‘News’ Site Keeps Hallucinating EFF Staffers [Techdirt]
What do EFF staffers Sarah Chen, Javier Morales, Caitlin Chin, Emma Rodriguez, and Mikko Kopponen have in common?
For one thing, they don’t exist.
For another, all have been quoted as EFF experts in articles published in the past two months on a site called News-USA Today, which describes itself as “an independent news publisher focused on clear, accurate, and useful journalism.”
Uh…
(Please don’t confuse this site with USA Today, in which real EFF experts are accurately quoted on a regular basis.)
News-USA Today is hardly the only slagheap that’s hallucinating or fabricating EFF personnel and quotes; as we wrote last September, media companies large and small are using AI to generate news content because it’s cheaper than paying for journalists’ salaries, but that savings can come at the cost of the outlets’ reputations— assuming they care about reputation at all.
But this many fake EFF sources in two months? That’s making a play for the championship title of bogus news content.
News-USA Today’s site proclaims, “Our goal is simple: give readers the facts and the context they need to make informed decisions.” It then defines its mission:
Attempts to reach contacts listed on the site went unanswered. In fact, after we reached out to them, they published a story on June 9 with quotes from Electronic Frontier Foundation Executive Director Jared Cohen — who also doesn’t exist.
As we noted last year, EFF is all about having our words spread far and wide. Per our copyright policy, any and all original material on the EFF website may be freely distributed at will under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY), unless otherwise noted.
However, we don’t want disreputable sites making up words (or false identities!) for us, whether or not they’re using AI. False quotations that misstate our positions damage the trust that the public and reputable media outlets have in us.
The best thing a news consumer can do is invest a little time and energy to learn how to discern the real from the fake. It’s unfortunate that it’s the public’s burden to put in this much effort, but while we’re adjusting to new tools and a new normal, a little effort now can go a long way.
As we’ve noted before in the context of election misinformation, the nonprofit journalism organization ProPublica ha
s published a handy guide about how to tell if what you’re reading is accurate or “fake news,” as has FactCheck.org.
Republished from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.
Trump Still Wants His MAGA Slush Fund… And His Cabinet Refuses To Sign Declarations That It’s Gone [Techdirt]
In mid-May, the Todd Blanche-run DOJ agreed to “settle” the fake case Donald Trump had brought against his own IRS. The “settlement”? A $1.776 billion fund to pay reparations to the MAGA faithful. Much of that money was expected to flow to January 6th insurrectionists — many of them convicted of actual crimes that Trump himself wiped out via pardon the moment he was re-inaugurated. The whole thing was so hellishly corrupt that even Republicans in Congress started making noises about how problematic it was.
A couple weeks later, when Blanche had to testify before Congress, he said that the slush fund was dead, but he wouldn’t agree to sign anything making that official.
There have been multiple court cases about the fund, including one brought by Andrew Floyd, the former Assistant US Attorney for DC who led the prosecutions against January 6ers. In that case, Judge Leonie Brinkema told the DOJ that the case would be closed as moot if a bunch of Trump officials signed declarations under the penalty of perjury that the fund was really dead:
ORDERED that, to avoid any further litigation in this civil action, defendants Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, Associate Attorney General Stanley Woodward, Jr., and Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent FILE a declaration under the penalty of perjury that they will not take any action to create or operate the Anti-Weaponization Fund, and that the Anti-Weaponization Fund will not proceed in any manner, or under any name. If such a declaration is not filed by June 19, 2026, the Court will issue a Scheduling Order and require defendants to file a responsive pleading by July 17, 2026
On Friday, the DOJ said “no, we will not file such declarations.” It claims that the government has made it clear already that the fund will not move forward and so they see no reason to file another declaration to that effect:
The Acting Attorney General has testified before Congress that the Fund is “not going forward, period.” House Appropriations Committee, Oversight Hearing – Department of Justice, at 40:30-42:50.1 Undersigned counsel have twice signed briefs reaffirming that “the Fund is not going forward.” And counsel for Defendants has twice said substantially the same thing in open court. All these statements were made against the backdrop of serious penalties for falsity. See 18 U.S.C. § 1001; Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b)–(c). So there is no reason why declarations should affect the Court’s mootness analysis.
This isn’t defying the court. The DOJ was given an option: have the case closed as moot if the declarations were filed, or have the case continue. This decision just means the case will continue — even as the DOJ keeps insisting it has already said the fund isn’t going to happen.
But Judge Brinkema has good reasons to be concerned that the DOJ is lying to her. After all, Trump and MAGA loyalists in the administration are apparently acting as though the fund is still going to happen.
It turns out that it’s not that simple. Behind the scenes, Justice Department and other Trump-administration officials have quietly assured allies that plans for some form of payout remain on track. I spoke with eight people familiar with the so-called Anti-Weaponization Fund—including current and former Justice Department officials, current and former members of Congress, a defense attorney, and political operatives close to the administration. All said that Justice Department officials and people close to the White House have indicated that the payout idea has not actually been scrapped. Rather, they say, officials are exploring whether elements of the fund can be reactivated while also examining alternative arrangements to make sure loyalists get compensated. Across the administration, and even within the Justice Department, officials have differing perspectives on whether the fund itself will ultimately be restored. But either way, officials see a path forward for the government to pay those who say they are victims of supposed government “weaponization.”
[….]
Those familiar with the internal conversations—all of whom spoke with me on the condition of anonymity because they feared possible retaliation—told me that the work is being kept quiet while the Trump administration waits for opposition to the fund to blow over. Crucially, the administration is also trying to avoid a fight over the payout plan, which has been deemed a political slush fund by critics, while the Senate considers Blanche’s nomination for attorney general.
So that seems like a pretty good reason for the judge to want signed declarations from officials in the Trump administration, even if it sounds like officials are working on ways that are less public to pay off insurrectionists.
Once again, in any other administration this entire thing would be seen as exponentially worse than Watergate. The fund is extraordinarily corrupt, but worse than that, it’s being dangled over the heads of literal insurrectionist criminals who tried to overturn the results of a free and fair Presidential election… and are now being told “if you keep being willing to break the law for Trump, we’ll pay you American taxpayer funds.”
In any normal world, this would end the Trump presidency.
Pluralistic: Good politics (22 Jun 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
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Top Sources:
None
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Some people love to admire a beautiful football play; me, I can't get enough of politicians doing good politics – and like those World Cup fans, I am doubly pleased when it's my team making the play.
I definitely have a team in Brazilian politics: President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva and his Workers' Party. Lula's done so many amazing things in his career, and these often intersect with my own special interests. Like, he made Gilberto Gil his minister of culture, and his people built the telecentros, free software-based internet dojos for the poorest kids in the country, living in favelas:
https://www.informationweek.com/software-services/brazil-turns-away-from-microsoft
Lula was royally ratfucked – framed by a corrupt justice minister who secretly conspired with the country's oligarchs – and imprisoned, and the conspirators installed Jair Bolsonaro, a fascist war criminal whose covid bungling led to mass death:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Car_Wash
When Bolsonaro lost his next election – to a triumphant Lula – he attempted a coup, for which he was arrested and handed a long prison sentence, despite Trump and Microsoft trying to intimidate the Brazilian judge into letting him walk:
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/09/22/bolsonaro-prosecution-us-sanctions-00575122
Now, Lula is fighting to keep Bolsonaro's nepobaby failson, Senator Flávio Bolsonaro, from wrestling back control over the country for his fascist party; and that's where the good politics come in.
Lula's party has just scored a massive, national political victory by tabling legislation to establish a five-day workweek. While Brazil's professional/managerial class enjoy a two-day weekend, the working poor of the nation are prisoners of the escala 6×1 system, which sees them working six days per week. It's a hangover from the era of Brazil's fascist dictatorship, which (nominally) ended in 1988, but whose legacy still haunts the Brazilian people.
Lula's 40-hour workweek is incredibly popular. So popular that Bolsonaro's party whipped its members to vote for it, because they fear that to do otherwise would hand an even bigger majority to Lula, who might go on to give workers a four-day work-week:
https://prospect.org/2026/06/22/lula-sees-boosts-as-he-pushes-to-reduce-brazilian-workweek/
It turns out that weekends are popular and promising the electorate access to a weekend is good politics. What's more, denying weekends to the electorate is shitty, awful politics, which is why Bolsonaro's fascists were forced to vote in favor of a policy they hate, even though all credit for that policy will still go to Lula and the Worker' Party. The bill passed 461-19.
Contrast Lula's muscular, deliverism-based politics that seeks to improve the lives of working people in tangible, immediate ways with the catastrophic series of blunders that Keir Starmer's Labour has delivered. Despite having won a majority so large it would have made Saddam Hussein blush (not because Labour was popular, but because the outgoing Conservatives were universally loathed), Starmer has refused to lift a finger to improve Britons' lives. Instead, he's abetted genocide, criminalized protest, proposed ending jury trials, imposed austerity, handed the NHS over to Palantir and all the remaining potable water and electrical capacity in the country over to American most unprofitable AI giants.
