News

Friday 2026-06-26

02:00 PM

Stop Killing Games Pivots To Amending Digital Fairness Act In EU After Loss [Techdirt]

Well, perhaps the demise of the Stop Killing Games movement in the EU was overstated. We were just talking about how the attempt to introduce new legislation to support the goals of the movement were defeated, despite a petition with over a million signatures and a parliamentary hearing that reportedly went very well. Given that all the movement is really after is restoring the copyright bargain in the video game industry such that cultural output in the form of games can’t be disappeared into the ether when a company decides to stop supporting it, the EU’s claim that copyright itself prohibits crafting new legislation was very disappointing.

But the movement is not only not done, but appears to have anticipated the decision. They are now moving onto their secondary plan: amending legislation already in process to achieve the same end.

In messages posted to Reddit, Stop Killing Games said there was “nothing surprising to anyone” in the decision, and that “the fight goes on.”

“This movement is defined by action and we will keep acting, we owe Ross [YouTuber Ross Scott, who launched Stop Killing Games in 2024] and the millions of people that have put their trust in us,” Stop Killing Games organizer Moritz Katzner wrote. “MEPs have recognized that, the California state assembly and even the courts have. Let’s keep winning.”

Katzner also laid out Stop Killing Games’ plans for the next few months, which includes continuing work on the Protect Our Games (POG) Act in the US and adapting it for the EU, pushing efforts based on existing legislation in the EU, and building up its new Stop Killing the Internet team.

The legislation in question is the EU’s Digital Fairness Act. The DFA has some lofty goals with some welcome aims, such as prohibitions on certain UI/UX practices online that are designed to push users to make uninformed decisions they wouldn’t otherwise make, or ending region-based restrictions on the use of technology. But there is plenty of concern about the law as well, with opportunities for it to focus on age-checks, deeper surveillance into the usership, and so on. If this thing is going to become law, it very much needs to focus on both consumer protections through freedom and not requiring corporations to take an even heavier hand in monitoring and restricting who can do what with the technology. And, above all else, it cannot curtail innovation.

But if consumer protection is a key goal of the DFA, the Stop Killing Games movement would fit nicely alongside it.

Stop Killing Games organizers, including founder Ross Scott, anticipated the Commission’s refusal and are now focusing on amending the Digital Fairness Act. They claim to have majority support in the European Parliament, with over 40 lawmakers backing the petition’s goals. The DFA, still in development, addresses broader digital rights issues, making it a potential vehicle for game preservation measures.

“We have made serious inroads in parliament. Just recently, we’ve even had an inquiry call on legislative action to the Commission signed by 45 members of European Parliament and collectively we have majority support on this issue. This means we’re in a position to pass legislation on this even without the Commission’s blessing.” – Ross Scott

Despite the recent set back, those heading up the movement believe they’re still in a good place to get something done. Alongside the legislation being proposed in California, it would be nice to see them start to stack up wins.

08:00 AM

The Free And Open Web Is Under Attack At The IETF [Techdirt]

The ability to access publicly available information using automated tools is a central value and benefit of a free and open internet. Automated access—often called crawling or scraping—powers important, useful tools for locating, preserving, and analyzing online information. For example, crawling and scraping helps journalists, researchers, and watchdog organizations report the news, find security flaws, and investigate discrimination. Crawling the web allows non-profits like the Internet Archive to preserve historical copies of websites. Tools for automated comparison shopping allow consumers to find the best deals on items they want to buy. And so on.

Yet the open internet access is increasingly under threat from publishers and Big Tech companies alike. Fearing lost advertising and licensing revenues, website operators increasingly claim that they need to lock down their sites from bots that crawl public web content to train or operate AI models. Some companies are even trying to embed their business models into internet standards by changing Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) technical standards that shape much of the internet.

Many of their economic anxieties are understandable. AI bots can strain websites’ infrastructure, in some cases, degrading site performance or taking them offline altogether. Upgrading systems costs money that some sites may not have. And AI is likely to disrupt the business models many publishers adopted in response to the rise of the internet, if users rely on AI overviews instead of visiting source websites.

However reasonable these fears may be, the answer is not to change the IETF standards from neutral protocols that encourage openness to restrictive requirements designed to monetize internet access.

The worst of these proposed standards would give websites far greater ability to automatically block legitimate, lawful scraping and crawling. For example, the AI Preferences working group is working on proposals to give publishers a way to express “preference signals” against crawling web data for AI-related purposes, including to train models, generate outputs, and help users search the web. These preference signals would be expressed through robots.txt and could potentially become legally binding in some jurisdictions.

Another working group, called Web Bot Auth, is pursuing efforts to protect sites from overly-aggressive bots that strain website resources—a positive goal that could meaningfully improve the internet in the AI era. But Web Bot Auth is simultaneously pursuing a much more dangerous path as well: standards changes that would enable sites to cryptographically identify bots so that they can more easily block anyone they wish—not just “bad” actors, but competitors, dissidents, or anyone who hasn’t paid for the right to access sites using automated tools. If sites restrict crawling to a preapproved list of cryptographically authenticated bots, they could require licensing payments from those wishing to crawl their sites. This would close off the open web to researchers, archivists, and startups without the ability to pay for automated access.  

Websites may have legitimate reasons to worry about AI’s impacts on their traffic and advertising revenue, but those reasons must be weighed against the benefits of the open web. These proposals would effectively give website operators veto power over a wide range of important uses—from the investigations and archival works described above to accessibility tools for people with disabilities, to research efforts aimed at holding governments accountable.

That is why we are fighting back against these threats to open access. EFF and our allies in the open internet community have successfully resisted some of the most dangerous IETF proposals thus far—and won’t stop working to protect the open web from efforts to manipulate internet standards to undermine the right to freely access the internet in any legal way, including with automated tools.

Republished from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

Cotswolds Interlude, Hiking Day Four [The Popehat Report]

Today was our fourth hiking day in England. We did 9.5 miles from Daylesford back to Bledington where we are staying. It was the hottest day of this heat wave week and the humidity remains brutal to our Southern California tastes, but somehow today was easier than yesterday, when I was wiped out by a 7 mile hike in the heat.

I love a trip where you feel that you are somewhere else, somewhere unique, not just the same sprawl with the same stores and sights. The Cotswolds are a great experience because nearly every building is quite old and because walking it also gives you a strong sense of time — this is what it would be like to walk from one small village to another on some errand.

There were many fine fields and meadows. I fell victim to muddy footing in one but injured only my dignity.

We walked through Adlestrop, immortalized by Edward Thomas’ evocative poem. Further on we reached Lower Oddington — apparently a corruption of “Odyn’s Town” — and went into St. Nicholas Church, which has changed very little structurally since 1300 or so. Its claim to fame is the 14th century Doom painting on the wall, much faded but quite visible:

“Doom” here means “judgment” - it’s Judgment Day. (Hence the nickname given to William the Conquerer’s great survey of property in England — the Doomsday Book — so called because it reflected unalterable judgments about ownership.) The menace is somewhat undermined by an adjacent fresco that people think was likely meant to mock Cardinal Wolsey. Memes are everywhere.

Easy day tomorrow, which my knees will appreciate.

Trump’s Latest Own Goal [The Status Kuo]

Photo: Andrew Harnik/Getty Images.

In honor of FIFA, let’s review the biggest “own goal” yet, committed by the ailing U.S. president.

On Wednesday, House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-LA) stood at the podium in Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill. He was feeling triumphant, having helped lead his conference to finally pass “a really important bill to lower housing costs.” It was the first major legislative achievement of the year, and a bipartisan one at that, just in time to have something to show voters before the midterms. It could prove the GOP really cared about issues like affordability and the high cost of living!

Rep. French Hill (R-AR)—chair of the powerful House Financial Services Committee and the bill’s floor manager—was also jubilant. He declared, “Let’s show the American people what legislating looks like. Let’s show the American people how you bring together and do something on a bicameral basis, and we did that.”

Hill had long claimed it had been his “top goal” to lower the cost of housing. “This bill does that, so I’m proud of the work that both chambers have struggled through,” he said. “But it’s successful today, and I’m proud of the work of the House and Senate to get people to ‘yes.’”

Cue sad trombone. What he did not know was that, at that very moment, Donald Trump had already posted on Truth Social canceling the planned signing of the bill. A reporter had to break the news to him.

Workers quietly removed the presidential seal from the podium. Democrats moved in to use the stage as a backdrop for their condemnations. The party that had spent months clawing this bill to the finish line left the stage, in full view of the public, with nothing to show for it.

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The road to the ROAD to Housing Act

The bill is formally known as the 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act. ROAD, in the forced manner these bills receive their titles, stands for “Renewing Opportunity in the American Dream.” Name aside, it represents the most sweeping housing legislation in decades, and it addresses a core problem in housing: supply.

In the years since the 2008 financial crisis, homebuilding has lagged, creating a shortage that has pushed prices higher as demand continues to outstrip supply. A family now needs an income of roughly $117,000 a year to afford the typical home on the market—almost $30,000 more than what most American households earn.

The bill attacks that problem on several fronts. It includes grant funding and pilot programs to build new homes, eases federal regulations, and empowers local governments to expedite housing reviews. It also restricts large institutional investors, including hedge funds and private equity firms, from buying more single-family homes once they own at least 350, a provision that drew bipartisan support. Co-sponsors Tim Scott (R-SC) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), admittedly strange political bedfellows, said jointly: “Today’s bipartisan vote is an important step toward addressing America’s housing affordability crisis and giving families across this country a fair shot at the American Dream.”

Getting to the finish line was another matter. The bill spent months bouncing between chambers, nearly derailed multiple times by intraparty fighting on the Republican side. House Freedom Caucus Chairman Andy Harris (R-MD) flatly told Politico that the House would “deal with housing in some way—it’s not going to be the way the Senate is going to send it over to the House.” Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-FL) threatened to block the bill’s rule vote entirely, tying her objection not to housing policy but to her frustration that Senate Majority Leader John Thune wasn’t moving fast enough on a separate elections bill (more on that later). Key provisions were stripped or renegotiated to bring conservatives along. In the end, all opposition in both chambers came from Republicans. Not a single Democrat voted against the final bill.

Francis Torres, housing and infrastructure director at the Bipartisan Policy Center, called the legislation “the most serious that Congress has gotten about housing reforms in a generation.” The Senate passed it 85–5. The House followed 358–32. Those are very high margins, almost unheard of in an age of political division.

The signing ceremony was scheduled for noon Wednesday in Statuary Hall.

Trump said what now?

Trump’s team set up the easy score for him. The night before the planned signing, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt praised the bill online as “one of the most significant pieces of housing affordability legislation in American history.” She added, “This bipartisan bill includes policies long championed by the President,” writing of its many provisions, “It cuts unnecessary red tape, helps increase housing supply, and limits the ability of large institutional investors to purchase single-family homes. As the President has said, homes should be owned by American families, not large corporations. President Trump promised to lower housing costs, and he is delivering, making it easier for every family to achieve the American Dream of homeownership. Tomorrow’s historic bill signing is another promise made, promise kept.”

James Blair, the recently departed White House deputy chief of staff now running Trump’s midterm operation, called it “a signature commitment that President Trump laid out in the State of the Union.”

Then the president picked up his phone and started to type.

As The National Desk reported, the White House went from touting the bill as a monumental achievement to downplaying its importance in less than 24 hours. In a Truth Social post, he called it “The Elizabeth ‘Pocahontas’ Warren centric housing bill, which is of minor importance compared to lower interest rates… pales in comparison to passing THE SAVE AMERICA ACT.” He then continued: “Get the bad Republicans to approve it or, better yet, Terminate the Filibuster and approve it, AND EVERYTHING ELSE REPUBLICANS HAVE EVER DREAMED OF. The Dumocrats will do it in hour one, 100%. Republicans will feel very stupid if they don’t do it first. I’ll be watching with tears in my eyes!!!”

Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) said Trump made the decision to cancel the signing during a phone call between the two that morning. Johnson had been walking Trump through how Trump’s elections bill, the so-called SAVE America Act, could be passed through the reconciliation process (though that is dubious). He then had to sane-wash Trump’s about-face, later telling reporters: “He has a window of time before he has to sign a bill, and he’s going to use a little bit more of that window of time. He’ll do it within that 10-day window.”

What Trump wants instead—and why he can’t have it

Trump’s latest demand is that Congress first pass the Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act before he signs anything else. He called it a “National Emergency.”

The SAVE America Act contains many voter suppression provisions. It would abolish most mail-in voting, require voters to bring proof of citizenship and proof of residency to register, mandate voter roll purges every 30 days, and include provisions banning transgender healthcare and restricting trans girls and women from competing in women’s sports. The bill sparked nationwide controversy earlier this year over a provision that would have made it more difficult for married women to vote. The backlash gummed up Homeland Security funding for months before Republicans had to abandon the package.

It bears repeating that noncitizen voting in federal elections is already illegal and rarely happens. But debate over the bill's merits or flaws is already academic; the SAVE America Act does not have the votes to pass the Senate, let alone clear the 60-vote filibuster threshold. Sen. Thom Tillis (R-NC) called it an “unachievable goal.”

The political damage

Republican senators made clear Wednesday they understood exactly what had just happened and were mighty displeased that Trump apparently had headbutted the political ball past their own goalie.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) said Trump’s move “makes no sense” because the housing bill addresses a core voter concern before the election. Sen. Tillis was blunter: “I don’t know why you’re holding a bill that’s ready for signature hostage over a bill that will never pass this Congress, makes no sense to me. There is a huge group of people who really appreciate what the president’s doing right now, and it’s the Democrat party.”

