Trump Says Democratic Lawmakers Should Die For Telling The Military To Obey Their Oath [Techdirt]
The President of the United States is calling for the execution of six Democratic lawmakers—all military veterans or former intelligence officers—because they reminded US service members of their oath to the Constitution.
That’s not hyperbole or exaggeration. That’s an actual thing that happened yesterday.
Donald Trump spent hours on social media demanding that Senators Elissa Slotkin and Mark Kelly, along with Representatives Chris DeLuzio, Maggie Goodlander, Chrissy Houlahan, and Jason Crow be arrested, tried, and put to death for “seditious behavior” and “treason.”
Their crime? Creating a two-minute video explaining that members of the military have a right—and sometimes a duty—to disobey unlawful orders.
The same oath that the president, in theory, took as well. The president is saying that elected officials of the opposing party should be put to death for telling people to remember their oath to the Constitution.
This comes after weeks of MAGA Republicans insisting that Democrats needed to “tone down the rhetoric” following the assassination of Charlie Kirk. It comes after the assassination of Minnesota House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband, who was among several Democratic officials on the killer’s target list.
And now the president is calling for elected officials to be put to death for reminding service members of their constitutional oath.
The video is worth watching (though, bizarrely, many news sites wouldn’t post it).
It’s less than two minutes. The six lawmakers simply remind service members that they have a right, and sometimes a duty, to disobey illegal orders.
Trump did not react kindly to this. He started out by SCREAMING that the lawmakers who did this engaged in “SEDITIOUS BEHAVIOR AT THE HIGHEST LEVEL” and that they “should be ARRESTED AND PUT ON TRIAL” and that “Their words cannot be allowed to stand.”

That post caused the usual unhinged cultists who egg the senile old man on to try to one-up him, and Trump just kept reposting them all.

Eventually, of course, some of his followers insisted that reminding soldiers of their oath is “treason” and that they were there for “traitors” who should be hanged. And the president of the United States just kept reposting it all.

And, so, it wasn’t long before he directly called for them to be put to death.

Let’s be clear about how unhinged this is, going step by step.
First, what these elected officials said was absolutely true. The military code of conduct does require that they obey lawful orders, which by default means they need not follow unlawful orders. And indeed, the Rules for Courts-Martial make it clear that the defenses for disobeying an order includes if it is unlawful. And the standard there is that “a person of ordinary sense and understanding would have known the orders to be unlawful.”
Rule 916(d) of the rules states clearly:
Obedience to orders. It is a defense to any offense that the accused was acting pursuant to orders unless the accused knew the orders to be unlawful or a person of ordinary sense and understanding would have known the orders to be unlawful.
Second, disobeying an order may subject you to a court-martial, but not “sedition” and being sentenced to death. I mean, this should go without saying, but what the fuck?
Third, simply telling people about their rights and obligations under the oath they took to the Constitution is obviously and clearly protected under the First Amendment. Anyone who still thinks the president believes in free speech is a fraud.
Fourth, beyond being protected speech, this has nothing to do with “sedition” or “treason.” Sedition is stirring up rebellion against the government. Treason means levying war against the United States. Reminding service members of their oath to the Constitution and their legal right to refuse unlawful orders is neither. It’s the exact opposite—it’s reinforcing their duties as US service members.
And, look, even if these elected officials had done something wrong (they haven’t), and even if it broke the law (it didn’t), and even if it was seditious (it’s not even remotely close), it’s still wrong and ridiculously, unfathomably out of line for the president to be saying they deserve the death penalty.
Of course, Trump’s tantrum has amplified this message far beyond what the original video would have reached. And according to a Military Times survey, 80% of US troops already understand their duty to disobey illegal orders anyway. All Trump’s rage has accomplished is reminding even more people—including his own supporters in uniform—of something they already knew.
Remember: this comes right after his MAGA colleagues spent weeks demanding Democrats “lower the temperature” following Charlie Kirk’s assassination. Yet here’s the president telling his followers that these officials deserve to die, forcing Democrats to alert the Capitol Police and the House Sergeant at Arms to protect these lawmakers and their families.
It’s fucking insane.
Congress should be calling for impeachment. Instead, you have the Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, doing his usual run for cover routine by claiming that “attorneys will have to parse the language.”
That’s a hell of a position from someone who, two months ago, insisted that calling Republicans “fascist” was tantamount to inciting violence:
Seems like quite the double standard. When the president literally calls for his political enemies to be put to death, he deflects and wants “the attorneys” to “parse the language,” but should anyone refer to the authoritarian attacks on the institutions of the United States, he’ll immediately condemn you for inciting violence.
But, of course, that is the MAGA way: they can say what they want, you have to shut up. They can encourage and incite violence, but anything you say that’s a little mean to them is beyond the pale.
History will remember those who did the right thing and those who enabled our mad king and his unhinged violent fantasies.
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September Arrest, Deportation Of Firefighter Shows The Administration Just Wants Brown People Gone [Techdirt]
I’ve expended far too many words stating the obvious: the Trump administration’s deportation program isn’t interested in removing criminals. It’s only interested in removing people who aren’t white. That’s why it vets visa applicants for “anti-American” social media posts while throwing the immigration door wide open for any white people seeking to escape the “persecution” they face in post-apartheid South Africa.
And that’s why so many people being arrested and deported don’t fit the profile of the “worst of the worst.” There simply aren’t enough criminal immigrants in America. Too much of our crime is home-grown and even if you’re a racist who thinks Black people are skewing the data, the data still shows white people commit crime more frequently than immigrants.
Back in September, federal officers rolled up on a fire crew in Washington state. Washington is already on the list of states Trump doesn’t like. The fact that these firefighters were on loan from Oregon — a state Trump vehemently (to the point of martial law) doesn’t like — surely factored into this equation.
After hassling a bunch of people just trying to keep a wildfire from spreading, the collective of federal officers only managed to secure two arrests. One of those was Jose Cruz-Estrada, who had been working as a firefighter since 2019. Officers arrested him and deported him to Mexico. In defense of its raid on firefighters, DHS said this:
The two illegal aliens apprehended were NOT firefighters. The two contracted work crews questioned on the day of their arrests were not even assigned to actively fight the fire; they were there in a support role, cutting logs into firewood. The firefighting response remained uninterrupted the entire time. No active firefighters were even questioned, and U.S. Border Patrol’s actions did not prevent or interfere with any personnel actively engaged in firefighting efforts.
They were firefighters. Just because they weren’t on the fire line didn’t mean they weren’t doing work to support firefighting efforts. This statement also lied about Cruz-Estrada’s role in firefighting, which involved more than this alleged response to a Bureau of Land Management investigation into the contractor’s hiring practices.
Once it became clear Cruz-Estrada was not just some migrant hastily hired to handle a wildfire, the DHS decided to amp up its deliberately misleading narrative. It issued a press release that had this to say about the firefighter (emphasis in the original):
Jose Bertin Cruz-Estrada, a criminal illegal alien from Mexico, past charges include the delivery and selling of methamphetamine. Border Patrol previously encountered this criminal illegal alien 15 times. Cruz-Estrada has a final order of removal from April 2015 and was last removed from the United States on February 27, 2016. He chose to disregard our laws and illegally re-enter the country again.
That’s the DHS skewing the facts to pretend a person, who not only runs his own lawn care business but has also handled supervisory roles in fire response teams, is a hardened criminal. According to the Guardian’s reporting, Cruz-Estrada has been a “squad boss and incident commander” since beginning his firefighting career. Here’s what actually happened, in far more detail than the DHS would ever be willing to share.
[I]n 2013, he got caught up in the criminal legal system after a local drug bust. Officers, records show, were not focused on Cruz-Estrada, but rather a resident of a home where Cruz-Estrada was hanging out. An informant bought drugs from the resident and secretly filmed the encounter; police accused Cruz-Estrada of being a “lookout”, because he was seen leaving the home and “walking around the surrounding area”, a prosecutor wrote.
Cruz-Estrada was charged with a litany of serious offenses, including racketeering and unlawful delivery of methamphetamine, but the charges were dismissed in exchange for him pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to deliver meth, a charge stemming from the “lookout” allegations.
The conviction carried no prison time.
This is the evidence the DHS thinks is so damning: someone was once accused of serious drug crimes more than a decade ago and served no time in prison for the single charge the government secured via a plea deal. Since then, he has worked for firefighting crews when not running his own business, which he incorporated in 2022.
But fuck him, I guess, for not trying to obtain citizenship during Trump’s first term. Cruz-Estrada re-entered the US illegally in 2019, which wasn’t exactly the best time to be asking for asylum or trying to fast-track a citizenship application. But he went back to firefighting, contributing to several major wildfire-fighting efforts over the next six years.
And yet, this government continues to insist this is exactly the kind of person the United States should have fewer of. When asked for a comment on this recent article, the foul front-mouth of the DHS decided to spew the usual bullshit, letting everyone who doesn’t respond to racist dog whistling know that this administration is doing this to Cruz-Estrada because it simply doesn’t like people from Mexico:
[DHS Asst. Secretary Tricia McLaughlin] said the border patrol had “encountered” Cruz-Estrada 15 times over the years and again cited his past criminal charges without noting they were dismissed. “Once again, the Guardian is debasing itself by peddling sob stories from a criminal illegal alien … Stop publishing criminal illegal aliens’ testimonies as the truth.”
That’s the sort of thing you say when you have no real argument to make. You re-read the jacket, gloss over the lack of a serious conviction, refuse to acknowledge the fact that the offense occurred well over a decade ago, and insult the people asking you to explain your actions. This person should not be allowed to issue a Teams meeting invitation, much less serve as the underboss for Kristi “I Kill Pets” Noem.
Cruz-Estrada is the sort of person who actually makes America great: a human being as capable of failure as the rest of us, but willing to turn his life around and be a positive force in this nation — something far too few US natives are interested in doing. Migrants never get to rest on their laurels. Meanwhile, the MAGA crowd remains kicked back on the laurel lounger it scored at an asset forfeiture auction, applauding an administration that is deliberately destroying the American ideals these shitheels claim to love so much it might occasionally mean having to drink something other than Bud Light for a few weeks.
Trump Attacks Leave U.S. Cybersecurity Agencies Hollowed Out And Managed By Useless Zealots [Techdirt]
We’ve noted time and time again that Trump’s attack on U.S. cybersecurity defenses and oversight are utterly indistinguishable from a foreign attack. Perhaps with the exception of more lip filler, spray tans, diabetes, bogus efficiency, and fake piety.
That’s been particularly true for Trump’s attack on the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), which has done a lot of heavy lifting in recent years when it comes to thwarting security threats, maintaining election cybersecurity, providing useful threat assessments for orgs that can’t afford to do their own, and even deterring the spread of misinformation about government security.
The Trump administration has requested CISA’s $3 billion budget be slashed by nearly half a billion dollars and cut a reported third of its workforce. The organization has had to freeze most of its cybersecurity election protection work. Folks who worked on protecting the country from foreign cybersecurity threats have been redirected toward harassing minorities.
The Verge has a good read on how important key spots in DHS and CISA have been filled by weird and incompetent Trump-loyal zealots, causing chains of failures across U.S. cybersecurity defenses. So when things happen, like Iranian government-linked hackers accessing and modifying Arizona election websites, people can no longer trust CISA to competently lend a hand:
“It was late June, and something strange was happening on Arizona’s online portal for political candidates. Images of the candidates were disappearing. Photos of the Iranian Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini were popping up in their place. The state would later come to believe it was an attack from an Iranian government-affiliated group. When they first discovered the threat, though, they were in the dark — and they needed help.
Arizona Secretary of State Adrian Fontes’ office took action to contain the threat, which he says did not impact personal voter information. But one thing he didn’t do was contact the federal agency that would have once been among Fontes’ first calls: CISA.”
Experts are already seeing an increase in scams, ransomware attacks, and foreign government probes of key U.S. systems. And Trump’s incompetence and sabotage extends way beyond CISA.
The Trump administration has also gutted government cybersecurity programs (including a board investigating Salt Typhoon, the biggest Chinese hack of U.S. telecom networks in history), and dismantled the Cyber Safety Review Board (CSRB) (responsible for investigating significant cybersecurity incidents).
Over at the FCC, Trump’s hand-picked earlobe nibbler Brendan Carr has been derailing agency plans to impose some baseline cybersecurity standards on “smart” home devices (because hardware vendors don’t want oversight). Carr is also killing new FCC rules requiring telecoms do a better, more transparent job securing their networks from foreign attacks (because again, AT&T and Comcast don’t want oversight). And he’s making it easier for robocalling scammers to abuse U.S. voice and data networks (because, yep, U.S. marketing companies don’t want oversight).
This will harm, and even kill, a lot of people.
MAGA loyalists don’t care because they aren’t interested in leadership and governance, they’re interested in scrapping the country for parts and selling it off the back loading dock. Whether or not that lines up with foreign governments and criminal organizations keen on undermining national security isn’t something they’re bright enough to understand or ethical enough to care about.
Kanji of the Day: 国 [Kanji of the Day]
国
✍8
小2
country
コク
くに
全国 (ぜんこく) — the whole country
中国 (ちゅうこく) — province of the second lowest rank (ritsuryo system)
米国 (べいこく) — America
国際 (こくさい) — international
韓国 (からくに) — China
国内 (くぬち) — internal
国民 (くにたみ) — people of a country
国会 (こっかい) — National Diet
か国 (かこく) — counter for countries
国連 (こくれん) — United Nations
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 窮 [Kanji of the Day]
窮
✍15
中学
hard up, destitute, suffer, perplexed, cornered
キュウ キョウ
きわ.める きわ.まる きわ.まり きわ.み
窮屈 (きゅうくつ) — narrow
困窮 (こんきゅう) — poverty
窮地 (きゅうち) — dilemma
窮状 (きゅうじょう) — distress
窮する (きゅうする) — to be at a loss
困窮者 (こんきゅうしゃ) — the poor
貧窮 (ひんきゅう) — great poverty
窮余 (きゅうよ) — extremity
窮迫 (きゅうはく) — financial difficulty
窮乏 (きゅうぼう) — poverty
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
A convincing argument [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
It’s almost never exclusively based on logic.
We navigate the world with stories, beliefs and assumptions. And the people you’re trying to persuade have a different set of all three than you do.
“If I were you” is a hard sentence to sell, because you’re not me.
A convincing argument works when the recipient is convinced, not you.
Piracy Liability Dispute Between Universal Music and Cloudflare Reaches EU’s Highest Court [TorrentFreak]
Pirate sites have proven to be quite a headache for Cloudflare and have landed the San Francisco-based tech company in court on several occasions.
These legal battles include a case in Germany, where the local branch of Universal Music sued Cloudflare for offering its services to pirate site DDL-Music.
The origins of this case date back to June 2019, when the German branch of Universal Music sent a copyright infringement notice to Cloudflare, listing DDL-Music links, which in turn linked to third-party sites that hosted tracks from Sarah Connor.
The lawsuit didn’t make any headlines, at least not initially. But when Cloudflare displayed an ‘Error 451’ to DDL-Music users in early 2020, it was clear that something was up. Error 451 is still relatively rare and typically reserved for cases where content has been made inaccessible for legal reasons.
In this case, Universal had obtained a preliminary injunction against Cloudflare that required the company to stop providing its CDN services to the pirate site. Failure to comply could’ve invoked a fine of up to 250,000 euros or even a six-month prison sentence for Cloudflare’s managing director.
Cloudflare was disappointed with the outcome and decided to appeal. The case eventually made its way to the Cologne Higher Regional Court, which largely confirmed the liability finding in 2023. That was another setback for Cloudflare which appealed to Germany’s highest court.
The Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof) took on the appeal in what has become a landmark case. The Court’s ruling is expected to be leading when it comes to the liability of CDN services for the copyright-infringing actions of customers.
Realizing the potential for broad repercussions, Germany’s highest court is actively seeking advice from the EU’s highest judicial body: the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).
Specifically, it asks the EU’s top court to provide guidance on two key questions that affect the potential liability of linking sites and CDN providers.
The questions were formally submitted earlier this year and were posted in the Official Journal of the European Union this week.

