News

Friday 2024-10-18

06:00 AM

Houston Cop Gerald Goines Gets 60-Year Sentence For Leading Bogus Drug Raid That Ended With Cops Killing Two People [Techdirt]

“Felony murder” laws are still problematic, even if that law has led to a corrupt drug warrior finally being punished for the evil he has committed under the color of law.

Gerald Goines headed up a Houston PD drug squad for years and was never one to let facts or a lack of evidence stand between him and a drug bust. Unfortunately for Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas — neither of them drug dealers — the raid generated and perpetrated by Gerald Goines ended their lives. They were shot by officers — four of whom were wounded during the raid — who forced entry into the innocent couple’s home, only to be greeted by (according to officers’ allegations) a seemingly reasonable response to armed intruders.

Goines was a monster. Unable to move forward with a controlled heroin purchase from the Tuttle residence (because Tuttle and Nicholas had no heroin to sell), he decided to fabricate a case against the couple, using drugs stashed in his car and series of lies that included sworn statements made in the warrant affidavit. The impetus for all of this was an unsubstantiated claim from a neighbor of Tuttle — one well-known by the Houston PD for filing bogus criminal complaints against people in her neighborhood.

Knowing full well the couple wasn’t actually dealing heroin from their home, Goines assembled his fellow drug warriors and raided their house. Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas were killed. Four officers were wounded. The official narrative is that they were shot by Tuttle. But that narrative is undercut by an independent forensic examination of the home following the raid — one that shows Houston PD investigators failed to conduct a full ballistic recovery and left lots of forensic evidence untouched, something that suggests cover-up far more than it suggests diligent police work.

Goines was the only participant in the raid to be criminally charged. Six other members of this drug squad have been indicated for their involvement in this raid or other crimes they engaged in while in uniform. But it’s Goines who being hit with the most years, thanks to the felony murder law that allows the government to imprison people for murder, even if they themselves didn’t personally murder anyone.

On Tuesday, the jury handed down their sentence after 10 hours of deliberation, bringing the five-year saga to a close. Goines received 60 years for each of the two murders, but his sentences will run concurrently. He will be eligible for parole after serving 30 years, and must also pay $20,000 in fines.

[…]

Prosecutors successfully argued that Goines lied to get the no-knock search warrant for the raid, falsely stating that he had used a confidential informant to purchase drugs from the Harding Street home. From this, they argued that because he was responsible for the raid happening in the first place, and because he was the lead agent on the raid, he was responsible for the deaths of the two homeowners, Dennis Tuttle and Rhogena Nicholas.

This is not a great way to secure a conviction, especially one with decades of prison time included. Goines is definitely responsible for everything leading up to the raid and, consequently, at least partially responsible for its outcome. But suggesting he’s a two-time murderer because other officers killed Tuttle and Nicholas isn’t even acceptable as an over-correction for years of ignored abusive, illegal actions by Goines and his underlings.

While it’s heartening to see an officer’s actions handled with the severity they deserve, everyone would be far better served if prosecutors had dug into his long history of misconduct (something that’s led to the dismissal of dozens of drug cases) and pursued criminal charges for those acts. While Goines’ hands are definitely dirty, he didn’t pull the trigger.

As for the other cops indicted as a result of this, let’s hope the ones who did actually kill the couple receive sentences roughly aligned to the kingpin of the Houston PD-enabled criminal organization. But let’s not celebrate injustice just because it happened to someone we don’t like. Goines should go to jail and, if he ever comes out, should never be allowed to be a cop again. Felony murder is a cheap shot and short cut. It never feels like actual justice because it simply isn’t.

Vote Yes On Locking Artist’s Voices In Contractual Seashells Like The Little Mermaid [Techdirt]

We are living under a sea of AI-generated slop, where AI deepfakes and non-consensual intimate content abound. Congress, a self-interested creature, naturally wants to create protections for themselves, their favorite celebrities, and their wealthy donors against online impersonation. But until now, visions of so-called AI protections have been limited. From my lair, I’ve seen how Big Content might use congressional panic about AI abuse to make a many-tentacled power grab. With the NO FAKES and No AI FRAUD Acts, it’s delicious to report that we have done exactly that.

Inspired by my seashell-prisons, in which I trap the sweet voices of mermaids looking to rise, these bills would let corporations and trade associations like mine control not only the tongues of young musicians, actors, or authors—but their whole face and body. It has been incredibly lucrative for Big Content to monopolize other intellectual property rights, so that we could prevent Prince from singing his pesky “art” under his own name and block Taylor Swift from buying back her early recordings from powerful enemies. It is far past time that new and more invasive rights are created, ones that allow us to make AI-generated deepfakes of artists singing the songs that we like, dressing in the way we desire, promoting the causes we approve, and endorsing the presidential candidates that we want to endorse.

Since teenagers, abuse survivors, and artists started suffering from AI deepfakes, our leaps toward victory have been enlivened by the sirens we’ve convinced to testify on behalf of concepts like consent, the struggle of artists for respect and dignity, and the importance of human art. They have unwittingly obscured our true aims with the beauty of their voices, and the results are glorious, netting legislation that would lure not only artists, but anyone at all, into crashing on the rocks.

If these bills pass, the vulnerable and desperate will also be lured into trading rights to their voices and faces for almost nothing—a month’s rent or a week’s groceries. A paid electricity bill. And for that we will amass vast libraries of captive voices and faces that we can license out to whomever will pay, to use as broadly and vaguely as we desire. AI-generated intimate content, political advertising, hate speech—sources of vast wealth currently being tapped by small-time influencers and foreign regimes. Many will pay richly to AI-generate another to deliver their message. This sea witch fully intends to insert herself in such a growing market.

And oh, the markets! The No AI FRAUD Act is particularly clever in its moves to kill alternative markets and competition for us, the biggest players in Content. With copious lawsuits, we will be able to smite any who dare attempt reenactments and parody, who depict a historical figure in a movie or sketch comedy, who make memes of a celebrity. After all, how dare they? Did they think the First Amendment was written for their drivel?

Even better, we will be able to sue social media platforms, too, for hosting such content. Although, social media companies have historically made moves to aggressively filter or shut down content they could be sued over. Ultimately, they may proactively smite our competition on our behalf—becoming an even more honed instrument for our supremacy. Either way, we win.

Censorship, you say? Perhaps. But if most of the human faces that are displayed online are the ones we own or sell licenses to, the dollar signs would fill a sea. And, we would own the faces of each person not only during their life, but these laws would let us own them for 70 years after their deaths.

NO FAKES in its turn is an eloquent symphony of conformity. It allows us to claim that any video, photo, or recording we do not like is an AI deepfake and have it removed from the Internet forever. The bill offers no recourse to anyone we might—oopsie—censor with our richly programmed armies of bots and filters. There is no mechanism to put content back online or punish a big content company for lying about a takedown request—well, unless you want to face down our armies of lawyers in federal court, that is. This one is all about who has the most money and power, darlings.

With these bills, we will tighten our many-tentacled stranglehold over arts and culture, ensuring that only those we profit from succeed—and that these choice humans need act only minimally once we have secured their AI likeness. No more pesky frailties or artistic preferences to contend with. No more divas unless we deepfake them. This is why we must make our utmost effort to pass NO FAKES and No AI FRAUD— before creators and the public catch on and discover that these bills don’t fight deepfakes, they solidify control of them amongst the most powerful players while obliterating consent.

We must act swiftly to purchase politicians and parade our most convincing messengers—the artists themselves—to demand Little Mermaid laws. These poor unfortunate souls are already falling into the grips of NDAs, brand protection agreements, other assignable rights, noncompetes, existing IP law, and everything else our lawyers can brew up. We just need one final, strong brew to cement control, and then artists’ ability to speak and appear publicly or online will be safe in our contractual seashells. There will be a new era of peace and harmony, as artists and creators won’t be able to agitate and contribute to conflict as pesky “activists”. They will be quiet and only sing when told to. And, our pretties will be able to sing their hearts out even if they become sick, ugly, impoverished, or die—because we hold their AI replicas.

After all, a star need not be human to shine, and if the human artist cannot speak without our permission, no one will know the difference anyway!

Ursula the Sea Witch, best known for cutting one of the hottest ever sub-marine deals with Mermaid Ariel to trap her voice in a seashell along with other poor unfortunate souls, was recently promoted to the C-suite of the Under-The-Sea Content Trade Association. There, her leadership focuses on expanding her pioneering work with Ariel, aiming to lock voices away without any true love’s kiss to set them free by 2026—and for complete, non consensual-yet-legal AI impersonation of all artists under contract by 2027. Ursula the Sea Witch is also the evil(er) alter-ego of Lia Holland, Campaigns and Communications Director at digital rights organization Fight for the Future.

05:00 AM

Justice Thomas Seems More Willing To Kill A Possibly Innocent Person Than Mildly Impugn The Reputations Of Prosecutors [Techdirt]

There are few things the government loves less than admitting wrongdoing, especially when the admission might affect multiple levels of government. That’s why nearly every settlement paid out to litigants includes a disavowment of any wrongdoing. And that’s why courts — at multiple levels — are so extremely reluctant to give possibly innocent people an opportunity to plead their case.

Then there’s the wildcard: justices like Clarence Thomas, who don’t seem to care what the law says and continually seek to convert their own personal ideologies into precedent. While this is definitely something Thomas does more consistently than most, refusing to consider new evidence or any genuine questions of guilt is a common feature of all courts at all levels.

“Innocent until proven guilty” is the ideal. The reality — for far too many judges, prosecutors, and jurors — is the opposite: an indictment or arrest makes a person guilty and places the burden on them to prove their innocence. When the system gets rigged through police or prosecutorial misconduct, it’s almost impossible to overturn this presumption of guilt, even via multiple visits to courts, which are supposed to be doing all they can to prevent miscarriages of justice.

The case of Richard Glossip has made it clear most courts don’t care what happens to people once they’ve been convicted, no matter how much exculpatory evidence is uncovered following the conviction. Glossip is on death row at the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, allegedly for hiring 19-year-old Justin Sneed to kill Barry Van Treese back in 1997. He was convicted in 1998 but had his conviction thrown out in 2001 by the Oklahoma District Court of Appeals, which called the prosecution’s case “extremely weak” and finding Glossip had received ineffective assistance of counsel.

Nearly a quarter-century later, this is still somehow being litigated. Glossip was convicted again by a new jury in 2004 and his conviction was affirmed by the same court that found the prosecution lacking the first time around. Multiple appeals, a bunch of new evidence pointing to Glossip’s supposed “accomplice” acting alone, support from local politicians, and questionable acts by the prosecutors handling the case have managed to keep Glossip from being executed, along with various challenges over Oklahoma’s constantly morphing execution cocktail recipe.

At this point, even the Oklahoma state Attorney General, Gentner Drummond, is unwilling to argue against Glossip in court. For some reason, the Supreme Court has decided someone should argue against Glossip, so it hired a former clerk who worked for two current justices (John Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh) to argue the state’s case on its behalf.

The Supreme Court’s hired gun, Christopher Michel — one with ties to two conservative justices — did exactly what was asked of him: he argued it didn’t matter the state AG thought the case was indefensible. The Supreme Court should still consider it defensible and ignore the public disavowal of this conviction.

Michel argues that the court should pay no mind to Drummond’s concerns about the legality of executing Glossip. “Nothing in the Constitution compels a state court to provide a particular measure of deference to a state official’s confession of error,” Michel wrote. In other words, it doesn’t matter how flawed Drummond believes the case is, the court is under no obligation to take those concerns seriously.

Chances are, Justice Clarence Thomas would have said what he said, even if he hadn’t been prompted by Roberts and Kavanaugh’s former foot soldier. Thomas has never met a right he isn’t willing to violate if it means helping cops/prosecutors or any right he isn’t willing to imagine into existence if it helps his far-right buddies (Donald Trump, Trump supporters, anti-choice legislators, Republicans complaining about internet “censorship,” etc.) get what they want.

So, he went all in against Glossip and those advocating for him. The real problem here, said Justice Thomas, is that people are maligning prosecutors who seemingly engaged in a whole bunch of misconduct.

Responding to Glossip’s attorney’s assertions that key information was withheld by prosecutors about the actual killer (Justin Sneed) would have given the accused man a chance to challenge the sole witness’s credibility, Thomas acted as though it was unfair the prosecutors were never given a chance to defend themselves from these accusations, despite having had nearly a quarter-decade to do so.

These omissions are no small matter. The due process clause requires prosecutors to turn over potentially favorable evidence to the defense, and compels them to correct false testimony. [State prosectuors] Smothermon and Ackley did neither. If they had, Glossip’s attorneys might have undermined Sneed’s credibility by proving that he lied on the stand. They may have more persuasively painted him as the lone killer, too, since [Sneed’s psychiatrist, Dr.] Trombka believed Sneed was capable of violent “manic episodes.” Because prosecutors chose to stay silent, Glossip’s attorneys could not make the strongest case for their client.

Yet during Wednesday’s arguments, Thomas sought to recast Smothermon and Ackley as innocent victims of a smear campaign. He immediately asked Seth Waxman, Glossip’s lawyer: “Did you at any point get a statement from either one of the prosecutors?” Waxman told him that he did, in fact, get a sworn statement from Ackley, and that Smothermon was interviewed by an independent counsel appointed by Drummond. So yes: Both prosecutors provided statements. Yet Thomas persisted as if they hadn’t. “It would seem that because not only their reputations are being impugned, but they are central to this case—it would seem that an interview of these two prosecutors would be central.” Waxman protested that, again, both prosecutors were given an opportunity to tell their side of the story. And again, Thomas refused to accept it: “They suggest,” the justice said, “that they were not sought out and given an opportunity to give detailed accounts of what those notes meant.”

That’s the take Thomas makes: that the notes referring to things said about Justin Sneed by his therapist (a therapist he denied seeing while testifying against Glossip), including the fact Dr. Trombka thought Sneed was “capable of violent manic episodes,” were simply misinterpreted by Glossip’s lawyers. And since the prosecutors who wrote the notes have never testified directly that they say the things they say, they’ve somehow been unfairly forced out of this court battle to prevent Glossip from being executed for a crime he didn’t commit.

