News

Sunday 2026-03-22

02:00 AM

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

You wear a hat, you’re not a hat.

State nouns are verbs that we talk about like they are nouns. Hurry, panic, frenzy, rage, funk, stupor, daze, fog, rut, bind, pickle, fix, slump, tailspin, tizzy. Notice that they’re almost all negative…

You’re in a hurry.

Really? I get that you’re hurrying. There might be good reasons for this. But the hurry hat isn’t what you are, it’s what you’re doing.

We can own our agency and our choices, not announce (to ourselves or the world) that we’re trapped in a container, unable to escape.

Until we start saying, “I’m in a joy” perhaps we should find the grace to choose what sort of verb we’d prefer.

The essential thing about a hat is that it’s easy to take off.

      

Just for Skeets and Giggles (3.21.26) [The Status Kuo]

In most cases, when someone passes, we should celebrate their life. But in one case

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Waiting for a book to tell the tale of Trump’s Iran War.

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Word was that Denmark, along with our other NATO allies, actually had to prepare to defend Greenland in the event the Mad King tried to take it.

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I’m thankful for all the comedians who continue to use their platforms to take the would-be king down a few pegs. Thanks to Conan O’Brien for this gem!

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The SNL cold open last weekend set the tone. And things have unfolded much as they predicted.

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His meme worthy “pull back the curtain” moment continues to provide.

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The price of gas is getting so high Trump may have to take executive action.

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His plea to the same allies he was threatening a month ago landed with a thud.

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Meanwhile at the Pentagon:

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The internet is undefeated.

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And if you can’t win, just declare you did, right?

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Maybe Trump just needs better advisers.

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Ouch.

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This next framing by the Veep was so inevitable I actually laughed when I saw it. (You don’t need to see the video, trust me.)

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We actually haven’t seen much of JD lately.

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Now this is a fantastic idea.

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The writers for this episode of Season 2 have jumped the shark, but it could just go straight comedy.

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Surely, former Fox host Pete Hegseth has a plan to extricate us from the disaster.

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The new Japanese prime minister Sanae Takaichi had a memorable White House visit.

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Betcha she didn’t expect to become a meme.

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Guess we’re about to see if Trump can turn a right-wing conservative into an international centrist again.

The international reactions were priceless. This one is translated from the original Spanish.

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I would have died.

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Please elaborate.

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10/10, no notes.

Speaker Johnson on the gaffe, probably:

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This meme just won’t quit!

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Is Rubio a “shoe-in” for this honor?

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I’m glad I wasn’t the only one to see this.

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In other words, Trump wants his likeness on U.S. coins.

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The law says only presidents who have already passed away can have their images on our currency. But hey, many might take that bargain with the universe!

Frustration continues to grow around Sen. Jon Fetterman (D?-PA), whose vote just allowed Sen. Markwayne Mullin’s (R-NotOK) nomination as the new DHS secretary to move forward. Charitably speaking, was it the brain injury?

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Speaking of Markwayne, the comedy will be amazing.

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Mullin is known not just for his silly first name but for his poor temperament.

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On a national level, things suck. But in the blue enclaves, amazing things are happening.

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They’ll say it’s DEI, even to appoint a T to the LGBTQ+ office, but there’s help on the way for the victims.

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Erika Kirk was still out there with her brilliant advice to those victims.

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Mailman maybe? I heard the USPS is really struggling.

Amazing new mimic just dropped.

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Speaking of condescending pricks, there was this from one of my fav parody accounts.

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I regret to tell you that this next one was from a real member of Congress.

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The Education Department continues to rip off IP.

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Honestly, she was always quite a shellfish person.

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Please don’t ignore this button! Give it at least five seconds. After that, if your heart says you’re the kind of person who believes good content should be supported and you can afford to help, become a paying subscriber of the Status Kuo if you’re not already! Thank you!

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My corgi Windsor is this retriever to a T when it comes to the pee trail. I started calling it “peemail” back in 2015—glad I’m not the only one!

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Here’s another golden, who like most, is quite nosy.

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And nothing, not even the assembled bovinity, can resist the cuteness of a corgi.

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My long-bodied corgi gets “stuck” quite often, so this compilation sent me. (This is a TikTok video for which you’ll need the app. If you don’t have it, try this link.)

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Hank is a helpful hound.

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I have never seen a cat do this.

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My kitty Shade would F-me up if I tried this with him!

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Tigers are just big silly cats. Here’s a screenshot as evidence.

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Chill is as chill does.

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Happy update on Punch, the monkey without a mama.

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The cow’s name, it turns out, is Ted. Ted Lasso.

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In other sporting news, it’s March Madness, and yesterday truly put the madness in that title. I was a cheerleader in college, which is the only reason I know anything about basketball and actually get very excited about moments like this.

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Sometimes it’s more fun to watch the college announcers as it is the game!

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Did anyone notice this on their brackets?

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On the subject of amazing basketball, this made the rounds again in case you didn’t see it before, or just want to relive it. (He means “manager” not “manger” which evokes a totally different image in my mind.)

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The dangers of AI have been in the news of late.

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The dangers of out of control men have also been top of mind for many women.

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If more could be like this guy, we might be okay.

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Men really are quite simple creatures.

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I’ve got a birthday coming up next Saturday, and this will be in my head.

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I have so many questions.

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Appliance humor apparently infected my algo this week.

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As did… egg humor?

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New Dune trailer dropped, but so did this yolk.

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Situational humor here, very on track.

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I want to be friends with this person.

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And this mom.

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(As a parent whose insurance still refuses to pay for 10 days of his baby the NICU, I can relate.)

Memes continued to spring out of the Oscars, but this one is for the ages.

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I bid you adieu by snaking in this dad joke at the end.

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Have a a great weekend!

Jay!

Saturday 2026-03-21

06:00 PM

DISH Seeks $28.65 Million Default Judgment in Lemo/Kemo IPTV Lawsuit [TorrentFreak]

tvEarlier this month, a California federal court dismissed the copyright infringement lawsuit DISH had filed against UK hosting provider Innetra.

DISH has accused the company of providing its services to pirate IPTV operations, including Lemo TV and Kemo IPTV, but it failed to establish jurisdiction.

The dismissal was a clear setback for the American pay TV provider and its anti-piracy partner IBCAP. However, at a federal court in Florida, DISH Network still has a separate lawsuit pending that could impact the IPTV operations in a more direct manner.

DISH vs. Lemo, Kemo, and IPTV Reseller

Last October, DISH filed a copyright infringement complaint against the alleged operators of the Lemo TV and Kemo IPTV pirate services, as well as one of their U.S.-based resellers: ‘1 Dollar IPTV’.

DISH alleged that the Malaysian company Kemo E Marketing Sdn. Bhd and its sole shareholder, Noorhayati Binti Abdul Rahim, are driving forces behind the Lemo/Kemo operation. Ammar Towir, also from Malaysia, allegedly owns and operates the Lemo/Kemo domains and financial accounts.

Kemoiptv.shop

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The identities of these defendants were presumably obtained through subpoenas that were obtained in a previously filed lawsuit in Texas that has since been dismissed.

In addition to the foreign defendants, DISH also names a Florida-based reseller; 1 Dollar IPTV. This is allegedly operated by Artistry Group LLC, from St. Petersburg, Florida. This company was voluntarily dissolved on February 27, 2025, but DISH notes that the company or its successors continue to run 1 Dollar IPTV.

DISH Seeks $28.65 Million Default

Because the defendants failed to respond to DISH’s complaint, while continuing their infringing activity, DISH successfully requested a default, which it now hopes to convert into a formal judgment.

In a motion filed at the Florida federal court, DISH seeks $150,000 in damages against Lemo and Kemo for each of the 181 registered works listed in the complaint. For the American reseller operating under Artistry Group, it seeks the maximum available damages for 10 works.

These damages amount to $27.15 million for the IPTV services and $1.5 million for the reseller. That is substantial, but according to DISH, it is needed to send a deterrent message.

“Defendants’ clear willfulness and the strong need for deterrence, as shown by their ongoing infringement in the face of numerous infringement notices and Defendants’ intent to operate their business on the basis of stealing the intellectual property of others, justifies an award of $150,000 for each of the registered Works,” the motion reads.

Servers Targeted Across Three Countries

Because the defendants have been unresponsive thus far, recouping the damages is not straightforward. Therefore, DISH believes that it is vital that the court issues a broad permanent injunction.

In this case, the proposed injunction has unusually specific infrastructure demands.

DISH’s enforcement partner NagraStar traced the IPTV services to three hosting providers: IPv4 Superhub Limited in Hong Kong, 24 Shells Inc. in New Jersey, and INTERKVM HOST SRL, operating as ZetServers, in Romania. DISH asks the court to order all three to disable the relevant IP addresses.

In addition, the proposed injunction also lists 19 domain names, requiring registries and registrars to transfer these to DISH. The list includes Kemoiptv.com, Lemotv.com, 1DollarIPTV.com, and 1DollarIPTV.net, along with a range of reseller and marketing storefronts.

From the proposed injunction

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Notably, the proposed injunction is designed to be “evergreen”. It includes a provision that would require registries and registrars to automatically disable any future domain names used by the defendants, provided that DISH submits a declaration confirming the new domains are being used for infringing purposes.

At the time of writing, court has not yet ruled on the motion. However, the chances of a favorable outcome in this case are higher for the pay TV company, as the defendants all failed to appear.

A copy of DISH’s motion for default judgment, filed at the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida, is available here (pdf).

