Facial Recognition Firm Announces Way To Punish Retail Workers, Shoppers For Forming Relationships [Techdirt]
You stroll into your favorite food-jobber, looking to pick up a few things on your way home from work. Lots of people are on their way home from work. There are lines at every register and someone is in the self-checkout with $600-worth of groceries, beginning what will eventually become a 30-minute stop-start process that could have been handled in a five minutes by even the most incompetent cashier.
That’s when you start considering your options. Do you take the slightly shorter line manned by yet another interchangeable teen who is only working a register because the manager scrambled help to the front — one who would otherwise just be at the back of the store milking the clock while pretending to stock the milk? Do you head towards a more reliable cashier of a much more advanced age, but one you know will ultimately annoy you with a blend of weather and politics small talk during what you hoped would be a quick in-out to restock a few consumables? Or do you go to the cashier you know can handle it all — someone who not only values your business but your time, and can infer from context whether you’re up for a bit of chatting during the transaction or just want to get out and go on with what’s left of your day?
Well, the bad news is that some tech firm wants to convert the relationship you’ve built with your favorite cashiers into something inherently suspicious. And it wants to do this because retailers are claiming people engaged in theft generally head towards employees willing to help them engage in theft. And while the latter is undoubtedly true, the suspicification (yes, it’s now a word) of normal interactions between long-term employees and regular customers will undoubtedly result in customers finding somewhere else to shop and great employees finding somewhere else to work. Of course, facial recognition tech is involved, because it always is.
Here’s Todd Feathers with the details (what there are of them at this point) for Gizmodo:
About a month ago, Israel-based Corsight AI began offering its global clients access to a new service aimed at rooting out what the retail industry calls “sweethearting,”—instances of store employees giving people they know discounts or free items.
Traditional facial recognition systems, which have proliferated in the retail industry thanks to companies like Corsight, flag people entering stores who are on designated blacklists of shoplifters. The new sweethearting detection system takes the monitoring a step further by tracking how each customer interacts with different employees over long periods of time.
I don’t doubt that “sweethearting” is a problem. Whether it’s a problem worth dumping money into unproven tech and even more specious assumptions about whose spending too much time with which employees is far more speculative. And there’s no better way to tell the CEO of Corsight (Shai Toren) doesn’t do that much shopping of his own than by reading the statement he provided to Gizmodo.
“If you go into a shop and you pick up a few groceries, usually you would pick any of the cashiers that is around and you go scan your goods,” he said. “When someone is planning a sweethearting theft, they will always go to the same cashier, which is most of the time a relative of theirs, and this is an anomaly in the behavior compared to the other customers. Our system is able to identify this anomaly and alert on that.”
But that’s not what actually happens, especially when someone is a frequent customer. Frequent shoppers know which employees are fast and efficient and which ones will just slow things down for them. Someone going to the same cashier may indicate theft is in the offing. But just as often, it may only indicate regular shoppers know where to go first for the best service.
On top of that, there’s no evidence this is something that can’t be handled by existing technology. It has been decades since I’ve been in a store that doesn’t have a camera aimed directly at each and every register. If that tech can’t stop “sweethearting,” it’s unlikely that expanding surveillance to treat each and every shopper as equally suspicious is going to improve anything. And it’s guaranteed to chase away frequent shoppers, who are bound to be pulled aside by loss prevention staff at some point and questioned about their “suspicious” desire to interact only with certain employees. It’s also going to result in the loss of these companies’ best front-line employees, who won’t like being treated like criminals just because so many regulars seek them out during their shopping trips.
A union representing lots of retail workers also raises another good point: when commissions are part of the pay structure, maintaining nearly-exclusive relationships with repeat customers is essential to these workers’ income. Shoving this tech where it’s not needed will just punish retail workers for being good at their jobs.
“We have a lot of concerns about this type of technology given that a lot of our members work on commission so the idea is that you are building a book of business based on relationships with customers,” said Chelsea Connor, communications director for the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union (RWDSU). “Whether or not they work on commission, [stores] push sales people to develop those relationships because that’s what brings people back to brick and mortar as opposed to buying online.”
All of these are compelling points that make it clear shoehorning even more surveillance into the retail “experience” will mostly produce negative outcomes. Then there’s the tech itself, which is still terrible at capably identifying people who aren’t white and male and now is being expected to make assumptions about human behavior based on little more than their preference in cashiers.
Any retailer that decides to buy into Corsight’s bullshit deserves every hit to the bottom line it takes because of this. It’s not going to stop the theft it claims it will stop — at least not to the extent that it will offset losses caused by people deciding to take their business elsewhere because they don’t feel like being treated as presumptive criminals just because they patronize the same businesses and employees repeatedly. Worse, they’re going to lose their best employees — the ones capable of building relationships with long-term customers — and replace them with a revolving door of disinterested replacements overseen by tech that says it can recognize faces while pretending it can also generate meaningful information about human relationships in a retail environment.
Not only is Corsight misleading its potential customers with its overstatements, it’s deluding itself into believing this is a service retailers consider so essential they’ll continue to spend money on it even after it fails to justify its ongoing existence.
Fifth Circuit: Lol, No, RFK Jr. You Don’t Have Standing To Sue Joe Biden Because Facebook Blocked Your Anti-vax Nonsense [Techdirt]
It remains incredible to me that we sometimes have to rely on the nutty Fifth Circuit to correct the even nuttier “MAGA favorite” judges who issue the stupidest decisions in court cases. But now they’ve done it again, as the Fifth Circuit has pointed out that, no, RFK Jr. does not appear to have standing to sue Joe Biden because Facebook moderated some of his anti-vax nonsense.
This will take some background coverage to get to where we are.
If you’ll recall, Missouri and Louisiana sued Joe Biden, falsely claiming that the White House engaged in a campaign to censor conservatives on social media. They filed this in a federal court where they knew they’d get Trump appointee Judge Terry Doughty, who appeared to deliberately wait until July 4th (a day the courts are closed) to issue a truly wacky opinion, who also took a bunch of nonsense, lies, and conjecture as proof of a grand conspiracy to censor conservatives.
The Fifth Circuit rejected a lot of Doughty’s nonsensical injunction, but did leave some of it in place (at one point, bizarrely, reissuing its decision and saying that one part of the government, CISA, that it initially said hadn’t done anything wrong, had in fact done something wrong, but the Court chose not to tell us what).
Eventually, the case made its way to the Supreme Court (under the name Murthy v. Missouri), where both lower court rulings were effectively tossed out. The majority, led by Justice Amy Coney Barrett, made it clear that the plaintiffs had no standing, particularly because they couldn’t show that any content moderation efforts by the social media companies had anything to do with actions by the federal government. As the Supreme Court said:
The primary weakness in the record of past restrictions is the lack of specific causation findings with respect to any discrete instance of content moderation. The District Court made none. Nor did the Fifth Circuit, which approached standing at a high level of generality. The platforms, it reasoned, “have engaged in censorship of certain viewpoints on key issues,” while “the government has engaged in a yearslong pressure campaign” to ensure that the platforms suppress those viewpoints. 83 F. 4th, at 370. The platforms’ “censorship decisions”—including those affecting the plaintiffs—were thus “likely attributable at least in part to the platforms’ reluctance to risk” the consequences of refusing to “adhere to the government’s directives.” Ibid.
We reject this overly broad assertion. As already discussed, the platforms moderated similar content long before any of the Government defendants engaged in the challenged conduct. In fact, the platforms, acting independently, had strengthened their pre-existing content-moderation policies before the Government defendants got involved.
Meanwhile, while all of this was going on, pretend-free speech supporter RFK Jr. had been running around to multiple courts trying to sue over the fact that Meta had moderated some RFK Jr. related content. Those cases (there are multiple ones) haven’t gone well at all. Perhaps seeing an opportunity to piggyback on the Missouri/Louisiana case, he filed a similar case in the same district and tried to connect the cases. Judge Doughty put that effort on hold until the Supreme Court process played out.
Once that was done, RFK Jr.’s lawyers insisted that any plain reading of the Murthy ruling was that while maybe the others in the case didn’t have standing, clearly he did. His explanation for this was complete and utter nonsense, but in Judge Doughty’s court, that’s enough. A few months back, Judge Doughty insisted that RFK Jr. had done enough to show standing and his case against the Biden admin could proceed.
As I noted in my writeup of this ruling, Judge Doughty came to this by completely misrepresenting a ton of information regarding how the world works.
Thankfully, the Fifth Circuit has now stepped in to vacate that decision, slap Doughty on the wrist, and suggest he try again.
RFK Jr. relied heavily on two declarations: one from Mary Holland, the head of RFK’s anti-vax organization Children’s Health Defense (CHD) and one from Brigid Rasmussen, the chief of staff for his doomed political campaign. The court notes that the Supreme Court had clearly instructed lower courts in the Murthy ruling that they need to show pretty clear “traceability” of actual government actions leading to private companies’ decisions to moderate.
While Doughty skipped over the details and said “sure thing, looks like censorship to me,” the three-judge panel here (Higginbotham, Stewart, and Haynes) realize that RFK’s claims are just as weak as everyone else’s involved in this case. Neither of the new depositions show anything approximating traceability. Indeed, the court notes that the deposition seems pretty similar to declarations that the Supreme Court already rejected in this very case.
The Court in Missouri explained that “the vast majority of [the White House’s] public and private engagement with the platforms occurred in 2021, when the pandemic was still in full swing” and that “the frequent, intense communications that took place in 2021 had considerably subsided by 2022.” Id. at 1994. The Court also noted that, “in April 2023, President Biden signed a joint resolution that ended the national COVID–19 emergency” and “[t]he next month, the White House disbanded its COVID–19 Response Team, which was responsible for many of the challenged communications in this case.” Id. at 1995. Regarding the CDC, the Court concluded that “the risk of future harm traceable to the CDC is minimal” because “[t]he CDC stopped meeting with the platforms in March 2022.” Id. at 1994. Although “the platforms sporadically asked the CDC to verify or debunk several claims about vaccines,” “the agency has not received any such message since the summer of 2022.”
Plaintiffs argue that because the CDC and Kennedy continue to be censored, their situation is distinguishable from Missouri. Missouri demonstrates the flaw in that argument. There, “the plaintiffs and the dissent suggest[ed] that the platforms continue to suppress their speech according to policies initially adopted under Government pressure.” Id. at 1995. The Court responded as follows:
[T]he plaintiffs have a redressability problem. . . . The requested judicial relief . . . is an injunction stopping certain Government agencies and employees from coercing or encouraging the platforms to suppress speech. A court could prevent these Government defendants from interfering with the platforms’ independent application of their policies. But without evidence of continued pressure from the defendants, it appears that the platforms remain free to enforce, or not to enforce, those policies—even those tainted by initial governmental coercion
Plaintiffs here have the same redressability problem.
We therefore conclude that the Holland declaration does not establish standing
As for the Rasmussen declaration, she’s got the same problem:
Rasmussen describes a series of content-moderation actions taken by social-media platforms against the Kennedy campaign and its supporters. But she does not trace any of the platforms’ content-moderation actions against Kennedy back to the government.
All of this was obvious when it was presented to Judge Doughty. The Justice Department explained this to Judge Doughty, but he ignored it. Now he has to find out about it from the Fifth Circuit. How embarrassing.
RFK tried to make a bigger deal by trying to argue that he had standing since he was a political candidate for president (sorta) and the White House was trying to suppress his campaign (a thing they were not actually doing). Again, the judges are not impressed:
Here, the only new election-related evidence is the Rasmussen declaration. But the declaration does not cure the traceability problem from Missouri because it does not allege any government action that is responsible for suppression of Kennedy’s campaign content. Kennedy must therefore rely on the same “speculative chain of possibilities” as Hoft in Missouri. Id. (quoting Clapper, 568 U.S. at 414). That chain does not become any less speculative if the FBI states that it will continue to communicate with platforms regarding election misinformation. If anything, Kennedy’s chain of possibilities might be even more speculative now that he has suspended his presidential campaign, a fact of which we may take judicial notice.
Again, it’s pretty incredible how much bullshit Judge Doughty was willing to rubber-stamp, even to the point that an entire three-judge panel at the Fifth would issue a per curiam “nah, dawg, that’s not how it works” ruling.
End result:
We therefore conclude that Kennedy lacks standing to seek a preliminary injunction for his claims concerning election-related content.
Because Plaintiffs lack standing to seek a preliminary injunction against Defendants, we VACATE the preliminary injunction and REMAND to the district court.
It will not surprise me at all if Judge Doughty comes up with some other method to keep this case going. He really seems to love ignoring reality to bless a fantasy world, made-up, nonsense case in which the Biden administration is actively telling social media sites who to censor and those social media sites are eagerly complying (again, something that has not happened).
But, at least for now, RFK Jr. is back sitting on the outside looking in. Something he should get used to.
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Fourth Circuit Appeals Court Announces It’s Going To Rethink Its Geofence Warrant Decision [Techdirt]
This is tentatively welcome news. I mean, it can’t result in anything worse than the original decision the Fourth Circuit handed down in the Chatrie case, which said there’s nothing constitutionally wrong with searching every Google user’s location info in hopes of finding the suspect law enforcement is actually looking for. (via FourthAmendment.com)
The Appeals Court took the Supreme Court’s Carpenter decision that created a warrant requirement for obtaining cell site location info over a long period of time and took that to mean that the location info law enforcement eventually obtained in the Chatrie case wasn’t worthy of Fourth Amendment protections.
