News

Friday 2025-12-19

12:00 AM

Jared Kushner Doesn’t Want The Heat, Exits Warner Bros Hostile Takeover Bid [Techdirt]

Shortly after Netflix announced a $82.7 billion acquisition of Warner Brothers, the Ellison family, alongside Jared Kushner and the Saudis, unveiled their own hostile takeover bid to pre-empt the deal. As we’ve discussed, Larry Ellison is trying to gobble up what’s left of old media (CBS, Paramount, Warner Brothers, CNN) and fuse it with new media (TikTok) to create a right wing, billionaire-simping, propaganda safe space that blows smoke up the asses of Benjamin Netanyahu and Donald Trump.

Apparently, Jared Kushner and his investment firm Affinity Partners didn’t like the attention the partnership was generating, and have announced their tactical retreat:

“The dynamics ​of the investment have changed significantly ​since we initially became ​involved ​in October,” the spokesperson said. “We ​continue to ​believe ​there is a strong strategic rationale for Paramount’s offer.”

And by “dynamics,” Affinity means that the the president’s son-in-law partnering with Saudis and the planet’s second-richest technofascist billionaire to gobble up the remnants of dying U.S. corporate media was generating a few too many negative headlines for their liking.

The $108 billion hostile takeover bid is still being backed (for now, apparently) by the Saudis. And, of course, it’s still the brainchild of right wing Trump billionaire ally Larry Ellison, who will assuredly receive favorable treatment should the dispute wind up being settled by the Trump DOJ or Trump-corrupted courts.

For his part, Trump is trying to pretend Ellison isn’t a close ally and massive campaign donor, because, one can only presume, he assumes you’re all very stupid:

“For those people that think I am close with the new owners of CBS, please understand that ’60 Minutes’ has treated me far worse since the so-called ‘takeover’ than they have ever treated me before,” Trump wrote. “If they are friends, I’d hate to see my enemies!”

Of course, Bari Weiss and Larry Ellison’s conversion of CBS into a right wing propaganda mill has only just begun, so the fact that 60 Minutes occasionally still makes our thin-skinned president mad doesn’t really account for much. Ellison has met personally with Trump, directly promising all manner of firings and “news distortions” at CNN should the president grant regulatory approval.

The whole fracas puts Democrats in a bit of a bind. In an ideal world with functioning regulators, you’d advocate for the rejection of all additional media consolidation, because these deals — whether Netflix or Paramount — routinely result in mass layoffs and higher prices for consumers.

But because Congress and U.S. regulators no longer function due to corruption (despite a lot of pretense to the contrary), it’s unlikely that all deals will be blocked. And while Netflix is certainly no saint, keeping consolidated corporate media ownership out of the hands of extremist authoritarian zealots hell bent on dismantling democracy with propaganda is pretty clearly the better option.

Which means that Democrats and organizations keen on actually helping (and keeping U.S. Democracy semi-operational) are probably better off finding common cause with Netflix. There’s dogshit Netflix homogenized consolidation, which is definitely bad, and then there’s authoritarian state television dominated by the planet’s second richest techno-fascist asshole, which is significantly worse

Thursday 2025-12-18

08:00 PM

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 11 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
Mountaineers descending into Chola Valley, 5,200 metres (17,100 ft) a. s. l., in good weather conditions, with a panoramic view over snow-capped Himalayan peaks to the south of the Great Himalayan Range in Mahalangur Himal, Nepal, Himalayas. Today is International Mountain Day.

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 15 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
A 2-week-old baby hamster with red eyes. Today is voice actress Haruna Ikezawa's birthday. She voiced Laruna Haruna, the owner of the titular hamster, in the 2000 anime adaption of Hamtaro.

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 16 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
Short-nosed unicornfish (Naso brevirostris), Red Sea, Egypt. This species has a maximum published total length of 60 centimetres (24 in). It occurs in the Indian and western Pacific Oceans. Adults feed mainly on gelatinous zooplankton, while juveniles mainly feed on benthic algae. The switch from grazing to preying on gelatinous zooplankton coincides with the development of the bony protuberance.

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for December 18 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
Lapita Hotel in Dubai is the Polynesian-themed hotel, part of the Autograph Collection by Marriott

05:00 PM

Tweaks to IPTV Piracy Law That “Bans VPNs” Won’t Change Its Intent or Scope [TorrentFreak]

vpn-divertx1The emergence of new technologies that appear to undermine provisions in existing law can present problems for those hoping to protect their content.

In Denmark, the government believes that laws designed to protect against older technologies are now too specific to tackle today’s challenges. Draft proposals submitted earlier this month aim to modernize the law but have already sparked controversy.

The Stated Need For Amendments

The draft proposals submitted by the Ministry of Culture in early December include measures to combat viewing of content on “illegal IPTV services” and the “illegal use of VPN connections.”

Legal standing under existing law doesn’t appear to be in doubt as both are clearly labeled “illegal”. Yet as things stand, both are considered “not suitable for cracking down on” since existing law is tailored towards older broadcasting technologies.

“[T]he rules are primarily aimed at illegal decoders and other decoding equipment. Pirate decoders and pirate cards are out of date, and it is therefore necessary to update the rules so that they can handle today’s piracy activities,” the proposals read.

The proposals go further than a simple update to tackle piracy as it stands today. The goal is to “future-proof” the law to ensure that it is able to deal with a “continuously and rapidly developing technical landscape.”

More specifically, the aim is to ensure that the “prohibition against online piracy becomes technology-neutral and can thereby take technological development into account. It is further clarified that the prohibition against online piracy in accordance with current law applies both for commercial purposes and for private use.”

Proposed Amendments

Among other things, provisions first introduced in 1997 targeted “pirate decoders and pirate decoder cards” which were used to circumvent signal encryption and avoid paying broadcasters for a subscription. Advertising and promoting these devices and similarly capable equipment was also banned.

In 2000, the existing commercial piracy ban was expanded to the private space; possession of a pirate decoder was rendered illegal, to send a “preventative message” to households that may have been considering purchasing one. In today’s environment, banning devices alone is insufficient, so the amendments envision the following:

“[I]t is not permitted to manufacture, import or sell equipment, software or other technical solutions with the purpose of providing unauthorized access to the content of an encrypted radio or television program or the content of any other content service where access is restricted by technical measures or arrangements. It is also prohibited to acquire, possess, install or use equipment, software or other technical solution, for the purpose of obtaining unauthorized access..”

This represents a core change. Rather than focusing on banning the sale and possession of physical devices, there’s a shift towards targeting the circumvention of access restrictions of all kinds, and providing the means to do so.

Focus Shifts From Devices to Circumvention

Most obviously this outlaws illegal access to content only available via legitimate services in exchange for a fee; in this case a fee the user hopes to avoid paying. In isolation that’s hardly a ground-breaking amendment, but the intended scope is substantially broader than that.

The same restrictions also apply when a user accesses content for which they have already paid the appropriate fee, but geo-restrictions dictate that the content is not ordinarily available in the user’s region.

In other words, accessing geo-blocked content will become illegal, regardless of whether the user paid for the content or not. As much is clearly signaled in the proposals, which also reveal that there are no limits on the type of content either.

The concept of ‘other content from any other content service, access to which is restricted by technical measures or arrangements’ should be understood broadly. It is noted that online piracy is no longer limited to radio and television broadcasts. The proposed amendment will mean that all audiovisual content, including films, television series, music, (e-)books, articles, etc., where access may be limited by a requirement for subscription or fee payment, etc., is covered by the protection in Section 91. Television or streaming transmissions of live events, such as sporting events and concerts, will also be covered by the provision.

And the potential legal violations for accessing pirated and/or geo-blocked content – paid for or not – don’t stop there.

Since the proposals also prohibit the acquisition, possession, installation, or use of equipment, software or other technical solutions, buying and using a VPN to access pirated content – or even geo-blocked content the user has paid for – would constitute an offense.

The same also applies to using any technical means to bypass Denmark’s existing site-blocking measures

Minister of Culture “Never Proposed” a VPN Ban

Public discussion over the proposals inevitably led some to conclude that what the government really wants is a “total VPN ban” in Denmark. While that claim is not supported by the current text, it’s sufficiently extreme to provide cover for denial on the details which, depending on the user, may have that type of effect nonetheless.

“The purpose of the bill was, among other things, to combat illegal streaming of football matches. Since then, debate has arisen about whether the government wants a total ban on VPN connections, which is not the case,” the Ministry of Culture wrote in a statement this week.

Minister of Culture Jakob Engel-Schmidt added the following:

“I am not in favor of making VPN illegal, and I have never proposed that. But I must admit that the bill has not been formulated precisely enough, when someone can see so many ghosts in the current wording. Therefore, I am removing the part about VPN in the bill, so that there can no longer be any doubt that I in no way want to ban the use of VPN.”

Removing ‘VPN’ From Future-Proofed Proposals Changes Nothing

Considering the intent underpinning the proposals, and the shortcomings in current legislation that the proposals aim to fix, removing the term ‘VPN’ seems unlikely to have any effect. After all, the enduring strength of the proposed amendments are due to their technology-neutral framing. Indeed, removing references to VPNs means nothing when the proposals state the following:

“The concept of ‘other technical solution’ should be understood broadly. The broad wording is intended to mean that the proposed amendment will cover any technical solution used to provide unauthorized access to media content.”

Posting on X, the Culture Minister described claims of a total VPN ban as “Fake news”.

“I do not advocate for criminalizing VPN and will certainly not propose that. In all honesty, this seems like a deliberate misunderstanding of a fairly modest bill, which solely establishes that it is illegal to stream sports without paying.”

In 2024, a legal battle in Denmark involving LaLiga and Rojadirecta, already concluded that live sports broadcasts are protected copyright works.

Under the proposals, advertising or promoting VPNs to unblock geo-protected content would also be an offense. Not necessarily VPNs either – anything capable of achieving the same result.

Denmark’s Supreme Court confirmed in 2020 that providing information on how to use Popcorn Time was a criminal offense.

The proposals are available here: Portal, bill, consultation letter, hearing list

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

02:00 PM

The ‘Koozie’ People Bullied A Wooden Drink Sleeve Product, ‘Woodzie’, Into A Name Change [Techdirt]

I’ve said it roughly a zillion times: trademark bullying exists because it works. One of the unfortunate inequities of our system is that having a large legal warchest simply allows someone to push around others over trademark “concerns” that aren’t valid. The formula for this is consistent. Large corporate interest with lawyers at the ready will police the country for any uses of a term in any way close to the corporation’s trademark, and C&D its victim into making a change, which itself only happens because the victim can’t afford to fight back. It sucks, but it’s reality.

But I’ll admit I didn’t expect the koozie people to have such a dirth of chill over this sort of thing. The Koozie Group is the company that holds the trademark for the word “koozie”, which I didn’t even know was a registered mark. I personally have always used the term generically to refer to a drink sleeve. Better Wheel Workshops makes drink sleeves out of wood and named its product “the woodzie”.

Better Wheel Workshops in Newfane produces wood can insulators previously known as “The Woodzie.” The husband and wife team made them for about a decade until the Koozie Group filed a petition to cancel the trademark. 

The Chevaliers said they were informed about a year-and-a-half ago that Koozie Group, a large corporation based in Clearwater, Fla. that owns the trademark phrase “Koozie,” filed a petition with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to cancel “The Woodzie” trademark due to potential confusion.

Now, the couple is tentatively changing the name of the product to “Tree Sleeve.” The website, betterwheelvt.com, will stay and any mention of “The Woodzie” will be removed. 

“We have until the end of the year for the full switchover,” Jeff said. “We’re notifying all wholesale partners of the change in the name and rebranding products in house.” 

Now, there are a lot of other companies out there that are using the term “koozie” that have nothing to do with The Koozie Group. You can do a simple Google shopping search and find them. I would also argue that “The Woodsie” is a name and product type that is transformative enough that I have a hard time believing any real public confusion of association is likely. At a minimum, this sounds to me like a fight worth fighting, all else being equal.

But that’s the point: all else is not equal. Specifically, the ability to fight the fight monetarily is not equal.

Jeff said the dispute cost his family “a little in legal fees.” 

“And by a little bit, I mean quite a lot actually, but it is what it is,” he said. “It’s the cost of doing business.” 

Jeff said “The Woodzie” was trademarked in 2019 after being in use since 2015. The dispute with the Koozie Group began about a year-and-a-half ago.  The family is working with a trademark attorney on the new name. 

“We don’t want to go through the same thing all over again,” Jeff said, “so we’re really trying to scrub the world and make sure we’re not stepping on any toes.”

It’s just too bad we don’t have a better mechanism for the little guy to fight back on this sort of thing. I remain convinced that “koozie” and “woodzie” are distinct enough to prevent customer confusion. While “koozie” is somewhat creative and fanciful, it ultimately derives from “tea cozy” in Britain, making the leap to “woodzie” a trademark issue largely over the letters “i” and “e”.

Given that and the lack of policing of the mark elsewhere, this strikes me as a fight that The Koozie Group didn’t have to start. But it did and, because trademark bullying works, a smaller company did the math and found that caving was cheaper than fighting.

01:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 犬 [Kanji of the Day]

✍4

小1

dog

ケン

いぬ いぬ-

愛犬   (あいけん)   —   pet dog
子犬   (こいぬ)   —   puppy
盲導犬   (もうどうけん)   —   guide dog
柴犬   (しばいぬ)   —   shiba inu (dog breed)
犬猫   (いぬねこ)   —   dogs and cats
飼い犬   (かいいぬ)   —   pet dog
犬種   (けんしゅ)   —   dog breed
負け犬   (まけいぬ)   —   loser
小型犬   (こがたけん)   —   small-breed dog
大型犬   (おおがたけん)   —   large-breed dog

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 盾 [Kanji of the Day]

✍9

中学

shield, escutcheon, pretext

ジュン

たて

矛盾   (むじゅん)   —   contradiction
後ろ盾   (うしろだて)   —   backing
自己矛盾   (じこむじゅん)   —   self-contradiction
人間の盾   (にんげんのたて)   —   human shield
論理矛盾   (ろんりむじゅん)   —   logical inconsistency
相矛盾   (あいむじゅん)   —   mutually contradictory
盾突く   (たてつく)   —   to defy
形容矛盾   (けいようむじゅん)   —   contradictio in adjecto
矛盾語法   (むじゅんごほう)   —   oxymoron
矛盾撞着   (むじゅんどうちゃく)   —   self-contradiction

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

10:00 AM

Trump Officials Celebrated With Cake After Slashing Aid. Then People Died of Cholera. [Techdirt]

This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license. The original has additional imagery which is worth checking out as well.