The German questions were translated into English and other languages, but not in a way that they are easy to grasp for the public.
The first question touches on the linking vs. hosting argument that’s common in piracy disputes. In this case, DDL-Music did not host the music files itself. Instead, it provided links to third-party cyberlockers like Nitroflare.
The German judges seem conflicted about the definition of copyright infringement when it comes to linking.
Generally speaking, the German Federal Court operates under the assumption that to “make a work available” to the public, the infringer must have control over the file within their own “access sphere” (e.g. their website/server).
However, there are also EU rulings that found linking can sometimes constitute a “communication to the public” and the German court asks the CJEU to clarify: Can a site operator be liable for “making a phonogram available” if they simply hyperlink to it?
The second question is arguably even more complex and harder to grasp. Not just due to the legal jargon, but also because of the implications concerning the liability of CDN providers.
With the second question, Germany’s Federal Court seeks clarification on the legal status of Cloudflare’s CDN infrastructure. It effectively asks if it classifies as a hosting provider or a caching service.
Cloudflare sees its CDN mostly as a caching service, which operates as a neutral intermediary that should not be liable for the bits that it passes on. Universal Music, however, disagreed and pointed out that some files are cached by Cloudflare for up to a year.
If Cloudflare is seen as a hosting service, Germany’s Federal Court would like to know if the liability criteria previously determined in the landmark YouTube vs. Cyando case also apply here.
In that matter the CJEU ruled that platforms such as YouTube are not liable for pirated content uploaded to their service. Liability only comes into play if a service actively and deliberately contributes to the infringement.
Finally, if the YouTube standards don’t apply, the German court wants to know exactly what criteria should be used to determine if a CDN is directly liable for the pirated content it delivers.
The questions are now in the hands of the CJEU, which is expected to share its view on the matter next year. Given the stakes involved, the matter will be followed closely by Internet infrastructure providers and rightsholders alike.
The final verdict is also expected to provide more insight into a technical debate regarding “Time to Live” (TTL) caching settings.
In its referral order, the German court noted that while Cloudflare’s servers could theoretically cache a file for a year or longer, this doesn’t necessarily mean the company has abandoned its role as a neutral intermediary.
The German judges appear open to the idea that “temporary” storage shouldn’t be measured in time, but by its function. If a file is stored for a long time purely to improve loading times or security, it might still qualify as “caching” rather than “hosting”.
However, if the CJEU decides that long-term storage is indeed active hosting, Cloudflare could lose its liability shield. This would effectively require CDN services to make sure that content hosted (or linked) by customers is rendered inaccessible when rightsholders complain.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Ken Paxton’s Tylenol Lawsuit Is Off To A Terrible Start [Techdirt]
Ken Paxton’s bullshit lawsuit against the makers of Tylenol, built on Trump and RFK Jr.’s bullshit press conference in which they pretended that science says acetaminophen causes autism, is off to a predictably bad start. I had a bit of a laugh shortly after this turd was filed, mainly because Kennedy himself came out after the lawsuit was filed to walk back the claims made in the press conference and acknowledged that all that science he and Trump cited “is not sufficient to say it definitely causes autism.” And, while Trump repeatedly instructed women to not take Tylenol while pregnant, a stance medical professionals overwhelmingly disagree with, Kennedy instead said women should consult with their doctors on its use.
Well, it’s early on in this nonsense, but Paxton has already lost on two requests he made as part of it.
A Texas Judge has rejected a request from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to issue a temporary order barring Tylenol’s maker, Kenvue, from claiming amid litigation that the pain and fever medication is safe for pregnant women and children, according to court documents.
In records filed Friday, District Judge LeAnn Rafferty, in Panola County, also rejected Paxton’s unusual request to block Kenvue from distributing $400 million in dividends to shareholders later this month.
Now, it’s important to acknowledge that Paxton is simply doing performative MAGA bullshit with this lawsuit. He’s running for the Senate seat currently held by John Cornyn, who is also seeking reelection. Wesley Hunt joins them to compete in the Republican primary for the seat. All of these men are simply attempting to out-MAGA one another.
The TRO request to keep Kenvue, current makers of the Tylenol brand, from stating that its product is safe for use by pregnant women and children, was always absurd. But it was made all the more so when Kennedy walked back his press conference claims. Judge Rafferty noted that she:
…denied the marketing claim, which even the Trump administration is not standing by. The day after Paxton filed his lawsuit, Kennedy said that “the causative association… between Tylenol given in pregnancy and the perinatal periods is not sufficient to say it definitely causes autism.”
Like I said in my previous post on this: very funny.
As for the dividend disbursement, for which Paxton relies on a Texas law preventing companies giving out such funds if they are about to become financially insolvent, the court simply didn’t have jurisdiction to issue any such order.
According to Reuters, one of Kenvue’s lawyers, Kim Bueno, explained that the problem with the state of Texas making this request is that Kenvue is based in New Jersey and incorporated in Delaware. “There was no jurisdiction to challenge that,” she said.
All this flailing about would be merely unbecoming, except that Paxton is a damned state AG. He should, and likely does, know better than all of this. As I said before, this is performative nonsense designed to do nothing more than gain primary votes in a Senate race.
But in today’s political climate, you can see just how much chaos can be generated by an ignoramus like RFK Jr.
Ctrl-Alt-Speech: You Can’t Antitrust Anyone These Days [Techdirt]
Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw.
Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed.
In this week’s round-up of the latest news in online speech, content moderation and internet regulation, Mike and Ben cover:
Why The Trump Administration’s Comparison Of Antifa To Hamas, ISIS, And MS-13 Makes No Sense [Techdirt]
When Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem compared antifa to the transnational criminal group MS-13, Hamas and the Islamic State group in October 2025, she equated a nonhierarchical, loosely organized movement of antifascist activists with some of the world’s most violent and organized militant groups.
“Antifa is just as dangerous,” she said.
It’s a sweeping claim that ignores crucial distinctions in ideology, organization and scope. Comparing these groups is like comparing apples and bricks: They may both be organizations, but that’s where the resemblance stops.
Noem’s statement echoed the logic of a September 2025 Trump administration executive order that designated antifa as a “domestic terrorist organization.” The order directs all relevant federal agencies to investigate and dismantle any operations, including the funding sources, linked to antifa.
But there is no credible evidence from the FBI or the Department of Homeland Security that supports such a comparison. Independent terrorism experts don’t see the similarities either.
Data shows that the movement can be confrontational and occasionally violent. But antifa is neither a terrorist network nor a major source of organized lethal violence.
Antifa, as understood by scholars and law enforcement, is not an organization in any formal sense. It lacks membership rolls and leadership hierarchies. It doesn’t have centralized funding.
As a scholar of social movements, I know that antifa is a decentralized movement animated by opposition to fascism and far-right extremism. It’s an assortment of small groups that mobilize around specific protests or local issues. And its tactics range from peaceful counterdemonstrations to mutual aid projects.
For example, in Portland, Oregon, local antifa activists organized counterdemonstrations against far-right rallies in 2019.
Antifa groups active in Houston during Hurricane Harvey in 2017 coordinated food, supplies and rescue support for affected residents.
The FBI and DHS have classified certain anarchist or anti-fascist groups under the broad category of “domestic violent extremists.” But neither agency nor the State Department has ever previously designated antifa as a terrorist organization.
The data on political violence reinforces this point.
A 2022 report by the Counter Extremism Project found that the overwhelming majority of deadly domestic terrorist incidents in the United States in recent years were linked to right-wing extremists. These groups include white supremacists and anti-government militias that promote racist or authoritarian ideologies. They reject democratic authority and often seek to provoke social chaos or civil conflict to achieve their goals.
Left-wing or anarchist-affiliated violence, including acts attributed to antifa-aligned people, accounts for only a small fraction of domestic extremist incidents and almost none of the fatalities. Similarly, in 2021, the George Washington University Program on Extremism found that anarchist or anti-fascist attacks are typically localized, spontaneous and lacking coordination.
By contrast, the organizations Noem invoked – Hamas, the Islamic State group and MS-13 – share structural and operational characteristics that antifa lacks.
They operate across borders and are hierarchically organized. They are also capable of sustained military or paramilitary operations. They possess training pipelines, funding networks, propaganda infrastructure and territorial control. And they have orchestrated mass casualties such as the 2015 Paris attacks and the 2016 Brussels bombings.
In short, they are military or criminal organizations with strategic intent. Noem’s claim that antifa is “just as dangerous” as these groups is not only empirically indefensible but rhetorically reckless.
So why make such a claim?
Noem’s statement fits squarely within the Trump administration’s broader political strategy that has sought to inflate the perceived threat of left-wing activism.
Casting antifa as a domestic terrorist equivalent of the Islamic State nation or Hamas serves several functions.
It stokes fear among conservative audiences by linking street protests and progressive dissent to global terror networks. It also provides political cover for expanded domestic surveillance and harsher policing of protests.
Additionally, it discredits protest movements critical of the right. In a polarized media environment, such rhetoric performs a symbolic purpose. It divides the moral universe into heroes and enemies, order and chaos, patriots and radicals.
Noem’s comparison reflects a broader pattern in populist politics, where complex social movements are reduced to simple, threatening caricatures. In recent years, some Republican leaders have used antifa as a shorthand for all forms of left-wing unrest or criticism of authority.
Antifa’s decentralized structure makes it a convenient target for blame. That’s because it lacks clear boundaries, leadership and accountability. So any act by someone identifying with antifa can be framed as representing the whole movement, whether or not it does. And by linking antifa to terrorist groups, Noem, the top anti-terror official in the country, turns a political talking point into a claim that appears to carry the weight of national security expertise.
The problem with this kind of rhetoric is not just that it’s inaccurate. Equating protest movements with terrorist organizations blurs important distinctions that allow democratic societies to tolerate dissent. It also risks misdirecting attention and resources away from more serious threats — including organized, ideologically driven groups that remain the primary source of domestic terrorism in the U.S.
As I see it, Noem’s claim reveals less about antifa and more about the political uses of fear.
By invoking the language of terrorism to describe an anti-fascist movement, she taps into a potent emotional current in American politics: the desire for clear enemies, simple explanations and moral certainty in times of division.
But effective homeland security depends on evidence, not ideology. To equate street-level confrontation with organized terror is not only wrong — it undermines the credibility of the very institutions charged with protecting the public.
Art Jipson is Associate Professor of Sociology at University of Dayton. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Trump’s Own Judges Easily Reject His Bonkers Lawsuit Against CNN For Calling His Big Lie A ‘Big Lie’ [Techdirt]
Donald Trump, who presents himself as a free speech champion, sure loves suing the media for their First Amendment-protected speech. CNN is a favorite target of his though these lawsuits don’t do particularly well. Back in 2022, he sued CNN for calling Trump’s lies about the results of the 2020 election “The Big Lie.” Two years ago the district court dumped that lawsuit easily.
It’s taken another two years, but the Eleventh Circuit has upheld that lower court dismissal, and done so in a simple 8-page per curiam opinion from a panel that includes two Trump-appointed judges: Elizabeth Branch and Kevin Newsom. The fact that even Trump’s own judicial appointees unanimously rejected his claims demolishes any narrative that this case had merit or that “biased” courts are persecuting him. This was simply a loser case that never should have been brought.
The appeals court’s analysis cuts straight to the heart of why Trump’s lawsuit was doomed from the start. The term “Big Lie” isn’t a factual claim that can be proven true or false—it’s CNN’s characterization of Trump’s conduct, protected opinion under the First Amendment.
Trump’s argument is unpersuasive. First, although he concedes that CNN’s use of the term “Big Lie” is, to some extent, ambiguous, he assumes that it is unambiguous enough to constitute a statement of fact. This assumption is untenable. Although we haven’t squarely addressed the point, case law from other circuits is persuasive. In Buckley v. Littell, 539 F.2d 882 (2d Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1062 (1977), the Second Circuit held that, by using the terms “fascist,” “fellow traveler,” and “radical right” to describe William F. Buckley, Jr., the defendant was not publishing “statements of fact.” Buckley, 539 F.2d at 893. Rather, the court ruled, the terms were “so debatable, loose and varying[] that they [we]re insusceptible to proof of truth or falsity.” Id. at 894. Similarly, in Ollman v. Evans, 750 F.2d 970 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (en banc), cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1127 (1985), the D.C. Circuit held that when the defendant called the plaintiff “an outspoken proponent of political Marxism,” his statement was “obviously unverifiable.” Ollman, 750 F.2d at 987. Trump argues that the term “Big Lie” is less ambiguous than the terms “fascist,” “fellow traveler,” “radical right,” and “outspoken proponent of political Marxism.” But he does not explain this assertion. If “fascist”—a term that is, by definition, political—is ambiguous, then it follows that “Big Lie”—a term that is facially apolitical—is at least as ambiguous.
The court’s comparison to terms like “fascist” and “fellow traveler” is particularly damaging to Trump’s case. If calling William F. Buckley Jr. a “fascist” constitutes protected opinion rather than actionable defamation, then CNN’s characterization of Trump’s election claims as a “Big Lie” clearly falls on the same side of the line. The panel essentially argues that Trump wants special protection from political criticism that no other public figure enjoys.
Second, Trump’s argument hinges on the fact that his own interpretation of his conduct—i.e., that he was exercising a constitutional right to identify his concerns with the integrity of elections—is true and that CNN’s interpretation—i.e., that Trump was peddling his “Big Lie”—is false. However, his conduct is susceptible to multiple subjective interpretations, including CNN’s.
Trump’s lawyers apparently thought they had found a silver bullet in the sheer volume of CNN’s coverage, arguing that more instances of the phrase somehow transformed opinion into defamation. The appeals court wasn’t buying it. If the thing is protected opinion five times, it’s protected opinion 10,000 times. It’s just speech.
Trump’s other arguments are likewise meritless. He argues that the district court erred in limiting its analysis to the five defamatory statements that he listed in his complaint. According to Trump, the district court should have also analyzed the “more than sixty instances of defamation set forth in the Notice Letter to CNN” and the “nearly 7,700 instances in which CNN had defamed Plaintiff with the ‘Big Lie’ allegation.” Brief of Appellant at 18. Trump has not alleged that any of these “instances of defamation” refer to something other than CNN’s use of “Big Lie.” We have held that, by using “Big Lie” to describe Trump, CNN was not publishing a false statement of fact. Therefore, whether CNN used “Big Lie” one time or many is irrelevant to the question of falsity.
This logic-chopping attempt reveals the fundamental weakness of Trump’s entire approach. He’s essentially arguing that repeating a protected opinion enough times magically transforms it into actionable defamation—a legal theory with no basis in the First Amendment whatsoever.
Trump, whose lawyers appeared to throw every possible argument at the court, also claimed that the lower court’s denial of his attempt to amend the lawsuit and try again was an abuse of the court’s discretion. The appeals court explains to Trump’s lawyers, that’s not how any of this actually works.
Trump argues that, when the district court denied his motion for leave to amend, it applied a standard that was too strict. Essential to his argument is his claim that the district court did not issue a judgment when it dismissed his complaint with prejudice. “In these circumstances,” Trump argues, “leave to amend should have been ‘granted liberally.’” Brief of Appellant at 41 (quoting Czeremcha v. International Ass’n of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO, 724 F.2d 1552, 1556 & n. 6 (11th Cir. 1984)). But Trump overlooks that, in its order, the district court indicated that “dismissal of the complaint constituted dismissal of the action.” Id. After dismissing Trump’s complaint with prejudice, the court stated that “[t]he Clerk of Court is directed to CLOSE this case and DENY AS MOOT any pending motions.” Trump, 684 F. Supp. 3d at 1277. Therefore, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Trump’s motion for leave to amend.
Nor did the district court abuse its discretion in denying Trump’s motion for reconsideration under Rule 59. Trump asserts that the district court (1) “fail[ed] to consider the entirety of the circumstances surrounding CNN’s publication of the challenged statements” and (2) “appeared to reframe its understanding of [the clear error] standard in a manner unrelated to the case.” Brief of Appellant at 51–52, 55). “The only grounds for granting [a Rule 59] motion are newly-discovered evidence or manifest errors of law or fact.” Arthur v. King, 500 F.3d 1335, 1343 (11th Cir. 2007) (alteration in original) (quoting In re Kellogg, 197 F.3d 1116, 1119 (11th Cir. 1999)). Neither of Trump’s points involve newly discovered evidence or manifest errors of law or fact, and the record confirms that the district court cited and applied the correct standard. We find no abuse of discretion.
This ruling represents more than just another failed Trump lawsuit—it’s a textbook example of how SLAPP suits are supposed to be handled by the courts. Trump’s case had all the hallmarks: a thin-skinned public figure using expensive litigation to punish media criticism, weak legal theories designed more to harass than to win, and endless procedural gamesmanship when the substantive claims inevitably failed.
What makes this particularly significant is that the rejection comes from a panel that includes two of Trump’s own judicial appointees. This demolishes the narrative that Trump’s legal failures stem from “biased” courts rather than fundamentally weak cases. When even judges you appointed won’t buy your legal theories, that’s a pretty clear signal that the problem isn’t judicial activism—it’s your vexatious case.
The broader context here matters. Trump has weaponized defamation law as a tool to silence media criticism throughout his career, filing lawsuit after lawsuit against news organizations that report unflattering truths about him. Most of these cases follow the same pattern: grandiose claims, weak legal theories, and inevitable failure in court. But the process is the punishment—forcing news organizations to spend time and money defending their basic right to engage in political commentary.
There’s nothing new or novel about this case. There’s no deep need to explore some nuance of defamation law here. This is just a garden variety SLAPP suit by one of the most petulant thin-skinned presidents we’ve ever had who regularly loves to abuse the legal system to try to silence and suppress media who doesn’t praise his every move.
In theory, Trump could seek an en banc rehearing by the entire Eleventh Circuit or petition the Supreme Court to review this decision, but both moves would be long shots at best. The legal principles here are well-established, the factual record is clear, and there’s no circuit split or novel constitutional question that would warrant further review. This case is a dead end, which is exactly where it belonged from the start.
Halligan the Hooligan [The Status Kuo]

