News

Saturday 2025-04-26

01:00 PM

Microsoft Allows Bethesda To Continue To Be Cool Regarding Fan-Made Remake Projects [Techdirt]

Bethesda has something of a history of embracing its modding communities. This has historically included not being aggressive on matters of IP against modders, attempting to build an economy around the modding community itself, and even being quite tolerant of fan-made expansions and the like of the publisher’s titles. This was all well and good until Bethesda was acquired by Microsoft. Straddling the before and after of that acquisition are some ambitious fan-led projects, perhaps none larger than Skyblivion, a project to completely remake The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion in the Skyrim engine.

The team behind the project previously indicated that it should be completed at some point this year, but I wondered aloud several months ago whether it would be allowed to move forward, or if this would be one of those fan-made projects that is killed off by the lawyers at the last minute, now that Microsoft is in charge. Complicating this further is the long-rumored remaster of Oblivion from Bethesda itself, released just this week. With what would be a competing project, even though Skyblivion is going to be released for free, what would this mean for the project being able to go forward?

Thankfully, and much to this writer’s surprise, it appears that Microsoft and Bethesda are playing cool with the entire project.

Fortunately for the Skyblivion team, Bethesda has apparently decided there’s room enough in this world for both official and unofficial remakes of Oblivion. The team took to social media Tuesday to thank Bethesda for “their continued support” and for “the generous gift of Oblivion Remastered game keys for our entire modding team.”

“To clear up any confusion Bethesda made it clear that they have no intention of shutting down our project,” the team added in a social media reply.

Now, hopefully, that also means that Microsoft has no intention of shutting this down, either. One would hope that any messaging about this from Bethesda has cleared whatever internal bureaucratic hurdles with the parent company required to make that stance firm.

It’s worth noting several things here. First, this fan project did not make use of any Bethesda assets beyond using Skyrim’s engine. Everything has been recreated from scratch, from what I understand. Second, you can’t play Skyblivion without having bought specific versions of both Oblivion and Skyrim, so there really is no threat to the publisher here. In fact, this should be a boon to them and, if anything, drive more sales for these older titles.

And, finally, these fans have, by all accounts, been very cool and respectful of Bethesda throughout the process.

Earlier this month, when credible rumors of the official Oblivion remaster were running rampant, the Skyblivion team posted that it was “eagerly aniticipating” the official release and that there was “no need for comparisons or a sense of competition between Skyblivion and a potential official remaster.” That’s particularly true, the team wrote, because Skyblivion’s PC mod won’t be available for console players, who will be able to enjoy Bethesda’s official version instead.

And now, Bethesda and Microsoft are being human and cool right back at them. I haven’t spilled much ink praising large companies like Microsoft for being sensible on matters that include their intellectual property, but here we are. When Microsoft does something cool, I suppose we owe it to the universe to say so out loud.

11:00 AM

Gavin Newsom Has Lost The Plot [Techdirt]

Gavin Newsom’s characterization of the Abrego García deportation as a “distraction” represents a catastrophic failure of moral clarity and constitutional understanding.

This isn’t a distraction. This is the constitutional foundation of our Republic hinging on a single case.

Let’s be absolutely clear about what’s at stake: The Supreme Court has issued a unanimous 9-0 order demanding that the administration facilitate the return Abrego García to the United States. A 9-0 ruling. In today’s polarized Court. This isn’t partisan; it’s fundamental. The President, bound by oath and the Constitution to “faithfully execute the laws,” is openly defying the highest judicial authority in the land.

If a President can simply ignore a direct, unanimous Supreme Court order with no consequences, then what remains of checks and balances? What remains of the separation of powers? What remains of the rule of law itself? This is not hyperbole—this is the actual constitutional crisis we were warned about, happening in real time.

The so-called “pragmatists” like Newsom who suggest we focus on “kitchen table issues” instead reveal a profound misunderstanding of what’s at stake. They present a false choice between economic concerns and constitutional principles—as if Americans cannot care about both their retirement accounts and whether we still have a functioning constitutional republic.

Perhaps Governor Newsom should visit Abrego García’s children—two with autism, one prone to seizures—and explain to them that their father’s wrongful imprisonment and torture in El Salvador is a “distraction” from more important matters. Perhaps he should tell these American citizens that the erroneous deportation of their father, in direct violation of his legal protections, is less important than poll-tested talking points about tariffs.

This is the Theater of Neutrality in its most shameful form—pretending that constitutional crises are merely political disagreements, that fundamental questions of rule of law are just one “issue” among many. It’s the cowardly posture that treats moral clarity as a political liability rather than a governing necessity.

What’s particularly galling is how Newsom frames this as political strategy: “Are they defending MS-13?” he asks, parroting the administration’s falsehoods even after a federal judge found that the gang allegations against Abrego García were based on a discredited database and testimony from a disgraced detective.

No, Governor. They’re defending the Constitution. They’re defending due process. They’re defending the principle that no one—not even a President—is above the law. They’re defending the idea that when the Supreme Court issues a unanimous order, it must be followed, not mocked or ignored.

Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And if we cannot summon the moral clarity to stand firmly against a President openly defying a direct Supreme Court order, then we have already surrendered the constitutional republic we claim to cherish.

The center must be held—not because it is easy, but because it is ours to hold. And holding it requires recognizing that some issues aren’t distractions but foundations. The rule of law isn’t a policy preference. It’s the condition that makes all other governance possible.

The ground approaches. And in this moment of constitutional gravity, those who cannot find their moral compass may find themselves remembered among those who stood aside while the Republic itself was undermined.

At this point, I’m not sure Gavin Newsom remembers what’s real.

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

06:00 AM

Enter The Fourth Amendment, Yet One More Reason DOGE Is Such A Constitutional Nightmare [Techdirt]

This post is about two things: that it looks like DOGE has violated an injunction, at least in spirit if not letter, and why it matters.

The injunction in question arose in the hybrid case, which named both DOGE and agency officials at the Social Security Administration.  It began as a TRO issued on March 20, which then became a preliminary injunction on April 17. The district court also refused to stay its enforcement.

The injunction does several things, but most notably it keeps DOGE from accessing identifiable personal information held on Social Security Administration systems except if certain conditions are met. See, for example, this part which generally bars DOGE’s access:

[T]he United States Social Security Administration (“SSA”), Leland Dudek, and Michael Russo and/or his successor (collectively, “SSA Defendants”), and any and all of their agents and employees, and any person working in concert with them, directly or indirectly, are ENJOINED and RESTRAINED from granting access to any SSA system of record containing personally identifiable information (“PII”), as defined in paragraph 9 hereof, or PII obtained, derived, copied, or exposed from any SSA system of record, including, but not limited to, records known as the Enterprise Data Warehouse (“EDW”), Numident, Master Beneficiary Record (“MBR”), Supplemental Security Record (“SSR”), and Treasury Payment Files, to the Department of Government Efficiency (“DOGE”); the United States DOGE Service; the United States DOGE Service Temporary Organization; members of the DOGE Team established at the Social Security Administration, as defined in ¶ 11(a); Elon Musk; Amy Gleason; and/or any DOGE Affiliate(s), as defined in ¶ 11(b)[.]

Then this part describes conditions that must be met before any exception can be made:

3. SSA may provide members of the DOGE Team with access to discrete, particularized, and non-anonymized data, in accordance with the Privacy Act, and in accordance with the conditions set forth herein: SSA must first comply with the provisions in ¶ 2 of this Order and, in addition, SSA must first obtain from the DOGE Team member, in writing, and subject to possible review by the Court, a detailed explanation as to the need for the record and why, for said particular and discrete record, an anonymized or redacted record is not suitable for the specified use. The general and conclusory explanation that the information is needed to search for fraud or waste is not sufficient to establish need.

According to a declaration by Leland Dudek and certification by the government, the Social Security Administration and DOGE are complying with the injunction, although the SSA acknowledged what it described as two “inadvertent” violations during the pendency of the TRO.

While the Temporary Restraining Order was in effect, SSA had two occasions where systems access was inadvertently granted to systems containing PII. In one instance, controls were in place so the access permissions could not actually be used. In the other, the access was granted inadvertently and the agency confirmed that the systems were not actually accessed, and prompt action was taken to remove the access permissions.

But it is difficult to square this certification with news that DOGE has apparently altered the status of millions of people to make the living seem dead, or specifically move the 6000+ immigrants to the dead list. Furthermore, according to some reports, DOGE renamed the Death Master File to the “Ineligible Master File.”

It is of course theoretically possible that the status changes for the millions of people was done via a script, and DOGE never saw the individual records it changed. It is also possible that the deliberate placing of the 6000+ people was done at the direction of SSA leadership and not DOGE, to the extent that it is believable that such decisions could be taken independently of DOGE’s influence – we’ve seen this issue before, where the Trump Administration has tried to get his appointed toadies to “ratify” terrible things DOGE demanded to give them a veneer of legitimacy, even though they still are things they never could have lawfully done themselves under the APA or other operable laws.

But the injunction (and the TRO, which, although it might have varied slightly from the more recent injunction, does not seem to be significantly different in general substance) also restrained DOGE from altering any code, which, if they ran a script or converted a database name, these actions would seem to violate:

All DOGE Defendants, as well as all SSA DOGE Team members and DOGE Affiliates, are ENJOINED and RESTRAINED from accessing, altering, or disclosing any SSA computer or software code.

And as for whether they forced SSA staff to do these things themselves, it’s the forcing that is the issue. The court was very careful to make sure that SSA staff could still conduct business as normal – it’s partly why the injunction was deemed proper and staying of it not, because the agency was in no way harmed since it could still do its regular work – it was only the DOGE misadventures that were being delayed.

To avoid confusion or doubt, this Order expressly applies only to SSA employees working on the DOGE agenda. Employees of SSA who are not involved with the DOGE Team or otherwise involved in the work of the DOGE Team are not subject to the Order. Therefore, this Order has no bearing on the ordinary operations of SSA.

Only it turns out they don’t seem to have been delayed at all.

What the news is reporting happened here is very wrong, in multiple ways. Not only does it seemingly violate the injunction (and presumably also the TRO, which was likely in force when much of what happened happened – and although the TRO might differ in small detail from the later formal injunction, it seems to be largely the same in substance), but it is also wrong on its face to do what DOGE has apparently done and cause people to wrongfully, and without due process, be deprived benefits and more.

These sorts of concerns about harm to the public seem to have been on the court’s mind for quite some time. For instance, while this injunction was being litigated the government said that DOGE needed access to personally identifiable information to root out fraud. But to the court it sounded like what DOGE claimed it needed to do was an unconstitutional fishing expedition:

As I understand [it], the Fraud Detection Project appears to amount to an attempt to uncover fraud, without particular, specific grounds that suggest fraud. With the Privacy Act in mind, as addressed in ECF 49, it is unclear to me why there is any need to disclose PII before there is a basis to believe that fraud has occurred. Therefore, the Supplemental Declaration should also clarify the work of the Fraud Detection Project, to include whether there are known, identifiable instances of fraud for which particular PII is sought. And, if there are no such specific, identifiable instances of fraud, then Mr. Dudek should address the need for the disclosure of non-anonymized data before there is a factual basis to support a belief that fraud has occurred or is occurring.

Although this language does not specifically raise the issue of the Fourth Amendment, it echoes it. Per the Constitution people are to be secure in their private matters (“papers and effects”) unless there is probable cause, which would entitle the government to invade their privacy and conduct a search and seizure with sufficient particularity. And here the court appears to be saying, “Where is your probable cause that would entitle you to invade people’s privacy in the information on these systems? Where is the particularity?” The Fourth Amendment says that the government doesn’t get to rummage through people’s private records to look for a crime; it has to already have probable cause to believe there was one and then it can get a warrant allowing it to go find the proof. Whereas here DOGE was saying they had a “need” to conduct a warrantless search, and the court reminded them that no, they don’t.

But the concerns that the court stood up for in ordering its injunction is why all this Privacy Act litigation is so important. One way the Fourth Amendment stops being a barrier to the government getting access to people’s private affairs is if they consent to it. Here, the government has an awful lot of private data people have consented for it to have because it made sense to give that consent in that context. For instance, if people want social security benefits, it makes sense to consent for the Social Security Administration to have enough information about them to provide that benefit.

The point of the Privacy Act is to make that limited consent possible by providing the statutory barriers to make sure it is limited. People don’t consent that “the government” has access to their private information; they consent that the relevant agency has it for the limited purpose that they need it.  The rest of the government doesn’t get to say, “Hey, we don’t need a warrant because look! We already have all the data we need!” The Privacy Act essentially says the government only “has” the data insofar as the public has consented for it to have it for the limited purpose it was needed and makes it illegal for any agency to share it with other parts of the government, even though technically it could.

Here, DOGE (and also the corrupt leadership of the agency) is trying to shatter those statutory barriers preventing that sharing, and for exactly the reason that we have them: to cause harm to the public.  Which is what courts are noticing and why injunctions are being granted in other DOGE Privacy Act cases. Because, as we see with people wrongfully placed on the “dead” list, when the public’s private information is not shielded from unfettered government access, injustice is what follows.

In DOGE’s Hunt For Imaginary Censors, It Kills Actual Anti-Censorship Research [Techdirt]

The people most loudly (misleadingly) complaining about censorship just… helped enable actual censorship. Not metaphorical censorship, not “they won’t let me tweet slurs” censorship, but literal “we’re going to stop research into fighting actual government censorship” censorship.

It’s painfully stupid, but that’s just what we get with the folks running the government these days.

This all starts with a fundamental misunderstanding: the belief that any research into “disinformation” must itself be a censorship program. This is a bit like assuming that studying cancer is actually a plot to give people cancer, but this is the state of the crazy world we live in today. It ignores the rather obvious fact that disinformation and foreign influence campaigns do exist, and that studying them usually aims to counter them with more speech, not less.

But you will never get that through to the truly brain-wormed among the MAGA-Musk cinematic universe. Just recently, Elon announced that “several more censorship organizations will be released” after a Steve Bannon acolyte falsely posted to ExTwitter that USAID’s non-classified efforts to fund digital literacy efforts was about censorship (she claimed the programs were “declassified,” as she’s too ignorant to know that the “U” in the description means they were always unclassified).

Of course, digital literacy has nothing to do with “censorship” at all. It’s not about “getting news solely from legacy sources.” It simply is about teaching people how to understand what they’re reading (like knowing when something is unclassified already, rather than declassified) and understanding how to recognize when you’re being lied to.

Either way, in pursuit of dumbing down Americans and making them much more susceptible to foreign influence campaigns, last week the NSF got around to pulling a bunch of grants that were (often loosely) related to mis- and disinformation. NSF put out a statement claiming these cuts are about better aligning their efforts.

Awards that are not aligned with NSF’s priorities have been terminated, including but not limited to those on diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) and misinformation/disinformation.

While the targeting of DEI initiatives has received significant attention, the wholesale elimination of mis- and disinformation research represents an equally concerning development.

