RapidIPTV Kingpin ‘Dash the Iranian’ Gets Two Years Prison Under Spanish Plea Deal [TorrentFreak]
In June 2020, Spanish police led a Europe-wide operation that arrested 11 people connected to a pirate IPTV platform with two million subscribers.
Europol and Eurojust announced the action with considerable fanfare but declined to name the service. However, at the time we confirmed that a key target was RapidIPTV, a platform that had been quietly running an IPTV streaming empire since at least 2014.
The authorities saw Amir Z. as the alleged mastermind behind the empire, which also offered a ‘franchise’ model. The man, known to his colleagues as “Dash the Iranian,” was arrested, and this week, after nearly six years of pre-trial proceedings, the prosecution formally started in court.
Spain’s National Court (Audiencia Nacional) began hearing the case on Tuesday against five defendants, all of Iranian origin. The charges cover membership of a criminal organization, intellectual property crimes, offenses against the market and consumers, as well as money laundering.
In sharp contrast to the multi-year wait following the arrests, the trial was relatively short-lived.
After three hours of negotiation, all defendants reached an agreement with prosecutors, according to EFE. The prosecution agreed to drop the most serious charge, membership of a criminal organization, after the defendants pleaded guilty to the three other charges.
This resulted in a large sentencing reduction. The prosecution had originally sought 22 and a half years of prison time for Amir Z., but the agreed sentence was just over two years. Similarly, the money-laundering fine that initially could be as high as €70 million was reduced to €8 million as part of the deal.
Because all sides agreed to the plea deal, it cannot be appealed by any party. This effectively ends the prosecution. The sentences for the remaining defendants were not reported.
In addition to the €8 million fine to the state, the sentence also includes a damages fee of €12 million for the affected companies. The court also ordered the confiscation of all material seized during the raids, as well as all funds and accounts held by the defendants.
The private prosecution coalition was an unusually large one. Warner Bros, Universal, Columbia, Sony Pictures, Paramount, New Line, Netflix, Amazon, Disney, and LaLiga had all joined the action under Spain’s acusación particular mechanism, to hold the IPTV operators responsible.
How much money can eventually be recouped has yet to be seen, but with an estimated 2 million subscribers, the operation generated substantial revenue.
The money-laundering element of the case was also notable. Prosecutors alleged that the group moved approximately €25.1 million through payment processors, cryptocurrency exchanges, shell companies, and falsified invoices.
Specific transactions identified by investigators included the construction of a residential building in Iran, the purchase of a Barcelona property valued at €1.6 million, and the purchase of two luxury vehicles worth a combined €400,000.

Those figures partially overlap with what was already public: at the time of the 2020 raids, Europol reported that police seized real estate, cars, jewelry, cash, and cryptocurrency worth approximately €4.8 million, and €1.1 million frozen in bank accounts.
The platform used various domain names, including rapidiptv.com, rapidiptv.net, iptvstack.com, and the iptv.community forum. According to the prosecution, it captured signals from licensed pay-TV platforms and routed them through a private server network of 50 servers in at least 13 countries across Europe and North America.
Interestingly, iptvstack.com and iptv.community both remain operational at the time of writing.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Kanji of the Day: 潮 [Kanji of the Day]
潮
✍15
小6
tide, salt water, opportunity
チョウ
しお うしお
風潮 (ふうちょう) — tide
潮流 (ちょうりゅう) — tide
高潮 (こうちょう) — high tide
朝潮 (あさしお) — morning tide
黒潮 (くろしお) — Kuroshio Current
最高潮 (さいこうちょう) — climax
潮風 (しおかぜ) — salty sea breeze
潮汐 (ちょうせき) — tide
赤潮 (あかしお) — red tide
紅潮 (こうちょう) — flush
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
The difficulty of making sure your website is broken [Let's Encrypt]
Have you ever needed to make sure your website has a broken certificate? While many tools exist to help run an HTTPS server with valid certificates, there aren’t tools to make sure your certificate is revoked or expired. This is not a problem most people have. Tools to help manage certificates are always focused on avoiding those problems, not creating them.
Let’s Encrypt is a Certificate Authority, and so we have unusual problems we need to solve.
One of the requirements for publicly trusted Certificate Authorities is to host websites with test certificates, some of which need to be revoked or expired. This gets messed up more than you might expect, but it’s a bit tricky to get right. Test certificate sites exist to allow developers to test their clients, so it’s important that they’re done right.
We’d previously used certbot, nginx, and some shell scripts, but the shell scripts were getting a bit too complicated. So we wrote a Go program tailored to the specific needs of a CA’s test certs site.
We need to host three sites per root certificate:
Valid is easy enough; it’s the normal case of any other website. This is a solved problem.
Expired, too, is pretty easy. Issue one certificate, wait until it expires, and then you can use it forever. Not a normal feature, but so long as your webserver doesn’t get upset at it being expired, it’s easy to set up once and leave it.
Revoked, though, is where it’s easiest to slip up. You could fail to revoke a certificate and serve a perfectly valid one, or you could let your revoked certificate expire. Making sure your website is serving a non-expired but revoked certificate is not something any of the off-the-shelf tools support.
In order to implement our program, we need a few different ingredients to mix together.
First and foremost, we need to be able to get certificates. Because we’re writing this in Go, we’re using Lego as a library to request the certificates. Obtaining a certificate requires completing a domain validation challenge. We can hook Lego up to the Go webserver we’re using to complete TLS-ALPN-01 validation. We use that challenge type because it doesn’t require any more setup beyond exposing our webserver to the internet.
To get a revoked certificate, we request a certificate and then revoke it. That’s something we can do with Lego and ACME too: The account which issued a certificate can request it be revoked. We then need a way to check that the certificate is revoked. Certificates contain an HTTP URL pointing to the Certificate Revocation List (CRL) which we poll until our certificate’s serial number appears in it.
Let’s Encrypt implements the ACME standard, which defines how clients can get certificates. In general, we think ACME clients integrated into webservers are often the best way to get certificates for websites. They can automatically handle challenges, managing and reloading certificates, and overall minimizing the amount of work and reducing problems.
We also need a way to wait until a certificate is in the right state. The valid certificate is ready to use right away, but that’s not true for the revoked and expired certificates. The revoked certificate needs to wait at least until it appears in a CRL, which can be up to an hour. Expired certificates need to wait even longer: Even if we request the shortest-lived certificates we offer, that’s still six days. To handle this, our program stores a “next” certificate instead of immediately overwriting the current one. We wait at least 24 hours for the revoked certificate to make sure any CRL caches or push-based CRL infrastructure have time to process the revocation. The expired certificate has to wait until it passes its expiration date. After the program decides a certificate is ready, it replaces the current certificate and passes it off to the webserver. Normal ACME tools don’t support this because they can usually start using a certificate as soon as it’s obtained.
And finally, we need a webserver to host the certificates. We’re using Go, which has a great built-in TLS and HTTP serving stack we can use. The Go TLS server takes a GetCertificate callback function that decides what certificate to use for each new connection. We have all our certificates in-memory and select the right one to serve based on the request’s SNI. This function is also where we hook up Lego to serve the challenge certificates required for TLS-ALPN-01. Because we prioritize serving the correct certificate over uptime, we refuse to handle a connection if the corresponding certificate is expired (unless it should be expired!).
If you visit one of our revoked sites, you might not get an error message. Revocation checking in browsers varies pretty widely, and has historically not worked great. Today’s state-of-the-art is Firefox’s CRLite, which is efficient and reliable. Ubuntu is deploying upki, a Rustls project based on CRLite. We hope other browsers and operating systems follow suit. The upki project is a great example of a project making use of these revoked test certificates, too.
The actual content of the website isn’t terribly important: We just have a little HTML page explaining what the site is. But since this website is meant for testing clients, there’s more than just browsers connecting. In particular, it’s pretty routine that I try connecting with curl or some other terminal http client, and getting a bunch of HTML spewed to your terminal isn’t very nice.
As a small Easter egg, we added a plain text version of the website with an ASCII art version of our logo that we serve if your HTTP client doesn’t include text/html in its Accept HTTP header. You can pass a ?txt or ?html URL parameter to specifically request one or the other version of the content, if you just want to see the ASCII art.
Let’s Encrypt has four root certificates right now. Each of them have test sites linked both here and from our documentation.
| Root X1 | valid | expired | revoked |
| Root X2 | valid | expired | revoked |
| Root YE | valid | expired | revoked |
| Root YR | valid | expired | revoked |
As with a lot of Let’s Encrypt, the code for this project is open-source. You can find it at https://github.com/letsencrypt/test-certs-site/. Other Certificate Authorities who need to run similar test certificate sites are welcome to use it. If you need any features that would make using our test certs site easier for your TLS/HTTPS client testing, please feel free to create an issue on that repository.
NVIDIA’s DLSS 5 Demo Video Briefly Taken Down Because YouTube’s Take Down Process Sucks [Techdirt]
Last month, we discussed NVIDIA’s demo video for its forthcoming DLSS 5 technology and the controversy surrounding it. While I’m going to continue to be of the posture that an injection of nuance is desperately needed in the reaction to AI tools and the like, our comments section largely disagreed with me on that post. That’s cool, that’s what this place is for, and I still love you all.
But this post is not about DLSS 5. Rather, it’s about the video itself and how it was briefly taken down over automated copyright claims thanks to an Italian news channel. Please note that the source material here was written while the video was still down, but it has since been restored.
And now, here we are in April, and NVIDIA’s DLSS 5 announcement trailer is no longer available to watch on YouTube on the company’s official GeForce channel. And no, it’s not because NVIDIA is responding to the feedback and retooling the technology for a re-reveal or re-announcement; it’s now blocked on “copyright grounds.”
A clear mistake, but also one that highlights the limitations of Google’s automated system for YouTube. Apparently, the Italian television channel La7 included footage from the DLSS 5 reveal in a recent broadcast and has since copyrighted it. From there, essentially every video on YouTube with DLSS 5 trailer footage was issued a copyright strike and said to be in violation, with the videos taken down with the following message: “Video unavailable: This video contains content from La7, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds.”
Yes, this was clearly a mistake. But it’s a mistake that I’m frankly tired of hearing about, all while Google does absolutely nothing to iterate on its copyright process and systems to mitigate such mistakes. The examples of this very thing are so legion as to be laughable. Whether due to error or due to malicious intent, videos that include content from other videos for the purposes of reporting and commentary, which are then copyrighted and result in takedowns of the source material, happens all the damned time.
This is almost certainly all automated, which means there are no human eyes looking for an error in the flagging of a copyright violation. It just gets tagged as such and taken down. And, no, the irony is not lost on me that we need human eyes to keep an automated copyright takedown on a video about AI from occurring.
What makes this alarming is that the video was taken down with seemingly no human interaction or input, as it’s clear that NVIDIA not only created DLSS 5, for better or worse, but also the trailer that has been a hot topic of discussion this year. We’re assuming this will be resolved fairly quickly. Still, it will be interesting to see whether YouTube responds to this case and claims that false copyright infringement notices like this are prevalent on the platform.
Google hasn’t been terribly interested in commenting on the plethora of cases like this in the past, so I strongly doubt it will now. Which is a damned shame, honestly, because the company really should be advocating for all of the users on its platform, if not especially those that are negatively impacted by this haphazard process.
But, for now, the video is back, so you can go hate-watch it again if you like.
Trump’s Two-Faced AI Policy [Techdirt]
The Trump administration’s AI policy is two-faced, torn between deregulation and despotism.
In March, the administration released its National AI Legislative Framework, directing Congress to “prevent the United States government from coercing technology providers, including AI providers, to ban, compel, or alter content based on partisan or ideological agendas.” This policy against government interference with AI is consistent with the administration’s purported light-touch approach to regulating the technology—but contrary to its recent actions.
In February 2025, Vice President Vance denounced “excessive regulation of the AI sector,” endorsing a “deregulatory flavor” of AI policy. Several months later, the administration released its AI Action Plan, pledging to “dismantle unnecessary regulatory barriers” and “onerous regulation.”
At first, the Trump administration followed through on this deregulatory promise. Three days into his second term, President Trump revoked an Executive Order from President Biden which established a government-wide effort to regulate and guide the development of the AI industry. Next, as directed by President Trump’s AI Action Plan, the Office of Science and Technology Policy initiated a proceeding to identify federal rules and regulations “that unnecessarily hinder” AI in order to implement “regulatory reform” and “promote” the technology. Last December, the Federal Trade Commission, led by two Trump appointees, set aside a Biden-era enforcement action against Rytr, an AI-powered writing assistant. The FTC explained that, “after reviewing the final order in response to President Trump’s AI Action Plan,” it concluded “the order unduly burdens innovation in the nascent AI industry.”
Despite the laissez-faire gesturing, however, the administration demonstrates a tyrannical impulse to control AI. In the same breath as denouncing excessive regulation, Vice President Vance demanded that “AI must remain free from ideological bias.” President Trump’s AI Action Plan echoed this command, directing AI companies to design their models “to pursue objective truth rather than social engineering agendas.” This rhetoric elides the fact that the First Amendment bars the government from deciding what constitutes “truth.”
In recent months, the administration has sought to exert control over the industry under the guise of combatting so-called “woke AI.” Last July, President Trump issued an Executive Order on Preventing Woke AI in the Federal Government, prohibiting government procurement of AI models unless they are ideologically “neutral,” i.e., “nonpartisan tools that do not manipulate responses in favor of ideological dogmas such as DEI.” In January, Secretary of Defense Hegseth issued a memo instructing the Department of Defense to “utilize models free from usage policy constraints” and banning the DoD from “employ[ing] AI models which incorporate ideological ‘tuning.’”
The memo set the stage for the ongoing dispute between the administration and Anthropic, an American AI company. In July 2025, the DoD contracted with Anthropic to deploy its AI models for national security applications like intelligence analysis, modeling and simulation, operational planning, and cyber operations. In the contract, Anthropic stipulated that the government could not use its models for mass domestic surveillance or to power fully autonomous weapons—arguably violating Hegseth’s rule against usage constraints.
Consequently, in late February, Hegseth threatened to cut ties with Anthropic unless the company allowed the military to use its AI for “all lawful purposes.” When Anthropic refused, President Trump directed federal agencies to “IMMEDIATELY CEASE all use of Anthropic’s technology,” deriding the firm as “A RADICAL LEFT, WOKE COMPANY.” He threatened to “use the Full Power of the Presidency to make [Anthropic] comply, with major civil and criminal consequences to follow.”
The DoD then designated Anthropic a “supply chain risk” under the Federal Acquisition Supply Chain Security Act of 2018, defined as an entity that “may sabotage, maliciously introduce unwanted function, extract data, or otherwise manipulate” the technology it provides “so as to surveil, deny, disrupt, or otherwise manipulate” the use of the technology or the “information stored or transmitted” thereon. The government has never applied this designation to a U.S. company; it is typically reserved for foreign intelligence agencies, terrorists, and hostile actors. As a result, Anthropic may not provide products or services to the DoD, and contractors may not use its products while working on DoD projects.
On March 9, Anthropic sued the administration in federal court, challenging the designation and seeking an injunction blocking its implementation. The company pleaded that the Trump administration has “harm[ed] Anthropic irreparably,” jeopardizing public and private contracts and costing it “hundreds of millions of dollars in the near-term,” as well as attacking “Anthropic’s reputation and core First Amendment freedoms.”
On March 26, the District Court for the Northern District of California sided with Anthropic and granted a preliminary injunction barring a variety of federal agencies from terminating their contracts. The court also blocked the DoD and Hegseth from implementing the supply chain risk designation. U.S. District Judge Rita Lin observed that the Trump administration is “punishing Anthropic for bringing public scrutiny to the government’s contracting position,” which “is classic illegal First Amendment retaliation.” Last week, the administration appealed the ruling to the Ninth Circuit.
Hegseth accused Anthropic of “duplicity,” but it is the Trump administration that has been duplicitous about its approach to AI. Despite championing deregulation, the administration has weaponized the federal government to punish an American AI company for refusing to bend to its will. Abusing the government procurement process to crush domestic AI firms is the opposite of light-touch regulation.
Judge Lin described the Trump administration’s actions against Anthropic as “Orwellian.” The administration has shown its ugly side on AI, and it looks a lot like tyranny.
Andy Jung is associate counsel at TechFreedom, a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank focused on technology law and policy.
Trump Threatens CNN For Very Basic Reporting On His Shitty, Unpopular War [Techdirt]
In case you’ve been asleep, what appears to be an increasingly mentally unstable Donald Trump has further destabilized the middle east with a war nobody asked for or wanted. Most U.S. media coverage of Trump’s disastrous Iran war hasn’t been great, but they’ve still occasionally managed to communicate the pointlessness of the endeavor to the electorate (which speaks more of the unpopularity of the war than their reporting chops).
Trump recently announced a “cease fire” with Iran (which apparently isn’t even a cease fire), but refused to state what the conditions of the cease fire or long term peace actually are. The Iranian Security Council issued a list of ten demands that, if agreed to, would leave Iran in a stronger position than when this whole idiocy started:

Some news outlets, like CNN, simply reported directly on what Iran had claimed. This, as you might expect, upset Donald Trump and his top FCC censor Brendan Carr, who are now threatening an “investigation” of CNN for simply repeating what was publicly stated:
Not mentioned (of course) is the fact that Fox News also reported the Iran statement, yet avoided being called out by the president:
Trump later would issue another statement over at his right wing propaganda website, calling for criminal action against CNN (and CNN only), while making up a whole bunch of nonsense (he may or may not believe is actually true):
Trump’s sensitivity here suggests they’re well aware that a massive, superior military has been getting dog-walked by Iranians because Trump and his advisors were too stupid to understand modern, cheap drone warfare and how shipping in the Straight of Hormuz actually worked. The shipping logjam is driving up gas prices and making life difficult for Republicans ahead of the midterms.
There is, of course, absolutely zero basis for any meaningful criminal action against CNN here of any kind that wouldn’t be laughed out of court on free speech grounds. As we’ve seen with corporate media that doesn’t mean they won’t still capitulate embarrassingly, but so far CNN is standing its ground. As it should, since again, all it did was report on an Iranian statement in a very basic way alongside dozens of other news outlets.
The bigger threat, as I keep noting, is CNN’s looming acquisition by Larry Ellison as part of the Paramount Warner Brothers merger. CNN under current management is already very friendly to right wing ideology (see its enthusiastic platforming of MAGA bullshitter Scott Jennings). Under Ellison’s ownership (see: Bari Weiss at CBS) there’s little doubt CNN will be converted into yet another Trump agitprop network.
At which point, Trump will move on to threatening any remaining U.S. corporate media outlets that haven’t either embarrassingly capitulated or been purchased by a right wing billionaire. This is, as I keep repeating, an exact copy of Victor Orban’s autocratic media policy in Hungary, which involves having party-loyal oligarchs buy up all corporate media outlets and pummel the public with propaganda while the government strangles what’s left of real, independent reporting just out of frame.
AI And Cybersecurity: A Glass Half-Empty/Half-Full Proposition, Where The Glass Is Holding Nitroglycerin [Techdirt]
First, some of the good news: certain AI models—currently Anthropic’s Mythos, but surely others are well on their way if they haven’t already arrived—turn out to be really good at finding cybersecurity vulnerabilities. As Anthropic itself reported:
During our testing, we found that Mythos Preview is capable of identifying and then exploiting zero-day vulnerabilities in every major operating system and every major web browser when directed by a user to do so. The vulnerabilities it finds are often subtle or difficult to detect. Many of them are ten or twenty years old, with the oldest we have found so far being a now-patched 27-year-old bug in OpenBSD—an operating system known primarily for its security.
That’s quite the tool, if it can help find vulnerabilities so that they can be patched.
But it’s also quite the tool to help find vulnerabilities so that they can be exploited. Like so many tools, including technological tools, whether they are good or bad depends entirely in how they are used. A hammer is a really helpful tool for building things, but it also smashes windows. And with this news, AI now has the capability for some really destructive uses.
To try to prevent them, Anthropic is working with some of the largest tech companies in the world to let them use a preview of its model on their own software to help QA them and proactively patch vulnerabilities. As Casey Newton reports:
Anthropic announced Mythos alongside Project Glasswing, an initiative with more than 40 of the world’s biggest tech companies that will see Anthropic grant early access to the model to find and patch vulnerabilities across many of the world’s most important systems. Launch partners in the coalition include Apple, Google, Microsoft, Cisco and Broadcom.
They’ll be tasked with scanning and patching their own systems along with the critical open-source systems that modern digital infrastructure depends on. Anthropic is giving participants $100 million in usage credits for Mythos, and donating another $4 million to open-source security efforts.
This sounds like a great program. It also should be noted that the Mythos model is not consumer-grade AI; it takes expensive, dedicated infrastructure to run, which means that, at least for the moment, there’s not an imminent danger of it being misused. But trouble is nevertheless brewing, and someday it will be here, which raises certain questions, like:
(A) What about other AI models, which will inevitably be similarly powerful? What if they are produced by less ethical companies, who would have no compunction against rogue actors using their systems in destructive ways that Project Glasswing won’t have intercepted?
(B) And what about every single legacy technology system in use, which Project Glasswing is unlikely to be able to retroactively fix? Large, resourced companies may be able to weather the on-coming storm, but what about your local dentist office? Or a hospital? Municipal IT systems? Networked technology is everywhere, and these smaller businesses and institutions are likely to both have older, unpatched technology and also fewer resources to update and secure them, or deal with the consequences of a hack, which can be devastating for the business or the people they serve.
On the other hand, there does seem to be one other bit of good news with this revelation: governments, including that of the United States, have often engaged in the dubious practice of hording zero-days, or collecting information about vulnerabilities that they then kept secret so that they could exploit them themselves by using them on an adversary. For those unfamiliar, “zero-day” refers to a vulnerability that has yet to be disclosed, which is why it’s on “day zero,” or before the first day of it being a known vulnerability that could now be fixed.
Mythos’s capabilities would seem to obviate this strategy, because suddenly the stash of unknown vulnerabilities isn’t really going to be such a secret, since anyone using the model will be able to find them. Mythos’s existence changes the balance of interests, where the stronger national security play by the government would be to disclose any discovered vulnerability to the vendor as soon as possible so that they can be patched and our nation’s systems more secured. Arguably that was always the better national security play, but now there’s definitely no upside to trying to keep them secret because it now definitely needs to be presumed that adversaries will be able to find and exploit them. They’ll have the tools.
With these AI models we’re going to need to presume that everyone is going to have the tools to know about every vulnerability. Up to now there has been at least the illusion of some security, because vulnerabilities couldn’t be exploited if no one knew about them, and finding vulnerabilities is hard. But now that it will be easy, the risk to the nation’s cybersecurity is greater than we have ever before contended with.
It is also not really a great harbinger that we know about Mythos because… a copy of the software got leaked. It’s just the software that was leaked and not the models it uses to tune its “reasoning,” which means that anyone trying to now build their own Mythos is still missing an important piece if they want to mimic its full capabilities, but they would have a lot. Which is probably why Anthropic has been sending DMCA takedown notices to have the leaked software removed from the Internet.
But doing so raises a related issue: the role of copyright law when it comes to “vibe coding,” or “having an AI system write the software rather than a programmer, just by instructing it on what to do. It’s especially important in light of the cybersecurity concerns always raised by software (and including vibe-coded software, as we’re having to trust that what’s produced does not have vulnerabilities). Copyright requires a human author, which raises the question: can software written by an AI be copyrightable? The answer would appear to be no, unless there was a great deal of creative effort on the part of a human being to instruct the AI or modify the output. But as Ed Lee chronicled, per Anthropic itself, even its own software (“pretty much 100%”) is being written by AI. And if that’s the case, then Anthropic has no business sending takedown notices for its software because DMCA takedown notices are only for demanding the removal of copyrighted works, which, it would appear, Anthropic’s own code does not qualify for.
But maybe it’s better if software stops being subject to copyright. “Vibe coding,” is becoming increasingly efficient, to the point that there is likely no need for copyright to incentivize its authorship. Instead, what public policy really needs to emphasize is that whatever software is produced is secure software. But in many ways copyright obstructs that goal, like through its lengthy terms, which mean that while a copyright holder might not still be maintaining its older software, no one else can maintain and patch it either, without potentially infringing the software’s copyright. Or through its privileged secrecy (unusually for copyright, when it comes to software you don’t actually have to disclose all the actual code to register a copyright in it!) and other powers to lock out security research efforts, like through Section 1201 of the DMCA, when such efforts aren’t specifically supported by the developer–assuming the developer supports any security testing at all, as right now there aren’t necessarily the incentives to make them care about it. Instead public policy has given them the ability, like with copyright, to escape oversight of the security of their software products, even as those products end up embedded in more and more of our lives.
It’s time to change that focus and get copyright out of the way of making software security our top policy priority.
And fast.
Daily Deal: Luminar Mobile for iOS And Android [Techdirt]
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No Surprise Here: Inspection Reveals Dozens Of Violations In El Paso ICE Detention Center [Techdirt]
I’m not here to cut the Trump administration any slack or engage in both-sides bullshit, but this is something that has always been true: we treat anyone imprisoned or detained as less than human. The dehumanization begins with something we call “processing” — a word that separates a human from their humanity by making them sound like nothing more than paperwork.
The horrors seen in jails and prisons are often compounded at immigrant detention facilities. While some duty of less-than-minimal care might be extended to imprisoned US citizens, it’s far more often ignored when federal officers believe (mistakenly) that migrants aren’t protected by the Constitution.
The litany of violations stretches back forever. Techdirt doesn’t stretch back quite that far, but let’s take a stroll down memory lane.
From 2022, back when Biden was still in office and people like me were thinking no one would ever elect Trump to office again:
That’s taken from a report demanding (“Management Alert”) the immediate removal of all detainees from this New Mexico detention center due to numerous violations, including a shortage of 112 employees and no less than 83 cells with “inoperable” sinks and toilets.
Going back further to Trump’s first administration:
In this Inspector General’s report, we learned that only 28 of 106 contractors were provided with the tools needed to meet minimum “performance standards.” We also learned that the $3.9 billion being thrown to private contractors was shored up by absolutely no level of accountability. ICE approved 96% of waivers requested by contractors who failed to meet minimum housing standards for detainees.
While it’s been a persistent problem, things are significantly worse now. The Trump administration is detaining more migrants than ever before. It’s also far more willing to pawn these duties off on private prison contractors who prioritize making money over taking care of the people thrust into their care by Trump’s top bigots.
On top of that, the administration is fighting wars on several litigation fronts in hopes of preventing any form of oversight from slowing its roll towards total migrant annihilation. Everything that was bad before is getting so much worse.
Thanks to the White House Merchant of Death, RFK Jr., measles outbreaks are being reported at detention facilities. Thanks to absolutely every-fucking-body else in the administration, reports of inhumane conditions are somehow still on the rise, even after years of regularly reported inhuman conditions at ICE facilities.
Here’s even more. At a facility where guards were caught setting up suicide “death pools” for inmates, more evidence of deliberate cruelty and inhumane treatment has surfaced. The host of ongoing atrocities is none other than Camp East Montana, comfortably nestled in the heartland of the “who gives a fuck about immigrants” Fifth Circuit: El Paso, Texas.
Here’s the New York Times with the details of more man’s inhumanity to man, as personified by “immigration enforcement” forces of Trump’s second term.
An inspection in February of Camp East Montana in Texas, one of the country’s largest immigration detention centers, found dozens of violations of national standards, including instances that may have exposed detainees to illnesses and uses of force that were not documented, a new report found.
[…]
The inspection, which was carried out by the agency over three days in February and included interviews with 49 detainees, found that there were at least 49 overall “deficiencies” from national standards at the camp. Of all the deficiencies, 22 involved use of force and restraints, and five involved issues related to medical care.
ICE actually released this inspection report. However, it did make sure names were changed redacted to protect the innocent guilty. While it’s uncharacteristically protective of the inspectors, it also makes sure we may never know which “Creative Corrections” employees helped make this detention center the hell hole it is.