Sen. John Cornyn (R-TX) called Trump’s reversal “inexplicable,” declaring, “I don’t know if there’s a precedent for it” and adding that colleagues whipping up Trump over a bill that can’t pass aren’t helping Republican chances in tough fall races. “I just don’t understand what they’re doing, what the point is. We do have midterm elections coming up here.”

Tim Scott (R-SC), the lead Senate Republican sponsor of the bill and chair of the Senate Banking Committee, bravely declined to comment.

Senate Majority Leader Thune, normally talkative, also declined to comment when first asked. “At this point, I don’t have any observations about that,” he told reporters. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) urged Trump to sign the bill “and stop making such a fool of himself.”

Trump then attended a closed-door lunch with Senate Republicans at the Capitol— invited not by Thune or GOP leadership, as is customary, but by Sen. Rick Scott of Florida. It turned contentious on multiple fronts.

Inside, as CNN reported, Rick Scott told Trump directly that they don't have the votes to pass the SAVE America Act. “I said this is where we are today,” Scott recounted afterward. “I’m a business guy. You have to live in reality.” After the lunch, Thune told reporters the conference had a “robust conversation” with the president, who made his views “very clear” even if he still refuses to accept political reality.

“We know how he feels on it,” Thune said. “I’m not sure what the takeaway was for him regarding that, but I think it’s fair to say that we’ve made the point a number of times that we don’t have the votes. But that’s not a conclusion, obviously, he would like to see us draw.”

When a reporter asked Trump directly whether he would veto the housing bill if it reached his desk, he didn’t answer. “I said I’m not signing the housing bill,” Trump said. “I want to see what happens with SAVE. Look, the housing bill is, I made billions of dollars with housing.”

Jim Tobin, president of the National Association of Home Builders, said he was on his way to the ceremony—walking through Capitol security—when Trump decided to hold the housing bill hostage. He called it “very disappointing,” citing two years of bipartisan work among industry leaders, lawmakers and the White House. “People, I believe, want to run—back home—on the affordability issue,” Tobin said. “This would be a great feather in a lot of Congress members’ hats, as well as the president’s.”

Sen. Warren put it plainly on CNBC. “He could be over here trying to claim a victory lap,” she noted. “And instead he’s saying, no, no, he doesn’t want anything to do with it. It’s because he really doesn’t care about American families.” Online, she drew a direct connection to the doomed SAVE America Act: “Huge bipartisan majorities in Congress passed a bill to lower housing costs. Trump refuses to sign it because he wants a bill that makes it harder to vote.”

The cancellation had immediate downstream consequences. A group of House Republicans led by Rep. Luna vowed to block any legislation from reaching the floor until the SAVE America Act passes, forcing the House to cancel rule votes for the entire week. Without those votes, the House cannot bring any bills to the floor. Congress is now gridlocked—not by Democrats, but by its own members, at the direction of its own president.

What happens now

There is a technical path by which the housing bill becomes law anyway. Once presented to the president (and it’s not clear that has happened yet), if Trump neither signs nor vetoes it within 10 days (excluding Sundays) while Congress is in session, it becomes law automatically. The margins it passed by—92 percent of the House and 94 percent of the Senate—already exceed the two-thirds threshold needed to override a veto, assuming GOP lawmakers would ever dare vote to override him.

Congress is scheduled to begin a two-week recess on Friday, but Senate leaders plan to hold pro forma sessions throughout. Those are brief, largely ceremonial meetings that keep Congress technically in session. That matters because a president can “pocket veto” a bill simply by not signing it, but only if Congress adjourns during the 10-day window. With pro forma sessions in place, that escape hatch is closed and the clock keeps running. (I told you this was technical. Try putting all that into a Schoolhouse Rock song!)

The likeliest outcome is that the bill becomes law without Trump’s signature. It’s a fitting coda for a president who turned his party’s one genuine legislative accomplishment, meant to help their own voters and give the GOP a win before the midterms, into a cynical and embarrassing demonstration of who those lawmakers actually work for.

06:00 AM

ICE Detention Center Contractor Endangered Detainees, Destroyed Homicide Evidence [Techdirt]

One of ICE’s largest detention centers is conveniently located only miles from the US border in El Paso, Texas. Erected on an apparently unused section of the Ft. Bliss military base, the detention center was crafted to hold up to 5,000 detainees at a time.

Camp East Montana has already earned the reputation as one of the worst places for detainees to be sent. Previous reporting has uncovered nasty things like guards setting up suicide death pools, rather than… you know… doing whatever they could to deter detainees from committing suicide.

In addition to this, there have been measles outbreaks and inspections detailing dozens of violations at the facility, including a seemingly deliberate unwillingness to provide basic medical care for detainees.

The Government Accountability Office (GAO) has just released its report [PDF] on Camp East Montana and it doesn’t contain anything ICE (or its contractors) might legitimately consider to be a “win,” much less a “barely perceptible improvement.”

As NPR notes in its reporting on the GAO’s report, ICE is running through contractors rapidly, which suggests the companies hoping to get in on the temporary jail business aren’t particularly qualified to do so. To date, three different contractors have been in charge of this prison camp: Creative Corrections, Amentum Services, and this company (I guess it’s technically a company?) that was recently kicked to curb by ICE shortly after the GAO began its investigation:

When the Trump administration awarded a $1.26 billion contract this summer to build and operate a new tent city detention center in Texas, it made headlines, and not just because the facility, located at the Fort Bliss Army base, was expected to be the biggest of its kind in the country. The company that won the job, Acquisition Logistics, was so small it operated out of a single-family home in Richmond, Virginia. Almost nobody had heard of it. “A random house…just won $1.26 billion from ICE,” wrote the New Republic.

That likely explains a lot of the flaws the GAO uncovered. But the federal government has to take a lot of the blame itself. First off, this contract was somehow secured by the US Navy on behalf of ICE, which definitely makes it seem more shady than it already seems.

But ICE was so busy blowing billions on satisfying Trump’s bigoted fantasies that it couldn’t even be bothered to craft a contract that wouldn’t screw taxpayers out of even more money. In most prisons and detention centers, those being held by the government are often underfed. In the early days of Camp East Montana, it was the complete opposite:

The contract identified pricing for services needed to reach initial operational capacity of 1,000 detained noncitizens, along with pricing to increase the capacity of the facility by 250 detained noncitizens every week until it reached its full operational capacity of 5,000. Based on our review of contract documents and invoices, the Army began paying the full cost for guards, medical services, transportation, meals, and other services on August 1, 2025. However, there were no detained noncitizens at the facility until August 16. Between August 1 and August 15, 2025, the Army wasted up to $11.5 million for these services. Further, because the Army set a fixed price for meals based on the capacity of the facility, it paid about an additional $423,000 for meals it did not need when the facility was operating below its designated capacity from August 16, 2025, through September 30, 2025.

That’s the good news… somehow. It gets so much worse after that. While wasting food is certainly problematic when so many detainees at other prison facilities go hungry, this contractor was apparently so inept and inexperienced that pretty much everything it did made things worse or more dangerous for detainees.

According to an ICE report, there were no security cameras on the perimeter fencing and there were blind spots in the placement of cameras throughout the facility, increasing the risk of a sexual assault or an escape. In addition, during our visit to the facility on September 16, 2025, officials told us that the post responsible for monitoring security camera footage for all areas of the facility was understaffed.

[…]

Contractors told ICE they were unable to accommodate detained noncitizens using wheelchairs. According to an ICE report, the facility did not have any Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant showers in the housing units when it opened.

[…]

In January 2026, a contract security guard at Camp East Montana lost their loaded firearm at the facility. According to an ICE official, despite several searches of the facility, as of March 2026 the firearm had not been recovered.

[…]

[D]etained noncitizens with chronic conditions did not receive treatment and care in accordance with National Detention Standards. For example, none of the detained noncitizens with diabetes or HIV had treatment plans in place.

[…]

On March 3, 2026, ICE issued a discrepancy report related to a detained noncitizen escaping from Camp East Montana in October 2025. ICE oversight officials attributed the escape to the contractor’s inability to account for detained noncitizens

Your severity mileage may vary, but this covers everything from a lack of ADA compliance to losing a loaded handgun, with plenty of ineptitude/indifference in between.

There’s more. And it’s even worse than what’s seen above.

On February 20, 2026, ICE issued a discrepancy report for a detained noncitizen death by use of force in January 2026. The coroner’s autopsy found the death to be a homicide due to asphyxia. However, the contractor did not provide use of force and death reports to ICE, as required. In addition, evidence associated with the incident was missing or destroyed.

Don’t let the “or” fool you. Reports written by agencies that strive to be as neutral and non-judgmental as possible don’t tend to engage in speculation. If the GAO thinks evidence has most likely been destroyed, it’s going to portray it as just being one of two options. If the GAO thought it was more likely the evidence had just been misplaced or perhaps never gathered correctly, it would not have added “or destroyed” to this sentence.

What’s absolutely unclear is whether or not the contractor acted alone. The GAO doesn’t discuss this further, which does leave this part open to speculation. Either the contractor acted alone because it felt it might be held accountable for this death, or it was urged to eternally “misplace” evidence that might implicate the contractor and/or ICE itself.

Either way, there’s nothing in this report that suggests ICE or its contractors are going out of their way to ensure the health and safety of detainees. And if this is happening here, it’s certainly happening anywhere else ICE is stashing arrestees.

The government has decided the best use of our resources is rounding up as many non-white migrants as possible and toss them into prison camps. And it has decided it doesn’t care how this is done. It only cares that it gets done. This nation — if it manages to survive this constant onslaught on our ideals — will have to deal with repercussions of the actions of a handful of hateful people for decades to come.

04:00 AM

Giant Baby Brendan Carr Is Very Upset That ABC Is Fighting Back [Techdirt]

Earlier this week we noted how ABC has been asking its audience to give the Trump FCC an earful about its clumsy efforts to censor journalists, comedians, and daytime talk show hosts:

The ad only hints at the fact that FCC boss Brendan Carr has launched a fake “investigation” of ABC because The View hosted Texas Senate hopeful James Talarico last February. As we’ve explored repeatedly, Carr is pretending that this appearance violates a dated and irrelevant FCC “equal time rule,” despite the fact the show has had a formal exemption since 2002.

It’s all weird, performative bullshit designed to chill speech and punish ABC because President Trump is a thin-skinned autocrat. It’s also intended to send a message to all major media outlets that if they platform people openly critical of our dim kakistocracy, they’ll be inundated with endless costly legal headaches and bad “press” (read: lots of hostility aimed at them by right wing propaganda outlets).

Despite the ABC ad being relatively timid, it clearly upset the similarly-thin-skinned Carr, who took to Elon Musk’s right wing propaganda website to whine about it:

Again, The View was already exempt from this rule, for more than two decades. Even if it wasn’t, the rule hasn’t been enforced in 26 years because it’s a relic that doesn’t matter. It was crafted for an era where a TV appearance could make or break a political candidacy, requiring that a politician of the opposite party ideology get “equal time” on broadcast airwaves.

But broadcast is increasingly irrelevant, as is the rule, which you’ll notice Carr doesn’t enforce for right wing radio (because this is an ideological crusade by a weak zealot). This is also a giant loser of a case on First Amendment grounds. But it could be a particularly problematic case for Carr during discovery, given the indications that Carr covertly worked with right wing broadcasters to falsely make it look like ABC’s affiliate actively broke the law by not filling out some paperwork.

Carr knows all of this but his audience of bots and MAGA zealots over at ex-Twitter obviously don’t. They will simply see women daytime TV hosts and “news” in the same line of sight and immediately suffer embolisms of hate.

“Some may dislike certain — or even most — of the viewpoints expressed on ‘The View’ or similar shows,” ABC said in one recent filing. “Such dislike, however, cannot justify using regulatory processes to restrict those views.”

Carr doesn’t want this to ever see an actual courtroom. He just wants to intimidate corporate media giants, censor valid speech, and then bask in the adoration of the misinformed and deluded.

But it’s genuinely bad news for Carr and Trump that Disney Corporation is fighting back. If they can openly and legally demonstrate that Carr is a toothless extremist hack, other corporations are likely to be encouraged. And as Trump’s health and political power starts to buckle and fail, that sort of uncharacteristic corporate media courage could prove contagious.

Daily Deal: flowkey Piano Learning App [Techdirt]

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

03:00 AM

Judge Says Florida’s Social Media Law Is “Literally Impossible” To Obey. Thanks To The Supreme Court, It Gets A Trial Anyway. [Techdirt]

Remember a few years ago when both Texas and Florida passed laws trying to tell social media companies they couldn’t moderate political content? Those cases eventually made their way to the Supreme Court, where the Court (as it’s been known to do) kinda punted: sending the cases back to the lower courts on technical legal grounds, claiming that the plaintiffs, NetChoice and CCIA, had mistakenly filed the cases as “facial” challenges, rather than “as applied.” It’s not worth going into the legal weeds again about the difference here, especially since the ruling had tons of important and useful language making it clear that content moderation is protected by the First Amendment in the case dubbed “Moody” after Florida’s former Attorney General.