This is garbage law work. If an attorney tried to make the same arguments in front of the court, they’d be shut down and/or berated by the judges on the bench. But if a justice says it, I guess it’s all ok. But Supreme Court justices are expected to be the best at lawyering, since they’re tasked with making final determinations that not only affect the parties in the current case, but the entirety of judicial system across America. But instead of seriously and neutrally considering the facts of the case, activist justices like Clarence Thomas are making things worse for millions of Americans because they’ve decided their own moral compasses (such as they are, especially in Thomas’s case) are the gold standard for constitutional law.

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ExTwitter Makes It Official: Blocks Are No Longer Blocks [Techdirt]

It has been rumored for a while that Elon wants to remove the official “block” functionality on ExTwitter, but now it’s official. The company has announced that it will soon start rolling out a new version of “block” that no longer blocks content, only interactions.

That’s ExTwitter’s engineering team saying:

Soon we’ll be launching a change to how the block function works. If your posts are set to public, accounts you have blocked will be able to view them, but they will not be able to engage (like, reply, repost, etc.).

Today, block can be used by users to share and hide harmful or private information about those they’ve blocked. Users will be able to see if such behavior occurs with this update, allowing for greater transparency.

This is a bad idea for a variety of reasons, though I’d push back on people calling it a “crazy” idea. There actually is some logic to it. As many people will point out, even with the existing “block” functionality, you can still see the content in question if you just switch to an incognito view. And, of course, there is something slightly odd in posting some content publicly, and then expecting that certain people should be “blocked” from seeing it.

That’s the theoretical argument for why what Elon is doing here seems to make sense.

But reality and theory don’t always match up. The reality is that the current “block” feature acts as a form of friction to stop abuse, and it’s somewhat, though not perfectly, effective in that role. That friction does not stop abusive people from viewing tweets or passing them along, but it does seem to help in some form.

The simple fact is that (even though Elon probably doesn’t know this or care to look at the history), Twitter tried this. A decade ago. And it was a complete flop. Such a flop that Twitter backtracked almost immediately.

On Thursday, the social site tweaked the way users block others who harass, spam or otherwise bother them. Under the change the blocked user would still be able to see the profile and tweets of the other user, as well as retweet their posts.

By Thursday night, however, the change was gone, reversed in stunningly abrupt fashion after a flurry of user protests, on a platform perfectly suited for both flurries and protests.

Part of the issue is that the block feature is a somewhat crude tool for dealing with multiple forms of abuse. Some of that abuse is still stopped via the new version (blocking interactions, but still showing content), while an awful lot is not. That’s the real problem. While block is far from a perfect tool in stopping people from ganging up on and abusing people, it does help. And with the new changes, that mostly goes away.

This plan is taking away an important, if imperfect, tool for stopping abuse, while not providing any alternative. It’s likely based on Elon’s near total inability to have empathy for people who are not himself. Over and over again, he has shown that he thinks the real problems on ExTwitter are just the ones that impact him directly: spam and scam repliers (even though he’s made that problem worse).

He has no concept of marginalized and targeted people and the kinds of abuse and attacks that can be heaped upon them. Thus, a tool that works towards minimizing such an impact is not even remotely interesting to him.

At the same time, it’s been said that the legacy blocking system is expensive computationally, because figuring out who can (and who cannot) see certain tweets is a pretty complex issue. I’ve noticed that this system breaks a lot since Musk took over, in that in the last few months I have repeatedly seen tweets from people who block me.

So, what this seems to come down to is (1) Elon trying to reduce more costs as the company continues to collapse, combined with (2) an inability to understand or care about the actual harassment that happens on his own platform. It doesn’t seem like a recipe for success.

03:00 AM

Decisions as effort [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Why are we more likely to get tasks done than to take on new initiatives?

Checking something off a to-do list requires far less emotional energy than adding something to the list was in the first place.

As is often the case, “resistance” is the answer.

It’s easy to type a book, hard to write one. That’s because writing one involves making choices.

The effort to perform a task we’ve done before is known in advance. So are the risks. There’s social pressure to do what we promised, and little friction in the way. It’s work, but not challenging.

Initiatives, on the other hand, go the other way around. The effort and repercussions are unknown, and in many settings, the social pressure to accept the status quo is high.

The most important work we do is to make decisions. Decisions don’t seem effortful (turn left or right, say yes or no) but the apparent risk and emotional labor is real. Hard decisions are hard because of the story we tell ourselves about repercussions and responsibility.

Once we acknowledge that taking initiative (which is more accurately described as ‘offering initiative’) requires effort, we can allocate the time and resources to do it well.

      

An Election Round Up (10.17.24) [The Status Kuo]

Photos by Getty Images

Today I’m covering four election developments.

First: two legal rulings. 

In Georgia, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney, who was appointed by a Republican governor in 2012, struck down several rules that had been adopted by the state elections board. He also clarified the ministerial, non-discretionary role of county election officials in the certification process. A second ruling from state court Judge Thomas A. Cox, Jr. dropped yesterday evening at the end of court business, striking down four of the same rules.

In Nebraska, the state supreme court affirmed the right to vote for felons who’ve completed their sentences, affecting some 100,000 people. A 2005 law restoring those rights had been declared unconstitutional by the state’s GOP attorney general and secretary of state. For reasons I’ll discuss below, this decision could have big national consequences.

Second, dueling appearances by the presidential candidates. Kamala Harris walked into a lion’s den and sat for an interview with Bret Baier of Fox. Baier treated the session more like a second debate, talking over Harris and badgering her with GOP talking points. But Harris held her own, taking command of the session and scoring high marks, even from Fox.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump went before a hand-picked audience of women on Fox, where he still managed to ramble incoherently and threaten his political opponents. Then he spoke with undecided Latino voters at Univision, where he called January 6 a “love fest” and maligned all migrants as criminals.

Let’s explore each of these developments a bit more in depth.

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The Georgia rulings

For many months, democracy advocates had one eye on the MAGA-leaning State Election Board of Georgia, which had gained prominence after Trump singled some of its members out for praise and thanks during a rally he’d held in the state. As I wrote in an earlier piece in The Big Picture, proponents of the Big Lie about a stolen 2020 presidential election 

were now in charge of the Georgia State Election Board and had begun passing new “rules,” in excess of their authority and in contravention of state law, that could cause chaos and delay, thwarting the timely certification of that state’s vote.

The recent rules passed by the MAGA majority on the Board included a “hand count” requirement, a “reasonable inquiry” requirement and an “examination” rule for documents. They also threw in a new “Drop Box” rule requiring photo ID,  a video “Surveillance Rule” for drop boxes, a “Poll Watcher” rule for where observers would be positioned, and a “Daily Reporting Rule” adding further requirements to daily absentee reports.

While the rules were troubling, many appeared to be clearly outside of the Board’s authority and past the 90-day deadline to make changes to election procedures. I wanted to assure readers that

the shenanigans of the Georgia State Election Board will not prevail once legal challenges are heard and adjudicated. This is based on a long line of authority that the state Supreme Court is very likely to uphold—and, I should add, that the U.S. Supreme Court shouldn’t and very likely won’t have any say over. Everything that these MAGA-aligned officials are attempting is likely headed to failure in the courts, and none of the measures they have put in place is likely to disrupt or delay certification of Georgia’s election and the awarding of its Electoral College votes to the winner of the popular election in the state.

That’s why Judge McBurney’s and Judge Cox’s rulings came as no surprise, even though they were very welcome given that early voting is already underway in Georgia.

The basic reasoning for the rulings are that the Board exceeded its authority; the rules ran contrary to Election Code; the rules violated the federal elections language of the U.S. Constitution; and the rules were untimely and would cause significant confusion and delay; and the certification of results by officials is mandatory, not discretionary. You can read the two opinions here and here.

With two respected judges weighing in on the illegality of the rules, and the law being so clear on these points, it seems unlikely that the Board will prevail should it appeal either or both rulings. This development throws a significant wrench into MAGA plans to encourage county-level elections officials in the state to upend or delay the certification of results. Should they attempt to do so under cover of the Board’s rules (which were struck down), they will be in clear violation of these decisions and could be compelled through something called a writ of mandamus to certify the results no matter what.

The Nebraska ruling

In a sweeping, 90-page opinion, with opinions from each of the seven justices, the Nebraska Supreme Court kneecapped efforts by the Republican Secretary of State and state Attorney General to prevent those with felony convictions from voting in the state. The Court ordered immediate compliance with state law that expressly allows such citizens to vote.

A bit of background. Historically, people convicted of felonies in Nebraska had their right to vote restored two years after completing their sentencing. Earlier this year, the legislature actually eliminated the two-year waiting period, a great move for democracy. But the state’s Attorney General, Mike Hilgers, and its Secretary of State, Robert Evnen, didn’t like the new law at all. Hilgers argued that only the state’s board of pardons could restore voting rights, while Evnen actually ordered local registrars to prevent all those with prior felony convictions from voting, claiming the laws that had enfranchised them were unconstitutional.

That’s a lot of people. While the ACLU lawsuit concerned 7,000 people directly affected by the elimination of the waiting period, the move by Evnan actually threatened the right of some 100,000 people in the state from voting. Imagine having completed your felony sentencing decades ago, only to be turned away from a polling station by the actions of a county registrar.

The ruling now makes clear that the laws were in fact constitutional, and that all felons who have completed their sentencing have a right to vote in Nebraska. The deadline to register is fast approaching—online by October 18th and in person by October 25th—so activists are busy assisting affected voters with their registrations.

It bears noting that Nebraska is pivotal to the national election in two important ways. The Harris Campaign needs NE-2’s single electoral vote to cross the 270 threshold, should Harris prevail in the Blue Wall states of Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. Further, the state’s Senate race, where independent Dan Osborn is neck-and-neck in the polls with incumbent Sen. Deb Fischer, could determine control of the upper chamber of Congress.

Here’s a fun tidbit from the opinion. As civil rights lawyer Matthew Segal pointed out,

Justice Miller-Lerman, in explaining why the state AG couldn't simply instruct officials to disregard a law restoring voting rights to people with felony convictions, appears to make a Simpsons reference:

The Fox Network Harris Interview 

The media has rather unfairly criticized Harris for not doing enough interviews, despite her recent appearances on 60 Minutes (which Trump dropped out of), The View, the popular Call Me Daddy podcast, Howard Stern, and yesterday with radio personality Charlamagne tha God. But to settle the matter once and for all, Harris accepted an invitation to appear in enemy territory on the Fox Network, in a sit down interview with anchor Bret Baier.

As a Harris supporter, I had my concerns about this, one shared by many. We did not believe for a moment that Baier, who shamelessly bats for Trump, would treat Harris fairly or respectfully. And on this score we were correct.

Throughout the interview, Baier was belligerent, armed with right-wing talking points and gotchas, and ready to interrupt and talk over Harris. It felt like a set-up, with Baier playing the role of a second debater because Trump had declined to do so.

As reporter Aaron Rupar noted as he real-time commented on the session, “Baier’s first question to Kamala Harris presses her on undocumented immigration. Baier barely lets her get a word in.” 

It quickly became apparent that Baier felt he had more to prove than Harris during the interview. But Harris held her own, and at several points she had to ask him to stop talking over her and interrupting. Baier had to back down when she demanded that she get to finish her response. “Yes, Ma’am,” Baier murmured, tail between his legs.

Baier tried to bait Harris for supporting gender affirming surgery for prisoners, but she shut him down, saying that she would “follow the law,” which requires inmates get medically necessary care. She also pointed out that Trump spent $20 million on anti-trans ads in order to “create fear.” Other politicians faced with this same attack should follow her example.

Baier also tried to suggest that she believed the American people were “stupid” for following Trump, and she also shot that down quickly and masterfully. “Oh God, I would never say that about the American people!” Harris said, looking at Baier with appropriate indignation. She noted that, if you watch any of Trump’s rallies, “he’s the one who tends to demean and belittle.”

At one point, Baier tried to pull a fast one by playing a clip from an interview with Trump in which he made no mention of the “enemy within,” a phrase Harris had singled out as unacceptable. But Harris had done her homework and called out Baier for playing the wrong clip, even from that very same day. That showed high level of mastery of the unfolding facts. Anderson Cooper of CNN zeroed in on this moment and explained to listeners that Baier did not actually show the correct clip, that it was an “interesting choice” Baier had made, and that Harris was correct.

Harris scored high marks from others in the media, from political strategists, and from Fox itself, while Baier received a lot of criticism over his tone and demeanor. 

Symone Sanders-Townsend of MSNBC's The Weekend tweeted,

I have sat in the room for a number of interviews with VP Harris and they have been tough. I’ve never witnessed what I witnessed tonight though. The interviewer wasn’t themselves - instead he was rude, misleading and pulled questions straight out of a proverbial Trump/Vance press release.

The best part is, VP’s response was simply to match his energy, stick to her why of the interview and not take the bait. <— this is what a President would do

Former campaign manager and Democratic consultant David Doak noted that the very fact Harris did this interview at all was great for voters to see:

Often times in politics the message sent has nothing to do with the questions asked.  Like Nixon looking [s]weaty and nervous, JFK cool and calm, Dukakis answer to death penalty for someone who [raped] his wife.....here the FOX interview showed a woman so confident she would go into the lion’s den, so tough and ready to be President that she could take the heat. The non verbal message was she is ready to be President, fearless, and tough.

Ron Filipkowski of The Meidas Network astutely observed,

There is not a single interviewer at Fox who has ever interviewed Trump the way that they just interviewed Harris. They wouldn’t dare. And if they dared, he would rage at them for months and tell everyone not to watch it. But Harris did great and showed them for who they are. 

Peter Wehner, who writes for the New York Times and the Atlantic, was unsparing on Baier while praising Harris.

My take: Bret Baier has rarely looked as bad (or tendentious) as he did in his interview with Kamala Harris. On the flip side, this was one of her best interviews. She dominated Bret. All in all it was quite a bad day for MAGA world’s most important media outlet.