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

03:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 律 [Kanji of the Day]

✍9

小6

rhythm, law, regulation, gauge, control

リツ リチ レツ

法律   (ほうりつ)   —   law
一律   (いちりつ)   —   uniform
規律   (きりつ)   —   order
旋律   (せんりつ)   —   melody
法律上   (ほうりつじょう)   —   legal
自律   (じりつ)   —   autonomy (philosophy)
法律相談   (ほうりつそうだん)   —   legal consultation
法律事務所   (ほうりつじむしょ)   —   law office
一律に   (いちりつに)   —   uniformly
自律神経   (じりつしんけい)   —   autonomic nerves

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 詰 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

中学

packed, close, pressed, reprove, rebuke, blame

キツ キチ

つ.める つ.め -づ.め つ.まる つ.む

詰め   (つめ)   —   stuffing
詰まり   (つまり)   —   that is to say
缶詰   (かんづめ)   —   canned food
詰める   (つめる)   —   to stuff into
大詰め   (おおづめ)   —   final scene
詰まる   (つまる)   —   to be packed (with)
息詰まる   (いきづまる)   —   to be breathtaking
詰め合わせ   (つめあわせ)   —   combination
行き詰まり   (いきづまり)   —   deadlock
瓶詰め   (びんづめ)   —   bottling

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

02:00 PM

Happy Schadenfriday [The Status Kuo]

It’s been a long week with news of the expanding war in Iran, spiking inflation, zero job growth, and the president insulting our Japanese allies by bringing up the attack on Pearl Harbor. Yikes.

So since it’s Friday, let’s switch gears and enjoy some much-deserved satisfaction as we watch former members of the Trump administration thrown under the bus, and current members struggling under the increasingly burdensome task of covering for Trump.

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Kent’s state

Another once loyal Trumpkin just got tossed under the bus.

Joe Kent, a white nationalist and antisemite, resigned as the director of the National Counterterrorism Center, citing differences with the White House over the war in Iran. On Wednesday, Kent went on Tucker Carlson’s show to claim Israel drove the decision to start the war, that key decision-makers were deliberately excluded, and that Iran in fact posed no imminent threat. We knew this, of course, but Kent admitting it to millions of MAGA voters is next level.

Shortly after his announcement, reports emerged that the FBI is investigating Kent for mishandling classified information. These reports were almost certainly pushed by the White House, as Trump aides denounced Kent as a “leaker” while Trump bad-mouthed his own appointee on social media.

We should shed no tears for Kent. Indeed, as Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo noted, he could have timed his resignation to make it appear that the investigation, which has been going on for months, was launched in retaliation.

Kent is a prime example of how MAGA officials who were once loyal foot soldiers could have it very rough now that they are on the outs. Indeed, some like Marshall posit that these officials are encouraged to be as bad as they can while in office so they can’t quit without risking investigations and imprisonment. It’s Trump’s version of defenestration for those who cross him.

One day you’re in, the next you’re out

Corey Lewandowski, the reigning MAGA champion of in-again / out-again—and I don’t just mean with rumored paramour Kristi Noem—is out again.

This is the second time Lewandowski has been publicly pushed out of a Trump job. The first occurred a decade ago when he was fired as Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign manager and replaced by likely Russian asset Paul Manafort. (This was a clear sign, by the way, of how bad things were about to get.)

After getting fired this time around along with his cosplaying girlfriend, Lewandowski reportedly is now under investigation, this time for involvement in government contracts. As MSN summarized,

Multiple contractors and DHS officials allege Lewandowski sought payments—described by one source as a ‘success fee’—in exchange for helping secure federal contracts, including with private prison operators and marketing firms. NBC News reporting describes GEO Group founder George Zoley rejecting such offers, after which the company saw contract changes, though it later won a $121 million deal. Industry and legal experts say such behavior would be a ‘blazing red flag’ for procurement integrity concerns.

Democrats warned these GOP-led investigations into both Lewandowski and Noem were mere window-dressing, given that the White House has long known about the corruption inside Homeland Security.

So yesterday, Democrats announced their own intent to investigate Lewandowski. As The Hill reported, Reps. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.), Rick Larsen (D-Wash.) and Bennie G. Thompson (D-Miss.), wrote to the DHS Office of Inspector General on Wednesday to request an investigation into Lewandowski and issued a request that DHS preserve all his records:

“We also demand DHS preserve all documents and communications concerning Mr. Lewandowski’s role within the Department, as well as the Department’s practices, policies, and procedures related to contracting, personnel, and the handling of classified materials, including, but not limited to, social media messages, Signal chats, and other private or personal communications pertaining to DHS matters.”

Let’s be clear: The House Oversight Dems are preparing for the day they hold the gavel and can proceed with real investigations instead of the sham ones the GOP keeps throwing up.

Speaking of sham investigations…

Attorney General Pam Bondi was subpoenaed by the Oversight Committee, with five GOP members breaking ranks to vote with all Democrats, to appear in a sworn deposition in April. At issue is her failure to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, and release all documents, with only victims’ names and images redacted, still held by her Department relating to its investigation of Epstein and his associates.

There is no question that Bondi has not complied with the law, and that others in the Justice Department, including her deputy Todd Blanche, are withholding documents to protect powerful, wealthy allies of Trump or to shield Trump himself from accountability.

So what’s a lying sycophant to do? Cover up the cover-up, of course.

Yesterday, Bondi went in for an “informal briefing” with the Committee which Republicans now present as a kind of substitute for her testimony under oath. To this end, a Justice Department spokesperson on Tuesday called the Bondi subpoena “completely unnecessary” and said Bondi “continues to have calls and meetings with members of Congress on the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which is why the Department offered to brief the committee.”

When Rep. Summer Lee (D-PA) protested the arrangement, Chair James Comer (R-KY) told her to “stop bitching.” The Democrats walked out and immediately took their concerns to the press. Ranking member Garcia had choice words:

Bondi continues to resist at her peril. A change in the majority is coming, and she won’t be able to stonewall or dissemble much longer. The more it appears she is trying to hide, the more the Epstein files return to public focus.

After all, not even a slippery snake like Bondi can escape the Streisand effect.

“Why do you even have jobs?”

Congress held hearings this week with Trump’s top intelligence officials: Director of National Intelligence and Fulton County sneak peeker Tulsi Gabbard; CIA Director and serial leaker of classified information John Ratcliffe; and FBI Director and former podcaster turned jet setting party boy, Kash Patel.

Through their testimony, two things were made quite clear.

First, they often don’t know what’s happening in their own departments. Here’s Patel on the question of the firing of Iran counterintelligence experts before the war began:

And here’s Gabbard trying to explain why she was in Fulton County when the FBI was involved in a domestic law enforcement activity:

Second, they made clear that, in their view, it is the president, and not the intelligence community, that determines what an “imminent threat” to our national security is.

A visibly agitated Rep. Jimmy Gomez asked why these intelligence officials “even have a job” if whatever Trump says goes.

The fact is, U.S. intelligence was at odds with the notion that Iran posed an imminent threat, as Joe Kent himself confirmed when he resigned. In order to square this assessment with why Trump started the war, they are left painfully arguing that, no matter what the intelligence experts conclude, Trump can and will just ignore them and do as he pleases.

This is both an indictment of Trump, who won’t listen to his top intel officials, and of those officials, who remain in their jobs and therefore have to humiliate themselves in public hearings.

That isn’t without cost. There’s a growing number of Trump voters who did not want this war and are beginning to balk mightily at the high gas prices it is causing.

Once their ire is fully stoked—perhaps at $5 a gallon—and they finally understand that they were lied to (duh), many may come to view officials like Patel, Ratcliffe and Gabbard as little more than water carriers for Trump.

That of course is already the clear truth. But truth has been in short supply among GOP voters, thanks to Trump and right-wing propaganda. And while independents have already abandoned Trump in historic numbers, we can’t simply force GOP voters to follow suit.

But hope yet lives. The treachery, corruption and utter abdication by Trump’s aides—from Joe Kent to Corey Lewandowski, Pam Bondi to the intelligence agency heads—are beginning to bring that truth into focus.

I sense a tipping point coming, even for many GOP voters, hastened by war, inflation and the Epstein Files. This is a three-headed hydra Trump cannot outrun, with each new provoked crisis somehow worse than the one he had hoped to distract from.

12:00 PM

A Model For HHS: New Mexico Measles Outbreak Was Curtailed With Mass Vaccination Campaign [Techdirt]

With RFK Jr. and his version of HHS entirely out to lunch on the ongoing measles issue in America, it’s been left to states and local medical professionals to try to figure out how to do combat with one of the most infectious diseases on the planet. In a sane world with a real, big boy executive branch, HHS would be taking the lead on this sort of thing. Since Kennedy’s eugenics-lite belief system promotes a “survival of the fittest” mentality instead, we get to examine how different states and local governments react to measles outbreaks. South Carolina, for instance, appears to be largely uninterested at the governmental level in doing anything at all about the failure in data-sharing, case-reporting, and combating the bullshit religious exemptions to vaccinations that led to a loss of herd immunity to begin with.

New Mexico, which suffered its own measles outbreak last year, went the opposite route. And when you compare that state’s response specifically to Texas’, as they were both part of the same outbreak, the lessons learned are even more instructive.

Texas declared the outbreak within its borders over on August 18, with an end tally of 762 cases. In New Mexico, officials declared its outbreak, which began in February, over on September 26, with a total of just 99 cases.

One of the key differences, according to a new study, was that in New Mexico, the rapid spread of the highly infectious virus spurred a massive surge in measles vaccinations among children and adults. Overall, shots of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) vaccine increased 55 percent statewide from January to September compared to the same period in 2024.

This is all based on a recent CDC study. I simply must point out that it’s quite interesting to see this uptick in vaccinations. It’s what I’ve advocated for, of course, but it certainly calls into question the reasoning for having not vaccinated before the reports of the outbreak. If these were more religious exemptions, did people suddenly become less religious? If it was fear of all the nonsense dangers RFK Jr. warns about with the MMR vaccines that kept them from vaccinating before, are they suddenly less afraid now? Or was all of that performative excuse making for people not wanting to get a simple shot in their arm?