On the one-month anniversary of President Donald Trump’s inauguration earlier this year, a group of his appointed aides gathered to celebrate.

For four weeks, they had been working overtime to dismantle the U.S. Agency for International Development, freezing thousands of programs, including ones that provided food, water and medicine around the world. They’d culled USAID’s staff and abandoned its former headquarters in the stately Ronald Reagan Building, shunting the remnants of the agency to what was once an overflow space in a glass-walled commercial office above Nordstrom Rack and a bank. 

There, the crew of newly minted political figures told the office manager to create a moat of 90 empty desks around them so no one could hear them talk. They ignored questions and advice from career staff with decades of experience in the field.

Despite the steps to insulate themselves, dire warnings poured in from diplomats and government experts around the world. The cuts would cost countless lives, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the other Trump officials were told repeatedly. The team of aides pressed on, galvanized by two men who did little to hide their disdain for the agency: first Peter Marocco, a blunt-spoken Marine veteran, and then 28-year-old Jeremy Lewin, who, despite having no government or aid experience, often personally decided which programs should be axed. 

By the third week in February, they were on track to wipe out 90% of USAID’s work. Created in 1961 to foster global stability and help advance American interests, USAID was the largest humanitarian donor in the world. In just a month’s time, the small band of appointees had set in motion its destruction.

In a corner conference room, it was time to party. They traded congratulatory speeches and cut into a sheet cake.


Days later, on a remote patch of land in South Sudan, a 38-year-old man named Tor Top gathered with his neighbors outside the local health clinic. Surrounded by floodwaters, their hamlet of thatch and mud homes had been battling a massive outbreak of cholera, a deadly disease spread by poor sanitation. Around the country, it had infected 36,000 people in three months, killing more than 600, many of them babies. Top’s family lived in the epicenter.

The clinic, one of 12 in the area run by the Christian, Maryland-based humanitarian organization World Relief and funded by USAID, provided a key weapon in the fight: IV bags to stave off dehydration and death. The bags cost just 62 cents each, and in three months, the clinics had helped save more than 500 people. 

Now, Top, who lived with his wife, children and mother in a one-room house less than 50 feet from the clinic, listened as World Relief staff shared grim news: The Trump administration had stopped USAID’s funding to World Relief. Their clinic, their lifeline, was closing.

Top’s usual gentle demeanor broke down. Why would the U.S. just cut off their medical care in the middle of a deadly outbreak?


By now the broad story of USAID’s ruin has been widely told: The decree handed down by Trump; Elon Musk, who led the new Department of Government Efficiency; and Russell Vought, who holds the purse strings for the administration as the head of the Office of Management and Budget, to scuttle the agency and undo decades of humanitarian work in the name of austerity. Publicly, the administration tried to temper international backlash by promising to keep or restore critical lifesaving programs. 

But that promise was not kept. Instead, a cast of Trump’s lesser-known political appointees and DOGE operatives cut programs in ways that guaranteed widespread harm and death in some of the world’s most desperate situations, according to an examination by ProPublica based on previously unreported episodes inside the government as well on-the-ground reporting in South Sudan. In some cases, they abandoned vital operations by clicking through a spreadsheet or ignoring requests in their inboxes. 

The abrupt moves left aid workers and communities with no time to find other sources of funding, food or medicine. Borrowing from a phrase used to describe the U.S.’ overwhelming military campaign during the Iraq War, political appointee Tim Meisburger told senior USAID staff that the strategy was “shock and awe.” (Meisburger declined to comment.)

Tibor Nagy, a veteran diplomat who was Trump’s acting undersecretary of state for management until April, has long been a critic of the vast networks of nonprofit organizations funded by American taxpayers. But he told ProPublica the administration never cared to differentiate between the “fluff” and vital humanitarian programs. “It was the most harebrained operation I’d seen in my 38 years with the U.S. government,” Nagy said, referring to the methods used this year. “Who knows how much damage was done.”

In public statements and congressional testimony, Rubio has repeatedly insisted that no one died because of cuts to U.S. foreign aid and that his staff had reinstated lifesaving operations. But ProPublica found that those claims were a charade: Lifesaving programs remained on the books, but the flow of money didn’t restart for months, if at all. Lewin blocked funding requests for programs like tuberculosis treatment in Tajikistan and emergency earthquake response in Myanmar, records show. 

This meant that dozens of supposedly “active” operations were dormant throughout most of the year. Rubio’s advisers let other critical programs, which typically run on one-year grants, expire without renewing them. 

Few places were hit harder than South Sudan, the youngest and poorest country in the world, as well as one of the most dependent on American aid. 

After Trump’s inauguration, career USAID and State Department staff spent months warning top officials that the funding cuts would exacerbate a historic cholera epidemic ripping through the country. They needed less than $20 million to fund lifesaving health programs, including cholera response efforts, for three months at the beginning of the year — an eighth of what Trump recently approved to buy private jets for one cabinet secretary and just 3% of USAID’s budget in South Sudan last year. But Rubio, Marocco and Lewin failed to heed their own agencies’ assessments, according to internal records and interviews. 

As a result, people in South Sudan died.

By denying and delaying those funds for months, Trump’s appointees incapacitated the fragile nation’s emergency response systems at the very moment when doctors and aid workers were scrambling to contain cholera’s spread. “We had to start rationing lifesaving interventions,” said Lanre Williams-Ayedun, the senior vice president of international programs for World Relief. “To have something like this happen in a place like this, where there aren’t mechanisms for backup, just means people are going to die.”

Villages and towns that had been reining in the outbreak suddenly lost essential services. Cholera came roaring back. “The trend was going down,” said a former U.S. official. “When we stopped the funding, it just surged.”

This summer, ProPublica journalists hiked and boated across Rubkona County, the epicenter of South Sudan’s outbreak and home to the country’s largest refugee camp, to interview families that the U.S. cut off from help. We collected medical files, diaries, meeting notes and photographs documenting cholera’s devastation after essential services stopped.

ProPublica also interviewed more than 100 government and aid officials and reviewed enormous caches of previously unreported memos, correspondence and other documents from inside the Trump administration. Many were granted anonymity due to fears of reprisal.

In response to a detailed list of questions, a senior State Department official said fast, drastic changes to foreign aid were necessary to reform a “calcified system.” The world, especially U.S. interests, will be better for it in the long run, the official said, despite “some disruptions in the short term.”

The official also said that Rubio was the final decision-maker for all aid programs. They also contended that they had a limited budget to work with, “which required some tradeoffs on what programs to continue,” saying OMB has ultimate control over new humanitarian funds. 

The official maintained that nobody died as a result of the funding cuts. “That’s a disgusting framing,” the official said. “There are people who are dying in horrible situations all around the world, all of the time.” 

“Who is responsible for the suffering of the people of South Sudan?” the official added. “The South Sudanese [government leaders] who take their oil revenues and buy private jets and fancy watches and don’t see to their own people? Or the United States? Are we responsible for every poor person all around the world?”

Officially, the death count in South Sudan is nearly 1,600, making it the worst cholera epidemic in the country’s history. But that toll is a dramatic undercount. ProPublica found newly dug, unmarked graves alongside roads and in backyards. In one town, community leaders showed reporters an informal cemetery with at least three dozen people who they said did not make it to medical facilities in time. 

Tor Top’s mother, Nyarietna, was one of the uncounted. In March, the clinic doors had been padlocked for two weeks when she developed vomiting and diarrhea. Top bundled her into a rented canoe and began paddling toward the nearest hospital, eight hours away. Less than halfway into the journey, long after they had stopped reassuring one another that she would be OK, Nyarietna died. 

Top turned the canoe around and made his way back home, where he buried his mom in their backyard. Now he alone tends the small garden where she grew corn and okra for their family. “If there was medicine here,” he said later, “maybe her life would have been saved.”

Aid to South Sudan 

For years, Sudan’s Arab-led central government waged a campaign of brutal violence against its Christian minority in the south. Their persecution became a cause celebre of the American Evangelical movement, which convinced President George W. Bush’s administration to help broker a peace agreement that led to independence 15 years ago. Since then, the U.S. has given the fledgling nation nearly $10 billion in aid, according to federal data. That money subsidized virtually every corner of the health care system, among other institutions.

Still, South Sudan remains undeveloped. Political instability, corruption and dysfunction are rampant. The transitional government hasn’t paid public employees’ salaries for most of the last two years. U.S. officials had long been on alert to South Sudanese aid workers siphoning resources. Deadly political violence — left over from the civil war and threatening a new one — besets much of the country. 

Well before Trump took office this year, the international community had broadly agreed that it was necessary to end the nation’s dependence on foreign aid, and U.S. officials were working on strategies to force its leaders to take responsibility for its citizens.

Some of the most vulnerable among them live in Rubkona County, an oil and cattle hub larger than Rhode Island near Sudan’s border. There, a refugee camp formed in 2014 during the nation’s civil war when thousands of people fled behind a United Nations peacekeeping mission to escape a massacre in the nearby town of Bentiu. As South Sudan’s political turmoil continued to spiral, tens of thousands more fled to the camp. In 2020, Rubkona was hit by a series of catastrophic floods that submerged the majority of the county. Generations of people are now essentially trapped there with nowhere else to go.

Previously, USAID gave the U.N.’s International Organization for Migration $36 million for work in South Sudan, which included keeping the Bentiu camp habitable and making critical repairs to the dikes that surround the camp and hold back the rising floodwaters. The group maintained the drainage system and paid people to pick up garbage and clean the latrines — essentially performing sanitation services for 110,000 people.

Despite those efforts, cholera began spreading late last year as new refugees poured in from neighboring Sudan. Rubkona County quickly became the outbreak’s epicenter. In a matter of days, hundreds of infections turned to thousands and the death toll mounted. U.S.-funded organizations raced to set up treatment units in the camp and surrounding communities. 

The situation was dire, and people had few viable options to leave Bentiu, U.S. Ambassador Michael Adler reported back to Washington after USAID staff visited the camp to assess the outbreak in early December. The U.S.-funded cholera clinics and other programs were necessary given the “explosivity” of the illness’ spread, he wrote.

It was the kind of routine crisis response that USAID was renowned for handling. The last cholera outbreak in Rubkona, in 2022, lasted seven months, and government statistics say that just one person died while about 420 were sickened. An aggressive sanitation campaign, largely funded by the U.S., was crucial to containing the disease.

Now faced with a new outbreak, the embassy’s staff rushed to get the aid organizations in Rubkona more money, according to the organizations and former officials. By early January, humanitarians were preparing to expand operations. World Relief planned to expand its mobile clinics, Williams-Ayedun said. USAID told Solidarités International, which repaired water pipes, provided sanitation services and distributed soap, to aggressively spend the money it had to combat cholera, with the understanding that the agency would immediately review a proposal for more funds, according to two former officials. An additional $30 million for the U.N.’s migration office — which planned to use the money to continue maintaining the refugee camps — was already committed.

Then Trump took office, signing an executive order on day one to freeze all foreign aid pending a review of whether it aligned with the administration’s stated values.  

“Just Throw Them in the Pot”

Days later, Rubio issued sweeping stop-work orders to aid programs worldwide. Musk declared that his DOGE team had fed USAID “into the woodchipper.” After a swift backlash from aid organizations, foreign governments and U.S. ambassadors overseas, Rubio announced that lifesaving operations would continue during his review. Marocco told lawmakers as much during briefings.  

It wasn’t true. Behind the scenes, Marocco and his lieutenants repeatedly obstructed USAID’s Africa, humanitarian aid and global health bureaus from restarting programs critical for responding to disease outbreaks, according to interviews and memos obtained by ProPublica. The money aid organizations in South Sudan were expecting by February didn’t come. Meanwhile, the appointees suspended nearly all of USAID’s staff, and those remaining said their bosses blocked payments even for approved programs.

Marocco was meant to be “the destroyer, and then someone else would come in to rebuild,” one former official said a senior political appointee had told her. “I guess the one thing happened, but not the other.” (Marocco did not respond to multiple requests for comment.) 

The cuts were so frenetic that, for a brief time, the U.S. government stopped paying for the fuel that ran the electricity for the American embassy in Juba, including the security compound, just as violence was surging throughout South Sudan, according to former senior officials.

In response to questions about the episode in Juba, the senior State Department official denied it was a mistake or that Rubio’s review wasn’t careful. “Going back and looking at things again doesn’t mean that you’ve made a mistake,” the senior official said. 

At one point in February, Marocco tried ordering the immediate return of foreign service officers stationed abroad. Several senior USAID officials protested, citing safety and logistical concerns for staff in war zones. During one meeting that month, Lewin responded, “You don’t want to get to know the lobsters. Just throw them in the pot,” according to an attendee and meeting notes. 

Lewin joined the government via Musk’s DOGE and later took over for Marocco. He seldom came to the USAID office or met with his own staff experts, officials said. Publicly, he called the agency an “unaccountable independent institution” where secrets leak so quickly “we have to hand-walk memos around like we’re in the ’40s.”

In the weeks that followed, DOGE and Trump appointees forbade those who remained at USAID from communicating with aid groups and discouraged discussion internally, telling staff abroad not to approach ambassadors to advocate for programs, emails show. 

Senior staffers said they were prohibited from meeting with congressional delegations to share basic information, which was critical to Congress’ oversight capabilities. The government’s health experts feared that taking any action to save lives could be a fireable offense. 

Still, some spoke out. 