But, the two cases have continued to bounce around the courts over the past few years, and the district court in Florida has rejected both the plaintiffs and the state’s motions for summary judgment, but in doing so has again made some great arguments about how content moderation gets First Amendment protections. The case is still before Judge Robert Hinkle, who made the original ruling finding the law unconstitutional five years ago.

Now, after discovery, Hinkle is reviewing the amended complaint that tries to deal with Moody’s limits on “facial” challenges. He starts out by reinforcing that content moderation is obviously protected by the First Amendment:

Collecting third-party speech content into a single speech product is what social-media platforms do. As the Supreme Court said, the collection “is itself expressive, and intrusion into that activity must be specially justified under the First Amendment.” Id. The defendants’ contrary assertion was rejected in NetChoice I (this court’s preliminary-injunction order), and in NetChoice II (the Eleventh Circuit’s opinion affirming that order in relevant part), and in Moody (the Supreme Court’s opinion agreeing with the Eleventh Circuit in relevant part).

Florida tried to argue that because recommendation engines try to keep users on the platform, and that decisions are made by “algorithms” that somehow changes the equation. The court points out that this is technically illiterate, because humans still set the editorial guidelines:

The defendants say platforms decide which content to show any given user primarily based on the user’s viewing habits, showing the user the content most likely to keep the user on the platform longer. Perhaps so. See Moody, 603 U.S. at 735 (“The selection and ranking is most often based on a user’s expressed interests and past activities.”). And the defendants say this decision is made by algorithms, devoid of human involvement. Not so. Humans adopt the standards and guidelines, establish algorithms that incorporate them, and keep a great deal of content off the platforms on this basis, even though, as the defendants emphasize, the remaining content is organized to a substantial extent by algorithms based on a user’s viewing habits. This record establishes without genuine dispute that the six platforms specifically addressed in the plaintiffs’ motion have standards or guidelines that have a significant role in selection and organization of content. “And because that is true, they receive First Amendment protection.” Moody, 603 U.S. at 740.

Moody reiterated this point in discussing Texas’s similar legislation. The Court said the parties treated Facebook’s News Feed and YouTube’s homepage as the heartland applications of the Texas law—much as those and other platforms’ similar features are the heartland applications of the Florida law. See id. at 744. The Court said that at least on the record then before the Court, “the editorial judgments influencing the content of those feeds” were “protected expressive activity” that Texas could not “interfere with . . . simply because it would prefer a different mix of messages.” Id. (emphasis added). The Court said “influencing,” not “fully determining.” The record now before this court makes clear that editorial judgments of the six platforms addressed in the plaintiffs’ motion at least influence the content of their feeds. The First Amendment applies.

While Justice Barrett made some technically questionable statements in a concurrence about whether AI-driven algorithms might change the equation, Judge Hinkle says that even if she were right, it wouldn’t matter here:

But the defendants are plainly incorrect when they assert, in substance if not explicitly, that the First Amendment does not apply when there is mixed curation—some driven by human editorial discretion and some by algorithms or artificial intelligence. Responding to Justice Barrett’s concurrence, the Court said this case does not deal with “feeds whose algorithms respond solely to how users act online—giving them the content they appear to want, without any regard to independent content standards.” Moody, 603 U.S. at 736 n.5 (emphasis added). The Court continued, “Like them or loathe them, the Community Standards and Community Guidelines make a wealth of user-agnostic judgments about what kinds of speech, including what viewpoints, are not worthy of promotion. And those judgments show up in Facebook’s and YouTube’s main feeds.” Id. Justice Barrett joined that footnote.

And then the key point: the First Amendment protects content moderation. Full stop.

The unmistakable upshot is this: the First Amendment applies to mixed curation. The defendants’ contrary assertion is inconsistent with Moody, the many precedents discussed in Moody, and any coherent view of the First Amendment. This does not mean platforms are not subject to government regulation, but it does mean regulation must pass appropriate First Amendment scrutiny.

The judge also finds that there are constitutional problems with how vague the law is in some areas. And, in others, finds that the law would be impossible to comply with. In discussing the law’s prohibition on “post-prioritization or shadow banning algorithms” for any posts “by or about” a candidate for office, the court finds the provision baffling — saying its plain meaning makes no sense, and that Florida’s defense of it makes even less sense:

But the provision prohibits a platform from using “post-prioritization or shadow banning algorithms” for content by or about a user known to be a candidate. “‘Post-prioritization’ means action by a social media platform to place, feature, or prioritize certain content or material ahead of, below, or in a more or less prominent position than others in a newsfeed, a feed, a view, or in search results.” Fla. Stat. § 501.2041(1)(e) (emphasis added). Unless a platform shuts down completely, compliance with this provision is literally impossible; posts can only be ahead of or below other posts, and posts can only be in a more or less prominent position than other content.

The defendants say, though, that the provision does not mean what it says— that it requires posts by or about candidates to be placed in chronological order. Perhaps Florida courts will rewrite the provision in this way, but they have not done so to this point. One doubts the Florida legislature really intended to require all candidate posts to go to the top, allowing candidates and their supporters to flood every user’s feed, rendering platforms useless, or nearly so. And if that is not what the provision means, one is at a loss to divine any plausible meaning.

Thus, the court says these provisions are likely unconstitutionally vague.

Still, NetChoice/CCIA don’t win their own summary judgment motion, in part because the court says that their amended complaint is still a “quasi-facial challenge” which runs into the same issues the original challenge faced at the Supreme Court, and because of that the court holds off on granting summary judgment, meaning the case continues to move forward to trial, even as the judge makes it pretty clear this law is a complete constitutional mess.

So this is about as good a ruling as NetChoice and CCIA could realistically hope for, given the procedural mess the Supreme Court handed down in Moody. Hinkle has made it abundantly clear that he thinks Florida’s law is a vague, unconstitutional disaster that can’t survive contact with the First Amendment. And yet, because the Supreme Court decided that “facial vs. as-applied” was the hill to die on, he can’t just say so and end it. Instead, a law that everyone — including the judge — can see is unconstitutional gets to march all the way to trial.

That’s the real legacy of Moody’s procedural punt: it didn’t save these laws, but it did make killing them slower, costlier, and more painful than it has any right to be.

12:00 AM

Marco Rubio Personally Authorized Detention Of An Immigrant Who Criticized A Politician Trump Likes [Techdirt]

It’s absolutely irritating to be living under the thumb of an administration filled to the brim with facile subservients who think they’re the biggest and best people to ever walk the earth. It’s a bunch of boys pretending to be men, right up until they have to talk to the boss, at which point they return to their innate yes man positioning.

It’s even worse that this entire government pretends to be the biggest badasses around (DEPARTMENT OF WAR! SOCIAL MEDIA BLOODSPORT!). Everyone knows it isn’t, but everyone in this administration pretends otherwise. It’s the pettiest, weakest presidency we’ve ever endured, continually propped up by lackeys who think we’re fooled by its manliest-of-the-men facade. Even the most tentative jab will reveal the facade is mostly balsa and rice paper.

But even if this government is loaded with weak men and weak-willed men who serve/worship them, it still has a considerable amount of power. That allows it to perpetually punch down, targeting the people least likely to fight back.

This is the level of “government” this abhorrent death cruise of a presidency delivers on a daily basis: the multiplied force of the federal government being brought to bear against a single human being who dared to criticize a foreign politician. Yes! You are reading that correctly!

This isn’t even the normal pettiness directed at critics of this government. This is the administration getting all heated up because someone Trump likes (so long as they remain in their country) got besmirched by a solitary migrant seeking asylum in this country.

The Trump administration detained a Colombian immigrant this week in Phoenix after he spoke out against a Trump-endorsed candidate in his home country’s upcoming presidential election.

Franklin Humberto Coral Garrido, a progressive online activist known as Beto Coral, is a supporter of President Gustavo Petro of Colombia, a leftist who has clashed with President Trump. He has publicly criticized Abelardo De La Espriella, a right-wing candidate backed by Mr. Trump. Mr. Coral was arrested by immigration authorities on Tuesday, the same day Secretary of State Marco Rubio issued a memo determining that he was deportable from the United States.

That’s all it takes to get on Trump’s radar. And, apparently, that’s all it takes for bitch boy Rubio to fire up his MS Office Suite to compose a memo making this single person a priority for immigration officers. It’s even stupider that it first appears. Not only was Rubio prompted (most likely by his boss) to write this memo authorizing Coral’s detention, but he told his underlings this was justified entirely by Coral’s decision to utilize the rights afforded to him by the US Constitution:

“Coral Garrido has used his presence in the United States to conduct political activity in support of the Petro government” and has advocated against a candidate for president, Mr. Rubio wrote, according to a copy of the memo obtained by The New York Times.

That is not an arrestable/detainable offense! Like it or not, MAGA bigots, constitutional rights are given to US residents, even if they’re not currently citizens. There’s a very good reason for that — one that will never be fully appreciated by the MAGA faithful until they travel outside of this country and are subjected solely to local laws like cane beatings, summary executions, etc. for things that would at least get you a nominally fair trial in the US. The memo written by Rubio says things it definitely shouldn’t say, like this guy needs to be detained because he engaged in free speech.

Whether this is a leading indicator or just the tip of the ICEberg hardly matters. What does matter is that the government isn’t allowed to do this. And criticism of a foreign presidential hopeful should never form the basis for arrest or detention. Our freedom to criticize our own government is enshrined, cherished, and treated with the utmost respect (for the most part) by our court system. We — and by that I also mean any person currently residing on US soil — should be doubly free to criticize foreign governments without fear of reprisal.

But reprisal is all this government has. It can’t win hearts and minds, nor does it care to. It likes Stockholm Syndrome and the beaten dog dynamics of Trump’s relationship with his political appointees. It doesn’t care what anyone else thinks. The problem here is that the administration believes “not caring” is the same thing as “being right.” For now, though, rights still matter. Rubio’s proactive toadying doesn’t wish the Constitution into the cornfield. And if natural-born Americans think this administration won’t come after them if they displease Trump, they’re wrong. We’re only 18 months into this presidency that has already compared mild dissent to outright terrorism and insurrection. It’s not going to stop just because it’s run out of outspoken migrants to detain.

Thursday 2026-06-25

07:00 PM

Standby –> Intervention [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Look around the room you’re in. There are dozens of electrically powered devices, each waiting for you to request their assistance. A toaster, six lights, an oven, the ice maker, stereo, TV, microwave… It’s a very long list. Silent and ubiquitous.

Of course, electricity didn’t start this way. Using a washing machine to do your laundry required unscrewing a lightbulb and then screwing in the Edison mount cord.

When the web arrived, we treated it as one more appliance, an electronic library. When you wanted something, you went to your browser (the name gives it away) and found what you needed. A billion web pages, all on standby, waiting for your arrival.

AI presents itself to us in this way, at least for now. When you have something you need, the chatbot’s ready, the LLMs are built, and the data center is powered up, all waiting for you to ask.

This is changing. Right here and right now. It’s not something we’re expecting or ready for, but it’s an inevitable consequence of our reliance on tech and the detailed cocoon of data we’re weaving.

The systems will notice and intervene before we ask them to. In matters large and small. This will be unsettling until it’s not only normal, but something we depend on.

If you had experts in health, productivity, leadership, efficiency and community action following you around all day, speaking up when it would be helpful, offering tools and insight when you needed them, often before you knew you needed them, what would your day be like?

It won’t always be delightful, and we don’t get much of a say in whether it happens, but that’s the path we’re on.

Two opportunities, then:

  1. Be intentional about which interventions will help you get to where you hope to go, and put them in place early.
  2. Be aware of which interventions the systems are pushing on you that don’t help you with your goals. Draw a line and don’t get lulled by convenience or social pressure.

We’re headed to a divide between amplifying agency and becoming a cog. Where do you want to go?

      

Pluralistic: Jailbreaking isn't theft (25 Jun 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



Steve Jobs holding an iPhone at the product launch. It has been modified. He wears a thief's balaclava. Behind him is the Apple wordmark, 'Think Different.'

Jailbreaking isn't theft (permalink)

It's not often that someone on a panel says something that makes my jaw drop, but that's what happened earlier this week when the moderator of a panel I was on in Toronto described jailbreaking an iPhone as "rampant theft of IP."

Some context: the panel was in Toronto, and the nominal subject was "digital sovereignty," though all the panelists (except me) interpreted that to mean "sovereign AI." All of their interventions were focused on how Canada could build and operate its own AI, which I found very weird, since there is no AI-related threat to Canadian sovereignty. If Donald Trump ordered OpenAI and Anthropic to turn off all of Canada's chatbots tomorrow, nothing would change: every firm, ministry and household would operate as per normal:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/06/18/their-trillions-our-billions/

Now, that's not to say that Canada doesn't have a digital sovereignty problem – it really does! Donald Trump and US Big Tech have fused into a single entity and Trump now orders US tech giants to terminate the online accounts of foreign officials who displease him. When Microsoft turns off your Office365 account, you lose your working files, your calendar, your address book, your email archives, and the Outlook email address you use to log in to every online service:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/01/minilateralism/#own-goal

So while turning off Canada's chatbots would not inflict any real harm on Canada, M365 terminations could paralyse any federal or provincial ministry, any structurally important firm, and most Canadian households.