[W]e find that the government did not conduct a Fourth Amendment search when it obtained two hours’ worth of Chatrie’s location information, since he voluntarily exposed this information to Google.
So, the lynchpin here was the length of time, even if the court expressed its reservations about the use of warrants that treat everyone in Google’s location database as a criminal suspect until proven otherwise, something the dissent pointed out in the court’s July 2024 decision:
[G]eofence intrusions are even broader than the intrusion in Carpenter because there is no limit on the number of users police can include in a geofence. With CSLI, police at least had to provide a specific phone number to search, so they had to identify a criminal suspect before they could pry into his or her historical CSLI data. By stark contrast, geofence intrusions permit police to rummage through the historical data of an unlimited number of individuals, none of whom the police previously identified nor suspected of any wrongdoing. Indeed, the very point of the geofence intrusion is to identify persons whose existence was unknown to police before the search.
In the end, though, the majority thought the intrusion in Chatrie’s movements was limited enough, it didn’t raise further constitutional issues. What was never really up for discussion was the constitutionality of the geofence warrants themselves, which allow the government to treat everyone as a suspect while trying to back into the probable cause needed to target only specific suspects.
This unexpected en banc rehearing is likely due to a more recent appellate decision — one handed down by the Fifth Circuit (yeah ikr?) in August, which said geofence warrants are themselves unconstitutional. These warrants are the “general rummaging” that was directly addressed by the Fourth Amendment. Just because it’s a warrant doesn’t mean it’s a lawful warrant, especially not when they’re deployed this way:
When law enforcement submits a geofence warrant to Google, Step 1 forces the company to search through its entire database to provide a new dataset that is derived from its entire Sensorvault. In other words, law enforcement cannot obtain its requested location data unless Google searches through the entirety of its Sensorvault—all 592 million individual accounts— for all of their locations at a given point in time. Moreover, this search is occurring while law enforcement officials have no idea who they are looking for, or whether the search will even turn up a result. Indeed, the quintessential problem with these warrants is that they never include a specific user to be identified, only a temporal and geographic location where any given user may turn up post-search. That is constitutionally insufficient.
Given the timing, there can be little doubt the Fifth Circuit’s take on this issue is forcing the Fourth Circuit to reconsider its own take. The Fourth Circuit limited itself to considering whether the data eventually obtained with a warrant constituted a Fourth Amendment violation.
The Fifth Circuit’s decision, on the other hand, makes it clear the end point of vague, exploratory and, yes, “general” warrants isn’t where the constitutional conversation should start. It should actually begin at the point the government commences its investigatory work: the first geofence warrant delivered to Google that requires it to search its entire database of location data under the shaky legal theory that there’s probable cause to believe Google may possibly discover location data investigators can use to create a list of suspects.
If the Fourth Circuit rolls back its inquiry to match the Fifth Circuit’s starting point, it’s hard to see how it will arrive at the decision that geofence warrants are constitutional. If it decides the rest of this inquiry isn’t worthy of discussion, it’s just going to end up back where it started, only with a lot more wasted time and effort. At worst, nothing changes. But at best, it could generate precedent that the Supreme Court won’t be able to ignore (for better or worse).
The paradox of points [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
Points aren’t just for games. Points are how we keep score and decide what to do next. Pick your scorekeeping wisely.
Too much focus on the score can bend us or break us, pushing us to engage with too much focus and without regard for balance.
And our attachment to obvious points strips us of our agency and independence.
If it’s subtle, variable and up to the user, the uncertainty can amplify our insecurity. “Wear festive clothing,” is an unwelcome line on an invitation, because the point system is unclear. How do I fit in? How do I not lose, or even win?
On the other hand, if the points on offer are industrialized, transactional or predictable, it quickly dehumanizes us into profit-seeking automatons. But at scale, this sort of easily communicated metric is common.
The word ‘jerk’ describes what happens to a human who is controlled by an assembly line (or a horse by a whip). A visitor to the first Ford assembly line was amazed at how the stopwatch and the pursuit of humans-as-a-resource mindset was turning people into puppets.
Points and compliance. Choose carefully.
Kanji of the Day: 市 [Kanji of the Day]
市
✍5
小2
market, city, town
シ
いち
市内 (しない) — in the city
市民 (しみん) — citizen
市長 (しちょう) — mayor
市場 (いちば) — market
同市 (どうし) — same city
大阪市 (おおさかし) — Osaka city
都市 (とし) — town
市立 (いちりつ) — municipal
市長選 (しちょうせん) — mayoral election
市議 (しぎ) — city councillor
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 葬 [Kanji of the Day]
葬
✍12
中学
interment, bury, shelve
ソウ
ほうむ.る
葬儀 (そうぎ) — funeral
葬式 (そうしき) — funeral
冠婚葬祭 (かんこんそうさい) — important ceremonial occasions in family relationships
埋葬 (まいそう) — burial
火葬 (かそう) — cremation
葬祭 (そうさい) — funerals and ceremonial occasions
葬儀社 (そうぎしゃ) — undertaker's office
密葬 (みっそう) — private funeral
火葬場 (かそうば) — crematory
葬儀屋 (そうぎや) — funeral parlor (parlour)
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
If you’re like me, you’re still in a state of stunned disbelief. The election results feel absurd and counterfactual, and you want desperately to make sense of what just happened.
This feeling perhaps is akin to watching a family member return to an abusive spouse, even after nearly being beaten to death. Or watching in horror as a loved one, whom you thought was finally clean, start using drugs again and spiral helplessly out of control. How could someone choose that over what we have to offer?
I admit a bit of trepidation in trying to address this topic on the day after this travesty, because I know how raw emotions are running, and any messenger is pretty much asking to be shot. But here’s a bit of where I am today.
One could almost excuse this nation for electing Trump the first time. There were millions of people willing to take a chance on a “business man” they knew from television. Roll the dice and see, why not? A foolhardy and costly mistake, but one we could learn from, right?
But after all we went through with him, after all his crimes and assaults, after his disastrously mismanaged response to a pandemic that killed one million Americans, and after all he did to undermine and ultimately openly attack our democracy, it is inconceivable that we would reelect such a man.
Yet that is what we’ve done. We are officially in the upside down.
There is a temptation, completely understandable, to suspect something in the contest was amiss. We certainly saw the other side do so when they believed their guy couldn’t have lost the 2020 election fair and square. But unlike them, we require that any extraordinary claim produce at least some credible evidence, and we won’t likely find any here. Our elections are secure, despite Russia’s best efforts to disrupt them with bomb threats.
Moreover, to look to foul play, rather than foul decisions, is to absolve the majority of the American electorate of the blame they carry for this catastrophe.
No, we must talk instead about some hard truths.
Before we do, let me be clear. I won’t spend any time assigning blame, and I’m not interested in hearing it from others. By any objective measure, Kamala Harris and Tim Walz ran a superb campaign; raised record amounts of money; had a forward-looking, positive message; and ran through the tape at the finish line, pedal to the floor, all in just over 100 days time. We were all proud of what they’d accomplished. By contrast, and again by any objective measure, the Trump campaign was crude, mean-spirited, laced with violent rhetoric, fueled by hate and fear, and frankly boring and weird. You know it, and I know it. Even the other side knows it.
Nor was this ever about who was actually the better candidate. Harris, an eloquent, experienced prosecutor, drubbed Trump so badly in the first debate that he fled from even the idea of a second. Harris produced detailed policies and common sense plans for an opportunity economy. Trump had no plans other than his tariffs, and his speeches were uniformly unintelligible, rambling, and on many levels disturbing. His own top aides even came out against him publicly, and our senior military officials warned us all that he is fascist to the core.
His supporters did not listen, or they did not care.
And Harris’s electoral loss came not from any bad choices, such as who to pick as her VP. You simply don’t lose all seven battlegrounds from that, just as Hillary Clinton didn’t lose because she “didn’t go to Michigan.” There is something far deeper at work.
One hard truth is that a majority of voters simply wanted what Trump offered: a champion for their grievances. I didn’t believe they actually would, but lower propensity male voters came out for Trump in appalling, historic numbers, underscoring the misogyny at the heart of his message and personified by JD Vance.
Other voters decided to mortgage the future of American democracy out of anger over high grocery bills, failing to understand (thanks to the media) the worldwide nature of post-pandemic inflation, how the Biden Administration had actually succeeded in taming it, or how Trump’s tariffs and economic policies would empty their wallets.
Many progressives, myself included, placed our hopes in the basic goodness and common sense of the American people, who of course would ultimately know better than to put a convicted felon and Russian asset into the Oval Office. This was especially true given how Trump had promised openly to rule as an authoritarian and to come after the press and his political opponents, wielding all the might of a compliant Justice Department and even the military if necessary.
And there, another hard truth: Either the voters don’t believe Trump will do what he has openly promised to do, or they simply don’t care. Neither brings any comfort.
I lay all this out because if we are to defeat the rising threat of fascism in America, we must be clear-eyed about how it preys upon our weaknesses as a society.
The same deeply rooted misogyny that has twice kept far more qualified and capable women from the presidency is now also being weaponized to strip away fundamental rights to bodily autonomy. Their next, inevitable, and indeed plainly stated goals include national bans on abortion and contraception. We must understand and prepare for how they will bring these assaults, even while we try to understand why so many women, and in particular white women, continue to support Trump and even voted for him this time around.
Not an easy or comfortable question.
It doesn’t stop there. “Traditional” notions of gender roles are also justifying vicious and sustained attacks upon trans people, whom the GOP demonizes at every turn in order to teach its base how to hate and dehumanize. If we parrot their language, look the other way, and fail to stand up for them, we allow that wedge to be driven deeper, and for discrimination and even calls for “eradication” to flourish. These attacks upon trans people are tests of the extent of our compassion and the strength of our principles, and we must not fail them.
We must also develop a deeper understanding of how racism operates and drives white grievance and white supremacy, which in turn powers the MAGA movement. But this is far more complicated than we understood. For example, we believed, incorrectly, that Trump’s openly racist attacks upon Latinos and threats of mass deportations of migrants would keep those voters in our column. Instead, the hardships of the post-Covid economy endured by Latino families swelled support for Trump within that community, even while African Americans remained relatively committed to the Democrats. If we cannot find a way to win back these voters, the entire American experiment is imperiled.
None of these issues will be solved overnight, nor must we have any of these painful conversations now while we are still in shock and grief from this heartbreaking loss. I raise them here because they are the questions we should truly be weighing, certainly before assigning blame to any of the hardworking team or incredible candidates.
In the end, Kamala Harris did not fail us. We as a nation failed her.
And that is a very hard truth.
LISTEN: A Politics-Free Election Day Edition of Savage Lovecast [The Stranger]
Happy Soft Cock Week to all who celebrate! by Dan Savage We’re giving you a break from whatever stressful stuff is going on this week to bring you some of the more…interesting calls we’ve collected. A man’s girlfriend wants to try saline injections on her breasts for a “24 hour boob job.” The question is, can he safely do the injecting? A woman’s cat is grieving the loss of her longtime companion, a small dog. Now the kinky feline is demanding unspeakable rough treatment and her “owner” is neither G, G, nor G and does NOT consent. Happy Soft Cock Week to all who celebrate! Our guest is “professional cuddler” Michelle Renee, who is helping to launch a worldwide celebration of the penis in repose. She offers a kind and loving perspective on a topic that really needn’t cause so much anxiety. On the Magnum, Dan chats with Paul Rosenberg, founder and manager of Rain City Jacks, a private, non-profit jack-off…
[ Read more ]
P.S. The best blowjob is 25-50% handjob. by Dan Savage 1. This debate is raging again, Dan, and we need you to issue a ruling: Do straight women belong in gay bars? Some (straight women, gay bars), not all (straight women, gay bars). 2. Why do men keep ghosting me after sex? I’m a 25-year-old woman. No clue. You could’ve had a string of bad luck — and fucked a dozen (or more) shitty guys in a row — or it could be something you’re doing wrong. Even if you don’t think you’re doing anything wrong, once you’ve noticed a pattern of behavior and/or results that makes you unhappy, it’s a good idea to make some changes. Try meeting different kinds of guys in different kinds of ways, try slowing your roll/hole, etc., and take time along the way to engage in constructive introspection and make further changes/course corrections, as needed. 3. How do I stop people from falling in…
[ Read more ]
My SNA Visible Minorities 61: “An Obituary for Former Peruvian President Alberto Fujimori”: As Trump is set to take the US Presidency again, let us consider the damage wrought by mixing political machines with family ties (Nov 2, 2024) [debito.org]
Intro: Raise your glass. Another authoritarian is worm food. I’m trying not to make a habit of writing obituaries, but people who affected policymaking in Japan just keep dying. I’ve done ruminations on the deaths of Shinzo Abe, Shintaro Ishihara, Henry Scott-Stokes, and even on positive influences such as Ivan Hall and Chalmers Johnson. Now it’s Alberto Fujimori’s turn. Alberto Fujimori, who died last September aged 86, was the President of Peru from 1990 to 2000. He was the first person of Japanese ancestry to assume that office, part of the wave of Japanese immigration to North and South America more than a century ago, assimilating into Peruvian society fully enough to be elected their national leader. This sounds like a paragon of tolerance and openness to outsiders, but what Fujimori did with that power became a cautionary tale—of how an outsider, once let in, can corrupt everything. For when governmental leadership structures centralize around families, horrible things happen. And it's a cautionary tale for letting the Trumps back into power in the United States...
