News

Friday 2026-05-08

05:00 PM

U.S. Removes Bulgaria from Piracy Watch List After Torrent Tracker Crackdown [TorrentFreak]

zamundaMore than six years ago, Bulgaria informed the U.S. authorities that it wanted to shut down the country’s largest torrent trackers, including ArenaBG, Zamunda, and Zelka.

Specifically, the country asked the U.S. authorities for help. That help eventually arrived in January this year, when the domain names of these torrent trackers were effectively seized.

Seized

seized

The multinational effort involved Bulgarian authorities and law enforcement, as well as their American counterparts. This included the U.S. Department of Justice, Homeland Security Investigations, and National IPR Coordination Center, which were all featured on the seizure banner that’s still online today.

Multi-Decade Crackdown

The crackdown did not come as a surprise. Rightsholders have complained about the Bulgarian torrent trackers for many years, and the local authorities have also tried to address these issues for nearly two decades.

As far back as 2010, Yavor Kolev, the head of Bulgaria’s Computer Crimes Department, said that his organization was intent on shutting down Zamunda and ArenaBG. At the time, police investigations into these trackers had already been ongoing for years.

While the authorities managed to shut down some pirate sites over the years, these major targets survived. In fact, Zamunda had grown to become the 11th most visited site at the start of 2026, until its main domain was seized in January.

U.S. Piracy Watch List

Bulgaria’s challenge to address the local piracy problems motivated the USTR to add the country to the Special 301 Report. This annual overview is meant to urge foreign governments to improve policy and legislation in favor of U.S. copyright holders.

In 2025, for example, Bulgaria was put on the “Watch List” with USTR stating that the country “continues to be a safe haven for online piracy.”

There was change afoot, however, as the country enacted new legislation in 2023 that would make it easier to investigate and prosecute piracy cases. While that had not been used until recently, it provided the basis for the crackdown that took place in January.

Bulgaria Removed from Watch List

The implementation of the new legislation and the subsequent torrent tracker crackdown worked. The latest version of the USTR Special 301 Report specifically states that Bulgaria was removed because of the progress it has made. This relates to the shutdowns and associated prosecutions, which remain ongoing.

“Bulgaria is removed from the Watch List this year due to significant enforcement actions and progress in criminal prosecutions during the past year,” USTR writes.

From the Special 301 Report

bulg

USTR specifically references Article 172a of the updated criminal code, which allows for the criminal prosecution of people who “create conditions” for online piracy through the “development and maintenance” of torrent trackers and other platforms. This law was used as the basis for the January crackdown, which led to the arrest of several individuals.

“In January 2026, Bulgarian law enforcement seized the five most popular Bulgarian piracy domains, executed search and seizure warrants at 30 locations, and arrested several individuals, some of whom have been charged under Article 172a discussed above,” the report reads.

According to local reports, the operation targeted 44 websites, not just the three mentioned trackers. By February, three of the four detained individuals had been formally charged.

While Bulgaria must be happy with this development, the country was previously removed from the watchlist in 2007 and 2018, just to be readded over new concerns within a few years. Time will tell whether this year’s removal will last.

More Removals and Additions

Bulgaria isn’t the only country to see its status change in this year’s Special 301 Report. Argentina and Mexico are both moved from the Priority Watch List to the lower-tier Watch List.

Argentina is credited for its February 2026 agreement with U.S. authorities, where the country promised to address site-blocking, ISP liability, and online enforcement. Mexico’s lowered risk is tied to draft amendments to the Federal Copyright Law and Federal Criminal Code, which would clarify ISP secondary liability and remove the “direct economic benefit” requirement, which was a roadblock for criminal piracy prosecutions.

The European Union, meanwhile, was added to the Watch List for the first time as a bloc since 2006. USTR cites a wide variety of concerns, including parts of the Digital Services Act, which rightsholders believe may impact their rights. The newly applicable AI Act is also flagged for monitoring.

The most notable change related to Vietnam, however, which was the first country in thirteen years to be designated as a Priority Foreign Country. According to the USTR, the country’s failure to take action against copyright infringers has turned it into a safe haven for pirate site operators.

A copy of the U.S. Trade Representative’s 2026 Special 301 Report is available here (pdf).

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

03:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 脈 [Kanji of the Day]

✍10

小5

vein, pulse, hope

ミャク

すじ

人脈   (じんみゃく)   —   personal connections
文脈   (ぶんみゃく)   —   context (of a passage)
山脈   (さんみゃく)   —   mountain range
大動脈   (だいどうみゃく)   —   aorta
動脈硬化   (どうみゃくこうか)   —   arteriosclerosis
水脈   (すいみゃく)   —   water vein
動脈   (どうみゃく)   —   artery
脈々   (みゃくみゃく)   —   continuous
不整脈   (ふせいみゃく)   —   irregular pulse
脈絡   (みゃくらく)   —   logical connection

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 栃 [Kanji of the Day]

✍9

小4

horse chestnut, kokuji

とち

栃木   (とちぎ)   —   Tochigi (city, prefecture)
栃木県   (とちぎけん)   —   Tochigi Prefecture (Kanto area)
栃葉人参   (とちばにんじん)   —   Japanese ginseng (Panax japonicus)
栃若   (とちわか)   —   Tochinishiki and Wakanohana I (dominant 1950s yokozuna)
栃栗毛   (とちくりげ)   —   dark chestnut (horse coat color)
栃の木   (とちのき)   —   Japanese horse chestnut (Aesculus turbinata)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

OpenStreetMap Japan ウェブサイトを刷新しました [OpenStreetMap Japan]

OpenStreetMap Japan のウェブサイトを刷新し、新しい基盤で公開しました。 これまで [openstreetmap.jp](https://openstreetmap.jp) で長らく Drupal 上で運用してきたコンテンツとイベント情報を、静的サイトジェネレーター [Astro](https://astro.build) ベースの新しいサイトに移行しています。表示の高速化や保守の簡素化、コミュニティ参加のしやすさを目指しています。

主な特徴

  • これまでのイベント情報、ガイドはほぼそのまま新サイトへ移行しています。
  • 過去の https://openstreetmap.jp/node/<id> 形式の URL は、新サイトの /node/<id>/

01:00 PM

GameStop CEO Appears To Be Auctioning Off Video Game History [Techdirt]

By now you likely have caught wind of GameStop, the video game and collectables retailer, announcing a bid to buy eBay. Perhaps you heard of this, as I did, because of GameStop’s CEO, Ryan Cohen, showing up to CNBC’s Squawk Box program where he pulled off one of the strangest interviews about business I’ve ever seen.

In a six-minute interview with CNBC‘s Andrew Ross Sorkin, Cohen gave a series of mostly incoherent responses to the most basic questions, unable to provide any decipherable reasons why a flailing video game retail chain that’s relied on meme stocks and Pokémon cards for its recent survival would even think of trying to buy a massively larger, international e-commerce company. When asked by CNBC, “So you’ve built up a stake in this company already, you’ve had conversations with the company? You’ve tried? What’s happening here?” there’s a deeply awkward pause before Cohen, in his mid-life-crisis black leather jacket, says “…No.” Then after another glacial pause, “We’re just starting,” followed by a very peculiar smirk.

It got stranger and more passive aggressive from there. Cohen indicated that through a stock issuance the company would directly put up $20 billion for the purchase, along with another $20 billion from investors. The problem is that the eBay purchase would require roughly $56 billion. It doesn’t take a professor in advanced mathematics to see the issue here.

Cohen seemed to approach the entire interview with an affected air of disgust and disdain, as if it’s just so beneath him to even have to answer questions based on his announcements. The mini-Musk rolls his eyes and glibly dismisses reasonable questions, which was going badly enough until Sorkin asked the most obvious question of all: “How does the math math?” How does around $20 billion from GameStop and $20 billion from an investor get close to $56 billion? “Half cash, half stock” Cohen replies, after more eye rolling and disdain. And then he appears to get stuck in a loop, like a rubbish sleepy robot.

Watch the entire interview if you like, but it’s pretty hard to get through it, honestly.

Going along with that very bizarre interview was the sudden appearance of all kinds of video game memorabilia, with some of it appearing to come directly from the “vault” that had been kept by GameStop’s Game Informer magazine, before Cohen shuttered it.

The stunt follows criticisms that the executive doesn’t have enough cash to actually make that acquisition. But it appears that at least some of the items being auctioned could be remnants looted from the legendary Game Informer Vault, where the long-running publication housed decades of video game history before GameStop shut down the publication in 2024.

Sources close to the situation who spoke under the condition of anonymity told Kotaku that while some of the products in Cohen’s eBay listings, such as the baseball cards, weren’t from the Game Informer Vault, other items, including some rare retro games, likely were. Some details like the sticky tab on the front of the sealed copy of Dracula for the NES and the sealed casings on copies of Yoshi’s Cookie and F1 Pole Position match photos and descriptions from the Vault verified by Kotaku.

Now, the Kotaku article suggests that Cohen is selling these items as an effort to raise money for the eBay bid. That’s a very silly thing to suggest. We’re talking about a $16 billion shortfall, unless Cohen plans to seriously dilute the stock value of current shareholders. Historical gaming items like we’re talking about, while certainly of import and value, aren’t going to net you $16 billion.

But it’s worth noting how cavalier Cohen is being here with very real gaming history and culture. It’s not surprise that the Video Game History Foundation and others are pointing out how an eBay auction like this is going to scatter all of this cultural history to the wind, and what a shame that is.

Video Game History Foundation founder Frank Cifaldi posted on Bluesky accusing Cohen of selling off items from the Vault. Though Game Informer has since returned as a print publication after the outlet was acquired and revived by Gunzilla Games in 2025, the Vault and all the contents found inside remained GameStop property.

“I’m very happy Game Informer is out from under GameStop, but choices like these remind people of the brutal closure of the magazine in 2024,” MinnMax founder and ex-Game Informer video producer Ben Hanson said in a statement to Kotaku. “Game Informer‘s history belongs in a museum, not some schmuck’s eBay listings. Show some love to the current Game Informer crew, subscribe to the physical magazine, and please try to ignore Ryan Cohen’s pleas for attention.”

Will GameStop actually buy eBay? I very much doubt it. I don’t think the company can pull off this kind of leverage while maintaining a credit rating post-acquisition that would satisfy the banking investment requirements as outlined in Cohen’s own financing letter. Moody’s doesn’t seem to think so, either.

Somewhat hilariously, Cohen’s own eBay account was also suspended shortly after he began auctioning these items off. But if he really wants to sell off the Game Informer vault, he’ll find a way. And that is a damned shame from a gaming preservation standpoint.

12:00 PM

How do you backup your files in a private way? [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]

This Week in F-Droid

TWIF curated on Thursday, 30 Apr 2026, Week 18

F-Droid core

F-Droid and Basic alpha testing is working great, we’ve seen a pattern of issues that we’ve fixed and we’ve refined the UI with more user feedback and experiences. If you’re free in the next few days, do make sure you update to latest alpha8 and take it for a ride.

You’ve read above and want to help? Get latest 2.0 by navigating to the F-Droid or Basic app details and check “Allow beta updates” in the top right three dot menu.

