The head of the U.S. Border Patrol resigned on Thursday. If you’re confused because you think that already happened a while ago, you can be forgiven. The recent cascade of firings and resignations at the Department of Homeland Security would make anyone’s head spin.

Former Border Patrol chief Michael Banks, who had led the agency since Trump’s second inauguration, announced his departure effective immediately, citing 37 years of service and a desire to return to his family and ranch in Texas.

The official story is retirement. The actual story is far Trumpier. It involves allegations, reported six weeks ago by the Washington Examiner and never credibly denied, that Banks had bragged to colleagues for years about paying for sex with prostitutes on foreign trips. Reportedly, two internal investigations into his conduct were quietly shelved.

Banks is the third senior DHS official to leave in two months. His character and abuse of his position, along with the conduct of other recently departed officials, raise a serious question: If ICE and CBP are broken beyond repair, why are we still trying to fix them?

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A chief and his character

Banks was no ordinary political appointee. He had more than three decades in public service, including a stint as Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s border czar, overseeing Operation Lone Star. Trump appointed Banks as Border Patrol’s top official at the start of his second term, and Banks took pride in the role, claiming credit even this past week for delivering “the most secure border this country has ever seen.”

His colleagues tell a different story. Six current and former Border Patrol employees told the Washington Examiner in April that Banks had bragged openly for years about taking regular trips to Colombia and Thailand to pay for sex with prostitutes—and had personally invited at least one colleague to join him. “I don’t know how he became the chief of the Border Patrol with his character,” one former agent told the Examiner. CBP investigated the allegations twice. The second investigation was opened last year, while Kristi Noem was still running the department and, like many investigations of Trump officials, was quietly closed before it reached a conclusion.

Again per the Washington Examiner, DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin met privately with the National Border Patrol Council president on Wednesday, the day before Banks’s resignation, reportedly in anticipation of a second damaging story about Banks set to drop Thursday. By the next morning, Banks had announced his retirement, effective immediately. “It’s just time,” he told Fox News.

When asked to comment about the allegations, CBP responded with a non-answer. “These allegations date back more than a decade and were reviewed years ago,” the agency told the Washington Examiner. “The matter was closed.”

The body count at the top

To set the stage, let’s review who else got shown the door recently at DHS.

There was the canning at the top, of course. Trump fired Kristi Noem as DHS Secretary in March. She was under fire for publicly defending the shootings of Renée Good and Alex Pretti before the facts were in. She was in constant friction with career officials in her department. But of greatest concern to Trump was that she had spent hundreds of millions on splashy immigration ads featuring herself, and in hearings said under oath that Trump had greenlit the spending. Noem and her “special government employee” companion Corey Lewandowski, who reportedly shared a bed on board a jet she used for personal travel, had forced out at least 15 senior CBP employees. Among them were the agency’s chief operating officer, its top border wall official, and the HR chief overseeing the hiring of 8,500 new agents.

There was also the cosplaying übergroupenführer, Greg Bovino, Noem’s handpicked “commander at large” and the public face of the urban immigration crackdowns. After the killings in Minneapolis, to which Bovino responded by publicly amplifying false claims about the shootings that video evidence directly contradicted, he was stripped of his national command role and sent back to his sector in El Centro, California.

Acting ICE Director Todd Lyons resigned last month after Politico reported he had been hospitalized twice for stress-related issues. Sources described White House policy director Stephen Miller screaming at Lyons on morning calls until he was visibly unable to make basic decisions. Reportedly, a bodyguard once had to borrow a defibrillator from a nearby government office in case Lyons needed it on the road. The White House called the story “inaccurate trash.” But Lyons still resigned three weeks later. His replacement is a former private prison executive.

Border czar Tom Homan somehow remains in his post, despite being recorded on film by undercover FBI agents accepting $50,000 in cash. This incident was reportedly documented in internal Justice Department records as an exchange for promises to steer federal contracts in a second Trump administration. The investigation, once again, was closed by Trump’s DOJ. When Attorney General Pam Bondi was asked directly by Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) whether Homan kept the money, she refused to answer.

Built broken

The nonstop scandals and resignations are shocking, but to those who have studied ICE and CBP as agencies for decades, they are unsurprising.

The agencies were both created in the chaotic reorganization that followed September 11, when Congress dissolved the old Immigration and Naturalization Service and Customs Service and rebuilt them as part of the new Department of Homeland Security. The pressure to staff up fast was enormous, and the consequences were predictable.

Journalist and historian Garrett Graff, who testified before Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s Accountability Commission in January, has spent more than two decades reporting on ICE and CBP and describes what followed as “the largest law enforcement scandal in American history.”

Graff testifying before Illinois’s Accountability Commission in January 2026.