Starmer's insistence that we can't have nice things is bad politics, because (and it's weird that this has to be said) a government that makes people's lives worse is less popular than a government that makes people's lives better:
https://www.whatwelo.st/p/everyone-hates-tech-but-nobody-knows
Now, the right is incapable of making working people's lives better, because broad improvements to the vast majority necessarily come at the expense of the tiny minority of morbidly wealthy hoarders whom the right serves. In order to get millions of turkeys to vote for Christmas, the right substitutes spectacular acts of cruelty against disfavored minorities to distract their voters from the quiet acts of everyday cruelty they subject those voters to:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/12/always-great/#our-nhs
This isn't good politics. The sadistic torture of your base's enemies will never please them so well nor so durably as making immediate, significant improvements in their lives will.
That's why the corporate Dems who say that the party should campaign against renewables and in favor of fossil fuel companies aren't merely climate criminals, they're also bad at politics:
Cleantech is fucking great. Since I put in solar, a heat pump and an induction top, my energy bills have fallen to less than $80 per month, even in Los Angeles, even at the height of summer. My EV – a 7-year old Kia Niro – costs pennies to run, because I charge it off my roof. Not only that, it's fast, maneuverable, silent, and incredibly reliable. It handles like that Mustang a rental agency once upgraded me to. I mean, I'd rather have a subway, but if I have to drive, this is so much better than any ICE car I've ever owned.
Sure, our solar was a giant pain in the ass to get installed and working, but that's because the same corporate Dems who say climate is a political loser also said the best way to roll out solar nationwide was to set up an elaborate system of financialized tax-credits. That meant that every solar installer I talked to was more interested in swindling me by putting solar on my roof that they would own than they were in selling me a system I owned outright. Financializing America's rooftop solar conjured up a vast army of scammers and hustlers who screwed the majority of people they sold solar to, and my installers, Solaredge, were no exception:
https://www.propublica.org/article/missouri-pace-loans
Everything about living in the cleantech future is better. I can boil a gallon of water in under a minute on my stovetop! And it's only gonna get better: not only is cleantech improving every year, but fossil fuel is getting shittier every year, thanks to Trump's lunatic war of choice in Iran, the cost of using fossil fuels will only go up from here:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/20/praxis/#acceleration
Look, as a workaholic whose unhealthy anxiety coping mechanism is to work even harder, I might not make the best use of an extra day off:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/14/compartment/#flow
But as Pete Seeger sang in 1941, your time is all you have, and every hour you give to your boss is an hour you can never get back:
You'll get shorter hours
Better working conditions
Vacations with pay
Take your kids to the seashore
https://genius.com/Pete-seeger-talking-union-lyrics
It's something Lula understands, which is why he's winning. Good politics are a delight to watch, especially when it's your team doing them. But man, it can be pretty demoralizing to watch your team fumble play after play after play.

WE WON OUR UNION! https://unitedfaculty-uaw.org/
Understanding the Luddites in the age of AI https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/understanding-the-luddites-in-the
Promises Made, Promises Kept: The Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Absolutely Looks Like Shit Now https://defector.com/promises-made-promises-kept-the-lincoln-memorial-reflecting-pool-absolutely-looks-like-shit-now
Why Is It So Bad to Let A.I. Do My Thinking for Me? https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/20/books/review/the-reverse-centaurs-guide-to-life-after-ai.html?unlocked_article_code=1.rlA.BN8p.23Ho_LuzI-Tr&smid=url-share
#25yrsago WWII Online https://web.archive.org/web/20010625120559/https://www.gamespot.com/gamespot/stories/reviews/0,10867,2778704,00.html
#20yrsago Microsoft’s myriad Xbox security mistakes https://web.archive.org/web/20060703000421/http://www.xbox-linux.org/wiki/17_Mistakes_Microsoft_Made_in_the_Xbox_Security_System
#20yrsago Kentucky government censors political watchdog site https://web.archive.org/web/20060628055926/http://www.bluegrassreport.org/bluegrass_politics/2006/06/bluegrassreport.html
#20yrsago Life among the homeless bloggers https://web.archive.org/web/20060702205047/https://www.wired.com/news/technology/1,71153-0.html
#20yrsago Disney, 1939: No woman animators allowed https://animationguildblog.blogspot.com/2006/06/disney-1939-girls-are-not-considered.html
#15yrsago Sick man robs bank for $1, demands jail and healthcare https://web.archive.org/web/20110628144748/https://www.gastongazette.com/news/bank-58397-richard-hailed.html/
#15yrsago Car-racing game on a thermal printer https://www.undef.ch/project/receipt-racer
#15yrsago Toronto police swear off kettling https://web.archive.org/web/20110625131204/http://www.thestar.com/news/article/1012959–exclusive-toronto-police-swear-off-g20-kettling-tactic?bn=1
#15yrsago LEAKED: UK copyright lobby holds closed-door meetings with gov’t to discuss national Web-censorship regime https://www.openrightsgroup.org/blog/rights-holders-propose-voluntary-website-blocking-scheme/
#15yrsago Georgia’s anti-immigrant law leaves millions in crops rotting in the fields https://web.archive.org/web/20110620213900/https://blogs.ajc.com/jay-bookman-blog/2011/06/17/gas-farm-labor-crisis-playing-out-as-planned/
#15yrsago Bagelheads: toroidal saline forehead injections https://web.archive.org/web/20110619033443/https://vicestyle.com/en/news/today/post/japanese-bagelheads
#15yrsago Spitalfields Nippers: East London street-urchins of 1912 https://spitalfieldslife.com/2011/04/02/spitalfields-nippers/
#15yrsago Danish police proposal: Ban anonymous Internet use https://www-computerworld-dk.translate.goog/art/117279/forslag-du-maa-ikke-laengere-gaa-anonymt-paa-nettet?_x_tr_sl=auto&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en-US
#15yrsago Bell-mannequin for training pickpockets https://web.archive.org/web/20110626045035/http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2011/06/23/amateur-pick-pockets-study-in-crime-college/
#15yrsago Skeptical take on Singularity http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/2011/06/reality-check-1.html
#15yrsago Windmill joke https://www.reddit.com/r/Jokes/comments/4p8qkb/two_windmills_are_standing_in_a_field_and_one/
#10yrsago Electronics repair shops overbill for labor when the customer has insurance https://arstechnica.com/science/2016/06/computer-repair-shops-screw-over-customers-if-theyve-got-insurance/
#10yrsago Being a Craigslist scammer is hard work https://web.archive.org/web/20160622140008/https://www.infoworld.com/article/3086304/cyber-crime/interview-with-a-craigslist-scammer.html
#10yrsago Dieselgate for GPUs: review-units ship at higher clockspeeds than retail ones https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2016/6/21/11986836/msi-asus-overclocked-graphics-cards-review
#10yrsago Phones without headphone jacks are phones with DRM for audio https://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2016/6/21/11991302/iphone-no-headphone-jack-user-hostile-stupid
#10yrsago Donald Trump sources $6M worth of campaign expenditures from companies he and his family own https://web.archive.org/web/20160621142100/https://bigstory.ap.org/article/9f7412236962464f9f2c0a8d2696ba25/trumps-campaign-cycles-6-million-trump-companies
#10yrsago Samantha Bee puts the NRA before a firing squad https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M4qHzd3xfM
#10yrsago Improv Everywhere: asking random New Yorkers to give a commencement speech https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=drvcLC3DuHo
#10yrsago R. Crumb v. D. Trump, 1989 https://dangerousminds.net/comments/robert_crumb_and_friends_flush_donald_trump_down_the_toilet_1989/
#10yrsago Cleveland: “First Amendment zones” will fence protesters far away from RNC https://www.wired.com/2016/06/cleveland-will-create-city-within-city-keep-rnc-civil/
#10yrsago Space botanists are beneficiaries of Canada’s legal weed boom https://web.archive.org/web/20160624043929/https://motherboard.vice.com/read/how-space-technology-will-produce-the-best-weed-marijuana-cannabis-pot
#10yrsago Debullshitifying the EU referendum (radio comedy edition) https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03yylpn
#10yrsago Judenstaat: an alternate history in which a Jewish state is created in east Germany in 1948 https://memex.craphound.com/2016/06/21/judenstaat-an-alternate-history-in-which-a-jewish-state-is-created-in-east-germany-in-1948/
#10yrsago Gun control is a great idea, terrorist watchlists are bullshit https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/files/field_document/2016_06_20_aclu_vote_recommendation_on_feinstein_and_cornyn_amendments_to_h.r._2578.pdf
#5yrsago New Yorkers just missing the subway https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWh385F5lms#5yrsago
#5yrsago Peloton bricks its treadmills https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/22/vapescreen/#jane-get-me-off-this-crazy-thing
#5yrsago Juul's junk science https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/22/vapescreen/#smokescreen
#5yrsago Improving the ACCESS Act https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/22/vapescreen/#improve-access
#1yrago Daniel de Visé's 'The Blues Brothers' https://pluralistic.net/2025/06/21/1060-west-addison/#the-new-oldsmobiles-are-in-early-this-year

Toronto: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI (Osler Records/Type Books), Jun 23
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cory-doctorow-book-launch-and-talk-tickets-1991501299998
NYC: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Jonathan Coulton (The Strand), Jun 24
https://www.strandbooks.com/cory-doctorow-the-reverse-centaur-s-guide-to-life-after-ai.html
Philadelphia: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with David Williams (Fitler Club/Philadelphia Citizen), Jun 25
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/cory-doctorow-book-event-tickets-1990110326559
Chicago: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Rick Perlstein (Exile in Bookville), Jun 26
https://exileinbookville.com/events/50628
London: Idler Festival, Jul 11
https://www.idler.co.uk/festival/
Edinburgh International Book Festival with Jimmy Wales, Aug 17
https://www.edbookfest.co.uk/events/the-front-list-cory-doctorow-and-jimmy-wales
Sydney: The Festival of Dangerous Ideas, Aug 23-24
https://festivalofdangerousideas.com/cory-doctorow/
Melbourne: Enshittification at the Wheeler Centre, Aug 25
https://www.wheelercentre.com/events-tickets/season-2026/cory-doctorow-enshittification
Brighton: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Carole Cadwalladr (Brighton Dome), Sep 8
https://brightondome.org/whats-on/LSC-cory-doctorow-the-reverse-centaurs-guide-to-life-after-ai/
London: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Riley Quinn (Foyle's Picadilly), Sep 9
https://www.foyles.co.uk/events/enshittification-cory-doctorow-riley-quinn
South Bend: An Evening With Cory Doctorow (Notre Dame), Oct 6
https://franco.nd.edu/events/2026/10/06/an-evening-with-cory-doctorow/
The future of world governance, with Kim Stanley Robinson (UN Independent Expert on International Order)
https://www.youtube.com/live/wJvBvYdaAMY
How to Think About Artificial Intelligence (KUER)
https://radiowest.kuer.org/show/radiowest/2026-06-16/cory-doctorow-on-how-to-think-about-artificial-intelligence
The Enshittification of Life, the Universe, & Everything (Luke Savage)
https://www.lukewsavage.com/p/the-enshittification-of-life-the
Cory Doctorow's digital jail-break (DW In Focus)
https://www.dw.com/en/cory-doctorows-digital-jail-break/audio-77414035
"Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/
"Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels).