Community News

Bitcoin Wallet was updated to 11.03 and Bitcoin Wallet [testnet3] was updated to 11.04. These come after one year and besides the usual libraries update, they also now require Android 9 or later to run.

Compass was updated to 2.0.0 getting a complete UI redesign using Jetpack Compose and full Malay and Nepali translations.

Conversations was updated to 2.19.16-beta+free adding a fix for Prosody servers invites, one for long lists of contacts crashing on scroll, more video compression size options, input box respects system color, a faster way to send voice recordings, availability settings section and an improved media browser for in chat files (multiple selection, filter, share, save, delete). The media browser update comes to complement a big structural change: default location for files storage.

Traditionally Conversations stored files in the user common storage area, up to Android 11 in its own Conversations/Media folder and since then, per Google rules, in Downloads, Pictures, Movies and Documents. This type of storage makes it easy for users to backup their own files under their own terms using self-hosted solutions like Nextcloud, Syncthing and more. But this also makes it easy for other apps to reach files received via Conversations, eg. files can be easily accessible from the gallery app or file manager, posing a possible security and privacy risk. While we host FLOSS app that respect user privacy and are transparent about their actions, not all users will run Conversations alongside good apps from F-Droid.

With version 2.19.16-beta+free the default storage location is the in-app internal storage, accessible only to the app, and, using the new media browser, available to be saved and shared as the user wishes. This also fixes a pain point for message deletion, when done manually by deleting a whole chat, using the automatic setting or when moderated, as the app now deletes in chat files too.

If you want the old behaviour back, make sure you open Settings, Attachments and toggle “Save to Gallery” to ON.

Want to see the new changes? Navigate to the Conversations page in F-Droid and check “Allow beta updates” in the top right three dot menu.

Home Assistant was updated to 2026.4.4-minimal after a 6 months pause as we waited for a dependency to get freed of it’s proprietary shackles. Go peruse the changelog since 2025.11.4 here.

OsmAnd~ was updated to 5.3.8 with the usual large changelog: astronomy plugin, 3D buildings, globe view, more trip recording widgets, palette editor, bicycle width aware routing and a lot more. Do these sound good? We keep the updates a bit more under the beta label, but if you are courageous, open the OSMAnd page in F-Droid and check “Allow beta updates” in the top right three dot menu.

OSS-Dict was updated to 2.0.0 adding support for MDict and StarDict dictionaries. If you know what those are, do test them thoroughly.

searxist was updated to 2026.02.20 but also suffered a key change. If you’ve installed the app before last week, please uninstall it and reinstall it.

There were 46 new apps added this week, thanks to the many devs who helped with reviews and tests. Recently we have got much more MRs to add new apps (I wonder why?!) and we have a big backlog. Sometimes it’s not that easy to test since different apps require different setups, but this task doesn’t require any experience in F-Droid development so anyone can lend us a hand. If you also want to help, don’t hesitate. Please pick an interesting app from those MRs waiting for testing, test it and post the results in the MR. You can help speed up the review process and improve the quality of new apps included in F-Droid.

Removed Apps

1 app was archived
  • Chip Defense Copper: A tower defense game with a microprocessor theme

Newly Added Apps

46 apps were newly added
  • AniSync: Offline-first AniList client for anime and manga tracking with widgets
  • BeatBridge: Auto-play music when your Bluetooth device connects
  • BodyCheck: Scan and visualize body composition QR codes from your gym
  • Bouncy: A tiny bouncing ball that plays musical notes when it hits the walls
  • Caffeine Health: Track your caffeine. Protect your sleep. Real-time pharmacokinetic curves.
  • Cavern Cravers: A roguelike turn-based virtual board game
  • Chora: Listen to music from Subsonic or Navidrome servers
  • Clock: A simple clock app
  • Colota - GPS Location Tracker: Self-hosted GPS tracking with offline support, geofencing and native maps
  • croc-app: Modern client for croc, easily and securely send files and text
  • Date-a-base: Your Personal Assistant for Every Special Occasion
  • Dawarich (Community): Community Mobile Client for Dawarich By Sunstep
  • Discover Ads Filter: LSPosed module that hides sponsored cards in Google Discover feed
  • Fauxx - Privacy Through Noise: Poison data collection profiles by generating decoy signals
  • FluxLinux - Mobile Linux: Run full Linux desktop environments with GPU acceleration
  • GitaVani - Bhagavad Gita: Ad-free Bhagavad Gita reader with Sanskrit audio, translations & commentaries
  • Hebrew Calendar: Biblical feast days, sabbaths, and moon phases on a lunar calendar
  • Kwik EFIS: Aviation Glass Cockpit / EFIS with ADS-B for E-Ink devices
  • LeanType: Privacy-focused keyboard with AI enhancements
  • Local Player: Modern local music player with word-by-word synchronized lyrics support
  • MAC Editor: Securely edit Wi-Fi MAC address
  • Manholer: Field logging for manholes, pipes, and field measurements
  • Matrix Synapse Manager: Admin panel for Synapse homeservers, manage users rooms and media
  • Minimal Kernel Manager: Android kernel management and system monitoring application
  • Offenbach App: The official citizen app of the city of Offenbach am Main
  • Open 100x: Extreme 100x hybrid zoom camera with local image processing
  • OpenVine: Record and stitch 6-second video clips. Offline and private.
  • Pioneer: Universal progress tracker
  • Plutonic: Suika physics-based planet shooter
  • PriceGrab: Compare two supermarket prices and find the cheaper one per unit
  • Reloado Auth: Secure 2FA TOTP authenticator with biometric lock and encrypted storage
  • Restoid: A modern, root-based app backup tool powered by restic
  • Scrib: A simple text workspace to edit text before pasting somewhere else
  • Setwork: AI-powered notes, smart task scheduling, and learning cards in one place
  • Spix - Privacy Fitness Tracker: Privacy-first offline fitness tracker with AI rep counter and gamification
  • Steam Server Browser: Browse A2S-compatible Steam game servers
  • Su Fei: Minimalist and immersive Chinese traditional poetry reader
  • Supertonic TTS: Local AI Text-to-Speech using Supertonic ONNX
  • Suspension Setup: Track and manage your mountain bike suspension settings and their change history
  • Timer Bundle: Flexible interval timers for sports training with dynamic duration control
  • Todosian - Obsidian Markdown Todos: Manage Obsidian todo lists. Edit Markdown files directly; no account or sync
  • VoicePlus – Audiobook Player: Audiobook player with listening logs, statistics, and no tracking
  • Wallet: Secure & Minimal Design Wallet for Your Credit/Debit/Loyalty/Identity Cards
  • Winterkongress 2026 Schedule: Conference program for the Winterkongress 2026 of digital society
  • YouPipe: A Material-3 based alternative to NewPipe using the same extractor
  • Öffi Sounds: Podcast app with ARD Sounds, BBC Sounds & public radio integration

Updated Apps

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

Thank you for reading this week’s TWIF 🙂

Please subscribe to the RSS feed in your favourite RSS application to be updated of new TWIFs when they come up.

You are welcome to join the TWIF forum thread. If you have any news from the community, post it there, maybe it will be featured next week 😉

To help support F-Droid, please check out the donation page and contribute what you can.

09:00 AM

Ctrl-Alt-Speech: The Human Element In The Room [Techdirt]

Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw.

Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed.

In this week’s roundup of the latest news in online speech, content moderation and internet regulation, Mike is joined by First Amendment lawyer Ari Cohn. Together they discuss:

Support the podcast by joining our Patreon, with special founder membership available until May 28th.

06:00 AM

Utah Wants Websites To See Through VPNs. That’s Not How VPNs Work. [Techdirt]

Utah has a long track record of short-sighted internet policymaking, but the latest example really does take things to a new level of stupid. As of yesterday, Utah’s “Online Age Verification Amendments” bill, Senate Bill 73, has taken effect. It is a piece of legislation that effectively tries to ban VPNs as a desperate attempt to stop people from bypassing the state’s already problematic (and likely unconstitutional) age verification requirements.

Signed by Governor Spencer Cox on March 19, the controversial law establishes that a user is considered to be accessing a website from Utah if they are physically located there, regardless of whether they use a VPN or proxy to mask their IP address. It also prohibits covered websites from sharing instructions on how to use a VPN to bypass age checks.

We’ve been highlighting the various attempts to ban VPNs as short-sighted legislators fail to grasp how necessary they are for basic security. But, now, Utah has touched the stove and is going to find out what it feels like.

While an earlier version of the law would have simply held a provider liable for not doing age verification, the amended version says service providers have to determine whether the person is physically located in Utah — even if they’re using a VPN to appear to be from somewhere else:

An individual is considered to be accessing the website from this state if the individual is actually located in the state, regardless of whether the individual is using a virtual private network, proxy server, or other means to disguise or misrepresent the individual’s geographic location to make it appear that the individual is accessing a website from a location outside this state.

In short, the genius legislators in Utah have decided that websites should do the impossible: either block all access from VPNs or somehow magically “know” that users whose digital footprints suggest they’re connecting from outside Utah are actually lying about their location. That is, in any understanding of the law, an effective ban on VPNs, because the only way to deal with that would be to block off huge segments of IP addresses associated with known VPN servers.

Even worse, the law says it’s a violation to tell people how to protect themselves with a VPN, which seems like a First Amendment violation on its own (you can’t ban a service from telling users how to use another service):

A commercial entity that operates a website that contains a substantial portion of material harmful to minors may not facilitate or encourage the use of a virtual private network, proxy server, or other means to circumvent age verification requirements, including by providing:

(a)instructions on how to use a virtual private network or proxy server to access the website; or

(b)means for individuals in this state to circumvent geofencing or blocking.

Lia Holland at Fight for the Future pointed out the absurdity of this in a statement, noting that the logic of the bill doesn’t even survive a basic reality check:

This is the sort of slop that if you asked the chatbot whether or not its previous statement was accurate, it would apologize profusely. Why? Because you cannot require a website doing age verification to determine where someone using a reputable VPN is browsing from—this feat is literally impossible by design for even the best hacker.

Such language and lack of logic begs the question—do Utah lawmakers actually understand what a VPN is? Let’s set the record straight: VPNs are an essential tool for online privacy, security, and liberty that everyone from abuse survivors to small businesses use to keep themselves safe. VPNs do this by totally hiding where a person is browsing the Internet from. Thus, when a person is using a VPN, the website they are browsing definitionally can’t tell whether or not they are in Utah.

It’s fairly astounding the level of technological ignorance legislators will openly admit in their efforts to demand technology do the impossible. Insisting that VPNs need to be banned should be a disqualifier from holding public office.

EFF’s Rindala Alajaji notes that what Utah is demanding here is technologically incomprehensible:

Blocking all known VPN and proxy IP addresses is a technical whack-a-mole that likely no company can win. Providers add new IP addresses constantly, and no comprehensive blocklist exists. Complying with Utah’s requirements would require impossible technical feats.