Between 2005 and 2024, according to CBP’s own disciplinary records, at least 4,913 CBP officers and Border Patrol agents were arrested. That number by itself is the size of the fourth-largest police department in the country, roughly equal to the entire Philadelphia police force. The agency saw one of its own agents arrested on average every 24 to 36 hours, year after year, for two decades.

The hiring surge also created a structural blind spot that persists to this day. Because CBP agents are classified as street-level law enforcement rather than special agent investigators, the agency was built without the legal authority to investigate its own misconduct. That made it the nation’s largest law enforcement agency with no internal affairs division. This glaring problem wasn’t addressed until the final months of the Obama administration, more than a decade after DHS was created.

The culture that took root in that vacuum was, in Graff’s words, a “fascist-secret-police-in-waiting—troubled agencies simply waiting for an ambitious would-be authoritarian.”

Trump did not create that culture. He found it, handed it a mandate and then flooded it with money. The “One Big Beautiful Bill” pumped $75 billion into ICE and $65 billion into CBP on top of their existing budgets. ICE’s new allocation alone exceeds the entire military budget of France. As part of a hiring surge to add 10,000 new ICE officers, the agency cut its training academy from five months to 42 days. A whistleblower who resigned from the ICE academy testified to Congress that by the final days of training, cadets still could not demonstrate basic command of the tactics or the law.

Last week, the administration quietly announced it was ending the fast-track program and reverting to a standard 72-day curriculum, while dispatching veteran officers to give the undertrained agents already in the field the extra 30 days of instruction they never received. That means thousands of half-trained deportation officers are on the streets right now, ostensibly learning on the job.

But the training problem goes beyond hours and days. A whistleblower complaint obtained by the Associated Press revealed that in May 2025, acting ICE Director Todd Lyons issued an internal memo that was addressed to all ICE personnel but kept secret even within the agency. It told instructing officers that they could forcibly enter homes using only an administrative warrant, without a judge’s approval. The memo acknowledged this was a departure from how DHS had historically operated. New ICE recruits were being taught to follow the memo’s guidance rather than the agency’s own written training materials, which explicitly state the opposite.

The distinction matters enormously. As I wrote about in January, an administrative warrant is neither issued by a judge nor reviewed by an independent party. Any supervising ICE officer can sign one. ICE’s own 2021 basic training materials stated flatly that an administrative warrant “does NOT alone authorize a 4th Amendment search of any kind.” The new memo simply declared that the agency’s general counsel had decided otherwise, with no legal explanation provided. Senior ICE officials had refused to distribute physical copies even within the agency, providing only oral instructions to agents rather than updating written training materials.

Why reform won’t work

Congress has spent months arguing over accountability for ICE and CBP as a condition of funding them. Democrats demanded judicial warrant requirements, mandatory body cameras, a ban on masks, use-of-force standards and protections around sensitive locations. In response, the White House offered language that largely restated existing policy.

The parties were at an impasse, but it reflects something real. ICE and CBP were built without adequate vetting, without internal affairs capacity, without meaningful oversight and without professional training standards. For two decades, those deficiencies were either papered over or ignored. When Trump and the Republicans handed these agencies billions of dollars, a mandate for cruelty, and apparent immunity from consequences, the result was predictable.

Calling for reform at this point requires believing that the same institutions that buried two investigations into their own chief, hospitalized their director under pressure to break the law faster, secretly rewrote the Fourth Amendment in a memo they were afraid to put in writing, and killed two American citizens in the streets of Minneapolis can be rebuilt from within. That belief is no longer reasonable.

Time to start over

“Abolish ICE” has been treated as a slogan since the first time it appeared on a protest sign. It deserves to be taken seriously as policy.

What abolition actually means in practice is not open borders or the end of immigration enforcement. Several serious proposals are already on the table.

Representative Shri Thanedar (D-MI) has proposed the Abolish ICE Act, which would cancel its funding, wind down the agency within 90 days, and redistribute its functions to other parts of the government.

The ICE Security Reform Act, which attracted more than 70 co-sponsors in the House, would separate ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations division, which handles legitimate criminal work like drug trafficking, human smuggling and organized crime, from its Enforcement and Removal Operations arm, which is currently engaged in a program of mass deportation.

The American Immigration Council released a framework just this week proposing to replace indiscriminate enforcement entirely with a civil administrative agency focused on compliance, proportionate consequences, and a pathway to legal status for long-term residents with no criminal history.

These proposals differ in scope and ambition, and reasonable people can argue about which replacement would work best. The point is that the conversation has moved well past the question of whether reform is possible and toward the harder question of what comes next.

What seems clear is that maintaining the agencies as currently staffed and structured is not the answer. An institution that selects for misconduct, rewards impunity, and treats the Constitution as an obstacle to be routed around through secret memos is not an institution that can be fixed by merely changing the people at the top.

