U.S. Lawmakers Work on Unified Site-Blocking Bill to Counter Online Piracy [TorrentFreak]
The Supreme Court’s decision to reverse the billion-dollar piracy liability verdict against Cox Communications is a major win for Internet service providers.
It confirms that they can’t be held liable for pirating activities of subscribers or customers unless they actively induce copyright infringement through specific acts, or if their service has no substantial non-infringing uses.
For rightsholders, however, the ruling represents a significant setback, as it makes it much harder to hold ISPs liable for pirating subscribers.
Or, as Justice Sotomayor noted in her concurring Supreme Court opinion, the majority’s decision “permits ISPs to sell an internet connection to every single infringer who wants one without fear of liability and without lifting a finger to prevent infringement.”
The ruling reshapes the liability landscape, giving new urgency to site-blocking efforts.
Internet providers have previously opposed such legislation over liability concerns. Have those concerns been resolved by the Supreme Court? And where do the U.S. site-blocking legislative efforts stand today?
Last year, several new site-blocking proposals emerged in Congress. In January 2025, Lofgren had filed her Foreign Anti-Digital Piracy Act (FADPA) in the House. A few months later, Senator Tillis announced a draft of the Block BEARD Act, with bipartisan support from Senators Chris Coons, Marsha Blackburn, and Adam Schiff.
At the time, the House and Senate efforts were not coordinated. That has changed.
TorrentFreak has learned that, over the past months, Senator Tillis and Representative Lofgren have been working on a draft that would combine their separate site-blocking proposals into a single piece of legislation.
The unified approach marks a significant shift from the fragmented approach of the past year.
No draft text has been circulated publicly, and sources could not provide a specific timeline for introduction beyond noting it would need to happen before Tillis’s term ends in January 2027.
One possibility mentioned by sources is that the legislation could be attached to an omnibus spending bill. For now, however, that remains speculative.
While detailed specifics on the bill will have to wait until a draft is circulating, it is expected that the legislation will require both ISPs and large DNS providers to block foreign pirate sites.
This is in line with Lofgren’s original FADPA bill, which specifically included DNS resolvers with more than $100 million in annual revenue. Tillis’s Block BEARD act does not mention DNS resolvers, but uses the Section 512(k)(1)(A) DMCA service provider definition, which is wide enough to capture them.
The inclusion of DNS resolvers is significant, as it brings tech companies such as Google and Cloudflare into the mix. Targeting DNS resolvers is relatively novel internationally, as most site-blocking regimes do not explicitly include DNS providers.
We reached out to Google and Cloudflare, requesting comment, but they did not reply before publication. However, these companies have appealed similar blocking requests elsewhere, including in France, so they likely have reservations.
Notably, last year the Internet Infrastructure Coalition (I2Coalition), which represents major tech companies including Amazon, Cloudflare, and Google, launched its DNS at Risk campaign, warning the public about such DNS blocking threats.
Rightsholder groups including the RIAA, MPA, and Creative Future have supported the site-blocking efforts, while consumer advocates have raised concerns. However, the public discourse has been relatively quiet compared to the SOPA debates in 2012.
Times have changed and site blocking is much more common today than it was back then. That said, discussions, support, and critique will likely pick up when the legislation moves forward.
It is notable, however, that Representative Lofgren’s leading role is a shift from her position during the SOPA debates. At the time, she was among the fiercest opponents of SOPA in 2012, warning that blocking threatened the open internet.
Lofgren believes that her FADPA proposal is a “smart, targeted approach” that is mindful of due process, and respects free speech while using a narrow and targeted blocking approach.
Running parallel to the Tillis-Lofgren effort is a separate proposal from Representative Darrell Issa, chairman of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property, and the Internet.
Issa’s American Copyright Protection Act (ACPA) has been circulated in draft form for a while but has not been formally introduced. The bill takes a different procedural path. Rather than relying on standard district court jurisdiction, ACPA proposes that the Judicial Conference of the United States maintain a roster of designated judges to hear all piracy blocking cases.
Whether the Tillis-Lofgren framework and Issa’s separate effort will eventually converge remains unclear. Sources indicate that, in earlier stages, these were two separate, uncoordinated tracks.
Issa’s proposal also includes DNS resolvers. At the same time, it also addresses overblocking concerns directly. If a third party’s site is blocked due to an error caused by the copyright owner, the third party could request up to $250,000 in compensation from the rightsholder.
At the time of writing, the introduction timeline for the bicameral bill is unknown. However, Senator Tillis is not running for reelection. That gives him until January 2027 to advance the legislation and also creates a hard deadline.
Whether the bill surfaces as standalone legislation, gets attached to an omnibus spending package, or eventually blends with Issa’s separate ACPA proposal has yet to be seen. But it’s clear that, behind the scenes, lawmakers are still working on getting it ready.
With the Cox decision reshaping the legal landscape, site-blocking efforts have gained new urgency for both ISPs, DNS providers, and rightsholders.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Kanji of the Day: 様 [Kanji of the Day]
様
✍14
小3
Esq., way, manner, situation, polite suffix
ヨウ ショウ
さま さん
様子 (ようす) — state (of affairs)
様々 (さまさま) — our gracious (e.g., Queen)
同様 (どうよう) — same
皆様 (みなさま) — everyone
模様 (もよう) — pattern
奥様 (おくさま) — wife
お客様 (おきゃくさま) — guest
お母様 (おかあさま) — mother
同様に (どうように) — identically
仕様 (しよう) — way
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 殖 [Kanji of the Day]
殖
✍12
中学
augment, increase, multiply, raise
ショク
ふ.える ふ.やす
養殖 (ようしょく) — aquaculture
繁殖 (はんしょく) — breeding
増殖 (ぞうしょく) — increase
生殖 (せいしょく) — reproduction
高速増殖炉 (こうそくぞうしょくろ) — fast-breeder reactor
拓殖 (たくしょく) — colonization
繁殖期 (はんしょくき) — breeding season
繁殖地 (はんしょくち) — breeding grounds
養殖場 (ようしょくじょう) — nursery
真珠養殖 (しんじゅようしょく) — pearl culture
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Just for Skeets and Giggles (4.4.26) [The Status Kuo]
Eight million people turned out last Saturday for my birthday. I mean, for No Kings 3, which felt like a great birthday gift!
Speaking of my birthday, today is the last day of my birthday week sale, if you’re not already a paid supporter, with 20 percent off your first year’s subscription. All proceeds from the sale go to my children’s 529 education funds!
Here was my favorite commentary from last weekend:
This is evergreen, if you haven’t seen it. And more relevant than ever.
Trump declared he would build his presidential “library” inside a hotel or some other nonsense; it’s hard to keep track. Someone posted this incredible commentary on our times and the MAGA movement in response.
Note: Xcancel links mirror Twitter without sending traffic. Some GIFs may load; just swipe them down. Issues? Click the gear on the Xcancel page’s upper right, select “proxy video streaming through the server,” then “save preferences” at the bottom. For sanity, don’t read the comments; they’re all bots and trolls. Won’t load? Paste the link into your browser and remove “cancel” after the X in the URL.
The war in Iran now has that country—supposedly utterly, totally defeated per Trump—shooting down our fighter jets. Here’s The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart on where Trump has been focused instead.
You’ve seen many overdubbed versions of the classic Hitler bunker scene, but this one may be one of my all time favs.
But we’re deep in negotiations with Iran, right? Jon Stewart, again:
Trump also decided he would attend the Supreme Court oral arguments this past weekend on his birthright citizenship executive order. Jimmy Fallon had some observations:
In a leaked video of an Easter lunch, Trump‘s senior “faith adviser” compared him to Christ who has Risen. Okay, so…
She wasn’t the only one sucking up to 47. RFK Jr. claimed Trump did something quite amazing and superhuman.
In response, the Academy decided to create a whole new award category.
The big news of the week came courtesy of Kristi Noem’s cucked husband.
I want to be clear here. There is absolutely nothing wrong with people wanting to explore their sexuality in any consensual way they see fit.
A cheer went up in at least one writers’ room:
We can’t ignore Noem’s rank hypocrisy, so common to modern “conservatives.” Noem pushed for and signed restrictions on gender nonconforming expression and medical access, along with anti-LGBTQ “religious liberty” laws in her own state. So yeah, she deserves all the calling out that came her way.
There’s even a weird connection to Noem’s own obsession with cosplay…
We’re also allowed to comment on sloppy execution. I mean, can I level with you here?
Oh wow, he went there.
I try to keep abreast of the news, but come on.
Just tit-for-tat brutal.
The irony just kept ballooning.
This meme is never leaving us.
Many wondered who leaked the photos of Bryan Noem to the press.
When the truth came out, it proved karma can be quite on the nose.
Just when we thought we were done with wild news about Trump’s cabinet members, Trump canned Ms. Dow Jones 50K herself, Attorney General Pam Bondi.
Let’s check in with our favorite devil on the matter.
So who is next? Trekkers, you’ll appreciate this.
The Good Liars went and found the former commander-on-the-ground for ICE and the Border Patrol, the Nazi cosplaying obergruppenführer big man himself: Greg Bovino. Just gonna leave this short clip here.
Erika Kirk has sued comedian Druski for his skit depicting “conservative women.” And that’s a huge tell, considering he didn’t use her name. Exhibit A for the defense:
For the queer life of me, I’ll never get past the fact that they use this song as a MAGA anthem.
Conservative white men, explained.
Here’s another man who should have just backed down. I don’t advocate violence, but self-defense is perfectly acceptable.
Life in Trump’s America is like a game you can’t win.
A popular right-wing meme went around and got immediate pushback.
As for the other creatures,
The thought of us being able to handle actual magical creatures when…
In honor of Easter, let’s recall, from my friend Mark MacKillop, the time JK Rowling had a happier inclusive message for the world.
Here’s that birthday sale offer again in case you ignored it at the top! If you enjoy these weekly funnies and my daily politics and law columns, toss me a thanks by becoming a paid subscriber. Your support allows me to keep this free for people on fixed income and disability!
The award for most adorable blossom goes to…
My Windsor is obsessed with hose water, too. Maybe all doggos are.
Your moment of cat zen. (Apparently this kitty has a nervous condition and is famous in Turkey for appreciating music as a way to calm itself.)
Maybe she’s the Moth-er ship?
Respect. This is very crafty.
From this angle, this Tibetan fox looks like a large wolf, but is only the size of, well, a fox.
Llama Llama ding dong?
From a distance, you might think these are mere cats.
Sorry, I would probably cave and pet the wildlife in this sitch.
There was some reason for hope for our own species as NASA returned to deep space and the moon for the first time in many decades. I share this sentiment:
Hard not to feel excited, especially when something like this happens.
Once they got up there, though, uh oh…
Okay, one more political joke…
Spring is known for fast changes and big swings in the weather, but come on.
There was a PSA put out by KitKat Europe:
Wait, someone made off with them?
Suspicion spread widely.
Gimme a break!
The Miss Thailand contest had a breakout star.
From breakout to breakdown:
They fixed him, but… time to wave the Olaf branch?
Disney’s problems weren’t quite over.
I hear the feeling will crow on you.
With avian afflicted animatronic Rapunzels and zombie robot Olafs roaming about, how can human performers even hope to compete?
I had this very experience trying to connect my iPad to my TV last night.
April Fool’s Day was this week, and to those who saw my post, no I am not helping to launch AOC’s substack (though would if asked!). But on the subject of 4/1, this Price Is Right throwback left me gagged.
We know how the rest of the world sees us these days (not great, TBH). But how do they hear us?
I’m thinking a musical like Wicked, but make it Peter Pan from Hook’s point of view.
March Madness is coming to a close, but if you somehow missed this, there was a buzzer beater for the ages.
It’s almost as fun to watch the reactions of the sportscasters.
Here’s another angle, with that collective hush that falls over the crowd as the ball arcs toward its faraway target.
Watch the UConn coach’s mom in the crowd.
Also the dude behind her lololol
The reaction of UConn fans at a bar watching the game is priceless.
This is me lately…
And me with compulsory online training courses.
I held it together until the end, too!
If you’ve followed the news, this is chef’s kiss…
We say goodbye today with a spicy dad joke.
This saged well! Have a great weekend—
Jay
Game Jam Winner Spotlight: CARAMENTRAN [Techdirt]
It’s time for the second in our series of spotlight posts looking at the winners of our eighth annual public domain game jam, Gaming Like It’s 1930! We’ve already covered the Best Adaptation winner, and this week we’re looking at the winner of Best Deep Cut: CARAMENTRAN by RedSPINE and poymakes.
Sometimes, we get entries that were designed for more than one game jam, and this is one of them. In this case, the game was also created for the Themed Horror game jam in which one of the themes was “macabre carnival”. CARAMENTRAN delves specifically into a Provençal carnival tradition from France, in which the “King of Carnival” or Caramentran is put on trial for all the year’s ills then burned at the stake in punishment. As the player, you are Caramentran himself, trying to ward off accusations from the villagers while extinguishing the flames at your feet in a grimy, unsettling horror arcade game.

It’s a fitting premise for a horror game, but what makes it special for this game jam is its visual assets, drawn from a variety of public domain sources. The game’s hauntingly hideous aesthetic comes from a collage of archive images and postcards of actual carnivals in Southern France, combined with figures taken from American magazines, ads, and fashion plates.

Many of the materials are from 1930, while many others are from earlier, and the combination of wildly different styles is viscerally jarring in a way that amplifies the horror. There are no widely recognized images or famous works of art here, only fragments of visual language plucked piece by piece from the vast sea of imagery in the public domain, and for that it’s this year’s Best Deep Cut.