The internet is built to, and will always, route around censorship. If Utah successfully hampers commercial VPN providers, motivated users will transition to non-commercial proxies, private tunnels through cloud services like AWS, or residential proxies that are virtually indistinguishable from standard home traffic. These workarounds will emerge within hours of the law taking effect. Meanwhile, the collateral damage will fall on businesses, journalists, and survivors of abuse who rely on commercial VPNs for essential data security.

Again, Fight for the Future explains the real impact of such a law:

Websites are left with three choices: either try to block everyone around the globe who’s using a VPN (which they can’t actually do), or require age verification for everybody in the world no matter if they’re in Utah, or censor all content that meets Utah’s nebulous “harmful to minors” standard for age verification.

Oh wait, there’s a fourth option: sue Utah.

Ignoring the law or suing the state appear to be the only rational responses.

Age verification already has a long list of well-known problems, many of which put users at risk. An effective ban on VPNs just makes it that much more dangerous for anyone in that state to use the internet. The fact that they’re doing all of this under the pretense of “protecting” children, when the actual impact will put everyone at greater risk, is just the icing on the cake — performative headline-chasing dressed up as policy.

04:00 AM

To The Surprise Of No One, Cops Are Using ALPR Cameras To Stalk Their Exes [Techdirt]

The cops never change. Only the tech toys do.

That’s the upshot of this report from the Institute for Justice, which has been tracking what cops have been tracking now that they have always-on access to massive networks of security cameras, including Flock Safety’s controversial offerings, which also include automatic license plate readers (ALPR).

The proliferation of police surveillance has led to repeated abuse. One shockingly common form: police officers using ALPR camera networks to keep tabs on their romantic interests, including current partners, exes, and even strangers who unwittingly caught their eye in public. 

An Institute for Justice review of media reports has identified at least 14 cases nationwide of officers allegedly abusing ALPR data this way, with the bulk of those incidents happening since 2024.

This is the same stuff that cops have been doing for years. Access to criminal databases, drivers license info, and anything else swept up by government entities has resulted in numerous cases of abuse.

A common thread that runs through most of these cases are the targets of this abusive surveillance, which are almost exclusively women. In some cases, officers are targeting random women to pursue as sexual conquests or, just as disturbingly, utilize a wealth of personal info to gain access to their online accounts for the sole purpose of obtaining sexually explicit content.

If there’s an upside, it’s this:

Nearly all of these officers were criminally charged and lost their jobs, either by resigning or getting fired. 

Now, if you’re the sort of person who sees a quarter-full glass and assumes it’s on its way to being half-full, you might come away with the impression that this is not only rare, but routinely punished when it’s discovered.

If you’ve read anything linked in the above paragraphs, the glass is still a quarter-full but is likely to continue evaporating as time goes on. There’s a reason most of these cases have surfaced during the last two years and it has everything to do with private surveillance tech companies like Ring and Flock aggressively courting cops and giving them easy access to recordings and live feeds generated by privately-owned cameras.

Even if the truth is somewhere in the middle of these two views, it’s not good news by any stretch of the imagination. As the Margaret Atwood quote goes: “Men are afraid that women will laugh at them. Women are afraid that men will kill them.” Now, take that and add the massive power imbalance that increases as cops move past cops v. everyone to cops v. women.

And that’s all it is. Its law enforcement officers targeting women. They’re tracking their mistresses. They’re spying on their exes and their current partners. They’re using this tech to stalk women they’re interested in for reasons that have nothing to do with their law enforcement jobs.

Don’t believe me? You must be a cop.

  • Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, 2021: Officer Michael McSherry pleaded guilty to stalking charges after using readers to track his estranged wife and other family members. 
  • Kechi, Kansas, 2023: Kechi Lieutenant Victor Heiar pleaded guilty to computer crime and stalking after using Flock cameras to track his estranged wife. 
  • Sedgwick, Kansas, 2023: Police Chief Lee Nygaard resigned after using Flock cameras to track his ex-girlfriend and her new boyfriend more than 200 times over several months. 
  • Costa Mesa, California, 2023: Officer Robert Josett used a Flock camera system to track his mistress and her other romantic interests. Josett pleaded guilty to multiple criminal charges in April 2026. 
  • Riverside County, California, 2024: After being arrested for kidnapping his ex-fiancée, Deputy Alexander Vanny allegedly used the department’s Flock system to track one of her friends. In December 2025 he was convicted of multiple charges in a jury trial. 
  • Orange City, Florida, 2024: Officer Jarmarus Brown allegedly used ALPRs to stalk his girlfriend and her family members more than 100 times over seven months. Brown was arrested and charged in 2025
  • Shelby County, Tennessee, 2024: Deputy Thadius Gordon was relieved of duty after allegedly using an ALPR database to track his ex-wife’s location more than 100 times. 
  • Louisville, Kentucky, 2025: Officer Roberto Cedeno was charged with multiple felonies after allegedly using the city’s ALPR system to track an ex-partner and her friends hundreds of times over two months. 
  • Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 2025: Officer Josue Ayala allegedly used the department’s network of Flock ALPRs to track a woman he was dating and her ex-partner nearly 180 times over a two-month period. Ayala resigned in 2026 after being charged with misconduct in public office. 
  • Jerome County, Idaho, 2025: Sheriff George Oppedyk used a Flock system to search for his wife’s vehicle hundreds of times. Idaho’s Attorney General concluded that no crime was committed, but Oppedyk retired in April 2026, two years before his term of office ended. 
  • Kenosha County, Wisconsin, 2025: Sheriff’s Deputy Frank McGrath resigned with severance pay after internal investigators found he used the department’s Flock system to keep tabs on another deputy with whom he was romantically involved. 
  • Menasha, Wisconsin, 2025: Officer Cristian Morales was placed on leave and charged with misconduct in office after his ex-girlfriend filed a complaint alleging that he used a Flock system to track her. 
  • Bonner Springs, Kansas, 2025: Detective Kyle Rector allegedly used license plate readers to track his estranged wife and two men he suspected were her new romantic partners. He was charged with multiple crimes in March 2026.
  • Monroe County, Florida, 2026: Sheriff’s Deputy Lamar Roman allegedly used an ALPR system to track and eventually pull over a woman he had met while providing security on a TV set. Roman was arrested and charged with accessing a computer or electronic device without authorization.

These are just the cases in which allegations were sustained or criminal charges were brought. In six of these 14 cases, officers resigned, retired or were simply taken off active duty, which means they’ve never faced justice for their actions. They’re probably not even the tip of the tip of the iceberg. As the IJ points out, most incidents like these come to light due to complaints filed by victims, rather than by internal reviews of database/recording access by officers given access to these systems.

Any system like this will be abused. But this report shows few, if any, law enforcement agencies are willing to engage in the kind of rigorous oversight needed to deter this sort of behavior. This abuse is far more pervasive than this short list of 14 officers would seemingly indicate. The only thing separating these cops from the hundreds or thousands of others on that side of the Thin Blue Line is that they got caught.

To be sure, this list will get longer as time goes on. But until cop shops and the companies providing this tech actually care enough about anyone else to do literally anything to deter this, the people with the most power will continue to abuse their access to hunt and haunt the people they’re pretty sure they can get away with abusing.

Daily Deal: The Complete Raspberry Pi And Alexa A-Z Bundle [Techdirt]

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

03:00 AM

New Release: Tor Browser 15.0.13 [Tor Project blog]

Arti 2.3.0 released: Logging, Relay, Directory authority, and RPC development. [Tor Project blog]

Arti is our ongoing project to create a next-generation Tor implementation in Rust. We're happy to announce the latest release, Arti 2.3.0.

This release bumps the minimum MacOS version supported by Arti to 10.14, up from 10.12. Despite being supported on a technical level, we do not recommend the use of MacOS versions that old, as they are no longer receiving updates from Apple and may have unpatched security issues.

This release continues our ongoing development towards using Arti as a relay and as a directory authority. It also continues development on RPC, including adding a new RPC API for inspecting tunnel paths.

Additionally, there are a couple new logging related features. Arti now supports logging to syslog when the syslog feature is enabled and the logging.syslog config option is enabled. We've also added a new logging.protocol_warnings option to log protocol violations as warnings.

Developers who use the arti-client crate should note that in the release after this one, we plan to change TorClient to be wrapped in an Arc explicitly, rather than implicitly having Arc-like semantics. Be prepared for this breaking change, and if you have any thoughts about it, please speak up in #2469.

As usual, there is also a signigicant amount of cleanup, improvements to testing, infrastructure, and documentation, and many small bugfixes.

For full details on what we've done, including API changes, and for information about many more minor and less-visible changes, please see the CHANGELOG.

For more information on using Arti, see our top-level README, and the documentation for the arti binary.

Thanks to everybody who's contributed to this release, including Andrew Kloet, hjrgrn, and moumenalaoui.

Also, our deep thanks to our sponsors for funding the development of Arti!

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

In our dreams, the laws of thermodynamics don’t apply, and gravity works in strange ways.

We can jump across a chasm and stick the landing on the other side.

This freedom is important. It’s part of what makes a dream, a dream.

It’s not just the physics of moving matter, though. It’s the physics of relationships, of money, of how the world works.

All good.

Unless we bring these dreams to our projects. At some point, the real world shows up. And we should acknowledge that while dreams are essential, they are simply our dreams… they don’t come with the guarantee that others will see them the way we do.

Gravity isn’t just a good idea. It’s the law.

      

John Roberts Wants You To Stop Believing Your Own Eyes [Techdirt]

John Roberts has spent years whining about how totally unfair it is that people claim he and his colleagues rule based on partisan leanings. He did it in 2014. He did it in 2017. He did it in 2019. Hell, he did it a couple months ago too. So it’s little surprise that he’s out there whining about people calling the Court partisan yet again.

Speaking at a conference for lawyers and judges in Hershey, Roberts said the Supreme Court is required to make decisions that are not popular and bemoaned that there is not a better understanding among the public of how the court operates.

“I think at a very basic level, people think we’re making policy decisions, [that] we’re saying we think this is what things should be as opposed to this is what the law provides,” Roberts said. “I think they view us as truly political actors, which I don’t think is an accurate understanding of what we do. I would say that’s the main difficulty.”

While he conceded that people have a right to criticize the court and its decisions, he added that there is a tendency to focus too much on politics.

“We’re not simply part of the political process, and there’s a reason for that, and I’m not sure people grasp that as much as is appropriate,” Roberts said.

The timing here is something else — a week after an obviously partisan ruling in Callais, which stripped away Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. Notably, Roberts himself had pointed to Section 2’s existence back in 2013 as the reason that they could kill off Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act (which required a pre-review of voting maps for racial bias). And now he helped kill Section 2.

If it were just about making decisions that are “not popular,” then… why are nearly all of his “unpopular” decisions quite clearly in support of one party’s goals and ideology? Any look at the details shows why people conclude that Roberts has a partisan bent to his rulings:

  • In the 15 precedent-overturning cases with partisan implications, in other words, Justice Roberts voted for a conservative outcome 14 times (93%).
  • Chief Justice Roberts is one of only two justices since 1946 to support 100% of decisions overturning precedent that led to conservative outcomes.
  • Roberts’s record in precedent-overturning cases is the second-most conservative among 37 justices who have ruled in at least 5 precedent-overturning cases since 1946. With 84% conservative votes in precedent-overturning cases, Roberts only trails Justice Alito’s 88%.