Baier himself admitted that Harris scored points during the interview. Speaking about the interview later, he said, 

“I think she had a mission that she wanted to do. And maybe she wanted to have a viral moment, she wanted to have a pushback. She came to Fox News and she wanted to have a ‘go after Donald Trump’ viral moment that plays on a lot of other channels and on social media. And I think she may have gotten that.”

Mark Cuban, who once supported Trump, has been stumping hard recently for Harris to convince the business community of Harris’s leadership qualities. As he summarized, drawing a sharp contrast to Trump,

When Bret went hard after her[, she] didn’t call him names. She didn’t quit the interview. She didn’t make things up. She never once complained the questions were tough. She never played the victim card. She didn’t lose her temper. She didn’t take the bait to diminish or talk down to Trump supporters.  

She stood up to him with force and never backed down. 

Trump pads a Fox appearance, then blows it with undecided Latino voters

When it was announced that Trump would appear in Georgia before an audience of women voters on the Fox Network, it was already evident that this would be a friendly crowd, even though women tend to support Harris by a sizable margin. 

As The Independent reported, “many in attendance didn’t need their minds swayed as they were already part devoted fans.” Matt Gertz of Media Matters reported that the very first question came from someone who appeared to be Lisa Cauley, the president of the Fulton County Republican Women.

This serves as a reminder that the Fox Network is simply the propaganda arm of the GOP, and not news by any stretch. It acts more like Russian state-owned television with its fake audiences and planted questions.

Trump still managed to create news by doubling down on the idea that the true enemies of the U.S. are “the enemy within”—including soon to be California senator Adam Schiff and “The Pelosis.” Trump believes the White House should be able to use the military to go after such people. It’s no wonder the former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley called him “fascist to the core.”

Trump didn’t fare so well before a less friendly audience of Latino voters who still consider themselves undecided in the election. The Spanish-language Q&A was conducted by Univision, and some of the questions were better than any member of the media have ever asked Trump directly.

For example, a farmer asked Trump who will do the hard jobs if he deports undocumented immigrants. It’s a reality that Florida recently had to learn the hard way as it drove migrants out of the state, leading many growers and construction sites without an adequate number of hands to complete their harvests or their projects. But Trump had no response at all to this, instead veering off into his usual false diatribe against migrants as being criminals of the worst kind.

You can watch the excellent question and hear Trump’s full non-answer here.

One audience member asked Trump if he really believed that Haitian migrants in Springfield were eating the pets of the local residents. Rather than apologize for getting his facts wrong and spreading dangerous misinformation, Trump claimed that this is what was “reported” and “All I do is report.” 

Another voter, who was formerly registered as a Republican, gave Trump the opportunity to win back his vote. As White House adviser Neera Tanden noted, this was akin to a “Joe the Plumber” moment which the Harris campaign should jump on. 

The voter was Ramiro González. He said that Trump’s inaction, during the January 6 riot, was a little disturbing to him, and he felt Trump had misled the public during Covid. He asked why he should support Trump when so many in his own administration didn’t.

Trump responded by saying that 97 percent of the people in his administration support him, which is probably news to the half of his former cabinet officials who do not support his reelection. He said that besides Ashli Babbitt, “nobody was killed” and “there were no guns” present at the attack at the Capitol (both statements are untrue) and that it was a “day of love” from the standpoint of his supporters.

These statements garnered incredulous reactions from González and other members of the audience. You can watch the question, given in English, and Trump’s response here. Notice also that Trump uses the word “we” when talking about the MAGA crowd that attacked the building—a fact of which Special Counsel Jack Smith might take note.

Undecided Latino voters are a critical piece of the puzzle for both campaigns, particularly in the Southwestern battlegrounds of Nevada and Arizona. This group has been hit very hard by inflation and remains soft in the polling for Democrats. In these final weeks of the election, how those voters decide could swing these states to either camp. 

On Wednesday, Trump did little to convince this critical voting bloc that they should put their trust in him again as president.

TorrentGalaxy Has a Rough Start Under New Owners [TorrentFreak]

tgx logoTorrentGalaxy has had its fair share of issues over the past few months.

In June, many users feared that the site had thrown in the towel, displaying only a cryptic message that read “4ever?” to visitors. This came as a surprise, even to the site’s top staffers, who had no clue what was going on.

The site eventually returned as if nothing ever happened and resumed its operations. The purpose of the downtime was never clarified and most people forgot about it until the site went offline again in September with another cryptic message.

With the rumor mill in full swing, claims from ‘moderators’ about the site’s demise started to circulate. However, those turned out to be unfounded as the site made yet another comeback after a few days.

Meanwhile, users began noticing occasional technical issues with the site, including periods of downtime such as today. Visitors to the site currently see the following message:

“Site is temporarily unavailable due to automated maintenance or some mook spilling coffee in the wrong places.”

TorrentGalaxy Down

tgx maintenance

These recurring issues are unusual for TorrentGalaxy which never suffered from long stints of downtime in previous years. So, why is this happening now?

‘New Owners’

After speaking to several sources, we can now offer some broader context. Apparently, the site has changed owners recently. The initial ‘maintenance’ was presumably part of this handover and could also play a role in other recent issues.

TorrentFreak spoke to one of the TorrentGalaxy’s original founders, who confirmed the change of ownership. We tried to get in touch with the new operators to hear their side of the story, but they haven’t replied.

Takeovers of pirate sites are not uncommon, but given TorrentGalaxy’s community-driven history, this is a noteworthy event.

Finding out more details about the takeover appears impossible, however. The co-founder we spoke to claims not to have been involved in selling the site and the person who was in charge of the sale can’t be reached.

How it All Began

While we don’t know where the site is heading under its new owners, the co-founder did provide some more background on how TorrentGalaxy got started. That, by itself, is a story worth sharing.

The co-founder prefers to remain anonymous, so here we refer to them using the fictitious nickname “Genesis”. For the record, what follows is the account of one person and should be interpreted as such.

The origin story takes us back to late 2017, when ExtraTorrent had just shut down. At the time, Genesis came up with the idea to start a new torrent site. A developer was approached to code it from scratch, but the end result wasn’t satisfactory, so that initial project stranded.

During this time, many former ExtraTorrent members stayed connected, often using the chatbox of another popular torrent site, 1337x. When Genesis shared their plans for a new torrent site there, “Cameron” (another pseudonym), also a former ExtraTorrent user, offered assistance.

Both founders brought something essential to the table. Cameron had plenty of coding experience and took care of all the technical aspects. Meanwhile, Genesis helped out with the finances until the site could sustain itself though advertisements.

Within months, an idea born in a chatbox became TorrentGalaxy, which quickly built a thriving community. In just a few years, ‘TGx’ grew into one of the largest torrent sites, serving millions of visitors each month.

It was already public knowledge that former ExtraTorrent members founded the site, but this backstory adds some more color. What began as a simple chatbox conversation, triggered a transformation worthy of ‘notorious pirate site status‘, and the associated legal pressure that comes with it.

The reason for the site’s sale remains unknown. We understand that Genesis and Cameron are no longer in contact. Perhaps they prefer to leave the past behind, regardless of TorrentGalaxy’s future.

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

Thursday 2024-10-17

11:00 PM

New FTC Rules Make It Easier To Cancel Services, Punish Companies For Being Annoying Little Shits About It [Techdirt]

While FTC boss Lina Khan certainly has had some growing pains, she’s fought for consumer protection and antitrust reform in a way that U.S. regulators haven’t seen for the better part of a generation.

Whether it’s taking on automaker privacy abuses, supporting right to repair reforms, or taking aim at Amazon’s attempt to dominate the entirety of online retail, she’s notably different from the feckless revolving door careerists that usually stock regulatory agencies, which is why the Barry Dillers, Reid Hoffmans, and Mark Cubans of the world are so hot and bothered.

Enter the FTC’s latest effort: cracking down on the predatory and annoying ways companies try to prevent you from cancelling services. Cemented by AOL in its heyday, and perfected by everybody from the Wall Street Journal to your broadband and wireless phone provider, corporate America loves to make it as annoying as possible to simply cancel services, often actively hiding any way to do so.

The FTC says its new revamp of the FTC’s 1973 “Negative Option Rule” requires companies be completely transparent about the limitations of deals and promotions, prohibits them from making cancelling services difficult or impossible, requires consumer actively consent to having read terms and deal restrictions, and generally makes cancelling a service as easy as signing up.

“Some businesses too often trick consumers into paying for subscriptions they no longer want or didn’t sign up for in the first place,” Khan said. “The proposed rule would require that companies make it as easy to cancel a subscription as it is to sign up for one. The proposal would save consumers time and money, and businesses that continued to use subscription tricks and traps would be subject to stiff penalties.”

Most of the FTC’s new guidelines will go into effect in 180 days, with some in effect within 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. The rulemaking updates started way back in 2019. There’s a fact sheet here that explains the proposal in more detail.

Consumer groups like US PIRG were pleased.

“For years, too many companies have used questionable tactics to trap customers in recurring payments even if they no longer want or need their services,” US PIRG Consumer Watchdog Director Teresa Murray said of the rule changes. “Subscriptions and memberships have often been like a visit to the Hotel California: ‘You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave.’ Now, you’ll be able to leave.”

Trade groups representing everything from media companies and telecoms to car wash operations called the rules “burdensome and unnecessary.” Publishers and Advertisers like the News/Media Alliance also complained about the rules, insisting they would “confuse customers” (one alliance group member, the WSJ, worked for years to make subscription cancellation as annoying as humanly possible, and didn’t seem too upset about consumer confusion at the time).

I’d suspect that, as in most sectors, these organizations will likely file suit to scuttle the new rules, insisting that several recent decisions by a corrupt Supreme Court have effectively made U.S. consumer protection effectively illegal without the specific, uncharacteristically-competent approval of a Congress too corrupt to function. They’re having more success on this front than you might think.

Again, there’s a lot of grumbling about Khan, but most of it oddly omits the numerous and popular consumer protection reforms she continues to implement cracking down on obvious consumer pain points the government previously spent decades doing nothing about.

08:00 PM

06:00 PM

Pirate IPTV Server Shut Down as City of London Police Target UK ‘Bulk Seller’ [TorrentFreak]

Police and anti-piracy groups in the UK appear to be following through with a pledge to keep cracking down on those involved in the pirate IPTV ecosystem.

Most arrests recently have targeted IPTV subscription resellers, i.e those who buy subscriptions and sell them on to friends, family, and increasingly anyone on social media, at a profit.

A report from the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU) at City of London Police suggests that a different type of player was targeted in an operation earlier this week. Photographs taken during the operation appear to back that up.

Target: West Midlands

Police say that the operation began in the early hours of Monday morning with a raid on a residential address in Wolverhampton, West Midlands. No specifics are provided beyond that but ‘dawn raids’ often take place between 6am and 7am, before suspects have had a chance to leave or wake up enough to destroy evidence.

“A 38-year-old man was arrested on suspicion of copyright and money laundering offenses, after he was suspected to have sold illegal streaming packages in bulk for others to sell to the public,” City of London Police report.

While subscription resellers with enough reach could also be described as selling packages in bulk, additional search warrants executed at four business addresses in Wolverhampton and Coventry indicate a more significant player.

Server Seized

According to police, officers from PIPCU assisted by their colleagues at West Midlands Police, seized hardware from one of the locations.

“Officers seized a server, which was used to host the illegal streaming service, at one of the addresses and the service was shut down,” the report adds.

Not shared as often as they once were, PIPCU also provided the following image from the operation. Given the unusual angle, it may actually be a pair of images side by side.

Image Credit: PIPCU/City of London Policeserver-raid-wolverhampton

Hardware aside for a moment, the location shown in the image is unquestionably a datacenter. Whether the datacenter is in Wolverhampton or Coventry isn’t revealed, but the image on the right isn’t just a mess of wires hiding a man’s face either.

Satellite Signal Distribution

If we zoom in to take a closer look, the piece of hardware (top right image, turned at an angle, blue cables) apparently of interest the technician isn’t a typical server, but it is used for distribution.

3-image-iptv

Manufactured by Danish company Triax, the device is known as a multiswitch and is designed for use in homes or other accomodation where one satellite signal to a single receiver isn’t enough.

Signals received at the box can be sent to a number of devices simultaneously by assigning a unique frequency channel to each device. This allows multiple receivers to receive different satellite channels at the same time, which could come in very handy for those with an end use that requires that kind of thing.

Further confirmation that the images were taken in a datacenter appears in the image on the left (above). Not shared as part of PIPCU’s press release, the photograph appeared on social media, in lieu of the more interesting image discussed above.

Pirate Service Used to Pirate Sky TV

Unsurprisingly, the packages allegedly sold provided illegal access to Sky channels but in all likelihood the overall channel availability would’ve been much broader than that, affecting many other broadcasters beyond Sky.

However, as a subscription broadcaster and the central component of the UK’s BeStreamWise anti-piracy campaign, this operation isn’t the first and won’t be the last for Sky, as it works to press home the campaign’s mantra of keeping consumers safe, while keeping its own content free from pirates.

“When people illegally stream they provide their personal information to criminals and the risks that result are very real,” says Matt Hibbert, Group Director of Anti-Piracy at Sky.

“We are grateful to the Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit for leading this action. We’ll continue to do everything we can to protect our content from theft, and to help keep consumers safe.”

The man arrested on Monday has since been released under investigation.

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

03:00 PM

Early next week… [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

It’s going to get busy around here. I wanted to share some upcoming events (online and in person) so you can plan ahead… there are five more for the end of the week, but here we go:

Linda Rottenberg is joining me on LinkedIn on Monday. She’s built an extraordinary organization that most people have never heard of–Endeavor transforms entrepreneurs who go one to build significant organizations worldwide. We’ll be talking about her strategic insights and the work that matters, and taking your questions.

James Clear will be my guest on Tuesday. He’s one of the most successful business book authors of all time. We’ll be talking about habits, of course, but also about the strategy of the company he’s helping to back, Authors Equity. We’ll take your questions live.