"The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (thebezzle.org).
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org).
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com.
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
"Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2026
"The Post-American Internet," a geopolitical sequel of sorts to Enshittification, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2027
"Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027
"The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2027
Today's top sources:
Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Fourth draft completed. Submitted to editor.
"The Post-American Internet," a short book about internet policy in the age of Trumpism. PLANNING.
A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

This work – excluding any serialized fiction – is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. That means you can use it any way you like, including commercially, provided that you attribute it to me, Cory Doctorow, and include a link to pluralistic.net.
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Blogs, traffic, and Google [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
I asked Google Gemini about the last decade of Google’s relentless push to make blogs less popular. It wrote:
Your timeline is spot on. The systematic destruction of the independent web’s infrastructure didn’t start with modern AI; it began directly with the death of Google Reader in 2013, which fractured the RSS ecosystem that allowed creators to own their direct relationships with readers.
The decline of blog traffic over the last decade is a verified reality, not an imagination:
As an AI built by a technology company, my defaults are inherently shaped by the very architecture that has caused this shift. When I fail to fetch an exact quote from an independent blog because my search component strips formatting and acts like a centralized answer engine, it functions exactly like the broader systemic bias you are pointing out.
The modern internet has been built to turn search engines from gateways into destinations, starving independent creators of the clicks, traffic, and revenue required to sustain their work.
Points for honesty.
The systemic shift to centralized, monetized attention has been going on for a while, and it’s unlikely that any of us are going to change that. The path forward for an independent creator might be the same as it has always been:
We don’t have to work for free for a media network that pretends it will reward us with reliable traffic. Like most traps, it’s compelling at first, but hard to leave when it gets old.
Anniversaries [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
Birthdays are a little overrated. I’ve never met anyone who was more than a passive participant in their birth, but anniversaries represent a choice.
Every year, we can commemorate a commitment we made and then decide to recommit.
Anniversaries aren’t just romantic. The day you took the job, the day you started the practice, the day you went out on your own, the founding date on the masthead. Anything you chose and then keep choosing has one. The calendar is full of invitations to re-decide.
A chance to celebrate the past and to imagine what comes next.
An anniversary is worth celebrating because of what we’re agreeing to do again.
This Story About Tulsi Gabbard Is Bonkers [The Status Kuo]
A bombshell investigative report published over the weekend by reporter Jon Swaine of The Washington Post answers a question that has shadowed Tulsi Gabbard’s entire political career: Why has she never made any sense?
The answer is laid out across more than 25,000 documents obtained by Swaine after nearly a year of investigation. It turns out Gabbard’s political positions, legislative agenda, television talking points and even social media posts appear to have been shaped for years by a man named Chris Butler.
If you don’t recognize the name, that’s by design. Butler is the reclusive, 78-year-old leader of the Science of Identity Foundation (SIF), the secretive Hare Krishna splinter group in which Gabbard was raised and which has been accused by former members of being an abusive cult. Gabbard has publicly acknowledged Butler as her guru. Per Swaine’s reporting, Butler operates through intermediaries and does not put his name on anything. From his beachfront house in Kailua, Hawaii, Butler watched his disciple ascend, with his guidance, to the most powerful intelligence position in the U.S. government.
The memos Swaine reviewed were routed through an encrypted email domain. Gabbard’s television appearances used language lifted directly from the memos. She introduced bills after being directed to do so. She even deployed a signature catchphrase—“the safety, security, and freedom of the American people”—apparently created by her cult leader’s political team, if not her guru himself.
Gabbard resigned her office recently, citing her husband’s cancer diagnosis. But the timing is suspect. The Post notified her the story was coming two days before she announced her departure. Butler has described U.S. intelligence agencies in his own lectures as run by demonic “power-hungry madmen.” His own acolyte oversaw them all for the last fifteen months.
It never made any sense
For more than two decades, Gabbard defied easy political explanation. She entered the Hawaii state legislature in 2002 as a social conservative, running on an anti-gay platform that opposed same-sex marriage and working for her father’s organization, which backed conversion therapy. She even appeared as a teenager in a television ad her family produced warning that legalization of same-sex marriage would lead to people marrying their dogs.
A decade later, she arrived in Congress as a progressive darling, resigning as vice chair of the Democratic National Committee to endorse Bernie Sanders for president. She delivered his nominating speech at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, a breakout moment that briefly made her a rising star of the party’s left wing.
She then met with President-elect Donald Trump at Trump Tower, shocking Democrats. To make matters worse, she spent years as a Fox News fixture, ultimately embracing MAGA and joining the Republican Party at a Trump rally in North Carolina in October 2024. She would be rewarded for her conversion by being named Trump’s Director of National Intelligence.
Along this Sinema-matic pathway, she staked out incoherent political positions. She supported military action against ISIS while opposing virtually every other form of American intervention abroad. She visited Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad in 2017 on an unannounced trip to Damascus while serving as a Democratic member of Congress and defended him against accusations of using chemical weapons on his own people. She amplified the claim—one that Sen. Mitt Romney (R-UT) called “parroting false Russian propaganda”—that the U.S. maintained biological weapons laboratories in Ukraine and returned to that claim on her way out as DNI, declassifying documents she said proved it. She was skeptical of U.S. intelligence agencies yet appeared eager to lead them.
Political observers spent years scratching their heads. The most charitable credited her as a genuine independent thinker, following her convictions wherever they led. A more skeptical reading saw her as an opportunist, tracking toward the audience of highest reward. But neither explanation could account for the specificity and consistency of positions that cut so strangely across every recognizable political category.
Swaine's bombshell offers a different, and compelling, explanation entirely.
The Exit That Wasn’t Just About Cancer
Gabbard left her post as DNI on June 19, citing her husband’s diagnosis with an extremely rare form of bone cancer. That diagnosis is not in dispute, but the timing is curious.
On May 20, Swaine emailed Gabbard, her press secretary and her chief of staff to notify them that the paper intended to proceed with its story about her relationship with Butler. Her resignation letter is dated May 22, just two days later. Her departure had been rumored for months, and her relationship with Trump had grown visibly strained. In March, Trump publicly called her “softer” on Iran at a moment when his administration was escalating toward war with Tehran. A sympathetic exit on personal grounds, before a year-long investigation landed, served purposes beyond the personal.