While apparently 430 such grants have been unceremoniously canceled, one academic forwarded me a spreadsheet listing out about 50 such canceled grants. I don’t want to release the whole thing, but while NSF’s email to academics claimed that each cut was carefully vetted, that’s obviously bullshit.

The most obvious example of how haphazard and stupid these cuts are is that they cut Associate Professor Eric Wustrow’s CAREER grant on “Combating Censorship from Within the Network.” You can kinda tell that some DOGE bro likely did a keyword search on “censorship” and probably just killed all such projects. But if anyone actually read even just the description of the project, they’d realize that this was about countering censorship through technology. You’d think that’s the sort of thing that the DOGE folks would support? Unless of course, they actually support censorship. (Also, canceling CAREER grants is utter bullshit, as they’re specifically designed to help out early career professors, who will be massively harmed by this).

Other canceled grants include one on “empowering fact checkers” because we can’t have that. There’s a canceled grant about “enhancing attribution, detection, and explanation” of foreign influence campaigns (you can see why MAGA might not like that one very much). Also a program on “using markets to address manipulated information online.” You’d think that the “more speech” crew would like that sorta thing, but apparently not.

The impact of these cuts will be profound: reducing America’s ability to counter actual censorship, understand foreign influence operations, and maintain technological leadership in these critical areas.

We will all be dumber because of this nonsense.

The whole thing is so stupid that even the Trump-appointed head of the NSF resigned just after these cuts were announced.

“I believe that I have done all I can to advance the mission of the agency and feel that it is time to pass the baton to new leadership,” writes Sethuraman Panchanathan, a computer scientist who was nominated to lead NSF by then-President Donald Trump in December 2019 and was confirmed by the Senate in August 2020. “I am deeply grateful to the presidents for the opportunity to serve our nation.”

Although Panchanathan, known as Panch, didn’t give a reason for his sudden departure, orders from the White House to accept a 55% cut to the agency’s $9 billion budget next year and fire half its 1700-person staff may have been the final straws in a series of directives Panchanathan felt he could no longer obey.

As Science notes, DOGE showed up in the NSF offices a few weeks ago and basically just started slashing stuff without much concern or understanding. And Panchanathan gives a little nod towards that nonsense in his resignation letter:

Panchanathan refers obliquely to that draconian reduction in his resignation letter. “While NSF has always been an efficient agency,” he writes, “we still took [on] the challenge of identifying other possible efficiencies and reducing our commitments to serve the scientific community even better.”

This is, like so much from this administration, needless destruction of important American infrastructure and knowledge base through ignorance, anger and stupidity. We will all be worse for it, but thank goodness, no one will ever have to face being… digitally literate in the Trump universe.

Daily Deal: The Ultimate Software Testing Bundle [Techdirt]

Get the skills you need to become a software tester with the Ultimate Software Testing Bundle. Software testing is performed to identify differences between given input and expected output and to verify that software products function according to pre-defined requirements. Courses cover the basics, Bugzilla, JIRA, testing techniques, Java TestNG, and more. It’s on sale for $60.

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

04:00 AM

Trump Admin, DOGE Are Turning Multiple Gov’t Components Into A Giant Racist Database [Techdirt]

What could possibly go wrong?

Operatives from Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are building a master database at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) that could track and surveil undocumented immigrants, two sources with direct knowledge tell WIRED.

DOGE is knitting together immigration databases from across DHS and uploading data from outside agencies including the Social Security Administration (SSA), as well as voting records, sources say. This, experts tell WIRED, could create a system that could later be searched to identify and surveil immigrants.

That’s the opening of Makena Kelly and Vittoria Elliott’s report for Wired. Even before you get to the part that indicates this is just a conglomeration of bigots concocting a massive database solely for the purpose of finding foreigners to deport, there’s the fact that this will become one of the most enticing targets for state-sponsored hackers and criminals ever created. Imagine having all of this data in one place and knowing those included in the database are already highly leveraged by their increasingly tenuous living situations. Being merely scammed would be the best possible outcome. Extortion might end up being far more common.

But let’s get back to the, shall we say, more practical aspects of this mass surveillance database. This sort of thing has never been done before for obvious reasons. One of the reasons is listed above. Another reason is that certain information serves certain specific purposes. Putting it all together just makes it more difficult to perform these specific functions. Converting data silos into one giant haystack isn’t necessarily efficient. It’s just something that ignores all the practical reasons data like this is siloed because this current administration is too hateful and stupid to understand the underlying problems or care about the collateral damage.

This is a surveillance state that aspires to be a police state, all while under the nominal “leadership” of a racist billionaire and the terrible person who has now become president twice, despite clearly being unable to do the job the first time around.

While this might look like a cool new way to find brown people, rest assured it will be used to find anyone the Trump administration and its components dislike, as EFF staff attorney Victoria Noble explains in the Wired article:

“When you put all of an agency’s data into a central repository that everyone within an agency or even other agencies can access, you end up dramatically increasing the risk that this information will be accessed by people who don’t need it and are using it for improper reasons or repressive goals, to weaponize the information, use it against people they dislike, dissidents, surveil immigrants or other groups.”

Normal people see bugs. The GOP only sees a list of features. Even when the inevitable data breach occurs, the administration will shrug it off because it mostly affects people it doesn’t consider to be actual people. At best, they’re 3/5ths human and 2/5ths future El Salvadoran prison inmates.

The nastiest part of this “data lake” DOGE is recklessly creating is this: it will be used to find and deport immigrants who are doing everything the government asks them to do to stay on the path to citizenship.

DOGE wants to upload information to the data lake from myUSCIS, the online portal where immigrants can file petitions, communicate with USCIS, view their application history, and respond to requests for evidence supporting their case, two DHS sources with direct knowledge tell WIRED. In combination with IP address information from immigrants that sources tell WIRED that DOGE also wants, this data could be used to aid in geolocating undocumented immigrants, experts say.

This is from an administration that (dishonestly) claims it doesn’t have a problem with migrants who reside in this country legally. These actions say otherwise. This is the administration leveraging data and good faith efforts by immigrants to eject them before they can complete the citizenship process. This is on top of the now-routine revoking of perfectly legal visas and unilateral proclamations that the immigration/visa/temporary residency rules no longer apply.

Attempting to comply just puts immigrants on the DHS radar. A database like this fills in the missing info to allow ICE and others to eject people who are here legally or are doing everything they can to stay here as legal residents. And once this administration feels comfortable doing so, the same pool of information will be used to target immigration lawyers, pro-migrant advocates, and anyone else that has managed to cross-pollinate in the data lake. It might even go after you, Joe Taxpayer and lifetime US citizen.

“As part of their fixation on this conspiracy theory that undocumented people are voting, they’re also pulling in tens of thousands, millions of US citizens who did nothing more than vote or file for Social Security benefits,” Cody Venzke, a senior policy counsel at the American Civil Liberties Union focused on privacy and surveillance, tells WIRED.

It’s stupid and dangerous, which is unsurprising. That’s Trump’s brand. As long as it gives the government enough brown people to go after, Trump and his enablers will shrug off the collateral damage suffered by actual US citizens, much in the way they’ve shrugged off the gutting of social services and setting fire to people’s retirement accounts. In exchange, we’re getting a Gestapo of our own and the opportunity to be on the wrong side of history for the foreseeable future.

03:00 AM

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

Go to the store, look at the five kinds of mustard on offer, and pick the one that’s best for you. This is not controversial.

Go to Amazon and search for wireless headphones. There are more than 400 types to choose from. Compare rankings and ratings and price and choose the ones that are best for you. Amazing, but not shocking.

Now, consider an architect designing an addition for the nearby school. She has specced the windows (there will be 200 of them). Autodesk could have the ability to poll every qualified window manufacturer and have them bid for that work, based on how busy they are, what they have in stock and how eager they are to grow their market share. And the building plans could change in response. Reputable companies and reputable architects could connect over better service, timing or pricing, creating a virtuous cycle.

Applying to college? Why not apply to all of them? Your AI bot takes all of your qualifications, recommendations and preferences and the colleges of the world have their AI optimizers consider all available options and put together the best available class, offering incentives and options to the potential students that are most likely to lead to a successful match.

And a job? What’s the point of applying to just a few when the software is already treating you like a cog in the machine as it reviews resumes? What if every job seeker was seen by every employer? The seeker’s AI agent could rank based on location, employee satisfaction, retention, workplace, pay, etc. And the employers could focus on skills and attitudes instead of false proxies like background.

One more: we know a lot about real estate agent performance. We can see how long their houses have been on the market and how likely they are to sell for above estimate. We can measure buyer and seller satisfaction. So, when it’s time to put a house on the market, why not have every broker make a bid instead of choosing the one who has a lot of signs around town?

More market information is not always a good thing. It can cause gaps, unfair access and dislocations. But more market information has been on an inevitable one-way road for generations, and it’s unlikely to go away.

And we should be prepared for asymmetrical competition–companies will hire MBAs and lawyers to create fine print, subscriptions and loopholes that are to their advantage when their AI agents start bidding on projects or hiring people. It’s rare to see this with a loaf of bread, but really common when we buy a cell phone or loan. Human beings are easy to trick. Hopefully, our AI agent will be at least as smart and careful as the company’s.

The thing about wasted slack is that we don’t notice it until we imagine that there’s a productive way for it to disappear.

      

The SDNY Shit Show [The Status Kuo]

Photo by Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Calamitous error… or devious sabotage?

That’s the question still hovering in the air after every lawyer’s worst nightmare took place yesterday in a high profile, high stakes case.

Picture this: You’re a lawyer in the SDNY office of the Department of Justice. Your office is known for its independence, and everyone is chafing lately under the improper and borderline illegal edicts from the Attorney General and her lackeys.

Your client is the Department of Transportation, headed by yet another idiotic Trump sycophant and former reality star turned politician, Sean Duffy. The Trump White House is looking for ways to block New York City’s successful congestion pricing program, apparently because 47 wants to pick a fight with every major blue state governor about something, and Trump has never quite gotten over what New York really thinks of him.

So you draft up a lengthy internal legal memo, explaining in very clear terms why you don’t think the Transportation Department has much of a leg to stand on. It’s thorough and devastating. Maybe you hope your client will accept that this is not a fight it will win and start to back down. In any event, you’ve covered your bases and your own ass.

Except… on Thursday, instead of uploading what the judge requested, somehow your internal memo gets uploaded to the public docket. Of all the documents that could have been mistakenly filed, this was the one that never should have outside eyes on it. It’s the most privileged of the privileged things—a thorough explanation of why your client is likely to lose.

Someone somewhere hit send, and now it’s front page of the Times.

Holy horror-show, Batman! All of Gotham now has your memo.

Subscribe now

Congestion question… now there’s tension

Like other battles Trump has picked, the question of over New York City’s so-called “congestion pricing” program pits the federal government on one side against a state governor and local transit authorities on the other.

To help relieve traffic, the Biden administration had greenlit a pilot program that proposed a surcharge on drivers heading into lower Manhattan. The program was on, then off, then on again for some time. It launched recently, and no one knew whether it would work. Merchants feared a drop in outside visitors. Uber and Lyft drivers feared the added costs.

But by most accounts, the program has worked beautifully, as summarized by New York Magazine: a drop in noise complaints, far fewer rush hour delays, quicker travel times, far fewer injuries, an uptick in mass transit use, and even more visitors coming into business improvement districts.

It’s a triumph that other cities likely will wish to replicate, especially since it has already brought in hundreds of millions in fees to fund public transit improvement. It’s also a win for local governance in partnership with the federal government, which owns the toll highways leading into the city.

The Trump White House, however, doesn’t see its partnership this way, nor does it like any of this idea. It threatened to completely undo the congestion pricing program just as it’s working so well. This is part policy disagreement but mostly ego on the part of Trump. The official White House account infamously tweeted that Trump would kill the program while proclaiming himself king:

"CONGESTION PRICING IS DEAD. Manhattan, and all of New York, is SAVED. LONG LIVE THE KING!"

–President Donald J. Trump

It even attached a doctored photo of him as a monarch on the cover of Time Magazine:

In response to this threat, Governor Kathy Hochul finally found her moment to shine. She has steadfastly refused to terminate the program despite multiple threats from the White House, earning her points with voters for standing up to Trump. The back and forth went something like what we’re seeing with Trump and President Xi Jinping of China:

The Metropolitan Transit Authority, which answers to Albany, also sued in federal court to stop the Transportation Department from pulling the plug. And that’s how the parties eventually found themselves in a very embarrassing and revealing situation.

“Exceedingly likely” to fail

The Department’s lawyers at the DOJ penned an 11-page internal memo explaining why the Department lacked strong legal arguments to support a termination of the pilot program and noting that going forward carried “considerable litigation risk.” They didn’t mince words when describing Secretary Duffy’s February 19, 2025 decision to terminate the program, saying at the outset of the letter that “the decision was contrary to law, pretextual, procedurally arbitrary and capricious, and violated due process.”

Oh, just that? Okay!

Instead, the lawyers suggested an alternative route to end the program: using the Office of Management Budget’s regulations governing the “termination of cooperative agreements” to end the partnership. The Department could do so, they advised, under the guise of “changed agency priorities,” rather than its guns-blazing claim that the program was somehow not authorized by law in the first place.

Even non-lawyers reading this can probably understand that this is akin to being handed an advance copy of the other team’s playbook. It also suggests that a shift in tactic by the Department to claim “changed agency priorities” would be a mere pretext for what it’s really trying to do.

Also, as noted by lawyer and activist Jess Coleman, there’s a big problem with Plan B, as highlighted by none other than the DOJ lawyers: The program agreement doesn’t actually have any termination provisions. This substantially undermines this line of attack.

And as The Gothamist pointed out, “the letter notes that argument isn’t airtight because the DOT did not give the MTA any money to launch congestion pricing.” That’s a pretty good argument that we will likely now see raised by the plaintiffs.

There are other real gems in the middle of this internal memo. Here’s my own favorite, highlighted also by Coleman, where the DOJ notes, “[I]t appears that other than the Secretary’s decision itself, there is no other material supporting or explaining the DOT’s change of position” and that “there is very little written justification for [the] agency’s action.”

You don’t say.

I hope you can appreciate why this kind of client communication and attorney work product is the last thing you ever want to fall into the hands of the opposing side. That is, unless you’re trying to undermine the case, which would of course never happen in a place as above-board as the SDNY.

The Adams family

In any sane legal office environment, such a gigantic administrative error would be understood as something unfortunate that sometimes happens. Lawyers and/or paralegals would be reprimanded, perhaps even fired if the damage was extensive and unfixable. But it would end there.

But this is the SDNY, where several lawyers with high integrity have refused to go along with orders asking them to violate ethical or professional codes and to undermine their superiors’ authority at all turns. As I wrote about in February, this came to a head during a “Thursday Afternoon Massacre” that rivaled the worst of the Justice Department sackings during the Nixon era. Here’s a quick refresher on that:

The Department had been planning to drop all charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who is facing federal corruption charges and possible new obstruction of justice charges. Lately, Adams has been working hard to curry favor with the Trump White House, and it looked like his efforts were about to pay off.