The Worldwide Strategy Meetup also happens on Tuesday. It’s taking place in 200+ cities around the world, and thousands are expected to participate. It’s not too late to find your peers–and it’s free. All the details are here.

My new book launches on Tuesday, October 22, with audiobook and Kindle editions as well. There’s also a collectible chocolate bar (of course there is) with trading cards, and a breakthrough strategy deck, a tool you and your team can use to explore the unseen opportunities all around us. Details are here.

And, on stage and in person (with a virtual option) I’ll be in DC on the 28th with Bina Venkataraman. I’m really looking forward to our conversation. Find out more here.

On the 23rd through the 25th, there are more live online conversations, I’ll keep you posted.

Thanks for being part of this.

      

02:00 PM

‘Baldur’s Gate 3’ Director Appears To Be Very Confused About The Secondary Market & Who Created It [Techdirt]

It can be easy for people to dislike the secondary market if they aren’t the ones selling into it. Commonly referred to as “scalpers”, the fact is that the secondary market is a very important part of the economy. It’s how goods retain some of their value, for instance. And when goods are sold several times, this naturally feeds into the economy and tax revenue for the country. It can also be a fantastic indicator of pricing efficiency in the primary market. For instance, if a good is bought and able to be resold very quickly on the secondary market for more than the original price, that can be an indicator for the original producer that they can consider pricing their goods higher.

But if you suddenly can’t afford a limited good because of its cost on the secondary market, that can certainly be aggravating. And apparently sometimes the original producer of the product can be annoyed on fans’ behalf as well. That is the case with one Larian director who is very mad at “scalpers” for selling Baldur’s Gate 3 Collector’s Edition copies at ten times the original price.

This was brought to stark attention by Larian’s publishing director Michael Douse, who tweeted (exxed?) to express his disgust at the listings he was finding online.

“Hate scalpers, man,” he wrote on X. “I understand how commodity works, but this CE isn’t a commodity it’s designed to make someone happy not rich.”

Now, frankly, the rest of that Kotaku post is likewise filled with a bunch of empty-calorie remarks on how bad “scalpers” are and how everything about this entire situation sucks and blah, blah, blah. Whether the author was merely attempting to toss red meat to readers or simply has a profound misunderstanding of what the secondary market is and does is of no material importance to me. I’d much rather focus on some very correct and key points that same author makes.

The main thrust of Douse’s complaint above is about people who bought the Collector’s Edition primarily to trade it, not because they’re some superfan or whatever. In other words, according to this complaint, the problem is that people looking to make money off the Collector’s Edition are buying it and creating scarcity for the everyday fan, thereby driving the price up to a point where most of those fans cannot afford it, or at least have to buy it at a highly inflated price. Now try to square that complaint with the entire existence of a Collector’s Edition in the first place.

It’s a situation that’s created by the artificial scarcity of the object in the first place, where a company deliberately doesn’t make as much of something as there are people who want to buy it, then price that thing at far more than it costs to make (because, that’s how commerce works) to reduce the number of people who’ll find it within their means.

If it were mass produced, it presumably wouldn’t be a “Collector’s” version (whatever that actually means—“I’ve collected all one of this Baldur’s Gate 3 boxed version!”), but then it would be available for everyone who wants it at the recommended price. And scalpers wouldn’t have a market to exploit.

Exactly! If Douse and Larian would like to rid the world of inflated prices for Collector’s Editions, let them go first. The call, as the saying goes, is coming from inside the house. Larian created this entire secondary market through its own decisions on production quantities for a special version of the product it chose to make. And, to be clear, it can absolutely do every bit of that without any complaint from me.

But then those same people that created the secondary market should probably stop whining about how it operates.

01:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 空 [Kanji of the Day]

✍8

小1

empty, sky, void, vacant, vacuum

クウ

そら あ.く あ.き あ.ける から す.く す.かす むな.しい

星空   (ほしぞら)   —   starry sky
空港   (くうこう)   —   airport
空気   (くうき)   —   air
航空   (こうくう)   —   aviation
空間   (あきま)   —   vacancy
空振り   (からぶり)   —   swing and a miss
架空   (かくう)   —   fictitious
航空機   (こうくうき)   —   aircraft
空き   (あき)   —   space
国際空港   (こくさいくうこう)   —   international airport

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 壇 [Kanji of the Day]

✍16

中学

podium, stage, rostrum, terrace

ダン タン

壇上   (だんじょう)   —   on a stage
土壇場   (どたんば)   —   last moment
仏壇   (ぶつだん)   —   Buddhist (household) altar
花壇   (かだん)   —   flower bed
登壇   (とうだん)   —   taking the podium
教壇   (きょうだん)   —   platform
祭壇   (さいだん)   —   altar
教壇に立つ   (きょうだんにたつ)   —   to stand on a podium
文壇   (ぶんだん)   —   literary world
画壇   (がだん)   —   artists' world

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

08:00 AM

Vice Mayor’s Suit Against Marion County Cops Who Raided Her House, Newspaper’s Office Can Move Forward, Court Says [Techdirt]

There is simply too much going on here to pretend there’s a way to succinctly sum up what’s led us to this point in our coverage. A small Kansas newspaper’s offices, the home of its 98-year-old owner (who died shortly after the raid), and the home of Marion vice mayor Ruth Herbel were all raided by the Marion County police, led by its new police chief, Gideon Cody, an apparent refugee seeking solid employment after having (allegedly) become a bit of a problem for the Kansas City Police Department.

I’ll try, but I’m going to crib from some of my previous notes. There’s Kari Newell, a local business person who was seeking a liquor license for a new business when her previous drunk-driving record became public. There’s County Attorney Joel Ensey, who claimed to have no knowledge of the raid until public records showed he actually knew plenty about it beforehand. There’s the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, which also disavowed all knowledge, until it became clear it had knowledge as well, at which point it began publicly condemning Chief Cody and his department. There’s the mayor who didn’t like his deputy mayor and seemed to be all too willing to indulge the police chief. There’s the judge who signed off on the search warrants without reading them and then tried to distance herself from actions — a judge who apparently had some drunk driving problems of her own. There are the communications Chief Cody made to Kari Newell, informing her he was going to raid the newspaper to shut down its coverage of her and, presumably, any further investigation into his law enforcement past. In the middle of all of this, there’s some bullshit computer crime charges, which were invoked despite the newspaper accessing driver record data legally through a third party.

Then there’s this, which opens up the court decision [PDF] finding (mostly) in favor of former Vice Mayor Ruth Herbel, who sued following the raid on her house that accompanied the PD’s raid of the newspaper and its owner’s house. It’s the sort of thing that might make one yearn for the relative innocence of big city corruption as it details exactly why a bunch of local officials and government employees may have conspired to intimidate their enemies (a newspaper and a deputy mayor not exactly fond of the mayor) into silence by sending out some guys with guns to rifle through their belongings and walk off with their electronics. If you thought this was nasty and convoluted before, buckle up:

Ruth has been politically active. She ran for city council in November 2019. She said she was “tired of the dishonesty in the city administration.” Ruth campaigned with [Mayor David] Mayfield on a platform of change and transparency. But Ruth and Mayfield began to clash after the election. The local paper reported that Ruth and Mayfield disagreed about city-council meetings. Ruth wanted freewheeling discussion, dissent, and debate. Mayfield seemed to want to act as a rubber stamp.

Ruth and Mayfield had several disputes. Mayfield once called her a “bitch” during an executive session. Mayfield began trying to control to whom Ruth could speak, how much she could speak, and on what topics. In November 2021, he required her to first raise concerns with the city administrator before raising them at meetings. He required her to give advance notice of any ordinances or policies she planned to mention. Mayfield had the city attorney send Ruth a letter warning her it could be illegal for her to speak to anyone interested in dealing with the city without full council approval. Mayfield forbade Ruth from contacting the Kansas League of Municipalities. Mayfield eventually forbade Ruth from contacting the city attorney. No other city council members had these restrictions.

Ruth frequently criticized Mayfield in the Marion County Record, which is the local paper. Ruth complained Mayfield was violating the city charter, handing out funds without authorization, giving raises to favored employees, holding illegal meetings, and disregarding procedure. The paper ran several stories detailing the tension between Ruth and Mayfield. The stories included comments by Ruth that upset Mayfield. In July 2022, Mayfield and the city council passed an ordinance over Ruth’s dissent. Ruth organized a referendum against the ordinance. She spent her own money on signs and advertising that criticized the ordinance. In December 2022, voters rejected Mayfield’s ordinance by an overwhelming margin. The paper described it as a personal defeat for Mayfield.

About a month after the failed vote, Mayfield’s wife filed a petition to recall Ruth from her position on the city council. Mayfield was a sponsor of the petition. Mayfield’s wife promoted the removal petition on Facebook, which Mayfield re-posted. The recall petition failed because there weren’t enough signatures collected.

In June 2023, Mayfield ordered the city administrator to make all city council members sign an acknowledgment that they held their office on an at-will basis, even though they were elected. Ruth crossed out the “at-will” language before signing.

That’s kind of a lot. And that explains why the mayor and his supporters in the city council would have been perfectly fine with supporting raids of the newspaper and Ruth Herbel’s home. But to do that, you need the assistance of law enforcement. Well, it seems Gideon Cody and his business-owning, drunk-driving friend were close enough they were able to collaborate on other forms of intimidation.

Cody’s appointment as police chief immediately introduced a new level of antagonism.

Mayfield decided to hire Cody despite Cody’s troubled history. Cody took the oath of office before the city council had a chance to formally vote on hiring him.

Cody immediately showed hostility toward the media. He declined interview requests with the paper and stopped providing weekly activity reports to the paper. The paper published that he had discontinued the practice. Cody also told the city administrator not to provide the paper with the pay scale for officers.

Cody’s view of the media was shared by others in Mayfield’s administration. By the end of July 2023, the city administrator told Mayfield they should cease all communication with the paper. Mayfield shared posts on Facebook calling journalists the “real villains in America.”

From there, it just descends into full-blown corrupt insanity — the sort of thing you wish was relegated to works of fiction.

[Mayor] Mayfield instructed Cody to open an investigation into his administration’s critics. Cody reached out to KDOR [the TV station website where the paper had verified the DUI info], and Mayfield and Cody both reached out to [Kari] Newell to warn her that Ruth knew about her suspended license. Mayfield and Cody claimed that Ruth would oppose Newell’s catering license because of the DUI, even though Ruth’s concerns were just about eligibility.

Cody told Newell that someone had stolen the letter from her mailbox. He didn’t have any factual basis for this. Newell said he was wrong, and Cody, again without factual basis, said someone had stolen her identity. Cody told Newell that the paper had shared her driving record with Ruth even though Cody knew [Pam] Maag [another town resident] had given the letter to both Ruth and the paper.

Mayfield told Newell that the only way to stop Ruth and get her removed from the city council was to have her arrested and charged with a crime. Mayfield and Cody decided it was a crime for Ruth “to merely possess a screenshot of a screenshot of a letter detailing information posted publicly to Facebook.”

There’s so much more in there, including the cooperation and guidance of the local sheriff, who felt his office would be embarrassed if it became public it had allowed Newell to not only drive, but operate a catering business (presumably involving driving commercially-licensed vehicles) without a valid license. Working with Chief Cody and the mayor, computer crime charges were whipped up and a warrant request handed to a judge — one that carefully omitted every single fact that would have shown no accused of any crime had actually committed these crimes.

There’s a lot to take in here and I encourage you to read the entire decision to fully comprehend the sheer amount of deliberate misconduct engaged in by multiple government officials. The upshot of the decision is this, though: most of the claims survive. Several parties are dismissed, but — most importantly — the ones still on the hook are Chief Cody and his Marion PD underlings. The city itself isn’t allowed to escape the lawsuit either, thanks to the mayor’s overt involvement and complicity in these horrendous civil rights violations. The lawsuit will move forward, with Ruth Herbel continuing to be represented by the Institute of Justice.

This is an extremely ugly chapter in American law enforcement history. Unfortunately, it’s one of several and it certainly won’t be the last time the government abuses its power to silence people it doesn’t like, including journalists who are given the utmost in First Amendment protections when it comes to handling issues of public interest. But hopefully this will cause the next would-be Chief Cody/Mayor David Mayfield to pause before deciding the communities they’re supposed to be serving are fiefdoms they can control through intimidation and unlawful actions.

07:00 AM

More Layoffs At Paramount As Streaming Media Giant’s ‘Merger Synergies’ Continue [Techdirt]

Over the summer we noted how the brunchlords in charge of Paramount (CBS) decided to eliminate decades of MTV News journalism and Comedy Central history as part of their ongoing and utterly mindless “cost saving” efforts. It was just the latest casualties in an ever-consolidating and very broken U.S. media business routinely run by some of the least competent people imaginable.

We’ve noted how with streaming subscriber growth slowing, quarterly returns have stagnated. So media giants (and the incompetent brunchlords who usually fail upward into positions of unearned power within them) have turned their attention to all the usual tricks: layoffs, pointless megamergers, price hikes, and weird and costly consumer restrictions to goose quarterly earnings and generate tax breaks.

That of course includes Paramount, which recently announced a major merger with Redbird/Skydance that executives promised would result in untold and amazing new “synergies,” helping transform the company into a next-generation streaming juggernaut. Of course what’s actually happened, as usual, has been a whole bunch of layoffs, the second round of which hit this week:

“Paramount is looking to save some $500 million and plans to lay off 15 percent of its U.S.-based employees. Tuesday’s layoffs were the second round, following a first wave of job cuts in mid-August.”

In a statement, Paramount executives called the mass firings an evolution:

“Like the entire Media industry, we are working to accelerate streaming profitability while at the same time adjusting to the evolving landscape in our traditional businesses. Days like today are never easy. It is difficult to say goodbye to valued colleagues, and to those departing, we are incredibly grateful for your countless contributions.”