“The consequences on lives lost and funding squandered will grow exponentially and irreversibly in many cases,” Nicholas Enrich, then an acting assistant administrator at USAID, warned in a Feb. 8 email to agency leaders, including Joel Borkert, the chief of staff, and Meisburger, who led the humanitarian affairs bureau. They did not respond to his plea, and Enrich was later put on administrative leave. 

Crucially, even when USAID’s new bosses did approve organizations to resume lifesaving work, they at times denied requests for the money that would allow them to do so, internal records show. Other proposals to fund existing grants or reverse terminations languished in limbo.

The official responding on behalf of the State Department said Trump’s OMB ultimately has more control over approving new grants and extensions, but that it was never the administration’s intention to keep all of the lifesaving programs forever. 

When ProPublica asked about the funding delays and the State Department’s explanation, OMB communications director Rachel Cauley said in an email, “That’s absolutely false. And that’s not even how this process works.” She did not clarify what was false, and the State Department did not address when Lewin sought funds from OMB for South Sudan’s cholera response. 

In early February, embassy staff in South Sudan provided Adler, the ambassador, with a list of the most critical operations there, warning that funds had not been released and lifesaving programs would cease when their money ran out. 

A career foreign service officer appointed to his post by the Biden administration, Adler had long been critical of the government of South Sudan for ongoing violence and deserting its own people, according to embassy cables and interviews with people familiar with his thinking.

Still, early on he appeared to recognize that without U.S. intervention, the most vulnerable people in the country did not stand a chance against cholera. In a Feb. 14 memo addressed to the leadership of the State Department’s Africa bureau, Adler asked the administration to release money to keep people alive. 

“Lifesaving medicine and medical care, as well as emergency water and sanitation services, play a critical role in controlling disease outbreaks,” the embassy wrote, “notably a severe cholera outbreak in South Sudan’s border regions hosting the greatest number of refugees.”

Adler declined to meet with ProPublica in South Sudan and did not respond to a detailed list of questions. 

Death by Spreadsheet 

As humanitarian groups racked up unpaid bills, they began to file lawsuits challenging the foreign aid freeze. A federal judge ordered the administration to reimburse the organizations. But on Feb. 26, the Supreme Court temporarily paused the lower court’s order. 

In a meeting with senior agency staff the next day, Lewin, who at that time was not yet in charge of USAID programs, indicated that he interpreted the recent legal decisions as a potential license to dispense with one of the key review processes for unfreezing operations, according to two attendees and meeting notes. One of those attendees took Lewin’s remarks to mean that “he had no intention to review contracts or implement lifesaving programs.”

In response, the senior State Department official told ProPublica, “No one meant that or said that.”

The next night, a Friday, staff at the Bureau of Humanitarian Assistance, the division of USAID that dealt with emergencies and ran nearly all of the programs in South Sudan, were working late, scrambling to keep emergency programs operational. Suddenly, they noticed Borkert making changes to a key spreadsheet. 

To create the spreadsheet, DOGE had sidestepped career staff, pulling information from databases made for project management. It was so rudimentary that it was often impossible to tell what a program did from descriptions as vague as “extension No. 4” or “allocation of funds,” according to people who saw the spreadsheet.

Rubio and his aides had already terminated hundreds of programs in preceding days. Staff were bracing for another round of cuts, but many of the line items remaining in the file were for programs that provided food, clean water or essential medicines.

Veteran USAID officials watched as Borkert scrolled down the spreadsheet, turning rows red, yellow or green every few seconds, never asking a single question. Realizing the red programs were slated to be cut, they frantically started editing descriptions so that Borkert would at least know what those programs did. Within minutes, he’d flagged dozens of them for termination. (Borkert declined to comment.)

A senior staff member in the group raced upstairs and begged Borkert to reinstate them, according to two officials familiar with the episode. He relented on several. But the next day, Marocco and Lewin told the group they’d kept far too many programs, emails show. Lewin ordered 151 additional awards terminated, writing that he would “have strong objections to these awards being turned on.” Marocco followed up by email at 11:30 p.m. saying the reactivations were “far too broad,” indicating several more line numbers and writing “sound like terminations,” next to them, ultimately canceling even more programs.

On March 10, Rubio announced on X that the review was over. In response to lawsuits, Trump officials told the courts that the review was a careful examination of USAID’s operations.

More than 5,000 programs had been canceled, and fewer than 1,000 remained — a figure that many officials told ProPublica was arbitrary but binding. In reality, the administration still wasn’t releasing money and many of the surviving programs had no funds, according to interviews with humanitarian groups and government officials, as well as memos and spreadsheets documenting those decisions.

When asked about the current status of the 1,000, the senior State Department official criticized USAID’s former vetting procedures and said the administration is in the process of creating new programs. 

Soon after the review ended, the cholera response in South Sudan came crashing down.

“God Is With Us”

Rebecca Nyariaka and Koang Kai were shrouded in grief throughout the upheaval in Washington. Their only child, 4-year-old son Geer, had been one of the first victims when cholera inundated the Bentiu camp in December. 

The couple met in secondary school at a refugee camp in Kenya and got married after they’d both returned to their homeland in 2013. After violence broke out, they fled to Bentiu, finding occasional jobs working with health clinics. 

Now, in early March, they prodded one another to stay hopeful: 28-year-old Nyariaka was once again pregnant.

In the refugee camp, the couple could see the signs of the funding cuts everywhere. Uncollected garbage barricaded the drainage ditches that encased their neighborhood. Human waste spilled out of the overflowing communal latrines near Nyariaka’s house and into the fetid water filling the culverts. Toilets crawling with rats, maggots and flies became so noxious that neighbors began defecating on the surrounding dirt roads. The stench was overwhelming. “Those who washed the latrines have gone,” Kai said. “And we are left here all alone.”

The U.N.’s new sanitation contract had been committed before Trump took office, but it hadn’t received any money since last year. On March 12, USAID staff in the region sent Washington field notes about the conditions in the camp, where health services faced “closure or severe cutbacks” because of the funding shortfall. Officials at the organization pleaded behind the scenes as well. They repeatedly called and met with embassy leaders to request help, to no avail. “What we have now is survival of the fittest,” one U.N. official told ProPublica.

When Nyariaka gave birth to a healthy baby boy, cholera was rampant throughout the camp. Neighbors were dying around them, and Kai was worried for his wife and new baby. “When cholera enters your home, you know the chances of survival are very low. Very few people survive it,” he said later. 

Nyariaka named the baby Kuothethin, “God is with us.” In her first days back from the hospital, her body still healing, the new mom used the bathroom frequently, teetering back and forth to the overflowing latrines close to her house. She soon developed violent vomiting and diarrhea, the hallmark symptoms of cholera. 

Kai, tall and muscular, picked her up in his arms and raced to the camp hospital, but it was too late. Nyariaka died just after they arrived.

She had been nowhere except her house and the latrines since coming home from the hospital, Kai said. He’s certain the toilets are to blame for her death. Depressed and unable to care for their newborn, he sent the baby across the floodwaters to live with his mother-in-law on another side of the state.

Kai and Nyariaka had been best friends for years before they started dating, their lives intertwined for nearly two decades. “Her whole way of life was good. She loved our children and cared for them,” Kai said. “I am heartbroken.”

As the disease ripped through the camp, more services shut down, including transportation for the dead. Kai’s neighbor, John Gai, lost his father to cholera. Gai had to take him to the cemetery himself in a wheelbarrow, his father’s head bobbing at his knees. “Nobody should have to carry a dead body among the living,” Gai said.

“Gross Neglect”

On March 28, Rubio notified Congress that he was officially shuttering most USAID operations and transferring programs that survived his review, including several in South Sudan, to the State Department. 

Staffers spent the next weeks repeatedly appealing to Lewin — who by then had replaced Marocco as Rubio’s top foreign aid official — for authority to perform the mundane tasks needed to keep the programs operating. In late April, the agency’s humanitarian bureau submitted a blanket request to fund grants that Lewin had already approved. Lewin refused, records show, and the humanitarian bureau had to submit country-specific proposals for consideration. That process dragged on for months.

In June, just before USAID was shut down for good, Lewin finally approved some of the funding the staff had advocated for. But by then it was too late. The officials had run out of time to transfer money already appropriated by Congress to remaining programs.  

On June 26, R. Clark Pearson, a supervisory contracting officer at USAID, sent a scathing email to USAID offices around the world in response to an email from the top procurement officer for the agency listing the hundreds of programs that were meant to be active. He said there was no one who could manage the awards, which he called “gross neglect on an astonishing level.” 

“In a time of unimaginable hubris, gross incompetence and failures of leadership across the Agency, this has to be one of the most delusional emails I have seen to date,” Pearson wrote. “Lives depend on these awards and for the [U.S. government] to simply not manage them because of an arbitrary deadline is inexcusable.”

That same day, a senior humanitarian adviser informed Adler that payment extensions for several programs, with the exception of food aid, weren’t processed because the “approval was received late.” 

In September, the Supreme Court issued another emergency ruling that let the administration withhold nearly $4 billion that Congress earmarked for foreign aid. 

Later that month, OMB released some new foreign aid funds. That’s when World Relief finally began to receive funding, allowing the clinic in Tor Top’s community to reopen, even though the administration claimed the program had been “active” for almost seven months. 

The U.N.’s migration program has not received a new South Sudan grant.  The organization will run out of money for dike maintenance in Bentiu by February, after months of some of the most severe flooding in years.

A spokesperson for the U.N.’s migration program said the organization was still in discussion with the State Department and “continues to engage with donors about the critical humanitarian needs in South Sudan.”

The Uncounted 

During the first months of the cholera outbreak, a mobile health team run by the International Rescue Committee, a U.S.-based nonprofit that works in crisis zones around the world, visited Nyajime Duop’s remote village on the edges of Rubkona County twice weekly. The team brought soap and transported sick people to IRC’s nearby clinic for care. 

At 27, Duop’s youthful face belied a life marked by war and poverty. She had arrived just a few months earlier, fleeing violence in Khartoum, Sudan, with an infant and toddler in tow, when Trump officials terminated IRC’s $5.5 million grant. 

The IRC suspended its operations in the village in the spring. When Duop’s 1-year-old baby, Nyagoa, fell ill with cholera in July, on a day IRC would have visited, there was no one to help her. By the morning, Nyagoa was unconscious. She died that day, the Fourth of July.

Cholera has spread to nearly every corner of South Sudan, infected at least 100,000 people and killed 1,600, though cases began abating this fall. The true death toll is impossible to know, in part because clinics that would have cared for people and counted the dead were shuttered. The Trump administration also cut funding to the World Health Organization, which helped the South Sudanese government gather accurate data on the outbreak. 

In a pasture a short walk from IRC’s clinic, ProPublica found at least three dozen mounds covered in sticks — the makeshift graves, village leaders said, of those who died of cholera before reaching the clinic. The clinic’s security guard told reporters he saw one man collapse and die just yards from the front gate.

“There are many more cases,” said Kray Ndong, then acting minister of health for the area, “many more deaths.”

The Trump administration recently announced a new era of foreign aid, where the U.S. will prioritize “trade over aid.” South Sudan, with a gross domestic product one-tenth the size of Vermont’s, has little to offer. 

“The administration says they are committed to humanitarian needs,” one aid official in South Sudan said. “But we don’t know what that means, only that it will be transactional.”

08:00 AM

When The Internet Grew Up — And Locked Out Its Kids [Techdirt]

In December 2025, the world crossed a threshold. For the first time ever, access to the major social media platforms was no longer guaranteed by interest, connection, or curiosity — but by a birth date. A new law in Australia decrees that people under 16 may no longer legally hold accounts on major social-media services. What began as parental warnings and optional “age checks” has transformed into something more fundamental: a formal re-engineering of the Internet’s social contract — one increasingly premised on the assumption that young people’s participation in networked spaces is presumptively risky rather than conditionally beneficial.

Australia’s law demands that big platforms block any user under 16 from having an account, or face fines nearing A$50 million. Platforms must take “reasonable steps” — and many will rely on ID checks, biometric checks, or algorithmic age verification rather than self-declared ages, which are easily falsified. The law was officially enforced in December 10, 2025, and by that date, major platforms are expected to have purged under-16 accounts or face consequences. 

It’s not just Australia. Across the Atlantic, the European Parliament has proposed sweeping changes to the digital lives of minors across the European Commission’s domain. In late November 2025, MEPs voted overwhelmingly in favor of a non-binding resolution that would make 16 the default minimum age to access social media, video-sharing platforms and even AI-powered assistants — unless parental consent is given. Access for 13–15-year-olds would still be possible but only with consent. 

The push is part of a broader EU effort. The Commission is working on a harmonised “age-verification blueprint app,” designed to let users prove they are old enough without revealing more personal data than necessary. The tool might become part of a future EU-wide “digital identity wallet.” Its aim: prevent minors from wandering into corners of the web designed without their safety in mind. 

Several EU member states are already acting. Countries such as Denmark propose banning social media for under-15s unless parental consent is granted; others — including France, Spain and Greece — support an EU-wide “digital majority” threshold to shield minors from harmful content, addiction and privacy violations. 

The harm narrative – and its limits

The effectiveness of these measures remains uncertain, and the underlying evidence is more mixed than public debate often suggests. Much of the current regulatory momentum reflects heightened concern about potential harms, informed by studies and reports indicating that some young people experience negative effects in some digital contexts — including anxiety, sleep disruption, cyberbullying, distorted self-image, and attention difficulties. These findings are important, but they do not point to uniform or inevitable outcomes. Across the research, effects vary widely by individual, platform, feature, intensity of use, and social context, with many young people reporting neutral or even positive experiences. The strongest evidence, taken as a whole, does not support the claim that social media is inherently harmful to children; rather, it points to clustered risks associated with specific combinations of vulnerability, design, and use.

European lawmakers point to studies indicating that one in four minors displays “problematic” or “dysfunctional” smartphone use.  But framing these findings as proof of universal addiction risks collapsing a complex behavioral spectrum into a single moral diagnosis — one that may obscure more than it clarifies.