Enter [Danielle] Sassoon, who was in charge of the Adams case. When she learned of the plan to dismiss all charges against Adams, she offered her resignation in a polite but damning letter. In it, she laid out why she could no longer in good faith work for the Department, which had put political considerations above the rule of law.

Sassoon wasn’t the only lawyer to quit the Department yesterday. When it tried to hand the case to the Public Integrity Section in D.C., its top lawyers resigned, too, rather than dismiss the charges against Adams. Then more lawyers followed. By the end, six attorneys had quit, dealing a stunning blow to the administration.

But the Adams saga wasn’t over. Just this week, three more DOJ lawyers resigned after they were asked, in an Inquisition-esque manner, to admit to wrongdoing in connection with the case in order to get their jobs back. The prosecutors—Celia V. Cohen, Andrew Rohrbach and Derek Wikstrom—had been placed on administrative leave but chose to resign rather than come back under terms set by the deputy attorney general, Todd Blanche.

Specifically, according to an email they sent, Blanche had required “that we must express regret and admit some wrongdoing by the office in connection with the refusal to move to dismiss the case.” They responded, “We will not confess wrongdoing when there was none.”

That kind of direct defiance has the entire Justice Department murmuring, secretly picking sides, and definitely on edge. It sounds a lot like every other department in the government these days, from the Pentagon under Pete Hegseth, to Health and Human Services under RFK Jr., to our intelligence agencies under Tulsi Gabbard.

In short, over at the SDNY, just as in the rest of the government, everyone is watching their back, and few fully trust anyone. That’s probably why people’s heads exploded when the internal letter admitting the Department has a very weak case “somehow” leaked.

Was this their attempt to RESIST?

The Department of Transportation is the latest government arm awash in paranoia. Following the fiasco of the publicly published internal memo, Secretary Sean Duffy called for “consequences” for the lawyers involved. “As lawyers, it’s incompetence or it was on purpose,” Duffy said. “Should there be consequences? Absolutely. What should those consequences be? The attorney general makes that decision.”

A Department official also publicly suggested that the error may have been intentional. “Are SDNY lawyers on this case incompetent or was this their attempt to RESIST?” demanded DOT spokesperson Halee Dobbins in a statement. “At the very least, it’s legal malpractice. It’s sad to see a premier legal organization continue to fall into such disgrace.”

The SDNY fell on its sword over the blunder, but its public statements are at least a little curious. “Unfortunately, an attorney-client privileged document was erroneously filed on the public docket last night,” spokesperson Nicholas Biase said in a statement. “This was a completely honest error and was not intentional in any way. Upon realizing the error, we immediately took steps to have the document removed. We look forward to continuing to vigorously advocate in the best interest of our clients, the DOT and FHWA, in this matter.”

It’s rather odd that the SDNY has to emphasize that this was a “completely honest error” and “was not intentional in any way.” There’s only one reason to underscore this: Others seriously believe that the “mistake” was actually on purpose.

Surely no attorneys in the SDNY would risk their professional careers by publishing such a devastating letter. Certainly they’d never publish one that gives away the game in a way that could humiliate the Trump administration with yet another big federal court case loss. No one would ever actually do that, right?

It seems the higher-ups at the DOJ aren’t taking any chances. Three lawyers in the SDNY involved with the case were sidelined yesterday, and the case transferred to the D.C. Civil Division.

02:00 AM

12:00 AM

FTC, Hoping To Prop Up Admin Myth They Still Care About Consumer Protection, Sues Uber For Making It Hard To Cancel [Techdirt]

A few days ago I talked about how the Trump administration is desperate to present the illusion it still cares about consumer protection and “antitrust reform.” Via executive order, regulatory capture, DOGE cuts, and a rightward-lurching court system, Trump 2.0 really is taking an absolute hatchet to consumer protection, labor rights, corporate oversight, environmental law, and public safety.

It’s really not subtle. It’s also not very populist, or popular, so the Trumplings need to occasionally put on a good face to maintain the ruse they care about “antitrust reform” and consumer protection in what’s looking to be a new golden age of corruption.

Enter the FTC, where Trump just illegally fired the agency’s two Democrat commissioners. The FTC has been maintaining some of Lina Khan’s inquiries into California “big tech” companies. Not because they actually care about corporate power, but because they care about leverage. That leverage, so far, has quite successfully turned most Silicon Valley giants into obedient, authoritarian-coddling invertebrates.

The FTC this week also announced it had sued San Francisco based, Tesla-competitor Uber for deceptive billing practices, stating that the company charged consumers for its Uber One subscription service without their consent, failed to deliver promised savings, and made it difficult for users to cancel the service despite its “cancel anytime” promises. Said FTC boss Andrew Ferguson:

“The Trump-Vance FTC is fighting back on behalf of the American people.”

Indeed. That’s a bummer for Uber and Uber Technologies CEO Dara Khosrowshahi, who collectively donated $2 million for the Trump inauguration fund.

Trump has made it clear their regulatory targets will usually be highly selective, and usually chosen for cronyism purposes (like, say a company directly competing with the billionaire running your DOGE department). There’s no limit of dangerous misrepresentation and potential fraud you could target Elon Musk’s companies for, but that’s clearly not happening under Trump 2.0.

Meanwhile most Trump agencies, like the FCC, are openly making it clear they plan to utterly eviscerate consumer protection. All while Supreme Court rulings like Loper Bright make it so regulators can’t do much of anything without it being overturned down the road. These are actions that are going to make corporate malfeasance worse, not better.

At the same time, agencies like the FCC are hypocritically claiming to have authority they don’t have to do bizarre and legally incoherent things, like the harassment of companies for not being racist and sexist enough, accurately reporting on the Trump administration, or not going far enough to coddle right wing ideology or protect and nurture right wing online propaganda.

FTC boss Andrew Ferguson’s first act before joining the FTC was to announce he’d leverage the agency’s dwindling authority to do things like “fight back against the trans agenda,” and take aim at the tech industry’s “censorship” (read: refusing to coddle right wing ideology and propaganda).

A lot of gullible press outlets are going to see the cases against Meta, Uber, and Google and proclaim that Trump 2.0 is “perpetuating the antitrust legacy of Lina Khan.” But they’ll downplay the much larger reality that is the complete evisceration of most regulatory agencies and corporate oversight in a way that’s going to make all corporate misbehavior much, much worse.

There’s still a lot of normalization bias among people who don’t want to believe the reality of what’s happening. And a lot of major media outlets that are too afraid of losing money and access to accurately call a duck a duck.

When Trump 2.0 does take consumer-protection action, it’s going to be incredibly important to wait and see what the actual remedies for harm look like (if there are any). And whether any of these efforts survive the Trumplican court system being custom-repurposed to derail reform and corporate accountability of every kind, performative or otherwise.

For example the Trump-stocked Fifth and Sixth circuits have taken an absolute hatchet to efforts like net neutrality or location-data privacy enforcement. Any consumer protection efforts you do see are being taken knowning that they’re likely not going to survive the Trump-stocked court’s assault on regulatory oversight.

Which is to say I think most Trump 2.0 consumer protection efforts are still a sort of performance art, generally designed to trick the press and public into believing that the administration is populist, when on every level beneath that façade, it’s being built to coddle corporate power and a relatively tiny subset of white rich men.

Friday 2025-04-25

11:00 PM

Turning Your Writing Hobby into a Content Business [Lulu Blog]

Turning Your Writing Hobby into a Content Business

For nearly two decades, I’ve been writing in my spare time. Usually, it's the first thing I do in the morning.

I write essays and stories, and sometimes I just type out my thoughts. 

And yes, I get paid to write the content you’re reading right now. But I’m not talking about that. I’m talking about writing for writing’s sake. 

I’m a hobbyist writer, and I like that.

So, I want to be completely clear that I’m not saying everyone who enjoys writing (or any hobby) should always be looking for ways to turn that hobby into a business. That’s some weird hustle culture mentality that I do not support.

This post is for that subset of hobbyist writers who also would like to make money from their writing.


People Love Content

I’m not even going to bother finding sources to prove it. We love content. Blogs, posts, videos, podcasts; you name it, and we’ll consume it. 

If you create and share content, you do so because you care about others seeing and enjoying that content. Or learning something from it. The purpose is rarely to make money. 

But that doesn’t mean you can’t use the content you love to create to build a sustainable business for yourself. If that’s you, this guide is for you.

Before You Monetize Your Content

There are two important things you need to do before you can go down the path of monetizing your content:

  1. Understand the business side
  2. Define your content ‘tilt’
Turning Your Writing Hobby into a Content Business

Learning the Business Side  

I love to create content. Mostly written, but I’ve dabbled in some other forms. What I haven’t done is go through the work to monetize that writing. I’ve never dipped my toes into the business of writing (personally).

But to build your own content business, you do need to understand the business side of it. That means developing sound financial tracking, figuring out insurance, and having a firm grasp on how taxes will impact your revenue. 

But first, you need to create a business plan. This is an opportunity for you to think about your product (the book you’re writing), the market/audience you will sell your product to, and who you might be competing against. You’ll also look at resources—from financial to physical—that will be necessary to start and maintain your business.

You will have expenses, like hosting a website or using an ecommerce platform, that you’ll need to consider. It’s smart to begin by doing some research into the ins and outs of actually running a business before you start selling anything. Then you’ll need to develop a solid budget for your content business.

What is a Content Tilt?

The idea of a content ‘tilt’ comes from well-known entrepreneur Joe Pulizzi. He defines it as “...what makes you so different that your audience notices you and rewards you with its attention.” For example, you might be a nature photographer, and your tilt is that you capture funny moments (like the photos from the Comedy Wildlife site). Or you might be a blogger who writes about gardening, and your content tilt is that you write each post from the perspective of a different plant. 

Your tilt is what will set you apart. Think hard on this and do some research in your niche to figure out how you can turn your existing content into a product with a tilt.

Turning Your Writing Hobby into a Content Business

Your Free Lulu Account

Create a Lulu Account today to print and publish your book for readers all around the world

Create a Free Account

Turning Your Content into a Product

From here on out, we’re going to focus on using books as the product you’re creating from the written content you’ve already shared with the world. That’s my area of expertise, but most of this advice can apply to other kinds of content and products.

Additional Content Ideas

Books are one of the best ways to monetize your writing. That will be what I want to focus on. But first, here are four additional ways to make money from your book or the expertise and skills you’ve developed as a writer.

  1. Freelance Writing - Offer your writing skills for blogs, magazines, businesses, or websites. Freelancers are in high demand for drafting SEO-optimized articles, white papers, social media content, and email campaigns.
  2. Monetized Blog - Turn your expertise into a blog, then monetize that with ads, affiliate marketing, or sponsorships. 
  3. Online Courses or Workshops - Turn your writing skills into an online course for new writers or content creators. 
  4. Subscription Models - Create exclusive content for paying subscribers using a platform like Substack or Ghost. This option works best if you already have an audience following your content (like blog posts or email newsletters).  
Turning Your Writing Hobby into a Content Business

Create Your Book

Use Lulu's free templates to easily create and publish your book today.

Start Your Book

Back to Publishing Your Book

Okay, so first off, you’ve got to connect the content you’ve already got—like short stories or blogs or even novels—to a product that fits it. Defining that product comes in three parts:

  1. The Content You Have - Take an accounting of all that you’ve written. Are they fictional stories or essays on current events? Determine a few categories (like fiction, essays, and poetry) to sort your content. Then, look hard at each category to find topics or trends. This is the first step in defining the theme of your book (and your tilt).
  2. Define Your Niche and Audience - If you blog or share your content on social media, you probably already have a bit of a following. If you don’t, you need to start building an audience now. As you find followers, you should start to see trends here. This is your niche—the specific content you love to create that other people love to consume. That might be broad, like Romance, so look for ways to narrow it. Something like Historical Romance with Magic might be specific enough for you to understand what the audience you’re marketing to wants to read. 
  3. Apply Your Tilt - Finally, you need to find a way to make your books stand out. You should already be thinking about this as you work on finding themes in your content and building an audience. Now, apply that tilt to make your work truly unique. Maybe your Historical Romance with Magic books are different from others in that niche because your characters are all earthworms instead of people.

Putting Your Writing Together to Make a Manuscript

Obviously, if you’ve been writing a novel, you’re already working on a manuscript. If that’s you, the key thing is to finish writing the book. Then, it’s editing and design work while you put together a business and marketing plan. 

If you create other kinds of content, like blog posts, poetry, or short stories, you need to rely on those categories you created while sorting your content. In theory, each category could be a book. You’ll need to select one and further evaluate your content. 

Turning a blog into a book is the usual path for nonfiction writers and essayists. You’ll need to take your posts and align them with some connecting copy. This can be a good use case for AI assistance.

Take the blog posts you want to use for your book, have your preferred AI read them, and then ask it to create an outline for a book using those posts as a base. You’ll need to refine the prompt to your specific content, and you’ll probably want to dig into some of what you’re missing to get the best suggestions. 

But today’s AIs are good at these tasks. You won’t want to use AI to write any of the content, but it’s terrific at helping you figure out what’s missing and organize the work you still need to do.

Publishing Your Book

Once all that content is put together, you’ll need to design your book’s interior and cover files for printing. You’ll probably want to create an ebook and audiobook, too, so you can offer your readers your book in whatever form they prefer. 

With Lulu, we make it easy to publish and print books on demand. Using our Pricing Calculator and templates, you prepare your interior pages, publish your book, and then you can sell on the Lulu Bookstore, through your site with Lulu Direct, and on Amazon (and other retailers) through our distribution services. 

The publishing process might be the most daunting part of monetizing your content, but it’s not nearly as challenging as it once was. Clear templates, simple online platforms, and ample educational content have made the process faster and simpler than ever before. 

Marketing Your (New) Content Business  

The last step is marketing. And if anything, it’s the hardest and most important. It’s hard because you need to put in a lot of work to build an audience. That means spending time on social media, attending events, setting up and sending regular emails, and looking for other writers and creators to partner with.

If you’re just starting out and you don’t have a big audience, you need to build one. That means getting involved in online communities, posting content on social media, and generally spreading the word about your work. 

Remember that promoting yourself (and your book) is tough at first, but as you build an audience, you’ll build momentum for the next book. 

Getting Your Content Business Started

Okay, there’s a lot that goes into turning your passion into your business. And I acknowledge that it’s not for everyone. But if you’re ready to take what you write and turn it into something you sell, this outline is a solid guide to get you started.

Before you go, I’ve got three tips to help make starting your content business feel a little less overwhelming.

  1. Build an audience by finding space online where people who would likely want to read your book gather. These are avid readers (and probably some writers) whom you’ll promote your book to once it’s time to launch.
  2. Join relevant communities (online and in person) to connect with peers—fellow writers are working to monetize their content just like you. Engage with readers and peers to discover new opportunities (like swapping content or beta readers). 
  3. Create a schedule for publishing on social media and sending out emails. Remember, in the beginning, consistency can be more important than quality. You can't improve on something that doesn't exist. So start sharing content with whatever audience you have and taking note of what works (and what doesn’t).