Gee. I wonder why people think the Court is partisan, chief?

And, on Monday (as we pointed out) Roberts joined Alito and the conservatives on the bench to break standard practice and precedent, supporting Louisiana ripping up its election maps to favor more Republican seats — even as voting had already started — even though, just months ago, he and the conservatives had said that Texas’ map (deemed unconstitutionally based on race by a Trump-appointed judge) couldn’t be torn up because it was “too close” to an election and voters needed “certainty.” There is literally no explanation for December being too close to change the maps while May somehow required rushing a map change… in the same election… other than the partisan leaning of those two decisions.

Indeed, as Liz Dye points out, we have decades of the Supreme Court doing exactly this: it allows for election map changes when it will help Republicans, but says “no can do, too close to an election” whenever it’s expected to help Democrats:

The Court’s conservatives routinely scold lower court judges for changing voting rules too close to an election. This violates the Purcell principle, named for a 2006 case in which the Court rebuked the 9th Circuit for blocking Arizona’s voter ID law too close to an election and causing voter “confusion.” For 20 years, the Supreme Court’s conservatives have selectively invoked Purcell to allow elections to proceed using maps that courts have already deemed to be unlawful.

In 2022, after lower courts struck down Alabama’s electoral map for violating Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act and disenfranchising Black voters, the Supreme Court intervened to allow Alabama to use the unconstitutional map anyway in the midterms. In 2023, the Court agreed that the maps were illegal under the VRA — but only after they’d let Alabama Republicans use them to take back the House.

Just five months ago, the Court cited Purcell when it rebuked a federal district court for “improperly inserting itself into an active primary campaign” by blocking Texas’s unconstitutionally racial gerrymander.

But given the chance to insert themselves into an acting primary campaign, they regularly jump in with both feet. And in fact they’re equally happy to stomp into the primary itself.

So, chief, if you want people to stop thinking the Court is partisan, maybe stop making such obviously partisan decisions.

Oh, and also maybe talk to your colleagues. After all, at the very moment you were whining about people thinking the court was partisan, your colleague Justice Neil Gorsuch was appearing on a famously rightwing podcast to talk about why “young conservatives must have courage to stand by their beliefs.” Sounds kinda partisan.

And just a few weeks ago, your colleague Justice Clarence Thomas gave a speech arguing that progressives were an existential threat to America.

Gosh. Why would the public think some of you are partisan. I wonder!

And, let’s not forget that Thomas’s wife was supportive of the attempt to steal an election from the rightfully elected Joe Biden in support of the failed Republican campaign of Donald Trump. And then there’s Justice Alito’s wife who, somewhat infamously, flew political flags outside their home, including one in support of the January 6th insurrection.

A real mystery, truly. Who could possibly think that there might be partisan bias? How unfair.

But you keep saying how unfair this is. Year after year, conference after conference, the same complaint: people just don’t understand us.

At some point, Chief Justice, the more productive question isn’t why the public doesn’t grasp your supposed non-partisanship. It’s why — after decades of rulings that break almost exclusively in one direction, colleagues who deliver speeches about the courage of young conservatives, and the existential threat of progressivism, and spouses flying insurrection flags — you’re still surprised that they don’t.

Maybe the problem isn’t the public’s understanding. Maybe it’s the Court’s behavior.

Pluralistic: Bubbles are REALLY evil (07 May 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



The royal carriage of king Louis Philippe is burned in front of the Chateau d'eau during the French revolution of 1848, Paris 24th February 1848.

Bubbles are REALLY evil (permalink)

I am on record as saying that every economic bubble is terrible, but some bubbles do at least leave behind a salvageable productive residue while others leave behind nothing but ashes; indeed, this is the thesis of my next book, The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI:

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374621568/thereversecentaursguidetolifeafterai/

Here's a historical comparison that's illuminating: Enron vs Worldcom. Both were monumental frauds, the CEOs of both companies died shortly after the frauds were discovered, but they have very different legacies. Enron – a scam that pretended to secure billions of dollars' worth of new efficiencies through "energy trading" but was actually just engineering rolling blackouts in order to jack up energy prices – left behind nothing.

Well, not quite nothing. Enron did leave behind a little useful residue after it burned to the ground: a giant repository of emails. You see, after Enron went bust, it was sued by its creditors, who demanded access to relevant emails from the company's Outlook server. But the company execs decided they didn't want to spend the money to weed out the irrelevant emails before the court-mandated disclosure, so instead they published all the emails ever sent or received by anyone at Enron, including tons of extremely private, personal, sensitive information relating to Enron's employees and customers:

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

This became the "Enron Corpus" and it was the first large tranche of emails that were in the public domain and available to researchers. As a result, it became the gold standard dataset for researchers investigating social graphs, natural language, and many other subjects that subsequently became very important computer science fields and commercial applications.

As legacies go, the Enron Corpus is pretty small ball, and even so, it is decidedly mixed, both because the Enron Corpus constitutes a gross, ongoing privacy violation for a huge number of people; and because a lot of that social graph and natural language work that it jumpstarted has been put to deeply shitty purposes.

Then there's Worldcom: also a gigantic fraud, Worldcom falsified billions of dollars' worth of orders for new fiber optic lines, which it then dug up streets all over the world and installed. When Worldcom went bankrupt, all that fiber stayed in the ground, and many people are still using it today. My home in Burbank has a 2GB symmetrical fiber connection through AT&T that runs on old Worldcom fiber that AT&T bought up for pennies on the dollar.

So while you have to squint really hard to find any benefit that can be salvaged from Enron, it's really easy to point at Worldcom's productive residue – it's a ton of fiber and conduit running under the streets of major cities around the world, ready to be lit up and bring the people nearby into the 21st century. Fiber, after all, is amazing, literally thousands of times better than copper or 5G or Starlink:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/07/swisscom/#stacked

Even though Enron's CEO Ken Lay and Worldcom's CEO Bernie Ebbers both received prison sentences after their fraud was revealed, the bubbles never stopped, and indeed, they only got worse. AI is the biggest bubble in human history, worse even than the South Sea Bubble:

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

And like those earlier bubbles, some of our modern bubbles will leave behind nothing, while others will leave behind some productive residue. Take the cryptocurrency bubble. Crypto will go to zero, and when it does, all it will leave behind is shitty monkey JPEGs and even worse Austrian economics:

https://www.web3isgoinggreat.com/

As with Enron, you can find some productive residue from cryptocurrency if you look hard enough. A lot of programmers have had a heavily subsidized education in Rust programming and cryptographic fundamentals, both of which are unalloyed goods in our otherwise very insecure digital world.

Some of the underlying mechanisms from the crypto are useful, even without blockchains. Take Metalabel, a system that lets collaborators on creative projects automate how they handle revenues from those projects by plugging DAO-like logic into traditional, dollar-based bank accounts. They're recycling some of the tooling from the crypto bubble to create a very useful utility, without the crypto:

https://www.metalabel.com/

But, as with the Enron Corpus, this is pretty small ball. The world has flushed away hundreds of billions to get paltry millions' worth of value out of crypto – the rest of that value disappeared into the pockets of crooked insiders who defrauded the public into parting with their savings.

If crypto will be Enron-like in its post-bubble life, what about AI? I think AI is more like Worldcom: there's a bunch of useful stuff that AI can do, after all. Take away the bubble and we'd call the things AI can do "plug-ins" and some people would use them, and others wouldn't, and some of those uses would be productive, and others would be foolish, but we wouldn't bet the world's economy on them, nor would we squander our last dribbles of potable water to cool their data centers.

After the AI bubble pops, there will be a lot of durable residue. The data centers will still stand. The GPUs will still be there, and if we don't "sweat the assets" by running them as hot and hard as they can tolerate, they won't burn out in 2-3 years. There will be lots of applied statisticians, skilled data-labelers, etc, looking for work. And there will be lots of open source models that have barely been optimized (why make an open source model more efficient when you're raising capital based on the promise of outspending everyone else in order to dominate a world of ubiquitous, pluripotent, winner-take-all centralized AI?):

https://pluralistic.net/2025/10/16/post-ai-ai/#productive-residue

That's a situation not unlike the post-dotcom bubble of the early 2000s. Almost overnight, the legion of humanities undergrads who'd been treated to subsidized training in perl, Python and HTML found themselves looking for work. Servers could be purchased in bulk for pennies on the dollar (with user data still on them!). I bought a "dining room set" of six $1,000+ fancy office chairs for $50 each (still wrapped in plastic!) from a dotcom founder who was selling them on the sidewalk out front of his failed startup's office in the Mission. He offered to sell me ten lifetime's supply of branded t-shirts for $20. I turned him down.

That was the birth of Web 2.0. All of a sudden, people who wanted to make real things that were good could do so, because they could find skilled workers, hardware, and office space at such knock-down prices that they could be funded out of pocket or put on a credit card. People got to pursue the web they wanted, free from asshole bosses and VCs. Not everything that got built in those heady days was good, but many good things got built.

I can easily imagine that the post-bubble AI scene will produce benefits comparable to Web 2.0 – projects built by and for people who want to do useful and fun things, without being distracted by the mirage of illusory billions promised by the stock swindlers who created the bubble.

I can easily imagine that I will find some of those post-bubble tools useful, and that in 20 years I will still be using them, just as today, I am still using some of those early post-dotcom bubble services and tools.

And despite all that, IT IS NOT WORTH IT.

The residue that is left behind by every bubble is subsidized, but that subsidy doesn't come from the deep-pocketed investors who are gripped by "irrational exuberance." It comes from mom-and-pop, normie, retail investors who have been tricked into giving their money to the insiders who inflated the bubble.

From Worldcom to Enron, from crypto to AI, the point of the bubble wasn't ever the residue or lack thereof – it was a transfer from working people to crooks. Bubbles are a system for moving the painfully sequestered life's savings of people who do things to people who steal things.