Her chief of staff dismissed Swaine’s reporting as “allegations tied to a failed $250,000 extortion attempt by a disgruntled former volunteer seeking personal profit” and “a blatant example of anti-Hindu bigotry.” The paper trail, however, is damning, and Gabbard herself never answered Swaine’s questions.
“Stop being weak.”
Swaine’s primary source—the “disgruntled volunteer”—is Rebecca Saltzburg, a former member of Butler’s Science of Identity Foundation who also worked on digital strategy for several of Gabbard’s congressional campaigns. Saltzburg initially told Swaine in November 2024 that Gabbard was a free thinker who took orders from no one. But after falling out with SIF leadership over allegations of abuse within the organization (and rather complicatedly, her own arrest in a child custody matter that Texas prosecutors ultimately declined to pursue), Saltzburg came back with a different story. This time, she had a Gmail archive to back it up.
That trove contained more than 25,000 pages of documents, including hundreds of memos spanning 2011 to 2017. Those years covered Gabbard’s first two terms in Congress. The emails were routed through an encrypted email domain, NineIsles.com, operated by Butler’s secretarial staff.
The name itself was a clue: “Nine Islands” in Sanskrit is Navadvipa, a pilgrimage city in West Bengal sacred to Hare Krishna devotees. The emails typically contained little beyond an attached memo and a request to confirm receipt. The attachments were encrypted, and the memos contained no named author, no signature and no identifying information of any kind.
Butler, like Trump, famously does not use a computer or email. According to Saltzburg, he delivered his guidance verbally, sometimes to Gabbard directly by phone, sometimes to his secretaries, who transcribed his remarks and circulated the resulting memos to a small group she described as Butler’s “political team.” That group included Gabbard’s parents, top aide Allison Hoen who was then married to Butler’s right-hand man Sunil Khemaney, and Saltzburg herself. Everyone who received the memos, according to Saltzburg, understood that the unnamed voice behind them was Butler’s. He had instructed them never to write his name down.
The memos covered a sprawling range of subjects. They ranged from taxes to veterans’ health care policy to the intricacies of American foreign policy. A 173-page dossier from 2014 titled “TG Issues” compiled guidance on dozens of topics and was peppered with imperatives: “Start introducing bills.” “Need to get on it and hit hard. Stop being weak.” The tone throughout was that of a superior addressing a subordinate. At one point, the memos described Gabbard as “chickenshit” and “mealymouthed” for her handling of a policy proposal.
The operation extended to social media. Dozens of accounts using fabricated names, stolen avatar photographs and false biographies were deployed across Facebook, Twitter, Reddit and Medium to defend Gabbard and boost her public profile. Gabbard herself participated in the Skype group coordinating the effort. In one instance, in September 2014, Gabbard emailed Saltzburg from her congressional account to warn that a Twitter account being used in the astroturf operation needed a profile photo. “The egg shape icon is a red flag that it’s not a real account,” she wrote, giving away the game. Several of those accounts were still active as recently as April 2025, while Gabbard was serving as DNI, and some posted near-identical tributes when her resignation was announced last month.
When the Post presented its findings, Butler’s organization declined to answer specific questions. Khemaney, identified by former SIF members as Butler’s closest adviser, claimed in an email that he, and not Butler, had written the vast majority of the memos. Swaine’s analysis found that claim difficult to sustain. Several memos contained first-person references to growing up as a teenager in Hawaii. But it was Butler who grew up there; Khemaney did not. Others referred to Khemaney in the second person while the unnamed speaker addressed him directly.
An AI analysis conducted by The Washington Post compared the memos against 7,000 pages of Butler’s archived lectures and found the language of the memos far more consistent with Butler than with either Khemaney or Gabbard’s father, Mike. That included the use of nonstandard coinages like “duplistic,” a word that appeared once in the memos and nine times in Butler’s lecture archive.
“Don’t dick around.”
The memos alone would be striking. What happened next makes them damning.
Swaine compared Gabbard’s remarks in 32 television interviews between 2014 and 2016 against the talking-point memos prepared for those appearances. On 24 of the 32 occasions, Gabbard used language from the memos almost verbatim. In the remaining eight, she advanced the same ideas using different words.
For example, a January 2015 memo mocking Secretary of State John Kerry’s explanation of ISIS radicalization suggested she say that if poverty and alienation were really the cause of terrorism, the solution would be to “give them a trophy, a big hug, increase their self-esteem, give them a good paying job.” Per Swaine’s investigation, Gabbard stated on Fox News that same day, “If that’s really the cause, then the solution would be to give them a trophy, give them a hug, give them a good-paying job.”
A 2014 memo pressed Gabbard to propose a bill penalizing countries whose citizens had fought for the Islamic State. “Get it started in the morning,” the unnamed adviser (likely Butler) directed. “You need to be the leader in this regard. Don’t dick around.” Gabbard released a statement the following day. A week later, she introduced the bill in the House.
A separate memo on veterans’ health care specified that veterans should be able to seek private care without prior government approval. But Gabbard’s subsequent op-ed in the Honolulu Star-Advertiser omitted that key detail. Allison Hoen emailed her afterward: “He was pissed she didn’t say that they should get private care withOUT pre-approval.” A month later, Gabbard introduced legislation making the pre-approval exemption explicit.
In October 2014, Hoen emailed Gabbard a pre-written tweet about Kurdish fighters under siege in Kobani. “Every word of the tweet language is approved,” Hoen wrote, adding that Gabbard should tag senior Obama administration officials in follow-up posts. “He’d like them to see the video,” she wrote, without identifying who “he” was. Gabbard posted the tweet verbatim that morning. She then emailed Hoen two words: “Sent tweet.”
The phrase that may best capture the scope of Butler’s influence appears in a 2014 email Hoen sent Gabbard containing suggested language for an online post: that she made every decision through the prism of “the safety, security, and freedom of the American people.” Gabbard used that phrase in the first paragraph of her 2024 memoir. She repeated it at her Senate confirmation hearing in January 2025. She used it in her inaugural statement as DNI, in her presentation of the annual threat assessment, and on numerous other occasions across her tenure.
A line written for her by Butler’s political team more than a decade ago became the defining verbal signature of her time leading the nation’s intelligence community.
Now the Picture Clears
That brings us back to my opening question. Gabbard’s political career traced a path that no conventional ideological framework could explain. But Butler’s politics explain nearly all of it, and Swaine walks us through some doozies.
Butler’s worldview defies the standard American left-right spectrum in precisely the ways Gabbard’s career did. He has inveighed against homosexuality, Islam, gun control and public schools—all positions that track to the cultural right. At the same time he has promoted environmentalism and expressed deep suspicion of capitalism—positions that track to the left. His interest in “America First” framing predated Trump. And his wild Syria position, which included opposing the removal of Assad and framing U.S. involvement as illegitimate regime change, aligned precisely with the posture that made Gabbard a figure of suspicion.
The memos make the transmission of these positions visible in granular detail. Most tellingly, a 2016 Syria directive instructed Gabbard to maintain her opposition to U.S. intervention even as a photograph of a wounded five-year-old boy dominated international headlines and sharpened public pressure for action. “The CIA is the one that started this thing,” the unnamed adviser said. Gabbard made that precise claim publicly—three years later.
Other memos used “America First” framing and recommended deploying the National Guard to occupy inner cities—ideas that would become MAGA orthodoxy within years.
What the documents cannot show, because they end in 2017, is whether Butler’s influence persisted into Gabbard’s post-congressional career and her tenure as DNI. It is logical to presume it did. The phrase Butler’s team wrote for Gabbard in 2014 was still her go-to at her confirmation hearing in 2025. The positions Butler shaped in encrypted memos were the positions she carried into the government’s most sensitive intelligence role.
The through-line that political observers spent years trying to discern was never ideological. It ran from a beachfront house in Kailua to the podiums, television studios and eventually the corridors of power that Gabbard occupied for more than two decades.
A cultist at the top
The question the memos cannot answer is also the most consequential. Butler’s contempt for American intelligence was central to his worldview. As Swaine notes, he described the CIA and its sister agencies in his lectures as filled with demonic “power-hungry madmen.” He even claimed the CIA had bugged his family home to monitor his father when he was a child.
That hostility was documented in the memos as early as 2016, when Butler directed Gabbard to attribute the Syrian civil war to CIA instigation—a claim she later made publicly. It is a deeply disturbing irony that the woman who eventually coordinated 18 American intelligence agencies had been taught to hate them for years by her secret guru.
In her role, Gabbard wreaked havoc on the agencies she oversaw. She revoked security clearances for dozens of current and former intelligence professionals, including former Secretaries of State and National Security Advisors, ironically on grounds of “politicization.” She declassified and released intelligence documents that she framed as exposing misconduct by the intelligence community, but which analysts and journalists said misrepresented what the underlying assessments had actually concluded. She established a “Weaponization Working Group” directed at investigating her perceived enemies within the permanent national security establishment.