There’s no way to touch on everything that goes into turning your writing hobby into a full-fledged content business, but this guide is a starting point to help you feel less overwhelmed. Now is the time to start planning and budgeting so your writing business is a huge success!

Kanji of the Day: 解 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

小5

unravel, notes, key, explanation, understanding, untie, undo, solve, answer, cancel, absolve, explain, minute

カイ ゲ

と.く と.かす と.ける ほど.く ほど.ける わか.る さと.る

理解   (りかい)   —   understanding
解除   (かいじょ)   —   termination (of a contract)
解決   (かいけつ)   —   settlement
解説   (かいせつ)   —   explanation
解散   (かいさん)   —   breaking up (a meeting, gathering, etc.)
解消   (かいしょう)   —   cancellation
解明   (かいめい)   —   elucidation
解雇   (かいこ)   —   dismissal (of an employee)
誤解   (ごかい)   —   misunderstanding
和解   (わかい)   —   reconciliation

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 駐 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

stop-over, reside in, resident

チュウ

駐車場   (ちゅうしゃじょう)   —   parking lot
駐留   (ちゅうりゅう)   —   stationing (e.g., of troops)
駐在   (ちゅうざい)   —   residence
駐車   (ちゅうしゃ)   —   parking (a vehicle)
常駐   (じょうちゅう)   —   permanent stationing
駐屯地   (ちゅうとんち)   —   garrison
駐日   (ちゅうにち)   —   resident in Japan
駐日大使   (ちゅうにちたいし)   —   ambassador to Japan
駐輪場   (ちゅうりんじょう)   —   parking area for bicycles
駐在員   (ちゅうざいいん)   —   resident employee

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

04:00 PM

Pirate CDNs Fueling 1,400 Russian Sites “Use EU & US CDN Infrastructure” [TorrentFreak]

f6-sBack in 2019, Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN, alongside the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment and Hollywood’s MPA, had reason to celebrate following a successful enforcement operation.

Their target was a CDN (Content Delivery Network) known as Moonwalk, which offered vast quantities of movies and TV shows for pirate site operators to embed in their own sites.

Services like these aren’t necessarily the cheapest option, but if time is money, having a one-stop-shop video supplier take care of pretty much everything, ads included, could certainly lighten the load for those short on time.

Moonwalk allegedly supplied content to 80% of known Russian streaming portals before it was shut down. A knock-on effect quickly claimed the scalps of other big players including HDGO and Kodik, at least for a while.

Pirate CDNs Play an Important Role Worldwide

Most visitors to popular pirate streaming sites will have watched embedded movies or TV shows that are hosted somewhere else entirely. This can be obvious when the viewer is presented with a choice of hosts, but that’s not always the case. Most streaming sites simply act as shop windows, which certainly helps with mobility when it’s time to rebrand while circumventing another round of blocking.

A new report from Russian cybersecurity firm F6 (previously Group-IB) provides an overview of the local pirate CDN market and presents some interesting findings.

One Player Dominates the Market

F6 analysts say they investigated 1,400 pirate sites to determine which CDNs are most popular in Russia. At the top of the list by some distance is the Alloha network. F6 estimates that 61% of local illegal streaming sites rely on Alloha for video content.

alloha.tv applicationIn our tests Alloha wasn’t readily findable in Google’s search results, despite being absent from the company’s takedown transparency report. Only when queries contained the platform’s full URL did it surface as expected; searches using Yandex, meanwhile, were much more straightforward.

Access to Alloha is granted on application, and subject to various terms and conditions.

The service states that applicants must operate their own site and must’ve had a minimum of 300 visitors per day during the previous week.

That appears to rule out brand-new sites seeking content to grow from an absolute standing start, but finding 300 visitors shouldn’t be too difficult.

Operating from an Indian domain, the Rewall service takes second place in the F6 list with 42%. In third place is Lumex with 11%, followed by the resurrected Kodik (9%), and HDVB with a modest 7% share. Since the total is over 100%, some pirates seem to be edging their bets with two or three suppliers, just in case.

Databases, Customers, Ads, Hosting

The authors of the report claim that these services usually offer massive libraries of pirated content. One unnamed service reportedly has more than 550,000 items of video listed in its database.

Overall, F6 notes that these services allow pirates to more effectively grow their sites. Advertising delivered along with video streams through the embedded player reportedly accounts for 36% of all advertising on pirate streaming sites.

Alloha player implemented on two different sitesalloha-players

That leaves the claim that around 1,400 streaming sites rely on these types of services for content. That sounds entirely plausible.

Finding sites behind Cloudflare can be a challenge, but at least one of these platforms prefers not to use it, which helped us to quickly identify around 600 domains linked to the service. How many are unique is another question, but the end result probably wouldn’t undermine the headline figure.

The West Should Take Piracy More Seriously, Apparently

Finally, it seems somewhat ironic that the West describes piracy in Russia as a very serious problem, yet in Russia, criticism in this case appears to run in the opposite direction. The mobility of indexing sites means that blocking in Russia descends into a game of cat and mouse, but the CDNs themselves are also considered problematic.

Instead of the CDNs being hosted in Russia, F6 notes that overseas hosting is preferred. The Netherlands, United States, Ukraine, Germany, and France are highlighted as the locations of choice, all of them more difficult for Russian authorities to block than servers hosted on home soil.

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

03:00 PM

Nintendo Once Again Seeking To Unmask Discord User For Leaking Content [Techdirt]

Leaks can be both embarrassing and aggravating for any content producer, though we often see the most anger over this sort of thing coming from large corporate interests. The video game space is lousy with examples of this, but there is perhaps no more notoriously draconian respondent to leaks than Nintendo. The company has unsurprisingly suffered its share of leaked content and its response generally ranges from attempting to DMCA the leaks into oblivion — which never actually works — to unmasking and then bringing down the heaviest legal hammer it can wield upon the leaker. Lost in the sauce in all of this appears to be just how much this keeps those leaks Nintendo wanted to bury in the news, working at a complete cross-purpose to what the company’s stated aims are.

It gets all the more silly when there are months and months in between the initial leak and this sort of legal action. Game Freak announced back in October of last year that it had suffered a breach and that content ranging from internal employee information to unreleased information about past and future Pokémon games had been exfiltrated. Shortly after the announcement, some of the leaked information began appearing on social media sites, including on Discord. There a user going by GameFreakOUT posted a bunch of the leaked content to a Discord Server called FreakLeak.

Again, that was all in October of last year. In April of this year, six months later, Nintendo has petitioned the court to unmask GameFreakOUT.

Nintendo is asking a California court to force Discord to give up the identity of the person behind last year’s massive Pokémon data breach, known among the Pokémon community as the “Teraleak.” It’s called the Teraleak because of just how much information was released online; the leaker claimed to have source code for the upcoming game Pokémon Legends: Z-A (though they did not release it), as well as next-generation Pokémon titles, builds of older games, and loads of concept art and lore documents.

The purpose of the subpoena is “to obtain the identity of the Discord user ‘GameFreakOUT,’ who posted infringing content,” wrote James D. Berkley, an attorney for Nintendo. Alongside the declaration, Nintendo included a partially redacted screenshot of the Discord server, in which the user GameFreakOUT posted a file and told users to “enjoy.”

Can Nintendo do this? Maybe. We’ve made this point before, but the unmasking of anonymous speakers on the internet ought to carry with it a very high bar over which petitioners should have to jump. Unmasking anonymous speech should be done to prevent future or current injury, not merely to punish accused bad actors. That said, that determination will be up to the court to decide.

But the broader point is why Nintendo is doing this now six months after the leak. All this serves to do for the time being is to keep the leak, and the information in the leak, in the news six months after the leak occurred. Nintendo may want to go the punitive litigation route as a deterrence, I suppose, but exactly how productive would that be? Is it really going to stop the next leak from happening? And if the answer to that is “no”, then what the hell is the point?

The answer is probably not that deep. Nintendo is a company with a litigious culture on matters of intellectual property. It may simply be that the questions above were never even asked of itself.

10:00 AM

Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Red Pills & Blue Checks [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:

This episode is brought to you with financial support from the Future of Online Trust & Safety Fund.

07:00 AM

Federal Prosecutor Fires Off Letter To Medical Journals Asking About Their Policies On ‘Competing Viewpoints’ [Techdirt]

Another day, another new bit of ugliness from the Trump Administration. What was first reported by MedPage Today appears to be the initial wave of attacks on medical journals for preferring scientific rigor to splashing around in the swampier parts of the marketplace of ideas.

A federal prosecutor sent a letter to a medical journal editor, probing whether the publication is “partisan” when it comes to “various scientific debates.”

Edward R. Martin Jr., U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, sent a list of questions to CHEST Editor-in-Chief Peter Mazzone, MD, MPH, of the Cleveland Clinic, asking how the journal handles “misinformation” and “competing viewpoints,” among other things.

MedPage Today has learned that at least two other journals have received similar letters.

The language is coded, but definitely not clever. Composed by a DOJ prosecutor perhaps best known for his hundred-plus appearances on Russian state-owned media outlets, the letter [PDF] is full of phrases that make it clear at least one federal prosecutor is interested in deterring scientific rebuttals to the parade of horrors that will be emanating from RFK Jr.’s Dept. of Health and Humans Services over the next few years.

Martin’s letter claims “more and more” scientific journals and publications are “conceding they are partisans in various scientific debates.” He alludes to possible federal crimes being committed by these journals if they are “advocating due to advertisement” (which Martin links to the postal code) or sponsorship (which Martin pretends might have something to do with federal fraud laws). In order to find targets for his prosecutorial attention, Martin asks every journal receiving this letter to respond to the following questions:

How do you assess your responsibilities to protect the public from misinformation?
How do you clearly articulate to the public when you have certain viewpoints that are influenced by your ongoing relationships with supporters, funders, advertisers, and others?
Do you accept articles or essays from competing viewpoints?
How do you assess the role played by government officials and funding organizations like the National Insitutes of Health in the development of submitted articles?
How do you handle allegations that authors of your work in your journals may have misled their readers?

I am also interested to now if publishers, journals, and organizations with which you work are adjusting their method of acceptance of competing viewpoints. Are there new norms being developed or authored?

These are pretty weird questions to be asking scientific journal publishers. These are exceptionally weird questions for a federal prosecutor to be asking scientific journal publishers. While there are certainly valid concerns about AI involvement in crafting scientific reports, along with some pay-to-play operations that undermine the scientific community in general, it’s generally accepted that these publishers usually publish work that has been subjected to peer review and scientific method best practices.

What this letter sounds like is a very vague threat that prosecutors will start hassling journals that refuse to publish unscientific garbage that appears to support the multiple conspiracy theories pushed by Trump, RFK Jr., and far too many of their supporters. It also suggests that if journals don’t cozy up to the Trump quacks, whatever NIH funding that still somehow exists post-DOGE will vanish completely. It would be worrying enough if this letter had been issued by the HHS. That it came from a federal prosecutor is legitimately horrifying.

Once again, the party of free speech and alleged participant in the marketplace of ideas is showing that it only thinks speech it agrees with should be “free” and that the marketplace of ideas should only offer up ideas it likes. At the very least, this letter has the chance to push some journals into self-censorship, limiting dissemination of studies and essays publishers know don’t align with the Trump Administration’s deep disdain for established scientific principles. And once that end of the idea marketplace begins to dry up, the administration will do all it can to fill the void in the market with bad science, bad ideas, and children’s corpses.

05:00 AM

Daily Deal: The Raspberry Pi And Arduino Bootcamp Bundle [Techdirt]

The Raspberry Pi and Arduino Bootcamp Bundle has 5 courses to help you dive into the world of hands-on programming. Courses cover Arduino, Raspberry Pi, and ROS2. It’s on sale for $30.

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

Elon Musk Pretends He’s Leaving The Job He Supposedly Doesn’t Have To Not Return To The Job He Supposedly Never Left [Techdirt]

There are a few ways to think about Elon Musk’s announcement this week that he’s stepping back from DOGE. The first is that he’s leaving a job he officially doesn’t have. The second is that he’s returning to a job (Tesla CEO) that he’s supposedly been doing this whole time. The third, and perhaps most interesting, is that none of this actually makes any sense at all.

The announcement came during Tesla’s latest earnings call (which was, to put it gently, not great). With Tesla’s sales and profits plummeting while Musk has been busy redesigning (read: destroying) the entire US government, you might think focusing more on Tesla would be logical. But that assumes any of this is actually about logic.

Like so many Musk pronouncements, this one’s mostly vaporware. Not only had this “stepping back” been reported weeks ago (though never confirmed), but if you look closely at what he actually said, he’s not really leaving DOGE at all, even as news headlines claimed otherwise. He just claimed he would spend less time on DOGE, giving a bit more time to his many other companies.

He said he’ll continue to spend a “day or two per week” on government issues “for as long as the president would like me to do so.”

But, of course, according to official filings from the US government, Elon Musk isn’t even a part of DOGE, an obvious lie that basically no one (other than the DOJ in sworn statements to a court) pretends are true.

Technically, Musk is a “special government employee” who supposedly can only advise the President, though in practice, we know that’s also not true. He’s basically running big parts of the government. And despite having no constitutionally-required appointment for such authority, he appears to be deciding what things can be cut, and shutting down entire agencies. While some have speculated the supposed “May” step down is because those SGE jobs are only supposed to last 130 days, apparently the government can issue waivers to allow those SGEs to stay on significantly longer.

And, really, Musk has violated a ton of other rules that apply to SGEs, including those around conflicts of interest, impartiality, and a ban on “partisan political activities.” Given how much Musk has done that involves a conflict of interest, and his ongoing partisan political activities, it seems that he doesn’t much care to follow the rules. So, the idea that anyone in this government cares about the supposed 130 day limit is laughable.

A closer reading of Musk’s actual words shows he’s not really going anywhere. He’s just promising not to spend all his time in DC anymore. And even that comes with a rather significant caveat:

“I’ll have to continue doing it for, I think, probably the remainder of the president’s term, just to make sure that the waste and fraud that we stop does not come roaring back, which will do if it has the chance,” Musk said

Let’s talk about those savings Musk is so worried about protecting. There are basically three stories here, each more puzzling than the last.

First, there’s the story of the incredible shrinking savings target. Musk started by promising to cut $2 trillion from the federal budget right before the election. Post-election, perhaps realizing people might actually try to hold him to that number, it suddenly became $1 trillion. A few weeks ago, he lowered expectations again to $150 billion.

If you’re playing at home, the difference between $2 trillion and $150 billion is… just about $2 trillion.

The second story is about what’s actually being cut. Even the $150 billion is nonsense — not only has DOGE failed to demonstrate any actual waste or fraud (certainly no one’s been charged with fraud), but the programs they’re recklessly cutting are likely to cost taxpayers way more than they save.