Regardless, it was a coordinated effort by New Mexico government groups and local doctors to be transparent about the outbreak, its dangers, and mobilize for mass vaccinations.

In the MMWR report, officials explained that they had a data-driven response effort that assessed local vaccination coverage and real-time vaccine inventories and targeted mobile vaccination delivery. They went all out on communication, releasing 12 health advisories to clinicians, 26 press releases to the public, and 184 social media posts. They also launched a regularly updated measles outbreak data page with information in English and Spanish. Finally, they set up a measles helpline, which got over 2,000 calls during the outbreak. The officials noted that their response to the outbreak was built on lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In all, “the strategies implemented in New Mexico could serve as a model for other states that are addressing measles cases or outbreaks,” they concluded.

Or, gee, I don’t know, how about it being a model for the federal fucking agency with a charter that centers on keeping Americans healthy and combating infectious diseases? Why is this left to the states to figure out? States can be laboratories for democracy all we like, but infectious diseases don’t respect state borders.

Instead of spending time licking his wounds from his recent losses in federal court, it sure would be nice if Kennedy could spend that time actually getting involved in combating measles, a disease that could only be resurrected thanks to the misinformation he spewed for decades.

10:00 AM

Patience is the key [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]

This Week in F-Droid

TWIF curated on Thursday, 19 Mar 2026, Week 12

F-Droid core

Even if not daring enough to install our latest client in development, we reiterate our message: get people to install F-Droid now, before it’s too late. It’s a small gesture that will prove to be critical for the future of Android as you and me have grown to love!

Now, F-Droid Basic was updated to 2.0-alpha5:

  • Updated strings and translations (Is your locale 100% translated yet?)
  • Improved loading of app details page
  • Refresh app lists on app status changes
  • Don’t close screenshot when rotating device
  • Fix RTL language presentation of updates
  • …and more

For CJK users, meaning Chinese, Japanese, and Korean writing systems, we recently fixed a bug in search, if alpha5 fails to find some apps, this will be fixed in the next version.

Community News

“Touchy slide keyboard app will soon require an US corporate account - data to be moved to BigCloud” article sounds like some statement dreamed up by the utterly Deranged. One year has passed since our own “Even my keyboard is built reproducibly” article was published, and we’ve been adding and updating keyboard apps on and on, so just pick one and use it!!!

aTalk was updated to 5.2.1, a hot-fix to the big 5.2.0 update. What’s hot? A lot, and the big news is support for the latest OMEMO specification v0.9 aka OMEMO 2. This is great news, but even if OMEMO is well supported in the XMPP ecosystem, most apps support v0.3 and none did OMEMO2 on Android before aTalk. We hope this encourages other projects (ahem and their forks ahem) to move forward.

In more messaging news, Briar was updated to 1.5.17, keeping Tor up to date. Unfortunately the app appears to be in maintenance mode, as after the Material Design 3 upgrade it only got minimal development, and that was almost 2 years ago.

CastLab was updated to 1.1.0 last week and it’s worth a highlight. Besides bug fixes, it adds some new features: support for the open FCast protocol, external display casting via USB-C and Screen sharing.

K-9 Mail and Thunderbird: Free Your Inbox were updated to 17.0 adding per account avatars (JPG only for now), foldable devices support, printing emails and more. While Thunderbird Beta for Testers was updated to 18.0b2 adding PNG support for avatars and many fixes.

LabCoat has a minor update to 2.8.0 with an authentication token fix. If LabNex is still not ready for your Gitlab workflow, you can cover some tasks again on the go.

Session developers are asking for your help, PFS and post-quantum cryptography are still in progress, and more work needs to be funded.

Newly Added Apps

15 apps were newly added

Updated Apps

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

Thank you for reading this week’s TWIF 🙂

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

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

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

09:00 AM

Rep. Finke Was Right: Age-Gating Isn’t About Kids, It’s About Control [Techdirt]

When Rep. Leigh Finke spoke last month before the Minnesota House Commerce Finance and Policy Committee to testify against HF1434, a broad-sweeping proposal to age-gate the internet, she began with something disarming: agreement.

“I want to support the basic part of this,” she said, the shared goal of protecting young people online. Because that is not controversial: everyone wants kids to be safe. But HF1434, Minnesota’s proposed age-verification bill, simply won’t “protect children.” It mandates that websites hosting speech that is protected by the First Amendment for both adults and young people to verify users’ identities, often through government IDs or biometric data. As we’ve discussed before, the bill’s definition of speech that lawmakers deem “harmful to minors” is notoriously broad—broad enough to sweep in lawful, non-pornographic speech about sexual orientation, sexual health, and gender identity.

Rep. Finke, an openly transgender lawmaker, next raised a point that her critics have since tried to distort: age-verification laws like the Minnesota bill are already being used to block young LGBTQ+ people from exercising their First Amendment rights to access information that may be educational, affirming, or life-saving. Referencing the Supreme Court case Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton, she noted that state attorneys general have been “almost jubilant” about the ability to use these laws to restrict queer youth from accessing content. “We know that ‘prurient interest’ could be for many people, the very existence of transgender kids,” she added, referring to the malleable legal standard that would govern what content must be age-gated under the law. 

But despite years’ worth of evidence to back her up, Finke has faced a wave of attacks from countless media outlets and religious advocacy groups for her statements. Rep. Finke’s testimony was repeatedly mischaracterized as not having young people’s best interests in mind, when really she was accurately describing the lived reality of LGBTQ+ youth and advocating in support of their access to vital resources and community.

In fact, this backlash proves her point. Beyond attempting to silence queer voices and to scare other legislators from speaking up against these laws, it reveals how age-verification mandates are part of a larger effort to give the government much greater control of what young people are allowed to say, read, or see online. 

Rep. Finke was also right that these proposals are bad policy; they prevent all young people from finding community online, and that they violate young people and adults’ First Amendment rights.

Why FSC v. Paxton Matters

Rep. Finke was similarly right to bring up the Paxton case, because beyond the troubling Supreme Court precedent it produced, Texas’s age-verification law also drew eager support from an extraordinary number of amicus briefs from anti-LGBTQ organizations (some even designated hate groups by the Southern Poverty Law Center). 

In FSC v. Paxton, the Supreme Court gave Texas the green light to require age verification for sites where at least one-third of the content is sexual material deemed “harmful to minors,” which generally means explicit sexual content. This ruling, based on how young people do not have a First Amendment right to access explicit sexual content, allows states to enact onerous age-verification rules that will block adults from accessing lawful speech, curtail their ability to be anonymous, and jeopardize their data security and privacy. These are real and immense burdens on adults, and the Court was wrong to ignore them in upholding Texas’ law. 

But laws enacted by other states and Minnesota HF 1434 go further than the Texas statute. Rather than restricting young people from accessing sexual content, these proposals expand what the state deems “harmful to minors” to include any speech that may reference sex, sexuality, gender, and reproductive health. But young people have a First Amendment right to both speak on those topics and to access information online about them.

We will continue to fight against all online age restrictions, but bills like Minnesota’s HF 1434, which seek to restrict young people from accessing speech about their bodies, sexuality, and other truthful information, are especially pernicious.

EFF and Rep. Finke are on the same page here: age verification mandates create immense harm to our First Amendment rights, our right to privacy, as well as our online safety and security. These proposals also fully ignore the reality that LGBTQ young people often rely on the internet for information they cannot get elsewhere. 

But the Paxton case, and the coalition behind it, illustrates exactly how these laws can be weaponized. They weren’t there just to stand up for young people’s privacy online—they were there to argue that the state has a compelling interest in shielding minors from material that, in practice, often includes LGBTQ content. Ultimately, these groups would like to age-gate not just porn sites, but also any content that might discuss sex, sexuality, gender, reproductive health, abortion, and more.

Using Children as Props to Enact Censorship 

The coalition of organizations that filed amicus briefs in support of Texas’s age verification law tells us everything we need to know about the true intentions behind legislating access to information online: censorship, surveillance, and control. After all, if the race to age-gate the internet was purely about child safety, we would expect its strongest supporters to be child-development experts or privacy advocates. Instead, the loudest advocates are organizations dedicated to policing sexuality, attacking LGBTQ+ folks and reproductive rights, and censoring anything that doesn’t fit within their worldview.

Below are some of the harmful platforms that the organizations supporting the age-gating movement are advancing, and how their arguments echo in the attacks on Rep. Finke today:

Policing sexuality, bodily autonomy, and reproductive rights

Many of the organizations backing age-verification laws have spent decades trying to restrict access to accurate sexual health information and reproductive care.

Groups like Exodus Cry, for example, who filed a brief in support of the Texas AG in the SCOTUS case, frame pornography as part of a broader moral crisis. Founded by a “Christian dominionist” activist, Exodus Cry advocates for the criminalization of porn and sex work, and promotes a worldview that defines “sexual immorality” as any sexual activity outside marriage between one man and one woman. Its leadership describes the internet as a battleground in a “pornified world” that has to be reclaimed. Another brief in support of the age-verification law was filed by a group of organizations including the Public Advocate of the United States (an SPLC-designated hate group) and America’s Future. America’s Future is an organization that was formed to “revitalize the role of faith in our society” and fiercely advocates in favor of trans sports bans

These groups see age-verification laws as attractive solutions because they create a legal mechanism to wall off large swaths of content that merely mentions sex from not only young people but millions of adults, too.

Attacking LGBTQ+ Rights

Several of the most prominent legal advocates behind age-verification laws have also led the crusade against LGBTQ+ equality. The internet that these groups envision is one that heavily censors critical and even life-saving LGBTQ+ resources, community, and information. 

The Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), for instance (which is another SPLC-designated hate group), built its reputation on litigation aimed at rolling back LGBTQ+ protections—including  allowing businesses to refuse service to same-sex couples, criminalizing same-sex relationships abroad, and restricting transgender rights

Then there’s other groups like Them Before Us and Women’s Liberation Front, both of which submitted amici in support of the Texas Attorney General and are devoted to upending LGBTQ+ rights in the United States. Them Before Us says it’s “committed to putting the rights and well-being of children ahead of the desires and agendas of adults.” But it’s also running a campaign to “End Obergefell,” the 2015 Supreme Court case that upheld the right to same-sex marriage, and has been on the cutting edge of transphobic campaigning and pseudoscientific fearmongering about IVF and surrogacy. The Women’s Liberation Front, on the other hand, is an organization that has a long track record of supporting transphobic policies such as bathroom bills, bans on gender-affirming healthcare, and efforts to define “sex” strictly as the biological sex assigned at birth. 

Through cases like FSC v. Paxton, groups like these three continue to advance a vision of society that creates government mandates to enforce their worldviews over personal freedom, while hiding behind a shroud of concern for children’s safety. But when they also describe LGBTQ+ people as “evil” threats to children and run countless campaigns against their human rights, they are being clear about their intentions. This is why we continue to say: the impact of age verification measures goes beyond porn sites.

Expanding censorship beyond the internet into real-life public spaces

As we’ve said for years now, the push to age-gate the internet is part of a broader campaign to control what information people can access in public life both on- and offline. Many of the same organizations advancing these proposals claim to be acting on behalf of young people, but their arguments consistently use children as props to justify giving the government more control over speech and information.

Many of the organizations advocating for online age verification have also supported book bans, attacks on DEI policies and education, and efforts to remove LGBTQ+ materials from schools and libraries. Two of the organizations who supported the Texas Attorney General, Citizens Defending Freedom and Manhattan Institute, have led campaigns around the country to “abolish DEI” and ban classical books like “The Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison from school libraries. These efforts are not different from the efforts to restrict access to the internet—they reflect a broader strategy to restrict access to ideas or information that these groups find objectionable. And they discourage free thought, inquiry, and the ability for people to decide how to live their lives. 

These campaigns rely on the same core argument, that certain ideas are inherently dangerous to young people and must therefore be restricted. But that framing misrepresents an important reality: if lawmakers genuinely want to address harms that young people experience online, they should start by listening to young people themselves. When EFF spoke directly with young people about their online experiences, they overwhelmingly rejected restrictions on their access to the internet and came back with nuanced and diverse perspectives. Once that principle—that certain ideas are inherently dangerous—is accepted, the internet, once a symbol of free expression, connection, creativity, and innovation, becomes the next logical target. 

This also wouldn’t be the first time a vulnerable group is used as a prop to advance internet censorship laws. We’ve seen this playbook during the debate over FOSTA/SESTA, where many of the same advocates claimed to speak for trafficking victims/survivors and sex workers, while pushing legislation that ultimately censored online speech and harmed the very communities it invoked. It’s a familiar pattern: you invoke a vulnerable group, frame certain speech as a threat, and use that as a way to expand government control over the flow of information. And as we said in the fight against FOSTA: if lawmakers are serious about addressing harms to particular communities, they should start by talking to those communities. This means that lawmakers seeking to address online harms to young people should be talking to young people, not groups who claim their interests. 

Rep. Finke Was Not Radical. She Was Right.

The Paxton case, and the coalition backing age verification laws in the U.S., shows us exactly why the messaging around these laws draws superficial support from parents and lawmakers. But we’ve heard the quiet part said out loud before. Marsha Blackburn, a sponsor of the federal Kids Online Safety Act, has said that her goal with the legislation was to address what she called “the transgender” in society. When lawmakers and advocacy groups frame queer existence itself as a threat to young people, age-verification laws become ideological enforcement instead of regulatory policy.

In defending free speechprivacy, and the right of young people to access truthful information about themselves, Rep. Leigh Finke was not radical—she was right. She was warning that broad, ideologically driven laws will be used to erase, silence, and isolate young people under the banner of child protection. 

What’s at stake in the fight against age verification is not just a single bill in a single state, or even multiple states, for that matter. It’s about whether “protecting children” becomes a legal pretext for embedding government control over the internet to enforce specific moral and religious judgments—judgments that deny marginalized people access to speech, community, history, and truth—into law. 

And more people in public office need the courage of Rep. Finke to call this out.

Republished from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

07:00 AM

Fifth Circuit: Actually, Putting The Ten Commandments In Schools Is Probably Fine [Techdirt]

Last June, the Fifth Circuit Appeals Court upheld a lower court’s ruling declaring a Louisiana law mandating the posting of the Ten Commandments in public schools to be a violation of the Constitution.

This decision made immediate sense, given that courts elsewhere in the nation (including the US Supreme Court) had repeatedly ruled that laws like these destroyed the separation of church and state. These laws were extremely obvious violations of the First Amendment that elevated one particular religion to a position of prominence with the backing of government power.

That hasn’t stopped MAGA legislators from creating similarly unconstitutional laws around the nation. These opportunists are hoping to convert their Trump coattail-riding into local iterations of Trump’s white Christian nationalist efforts.

Last June may as well be a lifetime ago. In that ruling, the Fifth Circuit made it clear the law was nothing more than an unconstitutional way for the state government to shove its preferred deity down students’ throats.

The statute does not require that the Ten Commandments be integrated into a curriculum of study. On the contrary, under the statute’s minimum requirements, the posters must be indiscriminately displayed in every public school classroom in Louisiana regardless of class subject-matter. See La. R.S. § 17:2124(B)(1). Louisiana insists, however, that unlike Kentucky, its Legislature has a valid “secular historical and educational purpose” for displaying the Ten Commandments in classrooms, which is reflected in the statute.

[…]

Louisiana’s purported legislative purpose states:
It is the Legislature’s intent to apply the decision set forth by the Supreme Court of the United States in Van Orden v. Perry, 545 U.S. 677 (2005), to continue the rich tradition [of including the Ten Commandments in the education of our children] and ensure that the students in our public schools may understand and appreciate the foundational documents of our state and national government.

[…]

It is also unclear how H.B. 71 ensures that students in Louisiana public schools “understand and appreciate the foundational documents of [its] state and national government” when it makes displaying those “foundational” documents optional, and does not require that they also be printed in a large, easily readable font. La. R.S. § 17:2124(A)(9). When the Ten Commandments must be posted prominently and legibly, while the other “contextual” materials need not be visible at all, the disparity lays bare the pretext.

That was the court refusing to let Louisiana lawmakers have their cake and eat it too by pretending the Ten Commandments were both “optional” and essential to students’ instruction.

The en banc opinion [PDF] — released in late February — goes in a completely different direction. The majority somehow reaches the conclusion that the lawsuit is premature. It lifts the injunction preventing the law from taking effect. The court contorts itself to give Louisiana a free pass to post the Ten Commandments prominently in public schools by pretending it doesn’t know how this mandate will actually look in practice.

While H.B. 71 sets certain “minimum requirement[s]” regarding the text, size, and accompanying “context statement” of the displays, it leaves “[t]he nature of the display” entirely to the discretion of local school boards. La. Rev. Stat. § 17:2124(B)(1)–(3). That delegation and those minimum requirements—necessarily leave numerous essential questions unanswered. We do not know, for example, how prominently the displays will appear, what other materials might accompany them, or how—if at all— teachers will reference them during instruction. More fundamentally, we do not even know the full content of the displays themselves. Although the statute requires inclusion of the Commandments and a context statement, it expressly permits additional content—such as “the Mayflower Compact, the Declaration of Independence, and the Northwest Ordinance”—to appear alongside them. Id. § 2124(B)(4).

Simply put, we cannot evaluate “how the text is used,” Van Orden, 545 U.S. at 701 (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment) (emphasis omitted), because we do not yet know—and cannot yet know—how the text will be used.

But we do actually know all of these things. And the Court does too, even if it has conveniently chosen to ignore the law to give the GOP what it wants yet again. (See also: this, this, this, this, etc.) As Rachel Lager — one of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs in this case — points out in her article for The Hill, the state’s lawyers and the bill’s proponents have already answered the questions the Fifth Circuit is now pretending are in need of further examination.

This law intends for the government (public schools) to convey that the words of the Ten Commandments — including “I AM the LORD thy God. Thou shalt have no other gods before me,” and “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy” — are mandates for all children, regardless of whether they and their families are Hindu and believe in many gods or nonreligious and believe in none.

Lest there be any doubt that this law was written to proselytize students, state Rep. Dodie Horton (R), the law’s sponsor, told us so when she proposed the bill: “I’m not concerned with an atheist. I’m not concerned with a Muslim, I’m concerned with our children looking and seeing what God’s law is.” Judge James Dennis was on point in his dissent when he called the court’s reasoning “procedural artifice.”

That vast gap between the Fifth Circuit’s “narrow” holding and the facts on the ground likely explain why there’s only a single published concurrence and several dissents. The sole concurrence was written by Judge James Ho, who boldly, baldly declares Supreme Court precedent on the subject is “no longer good law,” despite the Supreme Court never having said so itself. Ho also says the lawsuit isn’t just premature, but entirely without merit.

Multiple dissents disagree. The first, written by James Dennis and co-signed by three other judges — says James Ho and the rest of the majority are wrong. Pretending Supreme Court precedent regarding the mandated posting of the Ten Commandments (via a Kentucky state law) is no longer relevant because the Supreme Court ruled in favor of a coach who was fired for engaging in post-game prayers with his players is deliberately ignoring the difference between state action and personal action in order to reach the conclusion these pro-Bible-down-your-throat judges had already decided was the correct ruling.