Congratulations to RedSPINE and poymakes for the win! You can play CARAMENTRAN in your browser on Itch. We’ll be back next week with another winner spotlight, and don’t forget to check out the many great entries that didn’t quite make the cut. And stay tuned for next year, when we’ll be back for Gaming Like It’s 1931!
Kanji of the Day: 敬 [Kanji of the Day]
敬
✍12
小6
awe, respect, honor, revere
ケイ キョウ
うやま.う
敬称略 (けいしょうりゃく) — titles omitted
尊敬 (そんけい) — respect
敬遠 (けいえん) — pretending to respect (someone) while in fact staying distant
敬意 (けいい) — respect
敬する (けいする) — to respect
表敬訪問 (ひょうけいほうもん) — courtesy call
敬語 (けいご) — honorific
表敬 (ひょうけい) — courtesy
敬愛 (けいあい) — respect and affection
敬称 (けいしょう) — title of honor
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 陪 [Kanji of the Day]
陪
✍11
中学
obeisance, follow, accompany, attend on
バイ
陪審員 (ばいしんいん) — juror
大陪審 (だいばいしん) — grand jury
陪審制 (ばいしんせい) — jury system
陪審制度 (ばいしんせいど) — jury system
陪審 (ばいしん) — jury
陪席 (ばいせき) — sitting with one's superior
陪審裁判 (ばいしんさいばん) — trial by jury
陪観 (ばいかん) — viewing something in the company of one's superior
陪餐 (ばいさん) — Lord's Supper (in Protestantism)
陪食 (ばいしょく) — dining with one's superior
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Where do bad choices come from? [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
We all make them from time to time.
You might not know what you need to know. This is where experience is created.
You might have an identity that pushes you to make those choices. If you’re determined to act like the person you have assumed you are, the choices come with the role.
Or, you might prioritize short-term benefits over the long-term costs of a bad choice. In this sense, the difference between a good choice and a bad one is simply which timeframe we’re considering.
Built into the idea of ‘choice’ is the agency and freedom to choose. But we waste that power every time we fail to realize we’re making a choice.
And there are two common reasons for this: we don’t believe we have the freedom to choose, or we’re not clear about what we’re trying to accomplish in the first place.
Pluralistic: EU ready to cave to Trump on tech (04 Apr 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
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Top Sources:
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Crises precipitate change. That's no reason to induce a crisis, but you'd be a fool to let a crisis go to waste. Donald Trump is the greatest crisis of our young century, and the EU looks set to squander the opportunity, to its own terrible detriment.
For more than a decade, it's been clear that the American internet was not fit for purpose. The whistleblowers Mark Klein and Edward Snowden revealed that the US had weaponized its status as the world's transoceanic fiber-optic hub to spy on the entire planet:
US tech giants flouted privacy laws, gleefully plundering the world's cash and data with products that they remorselessly enshittified:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/30/zucksauce/#gandersauce
American companies repurposed their over-the-air software update capabilities to remotely brick expensive machinery in service to geopolitical priorities:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/05/08/about-those-kill-switched-ukrainian-tractors/
Then Trump and his tech companies started attacking key public institutions around the world, shutting down access for senior judges who attempted to hold Trump's international authoritarian allies to account for their crimes:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/10/20/post-american-internet/#huawei-with-american-characteristics
If Trump wants to steal Greenland, he doesn't need tanks or missiles. He can just tell Microsoft and Oracle to brick the entire Danish state and all of its key firms, blocking their access to their email archives, files, databases, and other key administrative tools. If Denmark still holds out, Trump can brick all their tractors, smart speakers, and phones. If Denmark still won't give up Greenland, Trump could blackhole all Danish IP addresses for the world's majority of transoceanic fiber. At the click of a mouse, Trump could shut down the world's supply of Lego, Ozempic, and delicious, lethally strong black licorice.
Now, these latent offensive capabilities were obvious long before Trump, but the presidents who weaponized them in the pre-Trump era did so in subtle and deniable ways, or under a state of exception (e.g. in response to spectacular terrorist attacks or in the immediate aftermath of the Russian invasion of Ukraine) that let bystanders assure themselves that this wouldn't become a routine policy.
After all, America profited so much from the status quo in which America and its trading partners all pretended that US tech wouldn't be weaponized for geopolitical aims, so a US president would be a fool to shatter the illusion. And even if the president was so emotionally incontinent that he demanded the naked weaponization of America's defective, boobytrapped tech exports, the power blocs that the president relies on would stop him, because they are so marinated in the rich broth that America drained from the world using Big Tech.
This is "status quo bias" in action. No one wants to let go of the vine they're swinging from until they have a new vine firmly in their grasp – but you can't reach the next vine unless you release your death-grip on your current one. So it was that, year after year, the world allowed itself to become more dependent on America's easily weaponizable tech, making the tech both more dangerous and harder to escape.
Enter Trump (a crisis) (and crises precipitate change). Under Trump, the illusion of a safe interdependence crumbled. Every day, in new and increasingly alarming ways, Trump makes it clear that America doesn't have allies or trading partners, only adversaries and rivals. Every day, Trump proves to the world that American tech isn't merely untrustworthy – it's a live, dire, urgent danger to your state, your companies, and your people. The best time to get shut of the American internet was 15 years ago. The second best time is right fucking now.
NOW!
The result is the burgeoning movement to build a "post-American internet." In Canada, PM Mark Carney's announcement of a "rupture" has the country rethinking its deep connections to the American internet and asking what it could do to escape it:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/27/i-want-to-do-it/#now-make-me-do-it
Europe, meanwhile, has multiple, advanced, well-funded initiatives to leave the American internet behind and migrate to a post-American internet, like "Eurostack" and the European Digital Infrastructure Consortium:
https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/policies/edic
But status quo bias exerts a powerful gravity. A reactionary counterrevolution is being waged in the European Commission – the permanent bureaucracy that executes Europe's laws and regulations. Within the EC, an ascendant faction has announced plans for a "dialogue" with representatives from the Trump regime to let them direct the enforcement of the Digital Markets Act (DMA) and Digital Services Act (DSA), Europe's landmark 2024 anti-Big Tech regulations:
The DMA and DSA require America's tech giants to open up their platforms in ways that would halt the plunder of Europeans' private data and cash. US tech giants have flatly refused to comply with these rules, relying on Trump to get them out of any obligations under EU law:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/26/empty-threats/#500-million-affluent-consumers
That's a sound bet. After all, the last thing Trump did before his inauguration was publicly announce his intention to destroy any country that attempted to enforce these laws:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/us/politics/trump-davos-europe-tariffs.html
He's making good on his threats. He's already sanctioned a group of officials who helped draft the DSA:
And he's ordered his tech companies to turn over the private emails and messages of other European officials, so he can identify the ones most dangerous to US tech plunder and sanction them, too:
The quislings and appeasers in the Commission who've been spooked by Trump's belligerence (or tempted by offers of cushy jobs in Big Tech after they leave public service) are selling out the EU's future. Caving to Trump won't make him more favorably disposed to Europe or Europeans. Trump treats every capitulation as a sign of weakness that signals that he can safely ignore his end of the bargain and demand twice as much. For Trump, the "art of the deal" can be summed up in one word: reneging.
Within the EU, there's fury at the Commission's announcement of "dialogue." As Politico's Milena Wälde reports, lawmakers like Alexandra Geese (Greens) say that this is a move that eliminates the "sovereign path for Europe" by letting tech giants "grade their own homework." She calls it a "fatal decision for our companies and our democracy."
Moving to the post-American internet is hard – but it will only get harder. Sure, Europe could wait for the next crisis to let go of the Big Tech vine and grab the Eurostack one, but that next crisis will be far, far worse. The EU can't afford to wait for Trump to brick one or more of its member states to (finally, at long last) take this threat seriously:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/01/39c3/#the-new-coalition

Homocore Anthology https://www.flukemags.com/product/homocore
Lessons from History: The DOJ vs Microsoft https://open-web-advocacy.org/blog/our-submission-to-the-cma-on-apples-ios-interoperability-commitments/#3-lessons-from-history-the-doj-vs-microsoft
Data Sharing and Syndication Remedies in US v Google https://insights.sumitsharma.consulting/p/google-search-remedies-implementation?hide_intro_popup=true
Who Goes AI? https://www.todayintabs.com/p/who-goes-ai
#10yrsago Among a Thousand Fireflies: children’s book shows the sweet, alien love stories unfolding in our own backyards https://memex.craphound.com/2016/04/01/among-a-thousand-fireflies-childrens-book-shows-the-sweet-alien-love-stories-unfolding-in-our-own-backyards/
#10yrsago After biggest bribery scandal in history, police raids and investigations https://www.smh.com.au/business/police-raids-and-more-revelations-the-fallout-of-the-unaoil-scandal-20160401-gnw9mx.html
#10yrsago Bernie Sanders’ South Bronx rally, featuring Rosario Dawson, Spike Lee, and Residente https://www.c-span.org/program/campaign-2016/senator-bernie-sanders-campaign-rally-in-south-bronx/437114
#10yrsago Freshman Missouri Rep almost made it 3 months before introducing bill urging members to say “fiscal,” not “physical” https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/03/31/hero-lawmaker-urges-colleagues-to-stop-saying-physical-when-they-mean-fiscal/
#10yrsago Indiana women phone the governor’s office to tell him about their periods https://web.archive.org/web/20160401170206/https://fusion.net/story/286941/periods-for-pence-indiana-women-calling-governor/
#10yrsago United pilot orders Arab-American family off his flight for “safety” https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/national-international/united-airlines-arab-american-plane/58370/
#10yrsago 33 state Democratic parties launder $26M from millionaires for Hillary https://www.counterpunch.org/2016/04/01/how-hillary-clinton-bought-the-loyalty-of-33-state-democratic-parties/
#10yrsago White SC cops pull black passenger out of car, take turns publicly cavity-searching him https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2016/04/01/video-shows-white-cops-performing-roadside-cavity-search-of-black-man/
#5yrsago The zombie economy and digital arm-breakers https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/02/innovation-unlocks-markets/#digital-arm-breakers
#5yrsago Ontario's drug-dealer premier is shockingly bad at distributing vaccines https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/01/incompetent-drug-dealer/#what-a-dope
#5yrsago The zombie economy and digital arm-breakers https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/02/innovation-unlocks-markets/#digital-arm-breakers
#1yrago What's wrong with tariffs https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/02/me-or-your-lying-eyes/#spherical-cows-on-frictionless-surfaces
#1yrago What's wrong with tariffs https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/02/me-or-your-lying-eyes/#spherical-cows-on-frictionless-surfaces
#1yrago Anyone who trusts an AI therapist needs their head examined https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/01/doctor-robo-blabbermouth/#fool-me-once-etc-etc

Montreal: Bronfman Lecture (McGill), Apr 10
https://www.eventbrite.ca/e/artificial-intelligence-the-ultimate-disrupter-tickets-1982706623885
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
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/
Tanner Humanities Lecture (U Utah)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6Yf1nSyekI
"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

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Minnesota Kicks Off Legal Battle With Trump Administration To Hold ICE Shooters Accountable [Techdirt]
This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
They asked nicely at first.
After an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed Renee Good, a 37-year-old mother of three who’d recently moved to Minneapolis, local law enforcement officials requested a partnership with the federal government to investigate the case, as they’d done in past shootings involving federal agents.
When the Trump administration refused to cooperate, Minnesota prosecutors ratcheted up their efforts. They sent a series of strongly worded legal letters demanding evidence in the Good shooting as well as the shootings of Julio Cesar Sosa-Celis, a Venezuelan immigrant who was wounded a week after Good was shot, and Alex Pretti, who was killed on Jan. 24.
Still, the administration rebuffed the requests.
This week, prosecutors from Hennepin County and the state of Minnesota took the next step to force the Trump administration’s hand. They filed a federal lawsuit against the departments of Homeland Security and Justice over the evidence in the shootings, an action that Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty, whose jurisdiction covers Minneapolis, characterized as “unprecedented in American history.”
The Trump administration has declined to release the names of the agents involved in the shootings, even after the Minnesota Star Tribune and ProPublica identified the officers involved in the Good and Pretti incidents.
“The federal government has refused to cooperate with state law enforcement, which is unique, rare and simply cannot be tolerated,” Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison told reporters. “[We] can’t sit around and let them do it.”
In the standoff over evidence, the case has already become a game of constitutional chicken over states’ rights versus federal immunity, a battle that will have implications for others who wish to hold agents in the president’s immigration surge criminally accountable.
So far, neither side is showing signs of backing down, foreshadowing a fight that could take years. If prosecutors do eventually file charges against federal agents involved in the shootings, legal experts said the path to trial, much less winning convictions, will be filled with legal and procedural challenges.
“State prosecutors across the country are going to be watching what happens in Minnesota really closely,” said Alicia Bannon, director of the judiciary program at the nonprofit Brennan Center for Justice.
The first test for prosecutors, if they file charges, would be to prove the agents don’t qualify for immunity through the Constitution’s supremacy clause, a rarely invoked legal doctrine that protects federal officers from state prosecutions if they’re acting lawfully and within the scope of their duties.
Failing to pass that test would likely end the case.
The U.S. Supreme Court hasn’t taken up a case involving supremacy clause immunity in over 100 years, Bannon said, and judges have come down differently on legal issues related to its application.
There’s no easy answer as to whether Minnesota will be able to get past a supremacy clause defense, said Jill Hasday, a constitutional law professor at the University of Minnesota.