Other censorship by the administration deliberately denies Americans access to the facts. What possible purpose is served here, other than allowing the government to pretend its rights violations were somehow excused by the [redacted] passage of time?

The government not only censored the number of detainee files reviewed, but also the ratio of files in noncompliance. What escapes ICE’s black-boxed attempts to redeem itself is this, which is plenty damning on its own:
[I]nitial classification process and initial housing assignments were not completed within 12 hours of detainees’ admission […]; rather they were completed 14 hours to 25 days after [admission]…
Everything that might show how often (or how frequently) violations occurred has been removed. It’s a deliberate muddying of the statistical waters. Who knows what’s behind the black box? It could mean rights were violated 10% of the time. Or it could mean rights were violated almost every time. But we the people — you know, the ones expected to foot the bill for this bullshit — aren’t allowed to know the actual details of what’s being done in our names.
If the government wants to play it that way, fine. We’ll just assume the worst and dare it to provide evidence to the contrary. And we know it never will. If or when the government decides to unredact this report, it will undoubtedly show us what we’ve always assumed: The administration and its contractors routinely abused detainees and violated their rights because the people in charge made it clear they don’t consider migrants to be humans.
And that makes this news as inevitable as it is deplorable:
So far this year, 14 people have died in U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody, including a Mexican man who was found unresponsive last week at a facility outside Los Angeles, according to data from the Department of Homeland Security.
If that seems like a low (or worse, an acceptable) number of deaths, think again:
In 2025, ICE reported 33 total in-custody deaths and in 2024 there were 11.
Deaths in ICE custody tripled under Trump during his first year back in office. If this pace continues, we’ll be looking at 56 in-custody deaths, which would nearly double the same number Trump managed to triple in 2025.
This will only get worse. The administration is still trying to buy up any warehouses it can to repurpose as detention centers. The workload is being stretched even thinner, leaving private citizens more poorly trained than current ICE officers in charge of the lives and well-being of thousands of detainees. The misery and death will continue. Unfortunately for us, this administration not only welcomes blood on its hands, but revels in it.
Sustainability Through Open Educational Resources [dperkins]
A paper of mine, Sustainability Through Open Educational Resources, was published in Between the Keys, a journal produced by the JALT Materials Writers Special Interest Group. Spring 2026, Volume 34.1, pg. 20–27. Download: PDF & ePub.

Japan’s overall population has been declining since 2007 (Rizzi, 2023), but perhaps more surprisingly, the Japanese youth population has fallen every year since 1982 (Nippon.com, 2022). The national government has examined and proposed various strategies to stabilize the numbers, but few positive effects have been achieved. Every year, negative population pressure causes approximately 450 schools around the nation to close their doors (Yamamitsu et al., 2023). Many public and private schools are struggling to fill seats. As schools shrink and merge, teachers are being asked to perform a myriad of duties, both bureaucratic and academic, including teaching classes they haven’t taught recently or at all.
In present-day Japan, teaching at the primary and secondary level is declining in popularity (Sakuma & Shimazaki, 2024; Yamasaki, 2025). In fact, the profession is losing popularity faster than the youth population’s decline. One approach to revitalizing the profession is to expand Open Educational Resource (OER) development into schools. OERs are teaching and learning materials that are either in the Public Domain or Creative Commons licensed. They have been a staple of international university education for many years (Gourley and Lane, 2009) and in more recent years international research has begun on high school deployment (García-Solano et al., 2023; Yassin, 2024). Progress along these lines in Japan could alleviate some teacher overwork while helping build teamwork and confidence among the country’s educators.
It has been remarked that U.S. school reform efforts over the last two centuries have led to surprisingly few major changes to teaching practice (Cuban, 2013). Cuban (2013) claims that one of the “fundamental errors” is the overemphasis on changing “school governments, organization, and curriculum,” and another is the mistaken assumption that policymakers have a “worldview” similar to that of teachers. Although Japan has arguably been more successful in national curriculum reform (Kitamura et al., 2019), continued change is both inevitable and necessary, and the ideas presented here avoid falling into the trap Cuban outlined. Expanded OER use doesn’t depend on distant edicts, and the choice of what materials to use and share can be left to individual teachers and departments.
From the Millennium Development Goals of 2000 to the Sustainable Development Goals of 2015, governments have been looking for ways to improve the quality and availability of global education (Kumar et al., 2016). Although some have criticized the SDGs as self-contradictory, in that Goal #8 targets continued economic growth, which is unsustainable given limited world resources (Hickel, 2019), most of the remaining goals refer to “sustainable development” as that which is designed “to ensure that it meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (United Nations Secretary General, 1987), echoing wording from the National Environmental Policy Act (1970) written nearly two decades prior.
The purpose of SDG #4 is to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” (UNESCO Institute for Statistics, 2018). That goal might sound broad and distant to individual educators, but strong communities have the capability to make measurable progress toward it. As Japan struggles with population decline and teacher shortages, sustainability is clearly a matter of both global and domestic significance. Sustainable education consists of policies and practices that boost education quality, are long-lasting, don’t depend on continued funding, are flexible for current use and future change, and can be exported to other schools and districts (Hargreaves & Fink, 2006). It is advanced through distributed leadership, when schools and teachers are offered greater power over how their schools function (Hargreaves & Fink, 2003, 2006). Government-led education reform efforts rarely succeed (Munby, 2020), and research emphasizes the potential of teachers themselves to lead the way to better education (Harris & Jones, 2019). Thus, one step towards sustainable education is to advance teacher agency.
As mentioned, OERs are materials relating to teaching and learning. These include regular classroom materials—handouts, slideshows, websites, booklets, etc.—that the authors have decided to share with everyone. Creating an OER is simple—the author need only add a license to the document (Weichler, 2020).
Flexibility is a key idea surrounding OERs. Because they are free to use and remix, educators typically customize things according to their own needs. For some elective courses, instead of a textbook, the teacher might create their own information packets and slideshows. For other courses, the teacher might mostly use a MEXT-approved textbook and have separate files for projects and presentations. In the aftermath of COVID-19, most schools started (or continued) using some kind of online learning platform, such as Google Suite for Education or Microsoft 365 for Education. As such, many teachers today have at least basic experience sharing and collaborating in online document creation. For those who do not, collaborative editing using Google Docs or Microsoft Office is easy to learn (Javed, 2024; Mihaila, 2023).
When creating OERs, the author must consider three main points. First, open and accessible formats are necessary. Many teachers like to use Apple computers, but Keynote files are hard to open on Windows. As such, Apple users, and anyone using proprietary file formats, may need to convert their files to more accessible formats (e.g., converting the Keynote file to a PowerPoint file or uploading it to Google Slides). Also, when sharing a PDF, the author needs to also share the source file, so that future teachers can make their own modifications. Second, personal information cannot be included in OERs. Because OERs are designed to be shared online and publicly, students’ names and pictures must be avoided, and school-specific information should be kept to a minimum. Finally, it is necessary to avoid non-free material, so content creators take care with downloaded pictures, long copyrighted passages, music, and video. The above considerations apply to any kind of public-facing materials development, so experienced authors are already prepared to create OER. For less experienced authors, a simple starting point would be to adapt previously-created OER work and share the results.
OER development began in the 1990s, and the term itself was formalized in 2002 (Bliss & Smith, 2017). Yet, adoption within Japan has been slow (Shigeta et al., 2017), and much of the domestic focus has been on massive open online courses (Open Education Japan, 2022). One way to estimate engagement in a topic is using Google Trends1, which shows search term popularity by country over the last five years. Two December 2025 queries, one for “OER” and the other for “open educational resources” ranked Japan in 40th and 60th place, clearly showing the relative lack of engagement in the topic at present. OER textbooks are unseen at the high school level, partly due to the burdensome national certification process (Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, n.d.). Although primary textbook certification takes years, supplementary textbooks and materials are less restricted, and teachers—particularly those at private schools that offer flexibility surrounding the course syllabus—can quickly create and integrate them into courses.
One major benefit of OERs is the ability to share with other teachers and schools. Many teachers in Japan today work under one-year contracts and leave their schools in less than five years (Green, 2019). Because OERs are free to everyone, teachers can take OERs with them when they find future work at other schools. Also, they can share materials at conferences or post them online. This gives individual teachers greater stability in their own classrooms and incentive to collaborate.
A second benefit is that actively using OERs decreases the teacher’s and school’s dependency on publishing companies. Many high quality supplementary OERs can be used standalone; they might go well with a specific textbook, but they don’t depend on that particular textbook. Consequently, when textbooks go out of print or new versions are released, teachers feel no rush to recreate supplementary materials, because their OERs are still be perfectly usable.
OERs are one important element of the greater effort to build Professional Learning Communities (PLCs). Research in education has solidly established the importance of a shared vision for school change (Aldridge & McLure, 2024; Hallinger, 2011). When teachers agree on what kind of school they want to create, they’re more likely to succeed, and one way to accomplish this is through PLCs. These communities play a key role in sustainable education (Hargreaves & Fink, 2006) because they involve teachers working together both within and between schools to reflect on, share, and collaboratively develop methodology, materials, and ideals that help them all provide a better education to their students (Stoll et al., 2006). Research has shown that subject departments in schools can raise student achievement through professional community development (Gates & Watkins, 2010; Lomos et al., 2011), and because OER production is visible and tangible, OER growth can act as a focal point for some PLC work. Successful use of OERs by PLCs has been reported in various locations; for example, teachers in Mexico found that sourcing quality OERs was less time-consuming than expected (García-Solano et al., 2023), and students in Egypt have reported clear benefits of OERs as supplementary materials to support their primary non-OER textbooks (Yassin, 2024). These were small studies in non-Japanese environments, but nevertheless they show the possibility and benefits of greater OER use in the broader educational community.
Many schools in Japan are struggling to both recruit students and retain teachers. The former issue is one that will unavoidably remain a serious concern for many decades, but the latter challenge can be more effectively addressed. There are many ways to boost teaching popularity, such as improving working conditions and raising salaries. These two approaches should not be understated in importance but are outside the scope of this paper. Of significance here is the potential that OERs hold to provide useful and reliable educational resources to teachers in what is, for many, a fluid and precarious professional environment. On the one hand, OER use in Japan at the primary and secondary level is currently minimal, and from that one might conclude that OERs are somehow unsuitable for these environments. On the other hand, it can also be argued that with a change in perspective, and increased teamwork within departments and across schools, progress can be made. Teachers and schools that are looking for inspiration from successes achieved abroad are well-situated to enact rapid change by collaborating to build better quality materials to help themselves and their students. In the words of Creative Commons (n.d.), “When we share, everyone wins”.
Aldridge, J. M., & McLure, F. I. (2024). Preparing Schools for Educational Change: Barriers and Supports – A Systematic Literature Review. Leadership and Policy in Schools, 23(3), 486–511. https://doi.org/10.1080/15700763.2023.2171439
Baseel, C. (2023, December 7). Tokyo makes high school free for all families, even the rich ones. SoraNews24. https://soranews24.com/2023/12/07/tokyo-makes-high-school-free-for-all-families-even-the-rich-ones/
Bliss, T. J., & Smith, M. (2017). A Brief History of Open Educational Resources. In R. S. Jhangiani & R. Biswas-Diener (Eds.), Open: The Philosophy and Practices that are Revolutionizing Education and Science (pp. 9–27). Ubiquity Press. https://doi.org/10.5334/bbc.b
Creative Commons. (n.d.). When we share, everyone wins. Creative Commons. Retrieved April 4, 2025, from https://creativecommons.org/share-everyone-wins/
Cuban, L. (2013). Why so many structural changes in schools and so little reform in teaching practice? Journal of Educational Administration, 51(2), 109–125. https://doi.org/10.1108/09578231311304661
García-Solano, R., González Calleros, J. M., & Olmos-Pineda, I. (2023). Effective Strategies for Finding Open Educational Resources in High School. Apertura, 15(2), 104–119. https://doi.org/10.32870/Ap.v15n2.2393
Gates, G. S., & Watkins, M. (2010). The Place of Autonomy in School Community: Taking a Closer Look at Teacher Collaboration. Journal of School Leadership, 20(3), 272–303. https://doi.org/10.1177/105268461002000302
Gourley, B., & Lane, A. (2009). Re‐invigorating openness at The Open University: The role of Open Educational Resources. Open Learning: The Journal of Open, Distance and e-Learning, 24(1), 57–65. https://doi.org/10.1080/02680510802627845
Green, D. (2019). Foreign Faculty in Japan. PS: Political Science & Politics, 52(03), 523–526. https://doi.org/10.1017/S104909651900043X
Hallinger, P. (2011). Leadership for learning: Lessons from 40 years of empirical research. Journal of Educational Administration, 49(2), 125–142. https://doi.org/10.1108/09578231111116699
Hargreaves, A., & Fink, D. (2003). Sustaining Leadership. Phi Delta Kappan, 84(9), 693–700. https://doi.org/10.1177/003172170308400910
Hargreaves, A., & Fink, D. (2006). Redistributed Leadership for Sustainable Professional Learning Communities. Journal of School Leadership, 16(5), 550–565. https://doi.org/10.1177/105268460601600507
Harris, A., & Jones, M. (2019). Teacher leadership and educational change. School Leadership & Management, 39(2), 123–126. https://doi.org/10.1080/13632434.2019.1574964
Hickel, J. (2019). The contradiction of the sustainable development goals: Growth versus ecology on a finite planet. Sustainable Development, 27(5), 873–884. https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.1947
Japan’s Proportion of Children to Adults Lowest in the World. (2022, May 18). Nippon.Com. https://www.nippon.com/en/japan-data/h01320/
Javed, H. (2024, October 25). How to Collaborate on Google Drive Documents From Android and iPhone. How-To Geek. https://www.howtogeek.com/how-to-collaborate-on-google-drive-documents-from-android-and-iphone/
Kitamura, Y., Oomomo, T., & Katsuno, M. (2019). Education in Japan: A Comprehensive Analysis of Education Reforms and Practices (Vol. 47). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-2632-5
Kumar, S., Kumar, N., & Vivekadhish, S. (2016). Millennium development goals (MDGs) to sustainable development goals (SDGs): Addressing unfinished agenda and strengthening sustainable development and partnership. Indian Journal of Community Medicine, 41(1), 1–4. https://doi.org/10.4103/0970-0218.170955
Lomos, C., Hofman, R. H., & Bosker, R. J. (2011). The relationship between departments as professional communities and student achievement in secondary schools. Teaching and Teacher Education, 27(4), 722–731. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2010.12.003
Mihaila, R. (2023, September 7). How to Collaborate in Real-Time on a Word Document. MUO. https://www.makeuseof.com/collaborate-real-time-word/
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. (n.d.). Procedures up to the Use of Textbooks. MEXT. Retrieved March 16, 2025, from https://www.mext.go.jp/en/policy/education/elsec/title02/detail02/sdetail02/1383719.html
Munby, S. (2020). The development of school leadership practices for 21st century schools. European Journal of Education, 55(2), 146–150. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejed.12394
National Environmental Policy Act, Pub. L. No. 91–190, 4321 42 (1970). https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/91/s1075/text
OE Japan History. (2022, February). OE Japan. https://oejapan.org/history/
Rizzi, A. (2023, June 6). A look at Japan’s demographic collapse, through the eyes of its youth. El Pais. https://english.elpais.com/international/2023-06-06/a-look-at-japans-demographic-collapse-through-the-eyes-of-its-youth.html
Sakuma, A., & Shimazaki, N. (2024). “Why are We Running Short of Teachers Even as the Birthrate Declines?”: A Case Study of the Teacher Shortage in Public Schools in X Prefecture in Japan (N. Murray, Trans.). Educational Studies in Japan: International Yearbook, 18, 191–210. https://doi.org/10.7571/esjkyoiku.18.191
Shigeta, K., Koizumi, M., Sakai, H., Tsuji, Y., Inaba, R., & Hiraoka, N. (2017). A survey of the awareness, offering, and adoption of OERs and MOOCs in Japan. Open Praxis, 9(2), 195. https://doi.org/10.5944/openpraxis.9.2.568
Stoll, L., Bolam, R., McMahon, A., Wallace, M., & Thomas, S. (2006). Professional Learning Communities: A Review of the Literature. Journal of Educational Change, 7(4), 221–258. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10833-006-0001-8
Toda, S. (2023, August 26). Osaka Pref. To make all high school tuition free, eliminate income limit in Japan first. The Mainichi. https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20230826/p2a/00m/0na/016000c
UNESCO Institute for Statistics. (2018). Quick Guide to Education Indicators for SDG 4. UNESCO Institute for Statistics. https://uis.unesco.org/sites/default/files/documents/quick-guide-education-indicators-sdg4-2018-en.pdf
United Nations Secretary General. (1987). Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development (No. 42nd Session Item 83 (e); p. 374). United Nations. http://digitallibrary.un.org/record/139811
Weichler, J. (2020, January 14). How and why use Creative Commons licensed work. OpenSource.Com. https://opensource.com/article/20/1/what-creative-commons
Yamamitsu, E., Bateman, T., & Kato, I. (2023, March 30). School closures spread as Japan struggles with depopulation. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/asia-population-japan-children/
Yamasaki, H. (2025). Japan’s Teacher Shortage at the Beginning of the 21st Century: Declining Competition in Teacher Recruitment Examinations and a Shortage of Regular and Non-Regular Teachers. Educational Studies in Japan, 19, 5–16. https://doi.org/10.7571/esjkyoiku.19.5
Yassin, E. (2024). Examining the relation of open thinking, critical thinking, metacognitive skills and usage frequency of open educational resources among high school students. Thinking Skills and Creativity, 52, 101506. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tsc.2024.101506
Douglas Perkins is an English teacher at Keio Shonan Fujisawa Junior & Senior High School. He has taught at several schools in Akita, Tokyo, and Kanagawa for almost two decades. He is passionate about the development of high quality free educational materials. He makes and shares many of his own classroom materials and is an active contributor to Wikimedia Commons and similar sites.
Creating the conditions for magic [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
If you’re hoping for this meeting or this performance or this engagement to produce something extraordinary, why are you setting it up as if it’s ordinary?
The hard work of a brainstorming session, a pitch collaboration or a negotiation happens long before most people begin.
We hire architects to design expensive buildings, but we design expensive human interactions as an afterthought.
If it doesn’t feel like you’re putting a lot of effort into creating the conditions for magic, you’re probably not creating those conditions.
Pluralistic: Canny Valley and Creative Commons (10 Apr 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
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Last year, I ran a wildly successful Kickstarter campaign to pre-sell my ebooks, audiobooks and hardcovers of my book Enshittification, which went on to be an international bestseller, selling out 10 printings in the first 11 weeks:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/doctorow/enshittification-the-drm-free-audiobook
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/10/canny-valley#limited-edition