Programming alert: My livestream with Joyce Vance that was scheduled for 5pm PT / 8pm ET today will have to be rescheduled due to Joyce’s flight being canceled and rescheduled right over our streaming time!
We are working on a new date, likely this coming Sunday at the same time. Thanks for your patience, and **shakes fist at airlines and Sean Duffy**
The James Comey case, now being prosecuted by “Interim U.S. Attorney” Lindsay Halligan, is now officially a hot mess.
I feel compelled to put her title in quotes because it’s not at all clear that her appointment by Attorney General Pam Bondi was legal to begin with. And lately, she keeps generating new eyebrow-raising or even sanctionable misconduct in the case.
But should anyone be surprised? Halligan has exactly zero experience prosecuting cases. Her primary qualifications in Trump’s eyes appear to be her bone structure and her sycophancy. Even with my own legal background, I would never presume to know how to present a criminal case to a federal grand jury in my first week on the job, let alone one of this public importance. It speaks to the utter incompetence and sheer audacity of the Trump regime that they actually thought Halligan could pull this off.
The Comey case isn’t over, but it is teetering. That could soon deliver yet another embarrassing blow for Trump—in a month of stories about embarrassing blows (no pun intended).
To understand how things went so off the rails for Halligan, we need to keep in mind a few key points:
Halligan is a political appointee with no prosecuting experience and was running out of time to indict Comey because of the statute of limitations;
Her appointment following the resignation of the former interim U.S. attorney may be null and void, meaning the cases she charged could be out as well;
The entire matter reeks of political considerations and could be tossed on grounds of vindictive prosecution;
While presenting the case to the grand jury by herself—because no one from the office would put their name on the indictment—she made gross misstatements of the law to the grand jurors;
Her sole witness apparently and improperly utilized information gleaned from attorney-client privileged matters as part of the government’s presentation; and
It appears that Halligan never actually had the grand jury vote on the final indictment, meaning it may not even exist as far as the law is concerned.
You can see even from just this summary why legal observers are shaking our collective heads and placing bets on when the whole case implodes. For completeness’s sake, and because it’s rather satisfying to call out someone who deserves everything she’s about to experience, let’s walk through these together.
I’m not a prosecutor, but I play one on Fox TV
No shade on insurance lawyers, but they aren’t prosecutors. As Judd Legum of Popular Info noted, Halligan spent years as an insurance attorney litigating cases involving “fire, water damage, vandalism, and theft.” Then she got a big break: She met Donald Trump at his golf club, and he decided (for some reason, can’t figure out why) that she should join his legal team.
Once on the team, Halligan sued CNN for calling Trump’s false election claims the “Big Lie.” She also helped defend Trump after he stole classified documents and stored them in his bathroom. In his second term, she became best known for getting Trump to go after the “woke” exhibits in the Smithsonian.
How any of this adds up to a position as the “interim U.S. Attorney” for the critical Eastern District of Virginia is anyone’s guess. In any event, it didn’t take long for Halligan to demonstrate she had no clue what she was doing, even as she scrambled to get an indictment from a grand jury before the clock ran out on the statute of limitations, set to expire just a few days after her appointment.
And about that appointment…
Before we dive into her incompetence and misconduct, we need to ask some baseline questions. The first is whether Halligan should be in this elevated position as interim U.S. Attorney at all.
Both James Comey and Letitia James have filed motions to dismiss their cases on the ground that Halligan was never properly appointed. The motions are before U.S. District Judge Cameron McGowan Currie, who was brought in from outside the district. Why bring in a judge from outside to hear this? As I’ll explain below, the case involves who gets to appoint the next U.S. Attorney. Is it the Attorney General or the judges in the district? The presiding judge on the Comey case, Michael Nachmanoff, correctly concluded that a judge from inside the district couldn’t decide that question without creating a possible conflict of interest, so he brought in someone from the outside.
I should make clear that disqualification of Halligan as improperly appointed is not some Hail Mary argument. Judges across the country have been disqualifying Trumpy U.S. attorneys because they were improperly appointed by Bondi or otherwise never properly confirmed by the Senate, as required by the Constitution. And Halligan may suffer the same fate.
Here’s why in a nutshell. As Roger Parloff of Lawfare recounted, the dispute involves an interpretation of a law, Section 546, which ordinarily permits the Attorney General to temporarily fill a vacancy in a U.S. attorney post. If a 120-day period expires without the Senate confirming a permanent nominee, under paragraph (d) of Section 546, the district court for the judicial district “may” appoint a U.S. attorney to serve until the vacancy is filled.
The last U.S. attorney for EDVA stepped down days before Trump’s inauguration. The acting AG at the time submitted the name of Erik Siebert to be interim U.S. attorney under Section 546. All good.
On May 6, Trump submitted Siebert’s name to the Senate for approval as a permanent appointment. But that’s a long wait, and Siebert’s 120-day period was almost up. So on May 9, the district court decided to make Siebert the actual U.S. attorney, under Section 546(d), effective May 21. All still good.
Fast forward to September. Siebert, being a professional, had resisted attempts to charge Comey, so Trump went after him. Siebert resigned on September 19 after Trump said he wanted him “out.” Bondi then appointed Halligan after Trump posted a social media message about it addressed to “Pam.” (As you may recall, the post was supposed to be a DM to Bondi, which itself is unethical. These are very unserious people.)
So here’s the issue: After Siebert’s 120-day period expired, as Comey and James now argue in their motions to dismiss, only the district court had the power to appoint his successor. Otherwise, the law creates a crazy loophole that allows AGs to keep appointing successive “interim” U.S. attorneys who need never be confirmed by the Senate. That would remove power from the district courts to make such appointments and renders Section 546(d) meaningless. Courts don’t like it when one party’s interpretations render moot whole aspects of the law.
There’s another twist, and it’s a bad one for Bondi. She attempted to go back and “fix” the possible improper appointment of Halligan by purporting to “re-appoint” her to the position of “Special Attorney,” retroactively to Sept. 22, under a different set of statutes. Per Parloff:
She then gave Halligan, as special attorney, authority to handle all civil and criminal proceedings in the Eastern District of Virginia or, if “a court [later] conclude[d]” that that was illegal, to at least handle the Comey and James prosecutions. Bondi also wrote that, “based on [her] review” of the grand jury proceedings in the Comey and James cases, she was “ratify[ing]” all of Halligan[’s] “actions before the grand jury and her signature” on each indictment.
But Bondi got caught in a lie. As of the time of that “Special Attorney” appointment, Bondi had not received a complete copy of the grand jury proceedings, so she couldn’t have reviewed them.
Vindictive prosecution
Both James and Comey have also moved to dismiss their cases because they are the victims of selective prosecution. The case for this is also strong, when it’s normally a very hard thing to prove. It’s strong because Trump made it clear not only that he wanted his political enemies prosecuted, but that they were running out of time and he was running out of patience. In addition to his infamous post on Truth Social addressed to “Pam,” Trump went before reporters to issue threats:
“No, I just want people to act. They have to act and we want to act fast. You know, they were ruthless and vicious. I was impeached twice. I was indicted five times. It turned out to be a fake deal. And we have to act fast! One way or the other. One way or the other. They’re guilty, they’re not guilty, we have to act fast. If they’re not guilty, that’s fine. If they are guilty, or if they should be charged, they should be charged. And we have to do it now.”
At this point it’s worth remembering that the president isn’t supposed to be involved at all in charging decisions. The fact that he’s got a big swollen orange-stained thumb on the scales is both apparent and galling. From where I stand, if this isn’t evidence of selective, vindictive prosecution, I’m not sure what would ever qualify.
It went beyond mere words, too. Trump affirmatively forced Siebert out and had Halligan installed precisely so he could get around this non-prosecution decision by putting in a political loyalist who would do what Siebert refused to do.
In the James case, there was a “declination memo” that detailed why the office believed charges should not be brought. And there may have been one here in the Comey case as well. I say “may have been” because, under questioning by the court, a prosecutor, testifying as a government witness, refused to acknowledge whether there was or wasn’t a declination memo in the Comey case—after being told by his superiors not to say either way.
This seemed to particularly irk the judge, because, as David Kurtz of Talking Points Memo noted, “the existence, or lack thereof, of declination and prosecution memos would help determine whether Halligan had really exercised independent judgment.” This is especially true given how few days she had been in her position before making the decision to charge Comey.
There’s a decent chance that both Comey and James will prevail on their motions to dismiss, not only because Halligan was improperly appointed and she had no power to charge them, but because that decision was blatantly politically motivated.
That’s not what the law says, Lindsay
So what happens when an inexperienced insurance lawyer tries to present a criminal case before a federal grand jury? Predictably, you get misstatements of the law, some of which are prejudicial to the defendant.
That appears to be what took place when Halligan, speaking alone to the grand jury, stood up to make her case. A ruling on Monday revealed two instances where Halligan got the law completely backward when telling the grand jurors how they could arrive at their decision to indict. As the Washington Post reported, U.S. Magistrate Judge William Fitzpatrick laid into her:
Halligan appeared to misrepresent the law as she sought to explain away gaps in the evidence amid tough questioning from grand jurors.
At one point, Fitzpatrick said, she appeared to suggest that Comey would have to answer those questions himself and explain his innocence at trial — a mischaracterization of the government’s burden to prove its case beyond a reasonable doubt.
At another point, Halligan appeared to improperly suggest to the panel that they did not have to rely only on the evidence before them but could indict on the assumption that the government would have what Fitzpatrick described as “more evidence — perhaps better evidence — that would be presented at trial.”
In plainer English, Halligan implied Comey was guilty until he could explain his innocence (that’s backward, Lindsay) and that the grand jurors could simply imagine stronger evidence that the government might have on Comey.
It was, in a word, astonishing. But again, it was not surprising given that Halligan has no clue what she was doing, was running out of time to indict, and received no help from any actual prosecutors in the office.
Halligan’s witness was tainted
This next bit is somewhat complicated, so I’m going to give you a condensed version.
Halligan had a single witness testify before the grand jury. He was an FBI agent who had previously worked on other Comey matters. The problem was, he was privy to information subject to attorney-client privilege in those matters. That means it was impossible for him to testify without being tainted by that prior knowledge.
Allowing that agent to testify was “highly irregular and a radical departure from past DOJ practice,” Judge Fitzpatrick noted.
So why was this so bad?
At the heart of the Comey prosecution is his close connection with Columbia law professor Daniel Richman. Prosecutors have focused on documents and communications seized years ago from Richman, who briefly served as Comey’s attorney after Comey was fired by Trump in 2017. Richman himself was investigated beginning in 2019 over whether he had shared classified information, but that probe ended without charges.
Prosecutors now claim that Comey directed Richman to act anonymously as a media source and later lied about it to Congress during a 2020 hearing. That’s the heart of the Comey case. As investigators developed a new case against Comey, they leaned heavily on material previously taken from Richman’s devices — using it as a “cornerstone” of the inquiry. Normally, prosecutors must obtain fresh warrants to examine evidence collected for unrelated past investigations. In this instance, however, the team failed to follow that required process, probably because they were so rushed for time.