“That depends on the facts, but probably the odds are stacked against it,” she said.
Even if they survive such a fight, the cases could be dogged by a series of logistical challenges. Moriarty, who has been leading the investigations, has decided not to seek reelection and will leave office at the end of the year. That means whoever wins the election for her seat in November could inherit the prosecutions.
In addition to not having the names of the agents, prosecutors don’t know where those agents are now. Minnesota may need to extradite them, potentially from a MAGA-leaning state that may balk at sending them to Hennepin County to stand trial.
“Will the federal government or other states cooperate with that? I think the answer to that is sort of iffy,” said Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University in Virginia. (Indeed, in a case involving a doctor charged with illegally mailing abortion medication to a Louisiana woman, the state of California has rejected an extradition request, citing its own laws protecting doctors from prosecution elsewhere.)
The fight is focused on three shootings. But Moriarty’s office has opened criminal investigations into 14 additional cases of potentially unlawful behavior by federal agents during Operation Metro Surge, which started in early December and has wound down over the past few weeks.
The other cases Moriarty is examining involve allegations of excessive force or other misconduct by federal agents, such as an incident in early January in which agents allegedly used force on staff and students on the grounds of a high school.
Prosecutors are also investigating Gregory Bovino, the outgoing Border Patrol commander who helped to lead immigration surges into several American cities and who was seen on video lobbing green-smoke canisters into crowds at a park in Minneapolis. A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said at the time that Bovino and other agents were responding to a “hostile crowd.”
The tension has played out in a series of demand letters sent by Moriarty to the Justice and Homeland Security departments. “Public transparency is vitally important in these cases — not just for the people of Hennepin County and Minnesota, but for the public nationwide,” Moriarty wrote in one of the letters. “The only way to achieve transparency is through investigation conducted at a local level.”
In January, after the shooting of Good, federal officials had agreed to participate in a joint investigation with the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension — Minnesota’s state police agency tasked with examining use of deadly force cases — according to the letters signed by Moriarty.
State officials presumed they’d be able to examine evidence, such as the car Good was driving and the guns used to shoot her and the other victims. But the investigators later learned through public statements by high-ranking Trump administration officials that federal agents were no longer planning to share evidence, the letter states.
Local and state prosecutors don’t have the authority to subpoena them for evidence like in a typical criminal investigation. The demand letters, called Touhy letters, are formal written requests, used as an alternative to a subpoena, asking a federal agency to provide evidence or testimony in a case in which the government is not a party. Moriarty sought an extensive list of evidence in the shootings, from the guns fired by the agents in all three cases to official reports, agent GPS devices and witness statements. The Touhy letters asked for a response by Feb. 17.
Normally, the federal government complies with Touhy letters as a matter of protocol, as long as releasing the information doesn’t violate an internal policy, said Timothy Johnson, a political science and law professor at the University of Minnesota.
But on Feb. 13, the FBI told BCA investigators that it won’t share investigative materials in the Pretti case, BCA Superintendent Drew Evans said in a statement. Evans said the police agency had reiterated its requests for evidence in the Good and Sosa-Celis cases.
More than a month after the deadline set by prosecutors, the Trump administration still hasn’t turned over the materials.
“There has been no cooperation from federal authorities,” BCA spokesperson Michael Ernster said.
The agents involved in the shootings have not spoken publicly, but a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security defended Good’s shooting, saying the agent acted in self-defense. They said the Pretti shooting was under investigation by the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security, with the Border Patrol conducting its own investigation. Those investigations could result in discipline or charges, including for civil rights violations.
The Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said federal officials found that, after Sosa-Celis’ shooting, officers made false statements. But the agency did not say whether it would cooperate with the local authorities or follow a court ruling requiring it to do so.
The Justice Department did not respond to a request for comment or to questions. Neither agency has responded to the lawsuit.
Moriarty called the lawsuit “critically important” to investigating the shooting cases but also said she had not made any decisions on whether her office will file charges.
“There has to be an investigation anytime a federal agent or a state agent takes the life of a person in our community,” she said. “And ultimately the decision may be it was lawful. You don’t know, but that’s why you do the investigation. You are transparent with the results of that investigation, and you are public with your transparency about the decision and how you got there.”
But a lawsuit does not guarantee that prosecutors will get all they want. “The question then becomes, even if Hennepin County or Minneapolis wins the suit, will they comply then?” Johnson asked. “And the answer is probably no.”
If the Trump administration did eventually defy a judge’s order, he said, prosecutors could try to appeal up to the U.S. Supreme Court. As far as what could happen next: “It’s anyone’s guess.”
In Chiles V. Salazar The Supreme Court Issues A Bad Good First Amendment Decision [Techdirt]
The Supreme Court’s decision last year in U.S. v. Skirmetti, upholding a law depriving young trans people the healthcare they need, is insupportable, rendering people unequal in a way the Constitution cannot possibly suborn. But its new decision in Chiles v. Salazar regarding the First Amendment standard to use regarding Colorado’s law regarding conversion therapy is different. Despite its similar subject matter relating to sexual orientation and gender identity sounding similar to Skirmetti, it’s actually another 303 Creative, another case that endorsed bigoted views unacceptably hostile to LGBTQ+ people. But for much the same reason that 303 Creative was an important articulation of the First Amendment’s expansive protection—despite the apparent prejudice the plaintiff (and the Court) advanced—so is this decision.
That’s what’s good about this decision, that it recognizes that the First Amendment operates in the professional licensing space and requires heightened scrutiny before states can be permitted to constrain licensing when those constraints are predicated on viewpoints expressed by the licensee, including as part of the provision of services. Heightened scrutiny is what makes the First Amendment’s protections meaningful, and the Court has not always been consistent or coherent in requiring it, particularly with respect to licensure. But when heightened scrutiny isn’t required, it becomes much harder to fight censorial actions taken by the government, including those driven by animus, and including those driven by anti-LGBTQ+ animus—which would also include those actions targeted at therapists supporting LGBTQ+ patients, such as those recently announced by Ken Paxton in Texas. This Supreme Court decision now makes it much, much harder for him to get away with silencing those therapists whose therapy affirmed their patients’ identity by putting their license at risk if they do.
The main problem with this decision however is that the Court picked a law prohibiting conversion therapy as the moment to finally articulate that heightened scrutiny applies with respect to licensing, including medical licensing. Conversion therapy, as Justice Jackson described in her dissenting opinion, is a scientifically-discredited approach “designed to ‘convert’ a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity, so that the person will become heterosexual or cisgender.” [Dissent p.3]. Historically it has been provided via “aversive modalities,” that many have likened to torture, such as “inducing nausea, vomiting, or paralysis in patients or subjecting them to severe electric shocks to telling patients to snap an elastic band on their wrists in response to nonconforming thoughts.” [Dissent p.3]
Importantly, however, to the extent that any law prohibits these practices, those laws remain in force—this decision does not affect such laws. (“The question before us is a narrow one. Ms. Chiles does not question that Colorado’s law banning conversion therapy has some constitutionally sound applications. She does not take issue with the State’s effort to prohibit what she herself calls ‘long-abandoned, aversive’ physical interventions.” [Majority p.7]). But it does reach conversion therapy delivered via talk therapy, where therapists “seek to encourage patients to change their behavior in an attempt to ‘change’ their identity” still are. [Dissent p.3]. As Jackson explained, this approach also causes real harm. [Dissent p.4-5]. And it’s a kind of harm that states like Colorado, who passed the law challenged here, have an interest in stopping. [Dissent p.5-7].
Making it hard for states to do so raises a number of concerns, such as that the decision will give a veneer of legitimacy to conversion therapy and stoke the hostile anti-LGBTQ+ attitudes driving it, as well as create the risk that conversion therapy, at least insofar as it includes talk therapy, might be something that minors could be legally subjected to in Colorado and elsewhere. There is also the fear that even if the Court has now articulated a good rule about heightened scrutiny it will only remember to apply it in cases like these where it will lead to results consistent with the Court majority’s biases—in other words, while the Court may be happy to subject Colorado’s anti-conversion therapy rule to strict scrutiny, there is the fear that it will conveniently forget to apply it to, say, Texas’s law trying to punish those who refuse to engage in it.
It also raises a collateral concern even on the speech-protection front, that subjecting licensure requirements to strict scrutiny could have the practical effect of diluting the standard. As Jackson also noted, we have long allowed states to regulate medical professionals, [Dissent p.8], as well as other licensed professionals like lawyers, and much of the regulation is directed to how licensed practitioners speak in some way as they provide their services. Perhaps all these efforts could actually pass strict scrutiny. In fact, it’s even still possible that Colorado’s law might yet survive it; although Justice Gorsuch’s majority opinion casts some doubt, the case is not over.
Rather than deciding it for themselves, the Court remanded the case back to the lower courts to this time apply the more exacting strict scrutiny standard rather than the less-demanding rational basis review they originally applied. Presumably there will be more opportunity for briefing and argument to show how the particular harm of conversion therapy creates the compelling state interest Colorado needed to act, and that its prohibition of licensed therapists from providing it via talk therapy is a remedy that is sufficiently narrowly tailored.
But the problem with applying strict scrutiny to so much regulation targeting licensing is that it might start to become too easy to satisfy when there are strong policy reasons to favor the government action, and as a result strict scrutiny will no longer be useful as a standard if it essentially allows everything, instead of being a meaningful filter. There are after all always compelling reasons for the government to care about the quality of the services licensees deliver via their professional expression, but just because the government has a valid reason to regulate does not mean that everything it does to regulate is constitutional.
Strict scrutiny also requires that the state action be narrowly tailored, in addition to being motivated by a compelling reason, and it’s too easy for courts to skip that part of the analysis, as we saw with the TikTok ban when it was somehow blessed by the DC Circuit. And the fear is that the more strict scrutiny is applied to what is fairly ordinary state regulation—of licensed practitioners—the more likely it will have the practical effect of creating precedent that dilutes the standard so that it is no longer so strict when we need it to be, especially for state action that is more exceptional. (On the TikTok ban the Supreme Court had greenlighted it using a lesser standard, which was itself extremely problematic as the ban should have been found unconstitutional, but at least the tool that should have applied to it remained sharp for future use, rather than dulled by this bad decision.)
On the other hand, a decision upholding the lower courts’ use of rational basis review would have done no one any favors. As Justice Kagan wrote in her concurrence, joined by Justice Sotomayor, it is easy to imagine a law that mirrors what the Colorado one does, prohibiting talk therapy that accepts LGBTQ+ identity instead of challenges it, and now advocates are left with a much more powerful tool to challenge it.
Of course, it does not matter what the State’s preferred side is. Consider a hypothetical law that is the mirror image of Colorado’s. Instead of barring talk therapy designed to change a minor’s sexual orientation or gender identity, this law bars therapy affirming those things. As Ms. Chiles readily acknowledges, the First Amendment would apply in the identical way. [Concurrence p.3]
As Texas shows, such a situation is not hypothetical. But now with this decision people challenging such censorial government efforts can turn to long-established First Amendment doctrine in their fight. And the doctrine remains stable, rather than something now swiss-cheesed with bespoke exceptions tied to certain policy preferences. No matter how valid those preferences, if they can be given special constitutional treatment then so can the bad ones. This decision helps buttress the guardrails preventing speech from being protected or not based on whether the government likes it, which is the whole reason we have the First Amendment, to make sure government preferences cannot dictate what views people can express.
Which is especially important when the courts cannot be trusted to overcome their biases to have good sense about which policy preferences are good and bad. The Supreme Court of course only has itself to blame that the public is so primed to believe that its decisions are driven by its biases and not neutral, sustainable doctrine. But nevertheless this decision still stands as an important declaration of law that is consistent with existing First Amendment jurisprudence and one that will ultimately leave everyone, including those challenging government actions attacking LGBTQ+ interests, far better off than if the Court had let the lower courts’ decisions invalidating the law stand after using a less speech-protective rule. In fact it will be an important one for anyone fighting censorship in any context, including those we generally talk about here, to use, because with this decision, the rule that has long been the rule remains the rule: when a government action non-incidentally touches on speech, is content-based, and is not viewpoint neutral, strict scrutiny applies.
Per this decision, a law targeting what therapists can say inherently involves speech, and not in an incidental way. And it targets it in a way that is not viewpoint-neutral; it has a specific preference, that conversion therapy is bad. As a result, as a law that targets the content of speech in a way that is not viewpoint-neutral, strict scrutiny, a more exacting standard than the rational basis review the lower courts had used, is required.
Turning to the merits, both the district court and the Tenth Circuit denied Ms. Chiles’s request for a preliminary injunction. The courts recognized that Ms. Chiles provides only “talk therapy.” And they acknowledged that Colorado’s law regulates the “verbal language” she may use. But, the courts held, the main thrust of the State’s law is to delineate which “treatments” and “therapeutic modalit[ies]” are permissible. Accordingly, the courts reasoned that Colorado’s law is best understood as regulating “professional conduct.” At most, they continued, Colorado’s law regulates speech only “incidentally” to professional conduct. As a result, the courts concluded, Colorado’s law triggers no more than “rational basis review” under the First Amendment, requiring the State to show merely that its law is rationally related to a legitimate governmental interest. Because the State satisfied that standard, the courts held that Ms. Chiles was not entitled to the relief she sought. [Majority p.6]
[…]
Consistent with the First Amendment’s jealous protections for the individual’s right to think and speak freely, this Court has long held that laws regulating speech based on its subject matter or “communicative content” are “presumptively unconstitutional.” Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 576 U. S. 155, 163 (2015). As a general rule, such “content-based” restrictions trigger “strict scrutiny,” a demanding standard that requires the government to prove its restriction on speech is “narrowly tailored to serve compelling state interests.” Ibid. Under that test, it is ” ‘rare that a regulation . . . will ever be permissible.’ ” Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Assn., 564 U. S. 786, 799 (2011) (quoting United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc., 529 U. S. 803, 818 (2000)).