The threat doesn't stop there: Trump can also order Apple and Google to brick any of Canada's iPhones or Android devices – terminating individual officials' mobile access, or terminating whole provinces. It's not just iPhones either – Trump can also brick any tractor in Canada:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/05/08/about-those-kill-switched-ukrainian-tractors/

This is the real digital sovereignty risk, and Canada needs to address it now. But Canada can't – our hands are tied…by us. In 2012, we passed a law, The Copyright Modernization Act, that criminalizes "jailbreaking," meaning that Canadian companies can't go into business figuring out how to install different app stores on phones and consoles, or change the firmware in tractors to enable independent repair, or reliably export their cloud data to rival Canadian services:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/05/26/babyish-radical-extremists/#cancon

Why did we pass this law? Because the Americans promised us free trade and no tariffs on our exports if we agreed to it. That's a promise Trump tore up, but we're still holding up our end of the bargain. That's crazy. It means that American companies can use Canada's courts to destroy Canadian businesses that offer the Canadian people tools to help them escape Big Tech's sleazy ripoffs of their data and cash.

And boy do those US tech companies take in a lot of cash. The US ad-tech duopoly of Google/Meta rig the advertising market, taking 51% out of every ad dollar through an illegal, collusive arrangement called "Jedi Blue":

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

The US mobile tech duopoly takes 30 cents out of every dollar spent via an app, by forcing every app vendor to use their payment processors, which charge 1,000% more than any other payment processor in Canada. That means that every time a subscriber to a Canadian news site signs up through an app, 30% of the lifetime subscription revenue for that Canadian subscriber is funneled to one of two California companies.

The corollary, of course, is that if Canadian businesses were free to compete with US companies – if Canada stopped foolishly holding up its end of the bargain that Trump has dishonoured – then it would be as though every Canadian news outlet increased its subscriber base by 25% overnight! What's more, the Canadian companies that sell those jailbreaking tools would make billions out of US Big Tech's billions.

And that's where the moderator of this week's panel comes in. When I finished making this pitch, they turned to the rest of the panel and said something like, "Well, apart from rampant theft of IP, what else could Canada do to secure its digital sovereignty?"

That's when my jaw dropped. Making it possible for, say, a Canadian company to sell its own Canadian game to a Canadian customer, in Canada, without giving Apple or Xbox 30% of the purchase price, is not "theft of IP." It's not "theft of IP" for a rightsholder to sell their own products to their customers. It's not "theft of IP" for a Canadian owner of a device to decide for themselves which software they want to run on it. If buying software from the company that made it and installing it on a device you own is "theft of IP," then so is putting non-Nike shoelaces in your Air Jordans.

It's not "theft of IP." It's just good business. Moreover, it's the kind of good business that created America's tech giants in the first place. As Jeff Bezos tells his suppliers: "Your margin is my opportunity." US tech giants make whopping margins around the world, thanks to the anticircumvention laws that the US Trade Rep crammed down every US trading partner's throats, laws that allow US companies to use other countries' legal system to destroy their competitors.

I've been mulling this "rampant theft of IP" remark for a couple of days now, but it wasn't until a reader wrote to me to remind me about Apple's origin story that I realised what the punchline is. Apple founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak financed their first product launch by selling "Blue Boxes" (devices that let you make free long distance calls by cheating the phone company) door to door in the UC Berkeley dorms:

https://macdailynews.com/2024/06/19/steve-jobs-felt-certain-apple-would-never-have-existed-without-woz-and-him-making-blue-boxes/

Now, I'm not going to weep for the lost revenues that Jobs and Woz denied to AT&T. After all, AT&T was stealing that money from its customers, which is why, just a few years later, a federal court convicted AT&T of monopolistic practices and broke the company up:

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

But the legal term for what a Blue Box does is "toll theft," which is to say, Apple – a company literally founded on theft – now makes the majority of its profits by convincing people that making a competing product is literally stealing. A company whose founders got their seed capital by marketing illegal circumvention devices now markets products designed to make it a crime for a rightsholder to sell their own work to you.

I've long said that "every pirate wants to be an admiral":

https://pluralistic.net/2025/03/04/object-permanence/#picks-and-shovels

But this is just a little too on the nose. When Apple went into business selling products to rip off the phone company, that wasn't progress. When Canadians go into business selling devices that let iPhone owners use their own property to do legal things – like buying copyrighted works directly from their creators – that is not piracy.

Canada has a real digital sovereignty problem, and it's not AI. Canada will not mitigate its digital sovereignty risk by successfully launching a Made in Canada version of the money-losingest venture in the history of the human species:

https://www.wheresyoured.at/brokenomics/

Canada's real digital sovereignty problem is its reliance on the apps, cloud services and devices that are tethered to the American cloud, access to which Donald Trump could – and does – terminate whenever he feels grumpy. Trump has repeatedly threatened to annex Canada and turn us into "the 51st state." He's trying to steal Alberta right now. Our digital sovereignty risk is the risk of Trump paralysing our country in order to steal Alberta – or the entire shop.

We can address that digital sovereignty risk – and make billions at the same time – by legalising jailbreaking and becoming the world's "disenshittification nation." Unlike a program to build Canadian AI, this will make billions, not lose them – and unlike Canadian AI, this will make our country more resilient and safer, by delivering products that Canadians – and the world – want to buy and will pay us a fortune for.

Big Tech's margins are our opportunity.

(Image: Matthew Yohe, CC BY-SA 3.0; SABYST, CC BY-SA 4.0, modified)


Hey look at this (permalink)



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

Object permanence (permalink)

#25yrsago Major AI breakthrough is imminent https://web.archive.org/web/20010625114014/https://www.latimes.com/business/cutting/lat_cyc010621.htm

#25yrsago Webcomic reply to Scott McCloud on microtransactions https://web.archive.org/web/20010708225439/https://www.penny-arcade.com/view.php3?date=2001-06-22&res=l

#25yrsago School censorware blocks LBGTQ sites https://web.archive.org/web/20010803114449/https://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2001/06/14/net_filtering/print.html

#25yrsago SCOTUS backs freelance writers https://edition.cnn.com/2001/LAW/06/25/scotus.copyright/index.html

#20yrsago Canadian Gov’t Pays Copyright Lobby to Lobby https://web.archive.org/web/20060720230403/http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1151273413030&call_pageid=971794782442&col=971886476975

#20yrsago How can we keep the Bells from committing net-neutricide? https://web.archive.org/web/20060714044219/http://informationweek.com/news/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=189600971

#20yrsago Disney: We [will|won’t] sue if you put Pooh on a baby’s headstone https://web.archive.org/web/20060711194928/http://www.upi.com/NewsTrack/view.php?StoryID=20060623-093710-8391r

#15yrsago Comic Book Legal Defense Fund backs traveller arrested at Canadian border for “pornographic” manga on his hard drive https://cbldf.org/2011/06/cbldf-forms-coalition-to-defend-american-comics-reader-facing-criminal-charges-in-canada/

#15yrsago Rochester police use selective enforcement of parking laws to harass attendees at a meeting in support of Emily Good https://rochester.indymedia.org/node/7516

#15yrsago What happened before the Vancouver riot kiss https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8mtURc7mkUg

#15yrsago Mexican Congress votes to reject ACTA https://www.techdirt.com/2011/06/22/mexican-congress-says-no-to-acta/

#15yrsago “Hot News” doctrine gets a body-blow https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2011/06/hot-news-doctrine-surviving-life-support

#15yrsago Solar-powered 3D sand-printer https://web.archive.org/web/20110627035221/https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2011/06/markus-kayser-builds-a-solar-powered-3d-printer-that-prints-glass-from-sand-and-a-sun-powered-laser-cutter/

#10yrsago Australian educational contractor warns of wifi, vaccination danger to “gifted” kids’ “extra neurological connections” https://web.archive.org/web/20180211151730/https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/antivaccination-program-offered-to-gifted-children-in-primary-schools-20160621-gpnzzp.html#ixzz4CYBYf4Bl#ixzz4CYBYf4Bl

#10yrsago US Customs and Border Protection wants to ask for your “online presence” at the border https://www.theverge.com/2016/6/24/12026364/us-customs-border-patrol-online-account-twitter-facebook-instagram?utm_campaign=theverge&utm_content=chorus&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter

#10yrsago Stasi radio monitoring department, hard at work, 1980s https://web.archive.org/web/20160625190241/https://visualhistory.livejournal.com/1039990.html

#10yrsago Apps help women bypass states’ barriers to contraception https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/20/health/birth-control-options-websites.html

#10yrsago The blacker a city is, the more it fines its residents (especially black ones) https://priceonomics.com/the-fining-of-black-america/

#10yrsago The demographics of Brexit https://web.archive.org/web/20160626130820/http://www.perc.org.uk/project_posts/thoughts-on-the-sociology-of-brexit/

#10yrsago The morning after the Brexit vote, Nigel Farage admits money for the NHS was a lie https://memex.craphound.com/2016/06/24/the-morning-after-the-brexit-vote-nigel-farage-admits-money-for-the-nhs-was-a-lie/

#10yrsago How to protect the future web from its founders’ own frailty https://memex.craphound.com/2016/06/24/how-to-protect-the-future-web-from-its-founders-own-frailty/

#10yrsago More than 30 people burned during Tony Robbins “motivational” firewalk https://web.archive.org/web/20160627054938/https://bigstory.ap.org/c7872f6db09e4656a612ee13aab74d50

#10yrsago Google’s version of the W3C’s video DRM has been cracked https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5CkWjOvpZJw

#10yrsago Undercover reporter spent four months as a prison guard in a Louisiana pen run by CCA https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/06/cca-private-prisons-corrections-corporation-inmates-investigation-bauer/

#10yrsago Sanders will vote Hillary https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/2016-election/bernie-sanders-says-he-will-vote-hillary-clinton-n598251

#10yrsago Brexit: a timeline of the coming slow-motion car-crash http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2016/06/tomorrow-belongs-to-me.html

#5yrsago The pandemic showed remote proctoring to be worse than useless https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/24/proctor-ology/#miseducation

#1yrago Surveillance pricing lets corporations decide what your dollar is worth https://pluralistic.net/2025/06/24/price-discrimination/

#1yrago What's a "public internet?" https://pluralistic.net/2025/06/25/eurostack/#viktor-orbans-isp


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

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

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

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

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

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

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

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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A Bit of Tedious Drama At Bluesky [The Popehat Report]

Recently I got suspended for four days from Bluesky for posting this:

My suspension is over now. But I believe that returning after a suspension carries with it an implicit promise that I won’t post that, or something like it, again. I won’t make that promise, so I won’t return to Bluesky.

Regarding Suspension

I’ll talk about what I said and why I meant it. But before that, I have three points about being suspended.

First, I’ll repeat what I’ve said many times: Bluesky and other social media platforms can suspend or ban whomever they want for whatever reason they want. Bluesky’s moderation policies are an expression of its free speech and free association rights, as surely as my decision what to post there (or whom to block there). I may think their expressive choices are stupid, but I think a lot of people’s expressive choices are stupid, and so do you. It’s their right.

Second, I have no idea whether this suspension represented a human being’s decision. Bluesky uses automated moderation because it has to. Bluesky couldn’t use human moderation without charging everyone a ludicrous amount to post on Bluesky. I firmly agree with Mike Masnick’s long-standing rule that good content moderation is impossible to do at scale. A number of twerps and anti-anti-Trump mediocrities pretended to be exercised over the post; there’s a good chance that some sort of mass report campaign resulted in an auto-suspension almost two weeks after the fact. I submitted an “appeal,” which may also have been evaluated by machines, or maybe not. It really doesn’t matter: either humans decided on the suspension, or decided not to lift it, or decided to create the system that imposed it automatically.

Third, I’m not a victim. Don’t cry for me, Bluesky. I said what I said deliberately, knowing the risks. I will miss the parasocial relationships with many cool people, but some of those will be rebuilt elsewhere. It’s social media, not life. Moreover, I’m fortunate. I have lots of channels to express myself. I am in a far better position than the average Bluesky user who gets banned for lashing out — most often, lashing out at transphobia, or racism, or other stuff. Bluesky has a moderation mindset (or at least a moderation AI) that views some rando saying “the world would be a better place if Elon Musk were not in it” as being far worse than Elon Musk and people like him encouraging violence and pogroms. I knew what I was getting into.

Regarding Elon Musk and His Ilk

Now, I’ll address the substance of what I said. I meant every word. Moreover, I was right, and most of the outrage is contrived, dishonest, and in bad faith.

The context for the statement was Elon Musk’s ongoing efforts to use Twitter — his extremely powerful and influential toy, the algorithms of which boost his every thought — to incite racial violence against immigrants in the UK. This is not unusual. Elon Musk regularly encourages, by his own posts or boosting other posts, that the right people should use violence against immigrants and against race-traitor whites.

I could argue this point — try to persuade you — but it’s pointless. The possibilities are these: you already know and you’re appalled, you already know and you support it, or you’ll never be persuaded, any more than a Trump supporter can be persuaded that the 2020 election wasn’t stolen.

The other crucial context is that the current leadership of the United States is increasingly intent on promoting white nationalist hostility and clash-of-civilizations narratives to encourage hatred of immigrants everywhere. Whether it’s Pete Hegseth comparing immigration to the D-Day invasion or Trumpists promoting the noxious Camp of the Saints or the administration turning official social media channels into fonts of Nazi iconography, the Trump Administration supports and promotes the same racial narrative as Musk. Once again: either you know it and hate it, know it and love it, or will never acknowledge it.