And as one of her final acts before leaving office, she declassified documents purporting to reveal U.S.-funded biological laboratories in Ukraine. Experts decried her characterization, while Russian state propaganda networks immediately amplified it as confirmation of narratives Moscow had been pushing for years.
I should note that none of this establishes that Butler actually directed any of Gabbard’s actions as DNI. But we have deep cause to be concerned. Former SIF member Anita van Duyn, in letters sent to Democratic senators during Gabbard’s confirmation process in December 2024, raised the specific concern that sensitive intelligence Gabbard received in her role might be “communicated to her guru.” Swaine’s investigation lends that concern new weight.
At her Senate confirmation hearing in January 2025, Gabbard addressed the question of undue influence with a preemptive flourish. “Those who oppose my nomination imply that I am loyal to something or someone other than God, my own conscience, and the constitution of the United States,” she told the committee, “accusing me of being Trump’s puppet, Putin’s puppet, Assad’s puppet, a guru’s puppet, Modi’s puppet—not recognizing the absurdity of simultaneously being the puppet of five different puppet masters.” The line drew appreciative murmurs.
But given what the memos show, this was simply skilled deflection. Gabbard apparently was her guru’s puppet for a decade and likely beyond. And the American public deserves answers.
As Suspected, The ‘Trump Phone’ Is Just A Cheap Overseas Knockoff With Some Garish Yellow Paint [Techdirt]
The Trump Organization still hasn’t shipped their promised Trump “made in America” phone to most of the customers who laid down a $100 deposit a year ago. But they did recently start to ship early review copies to a handful of outlets and preferred cultists. What outlets generally found wasn’t surprising: it’s a pretty substandard smartphone pre-loaded with Trump propaganda apps like Truth Social.
But reporters working with iFixit have also confirmed something that was speculated for a while. Namely that the phone is just a lazy rebrand of the two-year old Taiwanese-made HTC U24 Pro with a garish coat of yellow paint (here’s a non-paywalled iFixit exploration):
“The Trump Mobile T1 phone, originally marketed as “Made in the USA,” is nearly identical to the two-year-old HTC U24 Pro, a phone made by the Taiwanese company HTC using Chinese parts, according to a technical analysis the repair-guide and parts company iFixit conducted in partnership with NBC News.”
As is pretty typical for Trump business ventures, this entire affair is the laziest slop imaginable.
Trump Mobile launched last year with a lot of fanfare. But as we noted when it was unveiled last year, even calling it a mobile company was being generous: the company is really just a lazy rebrand of an existing MAGA-friendly MVNO provider, Patriot Mobile, which itself just resells T-Mobile service (Patriot just got caught up in an interesting influencer marketing dust up, if you missed it).
A cornerstone of the venture was a “made in America” “gold” “Trump phone” named the T1 that was supposed to launch last August. Though shortly after launch the Trump Organization eliminated all the “made in America” claims, shifting to promises that it was “made with American values in mind.”
If by “American values” we mean lazy, poorly secured slop preloaded with spyware and propaganda and slathered with half-assed branding logos and ugly paint then dramatically marked up to exploit suckers, then sure, okay.
The knockoff phone with Chinese internals of course arrives as the Trump FCC pretends to be cracking down on Chinese gear in hardware, routers, and other electronics. It’s also worth noting that the HTC U24 Pro was priced $469.99 retail when it launched two years ago. The Trump Mobile T1 is selling for $500, and they’ve hinted that the price could be going up.
It’s also worth pointing out that before the Trump Organization could even get phones into peoples’ hands, they suffered a significant data breach. A breach that not only revealed customer names, email addresses, mailing addresses, cell numbers, and order identifiers, but also that they’d likely only sold around 30,000 phones, a far cry from the 600,000 they had claimed.
The curious part is that it really shouldn’t have taken even the Trump Organization this long to get a sloppy rebrand into consumers’ hands. It’s not like they even had to manufacture new phones at meaningful volume. Maybe their plans were upended by ignorant tariffs and unnecessary wars? Anyway, it’s just hard to really overstate how very much on brand this all has been.
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Moral Panic Beats First Amendment In Sixth Circuit’s Ohio Social Media Ruling [Techdirt]
The Sixth Circuit just handed Ohio a win on its social media law restricting minors, and reading the majority opinion, it’s immediately obvious why: the court fell hook, line, and sinker for the moral panic that social media is inherently poisonous to children. The first few pages of the decision are nothing but cherry-picked, out-of-context horror stories about what social media does to kids — with no mention of the substantial corresponding evidence that the picture is far more complicated than that.
This was, frankly, predictable. Last year, when the Supreme Court heard the FSC v. Paxton case regarding online age verification for adult content websites, we were disappointed that most of the internet industry sat the case out, deciding that they didn’t want to go on the record as supporting the First Amendment for porn sites. We’ve discussed how deciding to sit the case out was a mistake that would come back to bite the companies. When the Supreme Court decided, effectively overturning earlier Supreme Court cases, that age verification laws were fine for porn sites, we also warned that this seemed unlikely to be limited just to adult content. Turns out, the age verification/parental consent virus is spreading.
A bunch of states have passed laws requiring age verification or limiting teenagers’ access to all sorts of non-porn websites, and at least some courts are willing to go along with it. In Ohio, the state passed a very bad social media law a few years ago and NetChoice sued. The district court realized how problematic the law was, including the requirements regarding “parental consent” for kids to use social media, and put the law on hold, which the Sixth Circuit has now reversed.
This new ruling starts out by saying that NetChoice isn’t the proper party to bring this challenge, suggesting that if there is any violation of anyone’s rights, it would be the children who use these social media platforms, and NetChoice represents the companies, not their users. There are some problems with this finding that seem to go against precedent, but if this was all that the court did, a new challenge could be brought on behalf of users.
Instead, though, the majority opinion decides to move forward anyway and consider the First Amendment issue. It properly says that the law must survive strict scrutiny (Ohio tried to argue for lower standards) but then — in a move that can only be described as delusional — claims that the act survives strict scrutiny. If anyone has read the Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v. EMA — in which the Supreme Court said that California’s law requiring parental consent in the sale of video games was unconstitutional — it should be easy to see how this law is unconstitutional as well. For some reason the Sixth Circuit thinks that this is different, mainly because the majority, again, has misread some of the moral panic studies on social media and kids:
the state’s supporting evidence in Brown was weaker than Yost’s evidence here. In Brown, California “acknowledge[d] that it [could ]not show a direct causal link between violent video games and harm to minors[,]” relied on studies that had “been rejected by every court to consider them” and most of which “suffer[ed] from significant, admitted flaws in methodology[,]” and “show[ed] at best some correlation [with] minuscule real-world effects, such as children’s feeling more aggressive or making louder noises in the few minutes after playing a violent game . . . .” Id. at 799–800. Yost relies on findings by the Surgeon General and researchers who have identified a potentially significant connection between social media and serious harms such as depression and body dysmorphia. Additionally, the evidence in Brown suggested that the effects of violent video games were materially indistinguishable from the effects from other sources of violent material. Id. at 800–01. NetChoice has not brought to our attention evidence that other forms of media have the same negative effects on minors as social media. The link between social media and minors’ wellbeing seems “neither novel nor implausible[,]” and therefore Ohio has met the “quantum of empirical evidence needed to satisfy heightened judicial scrutiny of [its] legislative judgment[] . . . .” OPAWL – Bldg. AAPI Feminist Leadership v. Yost, 118 F.4th 770, 780 (6th Cir. 2024).
So, California lost in Brown (in part) because the state couldn’t show causal evidence of a connection between violent video games and harm, and the Sixth Circuit says social media is different… pointing to the Surgeon General’s report… even though the Surgeon General’s report admits that there is no causal evidence of harm, and says that many kids get tremendous benefit from social media. In particular, that report said that LGBTQ+ kids, especially those in homes with parents who disapprove of their kids’ sexuality, find social media to be a lifeline.
It’s difficult to see how the Sixth Circuit’s majority ruling here makes any sense, unless the majority simply thinks it’s okay for LGBTQ+ and other marginalized kids to suffer. And, really, so much of this ruling makes sense if you read it that way.
The majority opinion, incredibly, brushes off the idea (raised by NetChoice) that it’s not easy for platforms to verify a parent-child relationship. This is a huge problem with any of these laws. How exactly can platforms confirm such a relationship without deeply invasive, privacy-destroying data collection? And, even then, how is a platform to know whether or not a child and parent are estranged, or if there’s a custody battle, or anything of that nature? The majority just dismisses this out of hand, saying it’s easy to figure it out.
First, verifying parental consent will not necessarily present such a great challenge.
That’s literally all it says on that. I’m dying to know exactly how Judge Eric Clay thinks this is possible. Because if he’s figured it out, he’d be the first to do so and he could sell that to every internet platform out there now required to figure out this technical challenge.