We have recognized, as well, the even greater dangers associated with regulations that discriminate based on the speaker’s point of view. When the government seeks not just to restrict speech based on its subject matter, but also seeks to dictate what particular “opinion or perspective” individuals may express on that subject, “the violation of the First Amendment is all the more blatant.” Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of Univ. of Va., 515 U. S. 819, 829 (1995). “Viewpoint discrimination,” as we have put it, represents “an egregious form” of content regulation, and governments in this country must nearly always “abstain” from it. Ibid.; see also Iancu v. Brunetti, 588 U. S. 388, 393 (2019) (describing “the bedrock First Amendment principle that the government cannot discriminate” based on view-point (internal quotation marks omitted)); Good News Club v. Milford Central School, 533 U. S. 98, 112–113 (2001); Barnette, 319 U. S., at 642. [Majority p.8-9]
[…]
As applied here, Colorado’s law does not just regulate the content of Ms. Chiles’s speech. It goes a step further, prescribing what views she may and may not express. For a gay client, Ms. Chiles may express “[a]cceptance, support, and understanding for the facilitation of . . . identity exploration.” For a client “undergoing gender transition,” Ms. Chiles may likewise offer words of “[a]ssistance.” But if a gay or transgender client seeks her counsel in the hope of changing his sexual orientation or gender identity, Ms. Chiles cannot provide it. The law forbids her from saying anything that “attempts . . . to change” a client’s “sexual orientation or gender identity,” including anything that might represent an “effor[t] to change [her client’s] behaviors or gender expressions or . . . romantic attraction[s].” [Majority p.13]
But even if the law as it stands can’t survive strict scrutiny, in her concurrence, joined by Justice Sotomayor, Justice Kagan suggested ways the law might be amended so that it could be upheld.
It would, however, be less [likely to be unconstitutional] if the law under review was content based but viewpoint neutral. Such content-based laws, as the Court explains, trigger strict scrutiny “[a]s a general rule.” But our precedents respecting those laws recognize complexity and nuance. We apply our most demanding standard when there is any “realistic possibility that official suppression of ideas is afoot”—when, that is, a (merely) content-based law may reasonably be thought to pose the dangers that viewpoint-based laws always do. Davenport v. Washington Ed. Assn., 551 U. S. 177, 189 (2007). But when that is not the case—when a law, though based on content, raises no real concern that the government is censoring disfavored ideas—then we have not infrequently “relax[ed] our guard.” Reed, 576 U. S., at 183 (opinion of KAGAN, J.); see Davenport, 551 U. S., at 188 (noting the “numerous situations in which [the] risk” of a content-based law “driv[ing] certain ideas or viewpoints from the marketplace” is “attenuated” or “inconsequential, so that strict scrutiny is unwarranted”). Just two Terms ago, for example, the Court declined to apply strict scrutiny to a content-based but viewpoint-neutral trademark restriction. See Vidal v. Elster, 602 U. S. 286, 295 (2024); id., at 312 (BARRETT, J., concurring in part); id., at 329–330 (SOTOMAYOR, J., concurring in judgment). In the trademark context, as in some others, experience and reason alike showed “no significant danger of idea or viewpoint” bias. R. A. V., 505 U. S., at 388.
The same may well be true of content-based but viewpoint-neutral laws regulating speech in doctors’ and counselors’ offices.* Medical care typically involves speech, so the regulation of medical care (which is, of course, pervasive) may involve speech restrictions. And those restrictions will generally refer to the speech’s content. Cf. Reed, 576 U. S., at 177 (Breyer, J., concurring in judgment) (noting that “[r]egulatory programs” addressing speech “inevitably involve content discrimination”). But laws of that kind may not pose the risk of censorship—of “official suppression of ideas”—that appropriately triggers our most rigorous review. R. A. V., 505 U. S., at 390. And that means the “difference between viewpoint-based and viewpoint-neutral content discrimination” in the health-care context could prove “decisive.” Vidal, 602 U. S., at 330 (opinion of SOTOMAYOR, J.). Fuller consideration of that question, though, can wait for another day. We need not here decide how to assess viewpoint-neutral laws regulating health providers’ expression because, as the Court holds, Colorado’s is not one. [Concurrence p.3-4]
Ultimately, despite all of the concerns, the decision is still a good one that will leave everyone better off. And not just for cases that reach the Supreme Court but in every state and federal court hearing every challenge of laws trying to penalize certain views, including those accepting of LGBTQ+ identities. Whereas a decision to the contrary, one that would have allowed a rational basis standard to be the test for the law’s constitutionality, could be used to defend laws that, instead of fighting LGBTQ+ prejudice as this one tried to do, instead advanced it. As Texas illustrates, already there are examples of certain government actors attempting to impose their biased viewpoints via licensing requirements for therapists. This decision, even if it may stand as an individual reflection of LGBTQ+ animus by this Supreme Court, still makes further state action motivated by it that much harder for any government actor to impose.
Can Agentic AI Coding Tools Finally End Copyright For Software While Re-Inventing Open Source? [Techdirt]
Most of the discussions about the impact of the latest generative AI systems on copyright have centered on text, images and video. That’s no surprise, since writers, artists and film-makers feel very strongly about their creations, and members of the public can relate easily to the issues that AI raises for this kind of creativity. But there’s another creative domain that has been massively affected by genAI: software engineering. More and more professional coders are using generative AI to write major elements of their projects for them. Some top engineers even claim that they have stopped coding completely, and now act more as a manager for the AI generation of code, because the available tools are now so powerful. This applies in the world of open source software too. But a recent incident shows that it raises some interesting copyright issues there that are likely to affect the entire software world.
It concerns a project called chardet, “a universal character encoding detector for Python. It analyzes byte strings and returns the detected encoding, confidence score, and language.” A long and detailed post on Ars Technica explains what has happened recently:
The [chardet] repository was originally written by coder Mark Pilgrim in 2006 and released under an LGPL license that placed strict limits on how it could be reused and redistributed.
Dan Blanchard took over maintenance of the repository in 2012 but waded into some controversy with the release of version 7.0 of chardet last week. Blanchard described that overhaul as “a ground-up, MIT-licensed rewrite” of the entire library built with the help of Claude Code to be “much faster and more accurate” than what came before.
Licensing lies at the heart of open source. When Richard Stallman invented the concept of free software, he did so using a new kind of software license, the GPL. This allows anyone to use and modify software released under the GPL, provided they release their own code under the same license. As the above description makes clear, chardet was originally released under the LGPL – one of the GPL variants – but version 7.0 is licensed under the much more permissive MIT license. According to Ars Technica:
Blanchard says he was able to accomplish this “AI clean room” process by first specifying an architecture in a design document and writing out some requirements to Claude Code. After that, Blanchard “started in an empty repository with no access to the old source tree and explicitly instructed Claude not to base anything on LGPL/GPL-licensed code.”
That is, generative AI would appear to allow open source licenses like the GPL to be circumvented by rewriting the code without copying anything directly from the original. That’s possible because AI is now so good at coding that the results can be better than the original, as Blanchard proved with version 7.0 of chardet. And because it is new code, it can be released under any license. In fact, it is quite possible that code produced by genAI is not covered by copyright at all, for the same reason that artistic output created solely by AI can’t be copyrighted. If the license can be changed or simply cancelled in this way, then there is no way to force people to release their own variants only under the GPL, as Stallman intended. Similarly, the incentive for people to contribute their own improvements to the main version is diminished.
The ramifications extend even further. These kind of “AI clean room” implementations could be used to make new versions of any proprietary software. That’s been possible for decades – Stallman’s 1983 GNU project is itself a clean-room version of Unix – but generally requires many skilled coders working for long periods to achieve. The arrival of highly-capable genAI coding tools has brought down the cost by many orders of magnitude, which means it is relatively inexpensive and quick to produce new versions of any software.
In effect, generative AI coding systems make copyright irrelevant for software, both open source and proprietary. That’s because what is important about computer code is not the details of how it is written, but what it does. AI systems can be guided to create drop-in replacements for other software that are functionally identical, but with completely different code underneath.
Companies that license their proprietary software will probably still be able to do so by offering support packages plus the promise that they take legal responsibility for their code in a way that AI-generated alternatives don’t: businesses would pay for a promise of reliability plus the ability to sue someone when things go wrong. But for the open source world these are not relevant. As a result, the latest progress in AI coding seems a serious threat to the underlying development model that has worked well for the last 40 years, and which underpins most software in use today. But a wise post by Salvatore “antirez” Sanfilippo sees opportunities too:
AI can unlock a lot of good things in the field of open source software. Many passionate individuals write open source because they hate their day job, and want to make something they love, or they write open source because they want to be part of something bigger than economic interests. A lot of open source software is either written in the free time, or with severe constraints on the amount of people that are allocated for the project, or – even worse – with limiting conditions imposed by the companies paying for the developments. Now that code is every day less important than ideas, open source can be strongly accelerated by AI. The four hours allocated over the weekend will bring 10x the fruits, in the right hands (AI coding is not for everybody, as good coding and design is not for everybody).
Perhaps a new kind of open source will emerge – Open Source 2.0 – one in which people do not contribute their software patches to a project, as they do today, but instead send their prompts that produce better versions. People might start working directly on the prompts, collaborating on ways to fine tune them. It’s open source hacking but functioning at a level above the code itself.
One possibility is that such an approach could go some way to solving the so-called “Nebraska problem”: the fact that key parts of modern digital infrastructure are underpinned up by “a project some random person in Nebraska has been thanklessly maintaining since 2003”. That person may not receive many more thanks than they have in the past, but with AI assistants constantly checking, rewriting and improving the code, at least the selfless dedication to their project becomes a little less onerous, and thus a little less likely to lead to programmer burn out.
Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky. Originally published to Walled Culture.
Daily Deal: Hypergear 3-in-1 Wireless Charging Dock [Techdirt]
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“There is no alternative” [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
TINA!
This is what Margaret Thatcher said about her draconian free market policies.
It’s an easy thing to tell ourselves about compliance to any dominant system. But it’s incomplete.
The complete sentence is, “There is no alternative unless we’re prepared to endure short-term discomfort as we push back against the dominant system.”
So the real question isn’t, “what’s the alternative?”
The question is: “Can we create the conditions to cause this system to change enough for us to do the long-term work we’re proud of?”
Systems don’t like to be disrupted. Persistent systems push us to believe TINA.
A Rogues Gallery Poll: Who’s Next? [The Status Kuo]
Trump has now sacked both his Secretary of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, and his Attorney General, Pam Bondi.
Noem got the ax because her optics were terrible and for committing the unforgivable sin of saying Trump signed off on her corrupt self-dealing. Bondi is out as of yesterday after failing to deliver criminal prosecutions of Trump’s political foes and has, in Trump’s mind, badly mishandling the Epstein files.
Trump’s approval numbers are down across the board. The economy is a mess, job growth is effectively zero, inflation is running high with gas prices leading the way, draconian immigration enforcement has lost public support, the Epstein files are still lurking with high profile hearings coming up, and the war in Iran is now one deadly war crime after another with no end in sight.
This is a recipe for a midterm wipeout. So Trump is trying to right the ship and signal changes within his cabinet. With these two recent and high-profile firings, it’s time to line up some heads of lettuce and ask the logical question: Who will Trump can next?
And for extra fun, I’m including my very first newsletter poll on this question! Check it out at the end of today’s write-up.
Kash Patel
FBI Director Kash Patel is high on any next-to-go list. This erstwhile podcaster turned drunken frat mascot racked up a string of embarrassments, including using a private jet for personal trips that apparently even delayed Charlie Kirk’s murder investigation. Iranians also recently hacked his private emails. I wonder what they say?
Karoline Leavitt
Everyone’s least favorite in-your-face Christian could also be on the chopping block. Trump has publicly mused about how terrible a job Leavitt is doing. There are brutal skits online about how abrasive she is and how poorly she handles the press. And with his poll numbers cratering and messaging failing, why not blame the messenger?
Howard Lutnick
The Commerce Secretary is a longtime pal of Trump and the public face of his increasingly unpopular economic policies, including those sky-high tariffs. If Trump is looking to signal a shift in economic strategy, getting rid of Lutnick would be a start. Plus, Lutnick got caught lying about his close ties to Jeffrey Epstein—never a good look for anyone in Trump’s orbit.
Pete Hegseth
Trump has already laid the blame for the rush to war with Iran squarely at his Defense Secretary’s feet. Hegseth has created problems from the get-go, from SignalGate to the ill-fated and unsuccessful Houthi conflict, ballooning Pentagon spending, and recent insider trading allegations. If the Iran war goes very badly and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, how long before he throws Hegseth under the bus for it?
Tulsi Gabbard
The Director of National Intelligence (DNI) may also be involuntarily heading for the exits. She failed to deliver on a much-hyped treason conspiracy over Barack Obama, which generated plenty of noise before fizzling for lack of evidence. Trump has mused privately with advisors about whether to fire Gabbard over Iran, particularly after she defended the former director of counter-terrorism, Joe Kent, who resigned earlier in protest over the war.
So who’s your pick for the next Trump official to be told, “You’re fired”? Vote in the poll below!1 And Happy Schadenfriday!