As the Post noted,
Additionally, because Richman had served as an attorney for Comey during at least part of the period under review, some of the seized communications could be subject to attorney-client privilege and should have been kept from the team building the Comey case, he noted.
“This cavalier attitude toward a basic tenet of the Fourth Amendment and multiple court orders left the government unchecked to rummage through all of the information seized from Mr. Richman, and apparently, in the government’s eyes, to do so again anytime they chose,” he wrote.
You can just hear the disdain in Judge Fitzpatrick’s words.
Maybe there’s not even a valid indictment
The final WTF moment came yesterday, after the government conceded something pretty wild: The jury never even saw or voted on the final indictment.
How did this happen?
Halligan’s proposed indictment had three parts.
The first accused Comey of making a false statement to Congress about whether he had ever authorized anyone at the FBI to leak information about the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. Comey had authorized Richman to share Comey’s personal diaries about Trump with the New York Times in 2017, but Richman was not with the FBI.
The second accused Comey of obstructing a federal proceeding. That’s an “add on” count related to the first count.
The third accused Comey of making a false statement to Congress when asked if he remembered receiving a tip that Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign “was going to create a scandal regarding Trump and Russia.” Comey responded, “That doesn’t ring a bell.”
I know, weighty stuff. The grand jury came back, according to Halligan, with a decision approving the first two but rejecting the third. Importantly, that meant the grand jury had rejected the original three-count indictment. To do this right, she had to come back with the two-count indictment and have them vote on that cleanly.
Instead, she had the jury foreperson, with only one other juror in the room as a witness, sign a new indictment with the two counts.
Survey says: Blaaaaaahhhh.
Let’s give Halligan the benefit of the doubt for a moment. Let’s assume she didn’t realize that she actually needed to have the actual indictment voted on by the entire grand jury, and she couldn’t just take out the parts they didn’t approve. Whatever the reason for her error, that still means the indictment she presented to the judge, which was never voted on by the jury, isn’t actually valid. In theory, she has to go back and do it right. But the problem here is, she’s out of time. The statute of limitations has run.
It’s possible the judge winds up viewing this as a harmless or even clerical error. It’s also possible he says, “You know what? Given everything else and all your other misconduct here, I’m also going to rule that the indictment was defective and that you’re out of time to fix it. Case dismissed.”
When you add up all of the above, it sure seems like Halligan is now facing steep odds on not getting her case against Comey tossed completely. Any one of the grounds discussed would be cause enough for dismissal.
And that, I imagine, would not make her boss very happy at all.
Cities Shut Down Flock Camera Networks Following Improper Access By Federal Agencies [Techdirt]
“Flock Safety” may be the brand name, but this company’s earliest sales successes had nothing to with safety. Its target audience was homeowners associations and people running gated communities in upscale neighborhoods. The purpose of the cameras (and, eventually, the attached license plate reader tech) was to make sure people who were plenty safe already weren’t annoyed by occasional intrusions by the rest of the world outside of their gates.
Then it went the Ring route, offering cheap cameras to cops. It was just inkjet printers all over again. The cameras were affordable. Subscription fees for access to footage and the company’s search engine were the real moneymaker.
And, much like Ring, Flock has ended up on the wrong side of public opinion. While it hasn’t quite generated the amount of negative press Ring’s cozy relationship with cop shops has (yet!), it’s been getting eyeballed pretty fiercely by people who aren’t fans of its access-it-all-from-anywhere attitude. A report from 404 Media showed Texas law enforcement officers utilizing the nationwide network of Flock ALPR data to hunt down someone who had engaged in a medication abortion. Weeks later, it was discovered this search was performed on behalf of her vengeful boyfriend, who sought to press criminal charges against her.
Other news has surfaced as well, making Flock Safety look even worse. It has placed almost no restrictions on access by anyone from anywhere, which has resulted in a lot of local law enforcement agencies performing searches federal agencies like CBP, US Border Patrol, and ICE can’t perform themselves. In some cases, Flock’s lack of restraint and nonexistent privacy policies has made their cameras pretty much illegal. In other cases, local lawmakers are finally reining in use of this camera network due to its steady abuse by federal officers.
That’s the case in Washington, where two cities have shut down camera networks — with the support of local law enforcement — that may have been illegally accessed by federal agencies.
Police departments in Redmond and Lynnwood have temporarily shut down their Flock license plate reader systems following growing public concerns about privacy and system access, according to city officials.
Redmond’s City Council voted unanimously Monday to turn off its Automated License Plate Reader (ALPR) cameras after learning that U.S. Border Patrol improperly accessed Auburn’s Flock system last month.
Redmond’s police chief, Darrell Lowe, insists no improper/proxy access has happened on his watch. But that doesn’t mean all that much, because it’s unclear whether or not Flock Safety would inform local cops if these agencies did. For that matter, proxy searches for federal agencies generally have access to any records generated anywhere in the country. So, it’s hardly comforting to assure people your agency hasn’t been approached directly by federal officers.
That was the point Senator Ron Wyden made in his letter to Flock Safety — one in which he pointed out that Flock has zero desire to deter abuse of its camera network, much less engage in good faith discussions about how it could go about siloing its networks so searches are restricted to areas directly overseen by local law enforcement.
The police chief in Lynnwood, however, didn’t try to make excuses. He actually attempted to do something when these concerns were first raised.
“Flock cameras have already proven to be an invaluable investigative tool in solving crimes and keeping our community safe,” Lynnwood Police Chief Cole Langdon said. “However, it’s equally important that we maintain the public’s trust.”
The ALPR program in Lynnwood launched June 29, 2025, with 25 cameras funded through a Washington Auto Theft Prevention Authority grant.
Shortly after implementation, the department learned a vendor-enabled “nationwide search” feature allowed broader access than Lynnwood authorized.
Police said they worked with Flock Safety to disable that feature on July 8.
While Flock pitched in there to respect its customer’s request, it has also gone the other way just as frequently. The company has previously been caught illegally installing cameras. In September, it was caught reinstalling cameras the city of Evanston, Illinois had ordered removed because the network (and Flock’s access options) violated the state’s privacy laws.
Private surveillance vendor Flock Safety reinstalled all of its stationary license plate cameras in Evanston that had previously been removed, apparently doing so without authorization from the city, which sent the company a cease-and-desist order Tuesday afternoon demanding that the cams be taken back down.
The city previously ordered Flock to shut down 19 automated license plate readers (18 stationary and one flex camera that can be attached to a squad car) provided by the company and put its contract with Flock on a 30-day termination notice on Aug. 26.
Predictably, this push-back against Flock is generally occurring in areas already being threatened/invaded on a daily basis by the US military and swarms of federal officers. But that’s to be expected. Those most threatened by federal abuse of local camera networks are always going to be the first to fight back. The reason it’s not happening in “red” states is because the people running those states honestly don’t care what route enables authoritarianism, just so long as it does so while their party still holds power.
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Brendan Carr Launches Baseless ‘Investigation’ Into PBS, NPR, And BBC To Try And Silence Criticism Of His Weird, Unpopular Boss [Techdirt]
Donald Trump’s FCC boss Brendan Carr is opening a fake new “investigation” into PBS, NPR, and BBC in the hopes of suppressing journalistic criticism of the country’s increasingly unmoored and unpopular President. Carr first leaked word of the fake investigation to right wing propaganda website Breitbart.
In a letter to all three outlets (pages 1, 2), Carr indicates that his bogus inquiry is focusing on a minor edit made in a year-old documentary broadcast by the BBC about the president’s support of a violent insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, 2021.
Carr clearly doesn’t regulate UK media organizations. The PBS and NPR never even aired the documentary in question and had nothing do do with the BBC’s edits. So in his letter, Carr has to jump through a bunch of hoops to make his performative effort sound official and coherent:
Tim Karr, Senior Director of consumer group Free Press, told Techdirt that he spoke to the BBC, who never received the supposed letter Carr leaked to Breitbart. It’s also not posted to the FCC website. And it takes a few minutes of research to find that PBS and NPR, again, never aired the documentary in question (“Panorama,” which never aired in the U.S. and wasn’t even all that critical of Trump).
This is a manufactured scandal. Carr is putting on a cute little show for Trump and right wing media so he can pretend he’s being “tough” on “unfair” “liberal” media outlets. While this is performative grandstanding by a strange, unserious man, it’s still very dangerous for a government official to be abusing FCC authority to try and suppress journalism and free speech.
We’ve covered the BBC fracas recently. The short version: a right wing tabloid created a scandal out of the fact that a year old BBC documentary edited together two parts of Trump’s January 6 speech encouraging violence at the Capitol. While the snippet does reflect Trump’s clear and obvious intent to incite violence at the Capitol, the edit stitched together two parts of the same speech 54 minutes apart.
While the edits may have been in poor judgement, there was no actual distortion of Trump’s intent or of history. And to be clear: this is a bogus scandal U.S. authoritarians (no stranger to propaganda, news distortions, and misleading edits) created to pretend to be mad about. Trump and Carr have openly demonstrated they’re fine with misleading news edits if they help the President.
Still, as we’ve seen with outlets like ABC and CBS, that effort’s been working well so far when it comes to major U.S. media companies, whose affluent, usually Conservative owners are more worried about tax cuts, deregulation, and merger approvals than they are about consistently serving the public interest. It’s far less likely to work on a media organization in another country that isn’t regulated by Brendan Carr.
Trump has claimed he’s going to file a $1-$5 billion lawsuit against the BBC for the edit, despite the fact the edits occurred more than a year ago (outside the limits of UK defamation law).
The BBC hasn’t helped itself by over-reacting to the fake right wing scandal; with numerous high level BBC employees resigning, and the BBC CEO tripping over himself to apologize. Still, they’ve promised to fight Trump’s lawsuit, and have a very good chance of winning it.
Since that lawsuit isn’t likely to go well, Trump had Carr once again abuse FCC authority to launch a fake investigation based on the FCC’s decades-old “news distortion” rule. That rule, created in 1949, was supposed to be used to police major scandals — like a company or politician bribing a news organization to suppress a story important to the public interest.
Carr’s been instead weaponizing the rule to bully media companies that engage in commentary or reporting the President doesn’t like, with mixed success. Carr first leveraged the rule to harass CBS for some innocuous edits made to a 60 Minutes interview last election season. He then pushed his luck even further, abusing the rule in a very unsuccessful effort to censor ABC comedian Jimmy Kimmel.
A bipartisan coalition of former FCC officials just last week wrote a letter to Carr, urging him to eliminate the dated rule and stop abusing FCC power to crush free speech and undermine journalism. Carr, a dutiful MAGA loyalist, unsurprisingly refused, continuing to pretend he’s “serving the public interest”:

Unfortunately when the cowed U.S. corporate media covers these obvious attacks on free speech, they tend to soft sell how monumentally full of shit Carr and Trump are on this subject. Which is, of course, the exact outcome Trump and Carr are looking for.
The U.S. right wing is openly buying up major social networks (X, TikTok), and what’s left of our broken mainstream media (CBS, CNN), then trying to bully or bribe any stragglers into being pathetic stewards of major online information spaces (Meta), or feckless echoes of serious journalism (ABC).
However silly and performative Brendan Carr may be, his party’s mission to own, bully, or destroy all the cornerstones of major media is extremely dangerous. It’s the same gambit authoritarians in countries like Hungary and Russia successfully implemented to successfully cement permanent rule. And while it may improve as Trump’s health and influence fails, most of the U.S. responses to date have been pathetic.
With any luck, their hubris and incompetence will be their downfall. But it’s going to necessitate a broader awareness — especially among the Democrat party gerontocracy easily befuddled by the modern information environment — of what’s actually happening and what they’re trying to accomplish.
Carr’s roping in of NPR and PBS comes as the U.S. right wing also tries to destroy whatever was left of U.S. public media. They’re well aware that, untethered from the distorted financial incentives of ad-based corporate media, public media is more likely to be honest about the dangers of idiot authoritarianism (Jon Oliver recently had a good segment on public media that’s worth a watch).
It’s unlikely anything real comes of this inquiry itself. Again, the FCC doesn’t regulate the BBC and NPR and PBS literally had nothing to do with the BBC’s decision. Carr is putting on a cute (but dangerous) show for his mad king and right wing media, wasting taxpayer resources, and trying to scare media organizations away from telling the public the truth about an unpopular, embarrassing administration.
The TikTok ‘Ban’ Continues To Be One Of The Biggest Turds In Tech Policy History [Techdirt]
After four years of hyperventilation about TikTok’s impact on privacy, propaganda, and national security, and a year after the app was to be banned from app stores via an act of Congress, TikTok remains widely available. The Trump administration insists they hashed out a deal with Bytedance to sell the app to Trump’s billionaire buddies (clearly his goal all along), though that too remains in mysterious limbo.
Meanwhile, backers of the ban in Congress, either duped into or willfully complicit with Trump’s effort to hijack the app, say are all either curiously silent or trying to play stupid:
“…after months of panic over the alleged dangers of TikTok, Congress has spent the year putting up relatively little fuss as Trump repeatedly extended TikTok’s sales timeline in clear violation of the divest-or-ban law.”
The Verge contacted a dozen current and former lawmakers, many of whom were previously incredibly vocal about the dire threat posed by the app, who suddenly don’t much want to talk about it. The only one that was even willing to give a statement, Senate Commerce Committee Ranking Member Maria Cantwell, didn’t really say anything useful:
““Congress is still waiting to get briefed on how the TikTok sale would actually stop Chinese algorithms from causing harm to U.S. citizens, U.S. military, and U.S. interests,” she said. “The lack of transparency has caused concerns for both Democrats and Republicans who are still waiting for secure briefings on how to stop malign actions.”
You might recall that Biden championed the ban, then refused to enforce it on his way out the door. Trump followed this up by promising to fix everything with a deal in 75 days, then extended that deadline when China predictably balked. Repeatedly.
Last September, Trump finally announced that he’d struck a deal with ByteDance to offload 45 percent of the app to Oracle (Trump’s friend Larry Ellison), Silver Lake (Michael Dell is a top investor), and Abu Dhabi’s MGX — as well as possibly Rupert Murdoch.
Trump’s goal was always pretty clear (remember this whole thing started with first term Trump plan to offload TikTok to Oracle and Walmart); hijack TikTok’s fat revenues for his billionaire friends, and apply pressure to turn TikTok into an even safer space for far right wing ideology and propaganda.
It’s kind of the worst of all possible outcomes. The deal maintains the app’s supposedly problematic connections to China, but it adds a layer of domestic corruption as Trump offloads control of the app to his billionaire buddies. Including Larry Ellison, who (with the help of his nepobaby son David) is clearly making a play to dominate whatever’s left of establishment U.S. media.
It remains unclear if China actually supports — and will allow — such a deal. Trump has implied that President Xi Jinping has given approval, but there’s been little public forward momentum despite a meeting between Trump and Xi in both June and late October. And even then, it’s not clear such a deal would be aligned with the law, notes The Verge:
“Even if China accepts the deal, it’s not clear the agreement meets the legal requirements for divestiture. Licensing the TikTok algorithm could potentially constitute an ongoing operational relationship between the US entity and ByteDance, which is explicitly barred by the law.”
I’ve noted more times than I can count that the push to ban TikTok was never really about protecting American privacy. If that were true, we would pass a real privacy law and craft serious penalties for all companies and executives that play fast and loose with sensitive American data, be it TikTok or the myriad of super dodgy apps, telecoms, and hardware vendors monetizing your phone usage.
It was never really about propaganda. If that were true, we’d take aim at the extremely well funded authoritarian propaganda machine and engage in content moderation of race-baiting political propaganda that’s filling the brains of young American men with pudding and hate. We’d push for media consolidation limits and education media literacy reforms common in countries like Finland.
Banning TikTok was never really about national security. If that were true, we wouldn’t be dismantling our cybersecurity regulators, accidentally hosting sensitive military chats over Signal with journalists, voting to cement utterly incompetent knobs in unaccountable roles across military intelligence, and letting dodgy data brokers sell sensitive personal info to global governments (including our own).
TikTok’s Chinese ownership did pose some very real legitimate security, privacy, and NatSec concerns, but the folks “fixing” the problem were never competent or good faith actors, and the push to ban hijack TikTok was always really about ego, money, information control, and protecting Facebook from competition from a foreign company it clearly couldn’t out-innovate.
And the Democrat decision to support a ban of a popular app during an election season when they were trying to desperately court young voters — despite little to no public support for such a move — continues to be one of the dumbest political tech policy blunders in recent memory.
Now all of the folks who were so breathless about the need for a ban — from Brendan Carr to large cross sections of Congress — are suddenly all weirdly mute as the proposal sits in policy limbo somewhere between Trump’s rank corruption and raw, blistering congressional incompetence.
How to Use Lulu to Support Your Nonprofit [Write, Publish, and Sell]