Elon Musk is the world’s richest man — a trillionaire, briefly, until a market correction. He and his ideology are also supported by the administration of the most powerful nation on Earth. He is immune to normal social, economic, political, or legal limits. He can use his hugely influential platform to encourage pogroms without social, economic, political, or legal consequences.

It’s simply factual to say, as I did, that the only thing that will stop him is dying. Because my medium was a short Bluesky post, I mentioned him being killed. I suppose it would also stop him if he overdosed on Ketamine or choked on a piece of steak or got ass cancer or crashed one of his vehicles or something. But that would make a long post. Though the post has drawn plenty of criticism, nobody has explained to me how I am wrong about the limited circumstances that will stop him from encouraging racial violence.

No, mostly people are upset at the more pungent coda — “If only.” I said that because I think the world will be a better place when Elon Musk — sociopathic trillionaire who wants to watch a race war — is dead. I suppose it would be better if he dies from the ketamine thing. Political violence tends to lead to more political violence, political violence tends to hurt the powerless disproportionately, and political violence is destabilizing — though not, I think, as destabilizing as a politically connected trillionaire using his powerful social media platform to urge genocide. Elon Musk is autistic trillionaire Radio Rwanda.

I find the pearl-clutching over this sentiment profoundly unpersuasive. The United States kills people who “need killing” all the time. We’re on a campaign of killing unidentified guys in boats in the Gulf of Dementia because the government claims they’re drug dealers. We execute lots of people, many of whom did what they were accused of, many of whom have IQs above 70. We shoot protesters. We shoot people on the very thin pretense that they were “threatening” police officers. We kill Iranians — military and civilians — and boast about how we’re going to kill more. We killed Yamamoto and it’s a good thing we did. We didn’t kill Hitler but we helped arrange the circumstances where he killed himself, and nobody shook a scolding little finger at anyone for wishing him dead. Our most popular Founding Father’s most popular quote is “the tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."

Now, I think people of good faith can disagree about the morality or utility of wishing other human beings dead. I’ve read a few comments that suggest reasoned opposition. But not many. The loudest cries of outrage are from people who will diagnose you with Trump Derangement Syndrome if you object to the ocean of blood I just described. The reaction is largely contrived, mostly in bad faith, and rarely to be taken seriously. The people landing hardest on the fainting couches are in two groups: pro-Trump people who are thrilled that we are extrajudicially executing fishermen in the Gulf, and professional grifters who don’t necessary like the extrajudicial killings but whose entire gimmick is “aren’t those leftists silly and outrageous.” Look, they need to make a living, and they have to base a personality on something.

Pro-Trump people want you to think this oceans of blood and paeans to genocide are all good and praiseworthy, because those are their values. The anti-anti-Trump crowd wants to mock objections to Trumpism, because their dearest value is grift, and they think cringe is worse than fascism. They both demand to be taken seriously, to be respected. I decline. I said what I said.

Bluesky had the right to suspend me for that. I just think they were petty and dumb to do it.

A Postscript Regarding Honesty And Openness

I’ve made an effort for years to be open and honest about things like depression and anxiety, because I know it’s healthier, and because the social stigma around it should be crushed. This incident resulted, as is often the case, in losers mocking me for being crazy, and slightly more pretentious people obliquely referring to my mental heath. This is how I actually discovered, to my shock and pity, that Twitchy still exists and thinks mocking my mental health is worth two whole posts. Again, these people have to eat, I guess. But here’s my point: it turns out that the only people who do it are assholes, the only people who buy it aren’t worth your time, and it doesn’t really make an impact on your life. So be open and honest about mental health, speak up when you need help, and don’t spare much worry for the rabble. You’ll be better for it.

Now, back to rambling through the Cotswolds.

ACE, UEFA, and Mexico Chase PirloTV’s 950-Million-Visit Piracy Network [TorrentFreak]

pirloPirloTV and Rojadirecta are popular piracy brands with a loyal audience across Latin America, offering free, ad-supported sports streams

For millions of sports fans in the region, these are the go-to sites to enjoy live sports, including the FIFA World Cup and the UEFA Champions League matches.

Rightsholders have been well-aware of the operations and have tried to counter them on several occasions. Earlier this year, for example, UEFA obtained a site blocking order in India that ordered ISPs to block pirlotv2.pl, rojadirectaenvivo.pl, and many others.

This order also required domain registrars disable the domain names. While some complied with this order, several domains remained available. However, following a recent enforcement operation, some of these gaps were addressed.

44 ‘PirloTV’ Domains Targeted

Some domain names that initially stayed online have now been targeted in a new enforcement action. This includes pirlotv3.pl, rojadirectaenvivo.pl, and elitegoltv.pl. These are now under control of the MPA, pointing to the following ACE banner.

Redirect banner on PirloTV3.pl

pirlotv

Yesterday, the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment, together with UEFA and the Mexican Institute of Industrial Property (IMPI), took credit for a major ‘disruption’ action targeting the Mexican ‘PirloTV’ piracy ring.

According to the announcement, the 44 targeted domains attracted more than 950 million visits per year, including approximately 230 million from Mexico alone. The network’s strongest audiences were in Mexico and Colombia, with significant traffic also coming from Spain and the United States.

The press release mentions no domain names, but it does reference PirloTV, which likely means that the aforementioned domain names were part of this sweep.

Mexico’s First ACE Operation

The action is the first enforcement operation carried out under a memorandum of understanding between ACE and Mexico’s IMPI, which was signed in December 2025.

Under the agreement, IMPI and ACE committed to exchange intelligence on pirate streaming operations and coordinate enforcement actions across the region. The PirloTV operation is its first public output.

“This operation demonstrates the power of collaboration between ACE, UEFA, key industry stakeholders and government partners to protect the creative economy and combat large-scale digital piracy,” said Larissa Knapp, MPA’s Executive Vice President and Chief Content Protection Officer.

UEFA joined ACE as a member in October 2025, and the two organizations have since worked closely on enforcement, including the Indian domain blocking operation we referenced earlier.

New Domains Surfaced Quickly

This action already took place last month, before the UEFA Champions League final. The press release doesn’t explain why it was made public weeks after, but it is possible that some domain names still had to be properly secured.

It’s also worth noting that ACE’s press release doesn’t mention any enforcement actions against the operators. Instead, it refers to the action as a domain name “disruption”. However, disruption rarely means the end on the story.

This type of wordage suggests that the operators have not necessarily been stopped. That could also explain why several new PirloTV and RojaDirecta domain names emerged recently.

For example, in May a new pirlotvplay.pl surfaced, which later started to redirect to pirlotvplay.dev, which is live and fully operational at the time of writing.

PirloTVplay

pirlotvplay

The site carries standard PirloTV branding and is serving today’s sports schedule, including World Cup matches. Interestingly, the canonical URL points to rojadirectahd.vip, which points to a broader piracy network structure.

Whether these new domains are directly linked to the operation ACE targeted is unknown. In any case, there are dozens of copycat sites operating under the PirloTV and RojaDirecta brand names. Most of these are opportunistic clones, trying to capture search traffic, rather than the same operation.

While the recent enforcement action has not taken the operators out of action, it likely cost them significant traffic and revenue. Whether ACE and IMPI will pursue the people behind the network, besides these domains, remains to be seen.

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

06:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 動 [Kanji of the Day]

✍11

小3

move, motion, change, confusion, shift, shake

ドウ

うご.く うご.かす

活動   (かつどう)   —   activity (of a person, organization, animal, volcano, etc.)
動き   (うごき)   —   movement
行動   (こうどう)   —   action
運動   (うんどう)   —   exercise
移動   (いどう)   —   movement
自動車   (じどうしゃ)   —   car
感動   (かんどう)   —   being deeply moved emotionally
動画   (どうが)   —   video (esp. digital)
動物   (どうぶつ)   —   animal
動く   (うごく)   —   to move

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 戯 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

frolic, play, sport

ギ ゲ

たわむ.れる ざ.れる じゃ.れる

遊戯   (ゆうぎ)   —   play
戯曲   (ぎきょく)   —   drama
戯れ   (たわむれ)   —   play
戯言   (ぎげん)   —   joke
戯れる   (ざれる)   —   to be playful
悪戯   (あくぎ)   —   offensive joke
戯画   (ぎが)   —   caricature
戯れ言   (ざれこと)   —   prank
遊戯場   (ゆうぎじょう)   —   amusement center (center)
戯作者   (げさくしゃ)   —   fiction writer

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

2026年5月 今月のOpenStreetMap Japan [OpenStreetMap Japan]

この記事は、OpenStreetMap Japan Discordの投稿内容をもとに生成AIが作成したドラフトを、編集者が加筆・修正したものです。 The English version follows the Japanese version. This article is based on a draft generated by AI from discussions in the OpenStreetMap Japan Discord server and has been reviewed and edited by the editor. # 2026年5月 今月のOpenStreetMap Japan 2026年5月のOpenStreetMap Japanコミュニティは、**国土地理院のProject PLATEAU(プラトー)データの活用に関する議論や技術開発**が

01:00 PM

Surveillance Tech Company Is Pitching An Unholy ALPR/Stingray Hybrid To Law Enforcement [Techdirt]

Here’s something no one but cops and the tech firms that love cops wanted: an ALPR that can scoop up pretty much any information being broadcasted by cars and the devices carried by the people inside them. As if ALPRs weren’t already controversial enough, here comes a tech company offering that makes most ALPRs (including those sold by Flock!) look absolutely innocuous.

Joseph Cox has the gory details for 404 Media:

A surveillance company plans to add sensors to automatic license plate readers (ALPRs) that would mean the devices, as well as capture the license plate of passing vehicles, would also sweep up unique identifiers of mobile phones, wearables, and other Bluetooth-enabled devices in those cars, potentially letting law enforcement identify specific drivers or passengers.

The technology, called SignalTrace, would turn ALPR cameras from devices focused on tracking cars to ones that can more readily track the location of particular people. 

That’s some wild stuff! And not in a good way!

The legal argument for license plate readers has always been this: A car traveling on a public road has no expectation of privacy. Sure, ALPRs can generate hundreds of millions of plate/location records every year, but the (clumsy) analogy given to courts is that it’s no different than something that could be accomplished by police officers who simply wrote down every license plate that passed by their patrol car.

Of course, to duplicate what ALPRs actually do, you’d have to actually exist in a hypothetical. If a million monkeys with a million typewriters can create Shakespeare, surely a million blue-clad monkeys could generate millions of plate/location data points with the sort of accuracy one would expect from high-speed, high-quality plate reader cameras.

But we don’t exist in the infinite monkey theorem. That’s a strike against ALPRs being nothing more than a “force multiplier.”

And there is currently no legal argument that justifies hoovering data from devices and vehicles, which is something the public certainly can’t do. But that’s what surveillance tech company Leonardo is offering, according to its own pitch document:

It bridges license plate recognition data with sensor-captured device identifiers—such as those from mobile phones, Bluetooth wearables, and vehicle systems—to create a unique, trackable ‘electronic fingerprint’ for investigative use.

When multiple devices consistently move together with a vehicle, SignalTrace’s algorithms link them to that vehicle’s license plate and time-stamped location data. This correlation provides investigators with another layer of actionable intelligence, even if a suspect changes or removes a plate.

First off, let’s address this part of Leonardo’s assertion:

When multiple devices consistently move together with a vehicle

That seems deliberately misleading. While it’s not illogical to expect surveillance tech to seek correlations between data points, you’d have to be deliberately ignorant to believe that data (i.e., captures that don’t include “multiple devices consistently moving together”) won’t be searchable. While disparate data may be mostly useless in investigations, having the option to search by identifiers other than license plate numbers means cops can track people and devices, rather than limit themselves to the movement of vehicles. And if you don’t think this will be abused, you’re so deep in denial as to be unreachable.

And there’s so much more! The Leonardo document says its tech can capture RFID info from key cards, asset tags, and pet microchips. It also says it can pull info from vehicle infotainment systems. While this may be limited to unique identifiers that link the car to the device, these systems contain plenty of other data that may not be as well-protected as drivers assume — things like GPS data, phone info for every device that has been paired with the system, as well as any communications (and connecting phone numbers) stored during hands-free operation.

Leonardo is angling for federal law enforcement contracts. And it certainly would like to hook up with whatever local agencies it can talk into paying for its services. While it’s not clear that anyone is purchasing Signal trace yet, Leonardo is already filling its pockets with federal dollars, as 404 Media reports:

Its U.S. arm has contracts with U.S. Special Operations Command and the General Services Administration, according to procurement records maintained by the transparency website Widely Reported.

At this point, there is no widely recognized legal argument that supports this sort of intrusiveness. While ALPRs get a pass because anyone can see cars and license plates when they’re traveling public roads and the Third Party Doctrine says nearly anything “willingly” handed over to third parties doesn’t require a warrant to obtain, this is something else completely.

There’s no law on the books or court precedent that says the government can, in effect, force devices carried by people in cars to turn this info over to the government just because the vehicle happened to pass a SignalTrace-powered camera.

This is tech that has no analogue in the public sphere. In other words, the general public doesn’t have access to tech that can obtain this info from other people’s devices. That was the argument used to excuse cops who used an iPhone’s night photography option to “see” through the tinted windows of a parked car. There’s also no “just a cop with a notebook and a pen” equivalent for this tech, which is what has been argued to route ALPRs around the Fourth Amendment.

Leonardo is setting up shop in the unsettled areas of the law. That’s not a great business model. Even if there’s initial interest from the government’s early adopters, securing sustained revenue streams would require the Constitution itself to be upended. I’m not saying it won’t happen. I’m just saying I wouldn’t bet my career on it.