There’s another possibility: Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer. Hers isn’t a household name, so I’m not listing her in the poll because 1) I can only list five choices, and 2) no one really cares that much about her outside of Washington, D.C. circles. But inside the Beltway, there is much whispering and ridicule. That’s because Chavez-DeRemer allegedly used department resources for personal trips and tried to steer grants to towards her political career. A complaint alleges she was having an affair with a member of her security team, while her husband was barred from the building after staffers accused him of sexual assault. It’s a Trump-level mess in every sense.
The Social Media Addiction Verdicts Are Built On A Scientific Premise That Experts Keep Telling Us Is Wrong [Techdirt]
Last week, I wrote about why the social media addiction verdicts against Meta and YouTube should worry anyone who cares about the open internet. The short version: plaintiffs’ lawyers found a clever way to recharacterize editorial decisions about third-party content as “product design defects,” effectively gutting Section 230 without anyone having to repeal it. The legal theory will be weaponized against every platform on the internet, not just the ones you hate. And the encryption implications of the New Mexico decision alone should terrify everyone. You can read that post for more details on the legal arguments.
But there’s a separate question lurking underneath the legal one that deserves its own attention: is the scientific premise behind all of this even right? Are these platforms actually causing widespread harm to kids? Is “social media addiction” a real thing that justifies treating Instagram like a pack of Marlboros? We’ve covered versions of this debate in the past, mostly looking at studies. But there are other forms of expert analysis as well.
Long-time Techdirt reader and commenter Leah Abram pointed us to a newsletter from Dr. Katelyn Jetelina and Dr. Jacqueline Nesi that digs into exactly this question with the kind of nuance that’s been almost entirely absent from the mainstream coverage. Jetelina runs the widely read “Your Local Epidemiologist” newsletter, and Nesi is a clinical psychologist and professor at Brown who studies technology’s effects on young people.
And what they’re saying lines up almost perfectly with what we’ve been saying here at Techdirt for years, often to enormous pushback: social media does not appear to be inherently harmful to children. What appears to be true is that there is a small group of kids for whom it’s genuinely problematic. And the interventions that would actually help those kids look nothing like the blanket bans and sweeping product liability lawsuits that politicians and trial lawyers are currently pursuing. And those broad interventions do real harm to many more people, especially those who are directly helped by social media.
Let’s start with the “addiction” question, since that’s the framework on which these verdicts were built. Here’s Nesi:
There is much debate in psychology about whether social media use (or, really, any non-substance-using behavior outside of gambling) can be called an “addiction.” There is no clear neurological or diagnostic criteria, like a blood test, to make this easy, so it’s up for debate:
- On one hand, some researchers argue that compulsive social media use shares enough features (loss of control, withdrawal-like symptoms, continued use despite harm) to warrant the diagnosis for treatment.
- Others say the evidence for true neurological dependency is still weak and inconsistent because research relies on self-reported data, findings haven’t been replicated, and many heavy users don’t show true clinical impairment without pre-existing issues.
Her bottom line is measured and careful in a way that you almost never hear from the politicians and lawyers who claim to be acting on behalf of children:
Here’s my current take: There are a small number of people whose social media use is so extreme that it causes significant impairment in their lives, and they are unable to stop using it despite that impairment. And for those people, maybe addiction is the right word.
For the vast majority of people (and kids) using social media, though, I do not think addiction is the right word to use.
That’s a leading expert on technology and adolescent mental health, someone who has personally worked with hospitalized suicidal teenagers, telling you that for the vast majority of kids, “addiction” is the wrong word. And she has a specific, evidence-based reason for why that distinction matters — one that should be of particular interest to anyone who actually wants platforms held accountable for the kids who are being harmed.
Nesi argues that overusing the addiction label doesn’t just lack scientific precision. It actively weakens the case for meaningful platform accountability:
Preserving the precision of the addiction label — reserving it for the small number of kids whose use is genuinely compulsive and impairing — actually strengthens the case for platform accountability, rather than weakening it. It’s that targeted claim that has driven legal action and regulatory pressure. Expanding it to average use shifts focus from systemic design fixes to individual diagnosis, and dilutes the very argument that holds platforms responsible.
This is a vital point that runs counter to the knee-jerk reactions of both the trial lawyers and the moral panic crowd. If you say every kid using social media is an addict, you’ve made the concept of addiction meaningless, and you’ve made it dramatically harder to identify and help the kids who are actually suffering. You’ve also given platforms an easy out: if everyone’s addicted, then it’s just a feature of how humans interact with technology, and nobody is specifically responsible for anything. Precision is what creates accountability. Vagueness destroys it.
We highlighted something similar back in January, when a study published in Nature’s Scientific Reports found that simply priming people to think about their social media use in addiction terms — such as using language from the U.S. Surgeon General’s report — reduced their own perceived control, increased their self-blame, and made them recall more failed attempts to change their behavior. The addiction framing itself was creating a feeling of helplessness that made it harder for people to change their habits. As the researchers in that study put it:
It is impressive that even the two-minute exposure to addiction framing in our research was sufficient to produce a statistically significant negative impact on users. This effect is aligned with past literature showing that merely seeing addiction scales can negatively impact feelings of well-being. Presumably, continued exposure to the broader media narrative around social media addiction has even larger and more profound effects.
So we’re stuck with a situation where the dominant public narrative — “social media is addicting our children” — appears to be both scientifically imprecise and actively counterproductive for the people it claims to help. That’s a real problem. And it would be nice if the moral panic crowd would start to recognize the damage they’re doing.
None of this means there are no risks. Nesi is quite clear about that, drawing on her own clinical work:
A few years ago, I ran a study with adolescents experiencing suicidal thoughts in an inpatient hospital unit. Many of the patients I spoke to had complex histories of abuse, neglect, bullying, poverty, and other major stressors. Some of these patients used social media in totally benign, unremarkable ways. A few of them, though, were served with an endless feed of suicide-related posts and memes, some romanticizing or minimizing suicide. For those patients, it would be very hard to argue that social media did not contribute to their symptoms, even with everything else going on in their lives.
Nobody who has paid serious attention to this issue disputes that. There are kids for whom social media is a contributing factor in genuine mental health crises. The question has always been whether that reality justifies treating social media as an inherently dangerous product that harms all children — the premise on which these lawsuits and legislative bans are built.
The evidence consistently says no. When it comes to whether social media actually causes mental health issues, the newsletter is direct:
The scientific community has substantial correlational evidence and some, but not much, causal evidence of harm. Studies that randomly assigned people to stop using social media show mixed results, depending on how long they stopped, whether they quit entirely or just reduced use, and what they were using it for.
And:
It is still the case that if you take an average, healthy teen and give them social media, this is highly unlikely to create a mental illness.
This is consistent with what we’ve been reporting on for years, including two massive studies covering 125,000 kids that found either a U-shaped relationship (where moderate use was associated with the best outcomes and no use was sometimes worse than heavy use) or flat-out zero causal effect on mental health. Every time serious researchers go looking for the inherent-harm story that politicians keep telling, they come up empty.
One of the most fascinating details in the newsletter is the Costa Rica comparison. Costa Rica ranks #4 in the 2026 World Happiness Report. Its residents use just as much social media as Americans. And yet:
It doesn’t necessarily have fewer mental illnesses. And it certainly doesn’t have less social media use. What it has is a deep social fabric, and that may mean social media use reinforces real-world connections in Costa Rica, whereas in English-speaking countries, it may be replacing them.
In other words, cultural factors appear to be protective. The underlying challenges to social foundations — trust, connection, belonging, and safety — are what drive happiness. Friendships, being known by someone, the sense that you belong somewhere: these are the actual load-bearing pillars of mental health, more predictive of wellbeing than income, and more protective against mental illness than almost any intervention we have.
If social media were inherently harmful — if the “addictive design” of infinite scroll and autoplay and algorithmic recommendations were the core problem — Costa Rica would be suffering the same outcomes as the United States. They have the same platforms, same features, and same engagement mechanics. What actually differs is the strength of the social fabric, not the tools themselves.
This is a similar point I raised in my review of Jonathan Haidt’s book two years ago. If you go past his cherry-picked data, you can find tons of countries with high social media use where rates of depression and suicide have gone down. There are clearly many other factors at work here, and little evidence that social media is a key factor at all.
That realization completely changes how we should think about policy. If the problem is weak social foundations — not enough connection, not enough belonging, not enough adults showing up for kids — then banning social media or suing platforms into submission won’t fix it. You’ll have addressed the wrong variable. And in the process, you’ll have made the platforms worse for the many kids (including LGBTQ+ teens in hostile communities, kids with rare diseases, teens in rural areas) who rely on them for the connection and community that their physical environment doesn’t provide.
Nesi’s column has some practical advice that is pretty different than what that best selling book might tell you:
If you know your teen is vulnerable, perhaps due to existing mental health challenges or social struggles, you may want to be extra careful.
If your teen is using social media in moderation, and it does not seem to be affecting them negatively, it probably isn’t.
That sounds so obvious it feels almost silly to type out. And yet it is the exact opposite of the approach we see in the lawsuits and bans currently dominating the policy landscape, which assume social media is a universally dangerous product requiring universal restrictions.
The newsletter closes with a key line that highlights the nuance that so many people ignore:
Social media may be one piece of the puzzle, but it’s certainly not the whole thing.
We’ve been making this point at Techdirt for a long time now, often in the face of considerable hostility from people who are deeply invested in the simpler narrative. I’ve written about Danah Boyd’s useful framework of understanding the differences between risks and harms, and how moral panics confuse those two things. I’ve covered so many studies that find no causal link that I’ve lost count. I’ve pointed out how the “addiction” framing may be doing more damage than the platforms themselves.
That’s why it’s encouraging to see credentialed, independent researchers — people who work directly with the most vulnerable kids — end up in the same place through their own work. Because this conversation desperately needs more voices willing to acknowledge both realities: that some kids are genuinely harmed and need targeted help, and that the sweeping narrative of universal social media harm is not supported by the science and leads to policy responses that may hurt far more people than they help.
The kids who are in that small, genuinely vulnerable group deserve interventions designed for them — better mental health funding and access along with better identification of at-risk youth. What they don’t deserve is to have their suffering used as a blunt instrument and a prop to reshape the entire internet through lawsuits built on a scientific premise that the actual scientists keep telling us is wrong.
Senators Ask Tulsi Gabbard To Tell Americans That VPN Use Might Subject Them To Domestic Surveillance [Techdirt]
This may not be an actual “Wyden siren,” but it still has his name attached to it. What’s being said here isn’t nearly as ominous as this single sentence he sent to CIA leadership earlier this year:
I write to alert you to a classified letter I sent you earlier today in which I express deep concerns about CIA activities.
Few people are capable of saying so much with so little. This one runs a bit longer, but it has implications that likely run deeper than the surface level issue raised by Wyden and others in a recent letter to Trump’s (satire is dead) Director of National Intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard. Here are the details, as reported by Dell Cameron for Wired:
In a letter sent Thursday to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, the lawmakers say that because VPNs obscure a user’s true location, and because intelligence agencies presume that communications of unknown origin are foreign, Americans may be inadvertently waiving the privacy protections they’re entitled to under the law.
Several federal agencies, including the FBI, the National Security Agency, and the Federal Trade Commission, have recommended that consumers use VPNs to protect their privacy. But following that advice may inadvertently cost Americans the very protections they’re seeking.
The letter was signed by members of the Democratic Party’s progressive flank: Senators Ron Wyden, Elizabeth Warren, Edward Markey, and Alex Padilla, along with Representatives Pramila Jayapal and Sara Jacobs.
That’s alarming. It’s also a conundrum. VPN use (often required for remote logins to corporate systems) is a great way to secure connections that are otherwise insecure, like those made originating from people’s homes (to log into their work stuff) or utilizing public Wi-Fi. There are also more off-the-book uses, like circumventing regional content limitations or just ensuring your internet activity can’t be tied to your physical location.
The trade-off depends on the threat you’re trying to mitigate. It’s kind of like the trade-off in cell phone security. Using biometrics markers to unlock your phone might be the best option if what you’re mainly concerned with is theft of your device. A thief might be able to guess a password, but they won’t be able to duplicate an iris or a fingerprint.
But if the threat you’re more worried about is this government, you’ll want the passcode. Courts have generally found that fingerprints and eyeballs aren’t “testimonial,” so if you’re worried about being compelled to unlock your device, the Fifth Amendment tends to favor passwords, at least as far as the courts are concerned.
It’s almost the same thing here. VPNs might protect you against garden-variety criminals, but the intentional commingling of origin/destination points by VPNs could turn purely domestic communications into “foreign” communications the NSA can legally intercept (and the FBI, somewhat less-legally can dip into at will).
That’s the substance of the letter sent to Gabbard, in which the legislators ask the DNI to issue public guidance on VPN usage that makes it clear that doing so might subject users to (somewhat inadvertent) domestic surveillance:
Americans reportedly spend billions of dollars each year on commercial VPN services, many of which are offered by foreign-headquartered companies using servers located overseas. According to the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, VPNs have the potential to be vulnerable to surveillance by foreign adversaries. While Americans should be warned of these risks, they should also be told if these VPN services, which are advertised as a privacy protection, including by elements of the federal government, could, in fact, negatively impact their rights against U.S. government surveillance. To that end, we urge you to be more transparent with the American public about whether the use of VPNs can impact their privacy with regard to U.S. government surveillance, and clarify what, if anything, American consumers can do to ensure they receive the privacy protections they are entitled to under the law and Constitution.