IPTV Piracy Blocking at the Internet’s Core Routers Undergoes Testing [TorrentFreak]
During 2010/2011, opportunity arose for Hollywood to convince the High Court in London that site-blocking would be a proportionate response to tackle a single Usenet indexing site called Newzbin.
As rightsholders offered assurances that the action would be carefully targeted and strictly limited in scope, the requested injunction was granted in October 2011. Within 14 days, ISP BT would implement blocking to prevent six million customers from accessing the site in the UK. That was a landmark win for the studios; it also laid the foundations for something bigger.
Whether the High Court would’ve acted any differently is unclear, but it certainly wasn’t informed in advance that its decision would effectively seed site-blocking on a global scale, while acting as an official seal of approval.
Not only did the injunction eventually lead to the blocking of tens of thousands of domains locally, the High Court’s decision was used to convince courts all around the world to do the same. Even in countries where blocking already assists mass censorship, governments are routinely encouraged to block more than they do already.
Of course, it’s never enough. Blocking is easily circumvented, which prompts calls for even more blocking. When faster blocking fails to produce results, preemptive and in some cases perpetual blocking is now accepted as normal. News that testing is underway, to block pirate IPTV devices by meddling with the internet’s core routers, is certainly depressing. What it definitely is not, however, is any kind of surprise.
When Elon Musk and a Brazilian judge became embroiled in a bitter dispute over what can (and cannot) be said online, Brazil’s Supreme Court ordered local ISPs to take action. Using tools developed in recent years to block pirate sites and piracy-configured set-top boxes, the entire X platform was rendered inaccessible in Brazil. When a blocking mechanism is so readily available, the likelihood of it being used to stifle dissent is just a button press away.
Urged on by movie studios in the United States and the global recording industry, Brazil has now fully embraced site-blocking as a convenient anti-piracy solution. Courts have been issuing orders with such frequency it’s now almost impossible to keep up. Details of the entities subjected to blocking aren’t for public consumption, a common trait of site-blocking systems which prevents accountability.
Yet, those who somehow gain access to the blocklist will discover it currently contains around 11,800 domains. The majority are related to piracy and at some others concern outlawed gambling platforms that don’t appear on Brazil’s official whitelist.
The whitelist approach also applies to Android-style set-top boxes. All such devices are now illegal by default, pending state certification authorizing their use.
Ensuring that only authorized platforms and devices are accessible in Brazil falls to telecoms regulator Anatel.
In an interview with Tele.Sintese, outgoing Anatel board member Artur Coimbra recalls the lack of internet infrastructure in Brazil as recently as 2010. As head of the National Broadband Plan under the Ministry of Communications, that’s something he personally addressed. For Anatel today, blocking access to pirate websites and preventing unauthorized devices from communicating online is all in a day’s work.
“The topic of combating piracy has evolved significantly. We can already see the impact of this work on customer satisfaction indicators for IPTV boxes. Pirate box brands are receiving worse reviews as time goes by,” Coimbra says.
“This means that the service is getting worse, users are becoming more dissatisfied, and as a result, one day they will no longer use that pirated service. This is a great indicator of the work that Anatel has been doing.”
While blocking a few sites, services, or devices can be managed manually, Coimbra says that automation is the preferred option.
“Today, orders to block pirate boxes are issued manually. We work on call and send the orders to the operators. The operators receive this and implement the IP blocking,” he explains.
“What we are going to do at this point is that these orders will no longer be manual, they will have a common system in which everyone [operators and providers] will have access to the system at the same time.”
While it can be argued that manual systems are prone to errors, automated systems are designed to need much less oversight. Whether that means fewer checks and balances remains to be seen. In general, however, limited oversight is considered a plus in the world of site-blocking.
After many years of putting Brazil under enormous pressure to block pirate sites, the current system involving the courts now blocks thousands of them. Yet in a typical display of incremental demands for improvement, rightsholders now want more.
In a January report to the USTR (pdf), major rightsholders urged ANATEL to “implement an effective system to tackle online piracy within Internet applications and sites based on Bill of Law #3696/2023, which was signed by the President on January 15, 2024, and sets forth an administrative site-blocking provision.”
When a country’s ISPs receive their first request to block a single pirate site, using carefully targeted, strictly limited measures under the supervision of the courts, administrative blocking of tens of thousands of sites is the long-term goal.
This often means blocking measures discussed behind closed doors between mostly commercial entities, with limited or even no oversight from local courts. This is the system preferred by major rightsholders but having inspired Brazil to do more, why should it stop there?
In broad terms, the ‘internet backbone’ is the core infrastructure that combines to form the foundations of the global internet. It is comprised of the fastest, most capable networks, and data travels via high capacity fiber-optics and advanced ‘core’ routers. Operated by commercial companies, government, military and educational institutions, effective backbone networks are critical to the functioning of the wider internet.
Considering the ongoing crisis in Italy where the Piracy Shield system has already caused considerable damage with nothing like the same level of access, the idea of messing with the backbone of the internet seems like a bad dream; now it’s wake-up time.
“The second step, which we still need to evaluate because some companies want it, and others are more hesitant, is to allow Anatel to have access to the core routers to place a direct order on the router,” Coimbra reveals, referencing IPTV blocking.
“In these cases, these companies do not need to have someone on call to receive the [blocking] order and then implement it.”
Thanks to the interviewer at Tele.Sintese pressing Coimbra after his initial response, what initially sounds like a plan for the future is suddenly revealed as already underway. Will Anatel really access core routers to block IP addresses used for piracy?
“Companies that deem it convenient can give us limited access, not full access, so that we can perform these blocks directly for non-certified and non-approved equipment. Limited access so that we can only perform these blocks remotely. It would be a kind of virtual seal,” Coimbra adds.
Recall, all devices (mostly Android devices) are illegal without certification, regardless of whether they’re configured for piracy or not. So how long before something like this is actually implemented?
“Participation is voluntary. We are still testing with some companies. So, it will take some time until it actually happens,” Coimbra says. “I can’t say [how long]. Our inspection team is carrying out tests with some operators, I can’t say which ones.”
Most likely quite surprised at the revelation, the interviewer inquires whether this is also happening in other countries.
“I don’t know. Maybe in Spain and Portugal, which are more advanced countries in this fight. But I don’t have that information,” Coimbra responds, randomly naming two countries with which Brazil has consulted extensively on blocking matters.
“It’s critical infrastructure, so it has to be done with great care, with a limited scope. That’s why it has to have the support of the company that feels comfortable,” he concludes.
Blocking with great care and with limited scope are the same arguments presented in London during 2010/11. Due to a lack of transparency, how many domains and IP addresses are currently blocked around the world is impossible to say. That means that it’s impossible to say whether it’s carried out with great care or not.
As for limited scope, Brazil doesn’t appear to be targeting all core routers at the moment. Spain and Portugal, of which nothing is known, may or may not have tested anything at all. By definition, then, the scope is indeed limited and arguing otherwise risks being portrayed as an alarmist who lacks respect for the creative industries.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Net Neutrality Heads Back To Court; Corrupt Supreme Court Could Dismantle U.S. Broadband Consumer Protection [Techdirt]
Recent Supreme Court rulings have thrown most U.S. regulatory enforcement into operational and legal chaos. The dismantling of Chevron, with the Loper Bright ruling in particular, now dictates that regulators can’t implement new rules or reforms without the explicit approval of Congress.
Two problems: one, regulators ideally have very specific subject expertise Congress doesn’t have (think about Ted Cruz trying to craft new rules managing wireless spectrum). Two, Congress has been lobbied into corrupt dysfunction, ensuring these theoretical, better, clearer laws and reforms never actually arrive.
Corporations (and the various policy tendrils employed to parrot them) have dressed Chevron up as some noble rebalancing of institutional power. In reality they’ve just taken a hatchet to what’s left of U.S. corporate oversight. Corporate lawyers know they’ve effectively lobotomized Congress. Now they want to dismantle what’s left of federal regulatory oversight. When that’s done, they’ll take aim at state power.
It gets dressed up as some sort of sophisticated ethos, but the goal for corporations has always been the absolute unchecked accumulation of unlimited wealth, free of any government intervention, regardless of the market, labor, or human cost. A lot of ink gets spilled pretending otherwise.
It’s with that backdrop that ISPs and the FCC have started squaring off in court in the latest skirmish over net neutrality. You’ll recall the Republican-stocked 6th circuit put the FCC’s restored net neutrality rules on ice last August. Last week, ISPs and the FCC started having their arguments probed by a three court panel comprised of one Trump appointee and two George W Bush appointees.
Historically, precedent has suggested that the FCC has the authority to classify/reclassify ISPs as common carriers or enact/repeal net neutrality provided they do so within the confines of the Telecom Act and use basic, supporting data. As the EFF notes, Post Loper Bright, that’s all out the window, and the goal for industry is to be able to abuse their regional telecom monopoly power without government opposition:
“These companies would love to use their oligopoly power to charge users and websites additional fees for “premium” internet access, which they can create by artificially throttling some connections and prioritizing others.”
As usual, the telecom industry is claiming that the FCC is abusing its authority to restore net neutrality. You’re to ignore that the telecom industry routinely argues that absolutely any effort by the FCC to do absolutely anything is an abuse of power. If the Sixth Court doesn’t accept the industry’s argument, it heads to the Trump-stocked Supreme Court, where they’ll likely get a sympathetic ear.
All the coverage and analysis I see focuses a bit too myopically on net neutrality. To be clear the FCC isn’t just fighting for net neutrality, it’s fighting for the right to be able to engage in consumer protection at all under current law, whether that’s the policing of unfair usage caps, trying to end racial discrimination in broadband deployment, or trying to stop your cable company from ripping you off with shoddy fees.
Post Loper Bright, telecoms are going to argue that any consumer protection effort by the FCC is an abuse of power well outside of any interpretation of the Telecom Act, and with a court system stocked with Trumpists with an active disdain for precedent, they’re likely to win their arguments more often than not. That’s going to create legal chaos, chill federal willingness to protect users, and punt most broadband consumer protection to an inconsistent platter of state consumer protection efforts.
So far the courts have repeatedly ruled that if the federal government abdicates its responsibility to protect broadband consumers, states have the legal authority to fill the void on net neutrality (or anything else). But we’ll see how long those efforts hold up once an industry (that spends $320,000 every day on lobbying) shifts the entirety of its attention to dismantling state authority.
The story playing out with net neutrality isn’t restrained to telecom. Some variant of this is going to be playing out across every consumer protection effort across every industry and issue that touches your lives.
Because consumer protection is generally deemed as boring, and the “regulatory state” has been demonized as useless for a generation, I still don’t think the public, press, or policy folks have fully fleshed out what our new reality means for everything from labor rights to public safety.
But it’s going to be anything but boring when the real-world impact of Trump’s Supreme Court Loper Bright ruling starts having cascading and potentially fatal impacts across the country over the next few years, at which point a lot of people are going to suddenly be wondering how exactly we let it get to this point, and why people didn’t speak up earlier in a bid to stop it.
Hey, Vlad, Where The Hell Is My SputnikStation Gaming Console? [Techdirt]
Those of you who are video game fanatics like me know the feeling. There’s a brand new gaming console on the way and every couple of days you do some googling for updates, release dates, or any kind of news on it. The manufacturers of these consoles often do a drip campaign when it comes to releasing information about the new console, while millions of fans hang on the edge of their seats, desperate for reveals, news, whatever we can get our hands on. And just like me, you’re probably in this headspace right now. You know a new console is coming, but all the news coming out from the source of the console is about unrelated things.
What? The Nintendo Switch 2? That’s what you thought I was talking about?
No, I want to know when the hell I’m going to get the Russian gaming console, one that was to rival PlayStation and Xbox consoles, and one that was supposed to be released over the summer.
See, after the gaming industry of the West largely pulled out of Russia, or at least restricted what Russian citizens could buy and play, Vladimir Putin ordered two Russian companies to produce a Russian rival to Sony and Microsoft gaming consoles by June. Of 2024. And that edict was delivered in April, three months before that due date.
Per a report from the Russian newspaper Kommersant, the order was handed down from the Kremlin to “consider the issue of organizing the production of stationary and portable game consoles and game consoles.” Kommersant’s sources tell the nationally distributed Russian paper that the VK Group, a major Russian tech company behind the similarly named social media service VK, will be largely responsible for the project. The production of consoles will be handled by the GS Group, which was previously known as General Satellite and is the single largest Russian developer of set-top boxes.
In the infamous words of Judge Smailes:
Unless I somehow missed it (I didn’t), Russia has yet to announce the release of the SputnikStation 1 or whatever they would call it. No word on any progress on a console that I can find, mobile or otherwise. No first party titles announced for production. No hardware specs put on display. In fact, it looks for all the world like the two companies tasked by Putin to create these consoles ignored the order all together. That’s not a great look for an iron-fisted dictator, I would think.
What one of the companies in question, VK, managed to get out the door was a website that merely lets Russian players stream Nintendo games illicitly.
The site in question is VK Play, a video game platform run by VKontakte. And VKontakte, also known as VK for short, is a Russian social media website based in St. Petersburg. VK has faced prior controversies from the massive copyright infringement that happens in it. They have subsequently faced legal threats and had to resolve these issues with their own copyright tracker and IP reporting system.