Bound by Stone v. Graham and its progeny, and mindful that we are not the Supreme Court, I conclude that permanently posting the Ten Commandments in every public school classroom, without curricular incorporation and with compulsory attendance, violates the Establishment Clause. Our court avoids confronting that conclusion only through procedural artifice. I dissent.

Another dissent points out what the state, its legislators, and the majority of Fifth Circuit judges have also chosen to ignore: that religious leaders don’t even want the state to do what it’s doing.

Indeed, every faith-based organization before us—on behalf of thousands of members—and every clergy and devout plaintiff agree that Louisiana must not pick and post specific scripture that the state commands will confront children in state classrooms. All religious voices submitted to us, barring one individual, oppose Louisiana’s attempt to select, inculcate, and enforce this version of gospel text in compulsory public education.

The only people left arguing for this are arguing in bad faith. Parents and religious leaders who pretend any instruction in anything they’re opposed to (gender issues, evolution, socialism, etc.) is a form of indoctrination are more than willing to sign off on literal government indoctrination so long as it’s the sort of indoctrination they like.

Even if the en banc court felt this might need more discussion, it should have erred on the side of plaintiffs. In choosing to do otherwise, it’s basically telling plaintiffs in the Fifth Circuit that their rights need to be violated first because they can start questioning the constitutionality of enacted laws. That’s insane. But it’s the sort of insane the Fifth Circuit is known for. The only question now is whether the Supreme Court still has enough honest justices left to reverse this obviously unconstitutional decision by the Fifth.

06:00 AM

Australia’s Teen Social Media Ban Is Just Training A Generation In The Art Of The Workaround [Techdirt]

We’ve been covering Australia’s under-16 social media ban since before it went into effect, first noting the confusion and obvious implementation problems as pretty much everyone realized it was a total mess, and then documenting how the ban was actively harming kids with disabilities by cutting them off from critical support communities.

None of this was even remotely surprising. Critics around the world warned about all of it. The government went ahead anyway because doing something tends to poll better than doing something that actually works, especially when the thing that works is harder to explain. And government officials insisted (incorrectly) that the only ones who were complaining were the big tech companies or their proxies.

Now, three months in, the data is starting to arrive, and it confirms what should have been obvious from the start. New data from parental monitoring company Qustodio, provided to Crikey, shows that the ban has barely moved the needle:

While TikTok, YouTube and Snapchat all saw a decrease in use by Australians aged 10-15, the majority of teens who had been using the social media platforms pre-ban remained on the services afterwards.

That’s according to a new snapshot of data provided to Crikey by parental monitoring company Qustodio, adding to early evidence that there’s widespread circumvention of the government’s flagship tech policy.

The usage drop was only marginally larger than the normal seasonal dip that happens every year. In other words, the “world-first” ban achieved roughly the same effect as summer ending. There was definitely a drop, but it’s just not a particularly big one:

For what it’s worth, others are reporting the same thing. The Courier Mail found that the majority of teens who were using these apps before the ban were still using them afterwards.

Defenders of the ban will usually say something along the lines of: “We had to do something. Children were at risk. Even if it’s imperfect, at least we tried.” That argument might hold some water if the ban merely failed — if it just didn’t work and left things roughly where they were before. A swing and a miss. You dust yourself off and try something else.

But that’s not what happened. The ban didn’t leave things where they were. It made things actively worse, through a mechanism that was entirely predictable.

The ban is basically a test of technical sophistication, rather than a test of vulnerability. The kids who can’t figure out how to get around it — or who don’t have friends or older siblings to help them — are the kids who are already isolated or lack the technical skills to bypass a block. Those are the kids with disabilities who lost their support communities, the ones we wrote about last month. Those are the kids in rural areas or difficult home situations who relied on these platforms for connection. The ban selected for vulnerability and filtered against resourcefulness.

That’s a hell of a result for a child safety measure.

Meanwhile, the vast majority of kids — the ones the ban was supposedly protecting — just learned to route around it. Rather than learning responsible usage and digital literacy, they learned that age verification systems are obstacles to be defeated… which, congratulations, is probably the single least useful lesson you could teach a teenager about their relationship with technology.

Actually, it’s worse: Australian adults now have a false sense of security — the comfortable belief that they’ve magically protected kids from the evils of the internet.

When you pass a ban and declare the problem solved, you eliminate the political pressure to do the things that would actually help. Why fund digital literacy programs when kids aren’t supposed to be on social media at all? Why push platforms to develop better age-appropriate tools and experiences when under-16s are “banned”? Why have conversations with kids about healthy usage of something they’re not supposed to be using?

The ban creates a fiction — kids are off social media — that every politician and regulator has an incentive to maintain, even though the data says the fiction is exactly that. Kids are still using these platforms. They’re just doing it without guidance or access to real safety tools, and with the realization that the adults in charge don’t actually understand how any of this works.

So you end up with the worst possible outcome: nearly universal continued usage combined with policy complacency and zero institutional incentive to teach kids how to use these platforms safely. Kids using social media without supervision or education, while the government pats itself on the back for a ban that exists only on paper.

This was all foreseeable. It was all foreseen. Critics said so publicly, repeatedly, before the law passed. And the Australian government did it anyway, because “ban the thing” is a satisfying political narrative, even when — especially when — it doesn’t work.

And now that it’s failed, rather than admit that the plan was bad and dangerous… they’re doubling down by blaming the tech companies:

An eSafety spokesperson said that social media platforms need to take “continuous action” to find underage users on their platforms, including those who’ve created new accounts.

“eSafety is aware of reports some under-16s continue to access social media accounts and is actively engaging with platforms and their age assurance providers to probe weaknesses and encourage continuous improvement of implementation and settings while continuing to monitor for any systemic failures that may amount to a breach of the law,” they said.

The spokesperson foreshadowed further announcements in the coming weeks, adding: “We will provide further updates on age restricted platforms’ progress in meeting their obligations when it is appropriate to do so but we must be careful to not compromise the regulatory process currently underway or prejudice any enforcement action we may undertake in future.”

The blame will keep flowing toward the platforms. The kids will keep routing around the ban. And the adults will keep congratulating themselves for solving a problem they made worse.

Daily Deal: The 2026 C# Course Bundle [Techdirt]

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03:00 AM

Black Man Shot By Cops Dies After White Cop Suffering An ‘Anxiety Attack’ Snags Ambulance [Techdirt]

Black Lives Matter. All Cops Are Bastards.

These are not temporary catchphrases. These are universal and forever.

And leave it to a cop to ensure we never forget either of these concepts. A foot pursuit that ended in the shooting of Connecticut resident Dyshan Best would otherwise just be a footnote in cop history if some cops hadn’t decided to be the bastards they wanted to see in the world and make it extremely clear they felt a Black life didn’t matter.

The internal investigation of the shooting of a Black man by Bridgeport PD officers delivered unsurprising results:

Dyshan Best, 39, was shot in the back last year as he fled from officers in Bridgeport, Connecticut. A report released Tuesday by the state’s inspector general found that the shooting was justified because Best had a gun in his hand and the officer pursuing him had reasons to fear for his own safety.

All the stuff we expect to see in these reports is here, beginning with the assumption that a gun is a threat even if it’s not pointed at officers to the de rigueurfear for my safety” justification for shooting a fleeing person.

What’s somewhat expected — but still somehow surprising — is what happened after the apparently justified shooting:

The first ambulance called to take Best to the hospital arrived at the scene at 6:02 p.m., about 14 minutes after the shooting. However, at the urging of other officers, that ambulance was used to take away a white police officer, Erin Perrotta, who had been involved in the foot chase, the report said.

Paramedics reported that Perrotta declined treatment in the ambulance.

“I am fine, I just needed to get out of here,” she said, according to the report. Another officer described Perrotta at the time as “visibly hysterical (crying and breathing rapidly) and had blood all over her uniform,” the report said.

That’s right. The ambulance sent to pick up the person police officers had just shot was instead handed over to Officer Erin Perrotta, who — as the Inspector General’s report notes — was enduring the relative hardship of a “mild anxiety attack.”

The second ambulance didn’t show up for another ten minutes. The person with actual bullet holes in him didn’t hit the ER until 14 minutes after Officer “Anxiety Attack” Perrotta arrived at the hospital. The officer who was never in any danger of dying got nearly a 15-minute head start on her medical treatment.

The person they’d shot didn’t make it.

Best died at 7:41 p.m. as he was undergoing treatment for the gunshot wound, which damaged his liver and right kidney.

Meanwhile, Officer Perrotta’s employer only seems interested in outlasting this news cycle:

A spokesperson for Bridgeport police, Shawnna White, declined to comment Wednesday when asked about Perrotta taking the first ambulance. She said in an email that the police department’s Internal Affairs Division would conduct its own investigation.

Sometimes the lack of direct response says more than a direct response would. Perrotta is apparently currently on administrative leave “due to an unrelated matter.” That either means Perrotta does bad stuff often enough she’s already given the department another reason to sideline her or that the department has found other stuff to add to this headline-generating “#mefirst” effort by the officer to grease the wheels for the inevitable firing.

Whatever happens now won’t budge the needle for US law enforcement agencies. But for the rest of us not standing on the inside of the Thin Blue Line, this incident says the quiet part loud: Black lives don’t matter… not when it’s a cop claiming they can’t breathe.

01:00 AM

Can you make it worse? [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Is there something you can do right now that would impede progress, degrade quality or simply mess up the current situation?

Is there a way you could shift perceptions to make people more distraught, less hopeful or even panicked?

If it’s so easy to accomplish worse, why do we persist in believing we don’t have the power to make things better?

