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Sunday 2024-06-16

09:00 AM

Pluralistic: Sphinxmumps Linkdump (15 Jun 2024) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



A 'garbage plate' - a western NY delicacy in which a large number of foods are mounded high on a paper plate in a delicious/disgusting slurry.

Sphinxmumps Linkdump (permalink)

Welcome to my 20th Linkdump, in which I declare link bankruptcy and discharge my link-debts by telling you about all the open tabs I didn't get a chance to cover in this week's newsletters. Here's the previous 19 installments:

https://pluralistic.net/tag/linkdump/

Starting off this week with a gorgeous book that is also one of my favorite books: Beehive's special slipcased edition of Dante's Inferno, as translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, with new illustrations by UK linocut artist Sophy Hollington:

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/beehivebooks/the-inferno

I've loved Inferno since middle-school, when I read the John Ciardi translation, principally because I'd just read Niven and Pournelle's weird (and politically odious) (but cracking) sf novel of the same name:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inferno_(Niven_and_Pournelle_novel)

But also because Ciardi wrote "About Crows," one of my all-time favorite bits of doggerel, a poem that pierced my soul when I was 12 and continues to do so now that I'm 52, for completely opposite reasons (now there's a poem with staying power!):

https://spirituallythinking.blogspot.com/2011/10/about-crows-by-john-ciardi.html

Beehive has a well-deserved rep for making absolutely beautiful new editions of great public domain books, each with new illustrations and intros, all in matching livery to make a bookshelf look classy af. I have several of them and I've just ordered my copy of Inferno. How could I not? So looking forward to this, along with its intro by Ukrainian poet Ilya Kaminsky and essay by Dante scholar Kristina Olson.

The Beehive editions show us how a rich public domain can be the soil from which new and inspiring creative works sprout. Any honest assessment of a creator's work must include the fact that creativity is a collective act, both inspired by and inspiring to other creators, past, present and future.

One of the distressing aspects of the debate over the exploitative grift of AI is that it's provoked a wave of copyright maximalism among otherwise thoughtful artists, despite the fact that a new copyright that lets you control model training will do nothing to prevent your boss from forcing you to sign over that right in your contracts, training an AI on your work, and then using the model as a pretext to erode your wages or fire your ass:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/13/spooky-action-at-a-close-up/#invisible-hand

Same goes for some privacy advocates, whose imaginations were cramped by the fact that the only regulation we enforce on the internet is copyright, causing them to forget that privacy rights exist separate from the nonsensical prospect of "owning" facts about your life:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/21/the-internets-original-sin/

We should address AI's labor questions with labor rights, and we should address AI's privacy questions with privacy rights. You can tell that these are the approaches that would actually work for the public because our bosses hate these approaches and instead insist that the answer is just giving us more virtual property that we can sell to them, because they know they'll have a buyer's market that will let them scoop up all these rights at bargain prices and use the resulting hoards to torment, immiserate and pauperize us.

Take Clearview AI, a facial recognition tool created by eugenicists and white nationalists in order to help giant corporations and militarized, unaccountable cops hunt us by our faces:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/20/steal-your-face/#hoan-ton-that

Clearview scraped billions of images of our faces and shoveled them into their model. This led to a class action suit in Illinois, which boasts America's best biometric privacy law, under which Clearview owes tens of billions of dollars in statutory damages. Now, Clearview has offered a settlement that illustrates neatly the problem with making privacy into property that you can sell instead of a right that can't be violated: they're going to offer Illinoisians a small share of the company's stock:

https://www.theregister.com/2024/06/14/clearview_ai_reaches_creative_settlement/

To call this perverse is to go a grave injustice to good, hardworking perverts. The sums involved will be infinitesimal, and the only way to make those sums really count is for everyone in Illinois to root for Clearview to commit more grotesque privacy invasions of the rest of us to make its creepy, terrible product more valuable.

Worse still: by crafting a bespoke, one-off, forgiveness-oriented regulation specifically for Clearview, we ensure that it will continue, but that it will also never be disciplined by competitors. That is, rather than banning this kind of facial recognition tech, we grant them a monopoly over it, allowing them to charge all the traffic will bear.