You can feel good publishing with Lulu because we’re not Amazon a Certified B Corp, our platform is free to use, we have amazing customer support, we’re active in our community, we’re the proud publishers of Emoji Dick, and we even compost in our office.
But enough about us. What if you decide you want to make other people feel good by publishing with Lulu? First, thank you; you’re a gem, and second, we can help. Supporting your community or causes close to your heart is easy with Lulu.
When you publish with Lulu, you’ll get to a “Pricing and Payees” step in the process. If you are so inclined, you can add your favorite charity, organization, or nonprofit as a payee. The process is simple, you just need basic contact info for the recipient and to delegate what percentage of your revenue they will receive.
That’s it. The organization you entered can be paid quarterly via check, or monthly via PayPal. You don’t have to manage anything but the gratitude you will receive for being such an amazing human.
Donating to a worthy cause makes people feel good (and yes, we all know your bank account is a worthy cause, but stick with me), but donating to a worthy cause and getting something cool in return makes them feel even better. If you can provide an opportunity for people to shop and give back at the same time, it’s a win-win. And you don’t have to write a trilogy or create a complicated project to make this work. Some of the most successful fundraising projects we’ve seen are calendars. All you need is 14 photos and an afternoon, and you’re in business.

That doesn’t mean calendars are the only project perfect for fundraising. Anything you create can be an opportunity to support causes important to you. A few other favorites are community cookbooks, anthologies, photo books, or even comic books and magazines. If you’ve already published a book on Lulu, you can simply update the payee information and let people know that for a limited time, a portion of the proceeds will be going to charity.
Using your project to fundraise is also a great way to get more exposure for your work. We know it’s not about that, but it’s a nice bonus. The organization you’re supporting would probably be more than happy to promote your project—or even have a few copies for sale or display—to get the word out. This can open you up to a whole new audience, and maybe even provide some earned promotional opportunities as well. News outlets love feel-good stories, especially around the holidays, so letting your local news know you’re raising money for the community might get you even more coverage for your work and the organization you’re raising money for.
All of this can become a great way of building community as well. If you decide to make it an annual event, you can build an audience year after year that loves to support your work and the organizations you’re donating to. You can even get them involved by asking fans and followers to submit content like photos, recipes, or short stories, or vote on things like annual themes or cover art.
Use Lulu's free templates to easily create and publish your book today.
Last but not least, using your project to support nonprofits might just give you the edge over your competition. If a potential customer is looking at your project and comparing it to someone else’s that’s similar, seeing that they’ll be giving back with their purchase might just be their deciding factor. They might even feel so good they buy two!
And keep in mind, your fundraising doesn’t have to be forever. Do some research to see what events, celebrations, or observations would make the most sense to coincide with your efforts. Once you’ve hit your goal or your fundraising window has closed, you can update your payee info at any time in your Lulu account.
I could keep talking about this, but I will let you see this in action for yourself. Here are a few Lulu creators who are giving back.
Back for their 7th year, Reuben and his human have teamed up to make an amazing calendar that not only looks good, but also does good! All profits from Reuben’s 2026 calendar will be going to Bullies 2 the Rescue, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization located in North Carolina that rescues, rehabilitates, and rehomes bulldogs in need.
Proof that good things can come from bad circumstances, The Palm Springs Bears Cookbook was created when a community potluck dinner was put on hold during the pandemic. The community members put the cookbook together as a way to raise spirits and funds when people needed it the most.
Who We Are is an oral history from the StreetWise community. StreetWise exists to elevate marginalized voices and provide opportunities for individuals to earn an income with dignity. Who We Are is a triple threat - not only is it raising money for the StreetWise organization, but it’s also raising awareness and giving its members a voice.
If there is a cause, organization, or community on your heart and mind this season, a print-on-demand product can be a fun and creative way to provide some extra support.
Pro tip: Look for a holiday or event relevant to your content or the organization you want to support and schedule your launch around the same time. Giving Tuesday is always a good choice, but there are daily, weekly, and monthly observations and celebrations you can choose from.
Regardless of when or how you publish, there are always opportunities to give back. If you choose to support your favorite cause with Lulu, thank you for letting us be a small part in making a big difference!
Kanji of the Day: 豊 [Kanji of the Day]
豊
✍13
小5
bountiful, excellent, rich
ホウ ブ
ゆた.か とよ
豊か (ゆたか) — abundant
豊富 (ほうふ) — abundant
豊作 (ほうさく) — abundant harvest
経験豊富 (けいけんほうふ) — experienced
五穀豊穣 (ごこくほうじょう) — huge harvest (of the five grains)
豊漁 (ほうりょう) — good catch
緑豊か (みどりゆたか) — lushly green
風味豊か (ふうみゆたか) — flavorful
豊満 (ほうまん) — stout
種類豊富 (しゅるいほうふ) — rich in variety
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 衰 [Kanji of the Day]
衰
✍10
中学
decline, wane, weaken
スイ
おとろ.える
衰え (おとろえ) — weakening
衰退 (すいたい) — decline
衰弱 (すいじゃく) — weakness
衰える (おとろえる) — to become weak
老衰 (ろうすい) — senility
神経衰弱 (しんけいすいじゃく) — neurasthenia
盛衰 (せいすい) — rise and fall
減衰 (げんすい) — attenuation
栄枯盛衰 (えいこせいすい) — ups and downs of life
衰亡 (すいぼう) — decline and fall
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Hard work and goodwill [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
The other day, Tom Cruise gave a long acceptance speech.
But unlike every other speech of its kind, there were no notes. No rambling. No false starts. He did what he always does–he outworked everyone else. It must have taken weeks to write, rehearse and edit this performance. And then he intentionally added a layer of awards-show stiffness to make it seem real.
Beyond this, unlike most speeches of its kind, it’s all about the people in the room, not the winner.
It’s not that different from the extraordinary performance I linked to yesterday, from Dani Daortiz, the world’s greatest living card magician.
Dani practiced 100 hours for every minute of this apparently impromptu performance. And unlike the arrogance used to create tension by many magicians, Dani appears to be just as amazed as the others at the table.
Apparently, there’s always room for someone who is willing to work harder and be kinder than just about everyone else.

Pluralistic: The long game (20 Nov 2025) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
Well, this fucking sucks. A federal judge has decided that Meta is not a monopolist, and that its acquisitions of Instagram and Whatsapp were not an illegal bid to secure and maintain a monopoly:
https://gizmodo.com/meta-learns-that-nothing-is-a-monopoly-if-you-just-wait-long-enough-2000687691
This is particularly galling because Mark Zuckerberg repeatedly, explicitly declared that these mergers were undertaken to reduce competition, which is the only circumstance in which pro-monopoly economists and lawyers say that mergers should be blocked.
Let me take a step back here. During the Reagan years, a new economic orthodoxy took hold, a weird combination of economic theory and conspiracy theory that held that:
a) It was bad economic policy to try and prevent monopolization, since monopolies are "efficient" and arise because companies are so totally amazing that we all voluntarily buy their products and pay for their services and;
b) The anti-monopoly laws on the books are actually pro-monopoly laws, and if you look at them just right, you'll find that what Congress really intended was for monopolies to be nurtured and protected:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/20/we-should-not-endure-a-king/
The one exception these monsters of history were willing to make to their pro-monopoly posture was this: if a corporation undertakes a merger because they are seeking a monopoly, then the government should step in and stop them. This is a great standard to come up with if what you really want to do is nothing, because how can you know why a company truly wants to buy another company? Who can ever claim to know what is in another person's heart?
This is a great wheeze if you want to allow as many monopolies as possible, unless the guy who's trying to get that monopoly is Mark Zuckerberg, because Zuck is a man who has never had a criminal intention he did not immediately put to writing and email to someone else.
This is the guy who put in writing the immortal words, "It is better to buy than to compete," and "what we’re really buying is time," and who described his plans to clone a competitor's features as intended to get there "before anyone can get close to their scale again":
Basically, Zuck is the guy who works until 2:30 every night, and then, before turning in, sends some key executive a fully discoverable, immortally backed-up digital message that reads, "Hey Bob, you know that guy we were thinking about killing? Well, I've decided we should do it. And for avoidance of doubt, it's 100% a murder, and right now, at this moment, I am premeditating it."
And despite this wealth of evidence as to Zuckerberg's intention at the time, US regulators at the FTC and EU regulators at the Commission both waved through those mergers, as well as many other before and since. Because it turns out that in the pro-monopoly world, there are no bright lines, no mergers so nakedly corrupt that they should be prevented. All that stuff about using state power to prevent deliberate monopolization was always and forever just bullshit. In the pro-monopoly camp, all monopolies are warmly welcome.
It wasn't always this way. In the trustbusting era, enforcers joined with organized labor and activists fighting for all kinds of human rights, from universal sufferage to ending Jim Crow, to smash corporate power. Foundational to this fight was the understanding that concentrated corporate power presented a serious danger: first, because of the way that it could corrupt our political process, and second, because of the difficulty of dislodging corporate power once it had been established.
In other words, trustbusters sought to prevent monopolies, not merely to break up monopolies once they were formed. They understood that a company that was too big to fail would also be too big to jail, and that impunity rotted societies from within.
Then came the project to dismantle antitrust and revive the monopolies. Corporatists from the University of Chicago School of Economics and their ultra-wealthy backers launched a multipronged attack on economics, law, and precedent. It was a successful bid to bring back oligarchy and establish a new class of modern aristocracy, whose dynastic fortunes would ensure their rule and the rule of their descendants for generations to come.
A key part of this was an attack on the judiciary. Like other professionals, federal judges are expected to undergo regular "ongoing education" to ensure they're current on the best practices in their field. Wealthy pro-monopolists bankrolled a series of junkets for judges called the "Manne Seminars," all-expenses-paid family trips to luxury resorts, where judges could be indoctrinated with the theory of "efficient monopolies":
https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/13/post-bork-era/#manne-down
40% of all federal judges attended a Manne Seminar, and empirical studies show that after graduating, these judges changed the way they ruled, to favor monopolies:
https://academic.oup.com/qje/advance-article/doi/10.1093/qje/qjaf042/8241352?login=false
The terrible beauty of this strategy is that you don't need to get all the judges into a Manne Seminar – you just need to get enough judges to attend that they will create a wall of precedent that every other judge will feel hemmed in by when they rule on antitrust cases. Those judgments further shore-up the pro-monopoly precedent, setting the stage for the next pro-monopoly judgment, and the next, and the next.
So here we are, a couple generations into the project to brainwash judges, monopolize the economy and establish a new aristocracy, and a judge just ruled that Meta isn't an illegal monopoly, even though Mark Zuckerberg literally put his explicit criminal intent in writing.
What are we to do? Should we despair? Does this mean it's all over?
Not hardly. Reversing 40+ years of pro-monopoly policy was always going to be a slog, with many setbacks on the way. That's why antitrust has historically sought to prevent monopolies. Once monopolies have conquered your economy, getting rid of them is far harder, or, as the joke from eastern Canada goes, "If you wanted to get there, I wouldn't start from here."
But you have to play the ball where it lies. The fact that Meta can deliberately set out to create a monopoly and still evade judgment is more reason to fight monopolies, not less – it's (more) evidence of just how corrupted and illegitimate our judicial system has become.
We've been here before. The first antitrust laws were passed to do the hard work of smashing existing monopolies, not the relatively easy task of preventing monopolization. Of course: before there is a law, there has to be a crime. Antitrust law was passed because of a monopoly problem, not as a pro-active measure to prevent the problem from arising.
Our forbears smashed monopolies that were, if anything, far more ferocious than Big Tech. They vanquished oligarchs whose perfidy and ruthlessness put today's ketamine-addled zuckermuskian mediocrities in the shade. How they did it is not a mystery: they just put in the hard yards of building coalitions and winning public sentiment.
They did it before and we can do it again. We know how it's done. We remember their names and what they did. Take Ida Tarbell, the slayer of John D Rockefeller and Standard Oil. Tarbell was a brilliant, fierce writer and orator, fearless and brilliant. She was the first woman in America to get a science degree, and a key driver of the movement for universal suffrage. But in addition to all that, she was an anti-monopolist.
Tarbell's father was a Pennsylvania oil man who'd been ruined by Rockefeller and Standard Oil. Determined to see him avenged, Tarbell researched the many tendrils of Rockefeller's empire and his devious tactics, and laid them bare in a pair of wildly successful serialized books, The History of the Standard Oil Company, Volumes I & II (published first in the popular national magazine Collier's):
https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/13/a-monopoly-isnt-the-same-as-legitimate-greatness/
Tarbell's History changed the way the country saw Rockefeller. She punctured his myth of brilliance and competence, and showed how he owed his fortune to swindling and cheating. She cut him down to size. She was a key figure in the American trustbusting movement, a catalyst for the revolution that saw Rockefeller and his fellow oligarchs overthrown.
This took a hell of a long time. The Sherman Act (which was used to break up Standard Oil) was passed in 1890, but Standard Oil wasn't broken up until 1912. It took perseverance through setback after setback, it took the compounding tragedies that drove people to question the order and demand change, and it took unglamorous organizing and dramatic street-fights to escape from oligarchy's powerful gravity well.
Today, we are back at square one, but we have advantages that Tarbell and the other trustbusters lacked. For one thing, we have them, the lessons of their fight and the inspiration of their victory. For another, we have the political wind at our back. All over the world, from China to Canada, from the EU to the USA, politicians have felt emboldened (or forced) to launch anti-monopoly efforts the likes of which have not been seen since the Carter administration:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/08/09/elite-disunity/#awoken-giants
What's more, these enforcers aren't alone – they can and do collaborate. Because these tech companies run the same swindles in every country in the world, enforcers can collaborate on building cases against them. After all the facts of Big Tech's crimes are virtually identical, whether you're in the UK, Singapore, South Korea, Canada or Germany:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/22/autocrats-of-trade/#dingo-babysitter
This is an advantage that the trustbusters who took down Rockefeller could only dream of. Like Big Tech, Rockefeller had a global empire, but unlike Big Tech, Rockefeller abused each of the nations of the world in distinct ways. In America, Rockefeller ran the refineries and pipelines; in Germany, he had a stranglehold on the ports.
Even if the Rockefeller-era trustbusters wanted to collaborate, sending memos back and forth across the Atlantic by zeppelin, all they could offer each other was warm wishes. US pipeline investigations had nothing to add to German port investigations.
Today's tech monopolists may be bigger than any one government, but they're not bigger than all the governments whose people they're abusing.
The trustbusters who brought down Rockefeller did something knowable and repeatable. Their work did not arise out of the lost arts of a fallen civilization. The work of taking down today's monopolists requires only that we recover our ancestors' moral fire and perseverance. No one needs to figure out how to build a pyramid without power tools or embalm a Pharaoh.
We merely have to build and sustain a global movement to destroy oligarchy.
(Merely!)
Yes, that's a hell of a big lift. But we're not alone. There are billions of people who suffer under oligarchy and an infinite variety of ways to erode its power, as a prelude to smashing that power. Our allies in antitrust include the voters who put Zohran Mamdani into office, going from less than 1% in the polls to a commanding majority in a three-way race, running on an anti-oligarch platform:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/06/28/mamdani/#trustbusting
(No coincidence that one of our most effective fighters is now co-leading Mamdani's transition team):
https://pluralistic.net/2025/11/15/unconscionability/#standalone-authority
Trustbusting alone will not end oligarchy and trustbusters alone cannot break up the monopolies. As with the original trustbusters, the modern trustbusting movement is but a part of a coalition that wants a world organized around the needs of the many, not the few.