      

Friday 2026-03-20

11:00 PM

Brendan Carr Crafting ‘Patriotic’ Call Center Onshoring Plan To Provide Cover For Mass Looming Telecom Layoffs [Techdirt]

When he’s not busy trampling free speech, crushing the First Amendment, and destroying media consolidation and consumer protection standards, Brendan Carr has other hobbies. Like helping the telecom industry patriotically sell a brutal coming wave of new layoffs caused by the kind of industry consolidation he regularly rubber stamps.

Carr recently began circulating plans for something he claims will restrict U.S. telecom companies’ ‌use of foreign call centers and require foreign-based customer service workers to be proficient in American Standard English. The plan is vague, but Reuters unskeptically frames it as a good faith effort to protect U.S. consumer privacy, improve customer service, and protect Americans from the scourge of foreign accents:

“Carr noted that nearly 70% of U.S. businesses outsource at least one ‌department, ⁠including customer service and call center operations, to overseas locations.

“As a result, too many Americans have struggled to resolve an issue with a representative due to cultural and language barriers,” Carr said, adding foreign customer ​service centers “also raise ​concerns about ⁠protecting consumers’ personal information.”

What is Carr really up to here? I suspect he’s working closely with U.S. telecoms to craft pseudo-patriotic/nationalistic cover for another brutal round of layoffs. Some of which will be caused by AI, but a huge amount of which will have been caused by Carr’s love of rubber stamping harmful telecom industry consolidation.

For one, there’s no real evidence that overseas customer service centers create serious cybersecurity issues. As he did with his recent effort to remove phone unlocking rules, Carr likes to use cybersecurity as a bogeyman when convenient to something unpopular he’s trying to help industry sell.

Then, with his other hand, Carr is busy making U.S. consumers less safe and secure by gutting functional oversight of giant telecoms (despite the recent massive Salt Typhoon hack by China).

It’s also not really clear the FCC even has this authority. Especially in the Trump era, which has involved the Trump courts taking an absolutely brutal hatchet to regulatory independence. This sudden micromanagement of telcom support runs contrary to Carr’s “light regulatory touch” rhetoric. It’s also worth noting that a lot of telecoms, like Charter, already have mostly U.S. support agents.

But here’s the more important thing. I’ve covered Brendan Carr probably longer and more extensively than pretty much anybody alive. And I can tell you, with 100% certainty, that Carr doesn’t do anything that’s just inherently in the public interest. That’s simply not who he is.

He’s always working an angle for industry or large companies, usually media and telecom giants. There’s just no evidence that he’s a good faith operator in any of the arenas Reuters gives him unearned credibility for, and his ethics and principles, as we’ve seen repeatedly, are not consistent.

So I really doubt this has anything to actually do with improving customer service, or holding telecoms accountable for shoddy overseas support. I suspect he’s cooking up a stage play.

We’ve long noted how these consolidated regional telecom monopolies have some of the worst customer service ratings of any industry in America (which is truly saying something). Maybe AI will improve some aspects of that, but as we’ve seen in other arenas where AI is layered on top of very broken sectors (journalism, health insurance) by unethical executives, the end result isn’t particularly great.

If you don’t fix the underlying monopolization, you can’t fix the symptoms of monopolization, which generally are high prices, spotty service, slow speeds, and abysmal customer service. Layer AI on top of a broken industry, and you usually get a badly automated broken industry.

It will be worth keeping an eye on Carr’s final proposed plan. But I suspect it mostly involves him working closely with telecom giants to put a nationalistic, racist veneer on looming plans to dramatically accelerate layoffs in a telecom sector that’s already seen massive workforce reductions, largely due to the mindless consolidation Carr regularly rubber stamps.

05:00 PM

Oscar Winner ‘One Battle After Another’ Sees Piracy Surge, While ‘Sinners’ Stays Flat [TorrentFreak]

one battle after anotherIn 2007, The Pirate Bay supported “OscarTorrents,” which aimed to be a pirates’ counterweight to Hollywood’s annual awards show.

At the time, mass movie piracy was still a fringe activity, with no instant streaming options available. Nonetheless, more than 100,000 ‘pirates’ voted for their own movie favorites.

While the OscarTorrents project was a clear display of defiance, the outcome of the voting was rather mainstream. The Departed was crowned ‘Best Picture’ in the official Oscars ceremony, as well as in the pirate equivalent, and many of the other winners were also identical.

2026 Oscars

Fast forward nearly two decades, and the annual awards ceremony continues to make an impact. Typically, the winner of the Oscar for ‘best picture’ will see a boost in downloads on torrent sites and elsewhere.

Based on a sample of torrent activity tracked by IKnow, we can report that pirated downloads of “One Battle After Another” tripled the day after the awards ceremony compared to the week before. The chart below shows the daily estimated downloads for five of the Oscar nominees, with the winner clearly standing out.

Piracy Impact: 2026 Oscar Season

oscar 2026

This Oscar winner’s surge doesn’t come as a surprise, as we have seen this play out before. While there is always a boost for the best picture winner, relatively speaking, this is typically greater for lesser-known films.

The 300% increase for “One Battle After Another” is larger than that of “Oppenheimer” in 2024 but less pronounced than the quadrupling of last year’s winner, “Anora”.

No Piracy Boost for Sinners

What’s more surprising in this year’s data is the absence of an Oscar boost for Sinners, which was one of this year’s favorites with a record number of sixteen nominations. The film won four Oscars last weekend, but this didn’t trigger any new activity on pirate sites.

Sinners already saw its downloads on pirate sites triple in January after the nominations were announced. The nominations surge in January appears to have already satisfied pirates’ demand.

In the piracy data sample, we also see the lack of an Oscar effect for “Marty Supreme,” which did not see any increase in interest either. That is less surprising, of course, because the film failed to win any Oscars despite receiving nine nominations.

That said, it is not only the best picture winner who enjoys a boost in pirate downloads. While less visible in the chart above, “Frankenstein” and “Bugonia” also saw temporary download spikes of close to 50%, which can be attributed to the Oscar night spotlight for these titles.

Legal Demand Rises Too

The piracy boosts observed here are typically the result of an overall increase in demand. Legal streaming platforms tell a similar story, although not the same. Streaming search engine JustWatch informs us that, with a 231% increase, “One Battle After Another” was also the big winner in terms of legal demand.

Interestingly, Sinners did get a boost in interest on legitimate streaming platforms. JustWatch reports that Sinners saw an increase of 136% following the Academy Awards. JustWatch’s data is based on activity from U.S. users but, even when looking at U.S. traffic alone, a similar piracy effect could not be observed on our end.

Legal Streaming Impact: 2026 Oscar Season

stream

The graph above shows that legal demand for Marty Supreme through streaming platforms clearly dropped. That’s also different from our findings, as demand on pirate sites remained stable.

As with all trends today, these media-triggered spikes in demand don’t tend to last very long. After the initial boost on Monday, the piracy interest for most titles immediately started to level off. That said, with an Oscar for best picture in the bag, the status of “One Battle After Another” will remain permanently elevated.

Note: The data used in this article comes from Iknow, which tracks torrent downloads through DHT and PEX. While it may not be able to track all downloads, it’s a substantial sample. This sample only looks at torrent downloads. Views on streaming platforms, direct downloads, and other piracy sources can’t be measured directly. That said, we assume that the trend will be similar there.

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

02:00 PM

Business Models That Benefit Most from Lulu’s Print API [The Business of Printing Books]

Business Models That Benefit Most from Lulu’s Print API

If you are exploring Lulu’s ecosystem, you may be wondering which of our solutions is right for you. Whether you are just getting started with book publishing, launching an ecommerce business, or looking to introduce print material as an additional revenue stream for your company, we have the solutions you need. Instead of touting all the benefits of our different business lines (we’ve done that here), I’m going to take a different approach by focusing on one and sharing the business models that we see having the most success in implementing it.

Our Print API is a tool we’ve seen many different people with many different businesses have success with. There are wellness coaches, children’s book authors, people making books out of your text messages (with your consent, of course), but today I want to share some trends we’re seeing in the types of businesses that are successfully using our Print API so you can decide if you can use it to grow your business, too.


What Does Lulu’s Print API Do?

Let’s start with a brief overview of what our Print API does. Much like Lulu Direct, our Print API allows you to connect your online storefront to our global print and fulfillment network. You sell your books, journals, workbooks, magazines, planners, novels, and more through your own website, and the order gets sent to us to print and fulfill. All under your branding. A few highlights of using our Print API include:

  • Access to your customer data
  • Keep 100% of your revenue
  • Eliminate inventory and up-front costs 
  • Control your branding with white-label fulfillment
  • Automatically scale your production and fulfillment as your business grows
  • Access Lulu’s global print network to reach customers worldwide

The other major benefit of using Lulu’s Print API is per-order book customization. As long as you can build out the front end to get the necessary information from your customers, you can create a unique book and experience for each order.

If you’re an author, maybe this means including the reader’s name in the story. If you’re a coach or consultant, including your customer’s name along with a personalized workbook or methodology might be just the motivation they need to get to the next level. For enterprise users, this might mean updating projects with specific data points that change on a quarterly or annual basis. 

Offering custom content can help you stand out from competitors and offer your audience something truly unique. 

Business Models That Benefit Most from Lulu’s Print API

Sell Your Book, Your Way

Sell books on your Wix, Shopify, or WooCommerce website with Lulu Direct.
Or use our Order Import tool for your next book launch.

Learn About Lulu Direct

What Business Models Can Benefit from Using Lulu’s Print API?

With more and more books being published every day, unique and personalized products are one of the best ways to stand out. This list is certainly not exhaustive, but if you find that your business falls into one of these categories, integrating with Lulu’s Print API might just be the competitive edge you’re looking for. 