From the outside, the rationale feels compelling: we would never leave 13-year-olds unattended in a bar or a casino, so why leave them alone in an attention economy designed to capture and exploit their vulnerabilities? Yet this comparison quietly imports an assumption — that social media is analogous to inherently harmful adult-only environments — rather than to infrastructure whose effects depend heavily on design, governance, norms, and support.

What gets lost when we generalize harm

When harm is treated as universal, the response almost inevitably becomes universal exclusion. Nuance collapses. Differences between children — in temperament, resilience, social context, family support, identity, and need — are flattened into a single risk profile.

The Internet, however, was never meant to serve a single type of user. Its power came from universality — from its ability to give voice to the otherwise voiceless: shy kids, marginalized youth, LGBTQ+ children, rural teenagers, creative outsiders, identity seekers, those who feel alone. For many young people, social media platforms are not simply entertainment. They are places of learning, authorship, peer support, political awakening, and cultural participation. They are where teens practice argument, humor, creativity, solidarity, dissent — often more freely than in offline institutions that are tightly supervised, hierarchical, or unwelcoming.

When policymakers speak about children online primarily through the language of damage, they risk erasing these positive and formative uses. The child becomes framed not as an emerging citizen, but as a passive object of protection — someone to be shielded rather than supported, managed rather than empowered.

This framing matters because it shapes solutions. If social media is assumed to be broadly toxic, then the only responsible response appears to be removal. But if harm is uneven and situational, then exclusion becomes a blunt instrument — one that protects some children while actively disadvantaging others.

Marginalized and vulnerable youth are often the first to feel this loss. LGBTQ+ teens, for example, disproportionately report finding affirmation, language, and community online long before they encounter it offline. Young people in rural areas or restrictive households rely on digital spaces for exposure to ideas, mentors, and peers they cannot access locally. For these users, access is not a luxury — it is infrastructure.

Generalized harm narratives also obscure agency. They imply that young people are uniquely incapable of learning norms, developing judgment, or negotiating risk online — despite doing so, imperfectly but meaningfully, in every other social domain. This assumption can become self-fulfilling: if teens are denied the chance to practice digital citizenship, they are less prepared when access finally arrives. Treating youth presence online as a problem to be solved — rather than a reality to be shaped — risks turning protection into erasure. When the gate is slammed shut, a lot more than TikTok updates are lost: skills, social ties, civic voice, cultural fluency, and the slow, necessary process of learning how to exist in public.

As these policies spread from Australia to Europe — and potentially beyond — we face a world in which digital citizenship is awarded not by curiosity or contribution, but by age and identity verification. The Internet shifts from a public square to a credential-gated club.

Three futures for a youth-shaped Internet

What might this reshape look like in practice? There are three broad futures that could emerge, depending on how regulators, platforms and civil society act.

1. The Hard-Gate Era

In the first future, exclusion becomes the primary safety mechanism. More countries adopt strict minimum-age laws. Platforms build age-verification gates based on government IDs or biometric systems. This model treats youth access itself as the hazard — rather than interrogating which platform designs, incentive structures, and governance failures generate harm.

The social cost is high. Marginalized young people may lose access to vital communities and the Internet becomes something young people consume only after permission — not something they help shape.

2. The Hybrid Redesign Era

In a second future, regulatory pressure triggers transformation rather than exclusion. Age gates are narrow and specific. Platforms are forced to redesign for youth safety. Crucially, this approach assumes that harm is contingent, not inherent — and therefore preventable through design.

Infinite scroll and autoplay may be disabled by default for minors. Algorithmic amplification might be limited or made transparent. Data harvesting and targeted advertising curtailed. Privacy defaults strengthened. Friction added where needed.

Here, minors remain participants in the public sphere — but within environments engineered to reduce exploitation rather than maximize engagement at any cost.

3. The Parallel Internet Era

In the third future, bans fail to eliminate demand. Underage users migrate to obscure platforms beyond regulatory reach. This outcome highlights a central flaw in the “inherent harm” narrative: when access is blocked rather than improved, risk does not disappear — it relocates.

The harder question

There is real urgency behind these debates. Some children are struggling online. Some platform practices are demonstrably irresponsible. Some business models reward excess and compulsion. But if our response treats social media itself as the toxin — rather than asking who is harmed, how, and under what conditions — we risk replacing nuanced care with blunt control.

A digital childhood can be safer without being silent, protected without being excluded and, supported without being stripped of voice.

The question is not whether children should be online. It is whether we are willing to do the harder work: redesigning systems, reshaping incentives, and offering targeted support — instead of declaring an entire generation too fragile for the public square.

Konstantinos Komaitis is Resident Senior Fellow, Democracy and Tech Initiative, Atlantic Council

06:00 AM

ICE Ramps Up Deportation Efforts In Minneapolis After Trump Claims Somalians Are ‘Garbage’ [Techdirt]

Trump was always going to target Minnesota and, specifically, the home of its most liberal residents, Minneapolis. Trump hates the state’s governor, Tim Walz. He also hates one of the state’s congressional reps, Ilhan Omar, who was born in Somalia.

This is only part of Trump’s recent hateful statements targeting Somalians, Tim Walz, and Rep. Ilhan Omar:

As an example, hundreds of thousands of refugees from Somalia are completely taking over the once great State of Minnesota. Somalian gangs are roving the streets looking for “prey” as our wonderful people stay locked in their apartments and houses hoping against hope that they will be left alone. The seriously retarded Governor of Minnesota, Tim Walz, does nothing, either through fear, incompetence, or both, while the worst “Congressman/woman” in our Country, Ilhan Omar, always wrapped in her swaddling hijab, and who probably came into the U.S.A. illegally in that you are not allowed to marry your brother, does nothing but hatefully complain about our Country, its Constitution, and how “badly” she is treated, when her place of origin is a decadent, backward, and crime ridden nation, which is essentially not even a country for lack of Government, Military, Police, schools, etc…

That was delivered via Trump’s favorite outlet for his unhinged rants, Truth Social. He followed that up by making these statements where anyone could hear them during a press briefing:

They contribute nothing. I don’t want them in our country,” Trump told reporters near the end of a lengthy Cabinet meeting. He added: “Their country is no good for a reason. Your country stinks and we don’t want them in our country.

[…]

We can go one way or the other, and we’re going to go the wrong way, if we keep taking in garbage into our country,” Trump said. “Ilhan Omar is garbage. She’s garbage. Her friends are garbage.”

That put another target on Minnesota’s back. The state is home to nearly a third of the nation’s 260,000 Somalians. It’s not as though they’re here illegally, though.

Almost 58 percent were born in the U.S., and 87 percent of those born elsewhere are naturalized citizens.

Not that any of that matters to Donald Trump or ICE’s collective of masked thugs. So, these are the sort of things that are happening now in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area as Trump’s hatred becomes personified.

Federal agents used chemical irritants to push through an angry crowd that blocked their vehicles as they checked identifications in a heavily Somali neighborhood of Minneapolis on Tuesday, amid the Trump administration’s ongoing crackdown targeting the community.

City Council member Jamal Osman, a Somali American who represents the neighborhood, witnessed the confrontation, as did an Associated Press videographer.

[…]

He also said he spoke with one young Somali American who was dragged to a vehicle, detained and taken to an ICE detention center. There, officials finally looked at his U.S. passport, fingerprinted him, and released him but told him to find his own way home, about 6 miles (10 kilometers) away in snowy weather.

The DHS also made some noise about an arrest that supposedly justified the violent actions taken by ICE officers (who not only deployed chemicals but also arrested two people who were simply recording ICE officers and/or asserting their Fourth Amendment rights). But the statement seems extremely light on facts, as is often the case when DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin decides to open her mouth:

The Department of Homeland Security’s Assistant Secretary for Public Affairs Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement that Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers arrested Jesus Saucedo-Portillo, whom she described as an unauthorized immigrant, on Dec. 6 while he was getting into his vehicle in a campus parking lot.

In a divergence from what school officials have said about the incident, McLaughlin said officers had a warrant and were obstructed by a university administrator and campus security during the encounter.

McLaughlin said Saucedo-Portillo “is a registered sex offender and has a previous arrest for driving while intoxicated.” A search of Minnesota court records by the Minnesota Star Tribune found no record of a DWI case under that name, and Saucedo-Portillo does not appear in the national sex-offender registry.

Some journalists who got an inside look at this operation could have tried to undercut McLaughlin’s narrative about targeted arrests and “worst of the worst.” Instead, NBC News embedded with ICE for a day and ended up generating an article headlined “ICE operation shows the difficulty of immigration arrests amid pushback in frigid Minnesota.”

The article isn’t nearly as bad as the headline, but it allows ICE and their spokespeople to flat out lie about what’s been happening all over this nation, but has most recently focused almost exclusively on cities or states run by members of the Democratic Party.

“It is not an operation targeting the Somali community,” [ICE Acting Executive Director Marcos] Charles said. “We’re looking for people that are here illegally.”

Right. And that’s why the raid that made all the headlines (and generated a handful of bullshit arrests) just happened to have occurred in a neighborhood that is primarily populated by Somalis.

Then there’s this, which is directly contradicted by NBC’s reporting, even if NBC tries to present its observations as supporting Marcos Charles’s assertion:

“The biggest misconception is that we’re out there just randomly arresting people, which we’re not,” Charles said.

[…]

During NBC News’ roughly eight hours with ICE, fewer than a dozen people were arrested despite not being the initial targets of the operation. They just happened to be at the scene when agents showed up.

Given the wording, I would assume eleven people who weren’t ICE targets were arrested. If it were less than that, I assume NBC would have used wording like “ten people” or “less than ten people.” Either way, it’s like more than one “collateral” arrest per hour, which is crazy considering this is an article involving officers griping about the cold keeping people indoors, being prevented from entering homes by property owners multiple times due to the ICE’s lack of actual judicial warrants, and double-tap home search that revealed the targeted person had already fled. The officers decided to arrest the other person there just because.

Minneapolis is pushing back, which is exactly the way it should be. Here’s an incredible recording of anti-ICE protesters shielding a Minneapolis store from being entered by ICE officers, who collectively can’t even explain why they need to enter the building. The officers are eventually shamed into leaving, and showered with nothing but expressions of love, sympathy, and offers of prayer:

Resistance works. ICE officers work best when there’s no friction. When confronted or slowed, they’re far more apt to give up and leave than continue their likely illegal actions. In some cases, being confronted results in unprovoked acts of violence by federal officers. Fortunately, nothing like that happened here.

And just because we’re talking about Minneapolis, “Minnesota Nice,” and ICE activity largely fueled by xenophobic hate, here’s a palate cleanser. I don’t agree with my dad on nearly anything political, but he’s one of the most helpful people you will ever meet. He recently made the news in Minneapolis for doing what he’s always done: pitching in wherever needed.

Daily Deal: Super Duolingo 1-Year Subscription For 1 User [Techdirt]

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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.

05:00 AM

Advancing digital rights in 2026 will take all of us [Tor Project blog]

Earlier this year, I was asked about the connection between digital rights to human rights. I responded with my own questions. Today, I'm asking you those same questions:

When was the last time you learned about a police or military force harming a community? Where did you learn that information? When was the last time you saw hundreds of thousands of people on the street, calling for legislative change? Where did you see those pictures? How did those people learn about that protest and decide to join it?

In these examples, information is passed around with the help of the internet. Anybody fighting for human rights today is using technology: to share flyers or photos on social media, to communicate with a group on a messaging app, or to send messages to their representatives via email.

The upside is that technology makes the fight for human rights possible on a more global scale, because we can see and connect our movements together; however, most tech that we use today is controlled by Big Tech. That often means companies are conducting surveillance of how you use that technology and controlling the information you are shown through straight up censorship, algorithm manipulation, and shadow banning. As if that weren’t enough, there are many governments out there exploring and developing technology to repress and censor people.

There’s no democracy without digital rights

That is the connection between digital rights and human rights: You cannot untangle the fight to exercise our rights in the modern world from the internet and technology. Once you see that all movements for change depend, on some level, on technology, you can also see that the fight to defend democracies worldwide is equally connected to digital rights. In 2025 that has become clearer than ever.

From now on, there can be no defense of democracy where technology is not part of the conversation. This year we’ve heard a lot about “tech sovereignty” and the importance of breaking out from the dependency on Big Tech and centralization of services by one country. But tech sovereignty alone won’t save us if we don’t make digital rights a part of this plan. Otherwise, tech sovereignty can easily become authoritarian tech sovereignty, with each country creating its own walled-off internet, like Russia and China have been pushing for their citizens.

There are no digital rights without your support

2025 was also a year where projects working on digital rights faced unprecedented financial challenges. Many digital rights projects lost their backing.

Think about it: we are in a moment in the world where democracies are fragile, where resistance and the fight to protect democracy and human rights are incredibly important. And we are living a moment where it is almost impossible to do these things without the use of technology. At this crucial moment for the world, the main projects that are providing protection and tools for this resistance, are underfunded.

This fight to secure a better future for the world needs to include the support for projects working on digital rights.

So I am calling on our community to come together in 2026 and support these projects. Not only the Tor Project, but all of the projects that are working to build tools that ensure your rights are protected in the digital world. So you can help the fight for our rights in the “offline” world.

Tor's part in upholding our digital rights in 2026

Rights are upheld by people, communities, and technologies that adapt to a changing world. Here's what that looks like for Tor as we head into the next year.

We're continuing with a clear vision: make it easier for people to exercise their right to privacy and access to information with tools that keep us connected, and make it harder for powerful adversaries to break that connection.

In practice, this means refining how we respond to censorship events in real time: rolling out new features like Conjure and experimenting with new pluggable transports, and integrating effective circumvention tools into more Tor software like Tails and Tor VPN. At the same time, we're expanding the capabilities of battle-tested options that people can rely on when conditions change. We're working on a more efficient transport mode for Snowflake, so users can still reach it even as censors adapt, and we're making WebTunnel even more powerful, so it works in more environments where other circumvention tools struggle.