I wouldn’t expect a response from ODNI. I mean, I wouldn’t expect one in any case, but I especially don’t expect Tulsi Gabbard to respond to a letter sent by a handful of Democratic Party members.
A warning would be nice, but even an Intelligence Community overseen by competent professionals, rather than loyalists and Fox News commentators would be hard-pressed to present a solution. To be fair, this letter isn’t asking for a fix, but rather telling the Director of National Intelligence to inform the public of the risks of VPN usage, including increasing their odds of being swept up in NSA dragnets.
Certainly the NSA isn’t concerned about “incidental collection.” It’s never been too concerned about its consistent “incidental” collection of US persons’ communications and data in the past and this isn’t going to budge the needle, especially since it means the NSA would have to do more work to filter out domestic communications and the FBI would be less than thrilled with any efforts made to deny it access to communications it doesn’t have the legal right to obtain on its own.
Since the government won’t do this, it’s up to the general public, starting with everyone sharing the contents of this letter with others. VPNs can still offer considerable security benefits. But everyone needs to know that domestic surveillance is one of the possible side effects of utilizing this tech.
Yout.com Hopes Supreme Court’s Cox Ruling Helps Its Case; RIAA Disagrees [TorrentFreak]
YouTube downloaders and other nifty tools are seen as a major piracy threat by the music industry.
To curb this trend, music companies have taken legal action against various stream-ripping services. This includes Yout.com, which is operated by the American developer Johnathan Nader.
Nader is not easily defeated, however. In 2020 he took the RIAA to court in an attempt to have the site declared legal.
At the end of 2022, the district court handed a win to the RIAA and dismissed the matter at an early stage. Judge Stefan Underhill concluded that Yout had failed to show that it doesn’t circumvent YouTube’s technological protection measures. As such, it could be breaking the law. That wasn’t the end though.
Yout’s operator opted to appeal at the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, asking it to reverse the lower court’s decision. The stream-ripper’s arguments are partly supported by amicus briefs from GitHub and the EFF, both of which joined the case.
On the other side of the aisle, the RIAA dug in its heels. The music group saw no reason to doubt the lower court’s position and, in its response to the appeal, found the Copyright Alliance at its side.
The Second Circuit appeal has been pending for a while, but some fresh arguments appeared this week, after the Supreme Court issued its ruling in Cox v. Sony, reversing a billion-dollar verdict against the internet service provider and narrowing the standard for contributory copyright liability.
Yout’s lawyers were quick to flag the decision to the Second Circuit via a supplemental authority letter. They argued that the Supreme Court’s discussion of when a service is ‘tailored to infringement’ has bearing on Yout’s own situation.
“Although Cox Communications is not an anti-circumvention case, it nonetheless may provide useful guidance to the Court in the present case as the Supreme Court discusses when a ‘service is tailored to infringement’,” Yout’s counsel wrote.

The Supreme Court held that a service that has noninfringing uses cannot be held liable, even if the operator knows that the service may be used for copyright infringement. Yout suggests the same logic should apply in its case.
Shortly after Yout informed the court, the RIAA sent a direct response.
“Yout’s letter is not helpful to the resolution of this case,” RIAA writes. “The Cox decision addresses common law contributory liability for infringement. Yout’s complaint involves statutory anti-circumvention claims.”
The distinction matters according to the RIAA, as the anti-circumvention of the DMCA (Section 1201) operates independently of the contributory liability doctrine. This means that a technology with noninfringing uses can still be prohibited under Section 1201, if it meets one of three criteria.
Under 17 U.S.C. §§ 1201(a)(2) and 1201(b)(1), liability for trafficking exists if a technology or service meets any one of these three disjunctive criteria:
RIAA argues that all these criteria are met here, as Yout is designed to let users save local copies of YouTube content, its revenue model depends on that downloading functionality, and it markets itself explicitly as a stream recording tool, while borrowing the first four letters of YouTube’s name.
Whether this exchange of opinions will influence the Second Circuit’s eventual decision has yet to be seen. The key issue on appeal remains whether YouTube’s rolling cipher qualifies as a technological protection measure under Section 1201 of the DMCA, and whether Yout circumvents it.
—
A copy of Yout’s Rule 28(j) letter is available here (pdf). The RIAA’s response can be found here (pdf).
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
The Trump Administration Is Trying To Steal $21 BIllion Earmarked For Better Broadband [Techdirt]
A quick refresher: there was originally $42.5 billion in broadband grants headed to the states thanks to the 2021 infrastructure bill most Republicans voted against (yet routinely try to take credit for among their constituents).
But after taking office this second time, the Trump administration rewrote the grant program’s guidance to eliminate provisions ensuring the resulting broadband is affordable to poor people, and to ensure that Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos gets billions in new broadband subsidies for their fledgling satellite broadband networks.
Money given to Bezos and Musk is money not spent on better, faster, local fiber optics (especially popular community owned networks). A serious broadband policy would ensure that open access fiber is the priority, followed by wireless, with satellite filling the gaps. Satellite was never intended to be the primary delivery mechanism for broadband, because of obvious congestion and capacity constraints.
The Trump NTIA is doing all of this under the pretense that giving taxpayer money to billionaires (for satellite service they already planned to deploy) instead of spending it on high quality fiber is “saving taxpayers money.” That’s generally resulted in widespread delays for this BEAD (Broadband, Equity, Access and Deployment) program, despite Republicans spending much of last election season complaining this program was taking too long.
The Trump NTIA hijacking of the program has also created a $21 billion pool of “non deployment funds” made up of the fake savings Republicans claim they created by screwing up the program. There’s a looming fight emerging over what happens to that money. Congress and the infrastructure law specifically states this money is supposed to be dedicated to expanding broadband access.
States would obviously like to use this money either for broadband, or for local infrastructure. But you get the sense that this giant wad of cash is very tempting for the Trump administration to just hijack and use as an unaccountable slush fund, doled out to its most loyal red state allies (or just kept by the “Treasury”).
After delays and excuses extended in to last summer, the Trump NTIA was supposed to provide guidance for states on how this money could be used earlier this month, but has been a no show:
“Under pressure from senators at an appropriations hearing, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick last month sought to calm fears when he said that so-called “non-deployment” funds under the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment, or BEAD, program would not be rescinded.
But with no guidance so far from the department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration, which was expected but delayed this week, lawmakers and others are pushing to have their voice heard on exactly how states will be able to use the $21 billion pot of money.”
It’s not clear if states can trust the word of Lutnick (who’s been a little distracted by Epstein allegations). The Trump administration has threatened (quite illegally) to withhold BEAD funding entirely from states that attempt to stand up to telecom monopolies or insist that taxpayer-funded broadband is affordable. There were also several initiatives to withhold BEAD funds if states tried to regulate AI.
Unsurprisingly, many states are afraid to be honest about what a cock up this whole hijacking has been in the press for fear of losing billions in potential (and already technically awarded) funding.
There’s a real potential here that taxpayer money that was originally earmarked for future-proof, ultra-fast fiber network is going to be repurposed into a general free for all slush fund that gets redirected to whoever praises the Trump administration the most. And I wouldn’t be surprised that this ultimately results in state lawsuits against the federal government for redirecting funds.
“I think the state officials who think they’re going to be made whole, need to reread the Merchant of Venice, because [NTIA boss Arielle] Roth is coming for her pound of flesh,” Sascha Meinrath, Palmer Chair in Telecommunications at Penn State University, told me in an email. “I wouldn’t be at all surprised if it’s operationalized in a way to directly target or disadvantage blue states — whether in what it does, or what’s tied to the acceptance of the funding.”
One last side note: last election season the “abundance” folks like Ezra Klein spent ample time parroting GOP criticism of the admitted delays and problems with this BEAD program (ignoring why the program took so long, as well as other examples of similar broadband grant programs from the same year doing well) as an example of a Democratic bureaucratic dysfunction.
But I’ve noticed that since Trump hijacked the program, introduced massive delays, redirected billions to billionaires, and even tried to run off with half the funding, the subject hasn’t been revisited by Klein since. Quite generally (since infrastructure just doesn’t get those clicks) the press coverage of this whole mess has ranged from nonexistent to positively tepid.
Lulu Is a Technology Company [The Business of Printing Books]

Lulu, as of 2026, is 24 years old. In the tech world, that puts us in a league with a very small number of highly successful and resilient companies. When you’ve been around this long, you learn something crucial: longevity isn’t about branding or marketing or sales. It’s about careful and calculated engineering decisions.
At Lulu, at least in our current iteration, the driving force for the business isn’t a storefront, a product, or sales efforts. Those all contribute. But Lulu has always succeeded when the focus is on the platform. Lulu is not a publisher, a printer, or a book distributor. We do those things, but as a business, what we are is a technology platform that connects creators and their audience with manufacturing and fulfillment partners. Alex Osterwalder calls this a “multi-sided platform” in his book, Business Model Generation.
That means the work that matters most is rarely flashy. We are building systems that are scalable, stable when traffic spikes, and flexible enough to adapt to unique printing, logistics, and fulfillment needs. This was not an easy task and took years of work from every part of the Lulu team to get our platform to the place it is today.
When I joined Lulu, our technology stack and code base were not-so-fondly referred to as “the big ball of spaghetti.” There were too many moving parts, too many distinct coding languages, and not enough internal knowledge about how the spaghetti worked to make changes without breaking something.
We rebuilt because we had to. The goal wasn’t novelty. The goal was a coherent platform that a team can actually run, improve weekly, and keep improving for years.
In conversations with Bob Young (Lulu’s owner and a founder of Red Hat) over the years, one phrase has stuck with me: we have to get better at moving knowledge from one generation to the next. This issue was evident in Lulu’s code base.
The historic Lulu site was amazing for its time. In our first decade, Lulu printed millions of books for thousands of creators, helping them with distribution to retailers and, eventually, direct-to-consumer sales. But as the team at Lulu grew and shifted, vital knowledge was lost, leaving the team I took over in 2015 scattered. We worked hard every day just to ensure the health of the site, with no time to develop it further.

I saw—and I think everyone at the time saw this too—that to continue to provide our service, Lulu had to go all in on renewing our technology. That started with eliminating barriers.
Accessibility became a technical requirement for us. Both from a developer standpoint and for our users.
If publishing is only “accessible” when the platform is behaving, then it isn’t really accessible. And if making an update, however small, causes system instability, it’s also not accessible.
I’m based in Germany, and I’ve been Lulu’s Chief Technical Officer (CTO) for over ten years. I got here through one of the most unusual and lucky moments of my life: a printer I knew in the Netherlands introduced me to Lulu’s CEO at the time, and eventually we met in person. We talked for four hours about printing, technology, and the publishing industry. Not long after, he called me up and offered me a job.
Before Lulu, I was part of a company called PediaPress, where we built software to export selected Wikipedia articles and print them as a book. We’ve worked with the Wikimedia Foundation since 2007, and PediaPress still donates 10% of revenues to Wikipedia.
That project taught me a lot about publishing and digital printing at the time. Some things I learned from my time working with PediaPress:
I took the successes and failures from PediaPress and came to Lulu with fresh eyes and a desire to find a way to improve on these processes. Many of the others in the print-on-demand, publishing, and distribution spaces, like Ingram or Amazon, were not interested in innovating, making things easier for users, or building for longevity. They focused on the bottom line, on getting users through the process and purchasing.
I wanted to build something that would stand the test of time and ensure publishing continued to thrive.
Lulu’s platform has endured 24 years of innovation and change. When I came on board, the tech stack had become very diverse—multiple databases, programming languages, and approaches layered on top of one another. The result was a system that was difficult to understand and hard to change. The “big ball of spaghetti.”

Assessing where Lulu was at the time and where everyone at the company agreed we wanted to go, I began the arduous task (along with a team of talented developers) of redesigning Lulu’s site. To ensure we had the practical control over the code that we needed, we decided on a microservices architecture.
In the developer world, microservices were very much en vogue at the time; we chose them to counteract the relative complexity of Lulu’s platform.
By using the microservices design, we were able to split the large mess of code into small services, making the platform easier to understand, easier to adapt and add on to, and far easier for our team to manage. We started implementing this in 2017.
Over the following three years, we built experimental sites like Lulu xPress and developed our Open APIs to prove the microservices architecture was right for Lulu’s future.
In 2020, just as the world shut down due to COVID-19, lulu.com relaunched. This move took us completely from the old technology stack while simultaneously rebranding the site. This was a huge endeavor, unraveling the ball of spaghetti and leaving us with something more coherent and easier to manage. Despite some setbacks (we moved the launch date back three times), we finally launched in April 2020.

Those early weeks were stressful. People still joke that they have PTSD from those days. We worked day and night, and I even slept in my office for weeks. We fixed bugs, helped users find files lost in the migration, and worked diligently to ensure every Lulu user was able to enjoy this new platform.
But the truth is: you cannot prepare for everything. At Lulu’s scale, there are too many edge cases to test every scenario ahead of time. The part I’m most proud of is how the company showed up. When things were rough, the team held together—engineering, marketing, customer service—everyone knew what was at stake.
After about three months, we got over the biggest hurdles, kept customers happy, and stabilized the platform.
It was hard, but it was worth it.

The new microservices architecture allowed us to innovate and evolve the platform in ways that were previously impossible. That includes the visible work, like quickly updating site pages or fixing bugs, but it also includes the unglamorous work behind the scenes.
To put this into perspective, with our old site, any newly released feature or fix would require a long period of testing to ensure the site could handle it. And even then, we would see issues that caused instability or actually broke the site. That would require rolling back and looking again at our update.