And the third story? That’s about how DOGE counts its supposed savings. As the NY Times detailed, those numbers look to be pretty much fictional:

One of the group’s largest claims, in fact, involves canceling a contract that did not exist. Although the government says it had merely asked for proposals in that case, and had not settled on a vendor or a price, Mr. Musk’s group ignored that uncertainty and assigned itself a large and very specific amount of credit for canceling it.

It said it had saved exactly $318,310,328.30.

Even as the media keeps fact-checking these claims, DOGE just quietly makes random changes to its website, hoping no one notices. The NY Times caught them deleting entries that triple-counted the same savings, confused “billion” with “million”, and even claimed credit for canceling contracts that ended during the George W. Bush administration.

But the errors keep coming. Their second-biggest claimed savings? A supposedly canceled IRS contract worth $1.9 billion that was actually canceled under Biden. Their third-biggest? A $1.75 billion savings from canceling a vaccine nonprofit grant that had already been paid in full.

This might all be amusing if it weren’t so stupid and causing so much damage. Even as Musk was publicly walking back expectations to $150 billion in savings, DOGE’s own website was still claiming $160 billion. And then there’s the matter of Musk’s Twitter activity, where he seems to have discovered an entirely new category of fictional math, in which he will regularly and repeatedly retweet claims that disagree with his own admission that DOGE will only save $150 billion.

The latest example? Musk enthusiastically amplifying claims about massive Social Security fraud. Here he is, just yesterday, retweeting someone claiming $12.6 billion in monthly savings from supposedly removing “7 million scammers” from the system:

There are several problems here. The first, as Wired detailed, is that not a single part of this claim is true. The Social Security Administration has long had systems to prevent payments to deceased beneficiaries, including (but certainly not limited to) their automated processes to stop anyone over 115 from receiving any payments at all. Which means, rather awkwardly for Musk’s claims, none of these supposedly fraudulent recipients were actually receiving any money to begin with, and even if they were cut from the system, the savings would be $0.

Actually, it would be worse than that, because the SSA had already considered this exact issue. A report shows they deliberately chose not to update death records for these super-elderly non-recipients, because doing so would cost far more than any theoretical fraud it might prevent. The few actual cases of payments to deceased beneficiaries are handled through other means.

More than anyone else in the world, Musk is in a position to find out what’s really happening, but he’s been repeating the false claims about Social Security for months now. And, hell, for a supposed genius, even he should be able to do the basic math and realize that if his SS savings alone were $12.6 billion a month, that alone would basically equal the claimed $150 billion in annual savings.

Even worse, right around the time that Musk was telling the world to maybe expect $150 billion in savings, he retweeted some rando’s account claiming DOGE had already saved nearly twice that:

That retweet claiming $291.6 billion in savings came… three days before Musk announced at a cabinet meeting that savings for the entire fiscal year might reach $150 billion. In a normal world, you might expect his supporters (or the media?) to notice this rather stark contradiction. But this isn’t a normal world. Both numbers are somehow treated as equally valid, equally true, equally worth celebrating.

There’s a pattern here that goes beyond just bad math. Musk leads DOGE while government lawyers swear under oath that he doesn’t. He’s supposedly running Tesla while spending his time dismantling the federal government. He claims massive savings that don’t actually exist. He retweets numbers that directly contradict the numbers he personally announced just days earlier.

The whole thing feels like it should collapse under the weight of its own contradictions. But it doesn’t, because it was never meant to make sense. It’s basically all kayfabe — that peculiar form of theatrical fakery where the audience chooses to believe despite knowing better.

The difference is that unlike wrestling, where the fakery is harmless entertainment, this performance is actively destroying what had been the most amazing democracy and economy on the planet. And that’s a lot less fun to watch.

04:00 AM

ICE Is Also Relying On A Defunct Gang Database To Send Migrants To Foreign Concentration Camps [Techdirt]

Gang databases are just handy racism. They’re a way for cops to harass, arrest, or otherwise make minorities’ lives more miserable. Very little in the way of logic or evidence is required to allow officers to add people to these databases. That’s why victims of gang violence and the occasional infant have been labelled “gang members” by deliberately broken processes and systems.

So, it’s no surprise the same faulty logic and “any minority existing in public” attitude is being applied to the mass, forcible exodus of minorities from this country. Invoking the Alien Enemies Act made it clear this was about exiling foreigners, rather than protecting this nation from foreign enemies, because the last time it was used, the US government sent thousands of legal US residents to internment camps.

This time, we’re sending residents and undocumented immigrants to foreign prisons. El Salvador is our new best friend, willing to (inhumanely) house whoever we eject, whether it’s hardened criminals with violent histories or just people who happen to have been born in another country. Trump’s latest hallucination is that the Venezuelan government has sent thousands of Tren de Aragua (TdA) gang members to the US for the sole purpose of harming America and Americans in, I guess, a warlike fashion.

The mass ejection is so big it can no longer be handled by the DHS and its components. Since his re-arrival in DC, agencies from the FBI to the IRS to private prison companies have been deputized to assist in multiple unlawful acts that make the US look more like WWII Germany than the alleged 2025 Leader of the Free World.

Private prison companies and the disgraced ex-cops they’re all too willing to hire have helped send possibly innocent people to El Salvador, where they’ll be stacked like cordwood right next to vicious killers with lifelong MS-13 affiliations.

It takes a fucking village to burn this nation down. The all-hands-on-deck approach to cruelty also involves gang databases so toxic, even the cops who created them aren’t allowed to use them anymore. Kilmar Abrego Garcia — a person this administration first admitted was wrongly deported but now claims is actually a violent criminal — was the victim of this gang database, one once relied on by multiple law enforcement agencies.

Here’s the latest on this despicable twist from the Washington Post.

The path to Kilmar Abrego García’s deportation to a notorious megaprison in El Salvador began six years ago, when a suburban Maryland police detective typed a critical allegation into a Gang Interview Field Sheet.

“An active member of MS-13 with the Westerns clique,” wrote the detective in 2019, after detaining Abrego García at a Home Depot in Prince George’s County while he stood in the parking lot looking for construction work.His evidence: an unnamed confidential informant and Abrego García’s Chicago Bulls cap, which the officer wrote in his report was “indicative of the Hispanic gang culture.”

In other words, any “Hispanic” with a sports team’s hat on is probably in a gang. And any Black person as well, for that matter.

More unbelievably, the “this guy is gang member” narrative composed by the so-called “investigator” also made these claims in support of his MS-13 fantasies:

Abrego García, Mendez wrote, had been identified by an unnamed confidential informant as an “active member” of MS-13’s Western clique in Upstate New York — a place he has never lived. Mendez cited Abrego García’s clothes as further proof, including a hooded sweatshirt that featured green bands covering the eyes, ears and mouth of Benjamin Franklin’s face as printed on the $100 bill. His wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, would later say she bought him the sweatshirt — for sale on FashionNova — because she liked the design.

In other words, only whites are allowed to support sports teams in public. And only white people are allowed to reference fiat currency via outwear. Everyone else is a gang member. That’s not hyperbole. That’s the only honest conclusion that can be drawn from the gang database run by Prince George’s County PD’s “gang unit.”

The gang unit in Prince George’s County, whose residents are majority Black and Latino, stopped using the Gang Field Interview Sheet as a source of intelligence gathering about three years ago, amid a civil lawsuit that alleged young men of color were disproportionately represented in it.

The justifications for “nominating” gang members were so weak and the targeting so prevalent, federal officials in the area decommissioned this database voluntarily during this litigation. One reason for doing so? Hardly anyone was added to the database once courts and plaintiffs started asking questions about the processes used to determine who was or wasn’t a suspected gang member.

In this particular case, a dirty cop dirtied the database with his foregone conclusions about “Hispanics” and their possibly un-gang-related support of the Chicago Bulls. Ivan Mendez — since suspended from the Prince George’s County PD for tipping off a sex worker about an investigation into the brothel she allegedly ran — was one of several members of the PD’s gang unit, a number of which were criminally indicted for charges ranging from gross misconduct to conspiracy to commit criminal acts.

This questionable database, run by and contributed to by even more questionable law enforcement officers, is Donald Trump’s sole basis for the baseless “gang member” accusations he’s been hurling at Abrego Garcia ever since this whole thing blew up in federal court.

To date, the only evidence federal authorities have produced in court to support such allegations is the Maryland police detective’s 2019 gang sheet.

Well, that and a photo of someone’s hand that someone else has Photoshopped to pretend four different images on four fingers adds up to MS-13.

The administration has an obviously faulty report and a hazy image that isn’t the Zapruder freeze frame it seems to think it is. Instead, it’s carrying about the odious byproduct of gang unit officers so inherently untrustworthy, neither they nor their database are still in operation today.

Ladies and gentlemen, the President’s star witnesses!

From 2004 to 2009, the department was placed under federal oversight after the agency was investigated for canine unit brutality and shooting more people than any other police department in the country. A group of Black and Latino officers sued the department in 2018, alleging police leaders discriminated against officers of color and enabled racist behaviors that harmed residents.

Last year, the department was sued again over the gang unit and its use of the GangNET database after community members repeatedly complained that officers were racially profiling young Latino men and incorrectly labeling them as gang members.

On one hand, you want to be shocked that federal officers would use a defunct database and disgraced officers to justify extrajudicial ejections of people from this country. On the other hand, you can see who’s running the country and understand it doesn’t really matter to them whether or not they even possess the shittiest, weakest “evidence” to support deportations. They’re just going to keep doing it because they can.

02:00 AM

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

Not a lack of power, but feeling as though we have none. Some people have been indoctrinated to prefer a life with no agency, as it also brings no responsibility. At the other extreme, some folks have decided that they have more power than they actually do.

Video games offer people a chance to experience virtual power–an opportunity to feel a lack of powerlessness. Click the mouse, something happens–power is in your grasp. By giving players agency, the games allow users to feel something they might be avoiding in real life.

Everyone is on a spectrum. No one has absolute power, and no one is powerless. But our expectation and experience of power is always a choice.

Choosing the attitude of powerlessness is self-defeating as well as self-negating. The fact that the attitude can be chosen is in itself a form of power. We can find control over our attitude and our actions, gaining priceless power as we do.

No one can change everything, but everyone can change something. If you choose to live a life with impact, it’s in your control to do so.

      

Pluralistic: Every complex ecosystem has parasites (24 Apr 2025) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



A rainforest in Chiapas, green and intergrown.

Every complex ecosystem has parasites (permalink)

Patrick "patio11" McKenzie is a fantastic explainer, the kind of person who breaks topics down in ways that stay with you, and creep into your understanding of other subjects, too. Take his 2022 essay, "The optimal amount of fraud is non-zero":

https://www.bitsaboutmoney.com/archive/optimal-amount-of-fraud/

It's a very well-argued piece, and here's the nut of it:

The marginal return of permitting fraud against you is plausibly greater than zero, and therefore, you should welcome greater than zero fraud.

In other words, if you allow some fraud, you will also allow through a lot of non-fraudulent business that would otherwise trip your fraud meter. Or, put it another way, the only way to prevent all fraud is to chase away a large proportion of your customers, whose transactions are in some way abnormal or unexpected.

Another great explainer is Bruce Schneier, the security expert. In the wake of 9/11, lots of pundits (and senior government officials) ran around saying, "No price is too high to prevent another terrorist attack on our aviation system." Schneier had a foolproof way of shutting these fools up: "Fine, just ground all civilian aircraft, forever." Turns out, there is a price that's too high to pay for preventing air-terrorism.

Latent in these two statements is the idea that the most secure systems are simple, and while simplicity is a fine goal to strive for, we should always keep in mind the maxim attributed to Einstein, "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." That is to say, some things are just complicated.

20 years ago, my friend Kathryn Myronuk and I were talking about the spam wars, which were raging at the time. The spam wars were caused by the complexity of email: as a protocol (rather than a product), email is heterogenuous. There are lots of different kinds of email servers and clients, and many different ways of creating and rendering an email. All this flexibility makes email really popular, and it also means that users have a wide variety of use-cases for it. As a result, identifying spam is really hard. There's no reliable automated way of telling whether an email is spam or not – you can't just block a given server, or anyone using a kind of server software, or email client. You can't choose words or phrases to block and only block spam.

Many solutions were proposed to this at the height of the spam wars, and they all sucked, because they all assumed that the way the proposer used email was somehow typical, thus we could safely build a system to block things that were very different from this "typical" use and not catch too many dolphins in our tuna nets:

https://craphound.com/spamsolutions.txt

So Kathryn and I were talking about this, and she said, "Yeah, all complex ecosystems have parasites." I was thunderstruck. The phrase entered my head and never left. I even gave a major speech with that title later that year, at the O'Reilly Emerging Technology Conference:

https://craphound.com/complexecosystems.txt

Truly, a certain degree of undesirable activity is the inevitable price you pay once you make something general purpose, generative, and open. Open systems – like the web, or email – succeed because they are so adaptable, which means that all kinds of different people with different needs find ways to make use of them. The undesirable activity in open systems is, well, undesirable, and it's valid and useful to try to minimize it. But minimization isn't the same as elimination. "The optimal amount of fraud is non-zero," because "everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." Complexity is generative, but "all complex ecosystems have parasites."

America is a complex system. It has, for example, a Social Security apparatus that has to serve more than 65 million people. By definition, a cohort of 65 million people will experience 65 one-in-a-million outliers every day. Social Security has to accommodate 65 million variations on the (surprisingly complicated) concept of a "street address":

https://gist.github.com/almereyda/85fa289bfc668777fe3619298bbf0886

It will have to cope with 65 million variations on the absolutely, maddeningly complicated idea of a "name":

https://www.kalzumeus.com/2010/06/17/falsehoods-programmers-believe-about-names/

In cybernetics, we say that a means of regulating a system must be capable of representing as many states as the system itself – that is, if you're building a control box for a thing with five functions, the box needs at least five different settings:

http://pespmc1.vub.ac.be/REQVAR.html

So when we're talking about managing something as complicated as Social Security, we need to build a Social Security Administration that is just as complicated. Anything that complicated is gonna have parasites – once you make something capable of managing the glorious higgeldy piggeldy that is the human experience of names, dates of birth, and addresses, you will necessarily create exploitable failure modes that bad actors can use to steal Social Security. You can build good fraud detection systems (as the SSA has), and you can investigate fraud (as the SSA does), and you can keep this to a manageable number – in the case of the SSA, that number is well below one percent:

https://www.congress.gov/crs_external_products/IF/PDF/IF12948/IF12948.2.pdf

But if you want to reduce Social Security fraud from "a fraction of one percent" to "zero percent," you can either expend a gigantic amount of money (far more than you're losing to fraud) to get a little closer to zero – or you can make Social Security far simpler. For example, you could simply declare that anyone whose life and work history can't fit in a simple database schema is not eligible for Social Security, kick tens of millions of people off the SSI rolls, and cause them to lose their homes and starve on the streets. This isn't merely cruel, it's also very, very expensive, since homelessness costs the system far more than Social Security. The optimum amount of fraud is non-zero.