Membership and Subscription Businesses

Companies, entrepreneurs, or authors running paid communities, coaching programs, or subscription boxes can automatically fulfill printed materials like planners, workbooks, welcome kits, or quarterly magazines as members join or renew. The mailbox is having a moment, and with our Print API, you can easily dropship your custom printed content and delight your audience while earning revenue. 

Online Course and Education Providers

Course creators and educators can save time and money by automating and bundling the fulfillment of course materials. Let your students order supplemental material like workbooks, textbooks, or manuals to accompany your digital coursework. Each bundle can be customized to include the students’ names and specific modules they need for course completion.

Enterprise and B2B Platforms (especially those selling personalized content) 

Enterprise businesses and B2B companies that produce personalized reports, yearbooks, employee handbooks, compliance manuals, or customer-specific catalogs can take the guesswork (and cost) out of managing inventory by only ordering content when they need it. Once a custom API integration is built, companies that sell books as a core product (like customized wellness and diet plans, astrological planners, or AI-generated books) can automatically generate and dropship thousands of unique orders to their customers.

Event and Community Organizations

Conferences, nonprofits, and associations that create programs, proceedings, directories, or commemorative books can automate fulfillment tied to registrations or milestones, avoiding large print runs that may go to waste. Creating a high-quality print book or calendar that aligns with your mission can also be a great way to raise money and stay top of mind with your donors or members.

Business Models That Benefit Most from Lulu’s Print API

Your Free Lulu Account

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

Create a Free Account

Customization at Scale

Joshua Zinkovsky came to Lulu when he had the idea of turning text messages into beautiful keepsakes. Joshua wanted to create a way for people to hold on to important memories by preserving text conversations that would otherwise end up deleted or forgotten.

Integrating with Lulu’s Print API allowed Joshua to streamline book production while offering the custom designs his products require. He used the seamless integration and automation of our Print API to create My Forever Books

Joshua’s experience isn’t just a sweet story of making something memorable for his customers. It’s the story of leveraging Lulu’s global logistics network to create a sustainable business. The results speak for themselves—after connecting to Lulu’s Print API, My Forever Books saw a staggering 2,000% profit increase in just four months.

Joshua brought his passion project to life without sacrificing quality, managing inventory, or losing brand control.

Getting Started with Lulu’s Print API

If you’re ready to bring your business to life with Lulu’s Print API, here’s how to get started:

💡
Find a developer - We can provide some support, but most of the development work will need to be completed by you or your team.
📂
Review our documentation - All of the technical documentation is available on the Lulu Developer Portal.
🖥️
Complete the integration - Your developer will build the integration between your system and the Lulu Print API so your orders can be sent to us for fulfillment.
🏖️
Test in the sandbox environment - We provide a sandbox testing environment so you can verify that your integration is working correctly before sending real orders.
🚚
Begin fulfillment! Once testing is complete, you can switch to the live production environment and begin sending orders to Lulu for fulfillment.

For more information, check out the full API Integration Guide or contact our team below.

Automating Business Growth with the Print API

If you are building a business with books, or want to introduce books to your business as an additional stream of revenue, automating the print and fulfillment with Lulu’s Print API not only saves you time and money, but also allows you to focus on the business while we handle the logistics. Reach a global audience, offer curated custom products, and never worry about warehousing, packing, or shipping books manually again.

Kanji of the Day: 層 [Kanji of the Day]

✍14

小6

stratum, social class, layer, story, floor

ソウ

支持層   (しじそう)   —   base support (e.g., for a party in an election)
無党派層   (むとうはそう)   —   unaffiliated voters
一層   (いっそう)   —   even more
断層   (だんそう)   —   fault
年齢層   (ねんれいそう)   —   age range
層化   (そうか)   —   layering
高層   (こうそう)   —   high-rise (building)
若年層   (じゃくねんそう)   —   the young
富裕層   (ふゆうそう)   —   wealthy people
活断層   (かつだんそう)   —   active fault

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 芳 [Kanji of the Day]

✍7

中学

perfume, balmy, favorable, fragrant

ホウ

かんば.しい

芳醇   (ほうじゅん)   —   mellow (flavor or fragrance, esp. alcohol)
芳香   (ほうこう)   —   perfume
芳しくない   (かんばしくない)   —   poor
芳香剤   (ほうこうざい)   —   air freshener
芳しい   (かぐわしい)   —   sweet-smelling
芳信   (ほうしん)   —   letter
蘇芳   (すおう)   —   sappanwood (Caesalpinia sappan)
芳枝   (ほうし)   —   fragrant branch of flowers
芳紀   (ほうき)   —   age of a young lady who is at the peak of her (sexual) attractiveness
芳志   (ほうし)   —   kindness

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

01:00 PM

Greater Than Zero: The Anti-AI Pushback On Gaming Preservation Efforts Makes No Sense [Techdirt]

There is an old axiom you will have heard of before: don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. If we wanted to boil this down to a math equation, it might be described as something like: 0 < any positive integer. It’s not a difficult concept to grasp, typically, until you add in a dash of near-religious ideology into the equation. And that’s where the anti-AI crowd comes in.

Dustin Hubbard heads up Gaming Alexandria, a site dedicated to the preservation of obscure corners of video game history. Focused less on the actual games themselves, Gaming Alexandria instead focuses its efforts on media surrounding those games, such as manuals, box art, and old gaming journalism outputs. To that end, Hubbard’s group has amassed an impressive number of Japanese magazine scans throughout the years. To make this content useful to researchers elsewhere, he built a low-footprint app to make those scans searchable and, more importantly, to translate them. A Patreon page and subscriptions partially funded all of this.

And that’s what had Hubbard issuing apologies over this past weekend.

A day after that project went public, though, Hubbard was issuing an apology to many members of the Gaming Alexandria community who loudly objected to the use of Patreon funds for an error-prone AI-powered translation effort. The hubbub highlights just how controversial AI tools remain for many online communities, even as many see them as ways to maximize limited funds and man-hours.

“I sincerely apologize,” Hubbard wrote in his apology post. “My entire preservation philosophy has been to get people access to things we’ve never had access to before. I felt this project was a good step towards that, but I should have taken more into consideration the issues with AI.”

And this is where we enter the realm of the silly. I’m not some AI evangelist. I fully recognize that there are error and other problems with AI… and I imagine there always will be, to some extent. AI is not always, or perhaps even mostly, the right tool to use. Nor will it always have benefits that outweigh problems it creates for we human beings.

But a positive number is greater than zero. This was a tool that suddenly made all of this culture content accessible to a wider range of people. Before it was not available to anyone that didn’t have a high-level of knowledge on the Japanese language. Translation errors also happen with human translators, too. We need only look at the ancient religious texts, and the very real wars started over their translations, to understand that.

Hubbard himself attempted to make this point over the weekend.

Writing on Patreon this weekend, Hubbard said he has long been tinkering with an improved automated OCR and translation process that could help turn more of those magazine scans into useful tools for Western researchers. And when he put Google Gemini AI model to the task recently, he said he was “blown away” by the results. While he still recommended using a professional human translator before citing these magazines in any scholarly research, he said the output from the Gemini AI tool “gets you a large percentage of the way there quickly.”

Inspired by those results, Hubbard set to work on a self-described “vibe coded” interface to view the original PDF scans alongside their AI-generated text translations for easy comparison and editing. The result was the Gaming Alexandria Researcher tool, posted to GitHub on Friday and shared with the site’s Patreon backers as a “beta” on Saturday. The tool, which runs locally on Windows, Mac, or Linux, can search, download, and edit Gaming Alexandria’s files from the cloud or sort through local files stored on your own machine.

“This app has been something I never would have dreamed could exist,” Hubbard enthused. “Now I can finally read and enjoy these Japanese magazines I’ve been scanning for years. A large part of that is due to your believing in my work and funding me so thank you so much for that.”

The negative responses he got for all of this are wild. There were calls to boycott the project. Calls to rescind Patreon subscriptions. Max Nichols, a game designer, cancelled his own Patreon membership and decried the project as “worthless and destructive”, likening any output generated using AI-based translations as “looking at history through a clownhouse mirror.”

I would argue that I’d rather get that look than get no look at all. I’d also argue that we need to see very specific examples of AI-created translation errors to understand just how grounded these criticisms are in reality, versus all of this being a case of overstating the case.

Some fans of the site, at least, managed to understand the context here.

For some supporters, though, using machine translations—including ones aided by AI models—is a practical necessity given the size of the task at hand. “There’s no world in which they could ever get hundreds of thousands of pages translated by hand,” game preservationist Chris Chapman wrote on social media. “Error-prone searchability is more useful to more people than none at all.”

“Famitsu alone is over 1,900 issues, each with [a hundred-plus] pages,” journalist and author Felipe Pepe noted. “That’s one magazine from one country. [Human translation] would be ideal, but it’s impossible.”

On the Gaming Alexandria Discord, user asie wrote that people who use tools like Google Lens or DeepL are already using AI-powered OCR and translation tools. At this point, these kinds of tools are “just a fact of reality,” they added.

Again, any positive number is greater than zero. Don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Something is better than nothing.

I don’t know how to explain the negative responses here as anything other than a ideological commitment to disliking anything that even remotely touches upon artificial intelligence. Absolute moral stances certainly have their place, but they sure ought to be used sparingly.

And this particular stance is silly.

Donald Trump, Lyndon Johnson and Traps They Can’t Escape [The Status Kuo]

I’m writing for The Big Picture substack today. This is a teaser, so let me set the scene.

Three weeks into the war in Iran, Donald Trump is caught in a trap. It’s one that destroyed another American presidency sixty years ago.

When Lyndon Johnson escalated in Vietnam, he thought he was fighting a military war. He wasn’t. He was fighting a political one, and so was his enemy. North Vietnam didn’t need to beat us on the battlefield. They just needed to outlast us at home.