I've done many of these Kickstarter campaigns now, and I always try to come up with something special for backers – some limited edition book or tchotchke that lets me scratch my own itch for making beautiful physical things, and also lets a few backers splash out on a truly special item. I've come up with some doozies, like:
https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/doctorow/enshittification-the-drm-free-audiobook/rewards
I put 100 copies of Canny Valley up for sale in the Enshittification Kickstarter and all of them sold out in a matter of days. However, as promised at the time, there is a second chance to get a copy of the book, through the Creative Commons 25th anniversary fundraiser, which has just kicked off:
https://mailchi.mp/creativecommons/were-turning-25-book-giveaway
The whole print run for Canny Valley was limited to 500 copies, and it is the only run I will do for the book. 100 copies were sold to Kickstarter backers, I kept 25 for myself, and the remaining 375 are now available as a thank-you gift for people who make tax-deductible gifts to CC.
I have been a great supporter of Creative Commons since its inception – literally, I was around when Aaron Swartz, Matt Haughey and Lisa Rein worked with Larry Lessig to design the data scheme and user interface to create, use and re-use Creative Commons licenses. My debut novel, Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, was the first book ever released under a CC license:
https://craphound.com/down/download
Creative Commons arose out of the copyright wars of the early 2000s, in which the severe deficiencies of using copyright as the primary form of internet regulation were becoming ever clearer. Then – as now – the internet was filling up with material that everyday people produced together, incorporating one another's work, as well as popular works that had meaning to them. Virtually all of this material violated copyright law, and bringing it into compliance would cost hundreds of billions of dollars in billable lawyer hours to draft, negotiate and sign all the licenses needed to avoid both criminal and civil liability.
That's where CC came in: a team of international lawyers standardized a set of legal licenses that did something new and necessary: facilitated sharing and remix, rather than restricting them. Simply apply a CC license to your work – say, a Wikipedia contribution, a Flickr photo, or a story on AO3 – and others would be able to reproduce, adapt and recombine that work with other CC licensed works. What's more, thanks to the heroic efforts of the international CC team, these licenses were able to span borders, languages and legal systems, meaning that a Japanese animator can create a short based on a French story, using Australian 3D assets and a Croatian soundtrack:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/list.en
It's hard to overstate what a heroic feat of lawyering this is. Making a set of documents that allows creativity to spread freely across 45+ (often very different) legal systems is arguably the most ambitious piece of applied IP legal research ever undertaken. Today, tens of billions of works are CC licensed, including (to name just one example), all of Wikipedia.
I rely heavily on CC licensed works to make the images that run over my posts on Pluralistic, my CC-licensed newsletter. I combine these with public domain images in the GIMP (a powerful free/open Photoshop replacement that runs GNU/Linux, MacOS and Windows) to make my collages, which you can download in high-rez (and freely re-use, thanks to the CC licenses I apply to each of them) from this Flickr set of 350+ items:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/doctorow/albums/72177720316719208?sd
Canny Valley collects 80 of my favorite collages in a beautiful book that was printed on 100lb Mohawk paper on an Indigo digital offset printer and bound with PVA glue that will last a century, at Pasadena's Typecraft, a family-owned print shop that's been in business for more than 100 years:
https://www.typecraft.com/live2/who-we-are.html
It was designed by the type legend John D Berry:
And the introduction was written by my friend and mentor, the cyberpunk pioneer and digital art impresario Bruce Sterling:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Sterling

I published a long post that explained my creative process last year, including Bruce's intro (which is also CC licensed). I'm going to reproduce Bruce's intro below, but you can read the whole post here:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/04/illustrious/#chairman-bruce
I love these little books and I love that there's a chance for a few more people to lay hands on their own – and I especially love that this will support Creative Commons, an organization that produces digital public goods for a new, good internet:
https://mailchi.mp/creativecommons/were-turning-25-book-giveaway
==
INTRODUCTION
by Bruce Sterling
In 1970 a robotics professor named Masahiro Mori discovered a new problem in aesthetics. He called this "bukimi no tani genshō."
The Japanese robots he built were functional, so the "bukimi no tani" situation was not an engineering problem. It was a deep and basic problem in the human perception of humanlike androids.
Humble assembly robots, with their claws and swivels, those looked okay to most people. Dolls, puppets and mannequins, those also looked okay.
Living people had always aesthetically looked okay to people. Especially, the pretty ones.
However, between these two realms that the late Dr Mori was gamely attempting to weld together — the world of living mankind and of the pseudo-man-like machine– there was an artistic crevasse. Anything in this "Uncanny Valley" looked, and felt, severely not-okay. These overdressed robots looked and felt so eerie that their creator's skills became actively disgusting. The robots got prettier, but only up to a steep verge. Then they slid down the precipice and became zombie doppelgangers.

That's also the issue with the aptly-titled "Canny Valley" art collection here. People already know how to react aesthetically to traditional graphic images. Diagrams are okay. Hand-drawn sketches and cartoons are also okay. Brush-made paintings are mostly fine. Photographs, those can get kind of dodgy.