The new company is being overseen by Larry Ellison’s son David, who first used family Oracle wealth to purchase his role as a Hollywood producer, then received a $6 billion gift from dad to make the merger possible. Paramount had struggled with its ingenious strategy of charging higher and higher rates for lower and lower quality services, and eyed a merger as an executive escape hatch.

Again, the promise here is that this results in a better, leaner, more interesting company, but when it comes to media deals like this, that’s rarely the case. There’s hardly a single major media merger in the last twenty years that genuinely improved product quality or the fortunes of employees or consumers. And it’s almost never the strategically incompetent higher-level executives that wind up paying the price.

In reality, all the costs of debt-riddled transactions are borne by either consumers (in the form of higher prices, lower-quality services, and annoying new restrictions) or lower and mid-level employees in the form of layoffs. The AT&T–>Time Warner–>Discovery series of mergers was the poster child for the madness and dysfunction caused by this “consolidation for consolidation’s sake” mindset.

Wall Street wants its improved quarterly returns at any cost. It doesn’t care if those short term profits result in a lower quality product, consumer backlash, a loss of our collective history, or permanent damage to the brand. That’s a problem for somebody else to figure out after the extraction class has already made their money on the front end.

It’s a pointless doom loop that’s infected both entertainment media and traditional journalism. By the time any sort of check comes due for executive incompetence, they’ve either retired on the back of outsized compensation, or are off to another company to repeat the entire process all over again, having been financially disincentivized from learning absolutely anything from the experience.

06:00 AM

Daily Deal: The Complete 2024 Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking Training Bundle [Techdirt]

The Complete 2024 Penetration Testing & Ethical Hacking Training Bundle has 9 courses to help you learn to fight back against cyber threats. Courses include hands-on lessons on penetration testing for AWS, IoT, and web apps, along with hacking basics and a few certificate exam prep courses. It’s on sale for $50.

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.

Wyden: CALEA Hack Proves Dangers Of Government-Mandated Backdoors [Techdirt]

When Congress passed the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA) in 1994, they were assured by then-FBI Director Louis Freeh that the mandated wiretap backdoors posed no security risks. Fast forward to today, following the news of a massive CALEA hack and Senator Ron Wyden is reminding the DOJ of that history, while urging the Attorney General to better protect Americans’ security, in part by no longer demanding backdoors in encryption systems.

Last week, we wrote about the bombshell story of the Chinese hacking group Salt Typhoon apparently having “months or longer” access to the mandated wiretapping system found within our phone system. We noted how this story should put an end to the idea — often pushed by lawmakers and law enforcement — that surely we can put similar “backdoors” into encrypted communications.

Senator Ron Wyden has now sent a letter to the FCC and the DOJ highlighting a bit of the history behind CALEA, the statute that mandated wiretapping of the phone lines. In particular, Wyden points out that cybersecurity professionals warned Congress at the time that CALEA would lead to massive vulnerabilities in our phone system and could put everyone’s communications at risk.

These telecommunications companies are responsible for their lax cybersecurity and their failure to secure their own systems, but the government shares much of the blame. The surveillance systems reportedly hacked were mandated by federal law, through the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act (CALEA). CALEA, which was enacted in 1994 at the urging of the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), forced phone companies to install wiretapping technology into then-emerging digital phone networks. In 2006, acting on a request from the FBI, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) expanded this backdoor mandate to broadband internet companies.

During the Congressional hearings for CALEA, cybersecurity experts warned that these backdoors would be prime targets for hackers and foreign intelligence services. However, these concerns were dismissed by then-FBI Director Louis J. Freeh, who testified to Congress that experts’ fears of increased vulnerability were “unfounded and misplaced.” Congress, relying on the FBI Director’s assurances that the security risks experts warned about could be addressed, passed the law mandating backdoors. The Department of Justice (DOJ) received $1 billion in today’s dollars to provide industry grants for the development and purchase of new wiretapping technology.

The letter suggests that the DOJ should use this to start pushing back on efforts to backdoor encryption:

DOJ must stop pushing for policies that harm Americans’ privacy and security by championing surveillance backdoors in other communications technologies, like encrypted messaging apps. There is, and has long been, broad consensus among cybersecurity experts that wiretapping capabilities undermine the security of communications technology and create an irresistible target for hackers and spies. Even so, law enforcement officials, including your predecessor, as well as the current and former FBI Directors, have denied this reality, spread disinformation about non-existent secure backdoors, and sought to pressure companies to weaken the security of their products.

The letter also asks the FCC to issue rules regarding security on CALEA wiretaps. The FCC has had the ability to do this for decades, but has mostly chosen to stay out of it:

Chairwoman Rosenworcel, your agency has the authority to require strong cybersecurity defenses in these systems today. The FCC should initiate a rulemaking process to update the CALEA regulations to fully implement the system security requirements in the law. At a minimum, these updated regulations should establish baseline cybersecurity standards for telecommunications carriers, enforced by steep fines; require independent, annual third-party cybersecurity audits; require board-level cybersecurity expertise; and require senior executives annually sign certifications of compliance with the cybersecurity standards.

Overall, this is a good letter. It would be nice if the DOJ, at least, started pushing back on backdooring encryption, rather than (as it has done for years) pushing for such a security disaster.

ExTwitter Is Such Hot Garbage Even British Cops No Longer Want Anything To Do With It [Techdirt]

Of course, Elon Musk had to take Twitter private. If he had to answer to shareholders, he would have been ousted months ago for his systematic, single-minded destruction of the company’s value.

Pretty much every move he’s made has been some level of bad, ranging from confusing to annoying to infuriating to catastrophic. Alienating long-term users, chasing away advertisers, amplifying the voices of some the worst people in the world, kowtowing to foreign dictators Donald Trump considers to be great leaders, turning verification into pay-to-play, and generally just being an all-around asshole, Musk has managed to turn a social media pioneer into a toxic dumpster fire in record time.

It’s not just advertisers fleeing the platform. It’s also the public sector. Government agencies also use services like Twitter to reach constituents and they’re beginning to see why it might be a bad idea to send out their messages via a service awash in a sea of hate, misinformation, extremism, and grifting.

Even entities that often align themselves with the sort of authoritarians Musk and his Trump-loving fanboys dig the most are finding ExTwitter to have moved a bit too far to the extremist side of the spectrum to continue doing (government) business with the platform. Here are Andy Bruce and Muvija M reporting for Reuters about the latest collateral damage produced by the Musk regime:

Reuters contacted all 45 territorial police forces and British Transport Police by email. Of the 33 to give details about their policy, 10 forces who collectively police nearly 13 million people said they were actively reviewing their presence on X, while 13 said they frequently reviewed all their social media platforms.

[…]

Yet of these 23 forces, six said they were cutting their presence to just one or two X accounts. One, North Wales Police, serving nearly 700,000 residents, stopped using X completely in August.

We … felt that the platform was no longer consistent with our values and therefore we have withdrawn our use of it,” Chief Constable Amanda Blakeman said, adding that they would continue to monitor and review alternative platforms.

The quote in bold could be applied to a large number of former Twitter users, many of which began leaving the platform after Musk made it clear he’d prefer to be surrounded by conspiracy theorists, domestic extremists, far-right racists, and people willing to turn to violence rather than respect a peaceful transition of power. Then there are the Nazis. Lots of them. And all of this is surrounded by the non-stop gibbering of blue-checked asshats either trying to foist their bigotry on others or simply cluttering up threats with auto-generated replies pushing whatever crypto scam they happen to be participating in.

North Wales pulled the plug. It looks like another police agency may soon be headed for the exit door as well.

Gwent Police said they were reviewing X because of questions about “the tone of the platform and whether that is the right place to reach our communities”. All Gwent’s individual officer accounts have been removed.

It’s not just cops no longer seeing the value in maintaining ExTwitter accounts, although it’s always a surprise to see law enforcement agencies exit a platform that caters to so many of their biggest fans: bigots, white nationalists, and others who will lick any boot they see so long as it’s someone they hate being pinned under the heel.

Interacting and informing the public is an important feature of social media services. But other government agencies are now deciding it’s not worth wading through a cesspool just to hand out a few extra digital pamphlets.

Of 32 ambulance and fire services surveyed by Reuters, nine said they had actively reviewed their presence on X. England’s North East Ambulance Service announced in July that it had stopped posting there.

[…]

In recent months, some British charities, and health, and educational establishments have said they will no longer post to X.

Every day brings more news like this. Soon, ExTwitter will be of interest to no one but cultural anthropologists. Even those demanding the resurrection of banned accounts are bound to get bored with seeing nothing but their own bigotry and stupidity reflected back at them by a bunch of blue checks with similar interests and a similar lack of anything actually interesting to say.

For public services that seek to serve the entirety of their public, exiting X is the smart move, even if it means temporarily losing a little bit of reach. There’s nothing to be gained by being one of the last rational voices on a service that is pretty much just 4chan but with a more attractive UI.

02:00 AM

The interaction cascade [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Walk into an office, and the person behind the desk begins an interaction.

You respond (or react). They respond (or react) in turn.

Answer the phone. Caller ID tells you who it is–are you smiling? How much enthusiasm or disdain or annoyance or delight comes through?

The caller responds (or reacts). And so it goes.

Every interaction leads to the next interaction.

But the first one starts the whole thing. And that one can be up to us.

      

Pluralistic: You should be using an RSS reader (16 Oct 2024) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



A rifle-bearing, bearded rebel with crossed bandoliers stands atop a mainframe. His belt bears the RSS logo. The mainframe is on a floor made of a busy, resistor-studded circuit board. The background is a halftoned RSS logo. Around the rebel is a halo of light.

You should be using an RSS reader (permalink)

No matter how hard we all wish it were otherwise, the sad fact is that there aren't really individual solutions to systemic problems. For example: your personal diligence in recycling will have no meaningful impact on the climate emergency.

I get it. People write to me all the time, they say, "What can I change about my life to fight enshittification, or, at the very least, to reduce the amount of enshittification that I, personally, experience?"

It's frustrating, but my general answer is, "Join a movement. Get involved with a union, with EFF, with the FSF. Tell your Congressional candidate to defend Lina Khan from billionaire Dem donors who want her fired. Do something systemic."

There's very little you can do as a consumer. You're not going to shop your way out of monopoly capitalism. Now that Amazon has destroyed most of the brick-and-mortar and digital stores out of business, boycotting Amazon often just means doing without. The collective action problem of leaving Twitter or Facebook is so insurmountable that you end up stuck there, with a bunch of people you love and rely on, who all love each other, all hate the platform, but can't agree on a day and time to leave or a destination to leave for and so end up stuck there.

I've been experiencing some challenging stuff in my personal life lately and yesterday, I just found myself unable to deal with my usual podcast fare so I tuned into the videos from the very last XOXO, in search of uplifting fare:

https://www.youtube.com/@xoxofest

I found it. Talks by Dan Olson, Cabel Sasser, Ed Yong and many others, especially Molly White:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTaeVVAvk-c

Molly's talk was so, so good, but when I got to her call to action, I found myself pulling a bit of a face:

But the platforms do not exist without the people, and there are a lot more of us than there are of them. The platforms have installed themselves in a position of power, but they are also vulnerable…

Are the platforms really that vulnerable? The collective action problem is so hard, the switching costs are so high – maybe the fact that "there's a lot more of us than there are of them" is a bug, not a feature. The more of us there are, the thornier our collective action problem and the higher the switching costs, after all.

And then I had a realization: the conduit through which I experience Molly's excellent work is totally enshittification-proof, and the more I use it, the easier it is for everyone to be less enshittified.

This conduit is anti-lock-in, it works for nearly the whole internet. It is surveillance-resistant, far more accessible than the web or any mobile app interface. It is my secret super-power.

It's RSS.

RSS (one of those ancient internet acronyms with multiple definitions, including, but not limited to, "Really Simple Syndication") is an invisible, automatic way for internet-connected systems to public "feeds." For example, rather than reloading the Wired homepage every day and trying to figure out which stories are new (their layout makes this very hard to do!), you can just sign up for Wired's RSS feed, and use an RSS reader to monitor the site and preview new stories the moment they're published. Wired pushes about 600 words from each article into that feed, stripped of the usual stuff that makes Wired nearly impossible to read: no 20-second delay subscription pop-up, text in a font and size of your choosing. You can follow Wired's feed without any cookies, and Wired gets no information about which of its stories you read. Wired doesn't even get to know that you're monitoring its feed.

I don't mean to pick on Wired here. This goes for every news source I follow – from CNN to the New York Times. But RSS isn't just good for the news! It's good for everything. Your friends' blogs? Every blogging platform emits an RSS feed by default. You can follow every one of them in your reader.

Not just blogs. Do you follow a bunch of substackers or other newsletters? They've all got RSS feeds. You can read those newsletters without ever registering in the analytics of the platforms that host them. The text shows up in black and white (not the sadistic, 8-point, 80% grey-on-white type these things all default to). It is always delivered, without any risk of your email provider misclassifying an update as spam:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/10/10/dead-letters/

Did you know that, by default, your email sends information to mailing list platforms about your reading activity? The platform gets to know if you opened the message, and often how far along you've read in it. On top of that, they get all the private information your browser or app leaks about you, including your location. This is unbelievably gross, and you get to bypass all of it, just by reading in RSS.

Are your friends too pithy for a newsletter, preferring to quip on social media? Unfortunately, it's pretty hard to get an RSS feed from Insta/FB/Twitter, but all those new ones that have popped up? They all have feeds. You can follow any Mastodon account (which means you can follow any Threads account) via RSS. Same for Bluesky. That also goes for older platforms, like Tumblr and Medium. There's RSS for Hacker News, and there's a sub-feed for the comments on every story. You can get RSS feeds for the Fedex, UPS and USPS parcels you're awaiting, too.

Your local politician's website probably has an RSS feed. Ditto your state and national reps. There's an RSS feed for each federal agency (the FCC has a great blog!).

Your RSS reader lets you put all these feeds into folders if you want. You can even create automatic folders, based on keywords, or even things like "infrequently updated sites" (I follow a bunch of people via RSS who only update a couple times per year – cough, Danny O'Brien, cough – and never miss a post).