This page, translated by Google from Russian to English, clearly shows, among other things, a link to play [several Nintendo games] in the cloud. So it’s possible what’s happening here is that this website is connected to a server farm with actual Nintendo Switch consoles running these games.
Alternately, they could be running this on a server farm filled with emulators running Switch. The latter scenario might sound like the better option, since they could run Switch games on more powerful hardware. But it runs the risk of compatibility issues.
While we’ve come to expect this from the kleptocracy that is Russia, this hardly delivers on the command from Putin. This is merely more grift from a country that has openly embraced said grift.
I suppose I could continue to wait for whatever this Russian console might be, but somehow I’m having a hard time imagining a console, any console, from coming out anytime soon.
Pluralistic: How to have cancer (05 Nov 2024) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
I've got cancer but it's probably (almost certainly, really) okay. Within a very short period I will no longer have cancer (at least for now). This is the best kind of cancer to have – the kind that is caught early and treated easily – but I've learned a few things on the way that I want to share with you.
Last spring, my wife put her arm around my waist and said, "Hey, what's this on your rib?" She's a lot more observant than I am, and honestly, when was the last time you palpated your back over your left floating rib? Sure enough, there was a lump there, a kind of squishy, fatty raised thing, half a centimeter wide and about four centimeters long.
I'm a 53 year old man with a family history of cancer. My father was diagnosed with lymphatic cancer at 55. So I called my doctor and asked for an appointment to have the lump checked over.
I'm signed up with Southern California Kaiser Permanente, which is as close as you come to the Canadian medicare system I grew up under and the NHS system I lived under for more than a decade. Broadly speaking, I really like KP. Its app – while terrible – isn't as terrible as the other apps, and they've taken very good care of me for both routine things like vaccinations and checkups, and serious stuff, like a double hip replacement.
Around the time of The Lump, I'd been assigned a new primary care physician – my old one retired – and so this was my first appointment with her. I used the KP app to book it, and I was offered appointments six weeks in the future. My new doc was busy! I booked the first slot.
This was my first mistake. I didn't need to wait to see my PCP to get my lump checked over. There was really only two things that my doc was gonna do, either prod it and say, "This is an extremely common whatchamacallit and you don't need to worry" or "You should go get this scanned by a radiologist." I didn't need a specific doctor to do this. I could have ridden my bike down to the KP-affiliated Urgent Care at our local Target store and gotten an immediate referral to radiology.
Six weeks go by, and my doc kind of rolls the weird lump between her fingers and says, "You'd better go see a radiologist." I called the Kaiser appointment line and booked it that day, and a couple weeks later I had a scan.
The next day, the app notified me that radiology report was available in my electronic heath record. It's mostly technical jargon ("Echogenic areas within mass suggest fatty component but atypical for a lipoma") but certain phrases leapt out at me: "malignant masses cannot be excluded. Follow up advised."
That I understood. I immediately left my doctor a note saying that I needed a biopsy referral and set back to wait. Two days went by. I left her a voice message. Another two days went by. I sent another email. Nothing, then a weekend, then more nothing.
I called Kaiser and asked to be switched to another Primary Care Physician. It was a totally painless and quick procedure and within an hour my new doc's intake staff had reviewed my chart, called me up, and referred me for a biopsy.
This was my second mistake. When my doctor didn't get back to me within a day, I should have called up KP and raised hell, demanding an immediate surgical referral.
What I did do was call Kaiser Member Services and file a grievance. I made it very clear that when I visited my doctor, I had been very happy with the care I received, but that she and her staff were clearly totally overloaded and needed some kind of administrative intervention so that their patients didn't end up in limbo.
This is a privilege. I'm a native English speaker, and although I was worried about a serious illness, I didn't have any serious symptoms. I had the ability and the stamina to force action in the system, and my doing so meant that other patients, not so well situated as I was, would not be stuck where I had been, with fewer resources to get un-stuck.
The surgeon who did the biopsy was great. He removed my mass. It was a gross lump of yellowy-red gunk in formaldehyde. He even let me photograph it before it went to pathology (warning, gross):
https://www.flickr.com/photos/doctorow/54038418981/
They told me that the pathology would take 2-5 days. I reloaded the "test results" tab in the KP website religiously after 48 hours. Nothing was updated. After five days, I called the surgical department (I had been given a direct number to reach them in case of postsurgical infections, and made a careful note of it).
It turned out that the pathology report had been in hand for three days at that point, but it was "preliminary" pending some DNA testing. Still, it was enough that the surgeon referred me to an oncologist.
This was my third mistake: I should have called after 48 hours and asked whether the pathology report was in hand, and if not, whether they could check with pathology. However, I did something very right this time: I got a phone number to reach the specialist directly, rather than going through the Kaiser main number.
My oncologist appointment was very reassuring. The oncologist explained the kind of cancer I had ("follicular lymphoma"), the initial prognosis (very positive, though it was weird that it manifested on my rib, so far from a lymph node) and what needed to happen next (a CT/PET scan). He also walked me through the best, worst and medium-cases for treatment, based on different scan outcomes. This was really good, as it helped me think through how I would manage upcoming events – book tours, a book deadline, work travel, our family Christmas vacation plans – based on these possibilities.
The oncologist gave me a number for Kaiser Nuclear Medicine. I called them from the parking lot before leaving the Kaiser hospital and left a message for the scheduler to call me back. Then I drove home.
This was my fourth mistake. The Kaiser hospital in LA is the main hub for Kaiser Southern California, and the Nuclear Medicine department was right there. I could have walked over and made an appointment in person.
Instead, I left messages daily for the next five days, waited a weekend, then called up my oncologist's staff and asked them to intervene. I also called Kaiser Member Services and filed an "urgent grievance" (just what it sounds like) and followed up by filing a complaint with the California Patient Advocate:
In both the complaint and the grievance, I made sure to note that the outgoing message at Nuclear Medicine scheduling was giving out false information (it said, "Sorry, all lines are busy," even at 2am!). Again, I was really careful to say that the action I was hoping for was both a prompt appointment for me (my oncologist had been very insistent upon this) but also that this was a very broken system that would be letting down every patient, not me, and it should be fixed.
Within a couple hours, I had a call back from KP grievances department, and an hour after that, I had an appointment for my scan. Unfortunately, that was three weeks away (so much for my oncologist's "immediate" order).
I had the scan last week, on Hallowe'en. It was really cool. The gadget was awesome, and the rad-techs were really experienced and glad to geek out with me about the way the scanner and the radioactive glucose they infused in me interacted. They even let me take pictures of the scan visualizations:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/doctorow/54108481109/
The radiology report was incredibly efficient. Within a matter of hours, I was poring over it. I had an appointment to see the doc on November 5, but I had been reading up on the scans and I was pretty sure the news was good ("No enlarged or FDG avid lymph nodes are noted within the neck, chest, abdomen, or pelvis. No findings of FDG avid splenic or bone marrow involvement").
There was just one area of concern: "Moderate FDG uptake associated with a round 1.3 cm left inguinal lymph node." The radiologist advised the oncologist to "consider correlation with tissue sampling."
Today was my oncology appointment. For entirely separate reasons, I was unable to travel to the hospital today: I wrenched my back over the weekend and yesterday morning, it was so bad that I couldn't even scratch my nose without triggering unbearable spams. After spending all day yesterday in the ER (after being lifted out of my house on a stretcher), getting MRIs and pain meds, I'm much better off, though still unable to get out of bed for more than a few minutes at a time.
So this morning at 8:30 sharp, I started calling the oncology department and appointment services to get that appointment changed over to a virtual visit. While I spent an hour trying various non-working phone numbers and unsuccessfully trying to get Kaiser appointment services to reach my oncologist, I tried to message him through the KP app. It turns out that because he is a visiting fellow and not staff, this wasn't possible.
I eventually got through to the oncology department and had the appointment switched over. The oncology nurse told me that they've been trying for months to get KP to fix the bug where fellows can't be messaged by patients. So as soon as I got off the phone with her, I called member services and filed another grievance. Why bother, if I'd gotten what I needed? Same logic as before: if you have the stamina and skills to demand a fix to a broken system, you have a duty to use them.
I got off the phone with my oncologist about an hour ago. It went fine. I'm going to get a needle biopsy on that one suss node. If it comes back positive, I'll get a few very local, very low-powered radiation therapy interventions, whose worst side effect will be "a mild sunburn over a very small area." If it's negative, we're done, but I'll get quarterly CT/PET scans to be on the safe side.
Before I got off the phone, I made sure to get the name of the department where the needle biopsy would be performed and a phone number. The order for the biopsy just posted to my health record, and now I'm redialing the department to book in that appointment (I'm not waiting around for them to call me).
While I redial, a few more lessons from my experience. First, who do you tell? I told my wife and my parents, because I didn't want to go through a multi-week period of serious anxiety all on my own. Here, too, I made a mistake: I neglected to ask them not to tell anyone else. The word spread a little before I put a lid on things. I wanted to keep the circle of people who knew this was going on small, until I knew what was what. There's no point in worrying other people, of course, and my own worry wasn't going to be helped by having to repeat, "Well, it looks pretty good, but we won't know until I've had a scan/my appointment/etc."
Next, how to manage the process: this is a complex, multi-stage process. It began with a physician appointment, then a radiologist, then a pathology report, then surgery, then another pathology report, then an oncologist, then a scan, then another radiologist, and finally, the oncologist again.
That's a lot of path-dependent, interdepartmental stuff, with a lot of ways that things can fall off the rails (when my dad had cancer at my age, there was a big gap in care when one hospital lost a fax from another hospital department and my folks assumed that if they hadn't heard back, everything was fine).
So I have been making extensive use of a suspense file, where I record what I'm waiting for, who is supposed to provide it, and when it is due. Though I had several places where my care continuity crumbled some, there would have been far more if I hadn't done this:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/10/26/one-weird-trick/#todo
The title of this piece is "how to have cancer," but what it really boils down to is, "things I learned from my own cancer." As I've noted, I'm playing this one on the easiest setting: I have no symptoms, I speak and write English fluently, I am computer literate and reasonably capable of parsing medical/technical jargon. I have excellent insurance.
If any of these advantages hadn't been there, things would have been a lot harder. I'd have needed these lessons even more.
To recap them:
Get a direct phone number for every specialist you are referred to (add this to your phone book); call them immediately after the referral to get scheduled (better yet, walk over to their offices and schedule the appointment in person);
Get a timeframe as to when your results are due and when you can expect to get a follow-up; call the direct number as soon as the due-date comes (use calendar reminders for this);
If you can't get a call back, an appointment, or a test result in a reasonable amount of time (use a suspense file to track this), lodge a formal complaint with your insurer/facility, and consider filing with the state regulator;
Think hard about who you're going to tell, and when, and talk over your own wishes about who they can tell, and when.
As you might imagine, I've spent some time talking to my parents today as these welcome results have come in. My mother is (mostly) retired now, and she's doing a lot of volunteer work on end-of-life care. She recommends a book called Hope for the Best, Plan for the Rest: 7 Keys for Navigating a Life-Changing Diagnosis:
https://pagetwo.com/book/hope-for-the-best-plan-for-the-rest/
I haven't read it, but it looks like it's got excellent advice, especially for people who lack the self-advocacy capabilities and circumstances I'm privileged with. According to my mom, who uses it in workshops, there's a lot of emphasis on the role that families and friends can play in helping someone whose physical, mental and/or emotional health are compromised.
So, that's it. I've got cancer. No cancer is good. This cancer is better than most. I am almost certainly fine. Every medical professional I've dealt with, and all the administrative support staff at Kaiser, have been excellent. Even the doc who dropped the ball on my biopsy was really good to deal with – she was just clearly drowning in work. The problems I had are with the system, not the people. I'm profoundly grateful to all of them for the help they gave me, the interest and compassion they showed, and the clarity and respect they demonstrated in my dealings with them.
I'm also very grateful to my wife, my parents, and my boss at EFF, all of whom got the news early and demonstrated patience, love, and support that helped in my own dark hours over the past couple of months.
I hope you're well. But you know, everyone gets something, eventually. When you find yourself mired in a broken system full of good people, work the system – for yourself and for the people who come behind you. Take records. Make calls.
Look after yourself.