Since the Carter years, workers have been forced to flush their savings into the stock market, after the traditional "defined benefits pension" (that guarantees you an inflation-adjusted sum every month until you die) was replaced with 401(k)s and other "market-based pensions" (where you only get to survive after retirement if you bet correctly on the movement of stocks):

https://pluralistic.net/2022/05/29/against-cozy-catastrophies/

Despite this having all the appearances of a rigged game – finance industry insiders are always going to be better at betting on stocks than teachers, nurses, janitors and other productive workers – proponents of this system always insisted that workers weren't really the suckers at the table. But the stock market is like Kalshi or Polymarket in that one bettor's losses are another bettor's gains, and in those markets, nearly all the money is harvested by less than 1% of bettors:

https://www.coindesk.com/markets/2026/04/29/a-tiny-group-is-winning-on-polymarket-as-under-1-of-wallets-take-half-the-profits

Somehow, supposedly, we could beat those insiders and survive into our old age without having to eat dog food or become a burden on our kids by betting on the whole market, through index-tracker funds:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/03/17/shareholder-socialism/#asset-manager-capitalism

Supposedly, this would "diversify" our portfolios, which would insulate us from risks we could not understand, much less estimate. But thanks to private equity and the AI bubble, betting on "the whole market" is basically "betting on AI." 35% of the S&P 500 is tied up in seven AI companies, who are engaged in the obviously fraudulent (and Worldcom-adjacent) practice of passing the same $100b IOU around really quickly and pretending it's in all their bank accounts at once:

https://www.fool.com/investing/2025/11/05/ai-growth-stocks-is-there-still-room-to-run/

When the AI bubble pops, it will vaporize (at least) 35% of the US stock market and wipe out everyday savers who have been swindled into betting their futures on AI, based on the fraudulent representations of AI pitchmen. Millions of people who worked hard all their lives and deprived themselves of small comforts in order to save for their retirement will be wiped out. They will be made dependent on the Social Security system that Republicans are determined to starve into bankruptcy and then turn into (yet another) "market based system" that you will be required to convert into chips at the stock market casino where you're up against professional players who hold all the cards:

https://www.newsweek.com/major-social-security-change-proposed-to-build-wealth-11727844

Annihilating a third of the stock market will have severe knock-on effects, even though the median US worker only has $955 saved for retirement:

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/955-saved-for-retirement-millions-are-in-that-boat-150003868.html

Because wiping out the life's savings of everyone else will tank consumption for a generation. Retirees who have to sell their family homes to pay their medical bills won't be buying breakfast at the local diner or catching a Tuesday night movie. They won't be indulging their grandkids with nice birthday presents or helping their own kids buy their first home.

Worse still: the only thing our society knows how to do about economic catastrophe (for now, anyway) is to impose brutal austerity, and austerity drives voters into the arms of fascist strongmen, who blame all their woes on a scapegoated minority in order to win office, and then steal everything that's not nailed down:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/12/always-great/#our-nhs

Which is all to say, there's a world of difference between recognizing that the AI bubble is the superior sort of bubble in that it will leave a productive residue, and endorsing the AI bubble as a productive or morally acceptable way to produce that residue. It's one thing to anticipate salvaging something useful out of a catastrophe, and another thing altogether to deliberate induce or prolong that catastrophe so as to maximize the amount of salvage.

The swindlers who created this bubble are crooks who have set out to destroy the futures of a generation of savers. They are monsters, and their bubble needs to be popped as quickly as possible.


Hey look at this (permalink)



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

Object permanence (permalink)

#20yrsago Judge mocks FCC’s legal argument for wiretapping VoIP https://web.archive.org/web/20060512141440/https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/004638.php

#20yrsago Podcasting saved from the UN — for now https://web.archive.org/web/20060603152220/https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/004637.php

#15yrsago Two billion people and the royal wedding: pretty damned unlikely https://www.gyford.com/phil/writing/2011/05/06/2-billion-viewers/

#15yrsago Mozilla tells DHS: we won’t help you censor the Internet https://torrentfreak.com/homeland-security-wants-mozilla-to-pull-domain-seizure-add-on-110505/

#15yrsago Foxconn workers forced to sign promise not to commit suicide due to working conditions https://memex.craphound.com/2011/05/05/foxconn-workers-forced-to-sign-promise-not-to-commit-suicide-due-to-working-conditions/

#15yrsago Shannon’s Law: a story about bridging Faerie and the mundane world with TCP-over-magic https://reactormag.com/shannons-law/

#15yrsago Green Army men with PTSD https://www.wearedorothy.com/collections/artworks/products/casualties-of-war

#10yrsago Deep Insert skimmers: undetectable, disposable short-lived ATM skimmers https://krebsonsecurity.com/2016/05/crooks-go-deep-with-deep-insert-skimmers/

#10yrsago How standardizing DRM will make us all less secure https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/04/standardized-drm-will-make-us-less-safe

#10yrsago Excellent advice for generating and maintaining your passwords https://www.wired.com/2016/05/password-tips-experts/

#10yrsago Amid education funding emergency, Washington State gives Boeing, Microsoft $1B in tax breaks https://jeffreifman.com/2016/05/05/forget-boeing-microsofts-tax-break-costs-776-million/

#5yrsago MRNA vaccines and Clarke's Law https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/05/clarkes-third-law/#indistinguishable-from-magic

#5yrsago Stimmies killed the McJob https://pluralistic.net/2021/05/05/clarkes-third-law/#precariat-nostalgia

#1yrago Bridget Read's 'Little Bosses Everywhere' https://pluralistic.net/2025/05/05/free-enterprise-system/#amway-or-the-highway


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

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

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

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

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

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

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

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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The DOJ Just Came For Virginia’s L. Louise Lucas [The Status Kuo]

Photo courtesy of The Virginian-Pilot

Yesterday, the FBI raided the office of one of the most powerful Democratic state lawmakers in the country.

L. Louise Lucas is Virginia’s Senate president pro tempore and the chief architect of the 10-to-1 congressional map that Virginia voters approved on April 21. The FBI raid came just weeks after she helped push through that map, one of the most consequential redistricting victories in modern political history.

If that triggers your political Spidey senses, that’s the intended effect. The Trump White House wants us to be alarmed. It wants everyone, friends and foes alike, to understand how willing it is to abuse its prosecutorial powers against its political enemies.

The GOP and Trump’s spokespeople, following orders from the top, will try to paint this as justice being carried out and ongoing investigation begun under Biden. But this is no more about seeking justice than investigations and charges involving seashells, Somali daycare centers, Federal Reserve building renovations and home mortgage loan applications. We can’t let them twist this.

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The raid, in a nutshell

On May 6, 2026, federal agents executed court-authorized search warrants at Lucas’s Portsmouth, Virginia office and at the businesses she operates nearby. At the same time, a SWAT team descended on a cannabis dispensary she co-owns next door, and at least three people were taken into custody. More than ten search warrants were served at locations across the commonwealth.

No charges have been filed. No warrants have been made public. Lucas has not been named a formal target. But the investigation itself reportedly began under the Biden administration, something Trump’s mouthpieces will use to launder this as nonpartisan accountability.

We need to ask immediate questions, including who opened the investigation and who chose to execute it at this moment, in this way, with Trump’s media allies tipped off and on the scene.

Four reasons this stinks

Let’s start with the timing. Virginia voters approved Lucas’s redistricting referendum on April 21, barely two weeks before the FBI moved. The new congressional map, which Lucas championed and drove through the legislature, gives Democrats a potential four-seat pickup that could reshape the House majority. It was a direct counter to Trump’s mid-decade redistricting push in Texas and elsewhere. As U.S. Rep. Bobby Scott (D-VA) said Wednesday: “This is occurring just two weeks after Senator Lucas helped lead the successful effort by Virginia voters to reject President Trump’s attempt to rig the midterm elections.”

Second, consider why Fox was there. The network was first on the scene, even before local outlets, and before Lucas herself knew what was happening. As Rep. Scott demanded to know, “How was Fox News, a national media outlet, first on the scene? Did they know about the raid beforehand? If so, who approved that?” That’s not just a rhetorical question. Under DOJ’s own Justice Manual, advance notice of a raid to the media requires high-level approval. Someone in federal law enforcement decided to alert right-wing media, and we deserve answers.

Third, this isn’t the first politicized move. The Trump DOJ has pursued investigations against New York Attorney General Letitia James, indicted former FBI Director James Comey just a week before the Lucas raid, threatened Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, and pressured the DOJ to pursue multiple Democratic members of Congress. The through-line in these cases is opposition to Trump. As Virginia House Speaker Don Scott noted, this is “an FBI led by Kash Patel and a Justice Department run by President Donald Trump’s former personal attorney.” The institution supposed to enforce the law impartially has been systematically compromised.

Who is L. Louise Lucas

If you don’t know Louise Lucas, it’s time to uplift her. She’s more than a sharp online troll of the right, rivaling even Gavin Newsom’s press office. She’s a tough leader willing to do what the moment requires to preserve our democracy.

Born in Portsmouth, Virginia, on January 22, 1944, Lucas grew up attending Portsmouth public schools during the height of Virginia’s Massive Resistance era, when the state was fighting integration tooth and nail. She earned her bachelor’s degree and master’s degree in Urban Affairs from Norfolk State University, both with honors. In 1984, she became the first Black woman elected to Portsmouth City Council. In 1991, she won a seat in the Virginia State Senate, where she has served for more than three decades.

When Democrats took the Virginia Senate in 2019, she became Senate president pro tempore—the first woman and first African American in the chamber’s history to hold that position. She chairs the state Senate’s Finance and Appropriations Committee, again a first for an African American. She also runs multiple businesses in Portsmouth, including a Medicaid waiver services provider for intellectually disabled adults.

Lucas is also a scrappy fighter not afraid to put her views out there, as even The Daily Caller had to concede (after calling her “foul mouthed” without a trace of irony). When Ted Cruz called Virginia’s new congressional map “a brazen abuse of power,” she responded: “You all started it and we f**king finished it.” When asked in April what she was doing on 4/20, she posted a picture of a bong captioned “I fill my bong with Republican tears.” She has spent her career delivering for her constituents and picking fights with the right people. She is 82, a great-grandmother, and she has zero interest in laying down her political weapons. Her statement Wednesday night made that clear: “I am not backing down, and I will keep fighting for the people of Portsmouth and the Commonwealth of Virginia.”

The national picture of Lucas was shaped almost entirely by the redistricting fight. As CNN reported, when Virginia Democrats debated internally whether to target eight, nine or ten Republican seats, it was Lucas who argued for going all the way. She prevailed. Voters approved it 51.5 percent to 48.6 percent, in a campaign that raised over $85 million—the most expensive ballot measure in Virginia history. That referendum is currently tied up in litigation, but the message was sent: Democrats will fight to the finish with people like Lucas in charge.

What the investigation actually claims

This is the part where, to satisfy the well-intentioned “but what if-fers,” I step through the actual investigation and charges, bogus and politically motivated as they may be. So here is what we actually know about the underlying investigation.

The New York Times, ever ready to make headlines out of the White House’s framing, reported the probe involves allegations of “corruption and bribery related to marijuana dispensary businesses” and began during the Biden administration. The conservative Washington Times, citing a source, described it as an “alleged bribery scheme involving cannabis licenses.” NOTUS reported the probe is “financial” in nature. And NBC News added that the DEA is involved but that drugs are not the primary focus.

Importantly, we don’t know all that much yet. The warrants remain sealed. The FBI confirmed only that it executed a court-authorized search warrant and that “no further information is publicly available.” No charges have been filed against Lucas.

The Cannabis Outlet was the subject of a 2022 Virginia Mercury investigation that found products containing delta-9 THC—then technically illegal to sell in Virginia despite a right to possess marijuana—were being mislabeled as higher in THC than they actually were and offered for sale. A “Lucky Charms” cereal bar, for instance, claimed 600 milligrams of THC on the packaging while lab testing found just under 30 milligrams. State regulators took little to no action at the time. Lucas opened the store on July 1, 2021, the same day Virginia law changed to allow the sharing and gifting of marijuana, while retail sales remained prohibited. Five years later, she co-sponsored legislation that would allow dispensaries to sell THC products.