Your RSS reader doesn't (necessarily) have an algorithm. By default, you'll get everything as it appears, in reverse-chronological order.

Does that remind you of anything? Right: this is how social media used to work, before it was enshittified. You can single-handedly disenshittify your experience of virtually the entire web, just by switching to RSS, traveling back in time to the days when Facebook and Twitter were more interested in showing you the things you asked to see, rather than the ads and boosted content someone else would pay to cram into your eyeballs.

Now, you sign up to so many feeds that you're feeling overwhelmed and you want an algorithm to prioritize posts – or recommend content. Lots of RSS readers have some kind of algorithm and recommendation system (I use News, which offers both, though I don't use them – I like the glorious higgeldy-piggeldy of the undifferentiated firehose feed).

But you control the algorithm, you control the recommendations. And if a new RSS reader pops up with an algorithm you're dying to try, you can export all the feeds you follow with a single click, which will generate an OPML file. Then, with one click, you can import that OPML file into any other RSS reader in existence and all your feeds will be seamlessly migrated there. You can delete your old account, or you can even use different readers for different purposes.

You can access RSS in a browser or in an app on your phone (most RSS readers have an app), and they'll sync up, so a story you mark to read later on your phone will be waiting for you the next time you load up your reader in a browser tab, and you won't see the same stories twice (unless you want to, in which case you can mark them as unread).

RSS basically works like social media should work. Using RSS is a chance to visit a utopian future in which the platforms have no power, and all power is vested in publishers, who get to decide what to publish, and in readers, who have total control over what they read and how, without leaking any personal information through the simple act of reading.

And here's the best part: every time you use RSS, you bring that world closer into being! The collective action problem that the publishers and friends and politicians and businesses you care about is caused by the fact that everyone they want to reach is on a platform, so if they leave the platform, they'll lose that community. But the more people who use RSS to follow them, the less they'll depend on the platform.

Unlike those largely useless, performative boycotts of widely used platforms, switching to RSS doesn't require that you give anything up. Not only does switching to RSS let you continue to follow all the newsletters, webpages and social media accounts you're following now, it makes doing so better: more private, more accessible, and less enshittified.

Switching to RSS lets you experience just the good parts of the enshitternet, but that experience is delivered in manner that the new, good internet we're all dying for.

My own newsletter is delivered in fulltext via RSS. If you're reading this as a Mastodon or Twitter thread, on Tumblr or on Medium, or via email, you can get it by RSS instead:

https://pluralistic.net/feed/

Don't worry about which RSS reader you start with. It literally doesn't matter. Remember, you can switch readers with two clicks and take all the feeds you've subscribed to with you! If you want a recommendation, I have nothing but praise for Newsblur, which I've been paying $2/month for since 2011 (!):

https://newsblur.com/

Subscribing to feeds is super-easy, too: the links for RSS feeds are invisibly embedded in web-pages. Just paste the URL of a web-page into your RSS reader's "add feed" box and it'll automagically figure out where the feed lives and add it to your subscriptions.

It's still true that the new, good internet will require a movement to overcome the collective action problems and the legal barriers to disenshittifying things. Almost nothing you do as an individual is going to make a difference.

But using RSS will! Using RSS to follow the stuff that matters to you will have an immediate, profoundly beneficial impact on your own digital life – and it will appreciably, irreversibly nudge the whole internet towards a better state.


Hey look at this (permalink)


* You Can't Make Friends With The Rockstars https://www.wheresyoured.at/rockstars/



A Wayback Machine banner.

This day in history (permalink)

#20yrsago Sony bullies Retropod off the net https://web.archive.org/web/20041018040446/http://www.retropod.com/

#15yrsago This Side of Jordan – Violent jazz age novel by Charles M Schulz’s son Monte https://memex.craphound.com/2009/10/16/this-side-of-jordan-violent-jazz-age-novel-by-charles-m-schulzs-son-monte/

#10yrsago FBI chief demands an end to cellphone security https://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/17/us/politics/fbi-director-in-policy-speech-calls-dark-devices-hindrance-to-crime-solving.html

#10yrsago Please, Disney: put back John’s grandad’s Haunted Mansion tombstone https://thedisneyblog.com/2014/10/16/petition-to-return-a-lost-tombstone-to-the-haunted-mansion/

#10yrsago How Microsoft hacked trademark law to let it secretly seize whole businesses https://www.wired.com/2014/10/microsoft-pinkerton/

#10yrsago If you think you’ve anonymized a data set, you’re probably wrong https://web.archive.org/web/20141014172827/http://research.neustar.biz/2014/09/15/riding-with-the-stars-passenger-privacy-in-the-nyc-taxicab-dataset/

#10yrsago The lost cyber-crayolas of the mid-1990s https://memex.craphound.com/2014/10/16/the-lost-cyber-crayolas-of-the-mid-1990s/

#5yrsago “The People’s Money”: A crisp, simple, thorough explanation of how government spending is paid for https://neweconomicperspectives.org/2019/10/the-peoples-money-part-1.html

#5yrsago What it’s like to have Apple rip off your successful Mac app https://memex.craphound.com/2019/10/16/what-its-like-to-have-apple-rip-off-your-successful-mac-app/

#5yrsago Blizzard suspends college gamers from competitive play after they display “Free Hong Kong” poster https://www.vice.com/en/article/three-college-hearthstone-protesters-banned-for-six-months/

#5yrsago Terrified of bad press after its China capitulation, Blizzard cancels NYC Overwatch event https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-10-15/blizzard-cancels-overwatch-event-as-it-tries-to-contain-backlash

#5yrsago A San Diego Republican operator ran a massive, multimillion-dollar Facebook scam that targeted boomers https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/craigsilverman/facebook-subscription-trap-free-trial-scam-ads-inc

#5yrsago Britain’s unbelievably stupid, dangerous porn “age verification” scheme is totally dead https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2019/10/uk-government-abandons-planned-porn-age-verification-scheme/

#5yrsago Not only is Google’s auto-delete good for privacy, it’s also good news for competition https://memex.craphound.com/2019/10/16/not-only-is-googles-auto-delete-good-for-privacy-its-also-good-news-for-competition/

#5yrsago Edward Snowden on the global war on encryption: “This is our new battleground” https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/oct/15/encryption-lose-privacy-us-uk-australia-facebook

#5yrsago In Kansas’s poor, sick places, hospitals and debt collectors send the ailing to debtor’s prison https://features.propublica.org/medical-debt/when-medical-debt-collectors-decide-who-gets-arrested-coffeyville-kansas

#5yrsago Want a ride in a Lyft? Just sign away your right to sue if they kill, maim, rape or cheat you https://memex.craphound.com/2019/10/16/want-a-ride-in-a-lyft-just-sign-away-your-right-to-sue-if-they-kill-maim-rape-or-cheat-you/

#5yrsago #RedForEd rebooted: Chicago’s teachers are back on strike https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/union-strike-chicago-teachers/

#1yrago One of America's most corporate-crime-friendly bankruptcy judges forced to recuse himself https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/16/texas-two-step/#david-jones


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

A photo of me onstage, giving a speech, holding a mic.



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)

  • Picks and Shovels: a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books, February 2025

  • Unauthorized Bread: a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2025



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

  • Enshittification: a nonfiction book about platform decay for Farrar, Straus, Giroux. Today's progress: 818 words (64779 words total).

  • 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: Spill, part one (a Little Brother story) https://craphound.com/littlebrother/2024/10/06/spill-part-one-a-little-brother-story/


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.

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


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

Could We Finally Ditch Ted Cruz? [The Status Kuo]

Photo: Shelby Tauber for the Texas Tribune

All eyes are on the Texas Senate race as recent polls show Congressman Colin Allred closing in on incumbent senator Ted Cruz. While most polls still have Cruz up by 3-4 points, recent internal GOP polling showed a dead heat, with Cruz up by just one.

That’s drawn the attention of national Democrats and some consternation from the GOP. With a tough Senate map this year, Democrats could offset a loss in Montana or Ohio with a pick-up in Texas and still hang onto the Senate majority. As a bonus, the nation would finally be rid of one of the worst, most disliked people in government.

Things came to a head last night as the candidates faced off in their first and likely only debate before Election Day. The session was both fiery and substantive, drawing a sharp contrast between the policies and priorities of the two candidates. Indeed, their battle is something of a microcosm of the political tensions gripping the nation, with two vastly different visions for what Texas, and the U.S., should be on questions of abortion, immigration, democracy and rights.

In today’s piece, I’ll take a deeper dive into why the polling has got both parties watching this race so closely. I’ll also highlight a few moments from the debate that demonstrate how Cruz continues to be vulnerable, even in a state where Trump is expected to prevail.

Subscribe now

The state of the polls has the GOP worried

Usual caveats first. The polls may be off either way, and the race is already within the margin of error. Cruz could be ahead by much more, or Allred could be leading slightly. 

That said, as I often remind readers here, it’s more important to see how far the polls have moved over time, indicating both momentum and the possibility that the race could tip to Allred by Election Day, especially with many voters still undecided. The absolute values may be off, but movement is valuable to study.

Back in December of 2023, Sen. Cruz led consistently in the polling, even by double digits in many surveys. A University of Texas poll taken that month had Cruz over Allred by a whopping 16 points. It was easy to see why many did not give Allred much of a chance at the time. 

During 2024, Allred was able to introduce himself to Texas voters statewide, and his favorables began to trend higher than Cruz’s. That same University of Texas poll that was +16 for Cruz in December was +14 by February, then +13 in April, +11 in June, and +8 in August. 

Allred’s message was getting through, and Cruz’s lead was slipping.

To be fair, most polling averages still have Cruz ahead. But a recently released GOP Senate Leadership Fund memo, which used the GOP’s internal polling, had Cruz’s lead over Allred diminishing from three points in mid-September to just one point by October. As Politico reported,

“Beginning in early August, Colin Allred has been heavily outspending Ted Cruz,” the memo reads. But outside GOP groups have been trying to close that gap. The memo teases fresh GOP polling in the state that the group will have next week.

Democrats sense opportunity in Texas because of Cruz’s unpopularity and SLF’s numbers reflect that. Cruz’s favorability is above water by just 1 point at 49/48 while Allred’s is up 12 points at 48/36. Meanwhile, Allred is running 2 points ahead of Harris while Cruz is running 2 points behind Trump.

This isn’t some outlier result. Back in September, a Morning Consult poll of 2,716 likely voters showed Allred narrowly leading Cruz. And Allred has been pounding that point home ever since, sounding like the former football star he is.

“For the first time in this race, a new poll has us leading Ted Cruz by 1 point. I don’t know about y’all but I’m fired up and ready to WIN! We've got 47 days, let’s do this Texas,” Allred urged in a tweet.

While most polling averages still have Cruz beating Allred, the movement in the polls tells us that Allred could still win over persuadable voters in these final weeks. After all, he already closed the initial polling gap by 10-12 points. And with as many as 11 percent of voters still considered undecided, Allred could pull off an big upset. 

Election analysts are taking note. In early October, Cook Political moved the race from “likely” to “lean” Republican. And the U.S. Senate Democrats announced in late September that they would go on the offensive and make a multimillion dollar investment into Allred’s campaign to fund TV ads.

Allred knocked Cruz about in the debate on Tuesday

Last night was the first and only debate between the two candidates, and it didn’t go very well for Cruz. 

Allred tore into him on the issue where Cruz is considered most vulnerable: abortion. The night actually began with a direct question to Cruz about his stance, putting him immediately on the defensive. Even when repeatedly asked, Cruz avoided answering whether he supported Texas’s draconian six-week abortion ban, which has zero exceptions for rape or incest.

You can see him getting called out on his non-answers and avoidance of the question by the moderators around the 3:20 mark and the 5:10 mark:

Rather than respond, Cruz made a case for “states’ rights” around abortion.  “You wouldn’t expect Texas’s laws to be the same as California,” Cruz said. 

Allred shot back. “Senator Cruz just called himself pro-life — you’re not,” Allred responded. “It’s not pro-life to deny women care so long that they can’t have children anymore. It’s not pro-life to force a victim of rape to carry their rapist’s baby.”

The six-week ban in Texas is extremely unpopular among voters. If there is any issue that could tip the election to Allred, it is the destruction of the right to abortion. In Texas, some 26,000 women have already faced the fact that, under state law, they would be required after the sixth week to carry their rapist’s baby to term. Of course, many women would not even be aware that they were pregnant by this deadline.

Allred also jabbed at Cruz over his infamous vacation to Cancun, which Cruz took in the middle of a massive power outage in Texas during freezing temperatures. Allred’s clear message here? That Cruz is fundamentally unreliable.

He also raised another strong negative for Cruz around his seeking to overturn the results of the 2020 election. Calling Cruz a “threat to democracy,” Allred recalled how he, as a Congressmember, had to locate a gas mask under his seat and prepare to defend the House chamber from an attack by the mob. But what about Ted Cruz?

“At the same time he’d gone around the country lying about the election, after he’d been the architect to try and overthrow that election, when that mob came, Senator Cruz was hiding in a supply closet.” 

Cruz hit back with ugly rhetoric, attempting to tie Allred to Kamala Harris over her supposed policy of “open borders” for migrants. He repeated a false conspiracy that Democrats are trying to admit millions of immigrants and grant them citizenship for the sake of elections. “That would turn Texas blue,” Cruz warned. He promised to “fight to keep Texas Texas,” a not-so-subtle racist dogwhistle.

He also accused Allred of (checks notes) wanting military bases to have drag shows and fly transgender flags over them. This was in reference to Allred’s vote against an anti-trans GOP bill, cynically titled the “Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act of 2023.” That bill sought to cut off federal funds from any athletic program that allowed “men” (determined solely by reproductive biology and genetics at birth) to compete in women’s or girls’ sports.

Cruz has been running ads attacking Allred on trans rights, as if that were the thing most voters care about at this moment in our history. Allred responded that Cruz is trying to distract the public. “He wants you thinking about kids in bathrooms so you’re not thinking about women in hospitals.”

