News

Wednesday 2026-03-11

09:00 AM

37,000 Fake AI Comments Mysteriously Oppose Washington State’s Effort To Tax The Rich [Techdirt]

Ideally, the U.S. public is supposed to be able to comment on government policy proceedings, and the government is supposed to listen to that input.

Of course, it doesn’t really work that way: For years we’ve noted how U.S. regulatory comment proceedings are full of bots and fake comments from industries trying to game regulators, and make shitty policy (giant mergers, mindless deregulation, the elimination of consumer protection) seem like it has broad public support (remember when dead people opposed net neutrality?).

Unsurprisingly the U.S. hasn’t done anything to seriously rein in this problem. And when officials do act, it tends to be largely toothless, resulting in the problem getting steadily worse.

And that was before AI made it significantly easier for bad actors to quickly automate this sort of gamesmanship. Washington State has been exploring the RADICAL SOCIALIST ANTIFA EXTREMIST idea of having the state’s rich actually pay their taxes. That’s not been received particularly well by the extraction class, which has been making empty promises about leaving the state.

Recently the state opened up the public comment system to input, and not too surprisingly it was immediately flooded with upwards of 37,000 fake comments opposing the idea of taxing the rich:

“Beyond those individual cases, organizers said they identified 37,824 additional opposition sign-ins generated through thousands of duplicate name submissions across House and Senate hearings combined. In more than 15,000 instances, they said, identical names were entered repeatedly — sometimes 50 to 100 times. Many of the submissions were filed late at night or in rapid succession.”

The state’s wealthy (and the lawmakers paid to love them) are still trying to claim that the flood of provably false opposition to the bill only supports their claims that nobody wants the state’s wealthiest to actually pay a little more for regional societal improvements:

“Opponents of the tax, including state Republican leaders and hedge fund manager Brian Heywood, have leaned on the wave of opposition sign-ins as proof the proposal lacks public support.

“More than 60,000 people signed in against SB 6346 when it received a rushed hearing in the Senate,” Sen. John Braun, R-Centralia, said in a Feb. 16 statement. “That is so impressive that Democrats have tried to say bots are responsible, even though the Legislature blocks bots.”

(The legislature did not effectively block bots).

These are, it might go without saying, generally the same kinds of folks waging an all out war on U.S. journalism. More broadly this is a war on informed consensus, and it doesn’t take too much time looking around to see which side of this particular war is winning. Regardless of what policy you support, we’re supposed to, at the very least, be capable of a useful, honest conversation about policy.

But as we noted way back when the telecom industry was caught stuffing the FCC comment system with fake comments by fake and dead people opposing net neutrality (they even used my name, if you recall), you just know your position is a winner when you have to create entirely fake people to support it.

08:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 式 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

小3

style, ceremony, rite, function, method, system, form, expression

シキ

公式   (こうしき)   —   official
株式   (かぶしき)   —   share (in a company)
正式   (せいしき)   —   due form
方式   (ほうしき)   —   form
結婚式   (けっこんしき)   —   marriage ceremony
株式会社   (かぶしきがいしゃ)   —   stock company
開会式   (かいかいしき)   —   opening ceremony
形式   (けいしき)   —   form (as opposed to substance)
成人式   (せいじんしき)   —   coming-of-age ceremony
表彰式   (ひょうしょうしき)   —   commendation ceremony

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 懸 [Kanji of the Day]

✍20

中学

state of suspension, hang, depend, consult, distant, far apart

ケン ケ

か.ける か.かる

懸念   (けねん)   —   worry
一生懸命   (いっしょうけんめい)   —   very hard
懸命   (けんめい)   —   eager
懸案   (けんあん)   —   pending question
懸ける   (かける)   —   to hang up (e.g., a coat, a picture on the wall)
懸け橋   (かけはし)   —   temporary (suspension) bridge
懸賞   (けんしょう)   —   offering a prize
懸念材料   (けねんざいりょう)   —   cause (grounds) for concern (anxiety)
懸賞金   (けんしょうきん)   —   prize money
懸垂   (けんすい)   —   pull-up (exercise)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Poly Under Duress [The Stranger]

Got problems? Yes, you do! Email your question for the column to mailbox@savage.love! by Dan Savage Dear Readers: I’m off this week. To tide you over until I’m back, the tech-savvy, at-risk youth pulled some classic “PUD” questions from the archives. A PUD, of course, is someone who is “poly under duress.” Because while some of us start out poly and some of us achieve poly, others have poly thrust upon ’em. These are their stories. — Dan I’m a 25-year-old woman currently in a poly relationship with a married man roughly 20 years my senior. This has by far been the best relationship I’ve ever had. However, something has me a bit on edge. We went on a trip with friends to a brewery with a great restaurant. It was an amazing place, and I was sure his wife would enjoy it. He mentioned the place to her, and her response was NO, she didn’t want to go there because she didn’t want to have…

[ Read more ]

07:00 AM

Stephen Thaler’s Legendary AI Copyright Losing Streak Ends With Nowhere Left To Appeal [Techdirt]

We’ve been covering Stephen Thaler’s quixotic quest to get copyright (and patent) protection for works generated entirely by his AI system “DABUS” for years now. If there’s one thing Thaler has proved beyond all reasonable doubt, it’s that you can be comprehensively, thoroughly, and repeatedly wrong at every level of the American legal system and still keep going. He loses everywhere, every time, at every level. The Copyright Office rejected him. A federal district court rejected him. The DC Circuit rejected him. The Patent Office rejected him. Courts rejected his parallel patent claims. Even the Trump administration—not exactly known for its nuanced intellectual property positions—told the Supreme Court not to bother hearing his appeal.

And now, the Supreme Court has declined to take up the case, putting the final period on what has been one of the most impressive losing streaks in recent IP law history.

Plaintiff Stephen Thaler had appealed to the justices after lower courts upheld a U.S. Copyright Office decision that the AI-crafted visual art at issue in the case was ineligible for copyright protection because it did not have a human creator.

That was always the fatal flaw with his argument. He wasn’t making the more nuanced claim that a human who uses AI as a tool should get some copyright protection. He was making the maximalist claim: the AI did it all by itself, and it (or rather, he, as the AI’s owner) should get the copyright anyway.

The image in question—”A Recent Entrance to Paradise,” of train tracks entering a portal surrounded by green and purple plant-like imagery—was, according to Thaler, created entirely by DABUS with no human creative input. Every single institution that looked at this said no.

A federal judge in Washington upheld the office’s decision in Thaler’s case in 2023, writing that human authorship is a “bedrock requirement of copyright.” The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit affirmed the ruling in 2025.

Thaler’s lawyers, for their part, tried to argue that the stakes were too high for the Court to sit this one out:

With a refusal by the court to hear the appeal, Thaler’s lawyers said, “even if it later overturns the Copyright Office’s test in another case, it will be too late. The Copyright Office will have irreversibly and negatively impacted AI development and use in the creative industry during critically important years.”

That’s rich. The Copyright Office is already working through the genuinely harder questions in cases involving tools like Midjourney—cases where humans actually did have meaningful creative input. Those cases are moving through the system right now. The problem for Thaler is that he chose the worst possible vehicle to force a Supreme Court showdown: a case so maximalist in its claims (the AI did everything, humans did nothing, give us the copyright anyway) that courts could rule against him on the narrowest possible grounds without ever having to engage with the nuanced questions at all. His all-or-nothing bet made this an easy case.

Still, the question of what happens when a human uses AI as a creative tool—rather than letting the machine do everything—isn’t actually as novel or unsettled as many people seem to think.

Copyright law has required human creative choices since at least Burrow-Giles Lithographic Co. v. Sarony all the way back in 1884 in a case about whether or not photographs get covered by copyright. And the wonderful Feist Publications v. Rural Telephone Service from 1991 (a case we cite often) hammered the point home by establishing that copyright demands original creative expression. Consider how this already works with photography. A photographer who frames a shot of a landscape gets copyright protection in the creative choices they made—the composition, the angle, the timing, the lighting. But the landscape itself? No human created that. It gets no copyright. The camera mechanically captured what was in front of it, but the human’s original creative decisions (and only those original creative decisions) are what copyright protects.

AI-generated works should work roughly the same way. If a human’s creative input—through a sufficiently specific and expressive prompt, through selection and arrangement, through iterative creative choices—meaningfully shapes the output, that human contribution can be protected. But the parts that the AI generated autonomously, without human creative direction? Those are “the landscape.” They’re the thing no human authored.

There will certainly be disputes at the margins about exactly how much human input is enough, and where the line sits between “I told the AI to make something cool” and genuine creative direction. But the fundamental framework for handling this already exists. We’ve been here before with every new creative tool, from cameras to Photoshop. The principle has always been the same: copyright protects human creativity, regardless of the tool used to express it.

Thaler chose to fight for the one position that had no support in law (or in common sense). His losing streak is now complete, and there’s nowhere left to appeal. But the legacy of his many, many losses is actually kind of useful: he has, through sheer persistence, generated an incredibly clear and consistent body of authority establishing that purely AI-generated works, with no human creative input, do not get copyright protection.

So, thanks for that, I guess. Oh, and I guess we can confidently post that “Recent Entrance to Paradise” image as it, like the monkey selfie before it, is officially in the public domain.

05:00 AM

Small changes to big systems [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

A hardcover book printed in 1925 is almost indistinguishable from one printed yesterday. It’s easy to think not much has changed.

But book publishing isn’t about printing, and it’s a useful metaphor for the systems changes we’re seeing all around us.

The book publishing system was based on scarcity.

A successful bookstore was perfect. It had exactly the right number of books — more wouldn’t fit, and fewer wouldn’t pay the rent. The only way for a book publisher to get a new book into the stores was to get the bookseller to take an old book out.

As a result of this chokepoint, distribution became the focus. Publishers came to see bookstores, not readers, as their customers—which is why there are few ads for books, or toll-free numbers to call. There were plenty of authors, so publishers selected which ones got a distribution investment. And their timing and launch strategies all revolved around the bookstores.

Bookstores have to make smart choices. Months in advance, they choose which new books to take on (and which to leave behind.) If they were wrong, if a new book they don’t carry has an audience, then they lose sales because readers go elsewhere.

The small change? Get rid of the scarcity of shelf space. Amazon never removes a book to make room for a new book. They have all the books.

The publishers’ existing strategies make little sense when the scarcity of shelf space goes away.

One industry term is the “lay down” which describes how many books a major publisher needs to print and distribute to get good nationwide coverage at launch. For books that hope to be bestsellers, that number was 25,000 copies or so… a book from a well-known author would have that many copies in the world before a single copy was sold.

Today, for many books like this, the laydown is 250. 1% of what it used to be.

This is why the industry is shifting so much attention to pre-orders. The online world not only eradicated space (you can buy things from anywhere, so shelves don’t matter), it also shifted time. You can indicate interest by buying things long before they’re distributed.

Bookstores don’t stock a new book unless they see it’s already been selling online.

Another example: Pop music.

Through a happy accident, the typical record store was exactly big enough to hold all the music that the typical listener might ever hear on the radio. The radio as a sampling medium was about the same size as the physical distribution medium of the store. You didn’t hear hula music on the radio and you couldn’t buy it at Tower Records.

First, we blew up the store. The internet meant that any song you wanted, you could download for free if you cared enough, or listen to it on YouTube (if you only cared a little.)

Then, we blew up the radio station. The internet meant that the sampling medium went from DJ-curated to streaming-on-demand. And we demanded.

Change the distribution, change the medium.

There are still hits, but they’re not driven by A&R teams, record-store distribution deals or payola. The sampling medium and the revenue medium have become the same.

And one more shift, one that’s changed both industries:

The cost of making a book or a song has plummeted. Thanks to AI, autotune and other tools, combined with the roll-your-own distribution of ebooks and social media, anyone can create and self-publish. So, anyone will.

Scarcity of creation and scarcity of distribution have been replaced by a surplus of both.

What doesn’t scale? Trust, attention and belonging.

AI is making relatively small changes to very big systems, everywhere we look. But if those systems are built on the desires of humans, we will need to earn trust, attention and belonging more than ever before.

      

Pluralistic: Ad-tech is fascist tech (10 Mar 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



Times Square, lit up by night. Every ad sprouts a giant CCTV bubble. A green smoke crawls over the landscape.

Ad-tech is fascist tech (permalink)

A core tenet of the enshittification hypothesis is that all the terrible stuff we're subjected to in our digital lives today is the result of foreseeable (and foreseen) policy choices, which created the enshittogenic policy environment in which the worst people's worst ideas make the most money:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/10/say-their-names/#object-permanence

Take commercial surveillance. Google didn't have to switch from content-based ads (which chose ads based on your search terms and the contents of webpages) to surveillance-based ads (which used dossiers on your searches, emails, purchases and physical movements to target ads to you, personally). The content-based ads made Google billions, but the company made a gamble that surveillance-based ads would make them more money.

That gamble had two parts: the first was that advertisers would pay more for surveillance ads. This is the part we all focus on – the collusion between people who want to sell us stuff and companies willing to spy on us to help them do it.

But the other half of the bet is far more important: namely, whether spying on us would cost Google anything. Would they face fines? Would users collect massive civil judgments over these privacy violations? Would Google face criminal charges? These are the critical questions, because even if advertisers are willing to pay a premium for surveillance ads, it only makes sense to collect that premium if the excess profit it represents is larger than the anticipated penalties for committing surveillance crimes.

What's more, advertisers and Google execs all work for their shareholders, in a psychotic "market system" in which the myth of "fiduciary duty" is said to require companies to hurt us right up to the point where the harms they inflict on the world cost them more than the additional profits those harms deliver:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/09/18/falsifiability/#figleaves-not-rubrics

But the policymakers who ultimately determine whether the fines, judgments and criminal penalties outstrip the profits from spying – they work for us. They draw their paychecks from the public purse in exchange for safeguarding our interests, and they have manifestly failed at this.

Why did Google decide to start spying on us? For the same reason your dog licks its balls: because they could. The last consumer privacy law to make it out of the US Congress was a 1988 bill that banned video-store clerks from disclosing your VHS rentals:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/10/31/losing-the-crypto-wars/#surveillance-monopolism

And yes, the EU did pass a comprehensive consumer privacy law, but then abdicated any duty to enforce the GDPR, because US Big Tech companies pretend to be Irish, and Ireland is a crime-haven that lets the tax-evaders who maintain the fiction of a Dublin HQ break any EU law they find inconvenient:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/12/01/erin-go-blagged/#big-tech-omerta

The most important question for Google wasn't "Will advertisers pay more for surveillance targeting?" It was "Will lawmakers clobber us for spying on the whole internet?" And the answer to that second question was a resounding no.

Why did policymakers fail us? It's not much of a mystery, I'm afraid. Policymakers failed us because cops and spies hate privacy laws and lobby like hell against them. Cops and spies love commercial surveillance, because the private sector's massive surveillance dossiers are an off-the-books trove of warrantless surveillance data that the government can't legally collect. What's more, even if the spying was legal, buying private sector surveillance data is much cheaper than creating a public sector surveillance apparatus to collect the same info:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/16/the-second-best-time-is-now/#the-point-of-a-system-is-what-it-does

The harms of mass commercial surveillance were never hard to foresee. 20 years ago, Radar magazine commissioned a story from me about "the day Google turned evil," and I turned in "Scroogled," which was widely shared and reprinted:

https://web.archive.org/web/20070920193501/https://radaronline.com/from-the-magazine/2007/09/google_fiction_evil_dangerous_surveillance_control_1.php/

Radar is long gone, though it's back in the news now, thanks to the revelation that it was financed via Jeffrey Epstein as part of his plan to both control and loot magazines and newspapers:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Epstein/comments/142bufo/radar_magazine_lines_up_financing_published_2004/

But the premise of "Scroogled" lives on. 20 years ago, I wrote a story in which the bloated, paranoid, lawless DHS raided ad-tech databases of behavioral data in order to target people for secret arrests, extraordinary rendition, and torture.