We're in an extraordinary moment for both labor and privacy rights. Two of Biden's most powerful agency heads, Lina Khan and Rohit Chopra have made unprecedented use of their powers to create new national privacy regulations:

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

In so doing, they're bypassing Congressional deadlock. Congress has not passed a new consumer privacy law since 1988, when they banned video-store clerks from leaking your VHS rental history to newspaper reporters:

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

Congress hasn't given us a single law protecting American consumers from the digital era's all-out assault on our privacy. But between the agencies, state legislatures, and a growing coalition of groups demanding action on privacy, a new federal privacy law seems all but assured:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/06/privacy-first/#but-not-just-privacy

When that happens, we're going to have to decide what to do about products created through mass-scale privacy violations, like Clearview AI – but also all of OpenAI's products, Google's AI, Facebook's AI, Microsoft's AI, and so on. Do we offer them a deal like the one Clearview's angling for in Illinois, fining them an affordable sum and grandfathering in the products they built by violating our rights?

Doing so would give these companies a permanent advantage, and the ongoing use of their products would continue to violate billions of peoples' privacy, billions of times per day. It would ensure that there was no market for privacy-preserving competitors, thus enshrining privacy invasion as a permanent aspect of our technology and lives.

There's an alternative: "model disgorgement." "Disgorgement" is the legal term for forcing someone to cough up something they've stolen (for example, forcing an embezzler to give back the money). "Model disgorgement" can be a legal requirement to destroy models created illegally:

https://iapp.org/news/a/explaining-model-disgorgement

It's grounded in the idea that there's no known way to unscramble the AI eggs: once you train a model on data that shouldn't be in it, you can't untrain the model to get the private data out of it again. Model disgorgement doesn't insist that offending models be destroyed, but it shifts the burden of figuring out how to unscramble the AI omelet to the AI companies. If they can't figure out how to get the ill-gotten data out of the model, then they have to start over.

This framework aligns everyone's incentives. Unlike the Clearview approach – move fast, break things, attain an unassailable, permanent monopoly thanks to a grandfather exception – model disgorgement makes AI companies act with extreme care, because getting it wrong means going back to square one.

This is the kind of hard-nosed, public-interest-oriented rulemaking we're seeing from Biden's best anti-corporate enforcers. After decades of kid-glove treatment that allowed companies like Microsoft, Equifax, Wells Fargo and Exxon to commit ghastly crimes and then crime again another day, Biden's corporate cops are no longer treating the survival of massive, structurally important corporate criminals as a necessity.

It's been so long since anyone in the US government treated the corporate death penalty as a serious proposition that it can be hard to believe it's even happening, but boy is it happening. The DOJ Antitrust Division is seeking to break up Google, the largest tech company in the history of the world, and they are tipped to win:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/24/naming-names/#prabhakar-raghavan

And that's one of the major suits against Google that Big G is losing. Another suit, jointly brought by the feds and dozens of state AGs, is just about to start, despite Google's failed attempt to get the suit dismissed:

https://www.reuters.com/technology/google-loses-bid-end-us-antitrust-case-over-digital-advertising-2024-06-14/

I'm a huge fan of the Biden antitrust enforcers, but that doesn't make me a huge fan of Biden. Even before Biden's disgraceful collaboration in genocide, I had plenty of reasons – old and new – to distrust him and deplore his politics. I'm not the only leftist who's struggling with the dilemma posed by the worst part of Biden's record in light of the coming election.

You've doubtless read the arguments (or rather, "arguments," since they all generate a lot more heat than light and I doubt whether any of them will convince anyone). But this week, Anand Giridharadas republished his 2020 interview with Noam Chomsky about Biden and electoral politics, and I haven't been able to get it out of my mind:

https://the.ink/p/free-noam-chomsky-life-voting-biden-the-left

Chomsky contrasts the left position on politics with the liberal position. For leftists, Chomsky says, "real politics" are a matter of "constant activism." It's not a "laser-like focus on the quadrennial extravaganza" of national elections, after which you "go home and let your superiors take over."