We'll also double down on keeping the Tor network safe against evolving attacks. One priority is implementing Counter Galois Onion (CGO), a new cryptographic defense designed to mitigate attacks on the Tor network, into onion services, alongside other initiatives to counter abuses of Tor technology.

Finally, we'll continue our work to make onion services more widely accessible, so publishing information in anonymous and secure ways, and reaching people in censored regions, becomes easier. Privacy-preserving technology has to be usable by the millions of internet users who depend on it for their protection. Ensuring their ease-of-use and continued availability is one of the most powerful ways we can defend digital rights human rights in 2026.

The thing about chess [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

In a typical tournament, you don’t score any extra points for winning with the fewest number of moves. Quickly isn’t the point.

      

Section 230 Faces Repeal. Support The Coverage That’s Been Getting It Right All Along. [Techdirt]

Yesterday, Rep. Harriet Hageman released her bill to repeal Section 230. She’s calling it “reform,” but make no mistake—it’s a repeal, and I’ll explain why below. The law turns 30 in February, and there’s a very real chance this could be its last anniversary.

Which is why we’re running Techdirt’s fundraising campaign right now, offering our very first commemorative coin for donations of at least $100 made before January 5th. That coin celebrates those 30 years of Section 230. But more importantly, your support funds the kind of coverage that can actually cut through the bullshit at a moment when it matters most.

Because here’s the thing: for nearly three decades, we’ve been one of the only sources to report fully and accurately on both how Section 230 works and why it’s so important. And right now, with a bipartisan coalition gunning to kill it based on myths and misinformation, that expertise is desperately needed.

Just in the last week or so on Bluesky I’ve posted two separate threads debunking some blatantly false narratives around Section 230 (one claiming that Section 230 means you’re not a publisher and another claiming that Section 230 is a “get out of jail free” card).

Section 230 remains one of the most misunderstood laws in America, even among the people in Congress trying to destroy it. Some of that confusion is deliberate—political expediency wrapped in talking points. But much of it has calcified into “common knowledge” that’s actively wrong. The “platform or publisher” distinction that doesn’t exist in the law. The idea that 230 protects illegal content. The claim that moderation choices forfeit your protections. All myths. All dangerous. All getting repeated by people who should know better.

So below, I’m highlighting some of our essential Section 230 coverage—not as a greatest hits compilation, but as a roadmap to understanding what’s actually at stake. If you believe in the open internet, you need Section 230. And if you need Section 230, you need someone who actually understands it fighting back against the tsunami of bullshit. That’s what you’re funding when you support Techdirt.

Let’s start with the big one. Our most popular post ever on Section 230:

Hello! You’ve Been Referred Here Because You’re Wrong About Section 230 Of The Communications Decency Act

Five years later, this is still the single most useful thing you can hand someone who’s confidently wrong about Section 230. It systematically demolishes every major myth—the platform/publisher nonsense, the “neutrality” requirement that doesn’t exist, the “good faith” clause people misread, all of it—in a format designed to be shared. And people do share it, constantly, because the same wrong arguments keep recycling. Consider this your foundation.

Why Section 230 ‘Reform’ Effectively Means Section 230 Repeal

This is the piece that exposes the semantic game. Politicians love to say they’re not repealing 230, just “reforming” it. But as Cathy Gellis explains, nearly every reform proposal accomplishes the same thing: it forces websites into expensive, extended litigation to reach an outcome the law currently reaches in weeks. That’s not reform—it’s sabotage by procedure. The real benefit of 230 isn’t the outcome (most of these cases would eventually win on First Amendment grounds anyway), it’s that you get there for $100k instead of $5 million. Strip that away and you’ve effectively repealed the law for everyone except the richest companies. Which, spoiler alert, is exactly the point of most “reform” proposals.

Those Who Don’t Understand Section 230 Are Doomed To Repeal It

A near universal trait of those who show up with some crazy idea to “reform” Section 230 is that they don’t understand how the law works, despite the many explainers out there (and an entire book by Jeff Kosseff). And that’s why, as with Cathy’s article above, the advocates for reform lean in on the claim that they’re just “reforming” it when they’re actually leading to an effective repeal.

Everything You Know About Section 230 Is Wrong (But Why?)

Law professor James Boyle asks the more interesting question: why do smart people keep getting this so catastrophically wrong? His answer—cognitive biases, analogies to other areas of law that don’t actually apply, and the sheer difficulty of thinking clearly about speech policy—explains why the same bad ideas keep resurfacing despite being debunked repeatedly. Understanding the psychology of the confusion is almost as important as correcting it.

Your Problem Is Not With Section 230, But The 1st Amendment

So many complaints about Section 230 are actually complaints about the First Amendment in disguise. People angry that a website won’t remove certain speech often blame 230, but the reality is that the First Amendment likely protects that speech anyway. Prof. Jess Miers explains why killing 230 won’t magically enable the censorship people want—it’ll just make the process more expensive and unpredictable. Some people hear that and think “great, we can rely on the First Amendment alone then!” Which brings us to:

Why Section 230 Is Better Than The First Amendment

This is the piece that clicks it all into place. Prof. Eric Goldman’s paper explains that 230 isn’t an alternative to First Amendment protection—it’s a procedural shortcut to the same outcome. Without 230, most of these lawsuits would still eventually fail on First Amendment grounds. The difference is it would cost $3-5 million in legal fees to get there instead of $100k. That $100k vs $5 million gap is the difference between an ecosystem where small companies can exist and one where only giants survive. Anyone telling you we can just rely on the First Amendment either doesn’t understand this or is deliberately trying to consolidate the internet into a handful of megacorps.

NY Times Gets 230 Wrong Again; Misrepresenting History, Law, And The First Amendment

And now we get to the part where even the supposed experts fuck it up. The NY Times—the Paper of Record—has made the same basic factual error about Section 230 so many times they’ve had to run variations of this correction repeatedly:

If it feels like you can’t trust the mainstream media to accurately report on Section 230, you’re not wrong. And that’s why we do what we do at Techdirt.

Has Wired Given Up On Fact Checking? Publishes Facts-Optional Screed Against Section 230 That Gets Almost Everything Wrong

Even the tech press—outlets that should know better—regularly faceplants on this stuff. This Wired piece was so aggressively wrong it read like parody. The value here is watching us dissect not just the errors, but how someone can write thousands of words about a law while fundamentally misunderstanding what it does.

Ex-Congressmen Pen The Most Ignorant, Incorrect, Confused, And Dangerous Attack On Section 230 I’ve Ever Seen

The title says it all. When former members of Congress—people who theoretically understand how laws work—produce something this catastrophically wrong, it reveals the scope of the problem. These aren’t random trolls; these are people with institutional credibility writing op-eds that influence policy. The danger here is that their ignorance carries weight.

Before Advocating To Repeal Section 230, It Helps To First Understand How It Works

The pattern is almost comical: someone decides 230 is bad, spends zero time understanding it, then announces a “solution” that would either accomplish nothing or catastrophically backfire. This piece is representative of dozens we’ve written, each time responding to a new flavor of the same fundamental confusion, like no other publication online.

No, Revoking Section 230 Would Not ‘Save Democracy’

People have assigned Section 230 almost mystical properties—that it’s the reason democracy is failing, or that repealing it would somehow fix polarization, or radicalization, or misinformation. The law does none of these things, good or bad. This piece dismantles the fantasy thinking that treats 230 like a magic wand.

Five Section 230 Cases That Made Online Communities Better

Amid all the doom-saying, it’s worth remembering what 230 actually enables. Jess Miers walks through five specific cases where the law protected communities, support groups, review sites, and services that improve people’s lives. Repealing 230 doesn’t just hurt Facebook—it destroys the ecosystem of smaller communities that depend on user-generated content.

Please support our continued reporting on Section 230

There are dozens more pieces in our archives, each responding to new variations of the same fundamental misunderstandings. We’ve been doing this for nearly three decades—long before it was politically fashionable to attack 230, and we’ll keep doing it as long as the law is under threat.

Because here’s what happens if we lose this fight: the internet consolidates into a handful of platforms big enough to survive the legal costs. Smaller communities die. Innovation gets strangled in the crib. And ironically, the problems people blame on 230—misinformation, radicalization, abuse—all get worse, because only the giants with the resources to over-moderate will survive, and they’ll moderate in whatever way keeps advertisers and governments happy, not in whatever way actually serves users.

That’s the stakes. Not whether Facebook thrives, but whether the next generation of internet services can even exist.

We’re committed to making sure policymakers, journalists, and anyone who cares about this stuff actually understand what they’re about to destroy. But we need support to keep doing it. If you agree that Section 230 matters, and that someone needs to keep telling the truth about it when even the NY Times can’t get basic facts right, support Techdirt today. Consider a $230 donation and get our first commemorative coin, celebrating 30 years of a law that’s under existential threat and making sure it survives to see 31.

Pluralistic: Happy Public Domain Day 2026! (17 Dec 2025) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



A collage of images representing creative works entering the public domain on Jan 1, 2026.

Happy Public Domain Day 2026! (permalink)

In 1998, Congress committed an act of mass cultural erasure, extending copyright by 20 years, including for existing works (including ones that were already in the public domain), and for 20 years, virtually nothing entered the US public domain.

But then, on January 1, 2019, the public domain reopened. A crop of works from 1923 entered the public domain, to great fanfare – though honestly, precious few of those works were still known (that's what happens when you lock up 50 year old works for 20 years, ensuring they don't circulate, or get reissued or reworked). Sure, I sang Yes, We Have No Bananas along with everyone else, but the most important aspect of the Grand Reopening of the Public Domain was the works that were to come:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z2ryWm0bziE

The mid/late-1920s were extraordinarily fecund, culturally speaking. A surprising volume of creative work from that era remains in our consciousness, and so, every January 1, we have been treated to a fresh delivery of gifts from the past, works that are free and open and ours to claim and copy and use and remix.

No one chronicles this better than Jennifer Jenkins and James Boyle, the dynamic duo of copyright scholars who run Duke's Center for the Public Domain. During the 20 year public domain drought, Jenkins and Boyle kept the flame of hope, publishing an annual roundup of all the works that would have entered the public domain, but for Congress's act of wanton cultural vandalism. But starting in 2019, these yearly reports were transformed – no longer are they laments for the past we're losing; today, they are celebrations of the past that's showering down around us.

2024 marked another turning point for the public domain: that was the year that the first Mickey Mouse cartoons entered the public domain:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/20/em-oh-you-ess-ee/#sexytimes

Does that mean that Mickey Mouse is in the public domain? Well, it's complicated. Really complicated. To a first approximation, the aspects of Mickey that were present in those early cartoons enterted the public domain that year, while other, later aspects of his character design (e.g. the big white gloves) wouldn't enter the public domain until later. But that's not the whole story, because not every aspect of character design is even copyrightable, so some later refinements to The Mouse were immediately public. This is such a chewy subject that Jenkins devoted a whole separate (and brilliant) article to it:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/15/mouse-liberation-front/#free-mickey

You see, Jenkins is a generationally brilliant legal communicator, much sought after for her commentary of these abstract matters. You may have heard her giving her characteristically charming, crisp and clear commentaries on NPR's Planet Money:

https://www.npr.org/2023/12/28/1197959250/the-indicator-from-planet-money-lets-get-it-on-in-court-12-28-2023

She and Boyle have produced some of the best copyright textbooks – from popular explainers to the definitive casebooks for classroom use – in circulation today, and they release these as free, shareable, open-access works:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/07/30/open-and-shut-casebook/#stop-confusing-the-issue-with-relevant-facts

Yesterday, Jenkins and Boyle published the 2026 edition of their Public Domain Day omnibus:

https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2026/

There are some spectacular works that are being freed on January 1:

  • Dashiell Hammett's Maltese Falcon

  • Agatha Christie's Murder at the Vicarage (Miss Marple's debut)

  • The first four Nancy Drew books

  • The first Dick and Jane book

  • TS Eliot's Ash Wednesday

  • Olaf Stapledon's Last and First Men

  • Sigmund Freud's Civilization and Its Discontents (in German)

  • Somerset Maugham's Cakes and Ale

  • Bertrand Russell's The Conquest of Happiness

That's just a small selection from thousands of books.

Things are pretty amazing on the film side too: we're getting Academy Award winners like All Quiet on the Western Front, another Marx Brothers movie (Animal Crackers); the debut film appearance of two of the Three Stooges (Soup To Nuts); a Gary Cooper/Marlene Dietrich vehicle (Morocco); Garbo's first talkie (Anna Christie); John Wayne's big break (The Big Trail); a Hitchcock (Murder!); Jean Harlow's debut (Hell's Angels, directed by Howard Hughes); and so, so many more.

Then there's music. On the composition side, there's some great Gershwins (I Got Rhythm, I've Got a Crush on You, Embraceable You). There's Hoagy Carmichael's Georgia On My Mind. There's Dream a Little Dream of Me, Sunny Side of the Street, Livin' in the Sunlight, Lovin' in the Moonlight, Just a Gigolo; and a Sousa march, The Royal Welch Fusiliers.

There's also some banger recordings: Marian Anderson's Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen; Bessie Smith and Louis Armstrong's St Louis Blues; Clarence Williams’ Blue Five's Everybody Loves My Baby (but My Baby Don't Love Nobody but Me); Louis Armstrong's If I Lose, Let me Lose; and (again) so many more!

On top of that, there's a bunch of 2D art, including a Mondrian, a Klee, and a ton more work from 1930, which means a lot of Deco, Constructivism, and Neoplasticism. As a collagist, I find this very exciting:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/12/03/cannier-valley/#bricoleur

As with previous editions, Jenkins and Boyle use this year's public domain report as a jumping-off point to explain some of the gnarlier aspects of copyright law. This year's casus belli is the bizarre copyright status of Betty Boop.

https://web.law.duke.edu/cspd/publicdomainday/2026/#boopanchor

On January 1, the first Betty Boop cartoon, Dizzy Dishes, will enter the public domain. But there are many aspects of Betty Boop that are already in the public domain, because the copyright on many later Boop cartoons was never renewed – until 1976, copyright holders were required to file some paperwork at fixed intervals to extend the copyright on their works. While the Fleischer studio (where Betty Boop was created) renewed the copyright on Dizzy Dishes, there were many other shorts that entered the public domain years ago.