It took a minute, but today, the DHS is paying data-brokers and ad-tech giants like Google for commercial surveillance data that it is using to feed the systems that automatically decide who will be kidnapped, rendered and tortured by ICE:

https://www.theregister.com/2026/01/27/ice_data_advertising_tech_firms/

I want to be clear here: I'm not claiming any prescience – quite the reverse in fact. My point is that it just wasn't very hard to see what would happen if we let the surveillance advertising industry run wild. Our lawmakers were warned. They did nothing. They exposed us to this risk, which was both foreseeable and foreseen.

Nor did the ICE/ad-tech alliance drop out of the sky. The fascist mobilization of ad-tech data for a racist pogrom is the latest installment in a series of extremely visible, worsening weaponizations of commercial surveillance. Just last year, I testified before Biden's CFPB at hearings on a rule to kill the data-broker industry, where we heard from the Pentagon about ad-tech targeting of American military personnel with gambling problems with location-based ads that reached them in their barracks:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/02/20/privacy-first-second-third/#malvertising

Biden's CFPB passed the data broker-killing rule, but Trump and DOGE nuked it before it went into effect. Trump officials didn't offer any rationale for this, despite the fact that the testimony in that hearing included a rep from the AARP who described how data brokers let advertisers target seniors with signs of dementia (a core Trump voter bloc). I don't know for sure, but I have a sneaking suspicion that the Stephen Miller wing of the Trump coalition wanted data brokers intact so that they could use them to round up and imprison/torture/murder/enslave non-white people and Trump's political enemies.

Despite this eminently foreseeable outcome of the ad-tech industry, many perfectly nice people who made extremely nice salaries working in ad-tech are rather alarmed by this turn of events:

https://quoteinvestigator.com/2017/11/30/salary/

On Adxchanger.com, ad-tech exec David Nyurenberg writes, "The Privacy ‘Zealots’ Were Right: Ad Tech’s Infrastructure Was Always A Risk":

https://www.adexchanger.com/data-driven-thinking/the-privacy-zealots-were-right-ad-techs-infrastructure-was-always-a-risk/

Nyurenberg opens with a very important point – not only is ad-tech dangerous, it's also just not very good at selling stuff. The claims for the efficacy of surveillance advertising are grossly overblown, and used to bilk advertisers out of high premiums for a defective product:

https://truthset.com/the-state-of-data-accuracy-form/

There's another point that Nyurenberg doesn't make, but which is every bit as important: many of ad-tech's fiercest critics have abetted ad-tech's rise by engaging in "criti-hype" (repeating hype claims as criticism):

https://peoples-things.ghost.io/youre-doing-it-wrong-notes-on-criticism-and-technology-hype/

The "surveillance capitalism" critics who repeated tech's self-serving mumbo-jumbo about "hacking our dopamine loops" helped ad-tech cast itself in the role of mind-controlling evil sorcerers, which greatly benefited these self-styled Cyber-Rasputins when they pitched their ads to credulous advertisers:

https://pluralistic.net/HowToDestroySurveillanceCapitalism

Nyurenberg points to European privacy activists like Johnny Ryan and Max Schrems, who have chased American surveillance advertising companies out of the Irish courts and into other EU territories and even Europe's federal court, pointing out that these two (and many others!) have long warned the world about the way that this data would be weaponized. Johnny Ryan famously called ad-tech's "realtime bidding" system, "the largest data breach ever recorded":

https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/453/html/

Ryan is referring to the fact that you don't even have to buy an ad to amass vast databases of surveillance data about internet users. When you land on a webpage, every one of the little boxes where an ad will eventually show up gets its own high-speed auction in which your private data is dangled before anyone with an ad-tech account, who gets to bid on the right to shove an ad into your eyeballs. The losers of that auction are supposed to delete all your private data that they get to see through this process, but obviously they do not.

And Max Schrems has hollered from the mountaintops for years about the inevitability of authoritarian governments helping themselves to ad-tech data in order to suppress dissent and terrorize their political opposition:

https://www.bipc.com/european-high-court-finds-eu-us-privacy-shield-invalid

Nyurenberg says his friends in ad-tech are really upset that these (eminently foreseeable) outcomes have come to pass, but (he says), ad-tech bosses claim they have no choice but to collaborate with the Trump regime. After all, we've seen what Trump does to companies that don't agree to help him commit crimes:

https://apnews.com/article/anthropic-trump-pentagon-hegseth-ai-104c6c39306f1adeea3b637d2c1c601b

Nyurenberg closes by upbraiding his ad-tech peers for refusing to engage with their critics during the decades in which it would have been possible to do something to prevent this outcome. Ad-tech insiders dismissed privacy activists as unrealistic extremists who wanted to end advertising itself and accused ad-tech execs of wanting to create a repressive state system of surveillance. In reality, critics were just pointing out the entirely foreseeable repressive state surveillance that ad-tech would end up enabling.

I'm quite pleased to see Nyurenberg calling for a reckoning among his colleagues, but I think there's plenty of blame to spread around. Sure, the ad-tech industry built this fascist dragnet – but a series of governments around the world let them do it. There was nothing inevitable about mass commercial surveillance. It doesn't even work very well! Mass commercial surveillance is the public-private partnership from hell, where cops and spies shielded ad-tech companies from regulation in exchange for those ad-tech companies selling cops and spies unlimited access to their databases.

Our policymakers are supposed to work for us. They failed us. Don't let anyone tell you that the greed and depravity of ad-tech are the sole causes of Trump's use of ad-tech to decide who to kidnap and send to a Salvadoran slave-labor camp. Policymakers should have known. They did know. They had every chance to stop this. They did not.

(Image: Jakub Hałun, CC BY 4.0; Myotus, CC BY-SA 4.0; Lewis Clarke, CC BY-SA 2.0; 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)

#20yrsago Toronto transit fans to Commission: withdraw anagram map lawsuit threat https://web.archive.org/web/20060407230329/http://www.ttcrider.ca/anagram.php

#15yrsago BBC newsteam kidnapped, hooded and beaten by Gadaffi’s forces https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-12695077

#15yrsago Activists seize Saif Gadaffi’s London mansion https://web.archive.org/web/20110310091023/https://london.indymedia.org/articles/7766

#10yrsago Spacefaring and contractual obligations: who’s with me? https://memex.craphound.com/2016/03/09/spacefaring-and-contractual-obligations-whos-with-me/

#10yrsago Home Depot might pay up to $0.34 in compensation for each of the 53 million credit cards it leaked https://web.archive.org/web/20160310041148/https://www.csoonline.com/article/3041994/security/home-depot-will-pay-up-to-195-million-for-massive-2014-data-breach.html

#10yrsago How to make a tiffin lunch pail from used tuna fish cans https://www.instructables.com/Tiffin-Box-from-Tuna-Cans/

#10yrsago “Water Bar” celebrates the wonder and fragility of tap water https://www.minnpost.com/cityscape/2016/03/world-s-first-full-fledged-water-bar-about-open-minneapolis/

#10yrsago French Parliament votes to imprison tech execs for refusal to decrypt https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/03/france-votes-to-penalise-companies-for-refusing-to-decrypt-devices-messages/

#10yrsago Anti-censorship coalition urges Virginia governor to veto “Beloved” bill https://ncac.org/incident/coalition-to-virginia-governor-veto-the-beloved-bill

#10yrsago Washington Post: 16 negative stories about Bernie Sanders in 16 hours https://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/03/08/washington-post-ran-16-negative-stories-bernie-sanders-16-hours


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

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

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

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

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



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 (1038 words today, 46380 total)

  • "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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Gaslighting Over Atrocities [The Status Kuo]

At the onset of the war with Iran, a bomb struck a girls’ school in the southern part of Iran. Estimates put the number of dead at around 175, mostly children.

Misinformation, pushed in part by Israel, flooded the internet, including a debunked claim that a failed Iranian interceptor had destroyed the school.

But videos of nearby strikes captured in real time—and an apparent follow-on strike on the same building after frantic parents had rushed to find their children—quickly undercut this claim.

The Trump regime is seeking to deflect blame and avoid responsibility for the largest civilian massacre by the U.S. military since the My Lai massacre in Vietnam. It’s vitally important to understand what has actually happened and how the White House is now seeking to shift the narrative and evade accountability.

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Independent media investigations confirm a U.S. strike

On February 28, a precision airstrike destroyed the Shajarah Tayyebeh elementary school in Minab in southern Iran, not far from the Strait of Hormuz. The attack occurred during the day on a Saturday, the start of the Iranian school week, meaning students and teachers were in class.

A New York Times investigation, published on March 5, examined evidence of the strike and concluded the following:

  • The school was struck simultaneously with an adjacent naval base of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps;

  • U.S. forces were conducting strikes along southern Iran that day, and a map presented by Gen. Dan Caine included the Minab area;

  • Israeli forces were operating predominantly in northern Iran, not the south; and

  • The USS Abraham Lincoln strike group was explicitly described as “attriting naval capability all along the strait”

Satellite imagery, along with expert military analysis, showed that at least six Revolutionary Guards buildings were hit along with the school in what the Times’ military expert described as “picture perfect” precision strikes. Such strikes were inconsistent with the theory of a misfired Iranian missile.

The building was originally part of an Iranian naval base, but around 10 years ago it was partitioned with sports fields and recreational areas added over time. Such areas are clear hallmarks of a civilian school, and experts told the Times that U.S. intelligence should have been able to identify the building as such based on these open areas.

Even assuming this was a case of “target misidentification,” legal accountability could still lie ahead. One expert noted that the strike could constitute a violation of international law if proper verification of the target’s civilian status was not conducted.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

On March 6, CNN separately confirmed that it likely was a U.S. missile that struck the school. The network’s analysis aligned with that of the Times: The target was a nearby naval base, Israel was not operating in the area, and munitions experts assessed that the damage to buildings was from precision-guided missiles, not misfired weaponry.

Deflecting blame

Despite these independent investigations assigning responsibility for the massacre to the U.S., Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt went on the attack. Rather than treat the matter with the seriousness that it deserves, she sought to deflect blame by insisting that the U.S. does not target civilians while “the rogue Iranian regime” does.

Her talking points appeared consistent with how others, including her boss, would later handle the matter. While aboard Air Force One, President Trump was asked about the destruction of the school. He claimed, “Based upon what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran.”

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was then asked separately if that was true, and he exhibited a rare moment of non-alignment: “We’re certainly investigating,” Hegseth said, before echoing Leavitt’s messaging: “But the only side that targets civilians is Iran.”

Trump then doubled down on his claim. “We think it was done by Iran,” Trump insisted, before elaborating, without irony, “Because they’re very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”

Like Leavitt, Trump made that false statement on March 7, days after both the New York Times and CNN investigations had already reached the opposite conclusion.

There are real-time video receipts

Video evidence released two days ago by investigative outlet Bellingcat revealed the exact moment before a Tomahawk missile slammed into a nearby building. This confirmed that U.S. forces had conducted the attack, as they are the only party operating in the region that possesses and uses Tomahawk missiles.

Faced with this new evidence, Trump pivoted. He claimed yesterday, without any evidence, that Iran actually possesses “generic” Tomahawk missiles and somehow bombed its own school— apparently twice.

This is nonsense. The only countries that possess Tomahawk missiles are U.S. allies, including the U.K., Australia, Japan and the Netherlands. Further, it’s not just about possessing the missiles themselves. Tomahawk missiles require sophisticated launching systems in order to operate. They are not “generic” missiles that can be bought and sold on the world market and can be fired from wherever.

Setting the record straight, demanding justice and accountability

The question of who is responsible for the killing of so many Iranian children matters a great deal. As political commentator Niall Stanage noted,

  • This matters strategically, with the United States claiming its enemy is the Iranian regime and not its people;

  • It matters morally, because the United States should not be bombing schools; and

  • It matters ethically and legally, because people need to be held to account regardless of whether their actions were unintentional or intentional.

Lest we forget, this is the same White House that gaslit us on its Venezuelan “double tap” war crimes and then twice on the murders of Alexi Pretti and Renee Good. In each case, the White House made initial outrageous claims in an attempt to shift the narrative, only to be caught in its lies by video evidence and by careful investigations by the media of the actual facts.

The idea that Iran bombed its own school, and that the U.S. is somehow not responsible, is gaslighting on an international scale. The White House is seeking to avoid responsibility and accountability for the deaths of scores of children by misleading the public about what actually took place.

We can’t let that happen. And we cannot normalize this kind of atrocity at the hands of our own military.

The parents and families of those slain children deserve the truth and full justice. And we as a nation deserve a government that will tell us that truth, however hard it is, and not lead us further into needless, avoidable bloodshed.

Photo of mourners courtesy of The Guardian

If our current government cannot and will not grant us that, then we must do all we can to remove it from power. Indeed, that is our solemn responsibility to the rest of the world, which has been plunged into this war against its will and must now suffer the terrible consequences of our own grave electoral folly.

04:00 AM

Human Problems: It’s Not Always The Technology’s Fault [Techdirt]

We have met the enemy and he is us.

When a teenage boy in Orlando started texting Character.AI’s chatbot, it started as an innocent use of a new tool. Sewell Setzer III customized the chatbot to have the Game of Thrones-inspired persona of Daenerys Targaryen, the series’ prominent dragon-riding queen. In the months that followed, the boy developed a romantic connection with the chatbot. One night, he messaged the bot: “What if I told you I could come home right now?” The bot sent back, “[P]lease do, my sweet king.” Setzer was only fourteen years old when he died by suicide later that evening.

Setzer’s death is a tragedy. Like many parents in the wake of suicide, Seltzer’s mother is left searching for answers and accountability. Suicide often leaves behind a painful void, filled with questions that rarely yield satisfying explanations. 

In her search, Setzer’s mother sued the chatbot’s developer, Character Technologies, alleging that its chatbot caused her son’s death. The complaint describes the bot as a “defective” and “inherently dangerous” technology, and accuses the company of having “engineered Setzer’s harmful dependency on their products.” She is not alone. Three other families have brought similar suits against Character Technologies, and another has sued OpenAI, alleging the chatbots harmed their children.

Framing suicide and other harms as technology problems—as much of the current discourse around chatbots suggests—obscures underlying societal conditions and can undermine effective interventions. In effect, what are often described as “tech problems” are, more accurately, the result of human decisions, norms, and policies. They are, at their core, human problems. 

Historical Framing of Tech and Media in Creating and Sustaining Societal Problems

This is just the latest vintage whine, rebottled yet another time. Humanity has long sought to condemn new technologies and media for problems of the day. When the printing press made literature available to the masses, church and state condemned publications for causing immorality. Rock ‘n’ Roll and comic books were blamed for juvenile delinquency. Later, it was heavy metal and role-playing games. The advent of video games supposedly led to increased violence by adolescent boys.

The desire to hold technology companies responsible for human harms, however, has its immediate antecedent in social media. Over the past decade, users have sued social media platforms for offline violence committed by people they met online, failing to prevent cyberbullying, and hosting user-generated content that allegedly radicalized extremists. 