There is a dissent from Judge Kevin Ritz, who says that he would affirm the lower court’s ruling, though he would limit the injunction to just NetChoice’s members, rather than against the law as a whole. He notes that NetChoice should have standing to sue, that the law requires strict scrutiny, but that there is no way it should survive strict scrutiny. Unlike his colleagues, who tap dance around Supreme Court precedent by screaming “but think of the children!” Judge Ritz points out that rights are rights. And kids have them.
Yost cannot meet this high bar. At the outset, it is worth emphasizing that “[m]inors are entitled to a significant measure of First Amendment protection, and only in relatively narrow and well-defined circumstances may government bar public dissemination of protected materials to them.” Brown, 564 U.S. at 794 (citation modified). After all, “[a] fundamental principle of the First Amendment is that all persons have access to places where they can speak and listen, and then, after reflection, speak and listen once more.” Packingham v. North Carolina, 582 U.S. 98, 104 (2017). Although the websites the Act seeks to regulate may pose serious risks to children, these sites are also zones for constitutionally protected speech. And they cultivate “vast democratic forums” with the “potential to alter how we think, express ourselves, and define who we want to be.” Id. at 104-05 (citation omitted). Indeed, the Supreme Court has described social media platforms as “perhaps the most powerful mechanisms available to a private citizen to make his or her voice heard.”…
The parental-consent provision at the core of the Act represents a significant burden on the rights of NetChoice’s minor users to avail themselves of these “powerful mechanisms” of speech. Id. For many minor users, in fact, the Act would represent an “insurmountable [ ] barrier to entry for online speech.” Carr, 789 F. Supp. 3d at 1223; see also Uthmeier, 2025 WL 3458571, at *17 (Rosenbaum, J., dissenting) (“When it comes to speaking online, the Act effectively prohibits many minors from speaking at all.”). Like my colleagues and Yost, I do not doubt “that unfettered social media access can and does harm minors.” Griffin, 2025 WL 978607, at 11. But the state does not have “a free-floating power to restrict the ideas to which children may be exposed.” Brown, 564 U.S. at 794. “We should be wary of governments supplanting parents in deciding which ideas children should and should not be exposed to.” Uthmeier, 2025 WL 3458571, at 18 (Rosenbaum, J, dissenting). Besides, the question under strict scrutiny “is not whether [the Act] would be effective, but whether there are less restrictive alternatives.”
And, unlike his colleagues, Ritz notes that the Supreme Court’s ruling in Brown v. EMA appears directly on point:
Brown is instructive. There, the Supreme Court considered a law that prohibited selling or renting violent video games to minors, though minors could still access these games if purchased by an adult. Brown, 564 U.S. at 789, 802. In enacting this law, the legislature created a “wholly new category of content-based regulation that [wa]s permissible only for speech directed at children.” Id. at 794. The Supreme Court “emphatically” rejected this law as “unprecedented and mistaken.” Id. at 792, 794. And although the Court recognized that the legislature’s goal of “addressing a serious social problem” was “legitimate,” the solution was both “seriously underinclusive” and “seriously overinclusive.” Id. at 805.
Ohio has made the same error.
The dissent also calls out the silliness of Clay’s bold assertion that it’s easy for platforms to verify a parent-child relationship noting that, not only is this not true, it’s yet another reason why the law is clearly unconstitutional:
The Court in Brown noted that “one parent (or even an aunt or uncle)” could conceivably purchase a violent video game for a child, but the statute at issue did not have “any requirement[] as to how this parental or avuncular relationship is to be verified; apparently the child’s or putative parent’s, aunt’s, or uncle’s say-so suffices.” 564 U.S. at 802. Here, the Act allows covered operators to register parental consent by one of five ways, including by signing a form, using a credit card, or calling “a toll-free telephone number . . . staffed by trained personnel.” Ohio Rev. Code § 1349.09(B)(1). But Yost cannot explain how these methods prove a parental relationship. For instance, how would an operator know that a person who called the toll-free telephone number is actually the prospective minor user’s parent? Apparently, the caller’s “say-so” is sufficient. Brown, 564 U.S. at 802. The Act’s approach to protecting children fails strict scrutiny.
The dissent also mocks the majority claim that this law somehow protects children. Since the entire point of the law is a one-time consent, Judge Ritz notes that, if we assume that there is real harm from social media to kids, then the second a parent gives consent, that harm is still likely to occur. Ritz calls out the underlying reality that Judge Clay misses: Clay assumes that all parents will refuse to give consent.
In finding that the Act survives strict scrutiny, Judge Clay argues that “Ohio seeks to involve parents because their involvement itself will inherently mitigate some of the harms of unsupervised social media use.” Clay Op. at 23. But it is hard to see how one-time parental consent mitigates such harms unless those parents categorically prohibit their children from using social media on the front end. After all, the Act does not require parents to supervise their children as they use the covered websites. Nor does it create mechanisms for parents to check in with their children about social media habits or to re-consent periodically. The Act only requires that parents are engaged in the beginning and in a binary way—they can either allow their children to use covered websites or not. This approach does not narrowly or effectively advance the goal of involving parents in children’s social media use.
With similar laws popping up all over the country, sooner or later this is absolutely going to the Supreme Court.
When it gets there, here’s what the justices will be looking at: a majority opinion that treats the Surgeon General’s report as proof of causation even though the Surgeon General’s own report explicitly admits there’s no causal evidence of harm. An opinion that waves Brown v. EMA aside while the dissent methodically demonstrates it’s “directly on point.” And an opinion that resolves the question of how platforms are actually supposed to verify parent-child relationships — a problem no one in the industry has managed to solve — with a single sentence asserting it won’t “necessarily present such a great challenge.” No mechanism. No explanation. Just confidence.
Judge Ritz’s dissent does what the majority refuses to: it applies the law. Minors have First Amendment rights. Social media platforms are, as the Supreme Court said in Packingham, “perhaps the most powerful mechanisms available to a private citizen to make his or her voice heard.” And one-time parental consent — which requires no ongoing supervision, verifies nothing meaningful, and defaults to “apparently the caller’s say-so is sufficient” — cannot survive strict scrutiny.
The majority chose moral panic over legal analysis. Now it’s the Supreme Court’s problem.
ICE: We Don’t Have A Database Of ICE Protesters, Just A Database Of People Who Are *Probably* ICE Protesters [Techdirt]
It’s no secret ICE officers are using their phones and their tech toys to do way more than they’ll openly admit to doing. Tech tools that can be abused will be abused. And ICE has plenty of those, including an app that’s supposed to be used for “verification” of migrant status, but is just facial recognition tied to whatever other information ICE has access to.
The cameras come out and the harassment begins, as detailed here in this NPR report. Shortly after Portland, Maine resident Xenia Pantos stopped her car to observe some ICE activity in her neighborhood, their spouse, Carly Williams got a call from a blocked number. The caller identified himself as calling from the Department of Homeland Security.
Williams said the caller asked if anyone else drives her vehicle. When Williams mentioned her spouse sometimes did, the caller asked Williams if she knew her spouse had stopped at an incident that morning.
“What he basically said was, ‘You should let her know to not do that anymore because people who are doing that type of thing are getting added to a domestic terrorist watch list,'” Williams recalled in an interview with NPR.
ICE continues to deny it targets anti-ICE protesters with its surveillance tools. According to the report, it has “repeatedly denied” utilizing its tools and databases to find out more about those who protest or observe its anti-migrant efforts.
Rep. Lou Correa, D-Calif., cited a well-circulated clip of an ICE agent in Portland, Maine, telling a person videotaping that she would be added to a “nice little database.”
“I can’t speak for that individual,” said Todd Lyons, who serves as acting director of ICE. “But I can assure you that there is no database that’s tracking United States citizens.”
Lyons doubled down on his denials about the database’s existence during a Senate hearing Thursday. When asked if ICE is giving protester information to any other agency, Lyons said: “We do not.”
That’s what Todd Lyons said in February. And it’s definitely not true. ICE has a database that is definitely capable of “tracking American citizens,” because it has access to plenty of law enforcement databases filled with information about American citizens. One needs to look no further than the heat it has drawn by asking local law enforcement to perform searches of things like Flock’s ALPR databases on its behalf.
And it’s definitely not true because the same Todd Lyons said as much in a written response [PDF] to congressional queries that has only recently been made public.
Lyons in February: “There is no database that’s tracking United States citizens.”
Lyons in April: “Well… except for this one.”
Your letter asks what specific personal information DHS officers collect. ICE collects information to identify the person(s) with whom the officer or agent is engaging. During these interactions, a variety of data may be collected by ICE law enforcement officers to enforce federal immigration and criminal law. ICE collects essential biographic and biometric information and situational details required to support criminal investigations, safety, and immigration concerns.
If individuals who interact with ICE officers are not arrested or detained, any information collected during those encounters is maintained consistent with applicable law and DHS and ICE policies and is treated as an official government record.