The End Of Independent Publishing And Giant Freakin Robot https://www.giantfreakinrobot.com/ent/independent-ends.html (h/t Duke)
Steve Jobs Killed Music DRM – Why Not Movies? https://unbound.news/jobs-killed-music-drm-why-not-movies-2/ (h/t Terry)
#20yrsago Brands aren’t worth as much as we thought https://web.archive.org/web/20041107050607/https://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.11/brands_pr.html
#15yrsago EU kills 3-strikes proposal (yay!) but all is not well (eek!) https://www.laquadrature.net/en/2009/11/05/Europe-only-goes-half-way-in-protecting-internet-rights/
#15yrsago The Secret Science Alliance and the Copycat Crook: inspirational kids’ science comic https://memex.craphound.com/2009/11/05/the-secret-science-alliance-and-the-copycat-crook-inspirational-kids-science-comic/
#10yrsago EFF leadership change: Cindy Cohn to head organization https://www.eff.org/press/releases/cindy-cohn-become-effs-new-executive-director-2015
#10yrsago 1980 D&D ad asserts that RPGs are woman-friendly https://twitter.com/JonBolds/status/518044059240124417
#10yrsago Chip-and-PIN cards let nearby fraudsters steal $1M at a time https://www.wired.com/2014/11/chip-n-pin-foreign-currency-vulnerability/
#5yrsago After decades of corporate theft, Spinal Tap is finally getting paid by Universal https://variety.com/2019/biz/news/spinal-tap-universal-music-settle-copyright-dispute-1203393300/
#5yrsago Jeannette Ng was right: John W Campbell was a fascist https://locusmag.com/2019/11/cory-doctorow-jeannette-ng-was-right-john-w-campbell-was-a-fascist/
#5yrsago “Christian” hospital charges its own nurse $900,000 for her premature baby https://www.propublica.org/article/how-one-employer-stuck-a-new-mom-with-a-bill-for-her-premature-baby
#5yrsago When the company that made your prosthetic feet won’t repair them https://memex.craphound.com/2019/11/05/when-the-company-that-made-your-prosthetic-feet-wont-repair-them/
#5yrsago The Porch of Doom: a Halloween haunt that sends visitors to a billionaires’ Mars where they are expected to do all the dirty work https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KpfVhfty_4I
#5yrsago The inspiring story of how Cloudflare defeated a patent troll and broke the patent-trolling business-model https://blog.cloudflare.com/the-project-jengo-saga-how-cloudflare-stood-up-to-a-patent-troll-and-won/
#5yrsago Lynda Barry’s “Making Comics” is one of the best, most practical books ever written about creativity https://memex.craphound.com/2019/11/05/lynda-barrys-making-comics-is-one-of-the-best-most-practical-books-ever-written-about-creativity/
#1yrago A link-clump demands a linkdump https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/05/variegated/#nein
International Cooperative Alliance (New Delhi), Nov 24
https://icanewdelhi2024.coop/welcome/pages/Programme
ACM Conext-2024 Workshop on the Decentralization of the Internet (Los Angeles), Dec 9
https://conferences.sigcomm.org/co-next/2024/#!/din
IA et “merdification“ d’internet: peut-on envisager un nouveau web? (Remote), Dec 12
https://www.unige.ch/comprendre-le-numerique/conferences-publiques1/cycle-5-2024-2025/ia-et-merdification-dinternet-peut-envisager-un-nouveau-web/
ISSA-LA Holiday Celebration keynote (Los Angeles), Dec 18
https://issala.org/event/issa-la-december-18-dinner-meeting/
Cloudfest (Europa Park), Mar 17-20
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Maximum Iceland Scenario – Data Caps, 3rd Party Android Stores, Nuclear Amazon (This Week in Tech)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5MkCwktKz0
Speciale intervista a Cory Doctorow (Digitalia)
https://digitalia.fm/744/
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org). Signed, personalized copies at Dark Delicacies (https://www.darkdel.com/store/p3007/Pre-Order_Signed_Copies%3A_The_Lost_Cause_HB.html#/)
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com. Signed copies at Dark Delicacies (US): and Forbidden Planet (UK): https://forbiddenplanet.com/385004-red-team-blues-signed-edition-hardcover/.
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
"Attack Surface": The third Little Brother novel, a standalone technothriller for adults. The Washington Post called it "a political cyberthriller, vigorous, bold and savvy about the limits of revolution and resistance." Order signed, personalized copies from Dark Delicacies https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1840/Available_Now%3A_Attack_Surface.html
"How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism": an anti-monopoly pamphlet analyzing the true harms of surveillance capitalism and proposing a solution. https://onezero.medium.com/how-to-destroy-surveillance-capitalism-8135e6744d59?sk=f6cd10e54e20a07d4c6d0f3ac011af6b) (signed copies: https://www.darkdel.com/store/p2024/Available_Now%3A__How_to_Destroy_Surveillance_Capitalism.html)
"Little Brother/Homeland": A reissue omnibus edition with a new introduction by Edward Snowden: https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250774583; personalized/signed copies here: https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1750/July%3A__Little_Brother_%26_Homeland.html
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Unauthorized Bread: a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2025
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Election Night Coverage [The Status Kuo]
Hi, folks! I’ll be with my team tonight at The Big Picture with live updates and commentary throughout the evening (at least until reasonable!). If you’d like to join me there and aren’t yet a subscriber, you can join for free at the button below. We of course would be grateful if you would like to become a paid supporter of our work!
We should be online around 7:15 p.m. after polls close in Georgia. You’ll get an email inviting you to join the conversation in the comments section. Community is important! See you there.
Let’s win this!
Jay
Common Sense Says She Wins [The Status Kuo]
Poll after poll blares the same message on repeat: It’s a tight race, basically a tie, and it will come down to a few thousand people in a few battleground states.
Poll numbers are easy to message, but they can be deceptive. The polls missed in 2016, 2020 and 2022 after all, and yet many still hang on them as gospel, or at least allow their steady drumbeat to shape national narratives and rattle collective nerves.
In a way, it’s better that we fight and mobilize like we’re the underdogs, or that the race is at best tied. Such a position drives more donations, more volunteer sign-ups and greater urgency leading up to Election Day.
But it does come with a big psychic cost. As one voter put it so succinctly: “I love that we’re all like YES KAMALA but we also have 2016 traumala.”
It can be a bit lonely—and it honestly takes a lot of checking myself for bias—to assure readers that things are going to be fine. But I believe they will be. As I like to say, I remain confident that if we show up, we win. Further, I’m confident that if they don’t show up (and they haven’t so far), we also win. Indeed, it would take a lot more of them showing up today to knock me off my soapbox.
I put a list like this together earlier in the election cycle, but now that we’re here together on Election Day, I wanted to lay out my updated thinking. Today’s piece walks through ten reasons why I remain cautiously optimistic and would much rather be sitting with the Harris campaign celebrating than with the Trump campaign preparing to challenge the valid results tonight.
So here goes, my ten reasons.
1. The Gender Gap
If you’ve been following my writings here and in The Big Picture, you know that I’m all about the gender gap. I believe the Dobbs decision, which ended the once nationally protected right to abortion, remains the defining feature of this election, as it was in the midterms and most special elections since 2022.
In the early vote so far, based on demographic data that includes the gender of early voters, there’s a 10 point gender gap in battleground states. That gap is very similar to the last two elections in which Democrats won in 2020 and 2022. But remember, even among women voters, the gap between Harris and Trump is wider than prior contests.
Otherwise put, there are already far more women voting than men, and among those women voters, there are a lot more women voting for the Democrat than usual. Some surveys are showing a high teens to 20 percent gap.
To overcome this, the gap within male voters—one that favors Trump over Harris—would have to be much bigger. But it isn’t. It’s actually quite a bit smaller, with around a dozen points difference.
So how does this gap play out today on Election Day? Let’s take a look at North Carolina, a state that is hotly contested. Here’s the early vote so far in 2024, compared to the final vote in 2020 and 2022, broken down by gender:
You can see that the gender gap so far is slightly bigger than the final gap in 2020. And we know that a lot more of those 2.3 million women who have already voted are choosing the Democrat than they have in elections past.
Let’s assume that on Election Day, we get to nearly the same total (5.5 million) voters overall, which looks reasonable to conclude. We’re at 4.24 million currently, so only around 1.26 million more to come in. North Carolinians like to vote early!
If trends hold, we’re looking at around 640,000 more women and 600,000 more men yet to cast their votes, if 2020 is any guide. Again, that’s still more women than men left to vote, and the polling says women are breaking for Harris more strongly than men are breaking for Trump.
Unless we see an unexpectedly huge surge of male voters—enough to swamp the number of women voters still remaining—and if women in North Carolina are indeed as angry about abortion rights and the GOP’s misogyny as women in other states, that spells trouble for Trump.
This same dynamic will play out in many of the other swing states, and that gender gap could, and should, prove too wide for Trump to overcome.
2. Older women voters
I highlighted an important piece of data on Sunday when the Selzer poll out of Iowa came out: Among women over 75, who are the most reliable voters out there, Harris is crushing Trump in Iowa, 63 to 28. That’s more than two to one in favor of Harris. It’s one of the key reasons Selzer showed Harris actually leading Trump in Iowa, which sounds insane but that’s what Selzer’s survey showed fairly consistently day to day over the length of the poll.
Trump won Iowa by over eight points in 2020, so this result is a 12 point swing to the left. But even a five point swing would be catastrophic; Selzer could be off by far more than she’s ever been off before, and it’s still bad news for Trump.
Plus, Selzer isn’t the only pollster to find that older women voters in the Great Plains are breaking heavily for Harris. As election analyst Prof. Michael McDonald observed, the Kansas Speaks poll, taken in late October, also showed a flashing warning sign for Trump, with women 65 and older going for Harris by a margin of 53 to 38 percent. Again, this was one of the reasons that Trump was only winning that state by five, when he won it by 14 in 2020. That’s a nine point swing to the left.
The Kansas Speaks is a small sample poll, and Selzer could well be an outlier this year, so I don’t want us to get too far out over our skis. But it would not surprise me in the least if the polling industry, which is mostly male, somehow missed one of the biggest stories that one of the few female pollsters actually caught: Older women have had it with Trump and are turning out in droves to punish him for the Dobbs decision.
3. Enthusiasm favors Democrats
One of the few things election watchers agree on is that 2024 is a “turnout” election—meaning, the side that has more of its voters take the time and effort to vote will carry the election. Another way to ask the same questions is this: Which side is showing more enthusiasm?
We have some clues that are worth parsing. As Dave Wasserman of Cook Political noted, a recent NBC poll sought to measure voter enthusiasm about the election by asking people to rate their election interest on a scale of 1 to 10. They’ve been doing this since at least 2008, and the results this year are telling.
A full 10 percent of men fewer would rate their interest in the election this year as a 9 or a 10, compared to 2020. Women have slipped only three percent. You can see that gender gap opening up in those different numbers. In fact, men are the least interested they’ve been in this election since NBC started tracking this going back to 2008.
Remember, the GOP has more men as a percentage of its composition than the Democrats do. Men make up some 48 percent of the GOP, while comprising only around 40 percent of the Democratic party. Somehow I don’t think that drop off in male interest is coming primarily at the expense of the Democrats, though it is important to note that there is also a drop off in interest among minority voters and young people relative to prior elections.
But how do the two parties compare, head to head? Gallup has been polling party enthusiasm for a long time, and the numbers also confirm that Democrats have the edge. In the latest survey, Democrats were 10 points higher than Republicans in enthusiasm at levels comparable to 2008 when Obama was running for president:
Note that this wasn’t the case just a few months ago, when Biden was atop the ticket. The gains and current gap are because of Kamala Harris:
I should note that Trump has had trouble filling his rallies in the battleground states and people are leaving them early—something that irks him to no end. Meanwhile, Harris is breaking records and drawing capacity crowds. It’s anecdotal, but the vibe is there for voters to see. And images of bored Republicans in half empty rallies are unlikely to inspire huge surges in voting today.
4. The favorability factor
Kamala Harris did something quite remarkable and unprecedented: She went from a net double digit negative favorability rating to positive, all in just a few weeks. Here’s a chart of her surprising, meteoric rise, where she went into positive territory—and stayed there—around September 22, according to 538 polling.
Meanwhile, Trump has remained in negative territory. A recent Marist poll put the two candidates a fairly wide 11 points apart on favorability:
CNN analyst Harry Enten noted that the less popular candidate has only won once over the more popular candidate out of the last 17 contests. (Of course, to be fair, that last time was Donald Trump back in 2016, but Hillary Clinton herself was also quite unpopular at the time, while Harris is in positive territory.)
5. The Latino vote
We may look back at this election cycle and point to the hate-fest at Madison Square Garden as a turning point. That was when the Trump campaign invited insult comics and racist, misogynistic jerks to become the face of the GOP with just weeks to go in the race.
The blowback from the Latino community has been strong, and it is shifting undecided voters. These voters may be struggling financially, and they may unfairly blame Biden / Harris for that, but they won’t stand by while being insulted and demeaned.
As I wrote yesterday, a Univision poll made clear that the ugliness and racism was breaking through to Latino voters:
“Over half of the Latinos surveyed indicated that the rally remarks influenced their likelihood of supporting Trump, making them more likely to vote for Harris,” the survey concluded. A full 64 percent of Latinos polled now support Harris, with just 30 percent for Trump. Among those polled, 69 percent felt the remarks were more racist than humorous, with just 17 percent saying they were just jokes and not serious. And 71 percent of Puerto Ricans surveyed believed that the remarks indicate racism within the Trump camp, even if the words were meant as jokes.
Puerto Ricans in particular were offended by Trump’s refusal to apologize for the “floating island of garbage” insult delivered by a comic who opened for him that night. Instead, Trump donned a garbage man outfit himself, which many Puerto Ricans felt was him doubling down, even if his intent was to mock Biden’s gaffe over his supporters being “garbage.” There are some 450,000 Puerto Ricans in Pennsylvania alone.
It certainly does not help the GOP that last night, Republican Vice Presidential nominee JD Vance referred to Kamala Harris directly as “garbage,” underscoring the misogyny and racism that many already believe infects the GOP.
6. The youth vote
Ever since the midterm elections of 2018 and the mobilization by the Parkland students, Gen Z has turned out in historically high numbers for young voters. Their presence in the battlegrounds in 2022 was enough to offset a Republican same-day election surge and keep the red wave from washing ashore.