Like in Setzer’s case, parents have also sued social media companies after the deaths of their children, arguing that design choices, engagement mechanics, and algorithmic targeting played a role. Indeed, this is the central question at the heart of the current wave of “social media addiction” litigation that is currently being tried.

AI is just the latest technological scapegoat to which we seek to ascribe fault. It’s easier to hold technology responsible for our problems, especially when the technology is as uncanny as generative AI. We’re afraid of robots, perhaps not because of any harm they cause us, but because they show us how much we, as humanity, can harm ourselves. We would rather fault the technology du jour than confront the harder truths underneath. 

Death by Suicide as a Case Study

To put this into context, consider the allegations about the Character.AI chatbot and Setzer’s suicide. Suicide is a complex, deeply human problem. Among youth and young adults, it stands as the second leading cause of death. Suicide has no single cause. Public health experts have long recognized that risk emerges from a convergence of individual, relational, communal, and societal factors. These can include long-term effects of childhood trauma, substance abuse, social isolation, relationship loss, economic instability, and discrimination. On the surface, these may look like personal struggles, but they’re really the fallout of systemic failure. 

Access to lethal means compounds the risk of self-harm and suicide. In particular, the presence of firearms in the home has remained strongly associated with higher youth suicide rates. 

These systemic failures tend to hit teens the hardest. Studies consistently show that young people are facing rising rates of mental health challenges, especially due to and following the COVID-19 pandemic. This is compounded by chronically underfunded school counseling programs, inaccessible mental health care, and inconsistent support for youth in crisis. LGBTQ+ youth, in particular, bear the brunt, facing higher rates of bullying, depression, and suicidal ideation, all while increasingly being targeted by state policies that strip away protections and deny their identities. 

We don’t and can’t know for sure why Setzer or anyone else died by suicide. Tragically, teenage suicide is common. Indeed, it’s the subject of many songs. There’s no mechanism to definitively determine how Setzer and other victims felt when they started using Character.AI. However, as we likely all remember from our own lives, teenage years can be trying. As we mature physically and mentally, it can be difficult to express and accept ourselves. Other children can be cruel. Hormones can lead us to lash out in anger and withdraw into ourselves. 

In Setzer’s case, the complaint and public reporting indicate that he exhibited other signs and conditions commonly associated with elevated suicide risk, including anxiety and depression, withdrawal from teachers and peers, chronic lateness, significant sleep deprivation, and access to a firearm in the home. His interactions with fictional characters on the Character.AI service may suggest unmet emotional needs or a search for understanding and connection. At different points, he described a character as resembling a father figure and spoke about feelings of loneliness and a lack of romantic connection—experiences that are not uncommon for adolescents, particularly during periods of heightened vulnerability. According to the complaint, Setzer also raised the topic of suicide in earlier conversations with the chatbot, and those exchanges were promptly halted by the system. 

The uncomfortable truth about suicide is that it has existed as long as there have been people–sometimes for reasons we can understand, and often for reasons we never will. We are terrified that people die by suicide, not only because it is difficult to comprehend, but because the forces that drive someone there can feel disturbingly familiar.

Parents like Setzer’s can’t fix systemic governmental and societal failures. What feels more immediate and actionable is holding the technology companies accountable when their services appear to enable or amplify harm. It is far easier to fixate on the medium through which people express suicidal thoughts rather than ask where those thoughts came from or why they felt like the only option.

Legal Analysis of Faulting Tech

Legal doctrine appears to recognize that holding the technology responsible for these systemic failures is not viable. For example, because suicide is shaped by so many overlapping factors, tort claims against AI companies for causing a teen’s death—while understandable in their urgency—are, doctrinally speaking, a stretch. 

Under traditional tort principles, providers of generative AI systems and social media services are unlikely to bear legal responsibility in these cases. Claims based on intentional torts, such as battery, generally fail because providers of online services do not act with the intent to cause—or even to contribute to—physical harm. Therefore, Plaintiffs more commonly turn to negligence theories.

Negligence, however, requires more than just harm in fact. It demands both factual causation and proximate (i.e., legal) causation. In some situations, an online service or generative AI model might satisfy a but-for test because the harm would not have occurred without the service. But that is not sufficient. 

Proximate cause—what the law treats as a legally meaningful connection between conduct and injury—is where most of these claims falter. In many cases, particularly those involving such numerous and complex factors as suicide, the link between a provider’s conduct and the ultimate injury is typically too attenuated to meet this standard. 

Services such as social media and AI chatbots are typically designed as broad, general-purpose tools. The potentially implicatable content comes from other users’ behaviors, personalized interactions, or the user’s own actions. Even where excessive technology use—including social media—has been associated with elevated rates of suicidal ideation among youth and young adults, research has not established a direct causal link. As a result, courts are generally reluctant to find the technology service to be the legal cause of death. 

The Broader Ramifications of a Myopic Focus on Tech

Beyond legal error, focusing solely on technology obscures the path to real solutions. When we frame fundamentally human problems as technological ones, we deflect attention from the underlying conditions that lead to these tragedies and make it more likely they will recur. 

This framing guides policymakers and advocates toward seemingly easy, surface-level technological fixes such as imposing age-verification requirements, mandating disclosures about content moderation, or curbing algorithmic feeds. True, technology companies can—and should—consider how to help mitigate real-world harms. Yet these proposed interventions rest on the assumption that technology is the primary culprit, even though research increasingly shows that, in the right contexts, technology can actually help those in crisis. 

The appeal of reducing complex social issues to matters of redesigning or banning technology is understandable. Technology problems can feel tractable. They suggest clear targets and concrete fixes. 

What this logic ignores, however, is that the pre-technology status quo for many public health crises has long been dismal. The better question, then, isn’t whether technology causes harm, but whether it deepens an already broken baseline—or simply reflects it.

Technology, including generative AI, often acts less as a cause than a mirror. Our digital spaces often reflect the offline world, including its ills. 

Today, children face more pressure to excel at school and attend the best universities, even while job prospects stagnate and inflation soars. They have lost access to the kinds of public and community spaces that once offered structure, connection, and care. Libraries operate with reduced hours. Budget cuts have decimated after-school programs. Parks are monitored and restricted for loitering. Community centers that shuttered during the pandemic have never reopened. In many ways, technology—and social media in particular—has stepped in as a makeshift third space for teens. Yet rather than address the erosion of offline support, policymakers are now working to dismantle these digital communities too.

If human distress reflects deteriorating real-world social infrastructure, then optimizing digital services cannot restore stasis. Technological interventions address a symptom while the deeper human cancer persists.

A Pragmatic Path Forward

The path forward requires resisting the impulse to treat fundamentally human problems as technological ones. When new technologies appear alongside harm, the harder and more necessary questions are not simply how to regulate the tool, but what human choices produced the conditions in which harm emerged, which institutions failed or fell short, and what values should guide our response. These questions are more difficult—and often more uncomfortable—because they turn our attention inward, toward ourselves, rather than external and more convenient actors.

Instead of focusing our energies on systematically regulating platforms, we should direct our efforts toward these human problems. For suicide, public health experts point to a wide range of evidence-based strategies for preventing and mitigating risk factors. These include strengthening economic supports such as household financial stability and housing security; creating safer environments by reducing at-risk individuals’ access to lethal means; fostering healthy organizational policies and cultures; and improving access to healthcare by expanding insurance coverage for mental health services and increasing provider availability and remote access in underserved areas. Experts also emphasize the importance of promoting social connection and teaching problem-solving skills that can help individuals navigate periods of acute distress.

These and other socioeconomic reforms are not easy solutions. They aren’t just a matter of adjusting algorithms or restricting platform features. They demand uncomfortable conversations about how we structure work, education, and community life. They require sustained political commitment and resource allocation. Yet if we can achieve these results, we will create a better world than one derived from mere technological fixes.

In short, technology doesn’t cause suicide. It doesn’t cause a host of human problems for which it is often accused. Sadly, they have always been with us. 

But technology, used wisely, could help us mitigate these problems. For example, through processing massive amounts of data, AI can detect patterns that elude us humans. This alone could help reveal early warning signs or surface new protective factors. AI chatbots, for example, could help us identify teens who are at risk and create opportunities to intervene. 

But that kind of progress demands that we take responsibility for these problems. We must acknowledge that our governments, societies, communities, and even ourselves may have normalized and contributed to these harmful conditions. We may discover there’s no rhyme or reason to why teenagers commit suicide. But we may uncover that teen suicide isn’t random at all. It may stem from something we’ve unwittingly ignored, or perhaps built into the world. 

That possibility is far more unsettling than the idea of dangerous technology. It’s the idea that the danger might be us.

Kevin Frazier directs the AI Innovation and Law Program at the University of Texas School of Law and is a Senior Fellow at the Abundance Institute. Brian L. Frye is a Spears-Gilbert Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky J. David Rosenberg College of Law. Michael P. Goodyear is an Associate Professor at New York Law School. Jess Miers is an Assistant Professor of Law at The University of Akron School of Law

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02:00 AM

Trump Kicks Kristi Noem To The Curb For Being Exactly The Sort Of Person Trump Wanted Her To Be [Techdirt]

I come here to celebrate the apparently permanent sidelining of former DHS head, Kristi Noem. I know the adage usually does some hedging before damning with faint praise, but I’m not interested in praise, faint or otherwise, much less pretending this isn’t worth celebrating.

Noem openly pined for the VP position, but shot herself in the foot by shooting a dog in her gravel pit and then telling the world about it in her incredibly premature memoirs. What was meant to be a self-congratulatory anecdote about doing what needs to be done was correctly read by pretty much everyone as little more than a person gloating about inflicting misery on animals and her own children.

Kristi Noem spent most of her time as the DHS Secretary making sure she showed up front and center in social media posts. She also was always the first to portray anyone killed or wounded by federal officers as “terrorists,” and refused to walk back those comments after the facts proved otherwise.

She gifted herself with an expensive private jet so she could arrive at the next photo op in style. She moved into an expensive taxpayer-funded residence despite already living in another expensive taxpayer-funded residence. She blew $220 million on an ad campaign featuring her blown-dry looks and vapid statements that apparently also funneled some of that windfall back into her own pockets.

She continued to stay the course even as the national winds shifted in response to oppressive, blue state-targeting “immigration enforcement” efforts. She stood idly by while her officers violated rights, physically assaulted peaceful protesters, and literally murdered two people in one US city alone.

Realizing this putsch was hurting him more than helping him, Trump first sent Nazi-cosplayer Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino back to the actual border, forcing him out of the spotlight and back into the necessary but not-at-all-glamorous job of actually securing the border.

Noem was next. In a somewhat surprising move, Trump booted a true MAGA believer into irrelevance, taking Noem from an “is” to a “was” while she was engaged in a press briefing. She’s now the Special Envoy to the Shield of the Americas, which is exactly the sort of made-up position you’d shunt someone into if you didn’t want to be blamed for their hiring, but also didn’t want them to do any more damage to your administration.

Now that Noem’s been turfed, the knives are out. It’s not just leading GOP members now pretending she’s this administration’s Nikolai Yezhov. It’s also pro-Trump outlets like Fox News smelling the blood in the water but, of course, only speaking out now that the water’s more red than blue:

We can now openly admit what has been unfolding before our eyes for a year: that Kristi Noem was an utter, complete, total catastrophe, her tenure in charge of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) little more than a self-promoting crusade.

She was unqualified for the job from day one, and largely responsible for the awful excesses of ICE and the frustrating failures of FEMA

President Donald Trump’s decision to fire her, which took way too long, liberates many Republicans to acknowledge what many in the media, including me, along with Democrats and outside critics, have been saying all along: Noem was a slow-motion train wreck. 

Walk into the ocean, Howard Kurtz. You pretend like you’re a journalist and analyst and yet you state — openly! — that you weren’t willing to speak out against Kristi Noem (an apparent “utter, complete, total catastrophe”) until after Trump fired her. If you had any spine or ethics, you would have made your opinions known months ago and been hailed as a savvy insider. Now you just look like a practice squad Monday morning quarterback.

But enough about Kurtz. Here’s more about Noem, who was a spectacular failure on every level. Here’s another lowlight of Noem’s short federal career, as reported by The New Republic:

ICE’s former deputy director, Madison Sheahan, wasted millions of taxpayer dollars on 2,500 vehicles custom-wrapped to say “ICE” on the side, three sources told the Washington Examiner. The gaudy cars feature massive ICE logos, red stripes, and a golden decal of President Donald Trump’s name on the back window.

The vehicles first appeared in a DHS video intended to make ICE look cool. But a fleet of ostentatious cars are useless to Trump’s masked militia, which typically disappears people using unmarked vehicles.

Noem stans might want to pretend this doesn’t have anything to do with her since it was a former deputy director handling this purchase. No dice, weirdos. Noem has made it clear since day one that she’s the only one who can approve spending like this, which is something she used to defend refusing to send FEMA aid to places that weren’t sufficiently Trumpish.

That’s on top of other things that may have forced Trump to dump a die-hard ally. The first was the $220 million-worth of masturbation Noem performed, which came in the form of Noem-focused DHS ads featuring her sitting on a horse in front of Mt. Rushmore in South Dakota. Noem claimed the ad campaign was approved by Trump while testifying to Congress. Trump immediately said otherwise when questioned by reporters.

Then there were the three jets (two Gulfstreams and a remodeled 737) Noem wanted for her own personal use as DHS Secretary. On top of that, there were the rumors that Noem and her de facto chief of staff, Corey Lewandowski (another ridiculous MAGA asshat) were having an extramarital affair.

All of this was piled on top of a rapidly disintegrating “surge” in Minneapolis, which single-handedly managed to turn public opinion against Trump, at least in terms of immigration enforcement. Noem insisted on being the public face of this, competing with fellow sadists like the previously-mentioned (and similarly demoted) Gregory Bovino.

We should all dance on the professional grave of Kristi Noem, who sold out entirely to MAGA just to be stuck in a Special Envoy cubicle until she either gets demoted again or decides she’s better off back in South Dakota. Noem made her own bed. Now she gets to lay in it, along with her killed dog, which means she’s not only having to deal with her own shittily-made bed, but the fleas that come with it.

She couldn’t even make it 18 months. That’s heartening. That means a bunch more people who sold their souls for MAGA rock and roll are likely to find their loyalty repaid with GTFO orders from the boss man who won’t tolerate anything that doesn’t immediately look like a win. They deserve everything that’s coming to them, including the possibility of criminal or contempt charges for playing fast and loose with the laws and the US Constitution while holding, however briefly, their positions of power.

We won’t miss you, Kristi. You were the epitome of everything people hate about political appointees. The most you can hope for is that your swift defenestration will be somehow instructive for those following in your shady, subordinate footsteps. If not, you’ll be nothing more than a foul breeze, remembered only for the odor you created while passing through the political system. But you were exactly what Trump wanted, right up until he decided he didn’t.

12:00 AM

MAGA Suddenly Quiet About Overseas Influence Now That Larry Ellison’s Warner Bros Bid Has Saudi, Chinese Backing [Techdirt]

You might recall that during the great mass TikTok hyperventilation of 2021-2025, there was no limit of face fanning by Republicans like Brendan Carr about overseas involvement in social media. Carr was so particular on this subject, he scuttled an FCC program aimed at shoring up “smart” home device security standards because one of the testing labs (unsurprisingly) did business in China where this stuff is made.