The Age of Extraction https://the-antimonopolist.ghost.io/the-age-of-extraction/
HOPE Hacking Conference Banned From University Venue Over Apparent ‘Anti-Police Agenda’ https://www.404media.co/hope-hacking-conference-banned-from-university-venue-over-apparent-anti-police-agenda/
HOPE CONFERENCE BANNED BY ST. JOHN'S UNIVERSITY https://www.2600.com/content/hope-conference-banned-st-johns-university
unshittified.club https://unshittified.club/
#20yrsago Brit backpackers take Indian call-centre jobs https://web.archive.org/web/20051210103452/http://wiredblogs.tripod.com/sterling/index.blog?entry_id=1284171
#20yrsago Laser etching doesn’t necessarily void your warranty https://web.archive.org/web/20051126194823/http://www.makezine.com/blog/archive/2005/11/will_laser_etching_apple_gear.html
#20yrsago UCLA to MPAA shill: ARRRRRRR! https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2005-nov-18-fi-glickman18-story.html
#20yrsago RIAA prez: Lots of companies secretly install rootkits! It’s no biggie! https://web.archive.org/web/20051125041201/http://www.malbela.com/blog/archives/000375.html
#20yrsago Sony offers MP3s in replacement for rootkit CDs https://web.archive.org/web/20051124233458/https://www.upsrow.com/sonybmg/
#15yrsago TSA forces cancer survivor to remove prosthetic breast https://web.archive.org/web/20101120213044/http://www.wbtv.com/Global/story.asp?S=13534628
#15yrsago How the Victorians wiped their bums https://web.archive.org/web/20101123191021/http://wellcomelibrary.blogspot.com/2010/11/item-of-month-november-2010-victorian.html
#15yrsago Understanding the “microcredit crisis” in Andhra Pradesh https://web.archive.org/web/20101119012652/https://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2010/11/18/the-lessons-of-andhra-pradesh/
#15yrsago Canadian Heritage Minister inadvertently damns his own copyright bill https://web.archive.org/web/20101121054805/https://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/5456/125/
#15yrsago TSA confiscates heavily-armed soldiers’ nail-clippers https://redstate.com/erick/2010/11/18/another-tsa-outrage-n37064
#15yrsago Chris McKitterick pirates his own book https://mckitterick.livejournal.com/653743.html
#15yrsago Chinese woman kidnapped to labor camp on her wedding day over sarcastic re-Tweet https://web.archive.org/web/20120609051421/http://voices.washingtonpost.com/blog-post/2010/11/chinese_twitter_sentence_a_yea.html
#15yrsago RuneScape devs refuse to cave in to patent trolls https://web.archive.org/web/20101119012943/http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/31597/UKBased_RuneScape_Dev_Jagex_Wins_Patent_Infringement_Lawsuit.php
#10yrsago Manhattan DA calls for backdoors in all mobile operating systems https://web.archive.org/web/20151120003032/https://manhattanda.org/sites/default/files/11.18.15
#10yrsago Watching paint dry: epic crowfunded troll of the UK film censorship board https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/charlielyne/make-the-censors-watch-paint-drying?ref=video
#10yrsago CEOs are lucky, tall men https://hbr.org/2015/11/are-successful-ceos-just-lucky
#10yrsago America’s CEOs and hedge funds are starving the nation’s corporations to death https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-buybacks-cannibalized/
#10yrsago EU official: all identified Paris attackers were from the EU https://web.archive.org/web/20151116223023/https://thinkprogress.org/world/2015/11/16/3722838/all-paris-attackers-identified-so-far-are-european-nationals-according-to-top-eu-official/
#10yrsago The Web is pretty great with Javascript turned off https://www.wired.com/2015/11/i-turned-off-javascript-for-a-whole-week-and-it-was-glorious/
#10yrsago If the Paris attackers weren’t using cryptography, the next ones will, and so should you https://insidesources.com/new-york-times-article-blaming-encryption-paris-attacks/
#10yrsago Zero: the number of security experts Ted Koppel consulted for hysterical cyberwar book https://www.techdirt.com/2015/11/19/ted-koppel-writes-entire-book-about-how-hackers-will-take-down-our-electric-grid-never-spoke-to-any-experts/
#10yrsago How a paid FBI informant created a terror plot that sent an activist to jail for 9 years https://theintercept.com/2015/11/19/an-fbi-informant-seduced-eric-mcdavid-into-a-bomb-plot-then-the-government-lied-about-it/
#10yrsago Google steps up to defend fair use, will fund Youtubers’ legal defenses https://publicpolicy.googleblog.com/2015/11/a-step-toward-protecting-fair-use-on.html?m=1
#10yrsago Alan Moore’s advice to unpublished authors https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuaWu2uhmRQ
#10yrsago Private funding of public services is bankrupting the UK https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/nhs/11748960/The-PFI-hospitals-costing-NHS-2bn-every-year.html
#10yrsago The US government turned down Anne Frank’s visa application https://www.reuters.com/article/2007/02/14/us-annefrank-letters-idUSN1430569220070214/#HmyajvjLmsX2tVYf.97
#10yrsago Seriously, try “view source” on google.com https://xkcd.com/1605/#10yrsago
#5yrsago Tyson execs bet on covid spread in unsafe plant https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/19/disneymustpay/#you-bet-your-life
#5yrsago Disney stiffs writer https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/19/disneymustpay/#disneymustpay
#5yrsago Cyberpunk and Post-Cyberpunk https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/19/disneymustpay/#asl
#5yrsago Canada's GDPR https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/18/always-get-their-rationalisation/#consent
#5yrsago Telehealth chickenizes docs https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/18/always-get-their-rationalisation/#telehealth
#5yrsago The Mounties lied about social surveillance https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/18/always-get-their-rationalisation/#rcmp
#5yrsago Race, surveillance and tech https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/18/always-get-their-rationalisation/#asl
#1yrago Harpercollins wants authors to sign away AI training rights https://pluralistic.net/2024/11/18/rights-without-power/#careful-what-you-wish-for
#1yrago Forcing Google to spin off Chrome (and Android?) https://pluralistic.net/2024/11/19/breaking-up-is-hard-to-do/#shiny-and-chrome

Virtual: Enshittification with Vass Bednar (Vancouver Public Library), Nov 21
https://www.crowdcast.io/@bclibraries-present
Toronto: Jailbreaking Canada (OCAD U), Nov 27
https://www.ocadu.ca/events-and-exhibitions/jailbreaking-canada
San Diego: Enshittification at the Mission Hills Branch Library, Dec 1
https://libraryfoundationsd.org/events/doctorow
Seattle: Neuroscience, AI and Society (University of Washington), Dec 4
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/neuroscience-ai-and-society-cory-doctorow-tickets-1735371255139
Madison, CT: Enshittification at RJ Julia, Dec 8
https://rjjulia.com/event/2025-12-08/cory-doctorow-enshittification
Hamburg: Chaos Communications Congress, Dec 27-30
https://events.ccc.de/congress/2025/infos/index.html
Enshittification with danah boyd and Lee Vinsel (Peoples & Things)
https://newbooksnetwork.com/cory-doctorow-on-enshittification-why-everything-suddenly-got-worse-and-what-to-do-about-it
Enshittification and Extraction: The Internet Sucks Now, with Tim Wu (Oxford Internet Institute)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkYxMQJ9c94
Working it out: Job security in the AI era (Web Summit)
https://websummit.com/summaries/lis25/working-it-out-job-security-in-the-ai-era/
How to dis-Enshittify the world (Blood In the Machine)
https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/how-to-dis-enshittify-the-world-with
"Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/
"Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels).
"The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (the-bezzle.org).
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org).
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com.
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
"Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026
"The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2026
"The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2026
Today's top sources:
Currently writing:
A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

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EUIPO Study: Major Brand Ads on Pirate Sites Surged 567% [TorrentFreak]
For many pirate sites and apps, ad revenue is the only viable lifeline. This is why the advertising industry is an important ally in the fight against piracy.
Over the years, several ad-focused anti-piracy initiatives and partnerships have tried to prevent branded ads from appearing on these sites.
This includes a European Union-led Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in which several leading advertising companies, including Google, signed up to play their part. The origins of this agreement date back to 2016, and the EU Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO) has monitored progress ever since.
The latest report on the state of the pirate advertising landscape was published this week. As in previous years, the EUIPO commissioned UK-based research firm White Bullet to provide a detailed overview of what types of ads appeared on pirate sites throughout 2024.

The report looked at advertisements on 7,250 websites and 398 mobile applications across 18 EU member states. All ‘pirate’ sites and apps provided access to copyright-infringing content and were classified as either “illegal” or “high-risk”.
White Bullet compiled a similar advertising report for EUIPO in 2021, which makes it possible to measure progress over the past four years.
The headline figures reported by EUIPO this week suggest that advertising volume on piracy sites grew rapidly throughout last year. Globally (EU+UK+US), the monitored websites generated 28.3 billion ad impressions over the year, with a 92% increase in impressions from the first to the fourth quarter.
More concerning, perhaps, is that adverts run by major brands are still common on pirate sites. No names are mentioned in the report, but EUIPO notes that advertising impressions from major brands increased 567% between 2021 and 2024.
Overall, branded advertising accounted for 61% of ad impressions on monitored websites and 96% on the monitored apps. This includes ads for both major and less-well known brands.
The EUIPO highlights this significant increase in its “main conclusions” alongside some other concerning developments.