For leftists, politics means working all the time, "and every once in a while there's an event called an election." This should command "10 or 15 minutes" of your attention before you get back to the real work.

This makes the voting decision more obvious and less fraught for Chomsky. There's "never been a greater difference" between the candidates, so leftists should go take 15 minutes, "push the lever, and go back to work."

Chomsky attributed the good parts of Biden's 2020 platform to being "hammered on by activists coming out of the Sanders movement and others." That's the real work, that hammering. That's "real politics."

For Chomsky, voting for Biden isn't support for Biden. It's "support for the activists who have been at work constantly, creating the background within the party in which the shifts took place, and who have followed Sanders in actually entering the campaign and influencing it. Support for them. Support for real politics."

Chomsky tells us that the self-described "masters of the universe" understand that something has changed: "the peasants are coming with their pitchforks." They have all kinds of euphemisms for this ("reputational risks") but the core here is a winner-take-all battle for the future of the planet and the species. That's why the even the "sensible" ultra-rich threw in for Trump in 2016 and 2020, and why they're backing him even harder in 2024:

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckvvlv3lewxo

Chomsky tells us not to bother trying to figure out Biden's personality. Instead, we should focus on "how things get done." Biden won't do what's necessary to end genocide and preserve our habitable planet out of conviction, but he may do so out of necessity. Indeed, it doesn't matter how he feels about anything – what matters is what we can make him do.

Chomksy himself is in his 90s and his health is reportedly in terminal decline, so this is probably the only word we'll get from him on this issue:

https://www.reddit.com/r/chomsky/comments/1aj56hj/updates_on_noams_health_from_his_longtime_mit/

The link between concentrated wealth, concentrated power, and the existential risks to our species and civilization is obvious – to me, at least. Any time a tiny minority holds unaccountable power, they will end up using it to harm everyone except themselves. I'm not the first one to take note of this – it used to be a commonplace in American politics.

Back in 1936, FDR gave a speech at the DNC, accepting their nomination for president. Unlike FDR's election night speech ("I welcome their hatred"), this speech has been largely forgotten, but it's a banger:

https://teachingamericanhistory.org/document/acceptance-speech-at-the-democratic-national-convention-1936/

In that speech, Roosevelt brought a new term into our political parlance: "economic royalists." He described the American plutocracy as the spiritual descendants of the hereditary nobility that Americans had overthrown in 1776. The English aristocracy "governed without the consent of the governed" and “put the average man’s property and the average man’s life in pawn to the mercenaries of dynastic power":

Roosevelt said that these new royalists conquered the nation's economy and then set out to seize its politics, backing candidates that would create "a new despotism wrapped in the robes of legal sanction…an industrial dictatorship."

As David Dayen writes in The American Prospect, this has strong parallels to today's world, where "Silicon Valley, Big Oil, and Wall Street come together to back a transactional presidential candidate who promises them specific favors, after reducing their corporate taxes by 40 percent the last time he was president":

https://prospect.org/politics/2024-06-14-speech-fdr-would-give/

Roosevelt, of course, went on to win by a landslide, wiping out the Republicans despite the endless financial support of the ruling class for the Republican campaign.

The thing is, FDR's policies didn't originate with him. He came from the uppermost of the American upper crust, after all, and famously refused to define the "New Deal" even as he campaigned on it. The "New Deal" became whatever activists in the Democratic Party's left could force him to do, and while it was bold and transformative, it wasn't nearly enough.

The compromise FDR brokered within the Democratic Party froze out Black Americans to a terrible degree. Writing for the Institute for Local Self Reliance, Ron Knox and Susan Holmberg reveal the long shadow cast by that unforgivable compromise:

https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/045dcde7333243df9b7f4ed8147979cd

They describe how redlining – the formalization of anti-Black racism in New Deal housing policy – led to the ruin of Toledo's once-thriving Dorr Street neighborhood, a "Black Wall Street" where a Black middle class lived and thrived. New Deal policies starved the neighborhood of funds, then ripped it in two with a freeway, sacrificing it and the people who lived in it.