Fast forward to this year, and Carr curiously has zero problems with significant Saudi and Chinese investments in Larry Ellison and Paramount’s efforts to acquire Warner Brothers. Though Carr’s actual regulatory oversight of the deal is limited given the lack of public broadcast licenses involved, he took to CNBC anyway to insist the massive $111 billion deal should likely fly through regulatory approval:

“If there’s any FCC role at all, it’ll be a pretty minimal role. And I think this is a good deal, and I think it should get through pretty quickly,” Carr added.

Carr told CNBC that Netflix “would have a very difficult path” getting regulatory approval, adding that Paramount’s was “a lot cleaner, does not raise at all the same types of concerns.”

“I think there’s some real consumer benefits that can emerge from it,” he added.

Carr’s (and Republicans’ more generally) gushing excitement comes despite the fact that significant structural overlap between Paramount and Warner Brothers will mean significantly more layoffs than we would have seen during the originally proposed Netflix Warner Brothers tie up. Layoffs that will likely be much worse than past Warner deals due to the absolutely massive debt involved.

This is before you even get to Larry Ellison’s obvious quest to built autocratic-friendly state television, the likes of which coddles authoritarianism and, in countries like Russia and Hungary, ultimately led to the total decimation of serious truth-to-power journalism.

Then there’s the $24 billion in combined funding for the Paramount deal from Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds, including Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF). As well as the recent announcement that Chinese company Tencent is weighing a significant investment. Before his deal was scuttled, Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos was pretty pointed about this being a problem:

“Before pulling out of the deal, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos – speaking to the BBC in London on the morning after the recent BAFTA Film Awards – called the Gulf sovereign funds backing Paramount’s bid a “bad idea,” noting that they are from “a part of the world that is not very big on the First Amendment.” 

“It seems very odd to me with the level of investment that we’re talking about that they’d have no influence or editorial control over media in another country,” Sarandos added.

If you recall the multi-year right wing hysteria campaign about TikTok, it was fixated on the idea that having any overseas involvement in U.S. media was a doomsday scenario (they were not subtle or flexible on this point). Of course Trumpism immediately proceeded (with bumbling Democrat help) to “fix” this problem by offloading the company to Trump’s technofascist friends, while still maintaining a significant investment presence by the Chinese.

When Netflix was planning to buy Warner Brothers, Republicans engaged in no limit of face-fanning, featuring threats of “investigations” by Republican Attorneys General, and a phony Trump DOJ “investigation” into the antitrust concerns raised by the deal. But when a technofascist ally oligarch wants to own a major media property, with Saudi and Chinese help, all of that mysteriously disappears.

It’s almost as if Trump Republicans have no coherent ideology beyond their own power and unchecked wealth accumulation, and all of their posturing on issues like antitrust and national security, routinely propped up by a lazy press, is as hollow as a Dollar Store fake chocolate Easter bunny.

Tuesday 2026-03-10

11:00 PM

Internet Archive Faces Copyright Lawsuit Over ‘Myspace Dragon Hoard’ [TorrentFreak]

myspaceThrough its non-profit organization, the Internet Archive (IA) aims to preserve digital history for generations to come.

The Archive’s popular Wayback Machine has archived decades of web history, and it also aims to preserve content directly: by scanning physical books or recording old gramophones, for example.

One of the more unique preservation projects centers around Myspace, which was the leading social network twenty years ago. The site was particularly popular among musicians, but today it’s a shell of its former self with virtually no new activity. In fact, quite a bit of content was permanently lost.

The Myspace Dragon Hoard

In March 2019, Myspace publicly announced that all music uploaded to the platform between 2003 and 2015 had been wiped. As the result of a failed server migration, an estimated 50 million songs from 14 million artists were gone.

Days later, Internet Archive employee Jason Scott announced on X that some files may have been preserved. An anonymous academic group had mailed him a hard drive containing roughly 490,000 of those recordings, scraped from Myspace between 2008 and 2010.

“ANNOUNCING THE MYSPACE MUSIC DRAGON HOARD, a 450,000 song collection of mp3s from 2008-2010 on Myspace, gathered before they were all ‘deleted’ by mistake,” Scott posted at the time.

The tweet

tweet

This collection was uploaded to archive.org and made available for free, allowing people to stream and download the music without any limits. In addition, an unnamed entity launched a companion site, lostmyspace.com, with a dedicated search and playback interface for the archived files.

‘Myspace Dragon Hoard’

dragon hoard

With key historical data safely stored, the Myspace preservation effort was celebrated widely. However, not everyone was pleased.

Musician Sues Internet Archive

Two years ago, the Illinois-based musician Anthony Martino found out that several of his songs were part of the Myspace Dragon Hoard. These files were hosted by the Internet Archive without his permission and formed the basis of a legal challenge.

Last December, Martino filed a copyright infringement complaint in federal court. He argues that the recordings from his Myspace should not have been included to begin with, as he made these inaccessible to the public around 2011, long before Myspace lost the data.

An amended complaint, filed in January, accuses Internet Archive of copyright infringement, requesting the maximum statutory damages of $150,000 per work for willful infringement.

In addition to 11 works in the Myspace database, Martino also claims IA scanned and digitized his physical CD liner notes and printed lyrics, adding 48 additional works to the mix. This puts the (theoretical) maximum damages at $8,850,000.

However, in its answer, Internet Archive pointed out that potential damages should be reduced to the statutory minimum, as low as $200 per work, because any infringement was innocent. That would put the damages floor at roughly $11,800.

Internet Archive: We Didn’t Upload Anything

The Internet Archive vehemently disputes the copyright infringement claims. The organization explains that it was not directly involved in uploading the ‘Myspace Dragon Hoard’. IA notes that this was done by the anonymous academic researchers that were mentioned earlier.

“A group of academics that had saved some of the lost materials uploaded their archive onto the Internet Archive’s website,” the Archive’s attorney informed the court in a joint case management statement last week, noting that the organization is protected against third-party claims by the DMCA safe harbor.

IA does not see any outstanding issues and says that, to its understanding, all of Martino’s takedown DMCA requests were eventually processed.

In its formal answer to the complaint, Internet Archive also raises a notable counter-argument: it denies that any license Martino granted to Myspace by uploading his recordings was “fully and immediately revocable,” and denies that such a license prohibited distribution to third parties outside Myspace’s platform.

Martino, meanwhile, remains convinced that IA has a more active role. Among other things, he points to public statements by Scott himself describing his role in coordinating the collection’s upload.

To Trial

Since the case will move forward to trial, both parties will get the chance to conduct discovery to find evidence for their claims. The eventual trial date has not been scheduled yet, but both parties suggest planning it for April of 2027.

This is not the first music copyright dispute the Internet Archive is involved in. The organization was previously sued by several major music labels for digitizing gramophones. This case was settled confidentially last September.

A copy of Martino’s amended complaint is available here (pdf). The Internet Archive’s answer can be found here (pdf), while the case management statement is here (pdf).

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

04:00 PM

New Secrets from the Epstein Files [The Status Kuo]

Photo courtesy of the Post and Courier

While Trump commits war crimes abroad, he can’t escape mounting evidence of sex crimes here at home.

Three separate reports—from the South Carolina Post and Courier, the Miami Herald, and even the Murdoch-owned New York Post—corroborate the account of a sex crime victim interviewed four times by the FBI and raise serious questions about Jeffrey Epstein’s death in custody, including stunning evidence of a possible cover-up and apparent payoffs to a guard.

Let’s walk through what we’ve learned just in the last few days thanks to some intrepid reporting.

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No longer “uncorroborated”

Late last week the FBI finally released, in redacted form, three missing FBI Form 302 interview files related to credible allegations of sex crimes against a minor by Trump. Still missing are the FBI’s notes from those interviews, a rather telling and unexplained omission.

The White House continues to claim that there is “zero credible evidence” to support the victim’s allegations against Trump. But the South Carolina Post and Courier has now corroborated some interesting, albeit peripheral, details from those interviews. Together, they lend credence to the broader narrative.

For example, during her 2019 interviews, the victim correctly identified an Epstein associate from Hilton Head Island who has since become a central figure in the growing scandal. It is unlikely that someone who had not been under Epstein’s control as a victim of sexual abuse would have been able to provide such verifiable details.

Some of the other details include the following:

  • The victim’s mother had, in fact, rented a home to Epstein in South Carolina, where the Post and Courier is based.

  • One of the associates of Epstein whom she accused of assaulting her was an Ohio businessman. The victim said he was “affiliated with a Cincinnati-based college,” and the paper has confirmed he was a member of a for-profit school’s board.

  • The woman said Epstein provided marijuana, cocaine and pills to her and others. Local newspaper accounts from that time described problems with drug use among young people on Hilton Head’s beaches.

  • She recalled encountering Epstein once at a “Rick James concert in Savannah” when she was around age 15, saying he got her drunk. Newspaper records show James performed regularly in the Savannah area at the time.

  • The paper confirmed her mother’s many legal troubles, which, as the victim relayed to the FBI, had been used to put pressure on her family. Her mother ultimately pleaded guilty to the charges, was sentenced to probation, and ordered to make monthly restitution payments, which she later failed to meet, giving Epstein and his associates added leverage.

The Post and Courier noted that the victim’s friend had made similar allegations about Trump to the FBI which, as Roger Sollenberger noted in his early reporting, the FBI recorded in an email summary in August of 2025.

This could mean that, just as E. Jean Carroll did after Trump sexually assaulted her, there is corroborating evidence in the form of a statement made to a friend—also abused by Epstein—some time after the incident with Trump.

There would have been no reason for the victim to lie to her friend about Trump’s sexual assault, particularly if the statement was made around the time of the incident. (We don’t know from the record at what point the victim told her friend what had happened.)

By contrast, there would be every reason for the victim not to raise the incident with the FBI, especially if it were untrue, due to the high risk of retaliation. As the Post and Courier noted,

The woman repeatedly told FBI agents she believed it served no purpose to tell her story because the events occurred so long ago.

All these confirmed details indicate that the victim wasn’t lying about her time within Epstein’s orbit and about how he and his associates had sexually abused and threatened her. Together, they lend credence to her other claims, including that Trump sexually assaulted her when she was a young teen.

A cover-up of a cover-up

The Miami Herald separately reported that, buried within the Justice Department’s Epstein files is an explosive new piece of evidence. An agent within the FBI created a five-page handwritten report of an FBI interview of Epstein’s fellow inmate who allegedly overheard guards discussing covering up Epstein’s death.

According to the report, the inmate awoke the morning of Aug. 10, 2019 to a commotion in the Special Housing Unit, or SHU, where he and Epstein were jailed. He heard one guard say,

“Dudes, you killed that dude,” followed by a female guard, Tova Noel, saying they’d cover it up and provide each other alibis.

That inmate claimed the entire wing had heard the exchange, meaning this story could easily have been further investigated and corroborated. Yet no such investigation occurred.

Noel had been charged with falsifying reports that had made it appear that the guards on duty had made their rounds that night, when in fact they had not. The charges were later dropped, but the guards were fired.

The facts indicate that the investigation into Epstein’s death was less than thorough, to put it mildly, and likely intentionally so. Common sense and Occam’s razor indicate we should be skeptical of the official FBI version of events, if we weren’t already. Allegations by other inmates of a cover-up of Epstein’s death, which they claim to have personally overheard, were themselves not pursued, with no reason provided. That five-page written report by the FBI only surfaced because the law required it.

This suggests the entire “investigation” was either so incompetent as to seem intentional or part of a deliberate, larger cover-up—a claim many have made before but that now has some solid evidence behind it.

A legitimate inquiry wouldn’t just gloss over a claim that the guards were talking about covering up Epstein’s death and do nothing to track it down further.

Search histories and wild money deposits

If all that wasn’t enough, the New York Post (yes, that paper, but stay with me) reported some of its own interesting finds in the Epstein files.

The same female guard, Tova Noel, had searched the term “latest on Epstein in jail” twice some 40 minutes before the other guard found Epstein dead.

Why the early morning interest in Epstein’s incarceration at that hour? Was Noel waiting for something to be reported?

Her search history alone probably isn’t enough to nail her as part of some deep conspiracy, but get this: Noel also reportedly received $5,000 in cash one week after Epstein’s first “suicide attempt” (which Epstein claimed was actually an attempt on his life) and an unexplained pattern of cash payments in the months before his death.

These payments came in the form of cash and Zelle payments and payments on a new Range Rover. Call me skeptical, but a prison guard doesn’t typically have the financial means to purchase a new Range Rover absent unusual circumstances.

These cash transfers should have been huge flags to investigators. But once again, Noel was never asked about these during the official investigation.

There’s now a lot of activity by reporters around all of this “new” evidence which the FBI held but never acted upon. There are third party witnesses and potential co-conspirators, most of whom presumably are still alive but with this case, you never know.

We now have a series of questions that need answers. Why was Noel searching for news about Epstein’s incarceration or even death that morning? Was this typical of her? Who was sending Noel cash and making payments on her new vehicle? Who was the investigating FBI agent that recorded the inmate’s statements about a cover-up? Why did no one follow up on that? On whose orders? And why didn’t they take the money trail seriously? Again, on whose orders?

There’s a Pulitzer waiting for the reporter who can identify whoever might be pulling the strings behind Epstein’s death and the apparent cover-up. And to the House Oversight Committee, which is about to depose Pam Bondi, I’d say this: There are a few more witnesses you might want to track down and hear from under oath.

02:00 PM

Real Consequences: Trump’s Bullshit Claim About Tylenol Is Seeing Real World Results [Techdirt]

There’s this insane subset of people who, when they talk about Donald Trump, I’ll never understand. It’s the ones who claim that taking what Donald Trump says seriously is a mistake that most people are unlikely to make. It’s also expressed by the crowd that claims something to the effect of: you shouldn’t take Trump literally, but you should take him seriously.

That this is said about the most powerful single individual on the planet is bonkers. This is typically how I’ve talked about my own kids when they were toddlers. Inevitably, one of my kids would be trying to say something entirely innocuous, only to have what came out of their mouth be some horrible word or swear or something. And I would hand-wave that away. C’mon, I’d tell people, you know that’s not what he meant to say.

Donald Trump is, unfortunately, the President of the United States of America. When he speaks, people listen. And a percentage of those listening will take him both literally and seriously. And when Donald Trump told American women last year to not take Tylenol, or give it to their young children, because it would give their kids autism, well, they listened.

Researchers found that in the wake of that batshit crazy announcement, use of Tylenol and its generic equivalents dropped significantly in use in emergency rooms and prescriptions written for children.

For nearly three months after that, new research found, Tylenol orders for pregnant women showing up in emergency rooms dropped and prescriptions of the generic drug for children rose. This happened despite sharp criticism of the president’s message from doctor groups saying that the drug, leucovorin, shouldn’t be broadly used for autism and Tylenol is safe during pregnancy.

“It just shows that in our country right now, health care has been politicized in a way that political messages are driving and impacting care — and not always for good,” said Dr. Susan Sirota, a pediatrician in Highland Park, Illinois, who wasn’t involved with the research.

The research suggested something like a 10% drop in measurable use of acetaminophen or paracetamol in the wake of Trump’s announcement. That doesn’t tell the whole story, of course, since so much of the use of Tylenol occurs through over the counter purchases at drug stores and the like. Based on market research, however, Tylenol specifically saw a nearly identical 11% or so drop in OTC sales as well back in November.

But that isn’t all. With all of this attention on a common drug supposedly giving children autism, parental anxiety about the condition has shot up as well. And, as a result, parents are turning toward experimental drugs for that that defy expert recommendations. That’s where leucovorin comes in.