09:00 AM

Elon Musk Threatens To Sue Rep. Khanna For… Citing The Lancet About How DOGE Cuts Will Likely Lead To Millions Of Deaths [Techdirt]

We’ve been pointing out for years that the supposedly “free speech absolutist” Elon Musk is one of the most aggressive abusers of state power to create chilling effects against his critics. So it should come as little surprise to anyone paying attention, that he’s at it again: threatening to sue Rep. Ro Khanna for Khanna’s comments regarding Musk’s time running (though pretending not to run) DOGE, where Elon took great joy in killing USAID, despite having no congressional mandate to do so. At issue was the following comments from Khanna:

Khanna suggested that the Democratic Party take initiative to hold Musk accountable if they were to regain control over the House of Representatives or the Senate.

“I do believe once we take power, there needs to be accountability,” Khanna said on the “I’ve Had It” podcast. “There needs to be accountability for Elon Musk. You know, they’re celebrating that he created 4,400 millionaires, but they don’t talk about the 4.5 million children around the world who he possibly sentenced to death by dismantling USAID.”

Khanna continued, “He needs to answer for that. He needs to be subpoenaed. He needs to face investigation. He needs to answer for what he did with DOGE [Department of Government Efficiency]. It’s not just ‘let’s move on.'”

Khanna is referencing a recent Lancet report, which projects the “effects of defunding” USAID on mortality through 2030, and concluding it could lead to 4.5 million child deaths.

So, first things first, Khanna’s statement is clearly not defamatory. First, he doesn’t say that Musk killed that many people. He just says that the results of his cuts while in government should be investigated, and points to the Lancet report. And note that he says “possibly sentenced.” This is clearly him giving his opinion that an investigation should happen based on the Lancet’s analysis. Opinions based on disclosed facts are not defamatory.

Also, Elon Musk is, obviously, a public figure. And thus Musk would need to show actual malice — specifically that Khanna knows that the claims are false. But obviously, Khanna believes the Lancet’s report is worth investigating. There’s no way to prove actual malice.

But, as with so many of Musk’s SLAPP suits, any suit here wouldn’t be about winning. It would be about punishing a public official for daring to suggest that maybe — just maybe — Musk did real damage while running DOGE.

It appears that Musk is really, really sensitive to these claims and has spent days crashing out about it:

One or both of those things apparently didn’t sit right with the richest person in the universe, who responded by calling the representative an “evil liar,” a “robber,” and an “insider trader.” Then he threatened to sue Khanna, agreed that he should be arrested, and told his 240 million X followers that “Ro the Robber should be in prison!!” That all happened on Monday, but apparently sleeping on it didn’t change Musk’s feelings about the situation. On Tuesday he shared a post encouraging him to “take Ro ‘the Robber’ for every penny that he has”

He later retweeted Rand Paul’s false claim that USAID funded COVID, adding “USAID money killed millions” — a baseless assertion backed by nothing, in direct contrast to the peer-reviewed Lancet study he’s threatening to sue Khanna over.

The whole thing is ridiculously censorial — Musk is trying to get Khanna to shut up and prevent Congress from examining the actual impact of his (brief, but very eventful) leadership of DOGE. Turns out Musk doesn’t like either free speech or government transparency when it comes to his own actions.

There’s an extra layer of irony in who, exactly, Musk has chosen to go after. When Khanna was first elected to Congress a decade ago, he was Silicon Valley’s guy — backed by a massive war chest of tech billionaire money. Now those same circles are cheering Musk on to “take every penny” from him, because Khanna has since suggested the ultra-rich might pay marginally more in taxes and that Congress look into what DOGE actually did. As recently as last year, when Musk and Trump had a brief falling out, Khanna was even among those who explored whether Musk might shift his support toward Democrats — that’s how vast Musk’s gravitational pull had become over the entire ecosystem, critics included. Now that pull is being used to threaten financial ruin over a Congressional Representative citing a peer-reviewed journal.

It remains a complete travesty that there’s been no accountability, no responsibility, and no full accounting of just how much damage Musk did in his few months taking a chainsaw to large parts of the federal government, despite having zero congressional authority to do any of that.

The fact that he’s now threatening to abuse the courts to “take every penny” from Khanna for daring to suggest Congress should actually do its job and figure out what the fuck happened in the Executive Branch last year should (not for the first time) put to rest the idea that Musk has ever been a free speech supporter. He’s petty, vindictive and censorial, and not above using his extreme wealth to punish those who point out he’s an emperor with no clothes.

07:00 AM

All Rise for Our Federal District Courts [The Status Kuo]

Photo courtesy of Reuters

The most important judicial battles of Trump’s second term are not being fought at the Supreme Court. They’re being waged in federal district courts across the country, before individual judges whose names most Americans have never heard.

The numbers alone are telling. The Trump regime has now lost more than 70 percent of the lawsuits filed against its actions. According to Just Security’s litigation tracker, plaintiffs have racked up 272 wins against the regime, with 64 government actions permanently blocked and another 143 temporarily halted. The losses have occurred across the full ideological spectrum of the federal bench, including many of Trump’s own appointees.

The President has responded by attacking judges by name, accusing them of disloyalty and foreign sympathies, calling for their impeachment, and even directing the Justice Department to file misconduct complaints against them. That’s a bridge too far even for this radical Supreme Court; when Trump demanded the impeachment of Chief Judge James Boasberg of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Chief Justice John Roberts issued a rare public statement reminding the president that impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreeing with a court’s ruling.

In the face of these attacks, federal judges have not flinched. This week alone, three federal district court rulings landed with particular force, addressing the weaponization of the criminal process against political opponents, the integrity of our national elections, and the need to respect legal process in our immigration system. They were handed down by three judges who knew their rulings would paint targets on their backs.

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A “blatantly unlawful and unethical use of the grand-jury process”

To understand the import of what Chief U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz did on Monday, we need to rewind to events in Minneapolis in January.

Operation Metro Surge began in December 2025, a federal immigration enforcement operation that descended on Minnesota with the force of an occupying army. The Trump regime said it was targeting dangerous criminals, but that turned out to be largely fiction. Court records unsealed during the subsequent litigation showed that 77.1 percent of the roughly 4,000 people arrested during the operation had no criminal convictions.

During the street actions and protests that followed, federal agents shot and killed two U.S. citizens: Renee Good on January 7, 2026, and Alex Pretti on January 24. The city of Minneapolis estimates that the operation caused nearly $700 million in economic damage through business closures, lost wages, and community trauma.

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz sued to block the operation. Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey spoke out forcefully against ICE activity. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison demanded justice. Then, even as the slain were still being mourned, the Justice Department opened a criminal investigation into Walz, Frey, Ellison, St. Paul Mayor Kaohly Her and the county boards of Hennepin and Ramsey counties—essentially the governmental apparatus of the entire Twin Cities region.

The timeline of the criminal investigation is instructive. Trump had been publicly demanding a day of reckoning and retribution for Minnesota. Within days of his social media posts, the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump had been privately complaining that then-Attorney General Pam Bondi was weak because she hadn’t moved fast enough to pursue his political enemies. Days after that, the DOJ opened its investigation. Todd Blanche, then Deputy Attorney General, accused Walz and Frey of encouraging violence against law enforcement and vowed to stop their terrorism by whatever means necessary. The conduct that earned them that accusation, as best the record shows, was filing a lawsuit.

Judge Schiltz noted the sequence of events in his ruling. It ultimately led the DOJ, on January 20, to serve six grand jury subpoenas on the offices of the defendants demanding more than a year’s worth of internal communications, texts, emails, and policy documents related to their response to federal immigration enforcement.

As Democracy Docket observed, grand jury subpoenas carry the implicit threat of criminal indictment. Receiving one means a federal prosecutor has gone before a secret grand jury and obtained its authority. And notably, they are almost never quashed.

Judge Schiltz quashed all six.

As the Star Tribune noted, Schiltz is a George W. Bush appointee who clerked for the late Justice Antonin Scalia and mentored Justice Amy Coney Barrett. There’s no basis for a claim of “liberal bias.” Schiltz simply read the record, applied the law, and called what he saw by its name.

Schiltz wrote that “the evidence that the challenged subpoenas were issued for unlawful reasons is overwhelming” and that the Department had “struggled—without success—to identify a single plausible investigatory justification for the subpoenas.” He noted that the “connections between the information sought in the subpoenas and any possible criminal violation range from extremely weak to nonexistent.” And he added that the subpoenas sought materials that “largely if not entirely relate to constitutionally protected conduct.”

He went further. Trump’s repeated public vows of retribution, Schiltz found, established beyond reasonable dispute that the subpoenas were part of a broader campaign to coerce state and local officials in Minnesota to assist the Trump administration in its federal immigration enforcement. He tied them explicitly to what he called the Trump administration’s well-established history of using criminal investigations to retaliate against and pressure the president’s political and personal adversaries. Then came the hammer blow:

“Initiating a criminal investigation in order to harass political opponents or to coerce them into taking official action — particularly official action that the federal government cannot directly require those political opponents to take — is a blatantly unlawful and unethical use of the grand-jury process.”

The Tenth Amendment, Schiltz noted, bars the federal government from forcing states or their political subdivisions to enforce federal laws. The regime was using the criminal justice system to do through intimidation what the Constitution forbids it from doing directly. Schiltz concluded that nothing in this order or in the materials submitted to the Court could possibly compromise a criminal investigation, because, as the Court explained at length, the Department was not conducting one. It was using the grand jury process for other, unlawful purposes.

The DOJ’s justifications, Schiltz wrote, were risible—his SAT word, meaning laughable.

The stakes of this ruling extend well beyond Minnesota. Had Schiltz allowed the subpoenas to stand, the DOJ would have established a playbook: any state or local official who refuses to devote public resources to federal immigration enforcement could be subject to criminal investigation. Every blue-state governor, every sanctuary city mayor, every county commissioner who tells ICE it cannot use local jails would have been on notice that noncompliance carries the threat of a grand jury subpoena. The anti-commandeering doctrine, the constitutional guarantee that the federal government cannot conscript state officials into its enforcement programs, would have been effectively nullified by prosecutorial fear.

Walz called the ruling a victory for the rule of law and our democracy. But it was also something more: a ruling that refused to let two dead Americans become the predicate for a political prosecution.

The federal government “threatens the sacred right to vote.”

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Sparkle Sooknanan saved Anthony Nel’s right to vote, and with it, tens of thousands like him.

Nel was born in South Africa. He became a U.S. citizen as a teenager when his parents were naturalized. He registered to vote in Texas. He voted for years without incident.

Then, in late 2025, Texas ran its voter rolls through a newly overhauled federal database called SAVE—the Systematic Alien Verification for Entitlements System—which the Department of Homeland Security had rebuilt with the help of Elon Musk’s DOGE operation. The original SAVE system was designed to verify the immigration status of individuals applying for government benefits. It checked people one at a time, using DHS-issued identification numbers. The rebuilt version could run bulk checks on thousands of voters simultaneously, had been linked to Social Security Administration data for the first time, and now included the records of American-born citizens alongside foreign nationals.

The SAVE system flagged Nel as a potential noncitizen. Texas sent him a letter saying he needed to prove his citizenship or his voter registration would be canceled. He didn’t respond in time, and his registration was canceled. He was, in the system’s judgment, no longer eligible to vote in the country where he was a citizen.

Nel is not alone. When Texas ran more than 2,700 flagged potential noncitizens through the process, many turned out to be American citizens. People like Nel, born abroad to parents who later naturalized, fall into a category USCIS itself acknowledges the SAVE system cannot reliably verify. Travis County officials found that roughly a quarter of their flagged voters had registered at the DMV and had therefore already provided proof of citizenship. At least 11 of them were confirmed citizens. DHS and the Social Security Administration had known about the reliability problems before they built the system. They built it anyway.

By April 2026, more than 67 million voter records had been run through the overhauled SAVE system. Of those, 21,000 had been flagged as potential noncitizens. That’s less than one percent, which sounds reassuring until you remember that the midterms are in November; there are tens of millions more records that could be run against the system; many races are decided by a few hundred votes; and for every person who gets flagged, the burden of proof falls on the voter, not the government.

On Monday, Judge Sooknanan, a Biden appointee presiding in Washington, D.C., ruled the entire SAVE overhaul unlawful and ordered it shut down. As NPR reported, Sooknanan’s 75-page ruling found that federal agencies had “haphazardly combined and repurposed the private information of millions of Americans, including citizenship data that they knew to be unreliable.” She found that the creation of the expanded SAVE system violated the Privacy Act, the Social Security Act, and the Administrative Procedure Act—three separate statutory violations, each independently sufficient to kill the program. The agencies had no statutory authority to build what they built. They had received tens of thousands of negative public comments during a required notice period and ignored every one of them.

The DOJ had argued that only a small number of naturalized voters might have inaccurate data in SSA records. Sooknanan called that argument a red herring. She also went further, saying the dissemination of inaccurate citizenship data about voters was defamatory because it implied that those wrongly removed from voter rolls had committed a federal crime by registering as a noncitizen. The administration’s arguments to the contrary, she wrote, border on the absurd:

“All in all, the federal government has knowingly trampled on the privacy rights of American citizens in a manner that threatens the sacred right to vote. This Court cannot stand idly by while that happens.”