But the story of Dorr Street isn't over. As Knox and Holmberg write, the people of Dorr Street never gave up on their community, and today, there's an awful lot of Chomsky's "constant activism" that is painstakingly bringing the community back, inch by aching inch. The community is locked in a guerrilla war against the same forces that the Biden antitrust enforcers are fighting on the open field of battle. The work that activists do to drag Democratic Party policies to the left is critical to making reparations for the sins of the New Deal – and for realizing its promise for everybody.

In my lifetime, there's never been a Democratic Party that represented my values. The first Democratic President of my life, Carter, kicked off Reaganomics by beginning the dismantling of America's antitrust enforcement, in the mistaken belief that acting like a Republican would get Democrats to vote for him again. He failed and delivered Reagan, whose Reaganomics were the official policy of every Democrat since, from Clinton ("end welfare as we know it") to Obama ("foam the runways for the banks").

In other words, I don't give a damn about Biden, but I am entirely consumed with what we can force his administration to do, and there are lots of areas where I like our chances.

For example: getting Biden's IRS to go after the super-rich, ending the impunity for elite tax evasion that Spencer Woodman pitilessly dissects in this week's superb investigation for the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists:

https://www.icij.org/inside-icij/2024/06/how-the-irs-went-soft-on-billionaires-and-corporate-tax-cheats/

Ending elite tax cheating will make them poorer, and that will make them weaker, because their power comes from money alone (they don't wield power because their want to make us all better off!).

Or getting Biden's enforcers to continue their fight against the monopolists who've spiked the prices of our groceries even as they transformed shopping into a panopticon, so that their business is increasingly about selling our data to other giant corporations, with selling food to us as an afterthought:

https://prospect.org/economy/2024-06-12-war-in-the-aisles/

For forty years, since the Carter administration, we've been told that our only power comes from our role as "consumers." That's a word that always conjures up one of my favorite William Gibson quotes, from 2003's Idoru:

Something the size of a baby hippo, the color of a week-old boiled potato, that lives by itself, in the dark, in a double-wide on the outskirts of Topeka. It's covered with eyes and it sweats constantly. The sweat runs into those eyes and makes them sting. It has no mouth, no genitals, and can only express its mute extremes of murderous rage and infantile desire by changing the channels on a universal remote. Or by voting in presidential elections.

The normie, corporate wing of the Democratic Party sees us that way. They decry any action against concentrated corporate power as "anti-consumer" and insist that using the law to fight against corporate power is a waste of our time:

https://www.thesling.org/sorry-matt-yglesias-hipster-antitrust-does-not-mean-the-abandonment-of-consumers-but-it-does-mean-new-ways-to-protect-workers-2/

But after giving it some careful thought, I'm with Chomsky on this, not Yglesias. The election is something we have to pay some attention to as activists, but only "10 or 15 minutes." Yeah, "push the lever," but then "go back to work." I don't care what Biden wants to do. I care what we can make him do.

(Image: https://www.flickr.com/photos/jimsphotoworld/5360343644/, CC BY-SA 2.0, modified)



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This day in history (permalink)

#15yrsago Post one of Australia’s banned links, get fined AU$11,000/day https://web.archive.org/web/20090618142709/https://www.watoday.com.au/technology/banned-hyperlinks-could-cost-you-11000-a-day-20090615-c9rv.html

#15yrsago Free young adult novel, The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making https://web.archive.org/web/20090620053229/http://catherynnemvalente.com/fairyland/

#15yrsago Twitter reschedules maintenance to avoid clobbering Iranian dissidents https://blog.twitter.com/official/en_us/a/2009/down-time-rescheduled.html

#10yrsago Timberland’s new warranty conditions screw the prisoners who must buy them https://www.consumerreports.org/consumerist/timberland-boots-have-a-lifetime-warranty-unless-youre-in-prison/

#10yrsago Ikea bullies Ikeahackers with bogus trademark claim https://memex.craphound.com/2014/06/15/ikea-bullies-ikeahackers-with-bogus-trademark-claim/

#10yrsago Father’s Day: A Bear for Punishment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ChdyOU4lQjY