While some polling suggested that young voters had soured on the Democratic party, with many pointing to the war in Gaza and the Biden Administration’s support for Israel as the cause, broader polls, especially those by the gold standard Harvard Youth Survey, showed that Harris continued to enjoy a 28 point advantage among likely voters under 30.
Based on early vote projections, the youth vote this year will likely meet or beat organizer’s targets, according to the Gen Z-led Voters of Tomorrow. That is especially evident in the Blue Wall battleground and Southern Swing states:
I should add that the polls rarely catch any of the momentum created by new voter registrations, which have been favoring Democrats ever since Harris announced her candidacy (and with a bit of help from pop star Taylor Swift).
Reports this morning already confirm long lines to vote across universities in the battleground states. It certainly does not look like young voters are sitting this one out. We’ll have to await the final numbers, of course.
7. Closing weak v. closing strong
I wrote about this at length yesterday, so I won’t spend much time here.
There is near uniform agreement in the media that Trump’s final weeks have been anemic and disorganized, filled with dark messaging, the airing of past grievances and old-fashioned fear mongering.
By contrast, Harris has drawn huge crowds with her message of hope and unity with a focus upon the future. This has the effect of making her the “change” candidate, even though ironically she is already in the current administration.
For late-deciding voters, this difference in vibe can mean everything, since they tend to be lower information and lower propensity. If Harris feels like a winner and Trump feels like a loser, if she feels up while he feels down, the undecideds will break her way. Her campaign feels it is now positioned to win those undecideds, and it sees a path to victory in each of the seven battleground states.
8. The Ground Game
We will look back upon this election and likely have as another takeaway that the ground game really does matter. And the Harris campaign has been running a supercharged one based on traditional door-knocking, phone banking and getting out the vote.
The numbers have been astronomical. In Pennsylvania this past Saturday, the campaign knocked on 807,000 doors. Vice President Harris even went to visit a home herself in Reading, Pennsylvania.
In addition, the campaign’s volunteers made 940,000 calls and knocked on 215,000 doors in Wisconsin, with another 721,000 phone calls with 256,000 doors knocked in Michigan.
The Trump campaign outsourced its ground game to organizations with little to no experience running such an operation, including Elon Musk’s America PAC and Charlie Kirk’s Turning Point USA. Those groups completely dropped the ball, and the GOP has been basically nowhere on the ground in the swing states.
The personal touch of a door knock can increase the probability that a voter takes the time to vote, sometimes as much as 20 percent. In a tight race, every vote is going to count, and the Harris team has left nothing on the field.
9. Trump has bet on young male voters
It was a strategic gamble. Trump knew he had to find new voters to make up ground from 2020, where he had lost the election. He needed to find new voters. But rather than move to the center and moderate his views, Trump tacked right, and hard. He sought to blunt the effect of his misogyny, the loss of abortion rights, and his status as an adjudicated sexual assaulter by pursuing the young male vote, often seeking support from men who are terminally online.
His pick of JD Vance as a new voice for a more hardline masculine right may have energized guys in game room chats and the X platform, but it also has turned off women by the millions.
And now that early voting is over, it is now clear that Trump’s strategy isn’t working, at least so far. Despite all of Trump’s appearances with right-wing podcasters, streamers and fans of extreme sports, young men seem to have taken a collective yawn to the election. Instead, young women have outpaced young men in early voting and first time voting. The early voting numbers are most striking among young minority voters, with higher turnout from this group and especially from young women of color.
Is it possible these men will make their way in overwhelming numbers to the polls today? Sure. But it’s just not very likely.
10. About those polls
I’ve written fairly extensively about how polls are unreliable, can only show movement over time, and can’t accurately predict the outcome because they are often more a reflection of the pollsters’ views than of real voters.
But I’m going to go off on them again here.
Many assume that the job of a pollster is to survey voters off the registration rolls, record the results, then tell us those results. But that’s not how it works. Instead, they massage those numbers by applying baseline assumptions about the probable make up of the electorate. Lately, these assumptions have drawn heavily from past elections, probably in a desperate attempt not to undercount the Trump voters once again.
I personally believe they have undercounted Harris support as a result.
It is wrong to assume 2024 will be like 2020 or 2016, or even 2022. This election in 2024 will be about what the voters think today. And to “squish” the figures into molds from past elections, which is what the vast majority of polls do, is a cowardly disservice. (Incidentally, Ann Selzer does not do this with her polling in Iowa.)
If you begin from the presumption that 2024’s electorate will look like 2020 and then force it into that mold in your final figures, of course you will get a more or less tied race… because 2020 was more or less tied, especially in the tight battleground races.
But what if—and hear me out—there was something huge that happened between 2020 and 2024, something that changed the electorate in very fundamental ways? A change that dissipated the red wave in 2022 and drove victories in statewide referendums for progressives in Kansas and Ohio? One that caused purple Wisconsin to elect a progressive state supreme court justice by 11 points or could even flip Iowa blue this year?
That thing, of course, was the loss of abortion rights in June of 2022, driven by the GOP-dominated Supreme Court with three appointees by Donald Trump. Ever since the Dobbs decision, Democrats have been outperforming their 2020 numbers soundly in special elections. But it’s not really accounted for in the polling today. No one is squishing their electoral models to account for abortion.
This past week was even more embarrassing for the polling industry. As the clock wound down on the election, most of them “herded” toward the center, with nearly all claiming a tied race nationally and in nearly every battleground. That is statistically nearly impossible, given the way polls are supposed to work. It now seems evident the pollsters are tweaking their assumptions to bring their polls into alignment with other polls so as not to stand out.
Nate Cohn of the New York Times arrived at the same conclusion. In a moment of candor, Cohn said recently of the industry,
Perhaps the very best reason to think the polls might underestimate Kamala Harris this cycle is simply that many pollsters are so concerned—understandably—about underestimating Mr. Trump.
It’s hard to overstate how traumatic the 2016 and 2020 elections were for many pollsters. For some, another underestimate of Mr. Trump could be a major threat to their business and their livelihood. For the rest, their status and reputations are on the line. If they underestimate Mr. Trump a third straight time, how can their polls be trusted again? It is much safer, whether in terms of literal self-interest or purely psychologically, to find a close race than to gamble on a clear Harris victory.
Forgive me if I have zero sympathy for an industry that appears to be working out its own trauma from years past by creating new trauma for the U.S. electorate today.
I know I’m out on a bit of a limb here saying the polls could be way off from the final tally after today. It could be that we really do see a repeat of 2020 and that it once again comes down to a few thousand votes in a few battleground states. We should prepare for that possibility, which is why the ground game matters.
But I would not be surprised if this race gets called far earlier than most predict, with Harris taking a commanding lead in key states that will get her to 270 Electoral College Votes. I’ve listed nine reasons above to stack up against the polls and the polling averages, and we’ll have to see who is right in the end. I’m ready to admit the pollsters had it right if this really is a nailbiter, but I feel more confident in the bigger picture and bigger forces at play.
I also believe that people who love democracy, who love freedom, and who see both of these values as existentially threatened by Donald Trump, understand the assignment far better than those who see this as just another election. That has me very hopeful that these are the folks who will turn out today to stand up against the threat and beat it back into the ground where it belongs.
It’s been a very long and tough road to get to this day. I am so very grateful to this community for all your encouragement and support of my daily writings. It is no small matter that, together, we raised over half a million dollars for the Harris Victory Fund and for tight Senate and House races. I am humbled by your contributions and buoyed by your determination and resolve.
Now let’s go win this.
Jay
Election Conspiracy-Mongers’ ‘Election Integrity’ App Flaw Reveals Voter Suppression Plan (Along With User Data) [Techdirt]
Here’s a final election day story. This time, it’s about an “election integrity” app being used by MAGA folks to spread absolute nonsense about the election, but also to confess their own illegal voter suppression schemes. And thanks to their crap security, it’s now being reported.
At a time when the facts-optional GOP likes to flip everything on its head (calling legitimate reporting they dislike “fake news,” or basic editorial decision making “election interference”), they’re now using “election integrity” as the term to mean “here’s how we best violate free and fair elections.”
The group True the Vote, which has been behind a ton of election conspiracy theories, created an “election integrity app” called “VoteAlert” that they encouraged the MAGA faithful to use to report any fraudulent election activity they came across. True the Vote is the group behind the ridiculously stupid “2000 Mules” conspiracy theory film (you know, the one widely promoted by Trump loyalists, but which its very MAGA publishing company later felt the need to retract, remove, and apologize for?)
Yet, as Wired points out in an article today, the app’s security was so piss poor that it exposed all sorts of private info of those using the app, including emails and the submitted comments by users. That allowed Wired’s excellent security reporter Dhruv Mehrotra to take a look at what people were using the app for, and apparently, “committing actual voter fraud” was on the list:
In a since-deleted VoteAlert post reviewed by WIRED, a user wrote: “I’m probably going to be fired for this but I was hired by the Riverside County Registrar of Voters as an Election Officer in Hemet, CA. Since I’m in charge at this polling center, I’m asking for citizenship ID of anyone that looks suspiciously like they’re not here legally.”
The post went on to suggest that the Riverside County Sheriff’s office wouldn’t intervene in her scheme. “It’s just a drop in the bucket but I’m going to do my part to stop election fraud,” she wrote. “Wish me luck”
WIRED traced the email associated with the post to a California woman who describes herself as a person who is “FED UP with all the bullsh*t,” according to one app profile. “You’re only getting the hard, smack-your-face TRUTH from me.”
That is all very much illegal. You can argue over voter ID laws, but the fact is that California does not have one and it’s against the law to check citizenship status in California. And, no, this does not mean that non-citizens are voting. There are other systems that root that out, and what non-citizen is going to risk their presence in the country to vote?
Once again, it seems that every time we hear about claims of “voter fraud,” they seem to be coming from the MAGA world, accusing the Democrats of engaging in it. However, the very, very, very minimal number of cases of actual voter fraud being discovered almost always show it actually being conducted by MAGA folks who have been lied to and misled by Trump and others into believing the Democrats are doing it, thereby justifying their own illegal activities.
2nd Circuit Appeals Court Says Gmail Terms Of Service Don’t Negate 4th Amendment Protections [Techdirt]
Bad people make good case law. That’s just how our criminal justice system works. And so it is here in this decision, which flows from criminal charges that, in turn, flow from proactive efforts meant to thwart the sharing of child sexual abuse material.
In this case, Ryan Maher was convicted of CSAM possession. Having been informed of the chain of events leading to his arrest, Maher challenged the warrant used by law enforcement, claiming it was tainted by previous unconstitutional intrusions.
Like almost every service provider, Google checks users’ emails for hash values indicating known CSAM images. It passes these hashes on to NCMEC (National Center for Missing and Exploited Children), which then decides whether or not to pass this information on to law enforcement. Google is also welcome to pass on this information on its own — something it informs email users it might do if it detects illegal content.
That’s what happened here, as the Second Circuit recounts at the opening of its decision [PDF]. But the government overstepped when it decided to perform a further search without acquiring a warrant. (h/t Volokh Conspiracy)
No one at Google visually examined the contents of the Maher file before reporting it to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (the “NCMEC”) as “apparent child pornography.” Rather, that report was based on a computer-conducted algorithmic search of the Maher file, which identified a match between the hash value for the image contained in the Maher file (the “Maher file image”) and the hash value of an image (the “original file image”) that Google had earlier located in another file (the “original file”). Thus, when law enforcement authorities visually examined the contents of the Maher file, they went beyond the scope of Google’s private algorithmic search in that they learned more than the hash value for the Maher file image; they learned exactly what was depicted in that image.
This extra step prior to obtaining a warrant meant the government couldn’t claim it was just the innocent beneficiary of a private search. Google didn’t actually view the image that matched NCMEC’s hash values. It actually wasn’t viewed by anyone until investigators opened the file to verify its contents.
As the court goes on to note, the original tip might have provided probable cause, but New York State Police investigators should have used this probable cause to obtain a warrant, rather than deciding it didn’t need to obtain a warrant until after it had performed its own search.
In these circumstances, Google’s hash match may well have established probable cause for a warrant to allow police to conduct a visual examination of the Maher file. But, for reasons stated in this opinion, we conclude that neither the private search doctrine relied on by the district court nor the Google Terms of Service agreement cited by the government authorized the police to open the Maher file and to conduct such a visual examination of its contents without a warrant.
Normally, courts will just allow the “private search” assumption to carry the day and refuse to suppress unlawful searches performed by the government. In this case, that argument falls flat, mainly because the government — for whatever reason — chose to attack the suppression motion from a rather novel angle.
The government didn’t argue there was no reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of Maher’s emails — an argument that would have persuaded no judge anywhere, even if Maher disclaimed ownership of the CSAM image discovered in his email account. Instead, it pitched its own interpretation of the Third Party Doctrine: one that posits that because Google informs users the company might “review content” in Gmail accounts, the government is free to do pretty much the same thing without a warrant.
Not so, says the Appeals Court. What someone may agree to share with a private company to utilize a service is not a blank check for similar intrusion by the government. The court doesn’t go so far as to draw a bright line, but it says enough to indicate the existing lines are bright enough the government should know better than to cross them.