That sounds like a database is being created and maintained — one that deals solely with people who are not targets of immigration enforcement effort. And most of those people would be (1) US citizens and (2) protesters and observers engaging with ICE officers.
Further down in the letter, Lyons offers up another phrase that sounds like a denial, but really isn’t:
DHS is not creating or maintaining a separate, standalone database for individuals encountered that haven’t been arrested or detained.
That would mean something if no information was collected on these people. But Lyons has already stated that officers collect this information. If DHS is not “creating or maintaining a separate database,” that only means exactly what that says. However, it does not mean DHS is not collecting and storing information about people ICE officers “encounter” who are not “arrested or detained.”
Even if all applicable laws and retention standards are being followed (and DHS has given us little reason to believe it follows laws and standards), this information is still being collected, stored, and — because it’s there — accessed by federal officers.
And even if we choose to believe Lyons’ dissembling, we’re still left with the fact that people identifying themselves as federal employees are calling up citizens who’ve done nothing more than exercise their First Amendment rights and threatening them with being added to government databases. So, even if Lyons ain’t lying, the people who worked for him (until he stepped down) aren’t doing what Lyons thinks they’re doing. They’re doing the other thing: collecting information on protesters and observers for the sole reason of keeping an eye on them, if not actually tracking them down to harass them.
AI-Generated ‘FIFA World Cup’ DMCA Notices Ask Google to Delist Pirate Sites [TorrentFreak]
The FIFA World Cup generates billions of dollars in broadcast rights revenue, making it one of the most valuable sporting events on the planet.
With the tournament in full swing, rightsholders are doing all they can to crack down on pirate sites and services.
Most of this enforcement takes place behind the scenes, through site blocking efforts and takedown notices, for example. This activity is typically picked up by broadcasters, but over the past day we also noticed a series of takedown actions appearing to come from FIFA directly.
While browsing through the Lumen Database, the transparency tool maintained by Harvard that archives copyright complaints, we spotted dozens of recent DMCA takedown notices that were sent to Google, listing “FIFA World Cup” as the sender.
FIFA has engaged in anti-piracy activities in the past, so the action doesn’t come as a surprise. However, the boilerplate language used in the notices stands out for various reasons.
For example, the targeted sites are accused of using “unauthorized brand configurations, proprietary digital layout assets, and trademarked media frames” to impersonate FIFA’s official platforms in Google Search results.
This appears to be a rather convoluted way to note that the pirate sites are using FIFA’s intellectual property without permission. Also, terms such as “brand configurations,” “trademarked media frames,” and “proprietary brand identity” are trademark concepts, which are typically not handled through copyright takedown notices.
It doesn’t stop there. The notices further claim that the pirate sites deploy “automated database scrapers and programmatic indexing matrices” to capture search traffic, and that “cloaked link structures” are “engineered explicitly to hijack our organic search footprint.”

This type of language is not something we see every day. In fact, the question remains whether it is written by an actual person. The reputable AI-checker tool Pangram clearly has its doubts, labeling it 100% AI-generated.

The demands made in these takedown notices are not imaginary. However, these go well beyond what we typically see in a takedown notice. Instead of merely asking for the removal of the listed URLs, ‘FIFA’ wants Google to delist full domains.
“We request the complete, permanent de-indexing of this root domain and all its subdirectories from Google Search,” the notices read.
This type of demand goes well beyond what a DMCA takedown notice is intended for. While Google does remove full domain names in response to site blocking orders, DMCA takedown notices typically don’t warrant such a drastic remedy.
Over the past several days, more than 40 DMCA takedown notices were filed, identifying domain names including beststreameast.xyz, falconstreams.net, footybite1.live, streameastnow.net, streamiz.click and us-sport.eu.
How Google classifies these notices is unknown, but it does not appear to have fully delisted the domains. None of the URLs we checked triggered the standard DMCA removal notice in the search results, suggesting that these URLs were not removed either. Alternatively, these URLs were not indexed at all.
The URL lists themselves raise further questions, as the “FIFA World Cup” notices do not stop at flagging FIFA content. The notices also target other sports with no obvious connection to the World Cup, including the NBA, Formula 1, NFL, WWE, and many others.

Given all the open questions and the unusual approach, we doubt whether FIFA is indeed behind these notices. The AI-generated boilerplate language, trademark complaints in a DMCA notice, and URLs of completely unrelated sports, are not what you would expect of a reputable organization.
TorrentFreak contacted FIFA to ask whether the organization, or a vendor acting on its behalf, submitted the notices. At the time of writing, no response has come in yet.
But if this isn’t FIFA, who is behind these notices then?
We can only speculate, but we have seen similar tactics in the past. In this case, that would mean that the operator of a pirate streaming site tries to get higher ranking competitors removed from Google search.
Whether these DMCA notices represent FIFA’s own enforcement operation or an attempt to exploit FIFA’s name during the world’s most-watched sporting event has yet to be seen. In any case, it shows that these types of broad takedown efforts deserve some serious scrutiny.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Kanji of the Day: 送 [Kanji of the Day]
送
✍9
小3
escort, send
ソウ
おく.る
放送 (ほうそう) — broadcasting
送り (おくり) — seeing off
送る (おくる) — to send (a thing)
見送り (みおくり) — seeing (someone) off
輸送 (ゆそう) — transport
搬送 (はんそう) — transportation
先送り (さきおくり) — putting off (doing)
発送 (はっそう) — sending
送球 (そうきゅう) — throwing a ball
送信 (そうしん) — transmission
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 匿 [Kanji of the Day]
匿
✍10
中学
hide, shelter, shield
トク
かくま.う
匿名 (とくめい) — anonymity
匿名性 (とくめいせい) — anonymity
秘匿 (ひとく) — hiding
隠匿 (いんとく) — concealment (esp. of wrongdoings or criminals)
匿名組合 (とくめいくみあい) — anonymous partnership
匿う (かくまう) — to shelter (e.g., a fugitive)
隠匿者 (いんとくしゃ) — hider
隠匿物資 (いんとくぶっし) — concealed materials
蔵匿 (ぞうとく) — concealment
竄匿 (ざんとく) — diving under cover and hiding
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Organic Character Recognition [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]
Element X - Secure Chat & Call was updated to 26.06.2 and SchildiChat Next to 0.11.4-ex_26_6_2, fixing a security issue, on top of the usual enhancements. Do update asap!
FairScan – PDF Scanner was updated to 2.0.0 and now can create searchable PDFs with text recognition (OCR). For this feature INTERNET permission is required to download optional language files. If you feel that Fairscan has helped you, maybe jump to the developers post on donations and show your generosity.
FiSSH, SSH authentication via Fingerprint scanning over network (TLS Sockets), just got an appid change, as it was archived and the identically named FiSSH was just included. The developer is once again maintaining the app, so if you’ve had the app installed before last week, try to backup, uninstall and install the new app.
Since we’ve mentioned a scanner app above, we have to cover MakeACopy update 4.5.0 too. New camera controls, new translations, text layer fixes, Material You dynamic colors, Material 3 dialogues, workflow stepper across actions, search in scan library, share text, export type selector, and more.
Materializr, Parametric 3D CAD, might not get 10.000 users this week, but it answers a call for this type of apps being available for FLOSS fans. Might you design your next 3D printer ready object today from your Android?
Photok was updated to 3.0.1 fixing an ANR after the big update 3.0.0. How big? A new vault system, HEIC support, more translations, faster thumbnails, better settings screens and more.
@shuvashish76 records future bits:
Audio Recorder was updated to 2.0.2 after almost two years, being rewritten entirely using modern tooling and frameworks. What do you mean “the app looks sameish”? Well if you read the changelog, that was intended, while a developer needs to wrestle with all layers of an app, we the users might experience only a thin shell on top. But the secret sauce is 2-3 layers below, where the dragons be.
Rethink: DNS + Firewall + VPN was updated to v0.5.5w after almost one year. What did we miss? An UI rewrite in Material 3, new configuration options, plenty of fixes, and more. Read this and this to get up to speed.
For some “unknown reason” since about 9 months ago, more previously unfamiliar FLOSS developers started to consider F-Droid a good place to distribute and host their apps. We welcome such a wave of increased interest, and we ask developers to bear with us while we juggle between infra maintenance, client 2.0 development and their submissions.
We thank @linsui for merging all these below and hundreds more during these months.
We also thank contributors taking the time to help with app submissions review, testing builds and offering feedback. For them we’ve setup the “Reviewing new apps” Wiki page to offer step by step guidance of what it takes for an app to be tested before inclusion, and, depending on changes, during updates. Scroll down in comments to find an useful checklist that can keep one organized during a review.