Leucovorin is a derivative of folic acid used for, among other things, reducing the toxic side effects of certain chemotherapy drugs and treating a rare blood disorder. It has also been studied for a neurological condition known as cerebral folate deficiency and for a subset of autistic children, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The pediatrics group doesn’t recommend routine use of the drug for autistic children. Early, small-scale studies have explored its use, “and some findings suggest potential benefit in carefully selected cases,” the group said.

Still, after the federal announcement about the drug, Sirota said some families in her practice asked about getting it for their autistic children. She educated them about the evidence, told them about the potential for side effects and didn’t prescribe it. Potential side effects include irritability, nausea and vomiting and skin issues like dermatitis.

This may sound melodramatic, but there is real psychological harm being done to those just starting families in this country. For most parents, their children become their entire world. Their raison d’etre. And if you scare the shit out of them about Tylenol giving their kids a disorder, they’re going to stop taking the common drug and turn to any hair-brained lifeline they can find to try to keep their children from that disorder.

Does leucovorin do anything at all for anyone with autism? I don’t have the slightest clue. And neither does the Trump administration. I’m quite confident that there is no current reason to see Tylenol as a danger to the general populace, however, and that didn’t stop Trump from going on television and playing doctor.

“It feels like a pattern with our government, right? They keep building on these houses of cards that just fall down,” she said. “This politicizing of medicine just in general, and moving away from science, has been so challenging.”

The consequences of this sort of thing are going to span decades. Let that sink in.

09:00 AM

DOJ Un-Drops Its Appeal Against Law Firms, Files Brief That Gets The First Amendment Exactly Backwards [Techdirt]

On Wednesday of last week, I wrote a post about how the Trump administration had quietly given up defending its unconstitutional executive orders targeting law firms. The DOJ was dropping its appeals, the firms that fought had won, and the firms that capitulated—led by Paul Weiss and their nearly $1 billion in groveling pro bono commitments—were left holding a very expensive bag.

What I did not realize, because this administration launches new absurdities faster than any human being can reasonably track them, was that the day before I published that piece (but about the time I was writing it), the DOJ had already filed a motion to take back its voluntary dismissal. And then, by Friday, the DOJ had filed a full appellate brief seeking to overturn all four district court rulings that struck down the executive orders.

So, to recap the timeline here: On Monday, the DOJ told the DC Circuit it was voluntarily dropping its appeals. All four law firms agreed. Done deal. On Tuesday, the DOJ filed a motion to withdraw its own voluntary dismissal. On Wednesday, I published an article mocking the administration for giving up. On Friday, the DOJ filed a 97-page opening brief arguing that the executive orders were “well within the Presidential prerogative.”

My only defense for coming in a day late is that covering this administration in anything close to real time is effectively impossible.

Let’s start with the procedural absurdity before we get to the substance—because the procedural absurdity is really something.

The motion to withdraw the voluntary dismissal is a remarkable document, mostly for how little it says. The entire operative section is barely over a hundred words. After all parties had agreed to the dismissal, the DOJ simply asked to take it back, offering no explanation whatsoever. The law firms’ collective response, included in the filing itself, was about as polite as you’d expect:

“Plaintiffs-Appellees oppose the government’s unexplained request to withdraw yesterday’s voluntary dismissal, to which all parties had agreed. Under no circumstances should the government’s unexplained about-face provide a basis for an extension of its brief.”

“Unexplained.” That word does a lot of heavy lifting. The DOJ’s motion doesn’t even try to explain why it changed course. There’s no “upon further reflection” or “new developments have arisen.” Just: forget what we agreed to yesterday, the court hasn’t formally granted the dismissal yet, so we’d like to un-dismiss please.

As of this writing, the court hasn’t ruled on that motion. But the DOJ apparently decided not to wait around and went ahead and filed its full appellate brief on Friday anyway.

The opening paragraph of the DOJ’s appellate brief is genuinely one of the more audacious things I’ve read in a legal filing, and I say that as someone who reads a lot of legal filings:

Courts cannot tell the President what to say. Courts cannot tell the President what not to say. They cannot tell the President how to handle national security clearances. And they cannot interfere with Presidential directives instructing agencies to investigate racial discrimination that violates federal civil rights laws.

Let’s focus on those first two sentences, because they reveal something important about how the administration is framing this case—and how badly they’re getting the First Amendment backwards.

“Courts cannot tell the President what to say. Courts cannot tell the President what not to say.”

Well, sure. In the most general sense, that’s true. The president can stand at a podium and say whatever he wants. He can say mean things about law firms. He can call them names on social media. He can go on television and express his displeasure with their client choices. That’s all government speech, and it’s all fine.

But that’s… not what happened here. What happened here is that the president issued executive orders imposing concrete sanctions on specific law firms—revoking security clearances, directing the termination of government contracts, restricting access to federal buildings, banning the hiring of their employees—because those firms represented clients the president didn’t like and employed lawyers who had been involved in investigations the president found personally disagreeable.

The brief tries to frame the courts’ injunctions as an attempt to “silence” the president. But nobody is trying to silence the president. The president can talk about these law firms every day from now until the world ends. What the courts said—four separate times—is that the president cannot use the machinery of government to punish law firms for their constitutionally protected legal advocacy. There’s a rather fundamental difference between speech and sanctions, and pretending not to understand that difference is doing a lot of work in this brief.

This gets at something we talk about regularly here at Techdirt: the First Amendment is a restraint on government power. It prevents the government from using its authority to suppress or punish private speech. When the DOJ frames this as courts trying to control the president’s speech, they’ve got the vector of the First Amendment claim pointing in exactly the wrong direction. The law firms aren’t saying the president can’t talk. They’re saying the president can’t retaliate against them for their own protected speech and advocacy. Those are two wildly different things.

The brief actually cites NRA v. Vullo, the 2024 Supreme Court case that we’ve written about a few times. For those unfamiliar, that case involved New York’s former superintendent of financial services, who was accused of using her regulatory power to coerce financial institutions into cutting ties with the NRA because she disagreed with the NRA’s advocacy. The Supreme Court held—unanimously—that government officials using their regulatory authority to punish or suppress disfavored private speech can violate the First Amendment, even if the official frames their actions in terms of legitimate regulatory interests.

The DOJ cites Vullo in the context of arguing that the district courts went too far in enjoining “future actions” based on Section 1 of the executive orders, quoting the district court’s ruling in favor of one of the law firms (Jenner & Block) favorably:

Significantly, even the district court in Jenner recognized this. That court declined to “enjoin future actions taken pursuant to Section 1,” because “Section 1 does not direct any action.” JA2205–06. But “shorn of its enforcement mechanisms, Section 1 is nothing more than the Executive Branch ‘saying what it wishes.’” Id. (quoting Nat’l Rifle Ass’n of Am. v. Vullo, 602 U.S. 175, 187 (2024)). “Jenner has no more right to silence the Executive Branch than the Executive Branch has to silence Jenner.” Id. That is because Section 1 is “government speech.” Id. Despite Jenner’s repeated request to enjoin Section 1 in the abstract, the district court correctly recognized that “[n]either standing doctrine nor equity generally permits such judicial prophylaxis.” JA2207. Thus, “[w]hether best viewed as a shortcoming of standing, ripeness, or” the lack of any basis in equity, “the guesswork entailed in enjoining all future uses of the sentiments expressed in Section 1 would exceed the Court’s proper role.”

The problem is that Vullo actually undercuts their entire argument. The point of the Vullo framework is that when government speech is coupled with government action designed to punish disfavored private expression, the combination can be unconstitutional coercion. The administration wants to unbundle its speech from its sanctions and defend each in isolation—”Section 1 is just government speech.” That’s precisely the move Vullo says you can’t get away with.

Meanwhile, I have to call out that the same people who argued in the Murthy v. Missouri case that any government speech criticizing private companies constituted a de facto First Amendment violation are now arguing “well, this paragraph was just speech, not retaliatory, so leave it alone.”

The brief also contains a line that should make Paul Weiss and others in the capitulation crowd feel especially great about their choices:

In recognition of those problems, many law firms agreed to address their practices and commit to providing pro bono work in the public interest.

The brief then helpfully lists them in a footnote in case anyone forgot which capitulating law firms to shun:

Allen Overy Shearman Sterling, Cadwalader, Kirkland & Ellis, Latham & Watkins, Milbank, Paul Weiss, Simpson Thacher, Skadden, and Wilkie Farr & Gallagher.

The DOJ is literally using the capitulation of those firms as evidence that the executive orders were reasonable and justified. “See? These firms agreed with us!” The firms that folded bought themselves a supporting role in the government’s brief arguing for the constitutionality of retaliating against law firms. Congratulations! Great job lawyering, guys.

Meanwhile, the four firms named in the brief who fought—Perkins Coie, Jenner & Block, WilmerHale, and Susman Godfrey—are named as parties who “instead filed suit.” See? Capitulating is the only proper move to this DOJ. Standing up for your own constitutional rights deserves punishment.

The heart of the filing is that opening framing. “Courts cannot tell the President what to say.” And the response to that is simple: nobody’s trying to. What courts can do—what they’re required to do under the First Amendment—is tell the president he cannot use executive power to punish private parties for their constitutionally protected advocacy. The fact that the DOJ appears unable or unwilling to understand this distinction tells you everything about the strength of their legal position.

As I noted last week, the administration’s decision to initially drop these appeals suggested that even a DOJ willing to argue almost anything looked at these cases and concluded it couldn’t win. The un-dropping and subsequent brief don’t change that calculus. While the DOJ offered no explanation for its reversal, the timing strongly suggests someone higher up didn’t like the press coverage of them folding and decided the political upside of continuing to threaten the legal profession outweighed the legal downside of losing again. Which, if you think about it, proves exactly what the law firms argued from the start: this was always about intimidation, never about law.

The firms that folded will keep being cited in government briefs as proof that the intimidation campaign was justified.

That’s the tax you pay for cowardice: your surrender becomes someone else’s evidence.

08:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 机 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

小6

desk, table

つくえ

机上   (きじょう)   —   on the desk
机上の空論   (きじょうのくうろん)   —   armchair theory
勉強机   (べんきょうづくえ)   —   desk
学習机   (がくしゅうづくえ)   —   writing desk
長机   (ながづくえ)   —   long desk
事務机   (じむづくえ)   —   clerical desk
机下   (きか)   —   word of respect added to the addressee's name on a letter
机上検査   (きじょうけんさ)   —   desk checking
折り畳み机   (おりたたみつくえ)   —   folding desk
脇机   (わきづくえ)   —   drawer unit (next to a desk)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 核 [Kanji of the Day]

✍10

中学

nucleus, core, kernel

カク

核兵器   (かくへいき)   —   nuclear weapon
核問題   (かくもんだい)   —   nuclear issue (esp. weapon proliferation)
核実験   (かくじっけん)   —   nuclear (bomb) test
核施設   (かくしせつ)   —   nuclear facility
中核   (ちゅうかく)   —   kernel
核開発   (かくかいはつ)   —   nuclear development
非核   (ひかく)   —   non-nuclear
核廃絶   (かくはいぜつ)   —   total abolition of nuclear weapons
核心   (かくしん)   —   core
核軍縮   (かくぐんしゅく)   —   nuclear disarmament

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

06:00 AM

Congressional Republicans Push Bills That Would Block Kids Access To Content For Ideological Reasons [Techdirt]

Should parents have a right to monitor and control which sites and apps their kids use? Today, parents do have that legal right under the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA). The 1998 law requires verifiable parental consent before websites or apps can collect, use or share personal information from teens 13 or under. In practice, that means parents must consent for all social media apps. 

The original version of COPPA would have required parental notification whenever teens (ages 14-17) sign up for websites; parents would have had the right to access personal information shared with such sites. Those provisions were dropped after free speech advocates warned that these provisions could “chill protected First Amendment activities and undermine rather than enhance teenagers privacy,” especially when “teenagers may be divulging or seeking information they don’t want their parents to know about.” Thus, the Center for Democracy & Technology warned, while “parents have an important role in protecting their teenager’s privacy, however the bill’s emphasis on parental access may overlook older minors’ interests.”

Now, legislation is moving in Congress that would give parents the right to monitor and control the apps and platforms their teens use. Yesterday, in party-line votes, the House Energy & Commerce Committee sent two bills to the House floor. The “App Store Accountability Act” (ASAA) would require app stores to categorize users by age, associate the minors’ accounts with a parental account, and then obtain consent from the parental account when the minor user creates an account on the app store, or installs any app. This gives parents the right to monitor and control exactly which apps their kids are using. The Committee also approved the KIDS Act, which would require parental consent before any social media “platform” (website or app) could allow teens to use “any direct messaging feature.”

These bills would “make vulnerable kids less safe,” warned the committee’s Ranking Member, Frank Pallone (D-NJ), because they “threaten kids in unsupportive or even abusive households where they can be real-world harms from allowing parents complete access and control over their teens’ online existence.” This is essentially the same concern raised in 1998.

Rep. Diana Harshbarger (R-TN) was more direct than most of her Republican colleagues, insisting that parents need the bills to protect kids “who have access to these online evils.” Which evils? “Kids should not be looking at pornography—this is just common sense, people,” she said. Perhaps so: last year, the Supreme Court upheld age verification mandates for pornography in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton (2025). But Harshbarger went much further: “We’ve been hearing from a lot of folks who profit off doing harm to kids or have questionable ideological priorities.” 

Her fellow Tennessee Republican, Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), has been clear about just which “ideologies” need to be stopped. Last year, she was recorded, in remarks to a private meeting of social conservatives, saying the quiet part out loud: Republicans’ top priority should be “protecting minor children from the transgender [sic] in this culture and that influence.” Roughly half of American adults tell pollsters that trans people should be legally required to use public bathrooms that match their sex at birth, rather than the gender they identify with. Many of those parents doubtless think their teens need to be “protected” from sites and apps dedicated to helping LGBTQ teens who feel isolated and alone—apps like TrevorSpace and GiveUsTheFloor

These sites aren’t exploiting anyone for profit. They’re both non-profits dedicated to education and building communities of the kids most at risk for mental illness and suicide. Yet ASAA and the KIDS Act would require parents to approve teens’ access to both sites. This isn’t an accident: where COPPA applies only to sites that operate “in commerce” (i.e., for profit), neither bill contains any such limit, and thus both would apply even to pure non-profits. This problem could be fixed with a surgical amendment, but Republicans would surely object and Democrats failed to raise this issue at yesterday’s markup.

Even if this problem were fixed, the larger problem would remain: for-profit apps are overwhelmingly the ones that vulnerable teens use to access perspectives on the world their parents want to block and to find other teens they can relate to. Popular apps like Snapchat and TikTok are especially vital in regions where they face hostility or violence for expressing their sexuality or gender identity. Under ASAA and the KIDS Act, parents could block such apps to “protect” their teens from “online evils” like subversive ideas about gender, sexuality, contraception or religion.

Parents could, under ASAA, also block AI apps. At a Senate hearing last year on “Examining the Harm of AI Chatbots,” one parent complained that a Character.AI chatbot had “turned [her son] against our church by convincing him that Christians are sexist and hypocritical and that God does not exist.” Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) told her: “You didn’t know it at the time, but the chatbot was actively indoctrinating your son into questioning your beliefs as a family, your Biblical beliefs.” Questionable “ideological priorities,” indeed.

Both bills pay lip service to the First Amendment. The KIDS Act shall not be interpreted to “[a]llow a governmental entity to enforce this Act based on a viewpoint expressed by or through any speech, expression, or information protected by the First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.” Likewise, ASAA “shall not be construed … to affect or restrict the expression of political, religious, or other viewpoints.” These rules of construction might well help ensure that courts scrutinize selective enforcement of these bills aimed at suppressing disfavored speech. But these provisions won’t address the core problem with the bills: that parents will block viewpoints they don’t want their teens to access by controlling which apps and platforms they use.