We need not here draw any categorical conclusions about how terms of service affect a user’s
expectation of privacy as against the government. On this appeal, it suffices that we conclude that Google’s particular Terms of Service—which advise that Google “may” review users’ content—did not extinguish Maher’s reasonable expectation of privacy in that content as against the government.[…]
Nor is a different conclusion compelled by the fact that Google’s Terms of Service also warn users that the company “will share personal information outside of Google if . . . reasonably necessary to[] . . . [m]eet any applicable law.” (emphasis added). As noted supra at 7 n.5, federal law requires electronic service providers such as Google to file a report with the NCMEC when they have “actual knowledge” of child pornography on their platforms. 18 U.S.C. § 2258A(a)(1)(A), (B). But the same law specifically does not require Google “affirmatively [to] search, screen, or scan” for such material. Not surprisingly then, Google does not tell users that it will engage in the sort of content review for illegality that could trigger disclosure obligations under § 2258A(a)(1)(A), (B). Rather, it tells users only that it “may” engage in such review. Indeed, in the next sentence, Google emphasizes that it “does not necessarily . . . review content,” and tells users, “please don’t assume that we do.” (emphasis added). Such qualified language is hardly a per se signal to Google users that they can have no expectation of privacy in their emails, even as against the government.
Which is long way of basically stating what should be considered obvious: that agreeing to share things with private company third parties is not nearly the same thing as agreeing to share the same things with the government at any point the government desires to access content or communications. And yet, that’s pretty much how the Third Party Doctrine operates. Fortunately, it has never been so broadly read to cover private communications, but that definitely appears to be the argument the New York State Police tried to advance while pushing back against this challenge of its warrantless search.
It probably shouldn’t have bothered. The search is saved by the “good faith exception” and the conviction remains in place. But even though none of that does much for Maher, it does at least make it clear to law enforcement operating in the Second Circuit where the Third Party Doctrine ends and the Fourth Amendment begins. And that dividing line can’t simply be ignored because somewhere in the ToS boilerplate users are “informed” (lol) the company they’re entrusting their communications with may occasionally share these with the government.
No, Section 230 Doesn’t ‘Circumvent’ The First Amendment – But This Harvard Article Circumvents Reality [Techdirt]
When it comes to Section 230, we’ve seen a parade of embarrassingly wrong takes over the years, all sharing one consistent theme: the authors confidently opine on the law despite clearly not understanding it. Each time I think we’ve hit bottom with the most ridiculously wrong take, along comes another challenger.
This week’s is a doozy.
I don’t want to come off as harsh in critiquing these articles, but it’s exasperating. It’s very possible for the people writing these articles to actually educate themselves. And in this case in particular, at least two of the authors have published something similar before and have been called out for their factual errors, and have chosen to double down, rather than educate themselves. So if the tone of this piece sounds angry, it’s exasperation that the authors are now deliberately choosing to misrepresent reality.
I’ve written twice about Professor Allison Stanger, both times in regards to her extraordinarily confused misunderstandings about Section 230 and how it intersects with the First Amendment. It appears that she has not taken the opportunity in the interim to learn literally anything about the law. Instead, she is now taking (1) an association with Harvard’s prestigious Kennedy School to further push utter batshit nonsense disconnected from reality, and (2) sullying others’ reputations in the process.
I first wrote about her when she teamed up with infamous (and frequently wrong) curmudgeon Jaron Lanier to write a facts-optional screed against Section 230 in Wired magazine that got so much factually wrong that it was embarrassing. The key point that Stanger/Lanier claimed was that Section 230 somehow gave the internet an ad-based business model, which is not even remotely close to true. Among other things, that article confused Section 230 with the DMCA (two wholly different laws) and then tossed in a bunch of word salad about “data dignity,” a meaningless phrase.
Even weirder, the beginning of that article seems to complain that not enough content is moderated (too much bad content!), but by the end they’re complaining that too much good content is moderated. Somehow, the article suggests, if we got rid of Section 230, exactly the right kinds of content would be moderated, and somehow advertising would no longer be bad and harassment would disappear. Then they say websites should only moderate based on the First Amendment which would forbid sites from moderating a bunch of the things the article said needed moderating. I dunno, man. It made no sense.
Somehow, Stanger leveraged that absolute nonsense into a chance to appear before a congressional committee, where she falsely claimed that decentralized social media apps were the same thing as decentralized autonomous organizations. They’re wholly different things. She also told the committee that Wikipedia wouldn’t be sued without Section 230 because “their editing is done by humans who have first amendment rights.”
Which is quite an incredibly confusing thing to say. Humans with First Amendment rights still get sued all the time.
Anyway, Stanger and Lanier are back with a new article, this time published at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation. Once again, they are completely and totally getting Section 230 twisted around to make it unrecognizable from reality.
Unfortunately, this time, they’ve dragged along Audrey Tang as a co-author. I’ve met Tang and I have tremendous respect for her. As digital minister of Taiwan, she did some amazing things to use the internet for good in the world of civic tech. She’s also spoken about the importance of the internet on free speech in Taiwan, and the importance of the open World Wide Web on democracy in Taiwan. She’s very thoughtful about the intersection of technology, speech, and law.
But she is not an expert on Section 230 or the First Amendment, and it shows in this piece.
At least this article starts with a recognition of the First Amendment, but it even gets the very basics of that wrong:
The First Amendment is often misunderstood as permitting unlimited speech. In reality, it has never protected fraud, libel, or incitement to violence. Yet Section 230, in its current form, effectively shields these forms of harmful speech when amplified by algorithmic systems. It serves as both an unprecedented corporate liability shield and a license for technology companies to amplify certain voices while suppressing others. To truly uphold First Amendment freedoms, we must hold accountable the algorithms that drive harmful virality while protecting human expression.
Yes, some people misunderstand the First Amendment that way, but no, Section 230 does not shield “those forms of harmful speech.” Also, the “incitement to violence” is from the Brandenburg Test and is technically “incitement to imminent lawless action” which is not the same thing as “incitement to violence.” To pass the Brandenburg test, the speech has to be “intended to incite or produce imminent lawless action, and likely to incite such action.”
This is an extremely high bar, and nearly all harassment does not cross that bar.
Also, this completely misunderstands Section 230, which does not actually “shield these forms of harmful speech.” If the speech is actually illegal under the First Amendment, Section 230 does absolutely nothing to “shield” it. All 230 does is say that we place the liability on the speaker. If the speech actually does violate the First Amendment (and, as we’ll get to, this piece plays fast and loose with how the First Amendment actually works), then 230 doesn’t stand in the way at all of holding the speaker liable.
Yet, this piece seems to argue that if we got rid of Section 230 and somehow forced websites to only moderate to the Brandenburg standard, it would somehow magically stop harassment.
The choice before us is not binary between unchecked viral harassment and heavy-handed censorship. A third path exists: one that curtails viral harassment while preserving the free exchange of ideas. This balanced approach requires careful definition but is achievable, just as we’ve defined limits on viral financial transactions to prevent Ponzi schemes. Current engagement-based optimization amplifies hate and misinformation while discouraging constructive dialogue.
To put it mildly, this is delusional. This “third path” is basically just advocating for dictatorial control over speech.
This is a common stance for people with literally zero experience with the challenges of trust & safety and content moderation. These people seem to think if only they were put in charge of writing the rules, it’s possible to write perfect rules that stop the bad stuff but leave the good stuff.
That’s not possible. And anyone with any experience in a trust & safety role would know that. Which is why it would be great if non-experts stopped cosplaying as if they understand this stuff.
There’s a reason that we created two separate trust & safety and content moderation games to help people like the authors of this piece understand that it’s not so simple. People are complicated. So many things involve subjective calls in murky gray areas, that even experts in the field who have spent years adjudicating these things rarely agree on how best to handle different situations.
Our proposed “repeal and renew” approach would remove the liability shield for social media companies’ algorithmic amplification while protecting citizens’ direct speech. This reform distinguishes between fearless speech—which deserves constitutional protection—and reckless speech that causes demonstrable harm. The evidence of such harm is clear: from the documented mental health impacts of engagement-optimized content to the spread of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) through algorithm-driven networks.
Ah, so your problem is with the First Amendment, not Section 230. The idea that only “fearless speech” deserves constitutional protection is a lovely fantasy for law professors, but it’s not the law. And never has been. You would need to first completely dismantle over a century’s worth of First Amendment jurisprudence before we even get to the question of 230, which wouldn’t do what you want it to do in the first place.
Under the First Amendment, “reckless speech” remains protected, except in some very specific, well-delineated cases. And you can’t just wave your arms and pretend otherwise, even though that’s what Stanger, Lanier, and Tang do here.
That’s not how it works.
And, because the three of them seem to be coming up with simplistically wrong solutions to inherently complex problems, let’s dig in a bit more on the examples they have. First off, CSAM is already extremely illegal and not protected by either the First Amendment or Section 230. So it’s bizarre that it’s even mentioned here (unless you don’t understand how any of this works).
But how about “the documented mental health impacts of engagement-optimized content”? That’s… not actually proven? This has been discussed widely over the last few years, but the vast majority of research finds no such causal links. Yes, you have a few folks who claim it’s proven, but many of the leading researchers in the field, and multiple meta-analyses of the research have found no actual evidence to support a causal link between social media and mental health.
So… then what?
Stanger, Lanier, and Tang seem to take it as given that such harm is there, even as the evidence has disagreed with that claim. Do we wave a magic wand and say “well, because these three non-experts insist that social media is harmful to mental health that we suddenly make such content… no longer protected under the First Amendment?”
That’s not how the First Amendment works, and it’s not how anything works.
Or, how about we take a more specific example, even though it’s not directly raised in the article. One area of content that many people are very concerned about is “eating disorder content.” Based on what’s in this article, I’m pretty sure that Stanger, Lanier, and Tang would argue that, obviously, eating disorder content should be deemed “harmful” and therefore unprotected under the First Amendment (again, this would require a massive change to the First Amendment, but let’s leave that fantasyland in place for a moment.)
Okay, but now what?
Multiple studies have shown that (1) determining what actually is “eating disorder content” is way more difficult than most people think, because the language around it is so ever-changing, to the point that sometimes people argue that photos of gum are “eating disorder content” and (2) perhaps more importantly, simply removing eating disorder content has been shown to make eating disorder issues worse for some users!
Often, this is because eating disorder content is a demand-side issue, where people are looking for it, rather than being driven to eating disorders based on the content. Removing it often just drives those seeking it out into darker corners of the internet where, unlike in the mainstream areas of the internet, they’re less likely to see useful interventions and resources (including help from others who have recovered from eating disorders).
So, what should be done here? Under the Stanger/Lanier/Tang proposal, the answer is to make such content illegal and require websites to block it, even though that likely does even more harm to vulnerable people.
And that’s ignoring the whole First Amendment problem. Repeatedly throughout the article, Stanger/Lanier/Tang handwave around all this by suggesting that you can create a new law that concretely determines what content is allowed (and must be carried) and what content is not.
But that’s not how it works in both directions. The law can no more compel websites to keep up speech they don’t want to host, than it can force them to take down content the three authors think is “harmful” but does not pass the existing tests regarding what is not protected under the First Amendment.
Given its many problems regarding the authors’ understanding of speech, it will not surprise you that they trot out the “fire in a crowded theater” line, which is the screaming siren of “this is written by people unfamiliar with the First Amendment.”
Just as someone shouting “fire” in a crowded theater can be held liable for resulting harm, operators of algorithms that incentivize harassment for engagement should face accountability.
Earlier in the piece, they pointed (incorrectly) to the Brandenburg test on incitement to imminent lawless action. Given that, you might think that someone might have pointed out to them that Brandenburg effectively rejected Schenck, the case in which the “fire in a crowded theater” line was uttered as dicta (i.e., not controlling or meaningful). But, nope. They pretend it’s the law (it’s not), just like they pretend the Brandenburg standard can magically be extended to harassment (it cannot).
The piece concludes with even more nonsense:
Section 230 today inadvertently circumvents the First Amendment’s guarantees of free speech, assembly, and petition. It enables an ad-driven business model and algorithmic moderation that optimize for engagement at the expense of democratic discourse. Algorithmic amplification is a product, not a public service. By sunsetting Section 230 and implementing new legislation that holds proprietary algorithms accountable for demonstrable harm, we can finally extend First Amendment protections to the digital public square, something long overdue.
Literally every sentence of that paragraph is wrong. Harvard should be ashamed for publishing something that would flunk a first-year Harvard Law class. Section 230 does nothing to “circumvent” the First Amendment. The First Amendment does not guarantee free speech, assembly, and petition on private property. It simply limits the government from suppressing it. Private property owners still have the editorial discretion to do as they wish, which is supported by Section 230.
As for the claim that you can magically apply liability to “algorithmic amplification” and not have that violate the First Amendment, that’s also wrong. We discussed that just last week, so I’m not going to rehash the entire argument. But algorithmic amplification is literally speech as well, and it is very much protected under the First Amendment as an opinion on “we think you’d like this.” You can’t just magically move that outside of the First Amendment. That’s not how it works.
The point is that this piece is not serious. It does not grapple with the realities of the First Amendment. It does not grapple with the impossibilities of content moderation. It does not grapple with the messiness of societal level problems with no easy solution. It ignores the evidence on social media’s supposed harms.
It sets up a fantasyland First Amendment that does not exist, it misrepresents what Section 230 does, it mangles the concept of “harms” in the online speech context, and it punts on what the simple “rules” they think they can write to get around all of that would be.
It’s embarrassing how disconnected from reality the article is.
Yet, Harvard’s Kennedy School was happy to put it out. And that should be embarrassing for everyone involved.