#10yrsago FCC Chairman’s competition promise means nothing https://www.vice.com/en/article/pgak38/the-fcc-cant-help-cities-trapped-by-predatory-internet-deals-with-big-telecomhttps://consumerist.com/2014/06/13/t-mobile-rep-encourages-me-to-keep-dead-dads-mobile-line-open-to-hear-his-voice/

#1yrago Google makes millions on paid abortion disinformation https://pluralistic.net/2023/06/15/paid-medical-disinformation/#crisis-pregnancy-centers


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



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Upcoming books (permalink)

  • Picks and Shovels: a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books, February 2025

  • Unauthorized Bread: a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, 2025



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

  • Enshittification: a nonfiction book about platform decay. Friday's progress: 807 words (12142 words total).

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING

  • Picks and Shovels, a Martin Hench noir thriller about the heroic era of the PC. FORTHCOMING TOR BOOKS JAN 2025

  • Vigilant, Little Brother short story about remote invigilation. FORTHCOMING ON TOR.COM

  • Spill, a Little Brother short story about pipeline protests. FORTHCOMING ON TOR.COM

Latest podcast: Against Lore https://archive.org/download/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_469/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_469_-_Against_Lore.mp3


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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"When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla" -Joey "Accordion Guy" DeVilla

Just for Xeets and Giggles (06.15.24) [The Status Kuo]

Donald Trump had some campaign stops this week, between his usual golf rounds, and they provided a great deal of material for things like this compilation.

If you missed this parody of an introduction, it is really something.

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It was an open question how Trump would spin his 34 felony convictions in Manhattan, but this comic had a spot-on prediction.

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Sometimes you think there’s not going to be enough hilarious material to complete a full set by Saturday, and then Trump hands you a great gift in the form of the boat battery / shark soliloquy during his speech in Las Vegas. I liked this take on it:

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The memes quickly followed.

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How Biden should respond to this gibberish is an open question. Here’s an idea:

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I thought to myself, “Great! Trump just gave me tons of material.” But he wasn’t done. You see, Trump went to Congress for the first time since the January 6th attack on the Capitol, where his sycophants lined up to kiss his ass. Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) FTW

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They sang him Happy Birthday a day early, like he was five and needed a whole birthday week. George Conway kept the party going.

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Even the Biden Campaign got in the act, publishing a copy of Trump’s birthday invitation.

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While he was speaking to his subjects, Don King decided it would be politically smart to bash on the city that is hosting the Republican National Convention next month: Milwaukee. His allies freaked out with a series of denials, then spins on why he said it. Because of the crime! Because of the voter fraud!

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Wisconsin leaders were unimpressed and hit back admirably.

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I like their local representative even Moore now.

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I can’t verify if she actually wore this, but it’s funny.

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Some reminders of why we love Milwaukee were in order.

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Joe Biden was ready with his response and the perfect pic.

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One of the most troubling aspect of our times isn’t just the Orange Julius himself, but those who support him. The Daily Show had a great take on MTG:

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Dr. Phil got some attention for platforming and trying to soften Trump’s hard edges with softball questions.

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If you’re like me, you often wonder how Trump has the numbers of followers he does, given how obviously wrong he is as a leader. This clip from The Good Liars helps explain this phenomenon.

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I have no idea what this guy thought he was doing in this video, but I love the caption.

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There’s some talk of minorities saying to pollsters that they are thinking about voting for Trump, too. I like this response to that:

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In other news, a jury convicted Hunter Biden on three felony counts of lying on a gun purchase application about his drug use and addiction.

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The fake liberal tears here are really impressive:

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And this take was as dry as my dating prospects.

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Hey, y’all! New paid subscriptions have slowed to a trickle, so if you want to show a little love and appreciation, I’ll sent the vibe right back at ya if you upgrade your account today!

Subscribe now

It’s Pride month, so of course there are horrible people out defacing our flags and symbols of our identity, ironically underscoring the need for Pride month. This fool got taken down several notches by a popular fashion critic in this ugly clip.

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Pride has a way of triggering people into doing very silly and sometimes gay things themselves.

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What’s so scary about a flag with rainbow colors on it, anyway?

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The gays can be pretty damn funny with their flags.