That means that all the aspects of Betty Boop that were developed for Dizzy Dishes are about to enter the public domain. But also, all the aspects of Betty Boop from those non-renewed shorts are already in the public domain. But some of the remaining aspects of Betty Boop's character design – those developed in subsequent shorts that were also renewed – are also in the public domain, because they aren't copyrightable in the first place, because they're "generic," or "trivial," constitute "minuscule variations," or be so standard or indispensable that as to be a "scène à faire."

On top of that, there are aspects of the Betty Boop design that may be in copyright, but no one is sure who they belong to, because a lot of the paperwork establishing title to those copyrights vanished during the various times when the Fleischer studio and its archives changed hands.

But we're not done yet! Just because some later aspects of the Betty Boop character design are still in copyright, it doesn't follow that you aren't allowed to use them! US Copyright law has a broad set "limitations and exceptions," including fair use, and if your usage fits into one of these exceptions, you are allowed to reproduce, adapt, display and perform copyrighted works without permission from the copyright holder – even (especially) if the copyright holder objects.

And finally, on top of all of this, there's trademark, which is often lumped in with copyright as part of an incoherent, messy category we call "intellectual property." But trademark is absolutely unlike copyright in virtually every way. Unlike copyright, trademarks don't automatically expire. Trademarks remain in force for so long as they are used in commerce (which is why a group of cheeky ex-Twitter lawyers are trying to get the rights to the Twitter trademarks that Musk abandoned when he rebranded the company as "X"):

https://techcrunch.com/2025/12/16/x-updates-its-terms-files-countersuit-to-lay-claim-to-the-twitter-trademark-after-newcomers-challenge/

But also, trademark exists to prevent marketplace confusion, which means that you're allowed to use trademarks in ways that don't lead to consumers being misled about the origin of goods or services. Even the Supreme Court has (repeatedly) upheld the principle that trademark can't be used as a backdoor to extend copyright.

That's important, because the current Betty Boop license-holders have been sending out baseless legal threats claiming that their trademarks over Betty Boop mean that she's not going into the public domain. They're not the only ones, either! This is a routine, petty scam perpetrated by marketing companies that have scooped up the (usually confused and difficult-to-verify) title to cultural icons and then gone into business extracting rent from people and businesses who want to make new works with them. Scammers in this mold energetically send out bullshit legal threats on behalf of the estates of Charlie Chaplin, Alfred Hitchcock, and Herge, salting their threats with nonsense about different terms of copyright in the UK and elsewhere.

As Jenkins and Boyle point out, the thing that copyright expiration get us is clarity. When the heroic lawyer and Sherlockian Les Klinger succesfully wrestled the Sherlock Holmes rights out of the Doyle estate, he did us all a solid:

https://esl-bits.eu/ESL.English.Listening.Short.Stories/Rendition/01/default.html

But "wait until Les gets angry enough to spend five years in court" isn't a scalable solution to the scourge of copyfraud. It's only through the unambiguous expiry of copyright that we can all get clarity on which parts of our culture are free for all to use.

Now, that being said, copyright's limitations and exceptions are also hugely important, because there are plenty of beneficial uses that arise long before a work enters the public domain. To take just one example: for the past week, the song in top rotation on my music player has been the newly (officially) released Fatboy Slim track Satisfaction Skank, a mashup of Slim's giant hit Rockefeller Skank and the Rolling Stones' even bigger hit (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_c_V3oPCe-s

This track is one of Fatboy Slim's all-time crowd-pleasers, the song he would bust out during live shows to get everyone on the dance-floor. But for more than 20 years, the track has been exclusive to his live shows – despite multiple overtures, Fatboy Slim couldn't get the Rolling Stones to respond to his attempts to license Satisfaction for an official release.

That changed when – without explanation – the Rolling Stones reached out the Slim and offered to license the rights, even giving him access to the masters:

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c2dzre3z96go

This is a happy ending, but it's also a rarity. For every track like this – where the rightsholders decide to grant permission, even if it takes decades – there are thousands more that can't be officially released. This serves no one's interests – not musicians, not fans. The irony is that in the golden age of sampling, everyone operated from the presumption that sampling was fair use. High profile lawsuits and gunshy labels killed that presumption, and today, sampling remains a gigantic, ugly mess:

https://memex.craphound.com/2011/07/08/creative-license-how-the-hell-did-sampling-get-so-screwed-up-and-what-the-hell-do-we-do-about-it/

Which is all to say that the ongoing growth of the public domain, after its 20-year coma, is a most welcome experience – but if you think the public domain is great, wait'll you see what fair use can do for creativity!

(Image: Jennifer Jenkins and James Boyle, CC BY 4.0)


Hey look at this (permalink)



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

Object permanence (permalink)

#20yrago Sony DRM Debacle Roundup Part V https://memex.craphound.com/2005/12/16/sony-drm-debacle-roundup-part-v/

#15yrsago Weird D&D advice-column questions https://comicsalliance.com/weird-dd-questions-dungeons-dragons/

#10yrsago America’s permanent, ubiquitous tent-cities https://placesjournal.org/article/tent-city-america/

#10yrsago The changing world of webcomics business models https://web.archive.org/web/20151218130702/http://shadowbinders.com/webcomics-changing-business-model-podcast/

#10yrsago Cop who demanded photo of sexting-accused teen’s penis commits suicide https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/12/cop-who-wanted-to-take-pic-of-erection-in-sexting-case-commits-suicide/

#10yrsago Saudi millionaire acquitted of raping teen in London, says he tripped and accidentally penetrated her https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/12052901/Ehsan-Abdulaziz-Saudi-millionaire-cleared-of-raping-teenager.html

#10yrsago Someone snuck skimmers into Safeway stores https://krebsonsecurity.com/2015/12/skimmers-found-at-some-calif-colo-safeways/

#10yrsago Philips promises new firmware to permit third-party lightbulbs https://web.archive.org/web/20151216182639/http://www.developers.meethue.com/content/friends-hue-program-update

#5yrsago Jan 1 is Public Domain Day for 1925 https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/16/fraught-superpowers/#public-domain-day

#5yrsago Landmark US financial transparency law https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/16/fraught-superpowers/#financial-secrecy

#5yrsago Chaos Communications Congress https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/16/fraught-superpowers/#rc3

#5yrsago Email sabbaticals https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/16/fraught-superpowers/#email-sabbatical


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

  • "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2026

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

  • "The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2026

  • "The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, June 2026



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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Susie Drops A Doozy [The Status Kuo]

Images courtesy of The Democrats account on Twitter

Susie Wiles helped steer the Trump campaign to victory in 2024, in part by turning against her former boss, Ron DeSantis and helping to sideline him as a contender. Wiles was rewarded mightily when Trump named her his official and powerful gatekeeper as White House Chief of Staff.

But now, Wiles has swung those gates wide open by giving 11 recorded interviews to Vanity Fair, delivered in Part One and Part Two punches, with a series of truly jaw-dropping statements and claims.

The piece, which also presented highly unflattering photos of Trump’s motley set of advisors, provides the first, broad insider’s look at the Trump 2.0 White House. It confirms some things we’ve long suspected about key figures in the President’s orbit; it offers Wiles’s unique perspective on the lies, tensions and missteps that have characterized the regime; and it lays bare both her sycophantic devotion to Trump and her inability to prevent, and later her deep complicity in, some of Trump’s most terrible policies and acts.

Before we get into those, a bit about how wild it is that this piece even happened at all—and the circling of the wagons it has triggered.

Subscribe now

The unguarded guardian

As the New York Times reported,

The nation’s capital was stunned on Tuesday by an explosive new article recounting a year’s worth of unguarded conversations with the usually guarded Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff who spilled on everything from President Trump’s “alcoholic’s personality” to the brewing war in Venezuela.

Wiles typically “shuns publicity” but somehow agreed to 11 interviews this year with Chris Whipple, who previously wrote a book on White House chiefs of staff. Perhaps Wiles saw herself as someone to be counted among these historic figures and decided candor would serve her.

It did not. After the article published, a clearly upset Wiles blasted it on social media, which she rarely uses, calling it “a disingenuously framed hit piece on me and the finest President, White House staff, and Cabinet in history.” (Narrator: None of that last part is true.)

And while not disputing what she actually said on tape to Whipple, or any of the facts set forth in the article, Wiles claimed that “significant context was disregarded and much of what I, and others, said about the team and the President was left out of the story.”

Hold up. A cherry-picked political hit piece? In Washington, D.C.?! It’s like Wiles forgot where she worked.

In response to the piece, as Ron Filipkowski of MeidasTouch noted, the Trump cabinet apparently was instructed to tweet out support for Wiles and condemnation of the media.

This reads like panic, but okay.

Privately, Trump’s advisors appear stunned. Per CNN, “[S]ome White House aides and advisers expressed unease at the unvarnished views Wiles shared with a reporter. One Trump ally told CNN that the article appeared in ‘every group chat,’ adding ‘everyone is shocked and confused.’”

Susie’s Burn Book

Wiles served so much tea about Trump’s top advisors that it ought to be entered into her personal Burn Book. Here were a few real eyebrow raisers:

Trump has the personality of an alcoholic. Wiles made a rather unflattering comparison between Trump and her own father, a famous sportscaster who was an alcoholic. Trump himself does not drink, having seen booze kill his own brother Fred at age 42. But Wiles claimed Trump has “an alcoholic’s personality” because he believes “that there’s nothing he can’t do. Nothing, zero, nothing.” Her experience with her father, she said, made her “a little bit of an expert in big personalities.”

That sense of infallibility makes no one feel any easier. Asked about Wiles’s characterization, Trump gave Wiles the full Mamdani treatment. “No, she meant that I’m — you see, I don’t drink alcohol. So everybody knows that — but I’ve often said that if I did, I’d have a very good chance of being an alcoholic,” Trump said in an interview with the New York Post. “I have said that many times about myself, I do. It’s a very possessive personality.”

Elon Musk is often high on ketamine, and Wiles thinks he’s a problem. Wiles labeled Musk an “avowed ketamine user” who was probably “microdosing” while posting some of his worst takes on Hitler and Stalin. “He’s an odd, odd duck, as I think geniuses are,” she said, demonstrating quite the backhand. “You know, it’s not helpful, but he is his own person.”

Wiles also claimed she was “aghast” at Musk’s destruction of USAID, which directly killed hundreds of thousands of desperate aid recipients and will likely kill millions more. “I think anybody that pays attention to government and has ever paid attention to USAID believed, as I did, that they do very good work,” Wiles said. Per Vanity Fair,

Wiles says she called Musk on the carpet. “You can’t just lock people out of their offices,” she recalls telling him. At first, Wiles didn’t grasp the effect that slashing USAID programs would have on humanitarian aid. “I didn’t know a lot about the extent of their grant making.” But with immunizations halted in Africa, lives would be lost. Soon she was getting frantic calls from relief agency heads and former government officials with a dire message: Thousands of lives were in the balance.

Wiles continued: “So Marco is on his way to Panama. We call him and say, ‘You’re Senate-confirmed. You’re going to have to be the custodian, essentially, of [USAID].’ ‘Okay,’ he says.” But Musk forged ahead—all throttle, no brake. “Elon’s attitude is you have to get it done fast. If you’re an incrementalist, you just won’t get your rocket to the moon,” Wiles said. “And so with that attitude, you’re going to break some china. But no rational person could think the USAID process was a good one. Nobody.”

JD Vance is a conspiracy theorist. Wiles’s assessment of the Vice President was within the context of the Epstein files and the theories around them. “The people that really appreciated what a big deal this is are Kash [Patel] and [FBI deputy director] Dan Bongino,” Wiles said, “Because they lived in that world.” She then threw Vance into that same camp, adding, “And the vice president, who’s been a conspiracy theorist for a decade.” She also suggested Vance’s opinion on Trump morphed for political considerations. “His conversion came when he was running for the Senate. And I think his conversion was a little bit more, sort of political,” Wiles said.

Ya think?

This could be a long-running shtick between Vance and Wiles, or perhaps Vance is simply adept at quickly drawing the poison from a political wound. Addressing Wiles’s statements, Vance jovially told a crowd yesterday, “Sometimes I am a conspiracy theorist, but I only believe in the conspiracy theories that are true,” drawing cheers from the crowd but pained grimaces from scientists, investigators and experts. “And by the way, Susie and I have joked in private and in public about that for a long time.”

Russ Vought is a right-wing zealot. This is a secret to exactly no one, but to hear Wiles say it is startling. Vought is an author of Project 2025, a Christian Nationalist who has advanced the “unitary executive” theory to grant more power to Trump, and the brains behind mass firings and the strangulation of research and science through the illegal impoundment of billions in appropriated congressional funds.

Per the memo, Vought brushed off this statement by Wiles (and would probably gladly wear a fascist zealot’s band), praising her as “an exceptional Chief of Staff.”

The quiet part out loud

Besides some impolitic statements about members of Trump’s circle, Wiles also dove candidly into official White House policy. In the process, she detonated several explosives that could rattle the regime in the weeks and months to come.

First, and of critical importance given the U.S. military’s seizure of a Venezuelan oil tanker and Trump’s announcement yesterday of a “complete blockade” on Venezuelan shipping, Wiles confessed that the military’s attacks around Venezuela aren’t about stopping drugs.

Instead, regime change appears to be Trump’s foremost goal. “He wants to keep on blowing boats up until Maduro cries uncle,” Wiles said. “And people way smarter than me on that say that he will.”

The White House almost certainly wishes Wiles wouldn’t speak quite so much and so openly about Venezuela. She told Vanity Fair, for example, that in her view, if the U.S. military orders land strikes on that country, it must first seek authority from Congress. That admission alone is legally radioactive. Pete Hegseth no doubt loved seeing that in print.