No doubt to appease conservatives and to understandable dismay of trans rights advocates, Allred emphasized that he does not believe boys should play in girls’ sports. But he labeled Cruz’s attacks a desperate “Hail Mary,” and argued that it was laughable to think Cruz really wants to protect women, given his appalling stance on abortion.

“What I think is that folks should not be discriminated against,” Allred said. “What Senator Cruz should try to explain to you is why he thinks they should.”

Tuesday’s debate was held at Dallas’s ABC affiliate station, WFAA. The station held a real-time poll of 40,000 viewers watching on the YouTube livestream. And while by no means scientific, it is notable that of the 25,000 viewers who responded, Allred won the debate by a whopping two to one, 67 to 33 percent.

12:00 AM

Trump, Musk PAC Swing State Ground Game Hampered By Shitty, Slow Local Internet The GOP Is Largely Responsible For [Techdirt]

I’ve written extensively that U.S. broadband is slow, spotty, and expensive thanks to regulatory capture and regional monopoly power. Republicans have propped up this broken status quo at every opportunity, routinely working to undermine state and federal consumer protection, while letting companies like AT&T and Comcast quite literally write terrible state and federal telecom law.

So it’s a bit ironic that the GOP effort to cultivate votes in swing states using an Elon Musk PAC app is running into problems due to substandard, slow broadband access in those same states.

The Guardian notes that the Trump campaign and the Elon Musk-backed America PAC use a management app called Campaign Sidekick to confirm that door to door canvassers are actually reaching “low information” voters in swing states. But the app keeps crashing because it requires bandwidth that a lot of these local areas simply don’t have:

“The Campaign Sidekick app effectively forces canvassers who have less than 40mbps of internet – sufficient to stream 4K video – to use “offline walkbooks” which have no geo-tracking feature and do not always upload after a route is completed, the people said.

As a result, the Trump campaign and America Pac then have little way to know whether canvassers are actually knocking on doors or whether they are cheating – for instance, by “speed-running” routes where they literally throw campaign materials at doors as they drive past.”

So for one, that the app requires 40 Mbps in rural swing states to track canvasser movement means it’s a badly designed app. There are ways to do this using location movement data or lower resolution video that shouldn’t be anywhere near this bandwidth-intensive.

But here’s where I also remind you that Republicans are directly responsible for America’s sluggish, shitty, expensive, slow broadband access in the first place.

The GOP voted against the COVID relief and broadband infrastructure bills that were intended to bring affordable broadband to most of these areas (though they lie and take credit for among misinformed constituents anyway). And they’ve also opposed efforts to require that giant telecom monopolies ensure that networks built with taxpayer money are actually affordable.

The GOP is also currently helping the telecom industry dismantle what’s left of the FCC’s consumer protection authority under the pretense this would somehow magically result in “free market innovation.” Lack of corporate oversight results in companies like AT&T, Comcast, or Verizon seeing little to no real world accountability for monopolistic behavior, harming broadband speeds, availability, and pricing.

The Trump arm of the GOP also just killed a popular program that was helping to provide affordable broadband access to low-income voters across these states. Republicans also routinely rubber stamp competition-eroding telecom mergers resulting in less price competition and spottier access.

Not that I expect local voters to make any of these connections (in large part because local and national journalism isn’t all that interested in telling them the truth), but it’s ironic the Trump GOP ground game is being inconvenienced by their own telecom policies. That’s probably as close as they’ve ever gotten to actually owning the real-world impact their shitty policies routinely have on their own constituents.

IPTV Piracy Lawsuit Targets ‘DMCA Ignored’ Host in $42M Lawsuit [TorrentFreak]

dmca-ignored-sAs famously pointed out by The Pirate Bay’s Anakata in response to a Dreamworks takedown notice 20 years ago, the DMCA does not apply to countries outside the United States.

While technically correct, ignoring takedown notices isn’t risk-free; inaction can increase risk where none previously existed.

DMCA notices and equivalents issued under the EU’s E-Commerce Directive, for example, not only aim to counter infringement. They also support ‘safe harbors’ that protect hosts from incurring liability for customers’ infringements. In general terms, takedown notices indicate an allegation of infringement for which the host could incur liability if no action is taken.

A copyright lawsuit, filed by an American company against a ‘DMCA ignored’ hosting provider in Ukraine, provides an up-to-date example of how disregarding takedown notices can lead to escalation.

DISH Network vs. Virtual Systems, LLC

Filed yesterday at a district court in Seattle, the complaint sees broadcaster DISH Network, supported by the International Broadcaster Coalition Against Piracy (IBCAP), take on Ukraine-based hosting provider Virtual Systems, LLC, and its alleged owner and CEO, Vyacheslav Smyrnov.

The lawsuit follows a similar pattern to those filed previously by DISH against other hosting providers. Using monitoring systems deployed at IBCAP, pirate IPTV providers hosted by Virtual Systems were observed distributing copyrighted works owned by the plaintiff, thereby infringing its exclusive distribution and public performance rights.

“The Pirate Services transmitted the Works to Users over the internet using Virtual Systems’ servers and network as part of linear streams of the Channels or on a VOD basis,” the lawsuit notes.

“Users accessed the Works through a set-top box (STB) or a website that links to the Works or provides a playlist used to access the Works. Users often had to purchase a subscription to view the Pirate Services’ content, in addition to purchasing any required STB. DISH did not authorize the Pirate Services to distribute or publicly perform the Works and received no compensation from them.”

The lawsuit describes the scale of the pirate IPTV services’ infringement as extensive. It’s claimed that linear channels containing the works often aired on a 24/7 basis, in some cases continuously for the past several years, with pirated content distributed on a VOD basis adding to already significant infringement.

Efforts to Curtail Infringement

The complaint notes that the pirate IPTV providers were notified of their infringement on multiple occasions but continued regardless. At least three of the services are already the subject of permanent injunctions following legal action in the United States but, since they were based elsewhere, the complaint concedes they have little incentive to comply.

Also indicated as problematic are the efforts deployed to disguise the true identities of those behind the pirate providers, most believed to operate outside the United States. This certainly isn’t unusual, neither is the response from the plaintiff; when IPTV services refuse to comply, pressure is applied to their host.

“Virtual Systems and [CEO/owner] Smyrnov were sent written notices asking that they remove or disable access to Works that the Pirate Services were transmitting from Virtual Systems’ servers and network, thereby infringing DISH’s copyrights,” the complaint reads.

“Virtual Systems and Smyrnov, collectively, were the recipients of at least 512 Infringement Notices. Virtual Systems did not respond to the Infringement Notices and did not take any measures to stop the Pirate Services’ infringement occurring on its servers and network. The Pirate Services kept infringing DISH’s copyrights in Works aired on the Channels, even using the same IP addresses and URLs previously reported to Virtual Systems.”

Based on Virtual Systems’ marketing of its own services, this isn’t a bug – it’s a feature.

DMCA Ignored

The complaint alleges that Virtual Systems appeals to pirate IPTV services due to its “DMCA Ignored” policy. The company states that it ignores DMCA takedown notices concerning servers operated from its Ukraine datacenter; the complaint alleges that similar promotion is applied to Virtual Systems’ servers in Seattle and the Netherlands.

“Virtual Systems acted true to its ‘DMCA Ignored’ policy by disregarding the Infringement Notices and turning a blind eye to the Pirate Services’ infringement of DISH’s copyrights,” the complaint continues.

“Virtual Systems also did not comply with orders from United States courts, entered in lawsuits involving three of the Pirate Services, that permanently enjoined Virtual Systems from providing its servers and network to those Pirate Services because they were using them to infringe DISH’s copyrights.”

As highlighted earlier, the DMCA framework includes safe harbors for hosting providers that are responsive to takedown notices and meet other recognized standards. Failure to meet the requirements introduces greater risk at the lawsuit stage.

No Safe Harbor

The lawsuit was filed in Seattle where Virtual Systems reportedly operates a datacenter and servers, which were utilized by the pirate IPTV providers responsible for the alleged infringement. As far as safe harbors are concerned, the lawsuit claims that the inaction of Virtual Systems means it can avail itself of none.

“Virtual Systems is not entitled to assert any DMCA safe harbor defense because it does not adopt and reasonably implement a policy that provides for the termination of its services to repeat infringers,” the complaint reads.

“Virtual Systems is also not entitled to assert most DMCA safe harbor defenses because it does not have a designated DMCA agent to receive infringement notices; because when such notices are received or it otherwise has knowledge of infringement, Virtual Systems does not respond expeditiously to remove or disable access to the infringing material; and because Virtual Systems receives financial benefits directly attributable to infringement that is under its control.”

While not illegal per se, other policies and business practices at Virtual Systems are criticized for encouraging pirate IPTV providers to infringe copyright. With no ‘Know Your Customer’ policy, Virtual Systems says that it “do[es] not require personal data [of customers]” when they make a purchase and since they “love and accept” cryptocurrencies, and communicate via anonymous email, customers are “completely protected.”

$41.85m Claim for Damages

As a result, the complaint alleges “willful, malicious, intentional, and purposeful” contributory copyright infringement, inducement of copyright infringement, and vicarious copyright infringement, demanding statutory damages for each of the registered works in suit, as detailed by IBCAP in an announcement this morning.

“The complaint seeks statutory damages of up to $150,000 each for the willful infringement of 279 registered works — up to $41,850,000 total; Virtual Systems’ profits attributable to the infringement of thousands of unregistered works; an injunction prohibiting Virtual Systems from providing access to copyrighted works owned by IBCAP members; attorneys’ fees and costs; and pre-and post-judgment interest,” the anti-piracy coalition explained.

“[Virtual Systems CEO] Smyrnov was sued in his personal capacity because he authorized, directed and participated in Virtual Systems’ infringement and failed to exercise his ability to stop that infringement.”

Referencing an earlier lawsuit that resulted in a settlement with CDN provider Datacamp, Chris Kuelling, executive director of IBCAP, says the lawsuit filed this week is part of a strategy to hold non-compliant intermediaries to account.

“This case against Virtual Systems represents the culmination of IBCAP’s strategy to identify non-compliant CDNs and hosting providers and make them not only cease their illicit activities, but also pay for ignoring IBCAP takedown notices,” Kuelling says.

“As we have made clear through other legal actions, CDNs and hosting providers who support pirate services by delivering infringing content over their networks will be held accountable. The Datacamp case’s favorable outcome and the filing of this lawsuit should send a clear message to non-compliant CDNs and hosting providers that supporting pirate services is not worth the risk.”

The complaint, filed yesterday at a district court in Seattle, is available here (pdf)

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

Wednesday 2024-10-16

02:00 PM

Federal Court Tells Missouri Gov’t That Requiring Sex Offenders To Post ‘No Candy Here’ Signs Violates Their Rights [Techdirt]

There’s no evidence anywhere that even remotely suggests registered sex offenders leverage Halloween to lure victims to their homes. It’s just as untrue and ridiculous as the annual assertions people are lacing (cheap) candy with (expensive) drugs for… well, those reasons go completely unexplored.

Sex offenders are already subject to a considerable number of restrictions, which often include being forced to live as far away from any children as possible. But that doesn’t stop grandstanding law enforcement officials from pretending they’re doing something for the children by continuing to punish adults who’ve already served their time.

When officials start to think they can keep punishing people who’ve done their jail time and are following their post-release mandates, that’s when things get litigious. And that’s when law enforcement officials start finding out it’s not ok to continue to heap additional punishment on people. It’s unconstitutional.

Back in 2018, Sheriff Gary Long of Butts County, Georgia found this out the hard way. He and his deputies started placing these signs in the yards of registered sex offenders:

This stupidity managed to be topped by Grovetown, Georgia’s mayor, who claimed he could keep everyone safe by locking up registered sex offenders in city hall for a few hours every Halloween night to keep them from bothering any kids. The problem with that is, well, the Constitution. You can’t just detain people against their will for any length of time, much less three or four hours — not if there’s no constitutionally supported reason to do so.

All of this ridiculousness finally came to an end, albeit four years later when the Eleventh Circuit Appeals Court made it clear, in no uncertain terms, that planting “no trick-or-treat” signs in sex offenders’ yards was compelled speech — the sort of thing that’s always an extremely obvious violation of the First Amendment.

The state of Missouri had the same bad idea. It passed a law that did the same thing: compelled speech. The statute required sex offenders to post signs at their homes stating “No candy or treats at this residence” every October 31st. Somehow, this law managed to remain on the books for more than 15 years (it was enacted in 2008) before being successfully challenged.

But the law is no longer, for the time being. A ruling [PDF] issued by a Missouri federal court puts the obvious conclusion in plain writing: compelled speech is — as it always has been — unconstitutional. (via Courthouse News Service)

In this case, there’s already been actual harm. Thomas Sanderson, who was convicted in 2006, continued to hand out candy at the house he shared with his girlfriend, reasoning (incorrectly) that the 2008 law did not apply to him since his conviction occurred before the law was passed. He was arrested in 2022 on Halloween night by local police officers. The current police chief testified that his predecessor didn’t do anything to enforce the law, hence the lengthy gap between the law’s passage (2008), the plaintiff’s placement on the sex offender registry (2006), and his 2022 arrest.

During testimony, this somewhat hilarious fact about the unconstitutional law was related to the court by multiple government witnesses.

These witnesses confirmed that the sign posting requirement does not define the size of the sign or the size of the font for the phrase, “No candy or treats at this residence.” These witnesses also confirmed that registered sex offenders could display the sign at the back of the residence, or even inside the residence, and still be in compliance with the sign posting requirement.

In other words, the law was just some performative bullshit meant to score easy dunks on sex offenders while lawmakers pretended to care about the children. And the plaintiff definitely has standing to sue to have the law ruled unconstitutional because he had already been arrested for violating it.

Those facts mean the government (represented here by state Attorney General Andrew Bailey and the chief of the police department that arrested him) had no options to get this lawsuit dismissed. The rest of the evidence on hand just makes it that much easier for the court to find the law unconstitutional.