“Constitutional rights do not mature and come into being magically only when one attains the state-defined age of majority,” as the Supreme Court has noted. “[M]inors are entitled to a significant measure of First Amendment protection,” the Court has said, “and only in relatively narrow and well-defined circumstances may government bar public dissemination of protected materials to them.” 

The Court reiterated this point in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association (2010), which struck down age verification requirements for video games. Because virtual violence was not obscene to minors, the First Amendment applied—unlike Paxton, which upheld a Texas law requiring age verification for sites whose content was at least one third composed of pornography, which is obscene to minors. In Brown, California argued that its law was “justified in aid of parental authority: By requiring that the purchase of violent video games can be made only by adults, the Act ensures that parents can decide what games are appropriate.” The Supreme Court has long recognized “the liberty of parents and guardians to direct the upbringing and education of children under their control.” But the Brown Court doubted “that punishing third parties for conveying protected speech to children just in case their parents disapprove of that speech is a proper governmental means of aiding parental authority.” Those “doubts” should apply even more strongly to ASAA and the KIDS Act.

Rep. Harshbarger claimed that the KIDS Act hews closely to Paxton. Another member referenced the Eleventh Circuit’s recent decision in CCIA & NetChoice v. Uthmeier, which allowed a Florida law that included an age verification mandate for social media to take effect pending a First Amendment challenge. The appeals court claimed that Paxton “recently clarified that age verification does not automatically trigger strict scrutiny because it does not constitute a ‘ban on speech to adults.’”

Both misread Paxton. Here’s what the Court actually said: “the First Amendment leaves undisturbed States’ power to impose age limits on speech that is obscene to minors.” That’s irrelevant here. Like the age verification requirement for violent video games in Brown, the KIDS Act and ASAA both clearly require age verification for content that is not obscene to minors—and both bills clearly do burden the First Amendment speech of adults to access entirely lawful speech anonymously. True, ASAA tries to reduce this burden by applying the age verification mandate only to the category of users that are found likely to be minors (presumably excluding much older adults), but such a category will necessarily include many adults, who will have to identify themselves to exercise their First Amendment rights—exactly what made age verification unlawful in Brown

TechFreedom prebutted the Eleventh Circuit’s confusion in Uthmeier. As our amicus brief explained, Paxton essentially said two things. First, for content obscene to minors, age-verification laws are (now—due to Paxton’s contortions) akin to regulations on expressive conduct. When content obscene to minors is at issue, the state’s regulatory power “necessarily includes the power to require proof of age.” In the context of adult content (pornography), in other words, an age-verification “statute can readily be understood as an effort to restrict minors’ access” to speech unprotected as to them. In the context of social media, by contrast, no such assumption applies. Restrictions in that realm remain, as they have always been, presumptively unconstitutional direct regulations on speech—as Brown held. The Eleventh Circuit simply misunderstood this, and buried its misreading of Paxton in a flimsily reasoned footnote.

So, what can lawmakers do, consistent with the First Amendment? Congress might start by creating a more privacy-protective national standard for age verification for pornography. Notably, Texas’s law does nothing to address the data security concerns raised by collecting user information for age verification. 

For social media services, lawmakers should focus on what has always been the clearest harm: sexual exploitation by adults. Legislation could start by empowering parents to control who their teens can communicate with. In this sense, the KIDS Act is better than ASAA: it focuses on parents’ access to direct messaging controls rather than approving the installation of each app. Democrats’ alternative bill, the “Safe Messaging for Kids Act,” is still more focused: it would require only that platforms “shall provide a parental tool to allow a parent of a covered user to view the covered user’s direct messaging control settings.” But both bills would require some form of age verification for some adults for lawful content. Paxton doesn’t make that constitutional. 

But maybe that’s OK. Do parents really need the government to require platforms and app stores to age-verify users to determine who’s a minor? ASAA requires that a minor’s account “be affiliated with a parental account” but it doesn’t require any effort to prove that the parental account actually belongs to the minor’s parent, because there is no easy or reliable way of doing so. Instead, it’s enough that this account “be established by an individual who the app store provider has determined is an adult.” If we can reasonably assume that person is the parent, why can’t we trust parents to manage the settings on devices they purchase for their teens? After all, mobile carriers allow only adults to set up accounts. 

If the existing parental controls in operating systems and app stores are inadequate or too hard to use, that’s where regulation should focus. That would be “less restrictive” of speech, in First Amendment terms, than forcing adults to identify themselves. Perhaps parents do need better controls over direct messaging. Apple iOS currently allows parents to control direct messaging but only for built-in apps. But if any controls required by law should be content and viewpoint-neutral, which means that they should work across all apps, lest they become an indirect way for parents to veto teens’ use of particular apps, like TrevorSpace or GiveUsTheFloor.

Whatever the government might require, it has no business protecting teens from “questionable ideological priorities,” even through the indirect means of requiring parental controls. “Whatever the power of the state to control public dissemination of ideas inimical to the public morality, said the Supreme Court long ago, “it cannot constitutionally premise legislation on the desirability of controlling a person’s private thoughts.” That’s true even if that person is a teenager.

Berin Szóka is President of TechFreedom.

Daily Deal: The Courses Digest, Labs Digest, and Exams Digest Bundle [Techdirt]

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ICE Detainment Center Guards Allegedly Set Up Suicide Death Pools [Techdirt]

Say what you will about cops — even the federal ones — but they have nothing on the people charged with guarding people who have been detained or imprisoned. The cruelty of cops is slightly tempered by the fact that anyone with a cell phone, dash cam, or doorbell surveillance device might catch them in the act. It’s not much a deterrent (and it’s a far better deterrent than police body cameras, ironically enough) but it’s better than the absolute nothing that’s in place in detainment centers, jails, and prisons.

Cops can control their own cameras. Prison guards can control an entire network of cameras. And they’re far more used to dehumanizing people than law enforcement officers on the outside.

So, it’s hardly surprising that the people keeping an eye on the thousands of migrants being imprisoned indefinitely by this administration would be the most inhumane. If citizens stuck in prisons are treated like (diseased) cattle at best, the people dumped into ICE detention centers are treated like something even worse: vermin. That’s a loaded term. And I’m using it correctly when speaking about this administration.

The Associated Press has obtained some evidence of the day-to-day oppressive indignities ICE detainees suffer through each day. And from an unlikely source: 911 calls placed by detainment center staff. Things have to be particularly horrific for guards to consider calling 911 for help.

And they are:

The calls to 911 poured in from staff at Camp East Montana in Texas, the nation’s largest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility, at a rate of nearly one a day for five months, each its own tale of pain and despair.

A man sobs after being assaulted by another detainee. Another bangs his head against the wall after expressing suicidal thoughts. A pregnant woman complained of severe back pain and also had coronavirus.

Even worse is what’s been said by the detainees. Welcome to the Trump’s brave new world, where bigoted anti-migrant enforcement is now coupled with the potentially deadly effects of this administration’s anti-vax healthcare stance:

The detainees describe a camp where an average of about 3,000 people have lived per day in loud and unsanitary quarters, diseases spread easily and sleep is a luxury. The center will be closed to visitors until at least March 19 because of a measles outbreak, according to U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar.

That’s mass inhumanity, aided and abetted by an administration that doesn’t care how many people die so long as it can claim some sort of revenge over COVID-19 policies put in place in the last year of Trump’s previous presidential term.

Here’s the more selective inhumanity, which isn’t any better:

At one point [detainee Owen Ramsingh] said he overheard a security guard talking about bets made among the staff over which detainee would be next to die by suicide. The guard said he had paid $500 into a pool, with the total pot riding on the outcome. The talk was particularly jarring, he said, because he had contemplated suicide himself.

Some of you might be saying to yourselves “Well, that’s just something one guy said.” And that’s true, it’s just one guy saying this. But this is also just one guy saying this:

The DHS spokesperson said Ramsingh’s account was false, though provided no indication of how the agency had sought to verify that.

True or not, these are the facts on the ground in Camp East Montana:

Ramsingh said he heard of the betting pool after Jan. 3, when ICE said security guards responded after a 55-year-old Cuban man tried to harm himself and then used handcuffs and force to restrain him. A medical examiner ruled that Geraldo Lunas Campos’s death was a homicide caused by asphyxia.

On Jan. 14, staff reported that a 36-year-old Nicaraguan man died by suicide days after he was detained while working in Minnesota.

Given what we know about what’s happening in this detainment center, coupled with what we know about the historical sadism of “screws,” this doesn’t seem that far-fetched. Then there are the 911 calls — placed by the guards themselves — that made it clear at least six other detainees had attempted or considered attempting suicide during that same time period.

So, while it could just be some guy saying something, consider this: the DHS has more to gain from denying this than Ramsingh — who has already been deported — has to gain from making this allegation.

I don’t find this allegation unbelievable. It seems like exactly the sort of thing people trained and encouraged to treat detainees as less than human would do, especially when suicides and suicidal ideation are a daily occurrence. The government contractors employing them are profiting from human misery. Why shouldn’t they?

03:00 AM

Considering infinity [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Endless, unlimited and more. These are building blocks of capitalism.

Starbucks knows that they can’t get you to drink three coffees every morning, but their stock price is built on the idea that they can continue to get more customers and make more money from each one.

The Wedding-Industrial complex is built on the simple idea that your wedding should cost the same as your best friend’s wedding did (plus a little more).

The status ratchet is real, and it’s easy to be seduced by it. “Compared to what” is a fundamental component of marketing.

One reason this works is that a little progress gets you positive feedback, which makes you eager to find a little more, a cycle that doesn’t end. Infinity, all the way up.

And, for those seeking social change, the opposite is worth noting:

When asking for penance, self-control and good behavior, infinity is not a useful tool. When someone shows up and tries to do better, “that’s not good enough,” is not a particularly useful motivator.

The useful process begins by earning enrollment in the journey toward better, but it’s not amplified by our criticism of each action being imperfect.

Go-up infinity is about ‘more.’ But too often, social-good infinity is about ‘pure’. And pure is difficult to embrace, because anything less than pure feels like failure.

      

The Government Told Courts It Could Easily Refund Unlawful Tariffs. Now It Says It Can’t. [Techdirt]

When companies sued to block Trump’s IEEPA tariffs last year, one of the key arguments they made was obvious: if these tariffs turn out to be illegal, we’ll never get our money back. We need an injunction now. The government had an equally confident response: relax, if the tariffs are struck down, we’ll just issue refunds. No big deal. No injunction needed.

Multiple courts bought it. And now, with the Supreme Court having ruled the tariffs unlawful and a judge ordering the refunds, CBP is telling the court that it actually can’t comply with the order. The promises that defeated all those injunctions? Turns out nobody bothered to check whether they were actually true.

Once again, courts trusted what the government told them. Once again, it turns out they were wrong.

Let’s rewind to see how we got here.

Back in April 2025, when importers like V.O.S. Selections were seeking a preliminary injunction to stop the tariffs from being collected, the Department of Justice told the Court of International Trade there was simply no need for such drastic relief. In its brief opposing the injunction, the DOJ was explicit:

And, even if future entries are liquidated, defendants do not intend to oppose the Court’s authority to order reliquidation of entries of merchandise subject to the challenged tariffs if the tariffs are found in a final and unappealable decision to have been unlawfully collected. Such reliquidation would result in a refund of all duties determined to be unlawfully assessed, with interest.

No injunction needed! Refunds would flow. With interest, even. The government repeated this refund promise in case after case after case. In the Learning Resources stay motion, the government told the D.C. district court that there was no risk at all that the government wouldn’t repay:

For any plaintiff who is an importer, even if a stay is entered and defendants do not prevail on appeal, plaintiffs will assuredly receive payment on their refund with interest. “[T]here is virtually no risk” to any importer that they “would not be made whole” should they prevail on appeal. See Sunpreme v. United States, 2017 WL 65421, at *5 (Ct. Int’l Trade Jan. 5, 2017). The most “harm” that could incur would be a delay in collecting on deposits. This harm is, by definition, not irreparable.

In the Axle case, same thing.

In any event, were Axle to ultimately prevail, it could receive a refund of duties paid that would otherwise be eligible for duty-free treatment under the de minimis exemption on any unliquidated entries. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2643-44. To the extent any future entries are liquidated, the Court may order reliquidation of entries subject to the challenged de minimis exemption if the duties paid by Axle are, in a final and unappealable decision, found to have been unlawfully collected. Such reliquidation would result in a refund of all duties determined to be unlawfully assessed, with interest.

In the Princess Awesome joint stipulation, the government formally agreed that there was nothing to fear about getting repaid:

Defendants stipulate that they will not oppose the Court’s authority to order reliquidation of entries of merchandise subject to the challenged IEEPA duties and that they will refund any IEEPA duties found to have been unlawfully collected, after a final and unappealable decision has been issued finding the duties to have been unlawfully collected

And the courts relied on these representations. In December 2025, when AGS Company Automotive Solutions sought a preliminary injunction to stay the liquidation of its entries, the three-judge panel denied the motion specifically because of the government’s refund promises:

For the reasons stated above, we conclude that the Government has taken the “unequivocal position” that “liquidation will not affect the availability of refunds after a final decision” in V.O.S. Gov’t Resp. at 2–3. The Government would be judicially estopped from “assum[ing] a contrary position” in the future.

Note the court’s foresight here. The panel explicitly invoked judicial estoppel—basically saying “okay, now that you’ve said this to a court, you’re bound by it going forward.” You get the sense that the court had a sense of where all this was going.

Then the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in Learning Resources, Inc. v. Trump that the IEEPA tariffs were unlawful. Judge Eaton at the Court of International Trade—designated as the sole judge to handle IEEPA refund cases—last week ordered CBP basically pay back everyone who paid an IEEPA tariff. Everyone. Not just those who sued.

In court, when the DOJ pushed back a bit, Eaton was blunt:

“Customs knows how to do this,” Eaton said during a court hearing on Wednesday. “They do it every day. They liquidate entries and make refunds.”

Enter the declaration of Brandon Lord, CBP’s Executive Director of the Trade Programs Directorate, filed the day after Judge Eaton’s order. He points out that, actually, there are a TON of tariffs to repay.

As of March 4, 2026, over 330,000 importers have made a total of over 53 million entries in which they have deposited or paid duties imposed pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (“IEEPA”), 50 U.S.C. § 1701 et seq. (the “subject entries”). As of March 4, 2026, the total amount of IEEPA duties and estimated duty deposits collected pursuant to IEEPA is approximately $166 billion. Approximately 20.1 million entries remain unliquidated as of March 4, 2026.

And, apparently, it turns out that CBP is not at all prepared to repay what it owes:

In light of the Court’s March 5, 2026 amended order, CBP is now facing an unprecedented volume of refunds. Its existing administrative procedures and technology are not well suited to a task of this scale and will require manual work that will prevent personnel from fully carrying out the agency’s trade enforcement mission. Personnel would be redirected from responsibilities that serve to mitigate imminent threats to national security and economic security.

Lord’s declaration lays out a big list of technical and logistical obstacles. CBP’s Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) system can apparently only batch-process 10,000 entry summary lines at a time, and there are over 1.6 billion entry summary lines that need updating. Importers frequently lumped their IEEPA duties together with other duties on the same line, meaning CBP personnel would have to manually untangle the amounts. Processing each individual refund takes about 5 minutes, which across 53 million entries works out to over 4.4 million hours.