Digital collages that slice up and weld highly disparate elements like diagrams, cartoons, sketches and also photos and paintings, those trend toward the uncanny.
The pixel-juggling means of digital image-manipulation are not art-traditional pencils or brushes. They do not involve the human hand, or maybe not even the human eye, or the human will. They're not fixed on paper or canvas; they're a Frankenstein mash-up landscape of tiny colored screen-dots where images can become so fried that they look and feel "cursed." They're conceptually gooey congelations, stuck in the valley mire of that which is and must be neither this-nor-that.

A modern digital artist has billions of jpegs in files, folders, clouds and buckets. He's never gonna run out of weightless grist from that mill.
Why would Cory Doctorow — novelist, journalist, activist, opinion columnist and so on — want to lift his typing fingers from his lettered keyboard, so as to create graphics with cut-and-paste and "lasso tools"?

Cory Doctorow also has some remarkably tangled, scandalous and precarious issues to contemplate, summarize and discuss. They're not his scandalous private intrigues, though. Instead, they're scandalous public intrigues. Or, at least Cory struggles to rouse some public indignation about these intrigues, because his core topics are the tangled penthouse/slash/underground machinations of billionaire web moguls.
Cory really knows really a deep dank lot about this uncanny nexus of arcane situations. He explains the shameful disasters there, but they're difficult to capture without torrents of unwieldy tech jargon.
I think there are two basic reasons for this.
The important motivation is his own need to express himself by some method other than words.
I'm reminded here of the example of H. G. Wells, another science fiction writer turned internationally famous political pundit. HG Wells was quite a tireless and ambitious writer — so much so that he almost matched the torrential output of Cory Doctorow.

But HG Wells nevertheless felt a compelling need to hand-draw cartoons. He called them "picshuas." These hundreds of "picshuas" were rarely made public. They were usually sketched in the margins of his hand-written letters. Commonly the picshuas were aimed at his second wife, the woman he had renamed "Jane." These picshuas were caricatures, or maybe rapid pen-and-ink conceptual outlines, of passing conflicts, events and situations in the life of Wells. They seemed to carry tender messages to Jane that the writer was unable or unwilling to speak aloud to her. Wells being Wells, there were always issues in his private life that might well pose a challenge to bluntly state aloud: "Oh by the way, darling, I've built a second house in the South of France where I spend my summers with a comely KGB asset, the Baroness Budberg." Even a famously glib and charming writer might feel the need to finesse that.

Cory Doctorow also has some remarkably tangled, scandalous and precarious issues to contemplate, summarize and discuss. They're not his scandalous private intrigues, though. Instead, they're scandalous public intrigues. Or, at least Cory struggles to rouse some public indignation about these intrigues, because his core topics are the tangled penthouse/slash/underground machinations of billionaire web moguls.
Cory really knows really a deep dank lot about this uncanny nexus of arcane situations. He explains the shameful disasters there, but they're difficult to capture without torrents of unwieldy tech jargon.

So instead, he diligently clips, cuts, pastes, lassos, collages and pastiches. He might, plausibly, hire a professional artist to design his editorial cartoons for him. However, then Cory would have to verbally explain all his political analysis to this innocent graphics guy. Then Cory would also have to double-check the results of the artist and fix the inevitable newbie errors and grave misunderstandings. That effort would be three times the labor for a dogged crusader who is already working like sixty.
It's more practical for him to mash-up images that resemble editorial cartoons.
He can't draw. Also, although he definitely has a pronounced sense of aesthetics, it's not a aesthetic most people would consider tasteful. Cory Doctorow, from his very youth, has always had a "craphound" aesthetic. As an aesthete, Cory is the kind of guy who would collect rain-drenched punk-band flyers that had fallen off telephone poles and store them inside a 1950s cardboard kid-cereal box. I am not scolding him for this. He's always been like that.

As Wells used to say about his unique "picshuas," they seemed like eccentric scribblings, but over the years, when massed-up as an oeuvre, they formed a comic burlesque of an actual life. Similarly, one isolated Doctorow collage can seem rather what-the-hell. It's trying to be "canny." If you get it, you get it. If you don't get the first one, then you can page through all of these, and at the end you will probably get it. En masse, it forms the comic burlesque of a digital left-wing cyberspatial world-of-hell. A monster-teeming Silicon Uncanny Valley of extensively raked muck.

There are a lot of web-comix people who like to make comic fun of the Internet, and to mock "the Industry." However, there's no other social and analytical record quite like this one. It has something of the dark affect of the hundred-year-old satirical Dada collages of Georg Schultz or Hannah Hoch. Those Dada collages look dank and horrible because they're "Dada" and pulling a stunt. These images look dank and horrible because they're analytical, revelatory and make sense.
If you do not enjoy contemporary electronic politics, and instead you have somehow obtained an art degree, I might still be able to help you with my learned and well-meaning intro here. I can recommend a swell art-critical book titled "Memesthetics" by Valentina Tanni. I happen to know Dr. Tanni personally, and her book is the cat's pyjamas when it comes to semi-digital, semi-collage, appropriated, Situationiste-detournement, net.art "meme aesthetics." I promise that I could robotically mimic her, and write uncannily like her, if I somehow had to do that. I could even firmly link the graphic works of Cory Doctorow to the digital avant-garde and/or digital folk-art traditions that Valentina Tanni is eruditely and humanely discussing. Like with a lot of robots, the hard part would be getting me to stop.

Cory works with care on his political meme-cartoons — because he is using them to further his own personal analysis, and to personally convince himself. They're not merely sharp and partisan memes, there to rouse one distinct viewer-emotion and make one single point. They're like digital jigsaw-puzzle landscape-sketches — unstable, semi-stolen and digital, because the realm he portrays is itself also unstable, semi-stolen and digital. The cartoons are dirty and messy because the situations he tackles are so dirty and messy. That's the grain of his lampoon material, like the damaged amps in a punk song. A punk song that was licensed by some billionaire and then used to spy on hapless fans with surveillance-capitalism.

Since that's how it goes, that's also what you're in for. You have been warned, and these collages will warn you a whole lot more.
If you want to aesthetically experience some elegant, time-tested collage art that was created by a major world artist, then you should gaze in wonder at the Max Ernst masterpiece, "Une semaine de bonté" ("A Week of Kindness"). This indefinable "collage novel" aka "artist's book" was created in the troubled time of 1934. It's very uncanny rather than "canny, "and it's also capital-A great Art. As an art critic, I could balloon this essay to dreadful robotic proportions while I explain to you in detail why this weirdo mess is a lasting monument to the expressive power of collage. However, Cory Doctorow is not doing Max Ernst's dreamy, oneiric, enchanting Surrealist art. He would never do that and it wouldn't make any sense if he did.

Cory did this instead. It is art, though. It is what it is, and there's nothing else like it. It's artistic expression as Cory Doctorow has a sincere need to perform that, and in twenty years it will be even more rare and interesting. It's journalism ahead of its time (a little) and with a passage of time, it will become testimonial.
Bruce Sterling — Ibiza MMXXV

Amazon Pulls Support for Perfectly Fine Older Kindles https://www.wired.com/story/amazon-pulls-support-for-perfectly-fine-older-kindles/
"Fahrenheit 11/9" – This is How Fascism Starts | Michael Moore https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wfszwkoSdQA
Honda Puts Its Garage Door Opener Behind a Paywall https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=Gb2fEBW0oDA
Why Locus Matters More Than Ever https://reactormag.com/why-locus-matters-more-than-ever/
#20yrsago Al Franken wants a balanced war budget #15yrsago Fake-make: counterfeit handmade objects from big manufacturers https://web.archive.org/web/20110410125346/http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2011/04/untouched-by-human-hands.html
#15yrsago Marketplace for hijacked computers https://krebsonsecurity.com/2011/04/is-your-computer-listed-for-rent/
#15yrsago Fake-make: counterfeit handmade objects from big manufacturers https://web.archive.org/web/20110410125346/http://blog.makezine.com/archive/2011/04/untouched-by-human-hands.html
#10yrsago Pope invites Bernie Sanders to Vatican to speak about “social, economic, and environmental” issues https://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2016-35999269#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa
#10yrsago Baby sues US government for searching his diapers in racial profiling/War on Terror case https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/04/baby-who-had-his-diapers-searched-at-airport-is-part-of-class-action-suit/
#10yrsago Tax investigators and bill collectors use Rich Kids of Instagram to uncover oligarchs’ hidden millions https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/apr/03/super-rich-discover-hidden-risks-instagram-yachts-jets
#10yrsago The international art market is a money laundry whose details are in the Panama Papers https://web.archive.org/web/20160408024110/https://fusion.net/story/288515/panama-papers-leak-art-market/
#10yrsago UK government warns people that copyright trolls are a scam https://torrentfreak.com/uk-govt-issues-advice-on-dealing-with-copyright-trolls-160408/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Torrentfreak+(Torrentfreak)
#10yrsago Why the rise of ransomware attacks should worry you https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2016/04/ok-panic-newly-evolved-ransomware-is-bad-news-for-everyone/
#5yrsago Howard Dean's racist, genocidal pharma sellout https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/08/howard-dino/#the-scream
#1yrago We CAN have nice things https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/08/howard-dino/#payfors

Montreal: Drawn and Quarterly, Apr 10
https://mtl.drawnandquarterly.com/events/4863920260410
Toronto: DemocracyXchange, Apr 16
https://www.democracyxchange.org/news/cory-doctorow-to-open-dxc26-on-april-16
San Francisco: 2026 Berkeley Spring Forum on M&A and the Boardroom, Apr 23
https://www.theberkeleyforum.com/#agenda
London: Resisting Big Tech Empires (LSBU), Apr 25
https://www.tickettailor.com/events/globaljusticenow/2042691
NYC: Enshittification at Commonweal Ventures, Apr 29
https://luma.com/ssgfvqz8
NYC: Techidemic with Sarah Jeong, Tochi Onyibuchi and Alia Dastagir (PEN World Voices), Apr 30
https://worldvoices.pen.org/event/techidemic/
Berlin: Re:publica, May 18-20
https://re-publica.com/de/news/rp26-sprecher-cory-doctorow
Berlin: Enshittification at Otherland Books, May 19
https://www.otherland-berlin.de/de/event-details/cory-doctorow.html
Hay-on-Wye: HowTheLightGetsIn, May 22-25
https://howthelightgetsin.org/festivals/hay/big-ideas-2
SXSW London, Jun 2
https://www.sxswlondon.com/session/how-big-tech-broke-the-internet-b3c4a901
Do you feel screwed over by big tech? (Ontario Today)
https://www.cbc.ca/listen/live-radio/1-45-ontario-today/clip/16203024-do-feel-screwed-big-tech
Launch for Cindy's Cohn's "Privacy's Defender" (City Lights)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuVCm2PUalU
Chicken Mating Harnesses (This Week in Tech)
https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech/episodes/1074
The Virtual Jewel Box (U Utah)
https://tanner.utah.edu/podcast/enshittification-cory-doctorow-matthew-potolsky/
"Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/
"Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels).
"The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (thebezzle.org).
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org).
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com.
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
"Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026
"The 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, 2027
"The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2027
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. First draft complete. Second draft underway.
"The Post-American Internet," a short book about internet policy in the age of Trumpism. PLANNING.
A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