Second, Wiles lifted the curtain on inter-cabinet squabbling around Trump’s tariff policies, which are now under serious challenge before the Supreme Court and widely cited as the reason for higher prices and fewer jobs—key drivers of Trump’s low approval ratings. Many advisors, including Wiles, tried to dissuade Trump from proceeding with his high tariffs, but he would not be moved.

Ultimately, Wiles capitulated on the tariffs and pressed others to do the same. “There was a huge disagreement over whether they were a good idea. I said, ‘This is where we’re going to end up. So figure out how you can work into what he’s already thinking.’ Well, they couldn’t get there.” She admitted that the tariffs have wound up being ”more painful than I expected.” This underscores how much Trump truly owns the economic disaster he created from his tariffs, since even many of his own advisors had begged him not to impose them.

Third, Wiles sought to dissuade Trump from some of his worst impulses. That included his obsession with political vengeance, such as prosecuting perceived enemies like former FBI director James Comey, New York State Attorney General Letitia James and Sen. Adam Schiff of California. Wiles stated she had even forged a “loose agreement” with Trump to end the “score settling” with his enemies after 90 days—a pledge he then broke repeatedly.

Wiles also tried—and failed—to stop Trump from issuing blanket pardons to all January 6 defendants, including those who had committed criminal acts of violence on that day. Trump ignored her and pardoned every one of them.

Fourth, Wiles believes Attorney General Pam Bondi completely blew the Epstein files, no pun intended. As The Hill explained,

Attorney General Pam Bondi “whiffed” on understanding how much President Trump’s base of supporters cared about the release of the files linked to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles said in an interview published Tuesday.

“I think she completely whiffed on appreciating that that was the very targeted group that cared about this,” Wiles said in an interview with Vanity Fair.

Specifically, Bondi first “gave them binders full of nothingness. And then she said that the witness list, or the client list, was on her desk. There is no client list, and it sure as hell wasn’t on her desk,” she continued.

Without explaining how she knows, Wiles also told Vanity Fair that Trump repeatedly misled the public by saying Bill Clinton had visited Epstein Island. She also claimed that there is nothing incriminating in the files about Clinton. As the New York Times summarized,

While Mr. Trump for years has repeatedly claimed that Mr. Clinton visited Mr. Epstein’s private island, Ms. Wiles said “there is no evidence” of that. Asked if there was any incriminating information about Mr. Clinton in the Epstein files, she said, “The president was wrong about that.”

Protecting the king

Other statements by Wiles appeared designed to specifically protect Trump. Some don’t read as credible at all and come off more like favored White House narratives.

Wiles claimed, for example, that Trump wasn’t told in advance about Ghislaine Maxwell’s transfer to a “Club Fed” minimum security prison. “Somehow” this got promised and then happened, but Wiles claimed Trump was angry about it. It is hard to imagine something this big, with this much potential blowback, happening without express permission from the man himself. My most charitable offer is that Trump approved the transfer, then in a haze of dementia forgot that he had.

Wiles also defended Trump against claims that he bullies female reporters, as exemplified by the infamous “Quiet, piggy” moment on board Air Force One. She argued that the White House needs to be aggressive, that these days women reporters are the “punchers,” and that Trump is just punching back. That defense collapses on contact with reality: male reporters asking the same questions are not treated the same way.

Wiles also claimed, rather comically I should add, that Trump doesn’t fall asleep in meetings, but rather he just closes his eyes with his head back. I suppose as Chief of Staff she had to come up with some explanation for why her boss frequently dozes off, sometimes in the middle of cabinet meetings before all the cameras. Perhaps this is the best she could come up with.

Barbarians past the gates

These claims, ludicrous as some are on their face, reveal how tightly bound Wiles remains to her dangerous and unpredictable boss—and how essential she is as a regime apologist and enabler.

During Trump 1.0, chiefs of staff such as John Kelly tried to limit who could gain access to Trump, even while they sought to curb his worst impulses. In Trump 2.0, Wiles doesn’t even try. She lets bad elements like Musk, Vought and Bondi straight through, hands them the keys and effectively says “have at it.” Nothing she has said or done has moved Trump off his worst paths, no matter how reckless the outcome.

Perhaps Wiles understands that if she never actually plays gatekeeper, which is after all her job, she cannot be blamed if and when 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue falls. As crises multiply and the president’s approval ratings dip into the chilly 30s, this may be her best insurance policy. Like Speaker Johnson, Wiles is really only nominally in the job. They are both bystander witnesses to everything burning down around them, offering long-practiced shrugs with enormous consequences.

02:00 AM

Elon Musk’s Taxpayer-Subsidized Starlink Yanks Cheaper $40 Plan Because Network Couldn’t Handle The Load [Techdirt]

We’ve noted how Republicans are rewriting the 2021 infrastructure bill (they voted against) to ensure that billions of dollars in taxpayer-funded broadband grants wind up in the back pocket of Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos (and their low-Earth orbit (LEO) satellite broadband ventures, Starlink and Project Kuiper). This is billions of taxpayer dollars being paid to billionaires in exchange for doing nothing differently.

Republicans are framing this as something that’s going to save taxpayers money, but it’s a lie.

I’ve explained in detail why that’s a problem: LEO networks may be initially cheaper to deploy, but the networks lack the capacity to actually scale to meet demand. Data indicates they harm astronomy research and the ozone layer. Money directed toward Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk is also money directed away from higher-capacity, faster, higher-quality fiber and wireless alternatives, many of which are actually owned by the local communities they serve.

Starlink is also expensive.

At up to $120 a month for a “real” plan at next-generation speeds, plus hundreds of dollars in up front hardware fees, the service is too expensive for most of the Americans desperate to be connected. Apparently aware of the criticism that taxpayers were giving billions of dollars to a billionaire for a system many people can’t afford, Starlink briefly introduced a slower, $40 monthly tier.

Which disappeared almost as quickly as it was introduced, because the network couldn’t actually handle the influx of new subscribers:

“The 100Mbps plan was not widely available, as it seemed to pop up in a relatively small number of areas where Starlink likely had excess network capacity. Some customers speculate that new users and existing subscribers scrambled to take advantage of the bargain deal, which caused Starlink to reach capacity in the eligible areas. The plan stood out for its low price while capping download speeds to 100Mbps.”

Starlink also imposes massive “congestion fees” in areas where it lacks capacity. These fees can be upwards of $750 in some areas. So again, you can probably see why it’s a bad idea for Republicans to treat Starlink as a connectivity panacea while showering it with subsidies that could be going to better, more affordable, higher capacity options.

Ideally, if you’re going to throw billions of subsidies at U.S. broadband, your technology priority should be fiber (preferably open access, community owned to counter monopoly dominance), wireless (either fixed or 5G), and then LEO satellite to fill in the gaps. Instead, Republicans are putting Starlink at the front of the line, and Musk and friends are whining about and harassing states that balk at this dumb idea.

Back in June, researchers showed in detail that given the limited nature of satellite physics, the more people that use Starlink, the slower the network is going to get. What, exactly, do folks think is going to happen when the network sees a mass infusion of taxpayer subsidized advertisement and usage?

To be clear: Starlink is great if you have no other options and can afford it. But it shouldn’t be the top priority in a historic round of taxpayer subsidies. That’s just begging for trouble down the road. But Republicans are so excited to throw billions of new dollars at their white supremacist billionaire godbaby, they don’t really care about the actual real world impact at the other end of the line.

Wednesday 2025-12-17

06:00 PM

EU Ban on Russian War Propaganda Misfires: Blocks Social Media Giants & Pirate IPTV [TorrentFreak]

denied russiaFollowing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the EU issued several waves of broad sanction packages against the country.

These measures included bans on state-owned news outlets, such as Russia Today and Sputnik, and also applied to the websites of these organizations.

To comply with these mandatory blocking requirements, ISPs in EU countries have indeed restricted access to the associated domain names. However, since there is no official EU-issued blocklist, it is not always clear what should be blocked exactly. With potential criminal prosecutions for non-compliance, that’s a problem.

ISP Trade Organization Compiles ‘Unofficial’ Blocklist

The Dutch ISP trade association, NLconnect, has previously asked the Dutch authorities for guidance in this matter, but that failed to result in a concrete blocklist. In response, NLconnect therefore scraped the blocklists of regulators in Germany, Austria, Estonia, Finland, and Lithuania, to create a consolidated “reference list” for its members.

This week, Tweakers reported that the resulting blocklist was now being shared in public. While NLconnect doesn’t support site blocking as a technical intervention, it believes that the list helps its members to comply with the law.

“The consolidated list contains 796 domains. NLconnect advises its members to use this list to ensure compliance with the EU sanctions. We have also shared the list with Dutch regulator ACM and the Public Prosecutor. We are publishing this list to be fully transparent about the advice we have provided to our members,” NLconnect writes.

NLconnect’s Excel

blockexcell

Importantly, NLconnect did not vet any of the included domains and recognizes that it could include false positives or potential overblocking. And indeed, after a thorough review of the list, we can conclude that it is indeed quite broad.

Blocking Weibo and ShareChat as Russian Propaganda

TorrentFreak confirmed that the NLconnect blocklist is already in use at Dutch Internet provider Ziggo. This means that its users no longer have access to hundreds of websites on the list. These indeed include news outlets Sputnikglobe.com and RT.com, but other blockades are more dubious.

For example, the blocklist also features domain names of various social media services. They include ShareChat, India’s largest homegrown social media platform, which is completely blocked due to sanctions. Our analysis confirms the domain originates from the blocklist of the Lithuanian Radio and Television Commission (LRTK).

ShareChat

sharechat

ShareChat has hundreds of millions of active users in India and labeling it as “Russian propaganda” is factually incorrect. The site may host specific propaganda accounts but the platform itself is an Indian technology success story, not a Kremlin asset.

If there is a problematic account on a social media site, it makes sense to address this with a targeted URL blockade instead of simply banning a domain that has millions of legitimate users.

This logic also applies to other domains, including the Chinese microblogging service Weibo.com, which has hundreds of millions of daily users, as well as the Indian equivalent Kooapp.com. These services are both completely blocked under (an interpretation of) EU sanctions.

Online Streaming & Pirate IPTV Blockades

The blocklist also covers collections of online radio stations, such as the Streema.com portal, operated by the American company Streema Inc, as well as American media aggregator Viaway.com.

Neither service openly features Russian propaganda. They do list some banned Russian radio stations or feeds. But, instead of targeting these URLs specifically, these services have had their entire domains blocked instead.

Interestingly, NLconnect’s consolidated blocklist also includes various domain names that are linked to pirate IPTV services. These include IPTV-home.net, Ottclub.tv, Cbilling.eu, Iseetv.net, Limehd.tv, Snegiri.tv and many others.

While these domains are arguably infringing copyright and may eventually, after payment, offer access to Russian media, they are not intended as propaganda tools. On the contrary, the mentioned domains don’t specifically feature or highlight any of the banned outlets.

The Lithuanian Connection

On closer inspection, it appears that most of these domains appear in the Russian propaganda blocklist compiled by the Lithuanian telecoms regulator LRTK. However, the referenced text file also appears to include other unrelated domains, including many torrent sites.

From the LRTK text file used by NLconnect

blocked ltr

This is a perplexing situation, and LRTK’s dedicated sanctions page provides no additional insight either, as that also lists pirate sites and social media networks alongside Russian propaganda.

TorrentFreak asked the Lithuanian regulator LRTK to explain why a social network such as ShareChat.com is blocked under the Russian sanctions, but the organization did not immediately reply.

In the Netherlands, meanwhile, millions of Internet users no longer have access to websites and services that have little to do with Russian propaganda. And perhaps even more concerning, all of this has largely gone unnoticed by the public.

Blocking Sites & Pointing Fingers

When presented with our findings, NLconnect Managing Director Mathieu Andriessen emphasized that the trade association is merely the messenger. The organization did not select or curate the domains, it simply aggregated them from foreign regulators because the Dutch government refused to provide a concrete list.

“NLconnect has not selected or identified domains itself and did not independently scour the Internet to link websites to sanctioned media entities,” Andriessen tells TorrentFreak.

“The list is exclusively based on existing domain lists regarding EU sanctions from national regulators in other EU member states, because the European Commission explicitly refers to them in its guidance. These sources have been merged, cleaned, and deduplicated into one consistent reference list.”

NLconnect admits that it cannot guarantee that all listed domains are valid blocking targets, but for questions about potential overblocking, it directed us to the foreign regulator who blacklisted them – LRTK – which did not reply.

We also reached out to Ziggo/Vodafone, one of the largest Internet providers in the Netherlands, which actively uses the NLconnect blacklist. When we asked them for a comment on the blocking of Sharechat, Weibo, and other seemingly legitimate domains, it simply referred us back to NLconnect.

ISP Freedom Takes its Own Course

Not all Internet providers are blindly implementing the blocklist. Freedom, a privacy-focused ISP, has publicly rejected the NLconnect list precisely because of the “arbitrariness” caused by merging data from different countries with different legal standards.

“What NLconnect is consciously doing here is merging existing lists from foreign regulators, without adding any substantive choices of their own,” Freedom Internet’s Randal Peelen informs TorrentFreak.

“This shows where the friction lies: different regulators use different interpretations of the same sanctions, and by combining those lists, the risk of apparent arbitrariness arises.”

Freedom confirms that the Lithuanian data seems to rely on a “very broad interpretation” of the sanctions. As a result, Freedom has decided not to use the consolidated list. Instead, the ISP considers following the list from the German regulator BNetzA, which is viewed as more legally sound.

For the moment, Freedom is following its own blocklist where it aims to adhere to the EU sanctions without overblocking. This decision creates a bizarre situation where ISPs in the same country are deploying different blocklists, which are all the result of the same European sanctions law.

One of the reasons why NLconnect is publicly sharing its concerns is to encourage the Dutch regulator ACM and the relevant authorities to step up. While Dutch ISPs are typically not in favor of site blocking, arbitrary blocking measures are even worse.