The rot is deep in the roots of both ICE and CBP, and has been from the start. It’s time to yank them out completely.

10:00 AM

09:00 AM

Why The US Can’t Adopt Ukraine’s Innovative Approach To Unmanned Warfare Systems [Techdirt]

It is widely accepted that drones have changed the conduct of modern war dramatically. The war in Ukraine, in particular, is driving the rapid evolution of drone technology. Evidence of how far things have come was provided recently by the following claim from Ukraine, reported here on The Next Web (TNW):

In April, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky announced that his forces had, for the first time in the history of warfare, seized an enemy position using only unmanned systems. No infantry. No human soldiers entering the contested ground. Drones and ground robots identified the target, suppressed defensive fire, and captured the position without a single Ukrainian casualty. The claim has not been independently verified in detail, and Ukraine’s military has declined to provide specifics.

The TNW article goes on to give some details about the company that apparently played a major role in that unmanned assault:

a Ukrainian-British defence technology startup called UFORCE, has conducted more than 150,000 combat missions since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, achieved unicorn status with a valuation exceeding one billion dollars, and is now scaling production from a discreet London headquarters designed, the company says, to protect it from Russian sabotage. The age of unmanned warfare is no longer a conference-circuit prediction. It is a line item on a defence contractor’s balance sheet.

Politico interviewed the Ukrainian commander in charge of the Third Assault Brigade’s ground robotic systems unit, the one which carried out the attack. Mykola Zinkevych provided some interesting indications of what robotic systems were already doing today, and what Ukraine’s future plans were for unmanned warfare systems. For example, Zinkevych said:

Delivery of important cargo, evacuation of the wounded, conducting surveillance in open areas, destruction of enemy fortifications, sabotage operations behind enemy lines, laying minefields — all this is now performed by ground robotic systems

In the short term:

Infantrymen can and should be taken out of direct fire. Our goal for 2026 is to replace up to 30 percent of personnel in the most difficult areas of the front with technology

In a post on Facebook (in Ukrainian), Zinkevych gave details of the ambitious longer-term goals (via Google Translate), which will involve the wider deployment of unmanned ground vehicles (UGV):

In March alone, 9,000+ missions were completed by the military. Our goal is for 100% of front-line logistics to be performed by robotic systems.

In the first half of 2026, due to increased demand, we will contract 25,000 UGVs, which will be gradually delivered to the front. This is twice as much as in the entire year 2025.

A new paper from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, written by the former defense minister of Ukraine, Andriy Zagorodnyuk, explores what he calls “The New Revolution in Military Affairs”, which is being brought about by “rapid innovation and adaptation, introducing new types of unmanned systems, countermeasures, and operating methods at unprecedented speed.” A key element of this is “affordable precise mass” the highly effective deployment of cheap, long-range drones on a massive scale. He calls this transformation:

a structural shift in warfare in which new technologies drive the development of novel operational concepts and doctrines, fundamentally altering how military power is generated and employed, and forcing enduring changes in military organizations. These trends include the emergence of affordable precise mass, the fragmentation of the air domain, the growing difficulty of maneuver, the centrality of networked warfare, and the elevation of rapid adaptation as a core military capability. This transformation is still in its early stages, but countries that fail to recognize and adapt to it risk preparing for a form of war that has lost its decisiveness.

One important aspect of this shift touches on an area that will be familiar to Techdirt readers. As noted in the quotation above, Zagorodnyuk underlines the importance of rapid adaptation for this new kind of warfare:

The decisive advantage lies with those who can shorten the loop between combat experience, technical adaptation, and redeployment. As a result, ultra-fast adaptation becomes a paramount requirement for survival—and directly shapes force organization.

In Ukraine, this has led to drone operators being deeply involved in the technology’s evolution:

Units maintain their own repair facilities, component stocks, and small-scale production capabilities. Some operate informal research-and-development cells. Successful adaptations spread laterally through personal networks, messaging platforms, and volunteer communities rather than through centralized bureaucratic channels.

But Zagorodnyuk points out a key reason why the important lessons emerging from the wars in Ukraine and Iran are unlikely to be learned in many Western countries, including the US:

legal, contractual, and technical restrictions often prevent units from modifying or repairing their own equipment. In the United States, for example, defense contractors frequently retain control over maintenance data, software, and diagnostics, limiting what military personnel can do independently. The debate around the “right to repair” reflects this tension. While intended to protect intellectual property and safety standards, such restrictions can slow adaptation cycles and reduce operational flexibility—precisely the opposite of what high-intensity, technology-driven warfare now demands.

In other words, today’s obsession with protecting intellectual monopolies above all else could one day prove a major obstacle to fighting and winning future wars.

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