This work – excluding any serialized fiction – is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. That means you can use it any way you like, including commercially, provided that you attribute it to me, Cory Doctorow, and include a link to pluralistic.net.
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Quotations and images are not included in this license; they are included either under a limitation or exception to copyright, or on the basis of a separate license. Please exercise caution.
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"When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla" -Joey "Accordion Guy" DeVilla
READ CAREFULLY: By reading this, you agree, on behalf of your employer, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all NON-NEGOTIATED agreements, licenses, terms-of-service, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, browsewrap, confidentiality, non-disclosure, non-compete and acceptable use policies ("BOGUS AGREEMENTS") that I have entered into with your employer, its partners, licensors, agents and assigns, in perpetuity, without prejudice to my ongoing rights and privileges. You further represent that you have the authority to release me from any BOGUS AGREEMENTS on behalf of your employer.
ISSN: 3066-764X
Why Did Melania Do That? A Reader Poll! [The Status Kuo]
Before I get to the truly weird thing that Melania Trump did yesterday, here are the results of last week’s poll on which Trump aide will be shown the door next! The top pick was Tulsi, with a near three-way tie for second among Karoline, Pete and Kash.
Now on to the wild thing from yesterday…
Thursday’s surprise Epstein presser left Washington baffled.
On Thursday afternoon, Melania Trump walked into the Grand Foyer of the White House, read a prepared statement about Jeffrey Epstein, and walked away without taking a single question.
There’s also the small matter of where she did this. The White House podium is traditionally reserved for the President or officials speaking on his behalf, not for a First Lady airing a personal defense.
Moreover, nobody saw the statement coming. Not the press corps. Not most of her staff. Not even, by his own account, her husband.
The question hanging over Washington today is “WTF did she just do that?” There are at least five theories I want to explore for yucks. Before diving in—and conducting a reader survey—let’s review what she said, how it went down in the White House, and why the whole thing is frankly so bizarre, given the timing.
Dear G!
Melania’s statement covered a lot of ground in just over five minutes.
First, she declared she had never been friends with Epstein, never been on his plane, never visited his island, and that her name has never appeared in court documents, depositions, victim statements or FBI interviews.
She addressed head-on the 2002 email she sent Ghislaine Maxwell. Her now infamous “Dear G!” note praised a New York Magazine profile of Epstein and signed off with “Love, Melania.” She dismissed it yesterday as nothing more than “casual correspondence,” a “trivial note.”
She then went out of her way to deny a specific rumor: “I am not Epstein’s victim. Epstein did not introduce me to Donald Trump.”
Okay… no one has been saying either of those things, but you do you, Melania.
Then the First Lady made a surprising public demand. She asked Congress to hold public hearings where Epstein’s survivors could testify under oath. That’s something the Trump White House had resisted for months. Whoops.
Donald wants the country to move on. Melania said, “Not so fast.”
How Donald and Her Staff Reacted
Trump initially told reporters he did not know his wife was going to make this statement. In a brief phone call with MS Now, he said only that she “didn’t know [Epstein]” — and that he was in a meeting about the Iran war and couldn’t speak further.
But that claim didn’t hold for long. A spokesperson for Melania told the New York Times that “the president was aware that his wife was going to make a statement.” The official White House X account reshared the video without comment, suggesting retroactive endorsement, if not advance knowledge.
Multiple officials normally in the loop on external communications told reporters they were caught completely off guard.
Melania’s senior adviser Marc Beckman offered the “official” explanation in a statement to the New York Post: “enough is enough” and “the lies must stop.” He added that it was time for the public and media to focus on her “incredible achievements as First Lady.” (I know, I know, but stay with me here.)
In short, the White House’s story is already inconsistent. Trump says he didn’t know, his wife’s own spokesperson says he did, and his official account amplified the statement anyway. Whether that reflects genuine surprise followed by quick endorsement, or a coordinated move with a thin “I didn’t know” cover story, is one of the open questions hanging over the whole affair.
The reaction from Congress was bipartisan and immediate. Rep. Robert Garcia (D-CA), the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, called on Republican Chairman James Comer (R-KY) to “schedule a public hearing immediately.” Rep. Nancy Mace (R-SC), who also serves on the Oversight Committee, thanked the First Lady and echoed the call. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), who has pushed hardest for Epstein accountability on the Republican side, agreed — then ended his post with one word: “PROSECUTE!”
The Background That Makes This Odder
To understand why this landed so strangely, we need to zoom out and put into context the big moment that it interrupted.
The Iran war, which many observers had already characterized as a distraction from the Epstein files, had just hit a fragile two-week ceasefire. The regime was, for the first time in weeks, getting out of the Epstein news cycle.
Trump had fired Pam Bondi the week before, closing a chapter on the scandal. In fact, the very day before Melania’s bombshell, the Justice Department had informed the House Oversight Committee that Bondi would defy her subpoena to testify about her handling of the Epstein files. This promised at least a significant pause in the heat she had brought to the matter.
In sum, there was hope in the White House that Epstein was finally fading. And then Melania walked to a podium and said his name sixteen times.
NBC News White House correspondent Garrett Haake reported that Melania was “breathing new life into the Epstein saga.”
The question that set Washington buzzing wasn’t really what she said. It’s why she is saying it now. Her office offered no inciting incident. Author Michael Wolff, whose ongoing lawsuit against Melania over Epstein-related statements is one obvious potential trigger, told NBC News he has no forthcoming book or video that would have prompted this, and that he was “totally caught out of the blue.”
No one could name a specific story she was trying to get ahead of. All eyes had been on the Iran ceasefire. And yet here we are. Now let’s run through the leading theories for why Melania decided to blow Epstein up again.
Getting ahead of the Epstein Files
The most viral theory has an intuitive logic. Jon Favreau, Obama speechwriter and Pod Save America host, posted what many were thinking: “Ok so who’s about to break the Melania/Epstein story she just tried to get ahead of?”
Veteran reporter Scott MacFarlane noted that an Epstein survivor texted him calling the statement “a bizarre thing” and not the reaction of someone who felt vindicated by a long-overdue denial.
The playbook is well-established in political crisis management. You don’t hold a White House press conference to deny something nobody has been loudly accusing you of unless you have reason to believe that accusation is coming. There are millions more withheld Epstein documents whose contents remain unknown to the public. If those files contain something that names or implicates Melania more directly, a preemptive on-camera denial from the White House podium would serve as classic crisis inoculation.
Or perhaps an investigative reporter is sitting on a Melania-specific story—sourced from the files, from Maxwell’s circle, or from Wolff’s research—and reached out to her office for comment, triggering the statement. Wolff himself says he has nothing imminent, but he’s not the only journalist in this space.
Getting ahead of Ghislaine Maxwell
In February, Ghislaine Maxwell sat for a closed-door deposition before the House Oversight Committee and pleaded the Fifth on every question. But her attorney made a very specific, very public offer: grant Maxwell clemency, and she will testify that neither Trump nor Bill Clinton did anything wrong in their dealings with Epstein.
The White House shrugged it off publicly. But Trump has never definitively ruled out a pardon. And last summer, and with no explanation, Maxwell was moved to a cushier prison camp after doing two days of private interviews with Todd Blanche, now the acting AG. Nobody knows what was said in those sessions.
Read Maxwell’s offer carefully. Her attorney said she would testify that Trump is innocent in exchange for her freedom. That offer, “I’ll clear you if you free me,” carries an implicit flip side: “If you don’t free me, I will control what I say and to whom.” Maxwell’s attorney was careful to add that “only she can provide the complete account.”
In mob terms, that’s an offer he couldn’t refuse.
Now consider who in Trump’s orbit Maxwell could most plausibly target. It’s someone who isn’t shielded by the presidency, who has a documented paper trail with Maxwell herself, and who has the most personal reputational exposure.
The “Dear G” email already establishes a warmer relationship with Maxwell than the First Lady is now claiming. If Maxwell has been signaling behind the scenes to the White House what she could reveal about Melania specifically as leverage in her pardon negotiations, Melania going on camera to pre-emptively deny everything suddenly makes sense. It’s not a response to a published story. It’s a response to a private threat.
The First Lady who cried Wolff
It’s not top of the news (or at least, it wasn’t until now) but Melania has been waging an aggressive legal campaign on the Epstein-adjacent front for months.
In October 2025, her lawyers threatened author Michael Wolff with a $1 billion defamation lawsuit over his claims—including that she first met Trump on Epstein’s private jet and was deeply embedded in Epstein’s social world before her marriage. Wolff then sued her under New York’s anti-SLAPP law, explicitly stating he wanted to get both Trumps under oath.
That lawsuit is still pending. Given this context, an on-camera statement from the White House—in her own voice, under conditions she fully controls, with specific factual claims on the record—could be strategically useful for her. It cements her legal position. It adds weight to a possible motion to dismiss. And it signals she won’t be silenced, which may deter other publishers from wading into this territory.
Under this theory, her call for congressional hearings is also part of the legal positioning. She’s now framing herself as pro-accountability and pro-survivor, making it much harder to characterize her as someone trying to suppress the truth.
A shot across Donald’s bow
There’s a theory the pundit class finds irresistible, so we should tease it out a bit.
The Wolff lawsuit’s main claims aren’t about Epstein’s crimes at all. They’re about the nature of the Trumps’ marriage and Donald’s behavior inside Epstein’s orbit. Wolff claims that Melania and Donald first had sex on Epstein’s jet and that Trump liked to have sex with his friends’ wives. Both claims go directly to who Donald was before he became Melania’s husband, and both make Melania look pretty bad.
Meanwhile, Trump has spent months calling Epstein accountability a “Democrat hoax” and battling to suppress the files. His strategy has been to deflect, delay and deceive. Melania took the opposite position Thursday: transparency, testimony and truth. She called for the very thing her husband has spent significant political capital trying to prevent.
Melania has a documented history of very deliberate, very public signals to her husband. (Remember the “I Really Don’t Care, Do U?” jacket?) She is not a passive figure, but can be quite passive-aggressive. She has every reason to want the Epstein story told on terms that exonerate her specifically, even if that process creates discomfort or even big problems for her husband.
Maybe she really doesn’t care.
Perhaps she simply miscalculated
Sometimes the simplest explanation is the correct one.
Melania Trump is intensely protective of her reputation. She is also genuinely furious about the Epstein rumors, especially those concerning how she met her husband and the nature of their marriage. Her lawyers have been aggressively fighting these claims for years, and it has worked: The Daily Beast retracted its story. James Carville issued an apology. Harper Collins UK backed down.
She may have simply decided, on her own timeline, that “enough is enough,” exactly as her spokesman said, without fully understanding the political consequences. She is not a political operative. The Iran ceasefire, the Bondi deposition drama, the tariff chaos, perhaps none of these factored into her self-protective calculation.
Her thinking may have been as straightforward as “I am the First Lady, my name is being dragged, I have the biggest platform I’ll ever have, and I’m going to use it.”
The result is almost comical. Through her statement, she stepped on the war’s ceasefire coverage, revived the Epstein story at its lowest ebb in weeks, gave Democrats new ammunition to demand hearings, and handed Thomas Massie a megaphone.
Journalist Terry Moran observed: “She’s obsessed with herself, and oblivious to everything else. It’s who she is.” He added, “But she’s got to realize how bad this is politically for her husband.”