Daily Deal: The Advanced Cyber Security Bundle [Techdirt]
Take your basic knowledge of cybersecurity to a whole new level with the Advanced Cyber Security bundle. This bundle offers you 6 courses on industry-standard certifications on cybersecurity so you can enjoy the wonders of modern tech without compromising your data and privacy. Courses cover CISA, CCSP, CISM, and CISSP certification prep. You’ll also get an introduction to cyber security and learn about CompTIA Cloud Essentials. It’s on sale for $50.
Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.
Pirate IPTV-Selling ‘Law Enforcement Officer’ Faces Wiretapping Claim [TorrentFreak]
The potential consequences of being associated with any aspect of a pirate IPTV operation are well known. Criminal action rarely ends well for defendants, with similar outcomes seen in private prosecutions and most civil copyright lawsuits.
However, since the odds of being investigated and subsequently prosecuted are still relatively low, there’s no shortage of people willing to roll the dice in the hope of hitting the jackpot – and keeping it.
But while some embark on a journey of meticulous anonymity, supported by knowledge of geographical complications that make others vastly easier to pursue, some prefer different approaches. These can also work quite well, at least until they don’t.
Filed at a federal court in Illinois, the complaint sees DISH Network and Sling TV target Richard Moy, the alleged owner of CLVPN LLC, which ordinarily does business as City Lights Entertainment.
According to the plaintiffs’ investigation, Illinois-based Moy claimed that his IPTV reselling business was ‘USA based’ and he personally controlled the content it allegedly made available. Advertised as a “top notch” service, in which Moy had invested considerable sums of money obtaining servers and streams, subscriptions were sold both in bulk to a network of resellers or on a singular basis direct to consumers.
The Plaintiffs cite Moy’s claim of having “over 500 sellers” in the market, but the number of subscribers isn’t a rough estimate. How DISH and Sling obtained direct access to Moy’s IPTV management panel isn’t revealed in the complaint, but it’s alleged that after seeing data for themselves, they concluded that the service had over 450,000 users.
A one-month subscription purchased direct cost customers $20. Resellers were charged just a quarter of that, ensuring that they were able to return a profit after accounting for costs. The complaint claims that Moy, at least according to his own recollection, also acted as a channel supplier to other IPTV providers.
The complaint alleges that payments for the City Lights Entertainment (CLE) service were processed through Moy’s company, CLVPN LLC. Payments were accepted through Venmo, Cash App, and PayPal, some under Moy’s real name and others under aliases including “PapitoPatron” and “PapitoChacon.” A Venmo account linked to CLE recorded over 1,700 transactions, the plaintiffs note.
“Moy instructed purchasers to disguise the purpose of their payments by claiming the payments were being sent to ‘Friends NOT [for] Services’,” the complaint reads. On various Telegram groups used in connection with the IPTV service, Moy operated under the alias ‘Holmes’ and the username ‘@PapitoPatron.’ Another ‘disguise’ allegedly deployed by Moy was much more unorthodox.
“Moy held himself out as a Chicago-area law enforcement officer when selling the Service,” the lawsuit adds, referencing the images below.
“Moy’s resellers were informed that he was a law enforcement officer and that message was spread in the Telegram groups, including by group moderators working for Moy. On information and belief, Moy used his alleged association with law enforcement to market the Service to users and resellers and mitigate potential concerns over the unlawfulness of the Service,” the plaintiffs note
Other measures to avoid legal repercussions included a ban on resellers displaying “videos or pictures of channel lineups” of Moy’s service on social media, and the avoidance of “red flag keywords” such as “Tv Service… IPTV, Streams, Cable etc.”
Moy allegedly alerted resellers to legal actions against other streaming services and offered advice on how best to acquire their customers. The plaintiffs claim that Moy referred to himself and his resellers as “silent assassins.”
Count I alleges violations of the DMCA, 17 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(2), which concerns circumvention of technical measures. The approach has proven successful for DISH and Sling and now appears in most reseller lawsuits.
Count II alleges violations of the DMCA, 17 U.S.C. § 1201(b)(1), which prohibits the manufacture, sale, and distribution of devices that have no commercially significant purpose or use other than circumventing technical measures.
Count III alleges violations of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), which prohibits interception and disclosure of wire, oral, or electronic communications. The plaintiffs allege violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2511(1)(c)-(d) which occur when a person –
• (c) intentionally discloses, or endeavors to disclose, to any other person the contents of any wire, oral, or electronic communication, knowing or having reason to know that the information was obtained through the interception of a wire, oral, or electronic communication…
• (d) intentionally uses, or endeavors to use, the contents of any wire, oral, or electronic communication, knowing or having reason to know that the information was obtained through the interception of a wire, oral, or electronic communication…
While not usually seen alongside alleged violations of the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions, inclusion here suggests that the plaintiffs believe there is sufficient evidence to show that a live stream was intercepted. The interpretation of “live stream” under ECPA concerns interception of a real-time transmission, rather than a stream of a live event.
At least to our knowledge, this may be a new approach by the plaintiffs. However, the civil recovery available under 2520(a) does seem to align with existing strategy.
For Counts I and II, the plaintiffs request statutory damages of up to $2,500 for each violation of 17 U.S.C. § 1201(a)(2) and § 1201(b)(1). Should their claim of 450,000 subscribers pass muster, in theory statutory damages could reach $1,125,000,000. An award of that scale seems highly unlikely under the circumstances but could still be significant.
Statutory damages for ECPA violations are almost negligible in comparison; $100 per day of violation or $10,000, whichever is greater.
The complaint makes no mention of how long the alleged offending lasted, while references to the business are made in the past tense, which may suggest it no longer exists. If the alleged offending went on for a year, statutory damages could in theory reach a relatively modest $36,500.
The plaintiffs may prefer actual damages and the defendant’s profits instead, added to the punitive damages they’re claiming under 18 U.S.C. § 2520(b)(2) for the ECPA violations, of course. Without access to specific details, such as the length of the alleged offending and how much profit was made, it’s not possible to estimate the scale of any damages.
These details aren’t provided in the complaint, nor does the complaint mention any prior communication with the defendant, such and cease-and-desist notices, that type of thing. Yet in a sentence that stands out primarily for not explaining how the plaintiffs gained access to the IPTV service’s main panel, the exact number of subscribers is revealed as 450,000.
Whether further details will emerge as part of a case contested on the merits remains to be seen, but a smooth conclusion here with damages for ECPA violations intact, may come in useful at a later date.
The complaint is available here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
School District Pulls 425 Books From Its Libraries In Response To Tennessee’s Shitty Book Ban Law [Techdirt]
Like a bunch of other states run by people who hate the people they serve (except for the people who harbor the same hatred), Tennessee has decided it should get into the book-banning business — years after literal Nazis made this sort of thing politically untenable. Or so we thought.
Now, before the pedants step in to criticize the headline, I understand the law doesn’t actually authorize book bans. But it achieves the same end result by creating a long (but vague) list of content that supposedly isn’t appropriate for schoolchildren, no matter what their ages. And then it goes further by requiring schools to maintain and post lists of all books in their libraries, as well as humor “challenges” raised by activist groups that just want to see the immediate removal of content they don’t like.
Unsurprisingly, the books “challenged” the most are ones that contain anything remotely LGBTQ-related, as well as anything that might portray minorities in a positive light and/or white Americans in a negative light, even if the books factually depict historical events.
It’s this blend of vagueness and bigotry that resulted in a Tennessee school completely shuttering its library right as it was reopening for the school year in order to avoid potentially violating the law. And it’s the same law that has resulted in a single school district removing more than 400 books from its school libraries — an effort that has affected authors ranging from Dr. Seuss to Steven King.
At a school board meeting in Wilson County on Thursday, Director of Schools Jeff Luttrell included in his report a full list of 390 books that have been banned by the county. The titles include “The Green Mile” by Steven King, “Bluest Eye” by Toni Morrison, “Slaughterhouse Five” by Kurt Vonnegut, “The Lovely Bones” by Alice Sebold, “Wacky Wednesday” by Dr. Seuss, “Ready Player One” by Ernest Cline, “The Nickel Boys” by Colson Whitehead and more.
390 books is a lot of books. But that’s actually an under-count. Additional reporting says the number of books removed exceeds 400.
Wilson County Schools has removed about 425 book titles from its shelves to comply with new state law that went into effect July 1 prohibiting books and materials with references to sex and violence in public school libraries, according to a new report.
And there may be more to add to that list in the near future, according to the district’s public information officer, Bart Barker.
“This is an ongoing process,” Barker said as librarians continue to meet regularly “to get a collective opinion,” about book titles that should be pulled from schools based on the law.
This is supposedly the full list [PDF] of books removed by Wilson County Schools. A brief scan of the list will make it clear a lot of what’s being removed contains subject matter people with [vomit] “conservative values” which to see erased from public discourse. And the rest of it just appears to be content that fits within the extremely vague, overly-broad list of things the state feels even high school students shouldn’t be allowed to access, even if they do so on a daily basis away from schools.
It’s stupid and abhorrent. And it’s also a very popular thing to do. Full-time censors working for the government have aligned themselves with censorial hobbyists who spend their copious amounts of free time raising book challenges, yelling about stuff at school board meetings, and otherwise doing everything they can to force the government to force other people to comply with their narrow-minded worldview. At this point, we’re only a can of gas and a handful of matches away from government-ordained book burnings. It’s not going to take too many more elections to push this nation over the edge, set it adrift from its free speech moorings, and place us under the heels of people who pretend to be public servants while doing everything they can to keep the public as subservient as possible.
v30.0.2rc2 [Release notes from server]
@nextcloud/dialogs
to v6.0.1 by @susnux in #49093Full Changelog: v30.0.2rc1...v30.0.2rc2
v29.0.9rc2 [Release notes from server]
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to v5.3.8 by @susnux in #49095Full Changelog: v29.0.9rc1...v29.0.9rc2
v28.0.12rc2 [Release notes from server]
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Kinds of power [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
There’s the James Bond villian sort of power, based on division, dominance and destruction. This is the short-term power of bullies, trauma and mobs.
And then there’s a more resilient form of power. This is power based on connection, discussion and metrics. A power based in reality over the long term.
Divisive power tears things down. Resilient power builds things up.
Resilient power creates the conditions for the community to produce value over time. Resilient power uses optimism and fairness to create value because participants can see ways they can participate and contribute.
Fear might be for sale, but that doesn’t mean we have to buy it.
Better is possible.
Kanji of the Day: 阪 [Kanji of the Day]
阪
✍7
小4
heights, slope
ハン
さか
大阪 (おおさか) — Osaka (city, prefecture)
大阪市 (おおさかし) — Osaka city
阪神 (はんしん) — Osaka-Kobe
大阪府 (おおさかふ) — Osaka Prefecture (Kinki area)
阪神大震災 (はんしんだいしんさい) — Great Hanshin Earthquake (January 17, 1995)
大阪高裁 (おおさかこうさい) — Osaka High Court
京阪 (けいはん) — Kyoto and Osaka
京阪神 (けいはんしん) — Kyoto, Osaka and Kobe
大阪弁 (おおさかべん) — Osaka dialect
大阪証券取引所 (おおさかしょうけんとりひきじょ) — Osaka Securities Exchange
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
AT&T (Again) Caught Cheating Federal Subsidy Program For Poor People [Techdirt]
Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: a giant U.S. telecom monopoly has been ripping off a federal program designed to help the country’s low income residents. AT&T last week quietly struck a $2.3 million consent decree with the FCC for falsely inflating the number of people it was helping under a COVID-era program designed to make broadband more affordable for poor people.
During the pandemic, the government created the Emergency Broadband Benefit Program (EBB), which provided a $50 discount off the broadband bills of low-income Americans. AT&T used several different ways to falsely inflate the amount of users actually enrolled in the program to grab extra money it didn’t deserve. Then lied about it.
When contacted by Ars Technica in a bid for comment, AT&T spokespeople would only praise the company for participating in the program:
“When the federal government acted during the COVID-19 pandemic to stand up the Emergency Broadband Benefit program, and then the Affordable Connectivity Program, we quickly implemented both programs to provide more low-cost Internet options for our customers.”
In just the last decade, AT&T has been fined $18.6 million for helping rip off programs for the hearing impaired; fined $10.4 million for ripping off a different program for low-income families; fined $105 million for helping “crammers” by intentionally making such bogus charges more difficult to see on customer bills; and fined $60 million for lying to customers about the definition of “unlimited” data.
There’s also employee allegations the company has been ripping off school subsidy programs for years; allegations I’ve yet to see meaningfully investigated. And earlier this year, AT&T was fined another $23 million after executives were caught bribing Illinois officials to get favorable broadband regulation in the state.
AT&T is one of several companies currently trying to get out of federal obligations attached to infrastructure bill subsides designed to aid poor Americans. And they’re at the forefront of Supreme Court backed efforts to permanently defang what’s left of U.S. regulatory independence and authority. I wonder why?
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XML | The Popehat Report | 2024-11-07 03:00 AM |
XML | The Status Kuo | 2024-11-07 03:00 AM |
XML | The Stranger | 2024-11-07 03:00 AM |
XML | Tor Project blog | 2024-11-07 08:00 AM |
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XML | what if? | 2024-11-07 08:00 AM |
XML | Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed | 2024-11-04 04:00 PM |
XML | xkcd.com | 2024-11-07 08:00 AM |