Conservatives hate complexity. That's why the Trump administration banned all research grants for proposals that contained the word "systemic" (as a person with so-far-local cancer, I sure worry about what happens when and if my lymphoma become systemic). I once described the conservative yearning for "simpler times," as a desire to be a child again. After all, the thing that made your childhood "simpler" wasn't that the world was less complicated – it's that your parents managed that complexity and shielded you from it. There's always been partner abuse, divorce, gender minorities, mental illness, disability, racial discrimination, geopolitical crises, refugees, and class struggle. The only people who don't have to deal with this stuff are (lucky) children.

Complexity is an unavoidable attribute of all complicated processes. Evolution is complicated, so it produces complexity. It's convenient to think about a simplified model of genes in which individual genes produce specific traits, but it turns out genes all influence each other, are influenced in turn by epigenetics, and that developmental factors play a critical role in our outcomes. From eye-color to gender, evolution produces spectra, not binaries. It's ineluctably (and rather gloriously) complicated.

The conservative project to insist that things can be neatly categorized – animal or plant, man or woman, planet or comet – tries to take graceful bimodal curves and simplify them into a few simple straight lines – one or zero (except even the values of the miniature transistors on your computer's many chips are never at "one" or "zero" – they're "one-ish" and "mostly zero").

Like Social Security, fraud in the immigration system is a negligible rounding error. The US immigration system is a baroque, ramified, many-tendriled thing (I have the receipts from the immigration lawyers who helped me get a US visa, a green card, and citizenship to prove it). It is already so overweighted with pitfalls and traps for the unwary that a good immigration lawyer might send you to apply for a visa with 600 pages of documentation (the most I ever presented) just to make sure that every possible requirement is met:

https://www.flickr.com/photos/doctorow/2242342898/in/photolist-zp6PxJ-4q9Aqs-2nVHTZK-2pFKHyf

After my decades of experience with the US immigration system, I am prepared to say that the system is now at a stage where it is experiencing sharply diminishing returns from its anti-fraud systems. The cost of administering all this complexity is high, and the marginal amount of fraud caught by any new hoop the system gins up for migrants to jump through will round to zero.

Which poses a problem for Trump and trumpists: having whipped up a national panic about out of control immigration and open borders, the only way to make the system better at catching the infinitesimal amount of fraud it currently endures is to make the rules simpler, through the blunt-force tactic of simply excluding people who should be allowed in the country. For example, you could ban college kids planning to spend the summer in the US on the grounds that they didn't book all their hotels in advance, because they're planning to go from city to city and wing it:

https://www.newsweek.com/germany-tourists-deported-hotel-maria-lepere-charlotte-pohl-hawaii-2062046

Or you could ban the only research scientist in the world who knows how to interpret the results of the most promising new cancer imaging technology because a border guard was confused about the frog embryos she was transporting (she's been locked up for two months now):

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/horrified-harvard-scientists-ice-arrest-leaves-cancer-researchers-scrambling/ar-AA1DlUt8

Of course, the US has long operated a policy of "anything that confuses a border guard is grounds for being refused entry" but the Trump administration has turned the odd, rare outrage into business-as-usual.

But they can lock up or turn away as many people as they want, and they still won't get the amount of fraud to zero. The US is a complicated place. People have complicated reasons for entering the USA – work, family reunion, leisure, research, study, and more. The only immigration system that doesn't leak a little at the seams is an immigration system that is so simple that it has no seams – a toy immigration system for a trivial country in which so little is going on that everything is going on.

The only garden without weeds is a monoculture under a dome. The only email system without spam is a closed system managed by one company that only allows a carefully vetted cluster of subscribers to communicate with one another. The only species with just two genders is one wherein members who fit somewhere else on the spectrum are banished or killed, a charnel process that never ends because there are always newborns that are outside of the first sigma of the two peaks in the bimodal distribution.

A living system – a real country – is complicated. It's a system, where people do things you'll never understand for perfectly good reasons (and vice versa). To accommodate all that complexity, we need complex systems, and all complex ecosystems have parasites. Yes, you can burn the rainforest to the ground and plant monocrops in straight rows, but then what you have is a farm, not a forest, vulnerable to pests and plagues and fire and flood. Complex systems have parasites, sure, but complex systems are resilient. The optimal level of fraud is never zero, because a system that has been simplified to the point where no fraud can take place within it is a system that is so trivial and brittle as to be useless.


Hey look at this (permalink)



A Wayback Machine banner.

Object permanence (permalink)

#20yrsago French court bans DRM for DVDs https://web.archive.org/web/20050424023258/https://www.01net.com/editorial/274752/droit/la-justice-interdit-de-proteger-les-dvd-contre-la-copie/

#20yrsago Why governments make stupid copyrights https://www.ft.com/content/39b697dc-b25e-11d9-bcc6-00000e2511c8

#20yrsago London Review of Books’s personals are really dirty and funny https://web.archive.org/web/20050426005000/http://www.lrb.co.uk/classified/index.php#PERSONALS

#20yrsago German crooner’s megaphone-style covers of modern rock https://www.palast-orchester.de/en

#15yrsago British Airways leaves stranded passengers all over world, jacks up prices on tickets home https://www.theguardian.com/news/blog/2010/apr/23/iceland-volcano-thousands-passengers-stranded

#15yrsago Google highlights fair use defense to YouTube takedowns https://publicpolicy.googleblog.com/2010/04/content-id-and-fair-use.html

#15yrsago Microsoft wins its $100M tax-break and amnesty from broke-ass Washington State https://web.archive.org/web/20100429061500/http://microsofttaxdodge.com/2010/04/microsoft-gets-nevada-royalty-tax-cut-and-tax-amnesty.html?all

#10yrsago Privilege: you’re probably not the one percent https://jacobin.com/2015/04/1-99-percent-class-inequality

#10yrsago Marissa Mayer makes 1,100 Yahooers jobless, calls it a “remix” https://web.archive.org/web/20150425183847/http://news.dice.com/2015/04/22/yahoo-called-its-layoffs-a-remix-dont-do-that/?CMPID=AF_SD_UP_JS_AV_OG_DNA_

#10yrsago Canadian Big Content spokesjerk says the public domain is against the public interest https://www.michaelgeist.ca/2015/04/canadian-recording-industry-works-entering-the-public-domain-are-not-in-the-public-interest/

#5yrsago Riot Baby https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/23/riot-baby/#Tochi-Onyebuchi

#5yrsago Mayor of Las Vegas says the "free market" will decide what's safe https://pluralistic.net/2020/04/23/riot-baby/#carolyn-goodman

#1yrago "Humans in the loop" must detect the hardest-to-spot errors, at superhuman speed https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/23/maximal-plausibility/#reverse-centaurs


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

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

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

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

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

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

Latest podcast: Nimby and the D-Hoppers CONCLUSION https://craphound.com/stories/2025/04/13/nimby-and-the-d-hoppers-conclusion/


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

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

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


How to get Pluralistic:

Blog (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

Pluralistic.net

Newsletter (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

https://pluralistic.net/plura-list

Mastodon (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic

Medium (no ads, paywalled):

https://doctorow.medium.com/

Twitter (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising):

https://twitter.com/doctorow

Tumblr (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising):

https://mostlysignssomeportents.tumblr.com/tagged/pluralistic

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

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

ISSN: 3066-764X

The Trump Slump [The Status Kuo]

It’s traditional for news media and pollsters to assess the state of the presidency around 100 days. We’re nearing that number, and for Trump, the news is really, really bad.

According to a Fox News poll—which even the White House can’t explain away as liberal media bias—Trump has the lowest approval rating of any president at this time, at just 44 percent. That’s down from 49 percent in March.

The only president who came close to this number at this point in their term was Trump 1.0 at 45 percent.

These poor numbers align with a Pew poll out yesterday. That survey found Trump with just a 40 percent approval rating, tied with Trump 1.0 for lowest approval rating of any president at this point.

The New York Times average of polls also shows a steep decline, with Trump now at 45 percent approval and 52 percent disapproval. The direction of the two lines has been fairly consistent since he took office.

In many ways these numbers are not surprising. Voters who didn’t like Trump before, but somehow either forgot or were willing to give him another try, are having a strong case of buyer’s remorse. This is especially true now that they are getting a much worse version of Trump than they expected. It’s the one where all the adults in the room are nowhere to be found, and he’s surrounded himself with fawning sycophants and talking heads with no knowledge or experience in government. As a result, every day brings new chaos and scandal.

Former top aides and advisors, who implored voters not to support Trump, told us this would happen. Without anyone around to guide it safely to harbor, Trump’s ship is adrift and taking on water fast.

Moreover, voters who wanted a “CEO” president who would herald a new age of economic prosperity, as Trump had promised again and again, are instead witnessing the same capricious, vindictive, incompetent man who managed to bankrupt his own casinos.

Today, let’s take a closer look at how voters view the two major issues that Trump was supposed to be strong on: the economy and immigration. If he can’t win voters over on these, he’s unlikely to salvage his popularity before the midterm elections. And that carries enormous consequences for the GOP’s agenda.

Subscribe now

Empty shelves from empty fables

Once you dive deeper into the numbers, the Fox poll has some even worse news for Trump. On the question of his economic performance as president, Trump now sees 56 percent of those polled disapproving with only 38 percent approving.

Note how in March his approval numbers on the economy were five points higher, even while his disapprovals didn’t shift. Those once approving voters are now uncertain as markets have gone into free fall, federal workers face mass layoffs, and there are reports of empty cargo vessels from China due to sky high tariffs.

Watch for the disapproval numbers to rise even further. Currently, these poor numbers are piling up as voters merely anticipate a weaker economy with higher inflation. It’s a bit like anxiously watching a hurricane develop off the coast—but also realizing you have no idea when it will hit or how bad it will be because Trump fired all the NOAA weather forecasters.

But the actual economic impact has yet to hit. Recently, CEOs of major retailers warned Trump that there would soon be empty store shelves as Chinese-made goods dry up. This could further provoke hoarding and price gouging, just as we saw with household goods during Covid, baby formula in 2022, and eggs in 2025. But instead of being limited to a few items, we could soon see across the board shortages.

As Molson Hart, the CEO of an educational toy company, explained,

The White House has put itself and the country in a bad situation but doesn’t realize it yet.

Around April 10th China to USA trade shut down.

It takes ~30 days for containers to go from China to LA.

45 to Houston by sea, 45 to Chicago by train.

55 to New York by sea.

That means that there are no economic effects of what was done on April 10th until about May 10th.

Around then, Hart predicts, we’ll see the effects. Trucking work will dry up. Warehouses will lay workers off. It will start on the West Coast, then hit the middle of the country, then the East Coast. Even if the trade war were to end today, which hardly seems likely, Trump’s tariff hikes unleashed an economic tsunami, similar to what we saw during lockdowns, that will swamp our shipping, distribution and inventory as it heads our way.

The likely result will be a spike in inflation, like we experienced when supply chains were upended by Covid and then suddenly ramped back up.

There’s another important point. These disapproval numbers don’t take into account the other disruptions we will likely see across multiple industries due to sudden loss of inventory and supplies, from generic medications to rare earth minerals. And they don’t yet take into account other major economic consequences from Trump / Musk policies and actions, including, to name just a few,

  • a recently announced restart of student loan debt collection,

  • a spike in interest rates due to loss of confidence in the safety of U.S. government bonds,

  • the freezing of hiring and stop work orders due to loss of billions in research funding, and

  • the possibility that Social Security payments won’t arrive on time and there will be no one in the field offices to provide customer service.

It’s already too late to reverse any of the above consequences, so we will simply have to weather them. Trump has urged patience, saying that we will have to go through some pain in a “period of transition” before getting to the promised land (really, the pipe dream) of restored U.S. manufacturing and economic world dominance.

The hard truth is this: Trump will soon need to back off his tariff plans and back down from this trade war or face economic catastrophe at home and a deep global recession of his own making. But if and when he does, that will also mean that all of this chaos was for nothing, and he will suffer a blow to credibility even among ardent supporters. It’s a lose/lose situation, from which he will have to pick the least loser of a way out.

The next 100 days could demonstrate to voters how it truly is possible for a single ignorant and mercurial man to tank the world’s strongest and most successful economy, while also wrecking it for the foreseeable future in the eyes of global investors.

Voter fury, should that occur, will make the current town halls and protests seem quaint by comparison.

Lock them up?

Immigration is supposed to be Trump’s other strong suit. He campaigned promising to deport “criminals” first as part of an ambitious and terrifying mass deportation program.

But it’s not going as planned. Trump’s numbers have fallen over his immigration policies and he is now underwater on the question. A YouGov poll puts him at -5 on his handling of immigration, a sharp drop from prior weeks.

This drop occurred after his administration targeted a few hundred Central American migrants and international students, all of whom were denied due process and summarily detained or deported. There were widely circulating videos of student activists being kidnapped off the streets by ICE agents. Social media feeds filled with stories of men without criminal records being shackled and deported on planes, then shaved and humiliated in a torture prison in El Salvador, all because their tattoos caused some ICE agent somewhere to believe they were gang members.

This has galvanized opposition and drawn strong rebukes from the courts, including a 9-0 opinion from the Supreme Court. Trump’s response did him no favors. He argued recently that “we cannot give everyone a trial”—an ironic statement from a 34-time convicted felon who constantly whined about how often he had to face the courts.

Like his handling of the economy, Trump’s numbers on immigration are likely to fall further. That’s because his administration is gearing up to go after entire minority communities in order to deport up to a million people annually. His administration is building detention camps large enough to hold tens of thousands of detainees. It is not difficult to imagine the outcry when this program gets going.

Already horror stories are piling up, including harsh treatment of foreign visitors to the U.S. who have been held for weeks without recourse, and even U.S. citizens detained by ICE, again with no hearing or clear way to obtain release. As Democracy Docket reported this morning in its newsletter,

So far, dozens of U.S. citizens — including a ten-year-old Texas girl recovering from brain cancer — have been wrongly detained or threatened with deportation through President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

It’s important to understand what this will look like at a much larger scale if and when ICE agents are ordered to up their quotas to thousands of people detained daily—a necessary step if the administration is serious about deporting millions. It’s often hard to wrap our collective heads around numbers that big. But by comparison, the number of undocumented immigrants that the Department of Homeland Security seeks to move to its newly built detention centers each year is ten times the number of Japanese Americans interned during all of World War II. The program is infeasible, it is immoral, and it will prove deadly when and if they try to implement it.

It will also be a political loser. Trump has already lost the support of many of the Latino voters he bamboozled into voting for him in November. The Pew Research poll out yesterday found that 72 percent of Latinos now disapprove of Trump, with just 27 percent approving. Latinos had swung hard to the right in 2024, hoping that Trump would deliver on his economic promises with lower prices, and he even won a majority of them in key battleground states. Now, that community faces the terror of Trump’s mass deportation efforts, where it’s becoming a regular practice to detain and hold anyone who even looks like they might be undocumented.