Or maybe she doesn’t, and that’s also just fine by her.
Given all these competing theories, which do you most buy? Cast your vote in the poll below, and let me know in the comments if I’m missing an explanation. I’ll share the results in an upcoming newsletter. And have a great weekend!
Court Blocks Republican Push To (Further) Dominate And Destroy Local Broadcast News [Techdirt]
Last month FCC boss Brendan Carr illegally ignored remaining U.S. media consolidation laws to rubber stamp Nexstar’s $6.2 billion purchase of Tegna. It’s part of the generational Republican quest to steadily consolidate media, then replace whatever journalism remains with a soggy mish mash of lazy infotainment and right wing propaganda (see: Sinclair Broadcasting).
But there’s trouble in paradise: a judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking the merger from proceeding. For now.
“Defendants must immediately cease all ongoing actions relating to integration and consolidation of Nexstar and Tegna,” wrote Troy Nunley, the chief judge in US District Court for the Eastern District of California.
The savior in this case is curiously DirecTV, not-long-ago spun off from its own disastrous union with AT&T. DirecTV filed suit saying that the consolidation in local broadcast TV will erode what’s left of competition in the local broadcast TV sector, harming product quality, opinion diversity, and labor, while resulting in higher overall prices (for everyone) in exchange for even worse product.
From the restraining order:
“Nexstar admits the merger will greatly increase its already huge “scale” and its “leverage,” i.e., the ability to force its TV distribution customers, including Plaintiff, to pay even
higher fees for local news, live sports, and other content they distribute to their subscribers.
Plaintiff alleges Nexstar will also shut down local newsrooms in dozens of markets, reducing the amount, variety, and quality of local broadcast news that Americans rely on for trusted
information about their communities. Plaintiff asserts those harms from reduced
competition are precisely what antitrust laws are designed to prevent.”
Nexstar was so certain the merger was a done deal, it had begun changing the physical signs and logos on many of the acquired stations it had begun integrating, something it’s since been forced to reverse. The company has also tried to insist it can’t comply with some of the Judge’s demands because some aspects of the early integration “can’t be undone.”
The deal would combine Nexstar’s stable of more than local 200 stations with Tegna’s 65 outlets in major markets nationwide, blowing past restrictions that no company can control more than 39 percent of households (the new combined company reaches 54.5 percent). In addition to the NexStar lawsuit, the companies are also being sued by a coalition of eight attorneys general and consumer groups.
Since Rupert Murdoch convinced Ronald Reagan to eliminate laws preventing one mogul from owning a paper and TV station in one market, Republican policies (and corporations) have pushed relentlessly to pursue the goal of a monolithic, highly consolidated media in exclusive service to the extraction class and corporate power. The result has been anything but subtle.
Media scholars have been warning about the perils of this for decades, but only recently, under the ham-fisted efforts of Trumpism, have people truly begun seeing the full outline of the threat. The media sector (like most U.S. sectors) desperately needs an antitrust renaissance; and if the federal government is no longer willing to engage in adult supervision, other parties will have to fill the void.
Kanji of the Day: 病 [Kanji of the Day]
病
✍10
小3
ill, sick
ビョウ ヘイ
や.む -や.み やまい
病院 (びょういん) — hospital
病気 (びょうき) — illness (usu. excluding minor ailments, e.g., common cold)
糖尿病 (とうにょうびょう) — diabetes
うつ病 (うつびょう) — depression
水俣病 (みなまたびょう) — Minamata disease
持病 (じびょう) — chronic disease
総合病院 (そうごうびょういん) — general hospital
大学病院 (だいがくびょういん) — university hospital
無病息災 (むびょうそくさい) — sound health
病状 (びょうじょう) — patient's condition
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
GIMP @ Libre Graphics Meeting 2026 [GIMP]
The Libre Graphics Meeting (LGM) is the annual meeting on Free and Open Source Software (FLOSS) for graphics. It aims at gathering both developers, artists and other creative people.
This year, it will be held in Nuremberg (Nürnberg), Germany, from April 22nd to 25th of 2026.
As every year since the event was born in 2006 (co-founded by early GIMP team members!), our project will be present.
Here are talks and a workshop by GIMP team members:
What becomes possible with a graphics stack/compositor that works with vectors, rather than pixels? - and what does it take to make it possible? Helping figuring out this - is a goal of the ctx terminal emulator with its vector graphics extension.
I’d like to propose a soldering workshop for LGM attendees. Goal is to populate a PCB with a handfull of components to have something that lights up with colors.
Note: the schedule still says the workshop is on Friday, but we were told by organizers it moved to Thursday and schedule has not been updated. If you want to go, we suggest you verify the schedule page before.
GIMP is Free Software. Most people present at Libre Graphics know as much. But it is more: GIMP is also a Community. For me this aspect has about as much importance as the licensing part. In this talk, I will be diving further into what that means, how that works and why this matters. Doing so, I will also discuss a bit the past few years of the project, clarify our current vision and forecast the (very positive) future of this project.
Our project believes in the community, sharing and working together to make a great creative software ecosystem. Many from our team work professionally with Free Software, be it graphics or other, and we believe that FLOSS collaboration provides the best environment for all. Aryeom and I, for instance, maintain GIMP as we use it for professional animation film making. And we also use and support other awesome Free Software, such as Inkscape, Blender, Scribus, Kdenlive, Synfig and more…
This is why GIMPCon evolved into Libre Graphics Meeting, 20 years ago! And this is also why we have helped funding the event many times across the years. We also contributed hardware sometimes to LGM organizers, sponsored LGM parties, funded travel and/or accommodation expenses for contributors of other projects… Because GIMP would not be the same without all the other Free Software around.
This year again, we are officially a Gold Sponsor to LGM 2026.
It saddens us to see LGM organizers struggling to find basic funding every year. Therefore we would like to encourage other creative FLOSS projects which can afford it to also sponsor LGM. When you do so, you support the event gathering us all, improving inter-project collaboration and helping your own project evolve, you also support the smaller projects which are not yet self-sufficient, and you show appreciation for the whole community and the past contributors which allowed your project to be where it is now in the first place.
Of course, this call also extends to companies and other organizations using all these incredible Free Software for their work.
Here is where to get in touch with this year’s LGM organizers: LGM Sponsor Page.
We hope to see many people in LGM at the end of the month! 🤗
Oh and we still have cute Wilber stickers to give out while supplies last. So try to grab some to customize your laptop, fridge and everything!
In the mirror universe [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]
Mirrors are an integral part of F-Droid, as a vector for decentralization and user freedom. Besides our main servers, we had about 16 mirrors spread between Switzerland, Germany, Denmark, Finland, France, Sweden, Taiwan, Singapore and the US. While the spread seems good enough, this planet is larger than 9 countries, no matter how good Internet interconnections are.
This April we’ve added 3 more mirrors from Romania meant for better coverage around the Balkans as a whole. The new servers are activated by default so you don’t need to setup anything. Many thanks go to chroot and Hostico for providing them, but also for being long time supporters of many important FLOSS projects.
I feel that my app installs are slow and my country was not listed above! Sure, networking is a complex subject, let’s also detail a bit what it takes for a mirror to end up in your client.
Given that we are celebrating 16 years of F-Droid means we are thinking in the long term, and we expect the servers that we use or link to, to have the same goals. Any future mirror needs to be hosted on like-minded infrastructure.
What does this mean in practice?
First of all, we are few and we probably don’t live near you, we need you to step up and lead this process for your own benefit first and then for all the others around you.
There are many hosters that might be sympathetic to our (and your) cause, so you’ll start by finding those in your country that might be a good fit. Seek a contact method (e-mail probably), try “tech support” not “accounting”, and ping them with the question, in your native language.
No matter the order of actions, you’ll need to look around and dig more info about them.
Take a look at how they are hosting in general. Is it another CDN (we already have Cloudflare, no need for another instance of it, thanks), baremetal, VPS or an array of Raspberry Pi’s? Can its hosting cope with another Google announcement of locking Android even more? We know our main server fronters cry a bit when news is out…
Who hosts it? Is it a company, institution or individual? How is their public track record? Are they already mirroring other FLOSS projects like the Linux Kernel, Debian, Arch, etc.?
Do they have a privacy policy? Are they supporting privacy by default? Are they not retain any data longer than is necessary?
If a mirror was set, we can start to monitor it to assess its speed and consistency of synchronizing, by first listing it in our mirror-monitor.
And if all these above are true and good, did you test it in your client? Multiple clients? Everything was fine for a few weeks?
Many questions need to be asked, but this ensures the next time you want to get the latest index, update apps or install a new app, everything runs smooth and you spend more time exploring that app and not watching a “snake” slithering slowly across your screen.
Want to start this journey for your country? Join our discussion in the dedicated issue, as we can share some stats and maybe a template for you to use when contacting hosters around you.
The old Lichess app was replaced by the new one, added last week, and aptly named the same: Lichess. If you’ve installed the app before last week make sure you install the new app and uninstall the old one.
Session F-Droid was updated to 1.33.2 but this might the last version, as the whole project is so under funded that they have entered their last 90 days of service. We’ve told you about their donations plea 3 weeks ago but since they did not reach the needed $1 million (this is the yearly cost of operation) all employees were let go and only maintenance by volunteers will take place until July 8. Read the full announcement here.
CodeDoctor puts on the bunny ears:
Happy Easter to everyone!
As a special treat for the holidays, I am incredibly excited to announce the release of Butterfly 2.5.0!
The update brings many long-awaited features and improvements to the app. From a rebuilt template system to custom keybindings and new touch shortcuts, this release focuses on customization and stability.
Highlights:
📓 Rebuilt Template System
🎨 Shape Styles
⌨️ Custom Keybindings
👆 New Touch Shortcuts
☁️ WebDAV Rewrite
📄 Improved PDF Rendering
🔷 Improved Polygon Workflow
📁 File Management Improvements
🖥️ Better Presentation Mode
💾 Better Export & Data Settings
🔤 Better Arabic Font
📋 Improved Logs
Read more here
@shuvashish76 sharpens the feed:
NewsBlur - News reader was updated to 14.2. We skipped version 14.0 so this update adds even more polish and fixes on top. What’s new? You get a redesigned reading experience, discover related sites, daily briefing, refined dark themes, story list header bar, redesigned preferences and menus, Ask AI and more.
2026.3.01.0.102.4.21.7.51.4.95.2.278.0.13.01.211.70.03.11.121.12.22.2.13.1.0295845231.15.1.132.4.92026.04.12041.6.240.41.2.0v10.7.61.24.9a.211.572.11.25.Meta2026.04.07-8-FDroid4.0.9.52.19.11.3.1v0.312.1.31.2.21.4.05.273.01.4.344.2026040700.88.015.10.038.01.0.41-oss2.3.10.17.301.18.02.3.11.0.12.19.0-21.5.01.4.25.9.01.0.91.16.01.2.112.6.4.03.51.4.02.0.101.1.43.01.7.15.8.43.6.34.20.29.13.0.02.6.40.60.59.00.19.72.0.323.4.01.11.02.1.00.7.72.0.91.7.110.0.8-beta1.220.21.01.2.03.7.51.9.47.0.0-beta.22.1.02.2.04.4.52026.320.57.111.4.12.0.61.22.100.2.107.4.13.0.01.102.01.4.11.4.12.3.33.4.2202604080.9.9.953.0.30.19.0-fdroid3.0.10.6.12v1.0.11.7.03.3.195.3.60.4.150.2.61.2.33.5.1.91.2.02026.04.07-8-FDroid2.1.690.54.1v7.7494.4.02.15.525.3.31.26.34.9.03.0.81.0.0-alpha061.1.33.20.11.12.264.02.1.01.1.141.7.83.03.4.101.25.21.0.174.6.360.967-fdroid0.7.733.400.2604075.7.30.18.02.3.02.1.41.2.04.3.74.0.33.13.0.2alpha-0.6.41.0.41.13.63.6.331.451.5.01.1.201.3.11.0.133.53.8.74.0.0690.8.05.1.618.0b41.0.190.82026.04.03-fdroid7.7.018.02.23.49.1.11.6.14.20.11.0.291.0.173.51.5.60.4.215.02.02.1074.23.01.0.222.11.0120.5.7-alphaThank 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.
HBO Obtains DMCA Subpoena to Unmask ‘Euphoria’ Spoiler Account on X [TorrentFreak]
HBO has a history of being plagued by high-profile leaks.
Several Game of Thrones episodes leaked in the past, and the same applies to the sequel, House of the Dragon.
With the long-awaited third season of HBO’s hit series Euphoria coming up this weekend, the company was on high alert. So, when it saw several ‘spoilers’ being posted by an X account operating under the name “Lexi howard’s cat”, it wasted no time to take action.