There’s also a mess involving different entry types and automatic liquidation timelines—Lord’s declaration goes into a bunch of technical details about “formal” vs. “informal” entries, claiming that 4 million entries will automatically process next week and “CBP does not have a process to prevent” it. Even if the legal details are deep in the weeds, the message is clear: even with the Supreme Court ruling in hand, CBP claims parts of this train are still moving and they can’t stop it.

CBP says it can build new ACE functionality in 45 days that would streamline the process. The proposed system actually sounds reasonable. Which makes it worse: if you spent the better part of a year telling every court that would listen that refunds were totally manageable, that there was “virtually no risk” importers wouldn’t be made whole, that “such reliquidation would result in a refund of all duties determined to be unlawfully assessed, with interest”—then maybe, just maybe, you should have spent some of that year building the system to actually do it? Send over a DOGE bro or two to vibe code up a solution?

The Supreme Court case wasn’t a surprise. The government was a party to it. They knew the ruling was coming. They knew that if they lost, refunds would be necessary on a massive scale. And even just based on how the oral arguments went, they should have known how this would turn out.

Instead, CBP appears to have done absolutely nothing to prepare. The government used the promise of easy refunds as a sword to defeat injunction after injunction, convincing courts that importers would suffer no irreparable harm because the money could always be returned. Having successfully avoided those injunctions—allowing the tariffs to keep being collected for months on end, swelling that $166 billion pot—the government now tells the court that returning the money is an operational nightmare that requires new technology it hasn’t built yet.

This is exactly the scenario the AGS panel warned about. And if the government tries to argue that it can’t provide refunds—rather than that it just needs more time—it will run headlong into the judicial estoppel doctrine that the court already set up like a tripwire. As the AGS panel put it, quoting the Supreme Court: “where a party assumes a certain position in a legal proceeding, and succeeds in maintaining that position, he may not thereafter, simply because his interests have changed, assume a contrary position.”

Every month the government successfully avoided an injunction was another month it kept collecting tariffs. That $166 billion didn’t accumulate by accident. The government had every incentive to promise easy refunds and zero incentive to actually prepare for them. The longer importers waited for relief, the bigger the pot grew.

And now, with the Supreme Court having ruled those tariffs illegal, and with courts having explicitly warned that the government would be judicially estopped from changing its position, CBP says it needs 45 days to build new software before it can start writing checks.

“Customs knows how to do this,” Judge Eaton said. “They do it every day.”

Maybe. But apparently nobody in the entire federal government thought to ask whether CBP could actually deliver on the promises DOJ was making to court after court after court. Either that, or they just didn’t care what the answer was.

Pluralistic: Billionaires are a danger to themselves and (especially) us (09 Mar 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



A king on a sumptuous, much elaborated throne; in one hand he holds a sceptre of office, in the other, the leashes for two fierce stone dogs that guard the throne. The king's head has been replaced with a character who was used as the basis for MAD Magazine's Alfred E Neumann. The new head sports a conical dunce cap. Behind the king is a large group of 1960s business men, seated and standing, in conservative suits. The background is the view from the 80th floor of World Trade Center 3. The floor has been carpeted in sumptuous tabriz from the Ottoman court.

Billionaires are a danger to themselves and (especially) us (permalink)

Even if rich people were no more likely to believe stupid shit than you or me, it would still be a problem. After all, I believe in my share of stupid shit (and if you think that none of the shit you believe in is stupid, then I'm afraid we've just identified at least one kind of stupid shit you believe in).

The problem isn't whether rich people believe stupid shit; it's the fact that when a rich person believes something stupid, that belief can turn into torment for dozens, thousands, or millions of people.

Here's a historical example that I think about a lot. In 1928, Henry Ford got worried about the rubber supply chain. All the world's rubber came from plantations in countries that he had limited leverage over and he was worried that these countries could kneecap his operation by cutting off the supply. So Ford decided he would start cultivating rubber in the Brazilian jungles, judging that Brazil's politicians were biddable, bribeable or bludgeonable and thus not a risk.

Ford took over a large area of old-growth jungle in Brazil and decreed that a town be built there. But not just any town: Ford decreed that the town of Fordlandia would be a replica of Dearborn, the company town he controlled in Michigan. Now, leaving aside the colonialism and other ethical considerations, there are plenty of practical reasons not to replicate Dearborn, MI on the banks of the Rio Tapajós.

For one thing, Brazil is in the southern hemisphere, and Dearborn is in the northern hemisphere. The prefab houses that Ford ordered for Fordlandia had windows optimized for southern exposure, which is the normal way of designing a dwelling in the northern hemisphere. In the southern hemisphere, you try and put your windows on the other side of the building.

Ford's architects told him this, and proposed having the factory flip the houses' orientation. But Ford was adamant: he'd had a vision for a replica of his beloved Dearborn plunked down smack in the middle of the Amazon jungle, and by God, that was what he would get:

https://memex.craphound.com/2010/06/02/fordlandia-novelistic-history-of-henry-fords-doomed-midwestern-town-in-the-amazon-jungle/

Fordlandia was a catastrophe for so many reasons, and the windows are just a little footnote, but it's a detail that really stuck with me because it's just so stupid. Ford was a vicious antisemite, a bigot, a union-buster and an all-round piece of shit, but also, he believed that his opinions trumped the axial tilt of the planet Earth.

In other words, Henry Ford wasn't merely evil – he was also periodically as thick as pigshit. Ford's cherished stupidities didn't just affect him, they also meant that a whole city full of people in the Amazon had windows facing the wrong direction. Like I said, I sometimes believe stupid things, but those stupid things aren't consequential the way that rich people's cherished stupidities are.

This would be bad enough if rich people were no more prone to stupid beliefs than the rest of us, but it's actually worse than that. When I believe something stupid, it tends to get me in trouble, which means that (at least some of the time), I get to learn from my mistakes. But if you're a rich person, you can surround yourself with people who will tell you that you are right even when you are so wrong, with the result that you get progressively more wrong, until you literally kill yourself:

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/alternative-medicine-extend-abbreviate-steve-jobs-life/

A rich person could surround themselves with people who tell them that they're being stupid, but in practice, this almost never happens. After all, the prime advantage to accumulating as much money as possible is freedom from having to listen to other people. The richer you are, the fewer people there are who can thwart your will. Get rich enough and you can be found guilty of 34 felonies and still become President of the United States of America.

But wait, it gets even worse! Hurting other people is often a great way to get even more rich. So the richer you get, the more insulated you are from consequences for hurting other people, and the more you hurt other people, the richer you get.

What a world! The people whose wrong beliefs have the widest blast-radius and inflict the most collateral damage also have the fewest sources of external discipline that help them improve their beliefs, and often, that collateral damage is a feature, not a bug.

Billionaires are a danger to themselves and (especially) to the rest of us. They are wronger than the median person, and the consequences of their wrongness are exponentially worse than the consequences of the median person's mistake.

This has been on my mind lately because of a very local phenomenon.

I live around the corner from Burbank airport, a great little regional airport on the edge of Hollywood. It was never brought up to code, so the gates are really close together, which means the planes park really close together, and there's no room for jetways, so they park right up against the terminal. The ground crews wheel staircase/ramps to both the front and back of the plane. That means that you can walk the entire length of the terminal in about five minutes, and boarding and debarking takes less than half the time of any other airport. Sure, if one of those planes ever catches fire, every other plane is gonna go boom, and everyone in the terminal is toast, but my sofa-to-gate time is like 15 minutes.

Best of all, Burbank is a Southwest hub. When we moved here a decade ago, this was great. Southwest, after all, has free bag-check, open seating, a great app, friendly crews, and a generous policy for canceling or changing reservations.

If you fly in the US, you know what's coming next. In 2024, a hedge fund called Elliott Investment Management acquired an 11% stake in SWA, forced a boardroom coup that saw it replace five of the company's six directors, and then instituted a top to bottom change in airline policies. The company eliminated literally everything that Southwest fliers loved about the airline, from the free bags to the open seating:

https://www.reddit.com/r/SouthwestAirlines/comments/1ji79zt/elliott_management_is_dismantling_everything/

The airline went from being the least enshittified airline in America to the most. Southwest is now worse than Spirit airlines – no, really. Southwest doesn't just merely charge for seat selection, but if you refuse to pay for seat selection, they preferentially place you in a middle seat even on a half-empty flight, as a way of pressuring you to pay the sky-high junk fee for seat selection:

https://www.reddit.com/r/SouthwestAirlines/comments/1rd2g0k/ngl_thought_yall_were_joking/

Obviously, passengers who are given middle seats (and the passengers around them, who paid for window or aisle seats) don't like this, so they try to change seats. So SWA now makes its flight attendants order passengers not to switch seats, and they've resorted to making up nonsense about "weight balancing":

https://www.reddit.com/r/SouthwestAirlines/comments/1roz1bg/you_can_change_to_an_empty_seatbut_only_until_we/

Even without junk fees, Southwest's fares are now higher than their rivals. I'm flying to San Francisco tomorrow to host EFF executive director Cindy Cohn's book launch at City Lights:

https://citylights.com/events/cindy-cohn-launch-party-for-privacys-defender/

Normally, I would have just booked a SWA flight from Burbank to SFO or Oakland (which gets less fog and is more reliable). But the SWA fare – even without junk fees – was higher than a United ticket out of the same airport, even including a checked bag, seat selection, etc. Southwest is genuinely worse than Spirit now: not only does it have worse policies (forcing occupancy of middle seats!), and more frustrated, angrier flight crew (flight attendants are palpably sick of arguing with passengers), but SWA is now more expensive than United!

All of this is the fault of one billionaire: Elliott Investment Management CEO Paul Singer, one of America's most guillotineable plutes. This one guy personally enshittified Southwest Airlines, along with many other businesses in America and abroad. Because of this one guy, millions of people are made miserable every single day. Singer flogged off his shares and made a tidy profit. He's long gone. But SWA will never recover, and every day until its collapse, millions of passengers and flight attendants will have a shitty day because of this one guy:

https://www.wfaa.com/article/money/business/southwest-airlines-activist-investor-elliott-lower-ownership-stake/287-470b5131-ef1a-4648-a8ec-4cc017f7914c

Even if Paul Singer were no more prone to ethical missteps than you or me, the fact that he is morbidly wealthy means that his ethical blind spots leave behind a trail of wreckage that rivals a comet. And of course, being as rich as Paul Singer inflicts a lasting neurological injury that makes you incapable of understanding how wrong you are, which means that Paul Singer is doubly dangerous.

Billionaires aren't just a danger when they're trying to make money, either. One of the arguments in favor of billionaires is that sometimes, the "good" billionaires take up charitable causes. But even here, billionaires can cause sweeping harm. Take Bill Gates, whose charitable projects include waging war on the public education system, seeking to replace public schools with charter schools.

Gates has no background in education, but he spent millions on this project. He is one of the main reasons that poor communities around the country have been pressured to shutter their public schools and replace them with weakly regulated, extractive charters:

https://apnews.com/article/92dc914dd97c487a9b9aa4b006909a8c

This was a catastrophe. A single billionaire dilettante's cherished stupidity wrecked the educational chances of a generation of kids:

https://dissidentvoice.org/2026/03/free-market-charter-schools-wreak-havoc-in-michigan/

Gates was a prep-school kid, so it's weird for him to have forceful views about a public education system he never experienced. In reality, it's not so much that Gates has forceful views about schools – rather, he has forceful views about teachers' unions, which he wishes to see abolished. Gates is one of America's most vicious union-busters:

https://teamster.org/2019/10/teamsters-union-and-allies-protest-bill-gates-and-cambridge-union-society/

Gates's ideology permeates all of his charitable work. We all know about Gates's work on public health, but less well known is the role that Gates has played in blocking poor countries from exercising their rights under the WTO to override drug patents in times of emergency. In the 2000s, the Gates Foundation blocked South Africa from procuring the anti-retroviral AIDS drugs it was entitled to under the WTO's TRIPS agreement. The Gates Foundation blocked the Access to Medicines WIPO treaty, which would have vastly expanded the Global South's ability to manufacture life-saving drugs. And during the acute phase of the covid pandemic, Gates personally intervened to kill the WHO Covid-19 Technology Access Pool and to get Oxford to renege on its promise to make an open-source vaccine:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/13/public-interest-pharma/#gates-foundation

It's not that Gates is insincere in his desire to improve public health outcomes – it's that his desire to improve public health conflicts with his extreme ideology of maximum intellectual property regimes. Gates simply opposes open science and compulsory licenses on scientific patents, even when that kills millions of people (as it did in South Africa). Gates's morbid wealth magnifies his cherished stupidities into weapons of mass destruction.

Gates is back in the news these days because of his membership in the Epstein class. Epstein is the poster child for the ways that wealth is a force-multiplier for bad ideas. We can't separate Epstein's sexual predation from his wealth. Epstein spun elaborate junk-science theories to justify raping children, becoming mired in that most rich-guy coded of quagmires, eugenics:

https://www.statnews.com/2026/02/24/epstein-cell-line-george-church-harvard-personal-genome-project/

Epstein openly discussed his plans to seed the planet with his DNA, reportedly telling one scientist that he planned to fill his ranch with young trafficked girls and to keep 20 of them pregnant with his children at all times:

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/07/31/business/jeffrey-epstein-eugenics.html

We still don't know where Epstein's wealth came from, but we know that he was a central node in a network of vast riches, much of which he directed to his weird scientific projects. That network also protected him from consequences for his prolific child-rape project, which had more than 1,000 survivors.

In embracing eugenics junk science, Epstein was ahead of the curve. Today, eugenics is all the rage, reviving an idea that went out of fashion shortly after the Fordlandia era. After all, Henry Ford didn't just build a private city where his word was law – he also bought up media companies to promote his ideas of racial superiority:

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

Despite being too cringe to make it onto Epstein island, Elon Musk is the standard bearer for the dangers of billionaireism:

https://people.com/emails-reveal-that-elon-musk-asked-jeffrey-epstein-about-visiting-his-island-11896842

Like Henry Ford, he craves company towns where his word is law:

https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/inside-starbase-spacex-elon-musk-company-town/

Like Ford, he buys up media companies and then uses them to push his batshit ideas about racial superiority:

https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2025/01/eugenics-isnt-dead-its-thriving-in-tech/

Like Paul Singer, he is a master enshittifier who never met a junk fee he didn't fall in love with:

https://edition.cnn.com/2022/11/01/tech/musk-twitter-verification-price

And like Epstein, he wants to seed the human race with his babies, and has built a secret compound in the desert he plans to fill with women he has impregnated:

https://www.realtor.com/news/celebrity-real-estate/elon-musk-compound-austin-children/

Billionaires and their lickspittles will tell you that all of this is wrong: the market selects "capital allocators" by executing a vast, distributed computer program whose logic gates are every producer and consumer in The Economy (TM), and whose data are trillions of otherwise uncomputable buy and sell decisions.

This is a tautology: the argument goes that only good people are made rich, and therefore all the rich people are good. If rich people had as many cherished stupidities as I claim, The Economy (TM) would relieve them of their wealth, and thus their power to allocate capital, and thus their potential to hurt people by being wrong, which means that they must be right.

This is the stupidest (and most destructive) of all of billionaireism's cherished stupidities: that we live in a meritocracy, which means that whatever the richest people want must be right. It's a modern update to the doctrine of divine providence, which held that we can discern god's favor through wealth. The more god loves you, the richer he makes you.