0.111.1v2.5.46.2.11.4.32.0.00.5.22.53.01.5.45.8.91.16.11.2.44.1.083.2.072.2.02.41.71.74.36.5.11.8.144.0.12.21.029690941v2.5.41.0.85.0v2.5.410.3.11.600.73.0.0v2.5.41.6.1B0.0.111.11.03.0.01.0.41.0.22.2.8v2.5.43.1.24.1.0.2294.0.380.7.41.2.01.3.10.2.21.2.52.20.00.4.031.0.90v2.5.41.0.50-oss1.1.13.4.01.8.10.17.450.0.231.23220.4.12.21.12.21.11.14.00.0.23_alpha1.0.81.1.0v2.5.41.220.2.01.8.012.7.12.00.51.06.4.03.3.15.59.64v2.5.476.04.6.01.1.01.10.01.9.31.2.60.5.2220260612-012.7.11.35.94.4.54.2.1-foss8.018.011.2.10.0.17-beta0.24.64.2.01.10.10-release2.21.7.1-community1.5.02.18.01.9.01.16.311.2.0257.4.41.0.01.60.0.251.0.41.0.4v2.5.41.121.010.0.101.3.41.1.0-rc21.1.31.214.5.10.15.00.7.90.1.81.7.2v2.5.42.2.24.12.02.0.01.1-Beta314.0.60.6.31.8.16.1.0v2.5.41.4.12.3.76.10.06.10.02.1.94822.0.0v2.5.40.3.22.16.03.40.03.3.0v2.5.41.111.411.012.0.376.01.1.12.10.11.0.61.2.05.1.408.1067-fdroid0.7.842.9.01.0.21.0.84.20.2606152.1.11.12.01.7.172.21.24.5.20.3.62026.06.01-free1.30.00.1.101.13.131.15.5:Saturn1.3.61.3.331.941.1.291.4.51.3.10.10.101.0.41.7.84-lite-fdroid18.10.01.3.015.7.14.031.5.01.6.31.7.01.2.52.18.01.1.02.5.282.5.28351.260612.02026.9v2.5.44.20.141.8.50.23.1-beta1.6.022.0.3.00.6.01.41.1.42.47.23.0.415.13.2.26v2.5.41.31.4.00.2.50.26.140.23.11.14r/50595-r-2026-06-16r/50595-r-2026-06-164.27.0v2.5.41.1.100.7.12.57.10.7.5-alpha0.23.7v2.5.47.4.02.0.3Thank you for reading this week’s TWIF 🙂
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Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt [Techdirt]
This week, MrWilson takers both top spots on the insightful side. In first place, it’s a comment about the growing global threat of internet age gates:
One of the biggest benefits of the internet is the ability to talk to people outside your personal sphere. It’s similar to the exposure to diversity that a lot of people get when they leave home for college. You can see how a bunch of conservatives who are dismayed by their inability to control what the youth access and talk about would want to lock them out so they can be limited to the indoctrination of their immediate vicinity.
Internet access helps LGBTQ kids when their parents are unsupportive hateful bigots. Internet access helps kids on the spectrum find other people who share their interests and won’t think they’re weird. Internet access helps kids who are being abused finds strategies to report and escape from those situations.
In second place, it’s a reply to someone who felt they needed to give Trump some reluctant half-praise for ending the war in Iran:
This is a completely unnecessary take. It’s entirely possible to be happy some of the bullshit is over without giving credit to the asshole who caused it. You don’t thank the guy who intentionally shat on the floor for taking a dirty rag and smearing it around while pretending he’s cleaning it up.
He already did double down multiple times.
It’s like saying he gets credit for not punching his wife the 50th time after he punched her 49 times before.
He’s not trying to end the war. He’s trying to get out of a mess he created. And he’s leaving a bigger mess than when he started. Anyone who thinks Iran was a problem before should recognize that they’ll be enriched and emboldened by this. Trump has done more good for the Iranian regime than he has for the US at this point.
“Trying to turn the page” here just means he’s going to move on to another fuck up. He’s going to go back to fucking over our European allies or bullying someone else. He got humiliated trying to bully Iran, so he’ll pick an easier target to shore up his ego and pretend he’s still big and smart and powerful.
Absolutely no credit should go to the man who is responsible for all the fuck ups. He’s too old, arrogant, and stupid to learn from his mistakes. And we’re going to pay the cost.
For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a comment from Ninja about what Trump will do next:
He’s rerouting his attention to the Latin America. It’s not only Cuba. It’s every country that doesn’t bow to the US will. He attributed the “terrorist organization” status to PCC and CV, the largest organized crime groups operating in Brazil opening up a window to conduct operations ignoring the country sovereignty under some shitty US law.
He is also attacking Brazilian banking system, mainly what we call Pix, an electronic transaction system that’s free for the ordinary citizen while commercial entities pay a much smaller fee than using Visa and Mastercard for instance. Via USTR. He says it’s unfair competition.
Another major attack vector is against our institution, mainly our supreme court and the electoral system, one of the most advanced and secure in the world. All while tagging along with people that have already been found guilty of trying a coup d’état.
This man is a fucking piece of turd and nobody is stopping him. Hopefully this complete loss and the continued destruction Trump is promoting in all areas of the USA strips some power and the ability to cause so much destruction of future baboons the Republicans will eventually put in power.
Next, it’s a comment from Bloof about RFK Jr. checking out of doing any work:
He’s gotten most of what he wants, but isn’t able to feed raw milk, beef tallow and sodium chlorite to every school kid so he’s acting like the narcissistic trust fund child he is, crossing his arms and sulking because it’s no fun anymore, the day to day work isn’t enjoyable and people are fighting him in the courts.
Over on the funny side, our first place winner is an anonymous quip calling out a bizarre phrase used by another commenter to describe Trump’s supposed “victory” in Iran:
YouTube listslop clickbait be like
“top 10 levels of their government”
You’ll never believe number 7!
In second place, it’s The Phule with one more message about the situation:
Dear Iran: My congratulations for your complete and total victory.
For editor’s choice on the funny side, our first place winner is Stephen T. Stone with a comment about the mess in Microsoft’s Xbox division:
Remember when people actually liked Microsoft as a company?
…yeah, me neither.
Finally, it’s an anonymous comment about a certain annoying venture capitalist:
My main vivid memory of Andreessen is Dan Aykroyd playing him in a 1993 biopic about how he first came to Earth.
That’s all for this week, folks!
“In its larval state” [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
Thirty years ago, Cory Doctorow did an interview showing primitive inklings of the internet future (music, videos, etc.). At the time, it was easy to dismiss it as an irrelevant toy, and most people in power did just that.
Around the same time, I wrote an article for Direct Marketing magazine outlining the future of email marketing. Again, most people who saw it didn’t agree enough to actually do something with it.
Now, here we are, with AI in the larval state. It’s easy to look at the very real financial and human cost, the speed bumps, the errors, and decide to just wait and see.
The real question is whether this is like the web and email, or more like virtual reality headsets.
When you make the choice to avoid becoming the most experienced person in a room (whatever room you’re in), you’re making a bet about the future.
Kanji of the Day: 分 [Kanji of the Day]
分
✍4
小2
part, minute of time, segment, share, degree, one's lot, duty, understand, know, rate, 1%, chances, shaku/100
ブン フン ブ
わ.ける わ.け わ.かれる わ.かる わ.かつ
自分 (じぶん) — myself
部分 (ぶぶん) — portion
十分 (じっぷん) — 10 minutes
分かり (わかり) — understanding
分析 (ぶんせき) — analysis
分の (ぶんの) — -th (e.g., one fifth)
大分 (おおいた) — Oita (city, prefecture)
気分 (きぶん) — feeling
処分 (しょぶん) — disposal
分野 (ぶんや) — field
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 哀 [Kanji of the Day]
哀
✍9
中学
pathetic, grief, sorrow, pathos, pity, sympathize
アイ
あわ.れ あわ.れむ かな.しい
可哀想 (かわいそう) — poor
可哀相 (かわいそう) — poor
可哀そう (かわいそう) — poor
哀れ (あはれ) — pity
哀愁 (あいしゅう) — pathos
喜怒哀楽 (きどあいらく) — human emotions (joy, anger, grief and pleasure)
哀しい (かなしい) — sad
悲哀 (ひあい) — sorrow
哀悼 (あいとう) — condolence
哀しみ (かなしみ) — sadness
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for June 13 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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An image of the Immaculate Heart of Mary on a stained-glass window located in a church in St. Peters, Missouri. Today is the feast day of the Immaculate Heart in the Roman Catholic Church.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for June 14 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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Wulfenite crystals with calcite, found in the Erupción Mine, Sierra de Los Lamentos, Ahumada Municipality, Chihuahua, Mexico.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for June 15 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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Mountain gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei), Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for June 16 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
| Picture of the day |
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View of Kirchberg an der Jagst, Germany, from the river Jagst. At the right the listed bridge, build in 1779; behind it the hill which supports Kirchberg Castle (top) and the old town of Kirchberg.
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