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You may have read that Martha-Ann Alito lamented having to look across her lagoon and see a Pride flag flying there. Here’s a message to her:

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Speaking of flags, it was Flag Day this week. Continuing on the Alito theme:

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Speaking of lack of principles, I’ve never really trusted the libertarians in my circle to hold to a set of valid ones, and this meme captured why I think that is.

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Over on Twitter, which Elon Musk still calls X, they changed the rules again:

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People reminded him quickly of his earlier, now reneged upon promise:

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This made me smile imagining the chaos. It would be as if all your co-workers suddenly could see your browser history.

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I wonder who might be the most embarrassed by something like that?

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A reminder to the Speaker:

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Someone had this great idea:

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Which actor Mark Hamill of Star Wars then took to the next level, writing out “like” in the replies of posts and pretty much busting the feed wide open.

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There was news in the (checks notes) hot dog eating contest world, of all places, and this remark captured the absurdity of the modern news cycle:

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Rishi Sunak the Tory greeted Giorgia Meloni the Fascist, and a meme was born.

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Speaking of Rishi Sunak, he continues to take a pummeling everywhere. That fashion critic was salty this week!

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The Tories are in for quite the election, if letters to the editor are any indication.

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Time for pet posts!

This puss can dish it but can’t take it.

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I had no idea that birds enjoy this as much as cats do. Actually, my corgi makes a similar sound when delighted.

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You gotta root for this little fella.

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Don’t find someone who looks at you like this bird looks at bread.

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I’m having two kids in the next year if all goes well, so I think my life may become a lot like this.

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I can’t get this doggo’s face out of my mind hahaha

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Speaking of vehicles, I’m not the only one who makes fun of the Tesla CyberTruck. Even the name is pretentious. This woman nailed it.

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For us Bridgerton fans, this comment from actress Nicola Coughlan was amazing.

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I hope I raise my kids better than this:

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I love silly magic tricks, and this little girl’s face is priceless in his clip.

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Some social commentary, as we all would rather be outside than in an office this summer. I feel like I know both these dudes.

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Back when we had an office, before going full remote, I might have hung this.

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It’s wonder there are any men left alive on the planet, judging from this video.

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I have no idea who these guys are or what drives them to do this, but I agree with this take:

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If you’re over 50, this will garner much sympathy.

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I love that this happened. I love that someone’s commentary took it next level.

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The Brits have their own warped sense of humour.

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Tempted to go ad-less after coming across this question:

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For you Star Trek fans, a gem:

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Oh, and since it’s Pride month, who wants to tell them?

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For you doctor types amongst us:

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This sums up where we are today but also gives me hope.

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This is an earworm, since I’m on a roll. Watch here.

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I leave you with an international Dad Joke.

Have a great weekend. And thanks in advance for considering an upgrade to your account if you haven’t already!

— Jay

07:00 AM

Russia ‘Humanizes’ Criminal Copyright Law, ‘Large Scale’ Piracy Cut By 25% [TorrentFreak]

rus-vpn-sSome believe that all laws amount to restrictions on freedom, while laws that claim to grant freedom merely give back what shouldn’t have been taken in the first place.

Yet, even those freedom-returning laws, for which all shall be grateful, seem to be a dwindling minority these days.

Often overshadowed by increasingly complex legislation mandating or prohibiting this behavior or that, freedom isn’t what it used to be. Especially online, where monitoring systems gather pace to ensure future compliance. It’s still relative, however.

Russia “Humanizes” Penalties for Criminal Copyright Infringement

After passing a minimum of 50 anti-democratic laws to ‘safeguard’ democracy, regardless of the impact on citizens’ freedoms and their human rights, Russia’s record over the past 15 years speaks for itself. That’s useful since speech itself faces considerable challenges under Putin’s watch.

Those who refer to the ̶i̶̶n̶̶v̶̶a̶̶s̶̶i̶̶o̶̶n̶̶/̶w̶̶a̶̶r̶̶/a̶t̶t̶a̶c̶k̶ ̶o̶n̶ U̶̶k̶̶r̶̶a̶̶i̶̶n̶̶e̶̶ ‘Special Military Operation’ in unflattering terms, for example, face criminal prosecution and upon conviction, up to 15 years in prison.