This is the material the right will use to build their talking points. And let’s be clear: the cannabis store’s prior regulatory problems are real. The 2022 reporting was credible. If the investigation involves whether Lucas used her political position to influence licensing or regulation of cannabis businesses in which she held a personal financial interest, that is a legitimate investigative theory, at least in the abstract.

But here is the critical distinction that tends to get lost. An investigation is not a conviction. A search warrant requires only probable cause, not proof, charges or a finding of wrongdoing. As Democracy Docket noted, “search warrants are investigative tools, not findings of guilt.” And we have seen this pattern before from this administration: generate a raid, let Fox film it, activate the base with the imagery then never actually deliver a conviction.

The “it started under Biden” defense

Trump’s spokespeople will lean hard on the fact that this investigation predates the current administration, and it’s worth addressing directly because it’s the most sophisticated version of the “nothing to see here” argument.

Yes, the probe reportedly began under Biden. That means Biden-appointed officials at the FBI and DOJ assessed there was sufficient basis to open an investigation. That context matters, but it still does not explain why, four years into a slow-moving inquiry, the Trump administration suddenly executed more than ten search warrants just two weeks after the redistricting vote threatening Republican House seats. It does not answer why Fox cameras were on scene before local reporters. It does not explain why the search warrants remain sealed while the political spectacle plays out in full public view.

And as discussed above, the Trump DOJ has demonstrated a consistent pattern of activating, escalating or weaponizing existing legal machinery for political purposes. Cases that have long lingered suddenly get fast-tracked. Investigations that were dormant are mysteriously revived. The Biden DOJ opened this one, but the Trump DOJ decided now was the moment to execute it with a SWAT team and a camera crew.

What happens next

The Virginia redistricting fight remains unresolved. A judge issued an injunction the day after the referendum blocking certification of the results, and the Virginia Supreme Court is still considering the legal challenge. Lucas herself is still in office, still president pro tempore, still chair of Finance and Appropriations. No charges have been filed and may never be.

But the real damage was what the raid was designed to inflict: a Democratic power broker is now associated with FBI agents carrying boxes out of her office while federal law enforcement circlse the parking lot, all captured live for Fox viewers.

Lucas, for her part, isn’t playing the victim. “Today’s actions by Federal agents are about far more than one state senator,” she wrote Wednesday night. “They are about power and who is allowed to use it on behalf of the people. What we saw fits a clear pattern from this administration: when challenged, they try to intimidate and silence the voices who stand up to them.”

12:00 AM

FCC’s Gomez Calls For Review Of Paramount’s Dodgy Merger Financing [Techdirt]

Anna Gomez, the FCC’s lone Democratic Commissioner (because Republicans refuse to seat the second one) is calling for a rigorous review of Paramount and the Ellison family’s planned $111 billion merger with Warner Brothers. As Paramount recently revealed, 49.5 percent of the deal’s funding comes from Middle East and Chinese government-linked sources; just the sort of thing Republicans pretend to get mad about when engaged in stuff like, say, offloading TikTok to the POTUS’s rich friends.

The FCC doesn’t have much of a role in the giant media merger approval process because public license transfers aren’t involved. But it does (in a theoretical country that respects the law) have a role to play in enforcing Communications Act restrictions that restrict foreign entities from holding more than a 25% indirect equity or voting interest in a U.S. company that holds broadcast licenses

Carr and the Ellisons have spent months publicly insisting the law doesn’t matter because the countries won’t have a meaningful management and board presence. It doesn’t matter, it’s still technically illegal.

But Carr is eager to ignore the law because the merger is of benefit to a rich Republican looking to gift his nepobaby two major Hollywood studies and turn what’s left of corporate news media (both CNN and CBS News) into an even-friendlier safe space for rich Republicans and global autocrats.

While Gomez’ actual power here is negligible, her call for a meaningful review is a useful reminder of Trump-era Republican hypocrisy and the importance of functional media ownership regulation (which the U.S. hasn’t had in a very long time). From Gomez’ statement:

“The American public deserves to know who owns the airwaves that carry their news. I
am alarmed by what appears to be an effort to rubber stamp a financial structure that
places nearly half of one of America’s largest broadcast and media companies into the
hands of foreign governments with documented records of press suppression and a
troubling willingness to silence journalists.

There are serious, unresolved questions about how this foreign investment may jeopardize national security, and this Commission has a legal obligation to answer them before handing
wealthy friends of this Administration yet another Billionaire Buddy Bypass on a
transaction that strikes at the heart of American journalism.”

Again, recall how Chinese private ownership of a social media company doing business in the United States caused a four year embolism by FCC boss Brendan Carr and other Trump loyal Republicans. Here you have a billionaire right wing Trump friend ignoring the law and gobbling up whatever’s left of U.S. media with the help of several autocratic buddies and there’s curiously no problem.

It’s almost as if Trump Republicans don’t have any coherent ideology beyond propping up their own wealth and power. If only the United States had a diverse and healthy news media capable of explaining that.

With Gomez in the minority there’s virtually no chance of a meaningful FCC review. Still, it’s nice to see a Democrat at least get the messaging on this right. Dem media reform policies have historically ranged from highly performative to nonexistent in a country increasingly too corrupt to care about meaningful antitrust reform (recall how Democratic leadership abandoned popular media reformer Gigi Sohn’s appointment to the FCC after a baseless Republican and telecom/media sector smear campaign).

Ellison’s effort to dominate media, and the authoritarian threat more broadly, is so ham-fisted and dire it’s been hard for Democrats to ignore this one. Carr has unsurprisingly ignored other Democrat lawmakers’ call for meaningful inquiry.

A potential lawsuit by a coalition of state attorneys general remains the best path for blocking the deal, though their focus will obviously be on the inevitable mass layoffs, price hikes, and shittier overall service that arrive every single time giant media mergers (especially involving Warner Brothers) get rubber stamped by our pay-to-play federal government.

Thursday 2026-05-07

10:00 PM

New Alpha Release: Tor Browser 16.0a6 [Tor Project blog]

Tor Browser 16.0a6 is now available from the Tor Browser download page and also from our distribution directory.

This version includes important security updates to Firefox.

⚠️ Reminder: The Tor Browser Alpha release-channel is for testing only. As such, Tor Browser Alpha is not intended for general use because it is more likely to include bugs affecting usability, security, and privacy.

Moreover, Tor Browser Alphas are now based on Firefox's betas. Please read more about this important change in the Future of Tor Browser Alpha blog post.

If you are an at-risk user, require strong anonymity, or just want a reliably-working browser, please stick with the stable release channel.

Send us your feedback

If you find a bug or have a suggestion for how we could improve this release, please let us know.

Full changelog

The full changelog since Tor Browser 16.0a5 is:

New Release: Tor Browser 15.0.12 [Tor Project blog]

Tor Browser 15.0.12 is now available from the Tor Browser download page and also from our distribution directory.

This version includes important security updates to Firefox.

Send us your feedback

If you find a bug or have a suggestion for how we could improve this release, please let us know.

Full changelog

The full changelog since Tor Browser 15.0.11 is:

03:00 PM

Nintendo Shuts Down Fun Faux ‘Pokemon Documentary’ YouTuber Via Copyright Strikes [Techdirt]

We all should know by now that Nintendo is incredibly protective of its IP. When it comes to anything having to do with Pokémon specifically, all the more so. While they would tell you that they’re just protecting their IP, the end result is that some of the biggest Pokémon fans out there that just want to do some fun things that represent no harm to Nintendo get shut down by threats, lawyers, or copyright strikes.

Take the YouTube series called PokeNational Geographic, for instance. While this YouTube series has been pushing out faux nature documentary videos about Pokémon for several years, the channel behind it just got hit with a bunch of copyright strikes from Nintendo.

In a video posted to an alternate channel, Elious says that Nintendo of America suddenly issued numerous strikes on large batches of his videos, all in the space of 12 hours. At the time he posted the video, a total of 20 videos had been caught up in four separate copyright strikes which encompass the entirety of the videos. With YouTube’s three-strikes policy, this means his channel is now pending deletion by YouTube and will disappear in seven days.

Elious says the strikes claim his channel is inappropriately using “content used in Pokémon video games including audiovisual works, characters, and imagery.” Elious’ videos consist of original 3D animation of various Pokémon in the “wild,” with a David Attenborough–style narration sharing various facts about Pokémon like Magikarp, Squirtle, Magnemite, Snom, Mew, Charizard, and more. He has been producing these videos on this channel since as far back as 2023 without issue, and claims in his video that the only actual content he took directly from the games was “tiny sprite roars” that last less than three seconds, adding that numerous other Pokémon creators on YouTube, as well as AI-produced channels mimicking his own, use images or footage directly from the games with no issue.

So, why now? There’s no way to know for sure, but Elious did recently launch a Patreon account so that fans could compensate them for the series. The general speculation is that once Elious attempted to make any kind of money from his video series, that spurred Nintendo to send the copyright strikes. And for many people, that will make complete sense.

I don’t understand that point of view. Regardless of any money changing hands, this still doesn’t represent any threat or harm to Nintendo or the Pokémon franchise. If anything, fun little fan videos like this only propel interest in the product. They represent free engagement lures for fans of Pokémon. Why in the world is copyright striking this channel to hell a better option than working out a free or cheap licensing arrangement with Elious so that they can keep producing the series and Nintendo can reap some of the benefit?

Or, hell, Nintendo could have tried to have a conversation with Elious, at least.

Elious continues by saying that he isn’t opposed to just deleting all the Pokémon videos if Nintendo of America asks, but he wishes he could keep his nearly 100,000 subscribers so he can keep making videos of other things, as he has on the channel in the past.

“I can’t really fight this,” Elious says. “It all seems legitimate, it does seem to come from the actual, real Nintendo of America. I can’t fight this. I don’t…I don’t know what to do about it because it’ll remove everything. I’m downloading stuff, of course, I have like, all the videos myself. But I’ll never be able to post them again, and I’ll never be able to use this channel again. Almost 100,000 subscribers over three years of making these animations and it’s all going to be gone in seven days.”

It’s simply too bad that Nintendo would rather worship at the altar of intellectual property than get creative with how it can support its fans. Thanks to IP maximalist thought, here is just a little more fun that Nintendo has flushed down the toilet.

Kanji of the Day: 芽 [Kanji of the Day]

✍8

小4

bud, sprout, spear, germ

芽生え   (めばえ)   —   bud
発芽   (はつが)   —   germination
芽キャベツ   (めキャベツ)   —   Brussels sprouts (Brassica oleracea var. gemmifera)
新芽   (しんめ)   —   sprout
芽生える   (めばえる)   —   to bud
麦芽   (ばくが)   —   malt
花芽   (かが)   —   flower bud
萌芽   (ほうが)   —   germination
木の芽   (きのめ)   —   leaf bud
芽を摘む   (めをつむ)   —   to nip (something) in the bud

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 粧 [Kanji of the Day]

✍12

中学

cosmetics, adorn (one's person)

ショウ

化粧   (けしょう)   —   make-up
化粧品   (けしょうひん)   —   cosmetics
化粧水   (けしょうすい)   —   skin lotion
雪化粧   (ゆきげしょう)   —   coating of snow
粧す   (めかす)   —   to adorn oneself
化粧直し   (けしょうなおし)   —   adjusting one's makeup
薄化粧   (うすげしょう)   —   light makeup
化粧下   (けしょうした)   —   make-up base
厚化粧   (あつげしょう)   —   thick makeup
化粧室   (けしょうしつ)   —   toilet

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

02:00 PM

Moving Day! [The Status Kuo]

I’m taking the day off to move the family to Kingston! The morning started off spectacularly with Riley dumping her brother Ronan’s powdered formula all over herself. Fun!