The Lexi-inspired fan account has been around for a long time, sharing various Euphoria-related updates. However, a series of posts that were published in late March appeared to have hit too close to home.
On March 31, HBO’s parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) sent a takedown notice to X, flagging several posts. According to Michael Bentkover, WBD’s Director of Worldwide Online Enforcement, these were “spoilers for unaired episodes of our Euphoria TV Series”.
TorrentFreak was unable to find out what was posted exactly, but the DMCA notice identifies it as video/audiovisual recording.

X confirmed receipt on the same day and presumably removed the posts. However, that was not the end of it. A week later, on April 7, the company requested a DMCA subpoena at a California federal court, with the goal to identify the person behind the @maudesfancat account.
DMCA subpoenas are relatively easy to obtain, as they only require a court clerk to sign off, which indeed happened a day later.
The issued subpoena requires X to share information sufficient to identify the person behind the account. This includes names, addresses, telephone numbers, email addresses, account numbers, IP addresses, and any other contact or billing records held by the platform.

Unlike the DMCA notice, where WBD used “video” to describe the content, the declaration to the court by Michael Bentkover classifies the infringing content as “summaries of unpublished, character, setting, and plots of a forthcoming series”.
This distinction may matter, as a summary of a plot may not enjoy the same protection as a leaked video. Copyright generally protects the expression of a work, not the underlying ideas or plot descriptions.
Then again, Bentkover also states that the user in question “posted access to HBO’s unpublished, copyright protected work from its forthcoming series,” which sounds substantial.
For now, X Corp. has until April 23 to respond. Legally, both X and the account holder can challenge the subpoena, but no objections have been submitted in court yet. Meanwhile, the ‘Lexi howard’s cat’ account is no longer online.
—
A copy of the subpoena, filed April 8 at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California, is available here (pdf). The notice of filing and supporting declaration can be found here (pdf).
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Court Dismisses Pepperdine’s Nonsense Trademark Suit Against Netflix Over ‘Running Point’ [Techdirt]
A little over a year ago, we wrote about a fairly silly lawsuit filed against Netflix (and Warner Bros.) by Pepperdine University in California for trademark infringement. At issue is the Netflix show Running Point, which is a fictionalized story of a female executive thrust into ownership of a professional basketball team, inspired by the Lakers’ Jeannie Buss, who is also an Executive Producer on the show. The show’s fictional team, which is supposed to be a reference to the NBA’s Los Angeles Lakers, is called “The Waves”. Pepperdine’s sports teams are also called “The Waves”, which the school claimed made all of this trademark infringement.
They were wrong about that, as we said in the previous post. Creative works are given wide latitude in trademark law, specifically in that the Rogers test typically applies. Even in the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s terrible ruling on parody in the case of the Bad Spaniels and Jack Daniels lawsuit, this was always a situation in which the Rogers test would definitely apply. Specifically, SCOTUS’ decision that Rogers doesn’t apply when the offending trademark is used as a source identifier, because we’re talking about a fictional team used in a wider work of fiction, meaning the use isn’t an identifier or any source.
Netflix and Warner petitioned for dismissal for those very reasons and the now the court has agreed and the suit has been dismissed.
U.S. District Judge Cynthia Valenzuela said on Tuesday , opens new tab that the fictional Los Angeles Waves basketball team in “Running Point” did not violate the Malibu, California, school’s rights because the show did not use the “Waves” name and logo as trademarks.
The ruling goes into much more detail, of course. It very specifically examines whether the Rogers test applies, deciding it does based on the usage. For example:
Here, Plaintiff fails to allege that the Waves mark was used by Defendants to exploit the success of Plaintiff’s sports teams or to create an association between the Running Point series and Pepperdine’s teams. Rather, at most, the FAC shows that the Waves mark is “immediately recognized” to identify the Running Point series, and that its use is synonymous with the series. These allegations, which Plaintiff concludes show that the Waves mark is used to “identify the show” are still not sufficient to show that the Waves mark was used as a designation of source for the series. Plaintiff’s repeated use of the words “identify” and “source-identification” do not actually show how the Waves mark was used to identify the source of the series. Rather, here, Defendants clearly claim to be the source of the series.
Finally, the Court is not persuaded by Plaintiff’s arguments regarding the marketing of the show or Defendants’ behavior in similar uses. Although Plaintiff alleges that Defendants’ used the Waves mark in marketing the Running Point series, this does not alter the Court’s above analysis that the Waves mark is not used to identify the source of the series. And the fact that Defendants have obtained trademarks in fictional businesses central to their shows in the past again does not show that Defendants have used the Waves mark to identify the source of Running Point here.
The ruling goes on to note that if Rogers applies, the Lanham Act does not. With source identifying out of the equation, the only remaining question is if the use in this case is artistically relevant. As the fictional team the main character owns, the name of that team is obviously artistically relevant.
Pepperdine has been given leave to amend its complaint into something that is actually legally sound, but I’m struggling to understand what that would even be. In lieu of an amended complaint, it seems that some creative works are still protected some of the time from nonsense trademark infringement claims, even in a post Bad Spaniels world.
Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Honey, I Shrunk the Kids’ Internet [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, Ben is joined by Fadza Madzingira, a digital policy expert with a decade of experience at Meta, Salesforce, Ofcom and currently Twitch, where she leads the policy, outreach and education teams. Together, they discuss:
We’re still yet to find a Ctrl-Alt-Speech 2026 Bingo Card winner — could this week be your lucky day? Play along.
A Baseless Copyright Claim Against A Web Host — And Why It Failed [Techdirt]
Copyright law is supposed to encourage creativity. Too often, it’s used to extract payouts from others.
Higbee & Associates, a law firm known for sending copyright demand letters to website owners, targeted May First Movement Technology, accusing it of infringing a photograph owned by Agence France-Presse (AFP). The claim was baseless. May First didn’t post the photo. It didn’t even own the website where the photo appeared.
May First is a nonprofit membership organization that provides web hosting and technical infrastructure to social justice groups around the world. The allegedly infringing image was posted years ago by one of May First’s members, a human rights group based in Mexico. When May First learned about the copyright complaint, it ensured that the group removed the image.
That should have been the end of it. Instead, the firm demanded payment.
So EFF stepped in as May First’s counsel and explained why AFP and Higbee had no valid claim. After receiving our response, Higbee backed down.
This outcome is a reminder that targets of copyright demands often have strong defenses—especially when someone else posted the material.
Copyright law treats those who create or control content differently from those who simply provide the tools or infrastructure for others to communicate.
In this case, May First provided hosting services but didn’t post the photo. Courts have long recognized that service providers aren’t direct infringers when they merely store material at the direction of users. In those cases, service providers lack “volitional conduct”—the intentional act of copying or distributing the work.
Copyright law also recognizes that intermediaries can’t realistically police everything users upload. That’s why legal protections like the Digital Millennium Copyright Act safe harbors exist. Even outside those safe harbors, courts still shield service providers from liability when they promptly respond to notices.
May First did exactly what the law expects: it notified its member, and the image came down.
The troubling part of this story isn’t just that a demand was sent. It’s that Higbee and AFP continued to demand money and threaten litigation after May First explained that it was merely a hosting provider and had the image removed.
In other words, the claim was built on shaky legal ground from the start. Once May First explained its role, Higbee should have withdrawn its demand. Individuals and small nonprofits shouldn’t need lawyers just to stop aggressive copyright shakedowns.
This isn’t an isolated case—it’s a predictable result of copyright law’s statutory damages regime.
Statutory damages can reach $150,000 per work, regardless of actual harm. That enormous leverage incentivizes firms like Higbee to send mass demand letters seeking quick settlements. Even meritless claims can generate revenue when recipients are too afraid, confused, or resource-constrained to fight back.
This hits community organizations, independent publishers, and small service providers that don’t have in-house legal teams especially hard. Faced with the threat of ruinous statutory damages, many just pay what is demanded.
That’s not how copyright law should work.
If you receive a copyright demand based on material someone else posted, don’t assume you’re liable.
You may have defenses based on:
Every situation is different, but the key point is this: a demand letter is not the same as a valid legal claim.
May First stood its ground, and Higbee abandoned its demand after we explained the law.
But the bigger problem remains. Copyright’s statutory damages framework enables aggressive enforcement tactics that targets the wrong parties, and chills lawful online activity.
Until lawmakers fix these structural incentives, organizations and individuals will keep facing pressure to pay up—even when they’ve done nothing wrong.
If you get one of these demand letters, remember: you may have more rights than it suggests.
Republished from EFF’s Deeplinks blog.
Daily Deal: The 2026 Canva Bundle [Techdirt]
The 2026 Canva Bundle has six courses to help you learn about graphic design. From logo design to business cards to branding to bulk content creation, these courses have you covered. It’s on sale for $20.
Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.
Someone Filed a Bogus DMCA Notice to Kill a Story About A Sketchy SEO Firm. It Worked — Briefly. [Techdirt]
We’ve talked for years about how the DMCA’s notice-and-takedown system is ripe for abuse. The legal structure of the law practically begs for such abuse: send a notice, content disappears, and the target has to fight through a slow counter-notice process to maybe get it back. The system rewards speed of takedowns over accuracy because the burden of getting it wrong really only works one way. Sites have incentive to take content down first and ask questions later to avoid facing expensive liability. Getting it wrong may frustrate those whose content has disappeared, but there’s basically no legal cost to the platform. But if they get something wrong and leave infringing content up, they could face a very expensive legal bill. Which means anyone with something to hide and no particular attachment to honesty has a ready-made censorship tool at their disposal.
And while Google is rare in that it is much more aggressive in rejecting DMCA notices than most other sites, that doesn’t mean that it’s perfect.
Last week, Press Gazette published an investigation into Clickout Media, a UK-based company that has been buying up respected online news outlets, gutting their newsrooms, replacing human journalists with AI-generated writers (complete with AI-generated profile photos), and stuffing the sites full of affiliate links to offshore gambling operations. The whole game is to exploit the acquired sites’ reputations and search rankings — what’s known as “parasite SEO” — to drive gambling traffic through what look like legitimate publications. It’s a really excellent piece of reporting about a practice that is gutting digital news brands. Just a quick snippet, though it’s worth reading the whole thing:
Speaking anonymously, one former Clickout Media employee said: “I was moved from site to site. Writing guidelines and strategies changed every other week with very little explanation. At first, I didn’t write casino content, but then I wrote articles on bets and odds. Then AI articles started appearing.”
The owners of one site bought by UK-based Clickout Media said they were approached by anonymous buyers in the first instance.
The organisation has previously bought multiple sites in football and women’s sports (Football Blog, She Kicks, Sportslens, Sportslens UK, Sportscasting UK, Football Blog UK), as well as gambling sites, including Gambling Insider, for which it is suggested Clickout Media paid at least £12m.
However, within days of being published, the exposé disappeared from Google’s search results, removed after a DMCA copyright complaint.
A search of the exact Press Gazette headline: “The SEO parasites buying, exploiting and ultimately killing online newsbrands” does not bring the article up.
A note at the bottom of the Google search results page reveals for this query states: “In response to multiple complaints that we received under the US Digital Millennium Copyright Act, we have removed 2 results from this page. If you wish, you may read the DMCA complaints that caused the removals at LumenDatabase.org: Complaint, Complaint.”
A follow-up article by Search Engine Land covering the same topic was also removed (that’s the second “complaint” link above). So whoever was behind this was being thorough.
Now, Press Gazette doesn’t definitively identify who filed the takedown notice, and we should be careful here too. The complaint was filed anonymously from “US Hub” which gives us little info but which Press Gazette notes “suggests the complaint originated outside the US.” You can connect the dots yourself on who has a reason to make an investigative exposé of Clickout Media vanish from search results, but we can’t say for certain.
What we can say for certain is that the takedown notice itself is laughably, almost impressively, bogus. You can read it yourself over at the Lumen Database. The complaint claims Press Gazette’s entirely original investigation infringes on an unrelated article published by The Verge. That Verge article? It’s actually about Google cracking down on sketchy SEO practices, the likes of which Clickout Media seems to engage in. Which is, if nothing else, a spectacularly on-the-nose URL to attach to a fraudulent takedown of an article about sketchy SEO practices.
The language of the notice is quite something:
The infringing news website has blatantly and willfully violated copyright law by copying our entire content word for word, including all images, which are solely owned by our company. This includes the complete replication of our original written material, as published on our official website, along with the proprietary visuals accompanying it. Despite multiple good-faith efforts to resolve this matter amicably, the infringing party (hereinafter referred to as “Infringer”) continues to unlawfully publish and distribute our copyrighted content without permission. This is a direct and flagrant breach of our rights and a clear violation of Google’s copyright policies. We hereby demand the immediate removal of this infringing material from Google search results to protect our intellectual property.
None of that is true. Not one word. The Press Gazette article is original reporting. It has nothing to do with the Verge piece cited as the “original” work. There were no “multiple good-faith efforts to resolve this matter amicably,” because there was no infringement to resolve. The whole thing reads like someone fed a prompt into a chatbot asking it to write an angry-sounding but legally meaningless DMCA notice, and then pointed it at an article they wanted to disappear.
As the Press Gazette report on the bogus takedown notes, SEO experts found the whole thing bizarre, in part because Google is actually much better than most at sniffing out bullshit DMCA takedowns. But this one they missed.
Writing on X, SEO consultant Glenn Gabe said: “Surprised this was approved by Google…This is a BS DMCA takedown that doesn’t even make sense.”
Google processes an absolutely massive volume of takedown requests and rejects a good chunk of them. But this is the Impossibility Theorem in action: at that kind of scale, even a system that works well most of the time will let nonsense through sometimes. One bad notice that should have been caught in a ten-second review slips past, and suddenly a major piece of investigative journalism is invisible to anyone searching for it.
The good news is that, as of March 31, the Press Gazette article was reinstated in Google’s search results. The system worked, eventually. But that ‘eventually’ is doing a lot of heavy lifting. The article was invisible during what was probably the peak window of public interest in the story. Legal challenges to DMCA takedowns can take weeks or months to resolve, and the people who file these bogus notices know that. The copyright-enabled censorship just has to last long enough to blunt the impact.
For what it’s worth, the Press Gazette isn’t the only outlet digging into Clickout Media’s practices. Aftermath recently published its own extensive investigation based on eight months of reporting and interviews with more than two dozen current and former employees. That piece documents AI-generated author profiles, fake credentials (one supposed writer claimed an MA from Oxford in a program the university confirmed has never existed), writers being told never to publicly acknowledge any connection to Clickout Media, and a systematic strategy of acquiring beloved gaming publications only to fill them with crypto casino links.
Clickout Media is getting more and more negative attention, and Streisanding the Press Gazette story by having it removed from search will probably just attract more investigative reporters to the subject.
The company already has a pretty sketchy pattern: buy a respected publication, exploit its reputation, squeeze out whatever search ranking value you can, and discard the husk. And when someone publishes an article documenting what you’re doing, apparently get someone to file a bullshit copyright claim to make that article disappear too. It’s sketchy SEO all the way down.
This is why those of us who spend our time in the weeds of internet law won’t shut up about how legal liability systems are structured. The DMCA’s notice-and-takedown framework already gives bad actors a weapon to suppress speech. You don’t need a legitimate copyright claim. You don’t even need a coherent one. You just need to file the paperwork and wait for an automated system to do its thing.
And every time someone proposes weakening Section 230, or creating new obligations for platforms to proactively police third-party content, or imposing liability for hosting material that someone claims is harmful — they are, whether they realize it or not, proposing to hand bad actors this same kind of weapon in a dozen new calibers. The DMCA is the version of this we already have, and we can see plainly how it gets abused. We should be fixing the current system, and punishing the widespread abuses, rather than spreading that same broken incentive structure to every other area of online speech.
Bad actors will always exploit whatever legal lever is available to suppress content they don’t like. The question for policymakers is whether you’re going to keep handing them more levers. These kinds of bogus DMCA takedowns should be a warning for all those demanding reforms “weakening” Section 230. Because if you think bogus DMCA takedowns are bad now, just wait until they’re not just about copyright.
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for April 2 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Poplar hawkmoth (Laothoe populi populi) male in Cumnor Hill, Oxfordshire, England. All of the insect is in focus after focus stacking 15 images.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for April 3 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Coro delle Monache, fresco of Deposition by Paolo Caylina the Younger in the Museo di Santa Giulia in Brescia. Today is Good Friday in Western Christianity.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for April 4 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Boy under waterfall in Phu Sang National Park, Thailand
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for April 5 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Stained glass windows in the Iglesia de El Salvador, Santa Cruz de La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain. From left to right:
Today is Easter Sunday in Western Christianity. |
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