Since launching the updated platform and code base, we have released between fifteen and forty-five bug fixes, features, and improvements per week. Over the last five years, we’ve fixed over 10,000 bugs. This is a truly monumental change in how we manage and improve Lulu. And it’s allowed us to build hundreds of new features, without causing any issues for the users.
There’s also a business outcome that matters just as much: our infrastructure costs are now flat. We can scale up for the holiday season or when onboarding an enterprise customer without costs climbing. Just as important, we can scale back down if needed and still control our costs.
Create a Lulu Account today to print and publish your book for readers all around the world
I say this often because it’s true: ideas are cheap. Execution is the hard part. Because having a good idea is not a problem. Executing and getting that idea to the stage where it's really working takes much more effort.
Execution looks like our Quality Assurance team saying, “We’re going to do our best to break this,” and meaning it. As developers, we get attached to our work, much the same way an author is attached to their stories. Now, with a versatile infrastructure in place, we could truly own that work and begin the process of continuously improving and growing it.
So we ideate, and we execute. Over and over, releasing as I said, dozens of fixes and improvements each week. As a result, Lulu has become a truly robust, powerful tool for publishing, printing, and fulfilling orders. All because of the careful and thoughtful decisions my team makes every day.
Most people will never care that those decisions happened. They’ll only notice if we get them wrong.
One of my favorite examples of “problem first, tool second” is the Order Import tool.
It came out of an idea I had from my earlier PediaPress work. There’s an organization called Humble Bundle that wanted to donate to Wikipedia, and they approached me to help create a few books. They had over 2,500 supporters for that fundraiser, and I had to send everybody the right book. It was a huge pain. To handle the problem, I had to write programs to use Lulu’s Print API. Better than doing it manually, but still a large amount of effort.
That’s right, I had to review, process, and place all 2,500+ orders myself.
That pain is a signal. I felt the frustration and annoyance that comes with that much tedious work. And if it was a headache for me, I was certain it was just as much of a headache for conference organizers, reunion planners, authors running a pre-sale, and any business trying to ship numerous books to numerous people at once.
So we decided to fix this issue for our users. I envisioned a simple path:
Since releasing the Order Import tool, it’s become one of the fastest-growing and most popular additions to Lulu since we launched Lulu Direct.
In technology, there’s a notion of pet versus cattle.
Your computer at home is your pet: it’s specialized, personalized, and meant to fulfill your specific needs. But at Lulu, we treat the infrastructure like cattle. Likewise, for the books we print. Everything goes through the same standardized process. This ensures quality and consistency for any volume, be it a single book, a hundred books, or thousands.
That’s one of the most important criteria for a tech company’s success: building a process that doesn’t require adding more people as volume grows.
You can see it in how customers use our platform. Some years ago, an artist, Michael Mandiberg, wanted to print Wikipedia (yes, all of it at the time). We helped him prepare files, and he uploaded nearly 7,500 volumes with a script. And last year, a user uploaded 45,000 personalized Sudoku books. This caused an obvious spike in our data, but it didn’t disrupt the Lulu as a service.
That’s the goal: repeatable processes that keep working when creativity shows up at scale.
Sell books on your Wix, Shopify, or WooCommerce website with Lulu Direct.
Or use our Order Import tool for your next book launch.
Going forward, I foresee a future where Lulu acts as a complete publishing hub: your Lulu connection opens up access to everything our print and fulfillment network offers.
For example, we currently offer sixteen trim sizes. But some of our printers offer many, many more options. As we continue to develop Lulu, there will likely come a time when you can request a specific size and set of book specs, routing that order to the specific printer that can handle those projects.
Lulu stores your files, validates them for printing, enables ordering, and helps manage fulfillment, while you're in control of routing decisions. Like everything we do at Lulu, the goals stay the same:
Organizational structure mirrors the organization and infrastructure behind that company. This is called Conway’s Law. Seeing how Lulu has evolved (thanks to Lulu’s Marketing team's efforts to share our brand story) is fairly easy. But seeing how that evolution is mirrored and often informed by our tech stack is harder to notice.
The work we do in the background is what makes Lulu run smoothly, leaving us able to innovate and improve. And we are, every week, with every new update and release, improving a small piece of the platform without causing any disruption to creators like you.
Despite early perception, Lulu has always been a technology company. We understand creators and businesses need stable, consistent, and reliable printing and fulfillment. So we keep building publishing infrastructure that stays accessible as the world changes, using microservices to make adaptation fast and seamless.
Kanji of the Day: 炭 [Kanji of the Day]
炭
✍9
小3
charcoal, coal
タン
すみ
二酸化炭素 (にさんかたんそ) — carbon dioxide
石炭 (いしずみ) — coal
炭素 (たんそ) — carbon (C)
炭水化物 (たんすいかぶつ) — carbohydrate
練炭 (れんたん) — briquette (charcoal or coal)
炭鉱 (たんこう) — coal mine
木炭 (きずみ) — charcoal
炭酸 (たんさん) — carbonic acid
炭焼き (すみやき) — charcoal making
炭火 (すみび) — charcoal fire
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 逓 [Kanji of the Day]
逓
✍10
中学
relay, in turn, sending
テイ
かわ.る たがいに
逓信 (ていしん) — communications (e.g., post, telegraph)
逓信省 (ていしんしょう) — Ministry of Communications and Transportation (dissolved in 1949)
駅逓 (えきてい) — delivery of packages
逓減 (ていげん) — gradual decrease
駅逓局 (えきていきょく) — post office
逓降変圧器 (ていこうへんあつき) — step-down transformer
逓送 (ていそう) — forwarding
逓次 (ていじ) — successively
逓増 (ていぞう) — gradual increase
逓倍器 (ていばいき) — multiplier (e.g., frequency)
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
DOGE Goes Nuclear: How Trump Invited Silicon Valley Into America’s Nuclear Power Regulator [Techdirt]
This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
Last summer, a group of officials from the Department of Energy gathered at the Idaho National Laboratory, a sprawling 890-square-mile complex in the eastern desert of Idaho where the U.S. government built its first rudimentary nuclear power plant in 1951 and continues to test cutting-edge technology.
On the agenda that day: the future of nuclear energy in the Trump era. The meeting was convened by 31-year-old lawyer Seth Cohen. Just five years out of law school, Cohen brought no significant experience in nuclear law or policy; he had just entered government through Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency team.
As Cohen led the group through a technical conversation about licensing nuclear reactor designs, he repeatedly downplayed health and safety concerns. When staff brought up the topic of radiation exposure from nuclear test sites, Cohen broke in.
“They are testing in Utah. … I don’t know, like 70 people live there,” he said.
“But … there’s lots of babies,” one staffer pushed back. Babies, pregnant women and other vulnerable groups are thought to be potentially more susceptible to cancers brought on by low-level radiation exposure, and they are usually afforded greater protections.
“They’ve been downwind before,” another staffer joked.
“This is why we don’t use AI transcription in meetings,” another added.
ProPublica reviewed records of that meeting, providing a rare look at a dramatic shift underway in one of the most sensitive domains of public policy. The Trump administration is upending the way nuclear energy is regulated, driven by a desire to dramatically increase the amount of energy available to power artificial intelligence.
Career experts have been forced out and thousands of pages of regulations are being rewritten at a sprint. A new generation of nuclear energy companies — flush with Silicon Valley cash and boasting strong political connections — wield increasing influence over policy. Figures like Cohen are forcing a “move fast and break things” Silicon Valley ethos on one of the country’s most important regulators.
The Trump administration has been particularly aggressive in its attacks on the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the bipartisan independent regulator that approves commercial nuclear power plants and monitors their safety. The agency is not a household name. But it’s considered the international gold standard, often influencing safety rules around the world.
The NRC has critics, especially in Silicon Valley, where the often-cautious commission is portrayed as an impediment to innovation. In an early salvo, President Donald Trump fired NRC Commissioner Christopher Hanson last June after Hanson spoke out about the importance of agency independence. It was the first time an NRC commissioner had been fired.
During that Idaho meeting, Cohen shot down any notion of NRC independence in the new era.
“Assume the NRC is going to do whatever we tell the NRC to do,” he said, records reviewed by ProPublica show. In November, Cohen was made chief counsel for nuclear policy at the Department of Energy, where he oversees a broad nuclear portfolio.
The aggressive moves have sent shock waves through the nuclear energy world. Many longtime promoters of the industry say they worry recklessness from the Trump administration could discredit responsible nuclear energy initiatives.
“The regulator is no longer an independent regulator — we do not know whose interests it is serving,” warned Allison Macfarlane, who served as NRC chair during the Obama administration. “The safety culture is under threat.”
A ProPublica analysis of staffing data from the NRC and the Office of Personnel Management shows a rush to the exits: Over 400 people have left the agency since Trump took office. The losses are particularly pronounced in the teams that handle reactor and nuclear materials safety and among veteran staffers with 10 or more years of experience. Meanwhile, hiring of new staff has proceeded at a snail’s pace, with nearly 60 new arrivals in the first year of the Trump administration compared with nearly 350 in the last year of the Biden administration.
Some nuclear power supporters say the administration is providing a needed level of urgency given the energy demands of AI. They also contend the sweeping changes underway aren’t as dangerous or dire as some experts suggest.
“I think the NRC has been frozen in time,” said Brett Rampal, the senior director of nuclear and power strategy at the investment and strategy consultancy Veriten. “It’s a great time to get unfrozen and aim to work quickly.”
The White House referred most of ProPublica’s questions to the Department of Energy, where spokesperson Olivia Tinari said the agency is committed to helping build more safe, high-quality nuclear energy facilities.
“Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, America’s nuclear industry is entering a new era that will provide reliable, abundant power for generations to come,” she wrote. The DOE is “committed to the highest standards of safety for American workers and communities.”
Cohen did not respond to multiple requests for comment. The NRC declined to comment.
The U.S. has not had a serious nuclear incident since the Three Mile Island partial meltdown in 1979, a track record many experts attribute to a rigorous regulatory environment and an intense safety culture.
Major nuclear incidents around the world have only strengthened the resolve of past regulators to stay independent from industry and from political winds. A chief cause of Japan’s Fukushima accident, investigators found, was the cozy relationship between the country’s industry and oversight body, which opened the door for thin safety assessments and inaccurate projections overlooking the possible impact of a major tsunami.
“We knew regulatory capture led directly to Fukushima and to Chernobyl,” said Kathryn Huff, who was assistant secretary for the Office of Nuclear Energy during the Biden administration.
The U.S. has barely built any nuclear power plants in recent decades. Only three new reactors have been completed in the last 25 years, and since 1990 the U.S has barely added any net new nuclear electricity to its grid. Though about 20% of U.S. energy is supplied by nuclear power plants, the fleet is aging. Some experts blame the slow build-out on the challenging economics of financing a multibillion-dollar project and the uncertainty of accessing and disposing of nuclear fuels.
But an increasingly vocal group of industry voices and deregulation advocates have blamed the slow build-out on overly cautious and inefficient regulators. Among the most powerful exponents of this view are billionaires Peter Thiel and Marc Andreessen; both venture capitalists have their own investments in the nuclear energy sector and are influential Trump supporters.
Andreessen camped out at Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s private club in Florida, after Trump won the 2024 election, helping pick staff for the new administration. In late 2024, Thiel personally vetted at least one candidate for the Office of Nuclear Energy, according to people familiar with the conversations. Neither responded to requests for comment.
Four months into his second term, Trump signed a series of executive orders designed to supercharge nuclear power build-out. “It’s a hot industry, it’s a brilliant industry,” said Trump, flanked by nuclear energy CEOs in the Oval Office. He added: “And it’s become very safe.”
Under those orders, the NRC was directed to reduce its workforce, speed up the timeline for approving nuclear reactors and rewrite many of its safety rules. The DOE — which has a vast nuclear portfolio, including waste cleanup sites and government research labs — was tasked with creating a pathway for so-called advanced nuclear companies to test their designs.
The goal, Trump said, was to quadruple nuclear energy output and provide new power to the data centers behind the AI boom.
As DOGE gutted agencies, departures mounted in the nuclear sector. Career experts in nuclear regulations and safety departed or were forced out. When Trump fired Hanson, a Democratic NRC commissioner, the president’s team explained the move by saying, “All organizations are more effective when leaders are rowing in the same direction.”
In an unsigned email to ProPublica, the White House press office wrote: “All commissioners are presidential appointees and can be fired just like any other appointee.”
In August, the NRC’s top attorney resigned and was replaced by oil and gas lawyer David Taggart, who had been working on DOGE cuts at the DOE. In all, the nuclear office at the DOE had lost about a third of its staff, according to a January 2026 count by the Federation of American Scientists, a nonprofit focused on science and technology policy.
That summer, Cohen and a team of DOGE operatives touched down at the NRC offices, a series of nondescript towers across from a Dunkin’ in suburban Maryland. He was joined by Adam Blake, an investor who had recently founded an AI medical startup and has a background in real estate and solar energy, and Ankur Bansal, president of a company that created software for real estate agents. Neither would comment for this story.
Many career officials who spoke with ProPublica were blindsided: The new Trump officials at the NRC seemed to have no experience with the intricacies of nuclear energy policy or law, they said. One NRC lawyer who briefed some of the new arrivals decided to resign. “They were talking about quickly approving all these new reactors, and they didn’t seem to care that much about the rules — they wanted to carry out the wishes of the White House,” the official said.
At one point, Cohen began passing out hats from nuclear energy startup Valar Atomics, one of the companies vying to build a new reactor, according to sources familiar with the matter and records seen by ProPublica. NRC staffers balked; they were supposed to monitor companies like Valar for safety violations, not wear its swag.