TorrentFreak asked the Dutch regulator ACM for a comment on our findings, the alleged overblocking, as well as its role, but the organization had not supplied an on the record response at the time of publication.

Update: After publication, the Dutch regulator ACM responded to our inquiry, emphasizing that its oversight is strictly limited to the Open Internet Regulation (Net Neutrality).

The regulator clarified that while website blocking is generally prohibited, complying with mandatory EU laws—such as the Russia sanctions—is a valid exception. However, the ACM stresses that it does not monitor the actual execution or the content of the sanctions list; that responsibility lies with the Public Prosecutor (OM) and the Ministry of Justice.

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

03:00 PM

Mike Pence Calls For RFK Jr.’s Ouster…But Not For The Reasons You Would Think [Techdirt]

There are lots of good reasons to call for the impeachment or ouster or RFK Jr. He’s flatly unqualified for the role. He’s introducing all kinds of health risks for diseases we shouldn’t even have to worry about any longer because he’s an anti-vaxxer con-artist. He’s so bad at his job that high level administrators at DHS and its child agencies are leaving in droves, sometimes after only being on the job for weeks at a time. These are all great, righteous reasons to state publicly that RFK Jr. must go.

Please welcome Mike Pence to the team, I guess. His organization also recently stated publicly that RFK Jr. should be exited from his cabinet position. That it took a failure to review an abortion pill to get him there and not all of that other shit I mentioned is disappointing, though not in any way surprising.

Former Vice President Mike Pence’s organization said Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “must go,” accusing the secretary of refusing to review the abortion pill mifepristone.

In a statement posted on the social platform X, Pence’s nonprofit, Advancing American Freedom, said, “HHS Secretary RFK Jr. continues to refuse to review the dangerous chemical abortion pill, mifepristone. Despite the calls of state attorneys general across the country and pro-life promises made to Congress, RFK Jr. has followed in the footsteps of the Obama and Biden administrations by stonewalling pro-life efforts at HHS.”

“RFK Jr. must go,” the group added.

Folks, I’m in no way qualified to talk at any length about mifepristone and how safe or not it is. I can tell you that the current FDA website says that it is when properly used, as does the Johns Hopkins website. Basically every medical organization that has anything to do with obstetrics and gynecology has said that the drug is very safe (and you would think they would know). The American Medical Association has pointed out that reducing access to mifepristone would lead to real harm for patients. Basically, almost every credible expert on this topic appears to agree.

I can also tell you the listing of side effects on the Mayo Clinic’s site is long. So, is a review of the drug warranted? I’m going to rest comfortably on the idea that I am in no way qualified to say one way or the other.

Like me, Mike Pence is also not a medical professional. Unlike me, Mike Pence has been remarkably silent about RFK Jr. as he’s taken a flamethrower to HHS, to federal vaccine guidance, and has overseen the worst measles outbreak in America in over three decades. Apparently failing to review an FDA approved drug with a decades-long track record of safety is just a bridge too far.

No more aborted babies, all of you! If they aren’t brought to term, how are they supposed to get measles and Hep B?

01:00 PM

Transparency, Openness, and Our 2023-2024 Financials [Tor Project blog]

Every year, as required by U.S. federal law for 501(c)(3) nonprofits, the Tor Project completes a Form 990, and as required by contractual obligations and state regulations, an independent audit of our financial statements. After completing standard audits for 2023-2024,* we added our federal tax filings (Form 990) and audited financial statements to our website. We upload all of our tax documents and publish a blog post about these documents in order to be transparent.

(These documents have been available on our website for a while, but we are just now able to publish this blog post because of limited capacity. We hope you understand!)

Transparency for a privacy project is not a contradiction: privacy is about choice, and we choose to be transparent in order to build trust and a stronger community. In this post, we aim to be very clear about where the Tor Project’s money comes from and what we do with it. This is how we operate in all aspects of our work: we show you all of our projects, in source code, and in periodic project and team reports, and in collaborations with researchers who help assess and improve Tor. Transparency also means being clear about our values, promises, and priorities as laid out in our social contract.

We hope that by expanding each subsection of this post and adding more detail, you will have an even better understanding of the Tor Project’s funding, and that you will be able to read the audited financial statements and Form 990 on your own should you have more questions.

*Our fiscal years run from July through June instead of following the calendar year.

Fiscal Year 2023-2024 Summary

The audit and tax filing forms we discuss in this post cover July 1, 2023 to June 30, 2024. During this fiscal period, the Tor Project realized some of the benefits of the organization’s investment in fundraising capacity with new staff, new policies and procedures, and a focus on diversifying the organization’s funding sources.

We’re happy to continue to see the results of this strategy pay off, and we could not have done this without your support and belief in the Tor Project’s vision.

Revenue & Support

The Tor Project’s Revenue and Support in fiscal year 2023-2024, as listed in the audited financial statement, was $8,005,661.

Image statement activities

In our Form 990, our Revenue is listed as $7,287,566.

Image revenue 990

The difference between revenue on the Form 990 and the audited financials is not a mistake. The different revenue totals reflect differences in rules about how you must report tax revenue to the IRS and how you must report revenue in audited financial statements. The Tor Project’s audited financial statements include in-kind contributions ($768,413) as a form of revenue, while the Form 990 includes the in-kind contributions as an expense.

In-kind contributions is a term to describe non-monetary donations from the community. In 2023-2024, the Tor community contributed $768,413 in donated services or goods. That's an estimated 7,614 hours of software development, 1,894,720 words translated, cloud hosting services for 23 servers, and 26 certificates. Right now, this estimation does not include relay operator time and cost, but it should. We are working to better estimate both the hours of software development and how to represent the contributions made by relay operators. Stay tuned for the coming years! Clearly, Tor would not be possible without you. Thank you.

For the purposes of the following subsections of this blog post, we’ll be looking at the Revenue total following the 990, and breaking this total into the following categories:

  • U.S. Government (35.08% of total revenue) $2,556,472
  • Corporations (21.59% of total revenue) $1,573,300
  • Foundations (18.67% of total revenue) $1,395,494
  • Individual Donations (15.61% of total revenue) $1,102,619
  • Non-U.S. Governments (7.58% of total revenue) $552,387
  • Other (1.47% of total revenue) $107,293

Image revenue pie

U.S. Government

During this fiscal year, about 35.08% of our revenue came from U.S. government funds. For a comparison, in fiscal year 2021-2022, 53.5% of our revenue came from the U.S. government. You can see that our long-term mission to reduce our dependence on U.S. government funding has been coming to fruition. Of course there’s still more work to be done, and your support helps Tor realize this goal.

We get a lot of questions (and see a lot of FUD) about how the U.S. government funds the Tor Project, so we want to make this as clear as possible and show you where to find this information in the future in these publicly-available documents.

Let's talk specifically about which parts of the U.S. government have supported Tor, and what kind of projects they fund. Below, you can see a screenshot from the Tor Project's fiscal year 2023-2024 Form 990 on page 46 and 47, where we've listed all of our U.S. government funders. You will find text like this in all of our recent Form 990s:

Image funding us gov

Now, we'll break down which projects are funded by each entity and link you to places in GitLab where we organize the work associated with this funding.

U.S. State Department Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor ($2,121,049)

National Science Foundation + Georgetown University ($14,715)

International Republican Institute ($80,029)

  • Project: Localizing Tor tools and documentation into Arabic, Chinese, and Swahili
    • Description: The goal of this project was to localize Tor Browser, Tor circumvention tools, Tor documentation and training materials, and a Tor-based file sharing tool called OnionShare into Arabic, Chinese, and Swahili. The project also created localized demonstration videos on using Tor, circumventing censorship, and using OnionShare.

Open Technology Fund ($340,681)

  • Project: Support users to circumvent censorship against USAGM media sites

    • Description: The goal for this ongoing project is to get more onion services set up in the world. To complete this goal, we will develop tools to help with setup and monitoring of onion services as well as help different USAGM media services to set up and monitor their onion services. You can read about some of the outcomes of the first year of this project, an effort to plant and grow more onions, on our blog.
  • Project: Rapid Response – Turkmenistan

    • Description: The goal of this project was to ensure Tor tools and user support materials are available in Turkmen and that users in Turkmenistan have functional bridge options to connect to Tor.
  • Project: Tails Sustainability

    • Description: The goal of this project is to support the sustainability of developing Tails.

Whether related to research in the field of privacy and anonymity online, innovation in censorship circumvention, or advancing human rights, government funding is always the result of an extremely competitive bidding process. From start to finish, these projects are designed and controlled by the Tor Project, its core contributors, and members of the community in response to specific contract or funding opportunities. The National Council of Nonprofits has published many excellent resources for learning about how this process works in the United States.

Corporations + Nonprofits

The next largest category of contributions at 21.59% of the total revenue was donations from corporations and nonprofits. In the 2023-2024 fiscal year, $1,573,300 was generated from this category. That’s an increase of 68% over the fiscal year prior, and a 154% increase from two fiscal years prior.

This is a result of our increased investment in a wider range of partnerships and support, including from organizations like OpenSats, Omidyar Network, and as part of our ongoing relationship with Mullvad VPN to develop Mullvad Browser and improve Tor Browser.

This category is also where we account for membership dues from our members like DuckDuckGo, Proton, and Word Unscrambler. We haven't listed every single entity you will see in our Form 990 in this blog post, but we hope you have a better understanding of what you might find in the Form 990.

Foundations

Of the revenue in fiscal year 2023-2024, about 18.67% came from foundations, at $1,395,494.

Some of these contributions are in the form of restricted grants, which means we pick a project that is on our roadmap, we propose it to a funder, they agree that this project is important, and we are funded to complete these projects. Examples in this category include Zcash Community Grants' support of Arti and Open Society Foundation’s support of the project to deploy a new bridge distribution system.

Also in this category are unrestricted funds, like support from #StartSmall, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, and Ford Foundation. These unrestricted funds are not tied to a specific project.

Individual Donations

The next category of contributions at 15.61% of the total revenue was individual donors. In the 2023-2024 fiscal year, supporters gave $1,102,619 to the Tor Project in the form of one-time gifts and monthly donations. These gifts came in all different forms (including ten different cryptocurrencies, which are then converted to USD).

Individual contributions come in many forms: some people donate $5 to the Tor Project one time, some donate $100 every month, and some make large gifts annually. The common thread is that individual donations are unrestricted funds, and a very important kind of support. Unrestricted funds allow us to respond to censorship events, develop our tools in a more agile way, and ensure we have reserves to keep Tor strong in case of emergencies.

Non-U.S. Governments

This line item represents funding that comes from Sida, a government agency working on behalf of the Swedish parliament and government, with the mission to reduce poverty in the world. Sida supports the Tor Project so that we can carry out user research, localization, user support, usability improvements, training for communities, and training for trainers. This support is how we are able to meet our users and to carry out the user experience research we do to improve all Tor tools.

Other

$107,293 of our revenue is from and for the Privacy Enhancing Technologies Symposium. Tor supports the yearly PETS conference by providing structure and financial continuity.

Expenses

OK, we've told you how we get funding (and which documents to look at to learn more). Now what do we do with that money? Based on the Form 990, our expenses were $7,343,602 in fiscal year 2023-2024.

Image expenses 990

Like I discussed in the Revenue section above, the expenses listed in our Form 990 and audited financial statements are different. Based on the audited financial statements, our expenses (page 7) were $8,112,015.

Image functional expenses

Why the difference? The Form 990 does not include in-kind contributions--the audited financial statement does. For the rest of this blog post, as above, we'll be looking at the Expenses total following the Form 990.

We break our expenses into three main categories:

  • Administration: costs associated with organizational administration, like salary for our Executive Director, office supplies, business insurance costs;

  • Fundraising: costs associated with the fundraising program, like salary for fundraising staff, tools we use for fundraising, bank fees, postal mail supplies, swag; and

  • Program services: costs associated with making and maintaining Tor and supporting the people who use it, including application, network, UX, metrics, and community staff salaries; contractor salaries; and IT costs. If you want to learn more about the work considered "program services," you should read our list of sponsored projects on our wiki.

In the 2023-2024 fiscal year, 84% of our expenses were associated with program services. That means that a very significant portion of our budget goes directly into building Tor and making it better. Next comes administration at 10% and fundraising at 6%.

Image expenses pie

Ultimately, like Roger (the Tor Project's Co-Founder) has written in many past versions of this blog post, it's very important to remember the big picture: Tor's budget is modest considering our global impact. Compared to the cost of operating a VPN, Tor’s cost per user is much smaller, because of our distributed design and the contributions of thousands of relay operators. And it's also critical to remember that our annual revenue is utterly dwarfed by what our adversaries spend to suppress people's human right to privacy and anonymity, making the world a more dangerous and less free place.

In closing, we are extremely grateful for all of our donors and supporters. You make this work possible, and we hope this expanded version of our financial transparency post sheds more light on how the Tor Project raises money and how we spend it. Remember, that beyond making a donation, there are other ways to get involved, including volunteering and running a Tor relay!

Kanji of the Day: 職 [Kanji of the Day]

✍18

小5

post, employment, work

ショク ソク

職員   (しょくいん)   —   staff member
職場   (しょくば)   —   one's post
就職   (しゅうしょく)   —   finding employment
現職   (げんしょく)   —   present post
退職   (たいしょく)   —   retirement
職業   (しょくぎょう)   —   occupation
転職   (てんしょく)   —   change of job
無職   (むしょく)   —   without an occupation
前職   (ぜんしょく)   —   last position
職人   (しょくにん)   —   craftsman

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 恭 [Kanji of the Day]

✍10

中学

respect, reverent

キョウ

うやうや.しい

恭敬   (きょうけい)   —   respect
恭順   (きょうじゅん)   —   allegiance
恭しい   (うやうやしい)   —   polite
恭賀新年   (きょうがしんねん)   —   Happy New Year
恭賀   (きょうが)   —   respectful congratulations
恭謙   (きょうけん)   —   modesty
恭倹   (きょうけん)   —   respectfulness and modesty

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

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