But we got everything packed up, and now we’re awaiting the moving vans. And I think the kids like their new room!

For now, lots more room to tumble with their new “big sister” Lia!

I have hours of unpacking work ahead so this short break is very welcome.

I hope to be back writing tomorrow morning. Thanks for all your support and words of encouragement! This has been quite the project but we’re finally moved in…

Jay

08:00 AM

3 Days of Fun with Tor [Tor Project blog]

After organizing a successful first community gathering last year in Denmark, we were eager to find out: Could we get another productive, community-organized meeting off the ground taking into account what we've learned so far?

Preparations

We decided to do the next community gathering organized by us at the same location we used last year: Hylkedam, in Denmark. We knew it worked well, was sufficiently cheap, and we could likely cut down the overall planning overhead given our past experience there. And, indeed, planning was minimal, reusing much of the "playbook" we developed for our first meeting last year. We spent most of our preparation time on revamping our meeting website. We have a shiny new onionized space now, including a public mailing list!

3 days of fun with Tor

We gathered on the weekend of March 13 - 15 at Hylkedam. Overall we were a little less people this time (around 12) but had, on the plus side, participants with backgrounds not being present at our first Tor community gathering: we got the research angle covered this time (with focus on anti-censorship) and had people from the Reproducible Builds project attending. The latter allowed us to think about potentially doing community gatherings together, which would make collaboration and sharing of ideas easier between our projects. Talking about research on the other hand has been very inspiring as we could see what is currently happening in the research world and help shaping particular project plans by explaining related tools and already existing projects and needs within the Tor eco system.

Apart from the new contributions we were happy as well to see that various work started at the previous gathering got picked up and pushed forward again, showing the overall commitment of our volunteers in the community. Notably, we saw further improvements to the network social graph proof of concept project and the relay operator Grafana dashboard. We also continued the discussion around consensus-transparency.

We had the usual structure during our meeting days, following the established cycle of: opening session -> structured sessions -> unstructured sessions -> closing circle, which, again, worked pretty well. Unstructured sessions included general free hacking time and room for getting ad hoc together, thinking through or working on a topic that might have come up during the more structured sessions previously or is just not ready for "prime time" yet. We think that this time without a moderator and a clear session time limit is an essential part of making the whole meeting productive, as it gives the participants the freedom to work on random things they are interested in and might get excited about.

For the structured sessions we made sure we had note takers again, so someone not being able to attend can get up to speed afterwards. We had a set of different topics again, ranging from anti-censorship related sessions to an update on upcoming changes for relay operators and a session dedicated to how the community can get organized itself, so we would have similar gatherings or an 'onion festival' in the future. Check out the session notes on our website, in case you are interested!

What's next?

We plan to have more Tor community meetings in the future. As already said: they don't have to be at Hylkedam (we'd like to see other venues as well!), nor does it have to be the same group of people sharing the organization workload. So, if you are excited about what you read in this blog post and are experiencing a serious case of FOMO or want to help organize future community gatherings, get in touch! Our mailing list[3] is a good starting point for that.

The same goes for providing feedback about this format and how we can make such events more inviting and inclusive in the future. Want to be invited, too? Let us know as well!

Trump’s Anti-Migration Purge Is Breaking Up Military Families, Screwing Afghan Allies [Techdirt]

The content of their character was never up for consideration. Under Donald Trump, the only thing that matters is the color of their skin. That’s why almost every single person granted asylum since Trump took office has been white. That’s why Trump has been asking (out loud!) why we keep getting migrants from “shithole” countries (like those located in South America, Africa, and Latin America) rather than blond haired, blue eyed expats from Scandinavian countries whose residents’ lives would become noticeably worse if they chose to move to the US.

The president wraps himself in the flag, delivers a lot of garbled Team USA jingoism, and routinely proclaims we have the best military in the world. But even the people most directly responsible for keeping the US on top of the military game aren’t allowed to remain here if they’re not white.

Jose Serrano, an active duty soldier who served three tours in Afghanistan, said immigration agents arrested his wife April 14 as they attended an appointment with immigration services to take steps toward her permanent residency.

“A person opened the door, escorted us through the hallway, and at the end of the hallway, my wife got arrested,” Serrano said. “Arrested without any order, any warrant … They took away my wife. They don’t tell me anything.”

On top of all this awfulness, this incident shows ICE isn’t actually shifting away from immigration court arrests despite (1) officials saying otherwise, and (2) more importantly, ICE itself supposedly letting officers know that court arrests like these are not allowed under current ICE policy.

The regular awfulness is this: the Trump administration is willing to attack its own military if it means racking up a few more arrests and deportations:

[L]ast April, DHS eliminated a 2022 policy that considered military service of an immediate family member to be a “significant mitigating factor” in deciding whether or not to pursue immigration enforcement. The administration’s new policy states that “military service alone does not exempt aliens from the consequences of violating U.S. immigration laws.”

It’s not just this nation’s relationship with its own military that’s being permanently damaged by Trump’s bigoted war on non-white people. It’s also any future relationships we might have in countries where we’re engaged in combat. When the US began its full withdrawal from Afghanistan, it promised protections to Afghans who worked with the military to provide intelligence or otherwise aided in the US in the decades-long war.

That’s all being tossed aside by Trump because he and his administration simply just don’t like non-white people.

After halting a U.S. resettlement program for Afghans who helped the American war effort, President Trump is in talks to send as many as 1,100 of them to the Democratic Republic of Congo, an aid worker briefed on the plan said Tuesday.

The group includes interpreters for the U.S. military, former members of the Afghan Special Operations forces and family members of American service members. More than 400 children are among them.

The Afghans have been living in limbo in Qatar for over a year. They were taken there after being evacuated by the United States for their own safety because they supported American forces during the war against the Taliban that began in 2001.

Thanks for your help. Now, go fuck yourselves. That’s the message the US is sending to people who aided the US during this war. It’s the kind of message that isn’t likely to score it any allies as it resumes hostilities in the Middle East.

This report says Trump is “in talks” with DRC to pursue this “resettlement” of Afghan allies — one the administration pursues despite the protests of the people who risked their own lives to assist the US during the Afghanistan war.

It’s hard to believe Trump is actually engaged in anything. DRC already has a refugee problem of its own.

More than 600,000 refugees, mostly from the Central African Republic and Rwanda, are currently in Congo, according to the United Nations. Human rights activists say that the country is not equipped to take in more in the midst of fighting with neighboring Rwanda that has displaced even more people because of attacks on refugee camps.

On top of this, many Afghan allies already have family members living in the United States due to previous efforts made by the Biden administration to protect those who aided the US. This forced resettlement in, well, pretty much any African country that agrees to take them divides even more families. It also demonstrates the United States is not to be trusted when it offers favors in return for assistance. All it takes is an election cycle to roll back guarantees and turn trusted allies into just another set of people being moved from “shithole country” to “shithole country” by a bunch of bigots who would rather destroy America than allow any more non-white people to become residents of what used the be the world’s “melting pot.”

At least for now, Trump has seemingly found a willing dumping ground for people he doesn’t want in this country:

On April 17, the U.S. government deported 15 people to the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, a deeply impoverished African country that’s been scarred by years of conflict.

The group—comprising men and women from Colombia, Ecuador and Peru—is the first to arrive as part of a secretive migration deal brokered with the Trump administration.

“They took us, they put us on a plane, and they chained us by our hands and feet,” said one Colombian man, sitting on a plastic chair in a shabby hotel near Kinshasa’s airport. The deportees didn’t know their final destination until they were on the plane, he added.

Like El Salvador, I’m sure the DRC is more than happy to take our money to take some people off our hands. And like El Salvador, I’m sure the DRC government doesn’t actually care what happens to any of these people being shoved out of DHS charter flights like so much human refuse. If the US can’t be bothered to care, why should some third party in a developing nation do anything more than allow planes to land so long as the checks keep clearing?

This is what America is now: a place where human rights, civil liberties, and basic human morality are no longer weaved into the fabric of the nation. America is no longer the world’s policeman. It is now the world’s corrupt, racist sheriff.

Matt Taibbi Loses His Vexatious SLAPP Suit As Judge Explains What A ‘Metaphor’ Means [Techdirt]

Perhaps Matt Taibbi’s most famous bit of writing ever was his takedown of Goldman Sachs in Rolling Stone (and then in a book that followed) that opened with the highly evocative metaphor:

The world’s most powerful investment bank is a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.

Even now, if you ask anyone about Taibbi’s writing, the phrase “great vampire squid”* is probably the most likely response.

* For what it’s worth, contrary to the what you might think given the name, vampire squids are (1) not actually squids, (2) not bloodsucking as they’re actually described as gentle scavengers, and (3) pretty small.

So, a question: how do you think that Matt Taibbi (who claims to be a giant free speech supporter) would react if Goldman Sachs had sued him back then claiming that they were not, literally, a cephalopod?

I think he would have been rightly outraged at the abuse of the courts to attack his free speech for his use of a metaphor.

So it was pretty shocking back in January when Taibbi sued author Eoin Higgins over his (excellent) book, Owned: How Tech Billionaires on the Right Bought the Loudest Voices on the Left. The crux of Taibbi’s argument was that he wasn’t literally “owned” by billionaires, and thus it was defamatory:

The Book’s title and subtitle “Owned: How Tech Billionaires on the Right Bought the Loudest Voices on the Left” falsely state that Plaintiff was “owned” and “bought” by billionaires.

Even more ridiculously, Taibbi took to the pages of Bari Weiss and David Ellison’s The Free Press to claim that he was suing a journalist for his reporting “to protect free speech.”

Yeah, sure man, whatever you have to tell yourself to sleep at night.

But, no, vexatious SLAPP suits don’t protect free speech; they do the exact opposite. Higgins wrote a thorough and sharp critique of how a bunch of people, like Taibbi, who had been formerly associated with left-leaning views, seemed in recent years to have drifted sharply rightward — frequently with the financial and institutional backing of right-wing tech billionaires.

Taibbi’s lawsuit was weak from the start, repeatedly insisting that obviously metaphorical statements were defamatory because he wasn’t literally “owned” or that he didn’t make that much money by cozying up to Elon Musk with his ridiculously misleading Twitter Files. Even Taibbi’s amended complaint was laughably bad, whining that because he took no direct payments or “financial inducement” from Elon Musk, that it was unfair to associate him with Elon Musk. This despite Taibbi getting the first exclusive batch of internal Twitter documents, which he did discuss on Twitter (this is pre-X) but absolutely used to burnish his own reputation and that of his Substack newsletter.