The regime’s response came from DHS General Counsel James Percival, who posted,

“It’s amazing how hard the Left will fight to stop us from solving problems they insist do not exist. Judge Sparkle Soknanan’s [sic] latest ruling preventing DHS from addressing alien voting is just the latest example!”

Stephen Miller added, “Judge Sparkle [sic] decrees that America belongs to any random alien on planet earth, just like our founders intended.” Some right-wing accounts noted, pointedly, that Sooknanan was born in Trinidad and Tobago.

These attacks didn’t address the substance of her ruling, which was airtight. The regime built a national citizenship surveillance database using unreliable data, violated three federal privacy statutes, ignored public comment, and was already using the results to remove American citizens from voter rolls five months before a midterm election. In a separate proceeding challenging Trump’s mail-in voting executive order, the DOJ’s own lawyers acknowledged in court that the citizenship lists being compiled would be underinclusive and incomplete.

Naturalized citizens are the population most vulnerable to a database that cannot reliably verify their citizenship. The regime has lost nine consecutive cases in its campaign to compel states to hand over their voter rolls, has had three separate federal judges block its 2025 executive order requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote, and is zero for nine in voter data litigation. This is consistent and determined voter suppression, dressed in the language of election integrity.

Sooknanan’s ruling doesn’t end the fight, as the regime will undoubtedly appeal. But it likely means the SAVE system, as built, cannot be used against the 2026 electorate. Anthony Nel and others like him can vote.

ICE’s “courthouse-arrest policies are devoid of rational explanation”

Judge P. Casey Pitts dealt a giant blow to one of ICE’s worst practices.

For 80 years, a basic principle governed federal law enforcement near courthouses. Authorities don’t make arrests there. Not at hospitals, not at churches, not at schools—and not at courthouses, where people go precisely because the legal system has ordered them to appear. The logic is clear: Any legal system in which showing up makes you less safe than not showing up cannot function properly.

Trump ended that principle on his first day back in office. ICE began arresting people at immigration courthouses. These are immigrants who had filed asylum claims, complied with every check-in requirement, retained lawyers, and appeared at their scheduled hearings. To trap these law-abiding residents, the White House developed a cruel new tactic: dismissing immigrants’ cases in court and arresting them on the spot. From there, ICE could funnel them into expedited removal, a fast-track deportation process with far fewer due process protections than the standard proceedings they had been navigating.

The tactic caught judges and lawyers off guard. That was the point. It also caught Carmen Pablo Sequen in its trap. Sequen had fled persecution to seek safety in the United States. She did everything the system asked of her: turned herself in to authorities, filed her asylum claim and showed up for her court dates. At one of those hearings, ICE was waiting. She was arrested in the courthouse. It was the one place, she said, that she had been told to trust. She said the terror of that day haunted her.

ICE never documented why it had revoked its own 2021 guidance, which had restricted courthouse arrests to narrow circumstances such as national security threats or imminent danger. It issued no replacement rules specifically for immigration courts. The 2025 policies, Judge Pitts found, do not mention immigration courthouses at all.

That meant agents were operating under no internal limits whatsoever. And when courts began asking questions, the government’s own lawyers admitted in March 2026 that the legal justification the regime had been relying on for courthouse arrests does not and has never applied to immigration courts.

That admission—that the government had been making arrests for months under a legal theory its own lawyers conceded was unsupported—became the foundation of the ruling Judge Pitts issued on June 23.

Pitts is a Biden appointee in the Northern District of California. In a 71-page order, he vacated the ICE courthouse arrest policies nationwide. (For those wondering, this is still possible where there is a nationwide certified class.) He also struck down a separate waiver that had extended ICE’s authority to hold detainees in short-term holding facilities from 12 hours to 72 hours, a change made with, as Pitts found, no reasoned explanation.

For the past 80 years, Pitts explained, the Administrative Procedure Act has commanded federal agencies to think before they act. ICE did not. Pitts found that the agencies had “failed to provide reasoned explanations for their actions” and had failed to consider “important aspects of the problem”—including the chilling effect on immigration court attendance, the risks tied to prolonged detention, and whether alternatives existed. The agency’s own dismissal of chilling-effect concerns, Pitts wrote, was “a non sequitur.” The reversal of decades of courthouse protection was, he concluded, “not from merely unreasoned decision-making but a complete lack of decision-making.”

His conclusion was unsparing: “In sum, ICE’s 2025 courthouse-arrest policies are devoid of rational explanation.”

Before this ruling, asylum seekers faced what Pitts had previously described as a Hobson’s choice between two irreparable harms: appear in court and risk arrest and detention, or skip the hearing and lose your case in absentia, forfeiting any claim for asylum or other relief. Either way, you lose. The administration was not trying to enforce immigration law through the courts; it was trying to collapse the courts by making attendance too dangerous to risk.

After Pitts issued his ruling, Sequen said: “This decision means I can finally focus on my asylum case, not on the ICE officers who might be waiting for me outside the courtroom door.”

One of her lawyers put it plainly: the courthouse is meant to be a refuge for the pursuit of justice, not a hunting ground for ICE. No immigrant, whether appearing in San Francisco, Miami, Chicago or New York, should be forced to choose between liberty and their day in court.

The Department of Homeland Security’s response came from its general counsel, James Percival. He told Newsweek, “When a judge sentences a defendant, the defendant is taken into custody. If an alien is ordered removed by an immigration judge, the same should happen. A district judge ordering otherwise is naked judicial activism in service of an anti-American, open borders agenda.”

Percival did not address the 80 years of practice his agency had abandoned, the written policy it never produced, the legal justification it admitted never existed, or the asylum seeker—and thousands of others like her—who had done everything right and been arrested for it.

Holding the line and deserving of our praise

None of these rulings is final. The regime will appeal all of them, and some ultimately may be reversed or kneecapped by the right-wing radicals on the Supreme Court.

But for now, these three judges held the line. They did it knowing that their names would trend, that the Stephen Millers of the world would come directly for them, and that the President of the United States has a history of targeting judges who defy him and his agenda.

Still, they persisted. They stood by constitutional and legal principles knowing that it is no longer an abstraction that a grand jury can investigate political enemies, a vote can be erased by a DOGE database, and a courthouse can become a trap for immigrants following the law.

For that, they deserve our respect—and our gratitude.

06:00 AM

He Moved A Box Of Leftist Zines. MAGA’s Favorite Judge Just Gave Him 30 Years. [Techdirt]

In Trump’s America, the First Amendment is a dead letter. If you’re seen as anti-Trump, you apparently no longer have any rights at all. We’ll get to the man who moved a box of zines and got thirty years — he wasn’t even at the protest, but the judge claimed he was aiding a “terrorist on the run” (he was not). To understand how that’s even possible, though, you first have to look at how some people who actually tried to overturn democracy were treated. Because they walked.

Just look at the treatment of the January 6th insurrectionists, who literally sought to hang the Vice President, invaded the Capitol, blocked the certification of the free and fair 2020 presidential election, and generally tried to take down the federal government. While some were convicted of their crimes and given jail sentences commensurate with their actual crimes, Donald Trump then pardoned them all and is now trying to pay them millions of dollars, claiming that it was so unfair that the government was “weaponized” against them.

Now, compare them to the Prairieland protestors, who went to the Prairieland ICE detention center in Texas last year on July 4th. It was like plenty of the angry protest gatherings we’ve seen lately: a bit rowdy, with a few individuals going too far. Some set off fireworks. Some engaged in vandalism. One person fired a gun which appears to have hit a local police officer (who was released from the hospital soon after with no lasting damage).

It seems totally reasonable for prosecutors to prosecute the actual crimes that happened: mainly the person who fired a weapon at someone, and perhaps some of the vandalism. But, instead, the federal government tried to turn this into “an antifa terror cell” engaging in “domestic terrorism.” While a small number of those arrested knew each other and had planned to show up and be disruptive, many others didn’t know those who were engaged in the planning or the vandalism. They were just there.

some of the defendants – like Batten, Elizabeth Soto and her husband, Ines Soto, were not involved in the planning, arrived separately at the protest, and left when guards at the facility asked them to do so.

The whole case was always nonsense:

“This indictment stretches far beyond a specific, violent criminal action that might have taken place,” said Rachel Levinson-Waldman, director of the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center for Justice. “It characterizes these people who put together a protest as being in an antifa cell and tars all of them with this label of domestic terrorists.”

Levinson-Waldman said the overreach threatens the civil liberties of all Americans. 

“This is not just about antifa,” she said. “Anything that somehow feels at odds with this administration’s policies could be considered domestic terrorism and will be pursued with the full force of the federal government.”

But the cases were filed in North Texas before two of the most Trumpy judges around: Mark Pittman and Reed O’Connor. As we discussed back in March, the DOJ was able to get convictions against the protestors, including the one who wasn’t even there (hold that thought… it’s coming further down). A big part of the evidence was the weapons that some of the protestors brought to the protest. But, this is Texas. You’d think that in “we love the Second Amendment, Texas” that this wouldn’t be seen as a crime, but we’re dealing with a clearly ideologically driven prosecution.

This week, some of those convicted had sentences handed down, and they are so extreme and so long that they literally seem unbelievable.

Eight activists found guilty of terrorism-related charges in connection with an attack on an immigration detention facility in Texas in which a police officer was shot were sentenced to decades in prison Tuesday. One person in the group was sentenced to 100 years in prison, federal court records show.

Benjamin Song, who shot an Alvarado Police Department officer in the neck during the July 4 incident at Prairieland Detention Center outside the Dallas-Fort Worth area, was sentenced ​to a century behind bars, according to court documents reviewed by USA Today.

Maricela Rueda, another defendant, was sentenced to 70 years in prison, records show.

Zachary Evetts, Savanna Batten, Elizabeth Soto, Autumn Hill and Meagan Morris were each sentenced to 50 years in prison….

Again, Batten and Soto had no connection to those who planned the event or who showed up with weapons or engaged in violence. And they left when guards asked them to leave. And now they’ve been sentenced to 50 years in prison. For what?

Even if we compared these sentences to the absolute longest sentence for January 6th insurrectionists, they are nowhere near as long as this. From The Guardian’s coverage of the sentencing:

The punishment for the protesters exceeds the lengthiest prison sentences given out for the attack on the Capitol on January 6. Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the Proud Boys who was convicted of seditious conspiracy, was sentenced to 22 years in prison. Stewart Rhodes, the leader of the far-right group the Oath Keepers, was sentenced to 18 years in prison.

Tarrio and Rhodes were found guilty of detailed planning to overturn a presidential election. All anyone involved in the Prairieland case did was… get mad about ICE kidnapping and kicking their neighbors out of the country, and maybe a bit of vandalism.

Song, who was sentenced to 100 years did fire his weapon and hit a law enforcement agent, meaning he was always going to face some more serious sentence, but he claims he did so because he thought the officer was going to shoot protestors. From The Guardian again:

In a statement, Song said he had fired at the police officer, Lt Thomas Gross, because Gross had his weapon drawn and Song believed he was about to shoot a protester.

“I never want to see good people, standing for what they believe in, gunned down in the street,” he said. “Now 21 people have been arrested, have been persecuted, have been punished. For knowing me or being my friend? This is wrong. This is mass punishment. Collective punishment. This is guilt by association. This is injustice.”

Even worse, Judge O’Connor (who has been one of MAGA’s favorite judges, and who has no problem making it clear that he rules on purely ideological grounds) allegedly told some of the defendants that the long sentences were necessary to make sure that leftist ideology was seen to be punished:

Judge O’Connor stated from the bench that he is giving maximum sentences to the Prairieland sentences because “the state wants to send a message to anyone who shares a similar ideology.”Additionally, motions 29 and 33 for acquittal and a new trial were denied from the bench.

DFW Support Committee (@dfwsupportcommitt.bsky.social) 2026-06-23T15:54:46.153Z

If you can’t see that, it’s a post from a group that is supporting the defendants (and hasn’t yet been confirmed by other reporting) saying that O’Connor said, from the bench: “the state wants to send a message to anyone who shares a similar ideology.”

If accurate, that would be incredibly damning. Judges aren’t supposed to increase sentences to stamp out ideology. That’s about as blatant a clear First Amendment violation you could imagine.

The Intercept has some other quotes from the courtroom, and while they don’t have the same ideology quote from O’Connor, the quotes they do have from him are pretty bad on their own:

O’Connor, the judge, said several times that the defendants had committed an “assault on democracy.”

“What happened here was not by any stretch of the imagination a protest,” he said during the sentencing of one defendant.

I mean… come on. January 6th was an “assault on democracy.” It was quite literally an attempt to overturn a democratic election. What happened in Texas was quite clearly a protest where a few protestors went too far. It happens at plenty of protests. It’s not an “assault on democracy” unless you’re a partisan activist. Given that we’re talking about Reed O’Connor, the claims of being a partisan activist have stuck on him for years.

Again, it’s clear that some of the defendants did break some laws, though most seemed to be minor property damage. There is zero indication of anything even remotely looking like a “terrorist” plot.

But the worst, most ridiculous case is that of Daniel “Des” Sanchez-Estrada. He wasn’t even at the protest. He was arrested for… moving some left wing zines after his wife — Maricela Rueda, one of the people just sentenced to 70 years — was arrested. Prosecutors claimed that moving a box with zines in it amounted to “corruptly concealing a document.” It sounds unbelievable, but you can read the criminal complaint against him, which really is just about him taking a box of leftist zines from his and his wife’s house (after she called him from jail) to another apartment.