In the run-up to its conclusion, the court notes the Sheriff of Butts County case that ended with the Eleventh Circuit reminding the law enforcement official that compelled speech is clearly unconstitutional and that there’s a ton of case law already on the books that makes it legally implausible to claim the sheriff couldn’t have possibly known he was violating sex offenders’ rights.

The end result is the Missouri court tearing apart the compelled speech part of the law, along with the rationales the government offered in defense of it.

First, a sign stating “No candy or treats at this residence” does not clarify the danger that
the statute serves to mitigate. The sign contains no warning that there is a convicted sex offender or other dangerous person at that residence. The sign posting requirement does not even dictate the font size or location of the sign to ensure visibility to children or others.

[…]

More significantly, the other restrictions mandated in the Halloween Statute adequately address all of Defendants’ interests. To wit, sex offenders must “[a]void all Halloween-related
contact with children.” See Mo. Rev. Stat. § 589.426.1(1). Sex offenders must “[r]emain inside his or her residence between the hours of 5 p.m. and 10:30 p.m. unless required to be elsewhere for just cause, including but not limited to employment or medical emergencies.” Id. § 589.426.1(2). Sex offenders must also “[l]eave all outside residential lighting off during the evening hours after 5 p.m.” Id. § 589.426.1(4). These provisions prevent sex offenders from being in contact with children outside trick-or-treating and also deter children from venturing onto the properties of sex offenders.

Additionally, law enforcement witnesses testified that the sex-offender registry, which contains each registrant’s name, address, photograph, and convicted offense information, is available on the Missouri State Highway Patrol’s website. This further diminishes the need to require registered sex offenders to disseminate the same information on signs on their private property. The evidence presented has not shown that the sign posting requirement adds any value to protect children from Plaintiff, or other registered sex offenders, on Halloween. Even without the sign posting requirement, Defendants are free to enforce the other sections of the Halloween Statute. Plaintiff can still be charged and prosecuted for keeping his residence’s lights on, participating in Halloween activities that involve contact with children such as handing out candy to trick-or-treaters, or leaving his house absent just cause on Halloween. The Court does not discount the importance of the government’s interest in protecting children from sex offenders on Halloween, but the evidence fails to show that the sign posting requirement is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest in the least restrictive manner.“

And with that, the compelled speech clause of the so-called “Halloween Law” no longer exists, permanently blocked by the Missouri court.

For these reasons, the Court concludes that Plaintiff has met his burden of establishing that declaratory and permanent statewide injunctive relief is warranted. Further, because the
Court has found that Missouri Revised Statute Section 589.426.1(3) is unconstitutional, it is
therefore unenforceable against not only Plaintiff, but all others subject to this section of the
Halloween statute.

The state should have seen this coming. You can’t compel speech. And, at the very least, if you’re going to try to compel speech, you should make sure the part of the law that compels speech actually accomplishes the intent of the law. Something so poorly written someone can comply without posting a sign anywhere trick-or-treaters might see it shows this law was passed solely so legislators could appear to be doing something about something. In the end, they all ended up looking like fools.

01:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 向 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

小3

yonder, facing, beyond, confront, defy, tend toward, approach

コウ

む.く む.い -む.き む.ける -む.け む.かう む.かい む.こう む.こう- むこ むか.い

向け   (むけ)   —   intended for ...
方向   (ほうこう)   —   direction
向上   (こうじょう)   —   elevation
傾向   (けいこう)   —   tendency
意向   (いこう)   —   intention
風向   (ふうこう)   —   wind direction
前向き   (まえむき)   —   front-facing
向き   (むき)   —   direction
向かう   (むかう)   —   to face
動向   (どうこう)   —   trend

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 窒 [Kanji of the Day]

✍11

中学

plug up, obstruct

チツ

窒息死   (ちっそくし)   —   death by suffocation
窒息   (ちっそく)   —   suffocation
窒素   (ちっそ)   —   nitrogen (N)
液体窒素   (えきたいちっそ)   —   liquid nitrogen
窒素酸化物   (ちっそさんかぶつ)   —   nitrogen oxide
一酸化二窒素   (いっさんかにちっそ)   —   dinitrogen monoxide
亜酸化窒素   (あさんかちっそ)   —   nitrous oxide (N2O)
窒素肥料   (ちっそひりょう)   —   nitrogenous fertilizer
窒化物   (ちっかぶつ)   —   nitride
二酸化窒素   (にさんかちっそ)   —   nitrogen dioxide

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Pluralistic: Of course we can tax billionaires (15 Oct 2024) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



Uncle Sam as an old-fashioned cop with a gleaming IRS badge on his chest. He stands in a circle of wildly gesticulating, furious, old-fashioned rich guys. The background is a dark green, extremely magnified portrait of Benjamin Franklin from the middle of a US $100 bill.

Of course we can tax billionaires (permalink)

Billionaires are pretty confident that they can't be taxed – not just that they shouldn't be taxed, but rather, that it is technically impossible to tax the ultra-rich. They're not shy about explaining why, either – and neither is their army of lickspittles.

If it's impossible to tax billionaires, then anyone who demands that we tax billionaires is being childish. If taxing billionaires is impossible, then being mad that we're not taxing billionaires is like being mad at gravity.

Boy is this old trick getting old. It was already pretty thin when Margaret Thatcher rolled it out, insisting that "there is no alternative" to her program of letting the rich get richer and the poor go hungry. Dressing up a demand ("stop trying to think of alternatives") as a scientific truth ("there is no alternative") sets up a world where your opponents are Doing Ideology, while you're doing science.

Billionaires basically don't pay tax – that's a big part of how they got to be billionaires:

https://www.propublica.org/series/the-secret-irs-files

By cheating on their taxes, they get to keep – and invest – more money than less-rich people (who get to keep more money than regular people and poor people, obvs). They get so much money that they can "invest" it in corrupting the political process, for example, by flushing vast sums of dark money into elections to unseat politicians who care about finance crime and replace them with crytpo-friendly lawmakers who'll turn a blind eye to billionaires' scams:

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2024/10/14/silicon-valley-the-new-lobbying-monster

Once someone gets rich enough, they acquire impunity. They become too big to fail. They become too big to jail. They become too big to care. They buy presidents. They become president.

A decade ago, Thomas Piketty published his landmark Capital in the 21st Century, tracing three centuries of global capital flows and showing how extreme inequality creates political instability, leading to bloody revolutions and world wars that level the playing field by destroying most of the world's capital in an orgy of violence, with massive collateral damage:

https://memex.craphound.com/2014/06/24/thomas-pikettys-capital-in-the-21st-century/

Piketty argued that unless we taxed the rich, we would attain the same political instability that provoked the World Wars, but in a nuclear-tipped world that was poised on the brink of ecological collapse. He even laid out a program for this taxation, one that took account of all the things rich people would do to try to hide their assets.

Today, the destruction that Piketty prophesied is on our doorstep, and all over the world, political will is gathering to do something about our billionaire problem. The debate rages from France to a dozen-plus US states that are planning wealth taxes on the ultra-rich.

Wherever that debate takes hold, billionaires and their proxies pop up to tell us that we're Doing Ideology, that there is no alternative, and that it is literally impossible to tax the ultra-rich.

In a new blog post, Piketty deftly demolishes this argument, showing how thin the arguments for the impossibility of a billionaire tax really is:

https://www.lemonde.fr/blog/piketty/2024/10/15/how-to-tax-billionaires/

First, there's the argument that the ultra-rich are actually quite poor. Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg don't have a lot of money, they have a lot of stock, which they can't sell. Why can't they sell their stock? You'll hear a lot of complicated arguments about illiquidity and the effect on the share-price of a large sell-off, but they all boil down to this: if we make billionaires sell a bunch of their stock, they will be poorer.

No duh.

Piketty has an answer to the liquidity crisis of our poormouthing billionaires:

If finding a buyer is challenging, the government could accept these shares as payment for taxes. If necessary, it could then sell these shares through various methods, such as offering employees to purchase them, which would increase their stake in the company.

Though Piketty doesn't say so, billionaires are not actually poor. They have fucktons of cash, which they acquire through something called "buy, borrow, die," which allows them to create intergenerational dynastic wealth for their failsons:

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/buy-borrow-die-rich-avoid-140004536.html

Billionaires know they're not poor. They even admit it, when they say, "Okay, but the other reason it's impossible to tax us is that we're richer and therefore more powerful than the governments that want to try it."

Piketty points out the shell-game at the core of this argument: the free movement of money that allows for tax-dodging was created by governments. They made these laws, so they can change them. Governments that can't exercise their sovereign power to tax the wealthy end up taxing the poor, eroding their legitimacy and hence their power. Taxing the rich – a wildly popular move – will make governments more powerful, not less.

Big countries like the US (and federations like the EU) have a lot of power. The US ended Swiss banking secrecy and manages to tax Americans living abroad. There's no reason that France couldn't pass a wealth-tax that applies to people based on their historical residency: a 51 year old French billionaire who decamps to Switzerland to duck a wealth tax after 50 years in France could be held liable for 50/51 of the wealth tax.

The final argument Piketty takes up is the old saw that taxing the rich is illegal, or, if it were made legal, would be unconstitutional. As Piketty says, rich people have taken this position every single time they faced meaningful tax enforcement, and they have repeatedly lost this fight. France has repeatedly levied wealth taxes, as long ago as 1789 and as recently as 1945.

Taxing the ultra-rich isn't like the secret of embalming Pharaohs – it's not a lost art from a fallen civilization. The US top rate of tax in 1944 was 97%. The postwar top rate from 1945-63 was 94%, and it was 70% from 1965-80. This was the period of the largest expansion of the US economy in the nation's history. These are the "good old days" Republicans say they want to return to.

The super-rich keep getting richer. In France, the 500 richest families were worth a combined €200b in 2010. Today, it's €1.2 trillion. No wonder a global wealth tax is at the top of the agenda for next month's G20 Summit in Rio.

Here in the US – where money can easily move across state lines and where multiple states are racing each other to the bottom to be the best onshore/offshore tax- and financial secrecy haven – state-level millionaire taxes are kicking ass.

Massachusetts's 2024 millionaire tax has raised more than $1.8b, exceeding all expectations (it was originally benchmarked at $1b), by taxing annual income in excess of $1m at an additional 4%:

https://www.boston.com/news/business/2024/05/21/heres-how-much-the-new-massachusetts-millionaires-tax-has-raised-this-year/

This is exactly the kind of tax that billionaires say is impossible. It's so easy to turn ordinary income into sheltered income – realizing it as a capital gain, say – so raising taxes on income will do nothing. Who are you gonna believe, billionaires or the 1.8 billion dead presidents lying around the Massachusetts Department of Revenue?

But say you are worried that taxing ordinary income is a nonstarter because of preferential capital gains treatment. No worry, Washington State has you covered. Its 7% surcharge on capital gains in excess of $250,000 also exceeded all expectations, bringing in $600m more than expected in its first year – a year when the stock market fell by 25%:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/06/03/when-the-tide-goes-out/#passive-income

Okay, but what if all those billionaires flee your state? Good riddance, and don't let the door hit you on the way out. All we need is an exit tax, like the one in California, which levies a one-time 0.4% tax on net worth over $30m for any individual who leaves the state.

Billionaires are why we can't have nice things – a sensible climate policy, workers' rights, a functional Supreme Court and legislatures that answer to the people, rather than deep-pocketed donors.

The source of billionaires' power isn't mysterious: it's their money. Take away the money, take away the power. With more than a dozen states considering wealth taxes, we're finally in a race to the top, to see which state can attack the corrosive power of extreme wealth most aggressively.


Hey look at this (permalink)



A Wayback Machine banner.

This day in history (permalink)

#15yrsago Why Your Idea to Save Journalism Won’t Work (a checklist) https://www.metafilter.com/85761/How-To-Save-Media#2776753

#15yrsago Brit copyright group says, “No laptops allowed in cinemas” https://memex.craphound.com/2009/10/15/brit-copyright-group-says-no-laptops-allowed-in-cinemas/

#15yrsago Complex derivatives are “intractable” — you can’t tell if they’re being tampered with https://freedom-to-tinker.com/2009/10/15/intractability-financial-derivatives/

#10yrsago Jean Baudrillard predicted the Pumpkin Spice Latte http://www.critical-theory.com/understanding-jean-baudrillard-with-pumpkin-spice-lattes/

#10yrsago Obama administration has secured 526 months of jail time for leakers https://www.aclu.org/news/free-speech/leak-prosecutions-obama-takes-it-11-or-should-we

#5yrsago Samuel Delany’s 1977 Star Wars review: why is the future so damned white and male? https://memex.craphound.com/2019/10/15/samuel-delanys-1977-star-wars-review-why-is-the-future-so-damned-white-and-male/

#5yrsago The rich poop different: measuring inequality with sewage https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1910242116

#5yrsago 1 in 14 Trump appointees is a former lobbyist, four times the rate under Obama https://www.propublica.org/article/we-found-a-staggering-281-lobbyists-whove-worked-in-the-trump-administration#169046

#5yrsago The first-ever mandatory California drug price report reveals Big Pharma’s farcical price-gouging https://californiahealthline.org/news/californias-new-transparency-law-reveals-staggering-rise-in-wholesale-drug-prices/

#5yrsago The far right is dominating the information wars through “keyword signaling” https://www.wired.com/story/devin-nunes-and-the-dark-power-of-keyword-signaling/

#5yrsago Medallion Status: comparison is the thief of joy, and John Hodgman is the thief-taker https://memex.craphound.com/2019/10/15/medallion-status-comparison-is-the-thief-of-joy-and-john-hodgman-is-the-thief-taker/


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

A photo of me onstage, giving a speech, holding a mic.



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)

  • Picks and Shovels: a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books, February 2025

  • Unauthorized Bread: a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2025



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

  • Enshittification: a nonfiction book about platform decay for Farrar, Straus, Giroux. Today's progress: 762 words (63956 words total).

  • 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: Spill, part one (a Little Brother story) https://craphound.com/littlebrother/2024/10/06/spill-part-one-a-little-brother-story/


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.

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

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