But does Trump even care?

A common response to poll numbers when they come out, especially when they’re particularly bad, is to sigh that Trump does not care and will just keep doing what he’s doing.

That flies in the face of what we know about Trump’s obsession with ratings and polls. Trump is ignorant and lazy, but he does rather consistently respond to public sentiment, whether it’s the stock market tanking or his approval numbers cratering.

But even if we assume for argument’s sake that Trump won’t be moved by bad polling, the same cannot be said for GOP officials facing reelection. If, as predicted, his approval numbers continue to sink, the self-preservation instincts of swing district Republicans will kick in, endangering Trump’s plan to extend tax breaks to the wealthy and slash Medicaid and food assistance. Speaker Mike Johnson has only a threadbare majority in the House, and he has had to rely on Trump’s ability to strong-arm wayward Republicans into backing unpopular bills.

But if Trump’s brand turns toxic to voters, particularly in purple congressional districts, his ability to threaten the political futures of his fellow party members will diminish considerably. After all, if standing with Trump damages your reputation with constituents more than standing against him, those with any political survival skills will find a way to abandon him.

Another common question is this: Why does Trump’s support even remain as high as the mid-40s? Who the hell still supports Trump despite everything we now know?

The numbers reveal that his drop in support has come largely from a shift among independent voters. As the New York Times reported,

His standing with that crucial voting bloc in January stood at 41 percent approval and 46 percent disapproval. In Quinnipiac’s mid-April poll, 58 percent of independents said they disapproved of the president’s job performance, while just 36 percent approved.

That means Trump went from -5 among Independents in January to -22 percent by April—a stunning 17 point shift.

Meanwhile, Trump’s support among GOP voters has yet to move significantly. Some 80 percent of GOP voters still back their president. These voters are clinging to the hope that the widespread projections of economic disaster are overblown or perhaps even will not actually happen.

It is a sad fact that most GOP voters generally will not change their minds on something unless they themselves are personally negatively affected. And those deep inside the MAGA cult won’t change their views, no matter what. That likely means that there is a baseline 30-35 percent of voters that will support their guy come what may, even if we fall into recession and the store shelves are empty as the big retailers have warned.

At moments like this I like to consider one YouGov poll that assessed voter approval of things and events associated with medieval times. In that poll, the Black Plague received 9 percent support with still 17 percent uncertain, implying that’s probably the lowest we could ever expect an approval rating to fall to.

We may never drive Trump’s polls numbers down to Black Plague levels. But as a stretch goal, I think it’s a good one.

12:00 AM

FCC Boss Brendan Carr Whines About Accurate Comcast/NBC Reporting That Made Donald Trump Sad [Techdirt]

There’s simply no limit of problems in telecom and media that competent FCC regulators could be taking aim at. Broadband price gouging by monopolies, widespread telecom privacy and security failures, the obvious harm of unchecked media consolidation all come quickly to mind.

Instead of tackling any of this, new Trump FCC boss Brendan Carr has spent the lion’s share of his first months in office engaged in erratic authoritarian zealotry, whether it’s abusing FCC authority to harass journalists who refuse to kiss Donald Trump’s ass, or “investigating” Verizon, Comcast, and Disney for not being racist enough.

Now Carr is again taking aim at Comcast, simply because journalists at MSNBC and NBC gave King Donald a sad.

Over at the right wing propaganda website known as X, Carr whined about Comcast over MSNBC and NBC’s coverage of Abrego Garcia, a Maryland dad the government “accidentally” kidnapped, sent to a foreign gulag, and now refuses to return to the U.S.

You’ll notice Carr isn’t actually launching any sort of actual “investigation” into Comcast here because the accusation is baseless bullshit.

There is no evidence that Garcia was a gang member. Garcia’s only arrest was in 2019 for “loitering” in a Home Depot parking lot. Carr is of course mad because NBC and MSNBC told people the truth: that the government fucked up, appear to have falsely and lazily identified a man as a gang member and dangerous career criminal, then “accidentally” shipped him off to a foreign work gulag.

Even if Garcia was a gang member, Brendan Carr is behaving like a foolish clown. The rule he’s trying to leverage here, the FCC’s “distortion rule,” is a very rarely enforced rule that says news outlets can’t suppress important journalism or take cash bribes to modify journalism. It clearly doesn’t apply if NBC and MSNBC were just explaining the situation accurately. And it doesn’t apply to cable news.

Carr, of course, knows this, he’s just hoping that a shitty U.S. press system will help him pretend he’s launching a “serious investigation,” so the accusations get repeated across the media and other news outlets think twice before criticizing Donald Trump. It doesn’t matter if NBC (or anybody else) is guilty, the press will dutifully parrot the accusation far and wide, implying guilt.

Because U.S. consolidated corporate journalism is generally very shitty and concerned about losing access or costly fake investigations, it’s an effective tactic.

If you search through the news wires, most of the reporting on this story parrot Carr’s claims without pointing out he doesn’t have much of a leg to stand on. Or that the rule in question doesn’t apply to cable. Or that Carr’s primary goal is very clearly to bully media companies and suppress journalism, a curious choice for a party that spent the last few years babbling endlessly about their love of free speech.

Again there will never be a case against Comcast here because this is thin bullshit and Carr has absolutely no leg to stand on. The whole point of the tweet was to get the press to parrot the false claims to a broader audience and to soften their criticism of the Trump administration. Most were happy to oblige.

“You Wouldn’t Steal a Car”… But Would You Pirate a Font? [TorrentFreak]

pirate fontFirst released in 2004 as part of the broader “Piracy: It’s a Crime” campaign, the “You Wouldn’t Steal a Car” PSA quickly became iconic.

Its dramatic equation of online piracy with stealing handbags, televisions, and cars, also made it a fertile breeding ground for memes, satire, and ridicule.

While the main commercial is well-remembered, a lesser-known ‘street sales‘ equivalent has largely been forgotten. Even the official piracyitsacrime.com campaign website eventually vanished, only for the domain name to be later acquired and cleverly redirected to the famous IT Crowd parody mocking the original ad.

Piracy. It’s a Crime

Two decades on, the “You Wouldn’t Steal” video remains ingrained in internet culture. Yet, new details about the campaign continue to surface, including the ironic possibility that it used a ‘stolen’ font.

You Wouldn’t Steal a Font

In the past, reports have repeatedly claimed that the music used for the PSA was pirated. These claims were inaccurate, so when we saw repeated mentions suggesting that the font used for the “You Wouldn’t Steal” commercial was a clone of a commercial font, we were skeptical at first.

This time, however, the evidence seems compelling.

The “Piracy It’s a Crime” site and the “You Wouldn’t” steal commercials always appeared to use the FF Confidential font, which was created by Just Van Rossum in 1992. However, materials posted on the campaign website use an identical but differently named font called “XBAND Rough”.

XBAND Rough is a freely available font created by Catapult Entertainment in 1996, but it’s not difficult to see that this is a direct clone of Van Rossum’s font, which requires a license to use.

Pinpointing the font from the videos alone is difficult. However, Melissa Lewis recently suggested on Bluesky that the clone was used. This finding was later supported by another user, “Rib,” who discovered XBAND Rough embedded in a 2005 PDF file hosted on the official campaign website.

TorrentFreak was able to confirm independently that the campaign material uses the embedded XBAND Rough font, and the same applies to another campaign flyer created in 2005.

XBAND Rough

crime

Technically, it’s still possible that the commercials used a licensed version of FF Confidential, so we refrain from drawing any strong conclusions. However, the irony that a free knockoff of a commercial font was used for an anti-piracy campaign doesn’t escape us.

Font Creator: It’s Hilarious

So, what does FF Confidential’s creator, Just Van Rossum, think of this discovery?

Van Rossum informs us that he can’t say whether his font was licensed for the commercial, or if the cloned version was used instead. However, the evidence suggests that the “Piracy It’s a Crime” campaign itself did use the free font, a fact he finds hilarious.

“I knew my font was used for the campaign and that a pirated clone named XBand-Rough existed. I did not know that the campaign used XBand-Rough and not FF Confidential, though. So this fact is new to me, and I find it hilarious,” Van Rossum informs us.

The font’s creator has no intention of following this up, as he’s no longer the font’s official distributor. The licensing is currently handled by Monotype and before 2014, FontShop International had the exclusive rights.

More than two decades after its launch, the “You Wouldn’t Steal a Car” campaign continues to spark conversation. The revelation that its own materials likely contained a cloned version of a licensed font automatically leads us to a simple closing question: You wouldn’t steal a font, right?

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

Thursday 2025-04-24

10:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 倉 [Kanji of the Day]

✍10

小4

godown, warehouse, storehouse, cellar, treasury

ソウ

くら

倉敷   (くらしき)   —   Kurashiki (city)
倉庫   (そうこ)   —   storehouse
米倉   (こめぐら)   —   rice granary
鎌倉時代   (かまくらじだい)   —   Kamakura period (1185-1333)
倉庫番   (そうこばん)   —   warehouseman
矢倉   (やぐら)   —   turret
鎌倉幕府   (かまくらばくふ)   —   Kamakura shogunate (1185-1333)
小倉百人一首   (おぐらひゃくにんいっしゅ)   —   Ogura Hyakunin Isshu
穀倉地帯   (こくそうちたい)   —   grain-producing region
内倉   (うちぐら)   —   godown within a compound

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 稼 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

earnings, work, earn money

かせ.ぐ

稼働   (かどう)   —   operation (of a machine)
稼ぎ   (かせぎ)   —   earnings
稼ぐ   (かせぐ)   —   to earn (income)
稼げる   (かせげる)   —   to work
稼動   (かどう)   —   operation (of a machine)
共稼ぎ   (ともかせぎ)   —   earning a living together
出稼ぎ   (でかせぎ)   —   working away from home (esp. abroad)
稼働率   (かどうりつ)   —   operating rate
時間稼ぎ   (じかんかせぎ)   —   gaining time
稼働中   (かどうちゅう)   —   working

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

02:00 PM

John Carmack: Calm Down About Video Game AI Tech Demos, Folks [Techdirt]

The fear over industry disruptions due to technological advances is so predictable that we have the entire “buggy whip” analogy pre-built to rebut it. For the uninitiated, the analogy harkens back to when the automobile came into wide circulation and the disruption it had on the makers of horse buggy tools, like the whip for the horses, if they didn’t adapt. While some may have argued that the automobile was a danger to those businesses, the truth is that these new vehicles opened up so many other economic opportunities both for newly created jobs opened up by cars and within the transportation industry for those willing to adapt that it was actually a net benefit to jobs and the economy.

It may feel like artificial intelligence is everywhere these days, but the truth is that we’re still in the very early stages when it comes to how this technology will be used in the future and what effects it will have in all kinds of markets. In the video game industry specifically, we already have examples of how generative AI used in gaming isn’t even close yet to the product of human artists, nor a replacement for the gaming output of human beings. But that isn’t stopping some folks from worrying out loud that use of AI in the gaming industry is a threat to industry jobs.

In some cases, it will be, of course. But that should be a temporary concern, just like the buggy whip manufacturers. More important is what the use of AI in gaming can mean for increased output and as another tool for developers to use to create a better industry ecosystem. Industry legend John Carmack recently made this point when responding to some criticism for Microsoft’s recent demo of an AI-generated facsimile of Quake 2.

Carmack’s comments came after an X user with the handle “Quake Dad” called the new demo “disgusting” and claimed it “spits on the work of every developer everywhere.” The critic expressed concern that such technology would eliminate jobs in an industry already facing layoffs, writing: “A fully generative game cuts out the number of jobs necessary for such a project which in turn makes it harder for devs to get jobs.”

Carmack responded directly to these concerns in a lengthy post. “I think you are misunderstanding what this tech demo actually is,” he wrote, before addressing the broader concern about “AI tooling trivializing the skillsets of programmers, artists, and designers.” Carmack positioned AI as the latest in a long history of technological advancements that have transformed game development.

“My first games involved hand assembling machine code and turning graph paper characters into hex digits. Software progress has made that work as irrelevant as chariot wheel maintenance,” Carmack explained. “Building power tools is central to all the progress in computers.”

It’s the right argument to make, frankly. We’re a long ways off from AI being able to build entire, quality games from start to finish, as Microsoft’s own tech demo showed. Its output was nowhere close to being a one to one recreation of Quake 2. It was much closer to something like allowing players to experience the AI’s impression of the game. In the immediate, this demonstrates that human beings are still very much needed and that the output of AI is more akin to Carmack’s analogy than a job-stealing dev-bot.

But maybe someday it gets way, way better. In fact, that’s probably nearly an inevitability. There’s no reason to think that the long term is one where AI creates video games all on its own sans human handlers that have no input and therefore no jobs. Instead, it’s far more likely that this will be yet another tool human developers will have to create output faster, to create output better, or to otherwise assist human beings in their work.

Tim Sweeney of Epic Games chimed in on the conversation as well.

Ultimately, Sweeney says not to worry: “There’s always a fear that automation will lead companies to make the same old products while employing fewer people to do it,” Sweeney wrote in a follow-up post on X. “But competition will ultimately lead to companies producing the best work they’re capable of given the new tools, and that tends to mean more jobs.”

And Carmack closed with this: “Will there be more or less game developer jobs? That is an open question. It could go the way of farming, where labor-saving technology allow a tiny fraction of the previous workforce to satisfy everyone, or it could be like social media, where creative entrepreneurship has flourished at many different scales. Regardless, “don’t use power tools because they take people’s jobs” is not a winning strategy.”

We have no choice but to progress, in other words. Adapt or die. All the clichés. But we should also have our eyes open to the opportunities AI could create in the gaming industry and others, rather than wallow in doom and gloom.

01:00 PM

Three Wise Judges, One Mad King [The Status Kuo]

Photo: Evelyn Hockstein / Reuters

On March 15, some five weeks ago, Trump issued a White House proclamation under the guise of the “Alien Enemies Act”—a law from the late 1700s that has only ever been used during times of actual war. In it, Trump designated the gang known as “Tren de Aragua” as a “Foreign Terrorist Organization” that had “infiltrated the United States” and were “conducting irregular warfare and taking hostile actions” against our country.

To make a square “foreign terrorist” peg fit a round “irregular warfare” hole under the Alien Enemies Act, Trump further claimed, without evidence, that Tren de Aragua operates “in conjunction with” a cartel in Venezuela sponsored by the Maduro regime in order to destabilize America.

The White House used this completely fabricated claim to grant itself powers to summarily deport migrants, not just back to Venezuela, but to the infamous CECOT prison in El Salvador, which the U.S. is paying to hold these “criminals.”

Ever since that absurd and dangerous proclamation, civil rights lawyers have scrambled to protect the rights of migrant, moving quickly

  • to establish a right to a hearing for any migrants accused of being Tren de Aragua gang members, sometimes on nothing more than tattoos or the say-so of a single ICE agent or informant;

  • to identify and provide those illegally deported a chance to have their cases heard and to repatriate them back to the U.S. if possible; and

  • to stop the government from sending even more people to prison in El Salvador.