Iran is running the same playbook, but here’s where it gets darker. Johnson at least knew he was losing the political war. Trump​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ doesn’t seem to know there is one. When asked when the war would end, he told Fox News: “When I feel it in my bones.”

That’s not a strategy. That’s a trap with no exit.

With this, we’re getting into my own background on political theory, when I studied the role of military in politics under Condoleezza Rice in college. So nerd out a little and let’s see where this takes us! My piece comes out later this afternoon, so look for it if you’re already subscribed to The Big Picture. If not, you can do so for free (or as a voluntary paid supporter, thank you!) at the box below.

Sign Me Up For The Big Picture!

I’ll be back here tomorrow with a regular installment of The Status Kuo.

Jay

08:00 AM

The Government Uses Targeted Advertising to Track Your Location. Here’s What We Need to Do. [Techdirt]

We’ve all had the unsettling experience of seeing an ad online that reveals just how much advertisers know about our lives. You’re right to be disturbed. Those very same online ad systems have been used by the government to warrantlessly track peoples’ locations, new reporting has confirmed.

For years, the internet advertising industry has been sucking up our data, including our location data, to serve us “more relevant ads.” At the same time, we know that federal law enforcement agencies have been buying up our location data from shady data brokers that most people have never heard of.

Now, a new report gives us direct evidence that Customs and Border Protection (CBP) has used location data taken from the internet advertising ecosystem to track phones. In a document uncovered by 404 Media, CBP admits what we’ve been saying for years: The technical systems powering creepy targeted ads also allow federal agencies to track your location.

The document acknowledges that a program by the agency to use “commercially available marketing location data” for surveillance drew from the process used to select the targeted ads shown to you on nearly every website and app you visit. In this blog post, we’ll tell you what this process is, how it can and is being used for state surveillance, and what can be done about it—by individuals, by lawmakers, and by the tech companies that enable these abuses.

Advertising Surveillance Enables Government Surveillance

The online advertising industry has built a massive surveillance machine, and the government can co-opt it to spy on us. 

In the absence of strong privacy laws, surveillance-based advertising has become the norm online. Companies track our online and offline activity, then share it with ad tech companies and data brokers to help target ads. Law enforcement agencies take advantage of this advertising system to buy information about us that they would normally need a warrant for, like location data. They rely on the multi-billion-dollar data broker industry to buy location data harvested from people’s smartphones.

We’ve known for years that location data brokers are one part of federal law enforcement’s massive surveillance arsenal, including immigration enforcement agencies like CBP and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). ICE, CBP and the FBI have purchased location data from the data broker Venntell and used it to identify immigrants who were later arrested. Last year, ICE purchased a spy tool called Webloc that gathers the locations of millions of phones and makes it easy to search for phones within specific geographic areas over a period of time. Webloc also allows them to filter location data by the unique advertising IDs that Apple and Google assign to our phones.

But a document recently obtained by 404 Media is the first time CBP has acknowledged the location data it buys is partially sourced from the system powering nearly every ad you see online: real-time bidding (RTB). As CBP puts it, “RTB-sourced location data is recorded when an advertisement is served.” 

Even though this document is about a 2019-2021 pilot use of this data, CBP and other federal agencies have continued to purchase and use commercially obtained location data. ICE has purchased location tracking tools since then and recently requested information on “Ad Tech” tools it could use for investigations. 

The CBP document acknowledges two sources of location data that it relies on: software development kits (SDKs) and RTB, both methods of location-tracking that EFF has written about before. Apps for weather, navigation, dating, fitness, and “family safety” often request location permissions to enable key features. But once an app has access to your location, it could share it with data brokers directly through SDKs or indirectly (and often without the app developers’ knowledge) through RTB. Data brokers can collect location data from SDKs that they pay developers to put in their apps. When relying on RTB, data brokers don’t need any direct relationship with the apps and websites they’re collecting location data from. RTB is facilitated by ad companies that are already plugged into most websites and apps. 

How Real-Time Bidding Works

RTB is the process by which most websites and apps auction off their ad space. Unfortunately, the milliseconds-long auctions that determine which ads you see also expose your information, including location data, to thousands of companies a day. At a high-level, here’s how RTB works:

  1. The moment you visit a website or app with ad space, it asks an ad tech company to determine which ads to display for you. 
  2. This ad tech company packages all the information they can gather about you into a “bid request” and broadcasts it to thousands of potential advertisers. 
  3. The bid request may contain information like your unique advertising ID, your GPS coordinates, IP address, device details, inferred interests, demographic information, and the app or website you’re visiting. The information in bid requests is called “bidstream data” and typically includes identifiers that can be linked to real people. 
  4. Advertisers use the personal information in each bid request, along with data profiles they’ve built about you over time, to decide whether to bid on the ad space. 
  5. The highest bidder gets to display an ad for you, but advertisers (or the adtech companies that represent them) can collect your bidstream data regardless of whether or not they bid on the ad space.   

A key vulnerability of real-time bidding is that while only one advertiser wins the auction, all participants receive data about the person who would see their ad. As a result, anyone posing as an ad buyer can access a stream of sensitive data about billions of individuals a dayData brokers have taken advantage of this vulnerability to harvest data at a staggering scale. For example, the FTC found that location data broker Mobilewalla collected data on over a billion people, with an estimated 60% sourced from RTB auctions. Leaked data from another location data broker, Gravy Analytics, referenced thousands of apps, including Microsoft apps, Candy Crush, Tinder, Grindr, MyFitnessPal, pregnancy trackers and religious-focused apps. When confronted, several of these apps’ developers said they had never heard of Gravy Analytics. 

As Venntel, one of the location data brokers that has sold to ICE, puts it, “Commercially available bidstream data from the advertising ecosystem has long been one of the most comprehensive sources of real-time location and device data available.” But the privacy harms of RTB are not just a matter of misuse by individual data brokers. RTB auctions broadcast the average person’s data to thousands of companies, hundreds of times per day, with no oversight of how this information is ultimately exploited. Once your information is broadcast through RTB, it’s almost impossible to know who receives it or control how it’s used. 

What You Can Do To Protect Yourself

Revelations about the government’s exploitation of this location data shows how dangerous online tracking has become, but we’re not powerless. Here are two basic steps you can take to better protect your location data:

  1. Disable your mobile advertising ID (see instructions for iPhone/Android). Apple and Google assign unique advertising IDs to each of their phones. Location data brokers use these advertising IDs to stitch together the information they collect about you from different apps. 
  2. Review apps you’ve granted location permissions to. Apps that have access to your location could share it with other companies, so make sure you’re only granting location permission to apps that really need it in order to function. If you can’t disable location access completely for an app, limit it to only when you have the app open or only approximate location instead of precise location. 

For more tips, check out EFF’s guide to protecting yourself from mobile-device based location tracking. Keep in mind that the security plan that’s best for you will vary in different situations. For example, you may want to take stronger steps to protect your location data when traveling to a sensitive location, like a protest. 

What Tech Companies and Lawmakers Must Do

Legislators and tech companies must act so that individuals don’t bear the burden of defending their data every time they use the internet.

Ad tech companies must reckon with their role in warrantless government surveillance, among other privacy harms. The systems they built for targeted advertising are actively used to track people’s location. The best way to prevent online ads from fueling surveillance is to stop targeting ads based on detailed behavioral profiles. Ads can still be targeted contextually—based on the content people are viewing—without collecting or exposing their sensitive personal information. Short of moving to contextual advertising, tech companies can limit the use of their systems for government location tracking by:

  • Stopping the use of precise location data for targeted advertising. Ad tech companies facilitating ad auctions can and should remove precise location data from bid requests. Ads can be targeted based on people’s coarse location, like the city they’re in, without giving data brokers people’s exact GPS coordinates. Precise location data can reveal where we work, where we live, who we meet, where we protest, where we worship, and more. Broadcasting it to thousands of companies a day through RTB is dangerous.
  • Removing advertising IDs from devices, or at minimum, disabling them by default. Advertising IDs have become a linchpin of the data broker economy and are actively used by law enforcement to track people’s location. Advertising IDs were added to phones in 2012 to let companies track you, and removing them is not a far-fetched idea. When Apple forced apps to request access to people’s advertising IDs starting in 2021 (if you have an iPhone you’ve probably seen the “Ask App Not to Track” pop-ups), 96% of U.S. users opted out, essentially disabling advertising IDs on most iOS devices. One study found that iPhone users were less likely to be victims of financial fraud after Apple implemented this change. Google should follow Apple’s lead and disable advertising IDs by default.

Lawmakers also need to step up to protect their constituents’ privacy. We need strong, federal privacy laws to stop companies from spying on us and selling our personal information. EFF advocates for data privacy legislation with teeth and a ban on ad targeting based on online behavioral profiles, as it creates a financial incentive for companies to track our every move.

Legislators can and must also close the “data broker loophole” on the Fourth Amendment. Instead of obtaining a warrant signed by a judge, law enforcement agencies can just buy location data from private brokers to find out where you’ve been. Last year, Montana became the first state in the U.S. to pass a law blocking the government from buying sensitive data it would otherwise need a warrant to obtain. And in 2024, Senator Ron Wyden’s EFF-endorsed Fourth Amendment is Not for Sale Act passed the House before dying in the Senate. Others should follow suit to stop this end-run around constitutional protections.

Online behavioral advertising isn’t just creepy–it’s dangerous. It’s wrong that our personal information is being silently harvested, bought by shadow-y data brokers, and sold to anyone who wants to invade our privacy. This latest revelation of warrantless government surveillance should serve as a frightening wakeup call of how dangerous online behavioral advertising  has become.

Reposted from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

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