Thankfully, Higgins and his publisher, Bold Type Books (a Hachette imprint) had strong representation: Elizabeth McNamara and Leena Charlton from Davis Wright Tremaine — McNamara in particular is well known in media and First Amendment circles as one of the best in the business — and the court has issued a pretty quick and pretty thorough dismissal of the case.

Over and over again, the judge, George B. Daniels, patiently explains to Taibbi that metaphors and opinion are not defamatory. Which, you know, is the kind of thing you’d hope a famous writer like Taibbi would have understood already. Alas.

The Book’s Cover and Jacket

None of the statements Plaintiff identifies on the Book’s cover and jacket, standing alone, are actionable. Statements 1 and 2, the words “Owned” and “Bought” on the Book’s front cover, are susceptible to both literal and metaphorical meanings depending on the surrounding context. Plaintiff acknowledges, however, that the contents of the Book cannot support a literal reading, stating that the “[t]he Book contains no evidence of any financial transaction, payment, contract, or quid pro quo involving Plaintiff.” (Opp. at 4.) In this context, “Owned” and “Bought” naturally read as attention-grabbing rhetoric used to signify Higgin’s opinions and the Book’s conclusions. Aside from the scattered words and phrases discussed below, Plaintiff does not dispute the accuracy of the vast majority of the Book’s factual content that informs these views or point to language suggesting the opinions are based on facts other than those disclosed in the book. See Levin v. McPhee, 119 F.3d 189, 197 (2d Cir. 1997) (noting that “hypothesis or conjecture… may yet be actionable if they imply that the speaker’s opinion is based on the speaker’s knowledge of facts that are not disclosed to the reader”). Plaintiff may not like Higgins’s subjective conclusions, or agree with their accuracy, but that does not make them actionable defamation.

And for all of Taibbi’s “but Elon didn’t give me any money!” whining, that doesn’t matter. That’s not how defamation law works. Because if it did work that way lots of journalists wouldn’t be able to report on anything, for fear of vexatious SLAPP suits like the one Taibbi filed. As the judge explains:

Statement 3, that Plaintiff was in “the snug patronage of billionaires,” is also a nonactionable opinion. Just like “Owned” and “Bought,” the language “snug patronage” does not have a readily understood precise meaning, so there is no way for a reader to determine whether the statement is true or false. The statement also appears as a reviewer comment on the back cover under the heading “Praise for Owned.” From this context, a reader would likely intuit this statement as an opinion of the reviewer, supported by the facts disclosed in the Book, and not a statement of fact about Plaintiff. See Hammer v. Amazon.com, 392 F. Supp. 2d 423, 431 (E.D.N.Y. 2005) (“[T]he average person understands that [book reviews] are the reviewer’s interpretation and not ‘objectively verifiable’ false statements of facts.” (quoting Hammer v. Trendl, No. CV 02- 2462 (ADS), 2003 WL 21466686, at *3 (E.D.N.Y. Jan. 18, 2003)).

Rhetorical statements and opinions cannot be defamatory. Just like calling Goldman Sachs a vampire squid couldn’t be. Just like saying you’re someone’s “crony.” Incredibly, there was even an earlier ruling in the very same district specifically on whether or not calling someone a crony was defamatory. A good lawyer would have known that before suing over the word “crony.”

Statement 4 is a passage from the Book’s left flap that states that Plaintiff was one of the right-wing technology billionaires “cronies.” (Am. Compl. 20.) Courts in this district have previously held that calling someone a “crony,” without more, is nonactionable rhetorical hyperbole. See Cassava Scis., Inc. v. Heilbut, 2024 WL 553806, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 5, 2024), report and recommendation adopted sub nom. Cassava Scis., Inc. v. Bredt, 2024 WL 1347362 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 28, 2024) (holding that a presentation which labeled individuals as “cronies” was nonactionable opinion); cf. Biro, 883 F. Supp. 2d at 463 (“[T]he use of the terms ‘shyster,’ ‘con man,’ and finding an ‘easy mark’ is the type of ‘rhetorical hyperbole’ and ‘imaginative expression’ that is typically understood as a statement of opinion.”) (internal citation omitted). The same is true here. The assertion that Plaintiff is a billionaire’s crony is the sort of excessive, unverifiable language that signals to a reasonable reader that they are reading the speaker’s opinion, and not a statement of fact.

Also a fail: claiming that more general statements not directly about Taibbi could be defamatory about Taibbi. In this case, Taibbi claimed that Higgins book flap saying that the book “follows the money, names names” is somehow defamatory to Taibbi, despite not being directly about him. Again, making claims about general statements like that is a hallmark of vexatious, speech-suppressing SLAPP suits. As the judge notes:

Statement 5 also appears on the left flap and states that the Book “follows the money, names names,” and is a “biting expose of journalistic greed.” (Am. Compl. 24-25.) Plaintiff alleges that “follows the money” and “names names” “represents to readers that the author has traced actual financial relationships and identified specific recipients of improper payments or patronage.” (Id.24.) “In New York, a plaintiff cannot sustain a libel claim if the allegedly defamatory statement is not ‘of and concerning plaintiff but rather only speaks about a group of which the plaintiff is a member.” Chau, 771 F.3d at 129 (internal citation omitted). Statement 5 does not indicate that it is “of and concerning” Plaintiff it describes Higgins’s investigative process for all the Book’s subjects, not only Plaintiff. A reasonable reader would, therefore, not interpret “follows the money” and “names names” as a false statement of fact about Plaintiff.

It’s also not defamatory (and obviously opinion) to call someone “greedy.” You would think that the author of a supposed exposé on Goldman Freaking Sachs would know that. Alas. The judge has to explain it to Taibbi.

Statement 6 states that the Book is an “exposé of journalistic greed,” which Plaintiff alleges “asserts professional dishonesty and unethical conduct.” (Id. 25.) But whether someone is motivated out of greed or ambition is a subjective determination that is not capable of being proven true or false. See Rosa v. Eaton, No. 23 CIV. 6087 (DEH), 2024 WL 3161853 (S.D.N.Y. June 25, 2024) (“[C]ourts have recognized that words like… ‘greedy crooks’ are vague, imprecise statements of hyperbole considered nonactionable opinion.”) Further, the context surrounding the statement, including its placement on the left flap of the Book’s cover, clearly implies that the facts on which this opinion is based can be found within the Book. Cf. Graham v. UMG Recordings, Inc., 806 F. Supp. 3d 454 (S.D.N.Y. 2025) (holding that an album’s cover art shares the same overall context as the recording itself because the cover is “designed to reinforce the message of the [recording.” (internal citation and quotation marks omitted)).

As a kind of SLAPP Hail Mary, Taibbi’s lawyer had admitted that even if all of these statements were protected opinion, you could still claim defamation on the theory of “yeah, but if you lump them all together, people might jump to false and defamatory conclusions” and the judge has to explain that that, for that to be the case, you have to actually show that the statements are really intended to show such a defamatory meaning. And Taibbi’s lawyer couldn’t do that. Because it does not appear to be true.

Plaintiff acknowledges that these statements “might be protected opinion standing alone.” (Opp. at 11.) But he claims that when viewed together, the statements on the Book’s cover and jacket “become implied factual assertions that the accused was actually paid.” (Id.at 12.) Plaintiff is correct that otherwise nonactionable statements may create “false suggestions, impressions, and implications,” and that these false implications can serve as the basis of a defamation claim. See Armstrong v. Simon & Schuster, 85 N.Y.2d 373, 380-81 (1995). But plaintiffs alleging defamation by implication must “make a rigorous showing that the language of the communication as a whole can be reasonably read both to impart a defamatory inference and to affirmatively suggest that the author intended or endorsed that inference.” Stepanov v. Dow Jones & Co., 987 N.Y.S.2d 37, 44 (N.Y. App. Div. 2014) (emphasis added).

Even assuming that Plaintiff has affirmatively alleged a defamation by implication claim-despite not labeling his sole cause of action as such-Plaintiff has failed to allege facts showing that Defendants intended or endorsed the defamatory inference. As stated above, Plaintiff admits that “the Book contains no evidence whatsoever that Plaintiff received payments, sponsorship, or financial inducement from Elon Musk or any other billionaire.” (Am. Compl. 29.) Instead of endorsing the alleged defamatory implication, the Book argues that Plaintiff’s central reason for agreeing to participate in the Twitter Files was to “gain access.” Higgins, supra at 182. Plaintiff also claims that Higgins “admitted contemporaneously that readers expecting proof of who was ‘bought’ would be disappointed.” (Am. Compl. 62.) In short, the Book’s contents and Higgins contemporaneous statements distance the Book from the defamatory implication Plaintiff alleges. See Henry v. Fox News Network LLC, 629 F.Supp.3d 136, 150 (S.D.N.Y. 2022) (finding that a corporate statement did not endorse a defamatory implication because the statement intentionally included “nebulous” phrasing). Without any additional facts pointing to Defendants’ intent, Plaintiff’s defamation by implication claim fails.

There’s more. Taibbi sued Higgins over the phrase “cash in” but the judge points out that doesn’t need to literally mean getting cash:

This context makes clear that the Book’s reference to “cash in” is not referring to literal money, but rather the idea that Plaintiff traded his reputation for access to the Twitter Files. This sort of loose, figurative language would naturally lead a reasonable reader to interpret this as a statement of opinion.

Hilariously, Taibbi had tried to argue that Higgins claiming that Taibbi got a bunch of new Substack followers because of the Twitter Files was defamatory, but Taibbi’s lawyer had to admit during oral arguments that “getting a bunch of new Substack subscribers” is not the kind of statement that injures your reputation. Oh, and also, it turned out to be true.

Similarly, statement 8 is a nonactionable subjective determination. Statement 8 claims that Plaintiff’s Substack “gained thousands of subscriptions” following his work on the Twitter Files, which translated to a “financial windfall.” But as Plaintiff’s counsel acknowledged during oral argument, this statement, “in the abstract,” is not defamatory because it does not tend to injure Plaintiff’s reputation. Oral Arg. Tr. at 44:13-17; see also Chau, 771 F.3d at 127 (“To be actionable … the statement must do more than cause discomfort or affront; the statement is measured not by the sensitivities of the maligned, but the critique of reasonable minds that would think the speech attributes odious or despicable characterizations to its subject.”) And even if one could read a defamatory meaning into these words, Plaintiff admits that he did in fact gain thousands of Substack subscribers following the Twitter Files reporting. (See Am. Compl. 11 38-39 (“The ‘thousands of new subscribers Owned claims Plaintiff gained after publication represented only a small percentage of Plaintiff’s overall readership.”) Whether this “small percentage” of increased subscribers represented a “financial windfall” is a subjective determination.

In other words, the entire case was a garbage, vexatious attack on Higgins’ own speech — and should put to rest forever the idea that Taibbi was ever a true supporter of free speech. He spent years falsely implying that protected speech activities of private companies were an attack on free speech, and now he’s moved on to actually attacking the free speech of others — abusing the power of the courts to cost them time, money, and attention to fight off a vexatious lawsuit.

Honestly, it seems that, if anything, the small, cuddly, vampire squid would likely have a stronger case against Taibbi than Taibbi had against Higgins.

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