The report explicitly links this resurgence of major brand ads to a breakdown in industry cooperation, noting that education campaigns for advertisers were halted right before the spike occurred.
“The massive growth in Major Brand advertising on IPR-infringing websites may be correlated with the 2023 termination of several coordinated outreach programmes focused on educating brands that had been placing advertising on IPR-infringing websites,” EUIPO’s report reads.
While the headline numbers reported by EUIPO are correct, they deserve some nuance. The number of ad impressions on pirate sites by major brands did not increase 567%; not by a long shot.
What the report found is that major brand ads went from just 3% of all ad impressions on websites in 2021, to 20% of all ad impressions in 2024. While that technically represents a 567% increase in market share, the number of displayed ads tanked at the same time.
Across all monitored countries, ad impressions on pirate sites crashed from 146.1 billion in 2021 to 28.3 billion in 2024. So, the total number of ads on these sites fell by roughly 80%.
While the “567% increase” statistic is technically accurate when looking at relative market share, the increase is largely driven by the collapse of low-quality, non-brand ads. In real terms, the number of major brand ads served increased by roughly 30%.
The same logic applies to a reported surge in fraud and malware advertising, which was also highlighted in the EUIPO’s main conclusions.
“The report also notes a 250% increase in fraud and malware advertising from 2021 to 2024, showing that infringing websites not only exploit brand reputations but also expose users and advertisers to broader digital risks,” EUIPO writes.
Again, this 250% increase is relative. Looking at the absolute numbers, fraud and malware ads actually decreased by roughly 1.8 billion impressions from 2021 to 2024. That’s roughly a ~31% reduction in malicious ads.
The above makes it clear that absolute and relative comparisons can show an entirely different picture. This is largely attributable to a key change that took place over the past few years, which, strangely enough, is not mentioned in EUIPO’s main conclusions.
The fact that the EUIPO report found an unprecedented 80% drop in pirate site ads receives very little attention. Yet, the numbers clearly show that, in the 18 monitored EU Member States, pirate site ad impressions also plunged: from 70.3 billion in 2021 to 14.4 billion in 2024.
The report links this drastic decline to an increasingly fragmented landscape of pirate sites, leading to lower traffic numbers overall. That sounds like a welcome result, but in the report the finding receives no obvious emphasis.
The same applies to the associated decrease in advertising revenue for pirate sites. The report notes that the advertising revenues from the monitored countries dropped 78%, from €102.5 million in 2021 to €22 million last year.
While the EUIPO focuses mostly on the relative increases of major brand ads and fraud advertisements, one key number was not highlighted. That is, the average estimated revenue these 7,250 sites generate per day from visitors in the 18 monitored EU countries.
That number is not reported, but if we crunch the numbers, we see that the average pirate site generates roughly €8.29 per day from these EU users.
The EUIPO report puts the global revenue of these sites at ~€91 per day. This leads to the logical conclusion that the EU advertising traffic only represents a fraction of the total income of these sites. That’s worth calling out, we think.
—
The full report, which includes many more data points and intriguing statistics, is available here (pdf).
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Sony Threatens Fan Server For ‘Concord’, Which It Shut Down A Year Ago 2 Weeks After Release [Techdirt]
There are lots of ways things play out when it comes to fans of multiplayer video games building out their own host servers to play them. Sometimes fans set those servers up simply because they can do it better and more securely than the publisher… and then the publisher takes them down because of intellectual property concerns. Sometimes gamers simply want to play an older version of an online game, before the publisher pushes out a bunch of updates and expansion packs… and the publisher takes them down because of intellectual property concerns. And, rarely, sometimes the publisher ends its official support and hosting of a game’s servers and actually acts human and cool by giving fans a cheap license to host their own servers to keep the game alive.
The most frustrating version of this sort of thing is when a publisher fully ends support for a game, shuts down its servers, and then prevents any and all fans from ever playing the game again over IP concerns. And there can be no more stark example of this than Concord, an online game that Sony shut down 2 weeks (!!!) after its release, over a year ago.
A group of dedicated coders has managed to partially revive online gameplay for the PC version of Concord, the team-based shooter that Sony famously shut down just two weeks after its launch last summer. Now, though, the team behind that fan server effort is closing off new access after Sony started issuing DMCA takedown requests of sample gameplay videos.
The Game Post was among the first to publicize the “Concord Delta” project, which reverse-engineered the game’s now-defunct server API to get a functional multiplayer match running over the weekend. “The project is still [a work in progress], it’s playable, but buggy,” developer Red posted in the game’s Discord channel, as reported by The Game Post. “Once our servers are fully set up, we’ll begin doing some private playtesting.”
Those DMCA takedowns came from MarkScan, a longtime partner of Sony that looks around the internet for anything remotely resembling IP infractions and fires off DMCA notices. No demands about the actual game servers have been made… yet. And that makes this all the more strange. MarkScan, presumably at the behest of Sony, is taking down gameplay videos for a game that simply doesn’t exist outside of this fan effort. There are a billion gameplay videos of Sony games that are actually active and out in the world, but these get taken down?
And, again, it’s the absurdity that is the real star here. Concord officially existed for 2 whole weeks in 2024. Sony shut it down and refunded the money of any buyer that wanted one. It shut down the studio that made the game. So when some actual fans of the game come along and want to revive it on their own, Sony starts issuing threats?
“We’re choosing to not make this game available and insist you don’t either.”
While the team behind Concord Delta hasn’t been contacted by Sony directly, the YouTube video takedowns have put the group in something of a defensive crouch. “Due to worrying legal action we’ve decided to pause invites [to our Discord server] for the time being,” Red wrote on the Discord, as reported by The Game Post.
Of course, Sony could also decide to simply look the other way and let players enjoy a game the company seems to have no interest in officially supporting. That’s what Nintendo appears to be doing with fan projects like The Pretendo Network and WiiLink, which restore online functionality that’s no longer officially available on classic Nintendo consoles.
When you manage to make Nintendo look relatively fan-friendly, it should be obvious you’ve done something horribly wrong.
How Trademark Ruined Colorado-Style Pizza [Techdirt]
You’ve heard of New York style, Chicago deep dish, Detroit square pans. But Colorado-style pizza? Probably not. And there’s a perfectly ridiculous reason why this regional style never spread beyond a handful of restaurants in the Rocky Mountains: one guy trademarked it and scared everyone else away from making it.
This story comes via a fascinating Sporkful podcast episode where reporter Paul Karolyi spent years investigating why Colorado-style pizza remains trapped in obscurity while other regional styles became national phenomena.
The whole episode is worth listening to for the detective work alone, but the trademark angle reveals something important about how intellectual property thinking can strangle cultural movements in their cradle.
Here’s the thing about pizza “styles”: they become styles precisely because they spread. New York, Chicago, Detroit, New Haven—these aren’t just individual restaurant concepts, they’re cultural phenomena adopted and adapted by hundreds of restaurants. That widespread adoption creates the network effects that make a “style” valuable: customers seek it out, restaurants compete to perfect it, food writers chronicle its evolution.
Colorado-style pizza never got that chance. When Karolyi dug into why, he discovered that Beau Jo’s—the restaurant credited with inventing the style—had locked it up legally. When he asked the owner’s daughter if other restaurants were making Colorado-style pizza, her response was telling:
We’re um a trademark, so they cannot.
Really?
Yes.
Beau owns a trademark for Colorado style pizza.
Yep.
When Karolyi finally tracked down the actual owner, Chip (after years of trying, which is its own fascinating subplot), he expected to hear about some grand strategic vision behind the trademark. Instead, he got a masterclass in reflexive IP hoarding:
Cuz it’s different and nobody else is doing that. So, why not do it Colorado style? I mean, there’s Chicago style and there’s Pittsburgh style and Detroit and everything else. Um, and we were doing something that was what was definitely different and um um licensing attorney said, “Yeah, we can do it” and we were able to.
That’s it. No business plan. No licensing strategy. Just “some lawyer said we can do it” so they did. This is the IP-industrial complex in microcosm: lawyers selling trademark applications because they can, not because they should.
I pressed my case to Chip that abandoning the trademark so others could also use it could actually be good for his business.
“If more places made Colorado style pizza, the style itself would become more famous, which would make more people come to Beau Jo’s to try the original. If imitation is the highest form of flattery, like everyone would know that Beau Jo was the originator. Like, do you ever worry or maybe do you think that the trademark has possibly hindered the spread of this style of pizza that you created that you should be getting credit for?”
“Never thought about it.”
“Well, what do you think about it now?”
“I don’t know. I have to think about that. It’s an interesting thought. I’ve never thought about it. I’m going to look into it. I’m going to look into it. I’m going to talk to some people and um I’m not totally opposed to it. I don’t know that it would be a good idea for us, but I’m willing to look at it.”
A few weeks later, Karolyi followed up with Chip. Predictably, the business advisors had circled the wagons. They “unanimously” told him not to give up the trademark—because of course they did. These are the same people who profit from maintaining artificial scarcity, even when it demonstrably hurts the very thing they’re supposedly protecting.
And so Colorado-style pizza remains trapped in its legal cage, known only to a handful of tourists who stumble across Beau Jo’s locations. A culinary innovation that could have sparked a movement instead became a cautionary tale about how IP maximalism kills the things it claims to protect.
This case perfectly illustrates the perverse incentives of modern IP thinking. We’ve created an entire industry of lawyers and consultants whose job is to convince business owners to “protect everything” on the off chance they might license it later. Never mind that this protection often destroys the very value they’re trying to capture.
The trademark didn’t just fail to help Beau Jo’s—it actively harmed them. As Karolyi documents in the podcast, the legal lockup has demonstrably scared off other restaurateurs from experimenting with Colorado-style pizza, ensuring the “style” remains a curiosity rather than a movement. Fewer competitors means less innovation, less media attention, and fewer customers seeking out “the original.” It’s a masterclass in how to turn potential network effects into network defects.
Compare this to the sriracha success story. David Tran of Huy Fong Foods deliberately avoided trademarking “sriracha” early on, allowing dozens of competitors to enter the market. The result? Sriracha became a cultural phenomenon, and Huy Fong’s distinctive rooster bottle became the most recognizable brand in a category they helped create. Even as IP lawyers kept circling, Tran understood what Chip apparently doesn’t:
“Everyone wants to jump in now,” said Tran, 70. “We have lawyers come and say ‘I can represent you and sue’ and I say ‘No. Let them do it.’” Tran is so proud of the condiment’s popularity that he maintains a daily ritual of searching the Internet for the latest Sriracha spinoff.
Sometimes the best way to protect your creation is to let it go. But decades of IP maximalist indoctrination have made this counterintuitive wisdom almost impossible to hear. Even when presented with a clear roadmap for how abandoning the trademark could grow his business, Chip couldn’t break free from the sunk-cost fallacy and his advisors’ self-interested counsel.
The real tragedy isn’t just that Colorado-style pizza remains obscure. It’s that this story plays out thousands of times across industries, with creators choosing artificial scarcity over organic growth, protection over proliferation. Every time someone trademarks a taco style or patents an obvious business method, they’re making the same mistake Chip made: confusing ownership with value creation.
Fans Of Open Access, Unite: You Have Nothing To Lose But Your Chained Libraries [Techdirt]
When books were rare and extremely expensive, they were often chained to the bookcase to prevent people walking off with them, in what were known as “chained libraries”. Copyright serves a similar purpose today, even though, thanks to the miracle of perfect, zero-cost digital copies, it is possible simultaneously to take an ebook home and yet leave the original behind. For a quarter of a century, the open access movement has been fighting to break those virtual chains for academic works, and to allow anyone freely to read and make copies of the knowledge contained in online virtual libraries.
The detailed history of the movement can be found in Chapter 3 of Walled Culture the book (free digital versions available). As the timeline there, and posts on this blog both make clear, the open access movement has made only limited progress despite the enormous effort expended by many dedicated individuals. Moreover the open access idea has been embraced and then subverted by the academic publishers whose greed and selfishness it was meant to fight.
One version of open access, known as the “diamond” variant, still offers hope that the goals of free access to knowledge for everyone could still be achieved. But even this minimalist approach to academic publishing requires funding, which raises questions about its long-term sustainability. Economic issues also lie at the heart of wider discussions about what could replace copyright, which was born in the analogue world, and whose dysfunctional nature in the digital environment is evident every day.
Walled Culture the book concludes with a look at perhaps the most promising alternative model, whereby “true fans” support directly the creators whose work they value. This approach can also be applied to open access. In this case, the “true fans” of the research work published in papers and books are the academic libraries, acting on behalf of the people who use them. There are various ways for them to support the journals their academics want to access, but one of the most promising is “subscribe to open” (S2O), which helps publishers convert traditional journals into open access. The idea was formalized by Raym Crow, Richard Gallagher, Kamran Naim in 2019. Here’s their explanation of how it works:
S2O offers a journal’s current subscribers continued access at a discount off the regular subscription price. If current subscribers participate in the S2O offer, the publisher opens the content covered by that year’s subscription. If participation is not sufficient – for example, if some subscribers delay renewing in the expectation that they can gain access without participating – then the content remains gated. Because the publisher does not guarantee that the content will be opened unless all subscribers participate in the offer, institutions that value access to the content – demonstrably, the journal’s current subscribers – must either subscribe conventionally (at full price) or participate in S2O (at a discount) to ensure continued access. The offer is repeated every year, with the opening of each year’s content contingent on sufficient participation.
As with the “true fans” model, supporting S2O journals is in the self-interest of libraries, which receive subscriptions to journals their academics want, and for a lower price. But there is a collateral benefit for society because everyone else also receives access to the knowledge contained in those titles. Publishers receive a guaranteed subscription income up front, and as a consequence of the open access route, they can also reach a larger audience. For example, when the Annual Review of Public Health publication tried out the S2O model, its monthly usage factor went up by a factor of eight. Since that successful trial, the S2O model has gone from strength to strength, as a review article published at the end of last year explains:
As of 2024, thanks to the Subscribe to Open model, over 180 journals have been able to publish entire volumes in open access, which would never have been possible otherwise because of the shortcomings of the [article processing charge] models for these journals and their respective disciplines. The S2O model continues to grow, with more publishers set to launch their S2O offerings in 2025.
In August, the prestigious Royal Society announced that it would be moving eight of its subscription journals to S2O. Among those titles is Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, the world’s longest-running scientific journal. In an article reflecting on that move, Rod Cookson, publishing director of The Royal Society, explained why he and other forward-thinking publishers are fans of S2O:
It is cost neutral and a relatively small change through which libraries can enable entire journals to become open access. This combination of simplicity and transparency has generated enthusiasm for S2O among librarians the world over. Publishers now need to demonstrate to those librarians that in addition to being aligned with their missions, S2O delivers a return on investment that justifies their expenditure. With sensible features that make the S2O proposition work well for both libraries and publishing houses—like multi-year agreements, “premium benefits” for S2O supporters, and collective sales packages—S2O will continue to grow as a trusted and durable model for delivering open access.
S2O represents a successful application of the true fans idea in the context of academic publishing. But perhaps supporters of open access should embrace even more of the true fan spirit and look to the example of fan fiction to help re-imagine scholarly publishing. That, at least, is the bold idea of Caroline Ball, who is the community engagement lead for the Open Book Collective, and whose advocacy work appeared in Walled Culture four years ago. Here’s why she thinks academic research should be more like fan fiction:
At first glance, fanfiction—non-commercial works created by fans who reimagine and remix existing stories, characters, and worlds—and academic research may seem worlds apart. But look closer, and both are practices of deep engagement, intertextual interpretation, and knowledge creation.
Fanfiction doesn’t just regurgitate stories; it interrogates, reinvents, and expands on them, often filling in gaps and exclusions left offscreen. Likewise, scholarship builds on prior work, challenges assumptions, and contributes new insights. Both are iterative, dialogic, and community based. And both, at their best, come from a place of passion and curiosity.
Her post explains how Archive of Our Own (AO3), a community-run digital repository for fan fiction, works, and why it could be a model for a new kind of open access:
Archive of Our Own (AO3) is a community-run digital repository for fanfiction. Launched in 2008 by the nonprofit Organization for Transformative Works (OTW), AO3 is entirely open access. It charges nothing to publish, nothing to read, and is powered by open-source code and volunteer labor. As of May 2025 (according to the OTW Communications Committee), it hosts over 15 million works across 71,880 fandoms and sees a daily average of 94 million hits.
Ball goes on to suggests ways in which scholarly publishing could learn from that evident success. Specific areas include AO3’s flexible metadata system; its innovative approach to reviews and comments; its “format agnosticism”, accepting any kind of contribution; and the way it re-imagines recognition and reputation. In summary, she writes:
AO3 reminds us that platforms can be built by and for communities, without extractive profit models or exclusionary hierarchies. It shows what’s possible when infrastructure is treated as a public good, and when participation is scaffolded, not gated. And crucially, AO3 demonstrates how practices that have been piloted in isolation across the scholarly landscape—open peer commentary, volunteer governance, flexible metadata, inclusive formats—can be woven together into a single, sustainable system.
The S2O model described above is a welcome addition to the ways in which sustainable open access can be brought in by publishers. But ultimately Ball is right in emphasizing that universal and unconstrained access to knowledge will only be achieved when the entire scholarly publishing system is re-invented with that goal in mind. It’s well past time for all the fans of open access to unite in this endeavor, and to do away with today’s digital chained libraries forever.
Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky. Originally published to Walled Culture.
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