He was just sentenced to 30 years in prison.

I need to repeat that. He moved a box of zines. He wasn’t at the protest.

He’s now been sentenced to THIRTY YEARS in prison.

For scale, this is in Texas, where Attorney General Ken Paxton (currently running for the US Senate) let a repeat child sex abuser plead down to one day in jail. One day for a child abuser. Thirty years for moving a box of pamphlets.

The Freedom of the Press Foundation has rightly called out how utterly unconstitutional this is:

Texas artist Daniel “Des” Sanchez Estrada was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison today for transporting a box of zines, or political pamphlets. The prosecution claimed Sanchez moved the zines so they wouldn’t incriminate his wife, who attended a protest outside the Prairieland immigration detention center near Dallas, where a police officer was wounded by gunfire.

The zines at issue may have discussed controversial political views, but they said nothing about the shooting or the Prairieland protest, and prosecutors did not allege that Sanchez’s wife, Maricela Rueda (who was sentenced to 70 years today), fired any shots or had anything to do with the shooting.

According to The Intercept, O’Connor insisted that moving the box of zines was helping a “known terrorist.”

Sanchez Estrada said he still could not understand why he was convicted.

“I am a father, I am a husband, I am a teacher, a poet — I am many things, Your Honor, but I am not a terrorist,” he told the court.

O’Connor said he disagreed with the idea that moving the box of the zines was harmless. At the time of Sanchez Estrada’s actions, Song was still on the run from police.

“What was at stake at that time was a known terrorist was on the run for shooting a police officer during a terrorist attack,” he said.

Even if Song was a “known terrorist” (he’s not), that still…. means nothing. Sanchez moved a box of zines. What the fuck does that have to do with Song being on the run? The answer is absolutely nothing.

Yes, the Trump administration has been desperately trying to drum up some sort of violent organized opposition because they need that to justify the suppression of everyone’s rights as part of their continued authoritarian project. That the Trump Justice Department and a couple of famously partisan judges played along with this travesty of a prosecution, doesn’t make it legitimate by any stretch of the imagination.

It’s just another sign that in Trump’s America those who violate the law in support of Trump get told they can do whatever crimes they want, and Trump might even get them paid, but protesting the ongoing fascism, may get you sent to prison for decades. It’s so extreme that it’s almost difficult to believe it has happened in the United States. This case will go down in history among the most ridiculous, partisan, bullshit attacks on free speech, and Judges Pittman and O’Connor will both be remembered for being the judges responsible for this travesty.

04:00 AM

Public Records Bill Would Make California The ‘Most Secretive’ State In The US [Techdirt]

There aren’t many governments out there actually trying to be more transparent. Every so often, a law gets passed that benefits the public more than its benefits the government, but these are the exceptions, not the rule.

California experienced one of these anomalies fairly recently. In 2019, a law was passed that finally made police misconduct records public records. They were no longer something simply buried in PD filing cabinets until they could be destroyed. They became presumptively public, putting the burden on the government to explain refusals to relinquish records.

The law enforcement wing of California’s government was less than pleased. As soon as it became apparent the bill had a good chance to become law, law enforcement agencies began destroying records. After its passage and enactment, the state’s Attorney General began pretending the law wasn’t retroactive and the state itself was sued by police unions. The law still stands and police agencies hoping to keep these records out of the public’s hands have been shut down repeatedly at multiple levels of the court system.

Now, the state is poised to take a big step backwards in terms of transparency, thanks to the efforts of a legislator whose bill doesn’t even have the support of her own party. In March, Assembly member Blanca Pacheco introduced a bill that would have erected a significant paywall for public records, with the obvious intent of deterring records requests.

After running into internal and external opposition, Pacheco performed a legislative head-fake:

Amid opposition from transparency advocates and public access concerns from her own Assembly colleagues, though, the Downey Democrat diluted her proposal to simply give governments more time to respond to records requests, a change that allowed the measure to sail through the Assembly in May. 

Now that it’s gotten over this initial legislative hurdle, Pacheco is turning her proposal back into the one she really wants — the one that couldn’t pass without being stripped of its objectionable clauses.

Now, she’s brought the controversial elements back — and they are even more restrictive than before, drawing fierce opposition from transparency advocates.

The latest version of her proposal, Assembly Bill 1821, is co-written by the League of California Cities and the California State Association of Counties. It would allow government agencies to delay responding to certain requests and to charge $22 to $66 an hour to search for and review the records they deem are for “commercial use.” 

Government agencies could also take requests to court if they believe someone is asking for the records for a malicious reason. 

Pacheco says this is nothing more than some needed “minor amendments or minor tweaks” meant to prevent government agencies from being “inundated” by records requests, “especially” those “generated by artificial intelligence.”

But that’s just one of several explanations given by Pacheco. She also says the new fee structure is meant to prevent taxpayers from “subsidizing” public records requests made by commercial entities. She also claims several discussions with local governments prompted this effort, as well as stuff she learned while she was enjoying paid-for trips to multiple tourist destinations for the ostensible purpose of getting better at legislating.

The initiative originated from one of Pacheco’s many trips sponsored by special interest groups last year, her spokesperson, Alina Evans, told CalMatters in March. Last year, Pacheco reported receiving more than $45,000 in sponsored travel — the most of any California lawmaker — including a study tour in Spain, a golf tournament in Pebble Beach and a conference in Maui. When asked Wednesday, however, Pacheco said she did not remember which one inspired her measure and said the idea came from multiple conversations with local governments. 

While I can absolutely believe most government agencies would prefer to handle fewer public records requests, public records request laws are supposed to benefit the public that pays for all of this, not the agencies that are supposed to serve the public.

Pacheco claims these are minor tweaks. The mandatory fees ($22 to $66 an hour) and giving agencies more options to sue records requesters aren’t small adjustments. They’re changes that will lead to exactly what so many government agencies want: fewer requests, more opacity, and a whole lot of leeway when it comes to responding.

Pacheco’s measure would create barriers that would chill the public from filing requests, effectively gutting the state’s open records act and violating the spirit of Californians’ constitutional right to government information, transparency advocates argue. 

“The only way that there’s any government accountability is that people know what the government is doing,” said David Snyder, a former journalist and now the executive director of the First Amendment Coalition.

[…]

[C]alifornia would be the first state to explicitly allow agencies to sue for “malicious intent.” Requesters the court deems malicious would have to pay an hourly fee to obtain records to compensate agencies for their time. 

[…]

“It would be easily weaponized by agencies seeking to thwart transparency and accountability, as has already happened elsewhere in the country,” Snyder said.

The threat of a lawsuit alone would “chill requesters from submitting public requests,” said Shaila Nathu, a senior attorney with ACLU of Northern California, which also opposes the bill. 

Governments (including those in California) are already allowed to reject requests they deem “burdensome” or “vexatious.” They’ve always been able to go to court to justify refusals to release records. This addition gives California agencies a new offensive weapon in the war on transparency.

On top of this, the proposal would allow agencies to take however long they want to respond to requests. Most requests are now handled through online portals, but the 10-14 day timeline for request responses would now only apply to requests “made in person” or via email during “normal business hours.” It seems like a small thing, but in practice would allow agencies to ignore a large majority of records requests indefinitely.

The bill is still a few steps away from landing on the governor’s desk. But beyond a few people in government agencies who think the public has too much power, Pacheco seems to be on her own here. With any luck, it will remain that way and this terrible proposal will become something else that can be ignored indefinitely. But never underestimate the government’s constant trend towards opacity. It takes periodic resets to set it back on the road towards accountability. This is nothing more than Pacheco crafting an off-ramp, and being urged on (mostly secretly) by agencies who love the public’s money, but feel they owe nothing to the public in return for their paychecks.

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Polymarket Says Its Markets Reveal The Truth. Its Ad Strategy Was To Have Influencers Fake Wins. [Techdirt]

In theory, there’s a way to build a prediction market that actually provides valuable insight on issues through the wisdom of the crowds. But that’s not at all what we have with the current crop of prediction markets, mainly Kalshi and Polymarket, which seem to have leap-frogged FanDuel and DraftKings as the deservedly hated gambling apps that pretend not to be gambling apps. While we haven’t spent too much time talking about those markets here on Techdirt, we have mentioned some examples of where they are found to be distorting information, rather than revealing deeper insights.

But, really, if your entire marketing pitch is that you’re a tool for revealing truths, it should be existentially embarrassing for it to be revealed that your advertising strategy is to have influencers blatantly fake bets to pretend they had won, when they really would have lost. It’s like the opposite of a truth market. It’s false advertising.

A piece published over the weekend by the Wall Street Journal (whose publisher actually has a deal with Polymarket) is incredibly damning, suggesting pretty clearly that Polymarket and a crew of young influencers it has hired have engaged in outright fraud that both the FTC and the CFTC would go after, if either agency were inclined to act:

In his videos, George Makihara appears to have a lucrative side hustle making bets on Polymarket.

In January, the college student posted a video that showed him winning $100,000 on a wager that President Trump would publicly say the word “McDonald’s” that month.  

The bet was one of 145 that Makihara appeared to place on Polymarket’s website between January and mid-May, based on his videos—bets adding up to almost $410,000. 

But none of those bets were real, according to a Wall Street Journal investigation.

The basics of the scam are pretty straightforward: Polymarket hired one of those “influencer marketing” companies to round up college kids to make social media videos showing them winning bets on Polymarket. Except, it turns out that the bets shown in those videos aren’t real. They’re faked, using a fake version of Polymarket, with the clever domain name Poiymarket (that’s a lower case i rather than an l there). And, of course, none of the influencers disclosed they were being paid by Polymarket, let alone that the bets shown in the videos were made up.

This doesn’t seem to be a one-off case of a rogue influencer either. The WSJ found over 1,100 videos by multiple creators, and determined that in 70% of the videos, no actual bets were placed, even as the videos showed the influencers winning $1.9 million. Within that, one smaller segment of the videos used faked or outdated news coverage to pretend the influencers had won about a million dollars — when, the WSJ worked it out, those same bets would actually have lost $166,000 if anyone had actually placed them.

And according to the reporting, this isn’t just a case of the marketing firm Polymarket hired going too far. The article reports that Polymarket created the fake website and required the influencers send them all their videos for approval before posting:

Creators said they send the finished videos to Polymarket for review. If a video isn’t engaging enough, or if it bears obvious signs of being faked, Polymarket will ask for the videos to be reshot, the creators said.

All of this clearly violates the FTC’s rules on disclosing paid promotion, not to mention being clearly deceptive advertising. That isn’t even mentioning that Polymarket apparently demanded that the ads target Americans, even as Polymarket isn’t supposed to be operating its prediction market in the US (even though tons of people are using it there via VPNs and proxies).

This is where the CFTC should step in. Polymarket has been doing the whole “nudge, nudge, wink, wink” thing about supposedly not targeting the US. But this report makes it clear that they absolutely are targeting the US and that it’s an important market to them. In a normal administration, the CFTC would take note of this and take action:

As of early June, it only paid clippers if at least 60% of their audience was in the U.S., according to instructional materials.

There’s also this excuse given by one of the influencers, who may be about to learn about deceptive advertising laws:

Razeen Khan, a college student in California, worked as a Polymarket creator for several months until March. He compared the videos to fast-food commercials, where food can appear more appealing than it does in real life. 

“We’re depicting what actually happens,” he said. “You’re still going to buy the burger.”

This is quite the choice in what to compare things to, Razeen, because the FTC now has a few decades on the record of going after companies for representing food in ads in a deceptive manner. In 1968, there was the Campbell’s Soup case, in which the FTC dinged the soup company for placing clear marbles in the bottom of bowls so that photos of the soup made it look like there were more noodles and vegetables in the soup than there really were.

The general rule of thumb to avoid having the FTC come down on you is that if any food is shown in an ad, it has to be the actual food. Everything else around it can be faked or made to look better. But the food has to be real. Hell, there was just a case against Burger King (which appears to have settled earlier this year), alleging that the burgers it showed in commercials were bigger than what was actually sold.

So, yeah, Razeen, I’d suggest maybe talking to a lawyer before you claim that you’re just doing the same thing that you think fast food companies do… when those fast food companies know that they can face serious legal penalties for faking things. Like you appear to have done.

Of course, the real question is whether this FTC will do anything about it. On the merits, it’s about as clean a case as the agency is ever going to get — so blatant that looking the other way carries its own cost. But part of the reason Kalshi and Polymarket seem to be everywhere these days is that the Trump administration has gone to bat for both companies in their fights with state regulators — and that Donald Trump Jr. has financial links to both companies. So the agency that should be the natural enemy of a company building fake websites to run faked ads, instead answers to a White House championing that company, while the president’s son personally profits from its success.

Which is its own kind of tell. A prediction market’s entire pitch is that it surfaces the truth — that the wisdom of the crowd, with real money on the line, produces better information than anyone else can. Polymarket just demonstrated what it actually thinks of that promise: when it needed to sell itself, it didn’t trust the real numbers. It hired college kids, built a counterfeit version of its own site, and manufactured the wins. The product that’s supposed to reveal the truth couldn’t market itself without faking it.

This is the rare case clean enough to force the question. If the FTC does nothing with a fraud this obvious, it won’t be because the case is too weak. Instead, it will tell you exactly whose interests the Trump FTC thinks are worth protecting.

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