This can't be true, because every single economic cataclysm in the history of the world was the fault of rich people. Rich people gave us the 19th century's bank panics. They gave us the South Seas bubble. They gave us the Great Depression, and the S&L Crisis, and the Great Financial Crisis. They invented greedflation and created the cost of living crisis. Today, they are teeing up an AI crash that will make 2008 look like the best day of your life:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/12/05/pop-that-bubble/#u-washington

The old left aphorism has it that "every billionaire is a policy failure." That's true, but it's incomplete. Every billionaire is a machine for producing policy failures at scale.

(Image: Aude, CC BY 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)

#20yrsago Indie label uses heartfelt note instead of copy-restriction http://blog.resonancefm.com/archives/48

#20yrsago Clay Shirky’s ETECH presentation on the politics of social software https://craphound.com/youshutupetech2006.txt

#20yrsago Judge quotes Adam Sandler movie in decision blasting defendant https://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/crime/motion-denied-because-youre-idiot

#15yrsago Video game in your browser’s location bar web.archive.org/web/20110309212313/http://probablyinteractive.com/url-hunter

#15yrsago Wondrous, detailed map of the history of science fiction https://web.archive.org/web/20110310152548/http://scimaps.org/submissions/7-digital_libraries/maps/thumbs/024_LG.jpg

#15yrsago American Library Association task forces to take on ebook lending https://web.archive.org/web/20110310085634/https://www.wo.ala.org/districtdispatch/?p=5749

#15yrsago Wisconsin capitol bans recording, flags, reading, balloons, chairs, bags, backpacks, photography, etc etc etc https://captimes.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/more-rules-released-for-state-capitol-visitors/article_f044044f-6183-5128-b718-d5dffbfdb573.html

#15yrsago Librarians Against DRM logo https://web.archive.org/web/20110308170030/https://readersbillofrights.info/librariansagainstDRM

#15yrsago Extinct invertebrates caught in a 40 million year old sex act https://web.archive.org/web/20110303234001/http://news.discovery.com/animals/40-million-year-old-sex-act-captured-in-amber.html

#15yrsago Improvised toilets of earthquake-struck Christchurch https://web.archive.org/web/20110310044912/https://www.showusyourlongdrop.co.nz/

#15yrsago Canadian MP who shills for the record industry is an enthusiastic pirate https://web.archive.org/web/20110310163136/https://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/5673/125/

#15yrsago The Monster: the fraud and depraved indifference that caused the subprime meltdown https://memex.craphound.com/2011/03/07/the-monster-the-fraud-and-depraved-indifference-that-caused-the-subprime-meltdown/

#15yrsago Self-destructing ebooks: paper’s fragility is a bug, not a feature https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2011/mar/08/ebooks-harpercollins-26-times

#10yrsago Senior U.S. immigration judge says 3 and 4 year old children can represent themselves in court https://web.archive.org/web/20160304201631/http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2016/03/04/us-judge-says-3-and-4-year-olds-can-represent-themselves-in-immigration-court.html

#10yrsago Crimefighting for fun and profit: data-mining Medicare fraud and likely whistleblowers https://www.wired.com/2016/03/john-mininno-medicare/

#10yrsago Extensive list of space opera cliches https://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2016/03/towards-a-taxonomy-of-cliches-.html

#10yrsago Verizon pays $1.35M FCC settlement for using “supercookies” https://web.archive.org/web/20160308111653/https://motherboard.vice.com/read/verizon-settles-over-supercookies

#10yrsago Group chat: “an all-day meeting with random participants and no agenda” https://signalvnoise.com/svn3/is-group-chat-making-you-sweat/#.1chnl7hf4

#10yrsago Less than a year on, America has all but forgotten the epic Jeep hack https://www.wired.com/2016/03/survey-finds-one-4-americans-remembers-jeep-hack/

#10yrsago Racial justice organizers to FBI vs Apple judge: crypto matters to #blacklivesmatter https://theintercept.com/2016/03/08/the-fbi-vs-apple-debate-just-got-less-white/

#1yrago Gandersauce https://pluralistic.net/2025/03/08/turnabout/#is-fair-play


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

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

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

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

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



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 ( words today, total)

  • "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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Monday 2026-03-09

11:00 PM

If You’re Going To Defend AI And Whine About Its Critics, You Should Probably Be Honest About Its Actual Harms [Techdirt]

I think this recent post by AI industry CEO Matt Shumer is worth a read. In it, he basically explains how quickly LLMs (large language models) are evolving to supplant many developers and programmers, and how that disruption is coming to other industries quickly. He also warns critics of AI to adjust their priors and realize the AI tools you mocked just six months ago, aren’t the ones in use today:

I am no longer needed for the actual technical work of my job. I describe what I want built, in plain English, and it just… appears. Not a rough draft I need to fix. The finished thing. I tell the AI what I want, walk away from my computer for four hours, and come back to find the work done. Done well, done better than I would have done it myself, with no corrections needed. A couple of months ago, I was going back and forth with the AI, guiding it, making edits. Now I just describe the outcome and leave.”

While the post is interesting (with the understanding this is somebody making and selling automation software), you might notice something: absolutely nowhere in the blog post does he meaningfully acknowledge the widespread problems with existing AI use. Either because his financial self-interest doesn’t allow for honest acknowledgment of them, or because he simply doesn’t find those aspects all that interesting.

Maybe both.

There’s no mention of how these tools are causing corporations to blow past their already tepid climate goal; no mention of how the affluent, surveillance-obsessed exec dictating its trajectory enthusiastically cozied up to fascists; no mention of how Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg’s data centers are funneling pollution directly into black neighborhoods; zero mention of the technofascist plan to leverage AI to decimate unions; no mention of the weird and precarious financial shell games powering the sector.

This New York Times article from a couple weeks ago is probably a better example of this art form. It’s an article, ostensibly about why the public has been so hostile to AI, that takes until the THIRTY-EIGHTH paragraph to actually try and explain some of the reasons. And even then it’s kind of a throwaway paragraph that doesn’t wrestle seriously with any of the criticism:

“The tech executives who are betting their companies’ futures on the triumph of A.I. have many resources to make sure it happens. They can spend even more money to build even more data centers. On the other hand, data centers around the country are increasingly a target of opposition for local residents who dislike the noise, the disruption, the secrecy and the lack of community benefits like jobs.”

Distilling the animosity against AI as just some random grumbling about “noise” and ambiguous “disruption” is a very weird and conscious choice, and I’d argue that this minimization, a reflection of the establishment press’ need to appease and protect access to corporate power, is itself a major contributor to growing hostility toward AI.

The fact that much of the public animosity to AI may be linked to the fact that its salesmen have overtly and enthusiastically enabled fascism just isn’t mentioned. The Times doesn’t think that’s relevant.

The fact that many U.S. billionaires see AI largely as a way to lazily cut corners and obliterate unions (see: its rushed adoption in journalism outlets like the LA Times or Politico) isn’t mentioned either. That the goal for most AI executives is to power this latest technological revolution completely free of any corporate oversight whatsoever? Again, somehow not deemed relevant.

Stories like this cling to a narrative that vaguely imply people are generally angry about AI due to some ambiguous flaw in their “perception,” likely caused by the way AI is being portrayed to the public on the tee vee:

“The A.I. companies seem increasingly alert to a perception problem. This year’s Super Bowl featured A.I.-themed ads that were defensive or just odd. Amazon’s ad showed A.I. proposing ways to kill Chris Hemsworth. The twist at the end: A.I. disarms him with a promised massage.”

And while there certainly are people who are intractably hostile to all aspects of automation and simply refuse to engage with it on any level (including understanding it), a huge swath of the animosity is being driven by historic and justified anger at the extraction class.

That anger and energy is good, and just, and will likely serve us well in the months and years to come. I’d argue it deserves a wide berth; including by tech industry insiders and AI advocates who don’t want to live under permanent kakistocracy staffed by weird zealots who operate at a third-grade reading level, openly enthusiastic about their grand visions for a permanent mass-surveillance murder autocracy.

Stories like this Times piece will often fixate on the AI “doomer narrative” (SkyNet will kill us all), but downplay that this specific strain of doomerism (very often pushed by wealthy industry insiders), often exists to both misrepresent what LLMs are capable of, but also to direct attention away from more realism-based criticism the industry doesn’t really want to talk about.

That’s not to say people can’t or shouldn’t be excited by evolutions in automation. But it is to say if you’re an AI advocate and you’re not also talking seriously about the very valid reasons so many people are pissed off, you’re not really talking seriously about the subject at all. You’re in marketing.

09:00 PM

Major Publishers Sue Anna’s Archive Over ‘Staggering’ Copyright Infringement, Seek Injunction [TorrentFreak]

booksAnna’s Archive has already faced its fair share of legal trouble and domain name problems this year.

The popular shadow library was sued by Spotify and several major record labels in late December and lost many of its domain names.

The site responded by adding new domain names. After losing its .LI domain last week, it added .VG,.PK, and .GD as new alternatives. However, this does not mean that the pressure is fading. Within a matter of days, the .VG domain was already suspended by the domain registrar.

63 Million Pirated Books

After watching the music industry’s legal push, a group of thirteen major publishers has also sprung into action. In a complaint filed at a New York federal court last week, they accuse Anna’s Archive of staggering copyright infringement by hosting 63 million books and 95 million papers, most of which are pirated.

The complaint

the complaint

“Defendants shamelessly describe themselves as a collection of ‘pirates’ not ‘bound by the law’,” the complaint reads.

The publishers highlight that the site facilitated 763,000 downloads per day last Tuesday, as reported by the site’s own statistics. These downloads are predominantly unauthorized, they add.

“Plaintiffs are not aware that any of the copyright-protected works on Anna’s Archive are licensed or authorized by the copyright owners; to the contrary, their reproduction and distributions are blatantly illegal infringements,” the complaint notes.

763,000 downloads

stats

The publishers also highlight the AI training angle. They note that the shadow library provided high-speed access to 140+ million texts to LLM developers in China, Russia, and elsewhere. This includes a blog post titled “If You’re an LLM, Please Read This” which specifically targets AI companies.

The complaint alleged that Anna’s Archive reportedly charges significant fees for premium access, citing a LinkedIn post that mentioned a $200,000 donation.

“The amount of the ‘enterprise-level donation’ is not specified on the Website but it is reported to be $200,000. In an e-mail exchange with a researcher inquiring about the cost of the collection for AI training, Anna’s Archive offered premium access for $200,000,” the complaint notes.

Donation

linkedin

The Injunction is Key

With 130 copyrighted works mentioned in the complaint, and damages up to $150,000 per infringed work, the publishers seek up to $19.5 million in compensation. However, with the site’s operators being unknown and unreachable, chances are slim that this amount will be paid.

The publishers are aware of this. In fact, if we carefully read the framing of their complaint, it appears that the legal action is predominantly intended to target domain names and other technical infrastructure of Anna’s Archive.

In recent weeks, the music industry injunction in the Atlantic/Spotify case has helped to take out several domain names. However, Anna’s Archive has since removed music-related content from the site. Therefore, the publishers now seek a similar injunction.

“Were the Defendants to repost the contents of its illegal repository of stolen works without these audio files, the Atlantic Order would still be satisfied. Nor can the publisher Plaintiffs in this case enforce the Atlantic Order to protect their own copyrights,” the complaint reads.

Injunction Targeting Hosts, Registrars, and Registries

The publishers want to play their part in taking Anna’s Archive offline, and they therefore request an injunction to protect their copyrights. This proposed injunction requires the site and its operator to halt all infringing activity and destroy all pirated books and articles.

More importantly, the injunction would also require third-party intermediaries to stop providing services to the shadow library. This applies to data centers, and hosting and service providers, domain registrars, and domain registries.

Proposed injunctive relief

injunction

The proposed injunction would apply to all current domain names, as well as “any other websites that host the infringing content or directly facilitate its distribution.”

At the time of writing, the court has yet to sign off on the requested injunction. Whether that order will be enough to keep Anna’s Archive offline for good, given its track record of quickly securing new domains, has yet to be seen.

A copy of the complaint, filed at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, is available here (pdf). The exhibit listing works in suit can be found here (pdf).

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

07:00 PM

Italian IPTV Pirates Pay €1,000 in Damages to Football League Serie A [TorrentFreak]

italy flagLast May, the Guardia di Finanza announced that 2,282 pirate IPTV subscribers had been fined across 80 Italian provinces.

The user details came from a criminal investigation in Lecce that dismantled a large IPTV operation, leaving behind a subscriber database that authorities put to immediate use.

Those fines, typically starting at €154 and rising to €5,000 for repeat offenders, were only the beginning. The same pirate IPTV (Pezzotto) users were in for more trouble.

Two Bills, Same Offense

In the autumn of 2025, DAZN sent letters to many of the pirate IPTV users who were already fined, offering to settle a civil damages claim for €500. This new payment request was in addition to the state fine, not instead of it.

Taking a page from this playbook, Serie A followed with its own damages demand. In January, the league’s CEO, Luigi De Siervo, announced that lawyers sent approximately 2,000 letters to individuals who were previously identified by the Guardia di Finanza, requesting €1,000 each as a settlement for the damages caused by their illegal streaming.

In late February, Serie A CEO Luigi De Siervo confirmed that the first payments have now been received. As with the DAZN case, these payments are also linked to Criminal Case no. 7719/2022 at the Tribunal of Lecce.

“Finally, even in our country, we are restoring the rule of law,” De Siervo said in a statement, adding that this is “only the beginning.”

“Those who use the pezzotto or illegally watch matches on apps, pirate IPTV, or via VPN, must know that they will be identified by the competent authorities, will have to pay fines of up to €5,000 as provided by law, and will above all be required to pay an additional €1,000 to Serie A as compensation for damages. Piracy is theft, period.”

Serie A does not mention how many payments it has received in response to the thousands of letters it sent out. This could be less than a handful, for now.

Follow The Money

It is clear that the messaging aims to deter future IPTV pirates, suggesting that even a VPN can’t secure them. While this statement is technically correct, it deserves some nuance.

The IPTV pirates who were identified in this case did not have their connections monitored in any way. Instead, the IPTV users were identified through their payment details, banking data, and other personal information obtained as part of a criminal investigation into an IPTV operator.

This is a notable distinction, as defense lawyers in the Lecce case have argued that some of the administrative fines issued lack technical evidence of actual piracy, resting solely on the payment trail.

One lawyer filed formal correction requests with Italian media, stressing that no IP addresses were identified, no devices were seized, and no specific copyrighted work was named in the citations. However, those challenges have not prevented the compensation letters from going out, or the payments from coming in.

Looming Threat

The Lecce case is one of several active proceedings. There are several other prosecutions, and, with permission from the Prosecutor’s Office, more details of pirate subscribers are reportedly shared with rightsholders.

Italy’s Minister for Sport, Andrea Abodi, went even further in October, suggesting that the names of those caught buying illegal subscriptions could eventually be published in a public naming and shaming campaign. “It’s beyond privacy concerns; it’s a crime,” he said at the time.

For now, however, the government appears content to let the financial pressure do the work. This also serves as a deterrent message, as those who received the €1,000 letter from Serie A but chose to ignore it potentially face a more expensive civil claim.

Serie A website (dd. March 2 , 2026)

serie x

Meanwhile, the official Serie A website features a prominent advertisement for its long-running partner, 1XBET.

This is notable because the same gambling company the Motion Picture Association has flagged as a notorious piracy market, as it is frequently promoted through watermarked pirated movies and other advertisements on prominent pirate sites.

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

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