NRC ethics officials warned Cohen that the hat handout was a likely violation of conflict rules. It betrayed a misunderstanding of the safety regulator’s role, said a former official familiar with the exchange. “Imagine you live near a nuclear power plant, and you find out a supposedly independent safety regulator — the watchdog — is going around wearing the power plant’s branded hats,” the official said. “Would that make you feel safe?” The NRC and Cohen did not respond to requests for comment about the hat incident.
Valar counts Trump’s Silicon Valley allies as angel investors. They include Palmer Luckey, a technology executive and founder of the defense contractor Anduril, and Shyam Sankar, chief technology officer of Palantir, the software company helping power Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s deportation raids.
It was among three nuclear reactor companies that sued the NRC last year in an attempt to strip it of its authority to regulate its reactors and replace it with a state-level regulator. Before the Trump administration came into office, lawyers watching the case were confident the courts would quickly dismiss the suit, as the NRC’s authority to regulate reactors is widely acknowledged. But new Trump appointees pushed for a compromise settlement — which is still being negotiated. The career NRC lawyer working on the case quietly left the agency.
Valar and its executives did not reply to requests for comment.
The deregulatory push is the culmination of mounting pressure — both political and economic — to make it easier to build nuclear power in the U.S. Over the years, a bipartisan coalition supporting nuclear expansion brought together environmentalists who favor zero-carbon power and defense hawks focused on abundant domestic energy production.
Anti-nuclear activists still argue that renewable energy like wind and solar are safer and more economical. But streamlining the NRC has been a bipartisan priority as well. The latest major reform came in 2024, when President Joe Biden signed into law the ADVANCE Act, which went as far as changing the mission statement of the NRC to ensure it “does not unnecessarily limit” nuclear energy development.
Some nuclear power supporters say the Trump administration is merely accelerating these changes. They cite instances in which the current regulations appear out of sync with the times. The NRC’s byzantine rules are designed for so-called large light-water reactors — massive facilities that can power entire cities — and not the increasingly in vogue smaller advanced reactor designs popular among Silicon Valley-backed firms.
Rules that require fences of certain heights might make little sense for new reactors buried in the earth; and rules that require a certain number of operators per reactor could be a bad fit for a cluster of smaller reactors with modern controls. Advances in sensors, modeling and safety technologies, they say, should be taken into account across the board.
The NRC has said it expects over two dozen new license requests from small modular and advanced reactor companies in coming years. Many of those requests are likely to come from new, Silicon Valley-based nuclear firms.
“There was a missing link in the innovation cycle, and it was very difficult to build something and test it in the U.S. because of mostly licensing and site availability constraints in the past,” said Adam Stein of the pro-nuclear nonprofit Breakthrough Institute.
The regulatory changes are in flux: This spring, the NRC is starting to release thousands of pages of new rules governing everything from the safety and emergency preparedness plans reactor companies are required to submit to the procedures for objecting to a reactor license.
“It’s hard to know if they are getting rid of unnecessary processes or if it’s actually reducing public safety,” said one official working on reactor licensing, who, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation from the Trump administration. “And that’s just the problem with going so fast — everything just kind of gets lost in a mush.”
Lawyers from the Executive Office of the President have been sent to the NRC to keep an eye on the new rules, a move that further raised alarms about the agency’s independence.
Nicholas Gallagher — a relatively recent New York University law school graduate and conservative writer whom ProPublica previously identified as a DOGE operative at the General Services Administration — has been involved in conversations about overhauling environmental rules.
He’s working alongside Sydney Volanski, a 30-year-old recent law school graduate who rose to national attention while she was in high school for her campaign against the Girl Scouts of America, which she accused of promoting “Marxists, socialists and advocates of same-sex lifestyle.”
NRC lawyers working on the rules were told last October that Gallagher and Volanski would be joining them, and they both appear on the regular NRC rulemaking calendar invite.
The White House maintains, however, that “zero lawyers from the Executive Office of the President have been dispatched to work on rulemaking.” Neither Gallagher nor Volanski replied to requests for comment.
The administration is routing the new rules through an office overseen by Trump’s cost-cutting guru Russell Vought, a move that was previously unheard of for an independent regulator like the NRC. The White House spokesperson noted that, under a recent executive order, this process is now required for all agencies.
Political operatives have been “inserted into the senior leadership team to the point where they could significantly influence decision-making,” said Scott Morris, who worked at the NRC for more than 32 years, most recently as the No. 2 career operations official. “I just think that would be a dangerous proposition.”
Morris voted for Trump twice and broadly supports the goals of deregulating and expanding nuclear energy, but he has begun speaking out against the administration’s interference at the NRC. He retired in May 2025 as part of a wave of retirements and firings.
At a recent hearing before the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board — an independent body that helps adjudicate nuclear licensing — NRC lawyers withdrew from the proceedings, citing “limited resources.” The judge remarked that it was the first time in over 20 years the NRC had done so.
Meanwhile, some staff members, other career officials say, are afraid to voice dissenting views for fear of being fired. “It feels like being a lobster in a slowly boiling pot,” one NRC official who has been working on the rule changes told ProPublica, describing the erosion of independence.
The official was one of three who compared their recent experience at NRC to being in a pot of slowly boiling water. “If somebody is raising something that they think that the industry or the White House would have a problem with, they think twice,” the official said.
Inside the NRC, the steering committee overseeing the changes includes Cohen, Taggart and Mike King, a career NRC official who is the newly installed executive director for operations. The former director, Mirela Gavrilas, a 21-year veteran of the agency, retired after getting boxed out of decision-making, according to a person familiar with her departure. Gavrilas did not respond to a request for comment.
Any final changes will be approved by the NRC’s five commissioners, three of whom are Republicans. In September, the two Democratic commissioners told a Senate committee they might be fired at any time if they get crosswise with Trump — including over revisions to safety rules.
Draft rules being circulated inside the NRC propose drastic rollbacks of security and safety inspections at nuclear facilities. Those include a proposed 56% cut in emergency preparedness inspection time, CNN reported in March.
Even some pro-nuclear groups are troubled by the emerging order. Some have tried to backchannel to their contacts in the Trump administration to explain the importance of an independent regulator to help maintain public support for nuclear power. Without it, they risk losing credibility.
“You have to make sure you don’t throw out the baby with the bathwater,” said Judi Greenwald, president and CEO of the Nuclear Innovation Alliance, a nonprofit that promotes nuclear energy and supports many of the regulatory changes being proposed by the Trump administration.
Greenwald’s group favors faster timelines for approving nuclear reactors, but she worries that the agency’s fundamental independence has been undermined. “We would prefer that they yield back more of NRC independence,” she said.
One Trump administration priority has been making it easier for so-called advanced reactor companies to navigate the regulatory process. These firms, mostly backed by Silicon Valley tech and venture money, are often working on designs for much smaller reactors that they hope to mass produce in factories.
“There are two nuclear industries,” said Macfarlane, the former NRC chair. “There are the actual people who use nuclear reactors to produce power and put it on the grid … and then there are the ‘nuke bros’” in Silicon Valley.
Trump’s Silicon Valley allies have loomed large over his nuclear policy. One prospective political appointee for a top DOE nuclear job got a Christmas Eve call from Thiel, the rare Silicon Valley leader to back Trump in 2016. Thiel, whose Founders Fund invested in a nuclear fuel startup and an advanced reactor company, quizzed the would-be official about deregulation and how to rapidly build more nuclear energy capacity, said sources familiar with the conversation.
Nuclear energy startups jockeyed to spend time at Mar-a-Lago in the months before the start of Trump’s second term. Balerion Space Ventures, a venture capital firm that has invested in multiple companies, convened an investor summit there in January 2025, according to an invitation viewed by ProPublica. Balerion did not reply to a request for comment.
A few months later, when Trump was drawing up the executive orders, leaders at many of those nuclear companies were given advanced access to drafts of the text — and the opportunity to provide suggested edits, documents viewed by ProPublica show.
Those orders created a new program to test out experimental reactor designs, addressing a common complaint that companies are not given opportunities to experiment. There are currently about a dozen advanced reactor companies planning to participate. Each has a concierge team within the DOE to help navigate bureaucracy. As NPR reported in January, the DOE quietly overhauled a series of safety rules that would apply to these new reactors and shared the new regulations with these companies before making them public.
Secretary of Energy Chris Wright — who served on the board of one of those companies, Oklo — has said fast nuclear build-out is a priority: “We are moving as quickly as we can to permit, build and enable the rapid construction of as much nuke capacity as possible,” he told CNBC last fall. Oklo noted that Wright stepped down from the board when he was confirmed.
The Trump administration hopes some of the companies would have their reactors “go critical” — a key first step on the way to building a functioning power plant — by July 2026. Then the NRC, which signs off on the safety designs of commercial nuclear power plants, could be expected to quickly OK these new reactors to get to market.
According to people familiar with the conversations, at least one nuclear energy startup CEO personally recruited potential members of the DOGE nuclear team, though it’s not clear if Cohen was brought aboard this way. Cohen has told colleagues and industry contacts that he reports to Emily Underwood, one of Trump adviser Stephen Miller’s top aides for economic policy. He is perceived inside government as a key avatar of the White House’s nuclear agenda.
In its email to ProPublica, the White House said, “Seth Cohen is a Department of Energy employee and does not report to Emily Underwood or Stephen Miller in any capacity.”
The DOE spokesperson added, “Seth’s role at the Department of Energy is to support the Trump administration’s mission to unleash American Energy Dominance.”
Cohen has been pushing to raise the legal limit of radiation that nuclear energy companies are allowed to emit from their facilities. One nuclear industry insider, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said many firms are fixating on changing these radiation rules: Their business model requires moving nuclear reactors around the country, often near workers or the general public.
Building thick, expensive shielding walls can be prohibitively expensive, they said.
Valar CEO Isaiah Taylor has called limits on exposure to radiation a top barrier to industry growth. A recent DOE memo seen by ProPublica cites cost savings on shielding for Valar’s reactor to justify changing those limits. “Shielding-related cost reductions,” the memo said, “could range from $1-2 million per reactor.” The debate over the precise rule change is ongoing.
The DOE has been considering a fivefold increase to the limit for public exposure to radiation, which will allow some nuclear reactor companies to cut costs on these expensive safety shields, internal DOE documents seen by ProPublica show.
A presentation prepared by DOE staffers in their Idaho offices that has circulated inside the department makes the “business case” for changing the radiation dose rules: It could cut the cost of some new reactors by as much as 5%. These more relaxed standards are likely to be adopted by the NRC and apply to reactors nationwide, documents show.
In February, Wright accompanied Valar’s executive team on a first-of-its-kind flight, as a U.S. military plane was conscripted to fly the company’s reactor from Los Angeles to Utah. Valar does not yet have a working nuclear reactor, and a number of industry sources told ProPublica they viewed the airlift as a PR exercise. Internal government memos justified the airlift by designating it as “critical” to the U.S. “national security interests.”
Cohen posted smiling pictures of himself from the cargo bay of the military plane.
Cohen told an audience at the American Nuclear Society that the rapid build-out was essential to powering Silicon Valley’s AI data centers. He framed the policy in existential terms: “I can’t emphasize this strongly enough that losing the AI war is an outcome akin to the Nazis developing the bomb before the United States.”
As it deliberated rule changes, the DOE has cut out its internal team of health experts who work on radiation safety at the Office of Environment, Health, Safety and Security, said sources familiar with the decision. The advice of outside experts on radiation protection has been largely cast aside.
The DOE spokesperson said its radiation standards “are aligned with Gold Standard Science … with a focus on protecting people and the environment while avoiding unnecessary bureaucracy.”
The department has already decided to abandon the long-standing radiation protection principle known as “ALARA” — the “As Low As Reasonably Achievable” standard — which directs anyone dealing with radioactive materials to minimize exposure.
It often pushes exposure well below legal thresholds. Many experts agreed that the ALARA principle was sometimes applied too strictly, but the move to entirely throw it out was opposed by many prominent radiation health experts.
Whether the agencies will actually change the legal thresholds for radiation exposure is an open question, said sources familiar with the deliberations.
Internal DOE documents arguing for changing dose rules cite a report produced at the Idaho National Laboratory, which was compiled with the help of the AI assistant Claude. “It’s really strange,” said Kathryn Higley, president of the National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements, a congressionally chartered group studying radiation safety. “They fundamentally mistake the science.”
John Wagner, the head of the Idaho National Laboratory and the report’s lead author, acknowledged to ProPublica that the science over changing radiation exposure rules is hotly contested. “We recognize that respected experts interpret aspects of this literature differently,” he wrote. His analysis was not meant to be the final word, he said, but was “intended to inform debate.”
The impact of radiation levels at very low doses is hard to measure, so the U.S. has historically struck a cautious note. Raising dose limits could put the U.S. out of step with international standards.
For his part, Cohen has told the nuclear industry that he sees his job as making sure the government “is no longer a barrier” to them.
In June, he shot down the notion of companies putting money into a fund for workplace accidents. “Put yourself in the shoes of one of these startups,” he said. “They’re raising hundreds of millions of dollars to do this. And then they would have to go to their VCs and their board and say, listen, guys, we actually need a few hundred million dollars more to put into a trust fund?”
He also suggested that regulators should not fret about preparing for so-called 100-year events — disasters that have roughly a 1% chance of taking place but can be catastrophic for nuclear facilities.
“When SpaceX started building rockets, they sort of expected the first ones to blow up,” he said.
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