Yesterday, three federal judges stepped up to weigh in on each of these measures.

Subscribe now

“That ends now.”

In Maryland, Judge Paula Xinis is overseeing the Abrego García case. She is tasked with implementing the unanimous ruling by the Supreme Court that the government must “facilitate” the return of Abrego García to the U.S. Her efforts have been stymied by Justice Department lawyers who, at least perhaps until yesterday, have refused to provide information about what steps they have taken to secure his release from custody and what they will do to facilitate his return.

Judge Xinis ordered what’s known as “discovery” over why the government won’t simply cooperate. That opened the door for plaintiffs to pose questions, known as “interrogatories,” to the government and to demand production of relevant documents. Among the interrogatories were some quite basic ones:

  • Which individuals “have been or will be involved” in “ordering or authorizing Abrego Garcia’s removal to El Salvador, his initial placement in CECOT or his continued confinement in CECOT”;

  • The nature of any “agreement, arrangement, or understanding between the United States and El Salvador related to the removal and confinement of Abrego Garcia and any other individuals who were transported with him on March 15, 2025”;

  • A description of “all efforts the Government has taken to facilitate the return of aliens wrongfully removed to El Salvador.”

Recall that no less than the Supreme Court had already ordered the government to cooperate: “For its part, the Government should be prepared to share what it can concerning the steps it has taken and the prospect of further steps.”

But the government has not done this. Rather than respond with complete answers to these baseline questions, the Justice Department raised objections and stonewalled entirely. Judge Xinis was very displeased.

Its most galling argument was that the questions were somehow based on the “false premise” that the U.S. “can or has been ordered to facilitate Abrego Garcia’s release from custody in El Salvador.”

(Narrator: The U.S. was in fact so ordered, and directly, by no less than the Supreme Court.)

Judge Xinis could barely contain her ire. She wrote in her order,

Defendants—and their counsel—well know that the falsehood lies not in any supposed “premise,” but in their continued mischaracterization of the Supreme Court’s Order. That Order made clear that this Court “properly required the Government to ‘facilitate’ Abrego Garcia’s release from custody in El Salvador and to ensure that his case is handled as it would have been had he not been improperly sent to El Salvador.”

I’ve handled dozens of discovery motions in my years as a litigator. But I’ve never seen a sentence quite like this next one: “Defendants’ objection reflects a willful and bad faith refusal to comply with discovery obligations. The objection is overruled.”

Pro-tip: When you see words like “willful” and “bad faith” in an order, you pretty much know the court is lining things up for sanctions.

The government also claimed “privilege” as grounds to refuse to produce answers or documents. This assertion is par for the course with this administration and its officials, who after Trump’s first term asserted bogus “executive privilege” claims that had to be litigated one by one, running out the clock. Here, Judge Xinis called them “Equally specious” objections:

Defendants invoke in name only a range of protections— attorney-client privilege, the work-product doctrine, the deliberative process privilege, the state secrets privilege, and an undefined “governmental privilege”—without providing any supporting information or analysis. As Defendants and their counsel know, the proponent of a privilege must demonstrate the legal and factual bases to invoke the protections that such privilege affords.

Normally, when you assert a privilege in court, you need to create what’s called a “privilege log” that describes the information or document and explains why a certain privilege or privileges apply. The government didn’t make a log, and it’s pretty clear why that is: Whatever “privileges” it may have had (e.g., state secrets) were waived by its own actions, for example, tweeting about the arrangement with El Salvador.

What you can’t do is simply spout a bunch of privileges with nothing to back them up. Judge Xinis called the government out on this and is forcing it to cough up the information. And I just have to quote this next part of her order, with citations removed, because my mouth is still open from reading it.

Given that this Court expressly warned Defendants and their counsel to adhere strictly to their discovery obligations … their boilerplate, non-particularized objections are presumptively invalid and reflect a willful refusal to comply with this Court’s Discovery Order and governing rules. Although Defendants state now that they are willing to “meet and confer” with counsel about the production of such a log, their repeated refusals to meet and confer about much of anything else undermine the reliability of this assertion. The Court thus finds this offer was not made in good faith.

In other words, you didn’t do what I asked, you disobeyed me on purpose, and I don’t trust what you’re saying and promising. She went on:

Nor does the Court find Defendants’ protestations regarding the abbreviated time-line persuasive. For weeks, Defendants have sought refuge behind vague and unsubstantiated assertions of privilege, using them as a shield to obstruct discovery and evade compliance with this Court’s orders. Defendants have known, at least since last week, that this Court requires specific legal and factual showings to support any claim of privilege. Yet they have continued to rely on boilerplate assertions. That ends now.

She gave the government until 6:00 p.m. tonight to produce a log containing the detail necessary to support their privilege assertions or lose them entirely. This judge is going to look especially critically upon bogus assertions of privilege, as defendants have burned through all of their credibility and are likely facing sanctions.

Yesterday, for the first time, the government provided a status update under seal to the court. That move strongly indicates that it contains information that its previous non-informative updates did not have.

Despite the judge’s stern admonitions, the government apparently isn’t done putting up roadblocks. This morning, it filed a motion, also under seal, seeking a 7-day stay of the judge’s enforcement orders over discovery and regular status updates.

Stay tuned.

“People are being thrown out…because of their tattoos.”

In New York, Judge Alvin Hellerstein leaned in hard during a contentious hearing on whether to extend his existing hold on the deportation of migrants under the Alien Enemies Act proclamation. That hold has been in place temporarily since April 9.

The backdrop here is important. Since his initial restraining order, the government has admitted that many of the migrants it rendered to the CECOT prison in El Salvador did not have criminal records. Rather, it only suspected they were gang members because of their tattoo markings. There have been several highly publicized cases of innocent people—a soccer player, a barber—being detained and summarily deported to CECOT on their tattoos alone, even when the markings had nothing to do with gang activity.

Judge Hellerstein took the government to task. “This is not a secret court, an inquisition from medieval times. This is the United States of America. People are being thrown out of the country because of their tattoos." He added that the White House cannot “hire a jail in a foreign country” to subject people “to cruel and unusual punishment not allowable” here.

As for their suspicions of gang membership, the judge was equally firm. “The law is clear: If you are kicking out a person, you give them an opportunity to defend themselves,” the judge said. “You can’t kick someone out by guilt by association.”

Per reporting by the Wall Street Journal on the hearing, Hellerstein criticized the government’s current methods of “notifying” detained migrants that were slated for deportation, saying such notices came too late, needed to be in their native languages instead of only English, and needed to include details about how to obtain counsel. He also raised deep concerns about the treatment of those who had been shackled and sent to CECOT, saying that future detainees ought to be afforded greater protections and more humane treatment.

Judge Hellerstein extended his temporary order into a preliminary injunction while he considers a more permanent one.

“Invasions contemplate military actions.”

In Colorado on Monday, Judge Charlotte Sweeney held a hearing in which she expressed grave doubts over the government’s arguments and broad claims of power under the Alien Enemies Act. At issue was whether she should issue a temporary restraining order covering affected migrants within the state of Colorado.

The backdrop to this case is highly relevant as well. Just two days before the hearing, the Supreme Court ruled in a similar case in Texas that migrants whom the U.S. government was seeking to deport to El Salvador had to remain in the U.S. until further notice.

That SCOTUS order went down like a scene out of a movie. Buses carrying migrants toward planes bound for El Salvador actually turned around just after the 7-2 Supreme Court order came down. As NBC News reported,

At least 28 detainees — most, if not all, understood to be Venezuelan nationals — were placed on buses Friday evening at ICE’s Bluebonnet Detention Center in Anson, Texas, and driven toward Abilene Airport, about 30 miles away.

The motorcade — including at least 18 squad cars from various law enforcement agencies with flashing lights along the North Texas highways — left the ICE facility, with some men on board being told they were being deported to El Salvador and some that they were headed to Venezuela, according to the wife of one of the detainees and two lawyers representing other detainees at the facility. Before they departed, it was not clear what their destinations would be.

The video, obtained exclusively by NBC News, shows the ICE motorcade pass the airport’s exit and then turn around, looping back to return to the Bluebonnet detention facility.

Judge Sweeney noted the similarities between the Colorado case and the Texas one and worried that if she didn’t grant a temporary restraining order, the plaintiffs might find themselves two days later on a similar plane.

In a 35-page ruling, which came out yesterday, Judge Sweeney took on the government’s basic rationale behind the summary deportations, finding the plaintiffs were likely to prevail on the merits of their claim. She expressed grave doubts, for example, over the White House’s argument, laid out in its March proclamation, that migrants are being sent here to conduct “irregular warfare” under the Alien Enemies Act.

“Invasions contemplate military actions,” she wrote. “And at a bare minimum, ‘invasion’ means more than the Proclamation’s description of TdA’s ‘infiltrat[ion],’ ‘irregular warfare,’ and ‘hostile actions’ against the United States—notwithstanding the Proclamation’s conclusory description….” Moreover, “the Supreme Court’s discussion of the ‘power to be exercised by the President such as that conferred by the Act’ rests on the presumption the United States is in a “state of war.”

She concluded that, to the extent the White House “relies on the Act’s invasion and incursion provisions to justify its removal powers, it does so improperly.”

The judge issued a temporary restraining order covering a provisionally certified class of people that instructed the government not to move any of them outside of the District of Colorado without at least 21 days notice.

“We cannot give everyone a trial.”

Trump was very unhappy with the turn of events against his Proclamation and the halting of more planeloads of migrants to El Salvador. He came out yesterday with public criticism, posted to his platform Truth Social, blasting these court decisions and even the Supreme Court (which he was careful to say he still had great respect for).

Trumped posted words what will likely define the essence of his presidency: “We cannot give everyone a trial.”

The idea that trials are too slow or cumbersome and should simply be done away with so we can get on to the business of mass deportations should shock the conscience. It certainly isn’t how our federal judiciary sees things. Further, given that many of these cases are now brought as habeas corpus class actions, the claim that each individual potential deportee must receive an individual hearing is flat out wrong.

It also bears noting that it was Trump who scuttled the bipartisan border bill, which contained billions of dollars to upgrade our immigration courts and reduce the backlog of cases. Had that legislation passed, our immigration system could have processed and lawfully repatriated millions of unauthorized migrants during Trump’s second term, just as it did during previous administrations.

Instead, Trump wants to bulldoze constitutional safeguards then blow past the courts, all to send people to prison in a foreign country when they haven’t even had a fair hearing. That’s un-American and expressly contrary to even the most recent unanimous ruling by the Supreme Court.

So far, Trump hasn’t ordered ICE to deport more alleged Tren de Aragua gang members—or innocent barbers with tattoos honoring their parents—in spite of direct court orders not to. But that possibility lurks, and there is no question Trump is toying with the idea.

Meanwhile, our nation teeters on the precipice of a constitutional abyss, with federal judges the only parties now standing in the direct path of the White House, bravely commanding the mad king to stand down.

10:00 AM

Otherwise Objectionable: Can Section 230 Survive In An AI-Driven World? [Techdirt]

As Artificial Intelligence reshapes the internet landscape, we’re watching history repeat itself: The same people who fundamentally misunderstood Section 230’s role in enabling the modern internet are now making eerily similar mistakes about how we should approach AI regulation. This week’s episode of Otherwise Objectionable dives into these parallel debates, exploring both how Section 230’s principles might apply to AI and why some continue pushing to dismantle the law entirely.

The timing couldn’t be more relevant. As Congress (less so) and state legislatures (much more so) rush to regulate AI, they seem determined to ignore the lessons learned from decades of internet regulation. The principles that made Section 230 so crucial for the internet’s development — protecting innovation while enabling responsible content moderation — are more relevant than ever in the AI era.

Episode 7: The Future of Speech Online

While previous episodes explored Section 230’s history and the internet it enabled, this week’s discussions tackle two crucial questions: How should Section 230’s principles inform our approach to AI development? And why do some continue insisting the law needs to be dismantled despite its proven importance?

The episode begins with an exploration of how Section 230’s core principles might guide AI development and regulation. Neil Chilson and Dave Willner offer insights into the parallels (and a few differences!) between early internet and today’s AI debates. Just as Section 230 created a framework that both protected innovation and encouraged responsible moderation, we need similar nuanced approaches for AI — not the sledgehammer regulations many states are currently proposing.

Their discussion highlights a crucial point: the same fundamental tensions that Section 230 addressed — balancing innovation with responsibility, enabling filtering without mandating it — are at the heart of current AI policy debates. And just as with Section 230, many proposed AI regulations seem designed to solve problems that don’t actually exist while potentially creating massive new ones.

The episode then shifts to examine ongoing legal challenges to Section 230 itself, featuring interviews with attorneys Carrie Goldberg and Annie McAdams. Both have extensive histories challenging Section 230’s scope in court. While their cases have mostly (though not entirely) been unsuccessful — highlighting the law’s robust protections — it’s still worthwhile to get their perspectives on why they think the law is the problem (even as I disagree).

Perhaps most intriguingly, these two vocal critics of Section 230 ultimately reach different conclusions about the law’s future. Their disagreement underscores a key point: even among those who see problems with Section 230’s current interpretation, there’s no consensus on how to address those issues without undermining the law’s crucial protections.

As this series approaches its conclusion (with just one roundtable discussion remaining next week), these conversations highlight how Section 230’s principles remain vital for addressing new technological challenges. Whether we’re talking about content moderation on social media or the development of AI systems, we need frameworks that encourage innovation while enabling — but not mandating — responsible development practices.

RSSSiteUpdated
XML About Tagaini Jisho on Tagaini Jisho 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML Arch Linux: Releases 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Carlson Calamities 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Debian News 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML Debian Security 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML debito.org 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML dperkins 2025-04-26 03:00 AM
XML GIMP 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Japan Bash 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML Japan English Teacher Feed 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML Kanji of the Day 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Kanji of the Day 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Let's Encrypt 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Lulu Blog 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Marc Jones 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Marjorie's Blog 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Mr. Money Mustache 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML OpenStreetMap Japan - 自由な地図をみんなの手で/The Free Wiki World Map 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML OsmAnd Blog 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow 2025-04-26 03:00 AM
XML Popehat 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Ramen Adventures 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Release notes from server 2025-04-26 07:00 AM
XML Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect 2025-04-26 03:00 AM
XML SNA Japan 2025-04-26 03:00 AM
XML Tatoeba Project Blog 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML Techdirt 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML The Luddite 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML The Popehat Report 2025-04-26 03:00 AM
XML The Status Kuo 2025-04-26 03:00 AM
XML The Stranger 2025-04-25 11:00 PM
XML Tor Project blog 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML TorrentFreak 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML what if? 2025-04-26 01:00 PM
XML Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed 2025-04-22 04:00 AM
XML xkcd.com 2025-04-26 01:00 PM