Yet, in January 2024, a bill submitted to the State Duma by the Russian government carried an entirely different tone. The aim of the bill, the government said, was to “liberalize and humanize” criminal legislation in respect of copyright and related rights, among other things.

With an eye on the precarious socio-economic climate in Russia, including the rate of inflation and similar factors, those who drafted the bill also considered law enforcement data. The extent of recorded crime and sentences handed down in copyright and similar cases, presented an opportunity to significantly reduce the criminalization of citizens for copyright infringement offenses.

Article 146 of the Criminal Code of the Russian Federation

The bill submitted to the State Duma proposed amendments to Parts 2 and 3 of Article 146, Violation of Copyright and Neighboring Rights.

Under then-current legislation, Part 2 described the following as an offense:

‘Illegal use of objects of copyright or neighboring rights, as well as the acquisition, storage or carriage of counterfeited copies of works or phonograms, for the purpose of sale carried out on a large scale’

Upon conviction, the penalty options were as follows:

• A fine of up to 200K rubles or an amount against earnings for a period up to 18 months
• Obligatory labor for a term of up to four hundred and eighty hours, or
• Corrective labor for a term of up to two years, or
• Compulsory labor for a term of up to two years, or
• Deprivation of liberty for the same term.

** Average monthly wage currently ~74,000 rubles (~US$842.00)

Should the violations feature aggravating factors – committed as part of a conspiracy, carried out on an especially large scale, or through abuse of an official position – punishments increase significantly:

• Compulsory labor for a term of up to six years and a fine of up to 500K rubles, or
• A fine in an amount against earnings for a period of up to three years

Two Simple Amendments

In respect of copyright and related rights, the bill proposed just two amendments. In Part 2 of Article 146, the term ‘large scale’ was applicable when pirated copies of copyrighted works, or the value of the rights to copyrighted works, exceeded 100,000 rubles. The bill proposed to increase the threshold for criminal liability by 500%, from 100,000 to 500,000 rubles.

In Part 3, the term ‘especially large scale’ applied when pirated copies of copyrighted works, or the value of the rights to copyrighted works, exceeded one million rubles. The bill contained a proposal to double the criminal liability threshold to two million rubles.

Bill Becomes Law, Immediately Reduces Crime By ~26%

Adopted by the State Duma on May 28, 2024, and approved by the Federation Council on June 5, amendments to the Criminal Code were signed into law by President Putin this Wednesday, June 12, 2024.

Slashing criminal copyright infringementputin-sign-law

Lawmakers believe that by raising the qualifying thresholds for “large scale” and “especially large scale” copyright infringement, it will be possible to decriminalize around 26% of all crimes previously committed under Article 146.

The greatest effect should be felt under Part 3 where the authorities believe that around 40% of criminal copyright infringement offenses will be decriminalized under the new law.

Who benefits?

The big questions, if anyone dares to ask them, concern the winners and losers under this new policy. Will infringers see this as an opportunity to continue, safe in the knowledge that by moderating their former crimes, their freedom will remain intact? Or will the new thresholds be interpreted as targets, thereby offering up to double the amount of potential spoils?

Whether rightsholders will be asked to share their opinions at some point is unclear. Following the exodus of Western companies and much of their copyrighted content, due to the invasion of Ukraine, locally produced content became more significant. That seemed like an opportunity for locals to do more business.

This potential for growth now faces the likelihood that law enforcement will be even less interested in investigating infringement than before. Perhaps the most important question is whether the non-prosecution of Peter will limit Paul’s ability to improve his own socio-economic status through legitimate means. He could still file a civil suit but, for those with limited resources, the expense is often prohibitive.

So, who actually benefits other than those previously labeled ‘large scale’ infringers? Less work for the police and legal system may be seen as a plus, but alleviating prison overcrowding has already found its own solution, so that can be ruled out.

At the time of writing, 500,000 rubles converts to ~US$5,700. Average monthly wage in Russia is currently ~74,000 rubles (~US$842)

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

05:00 AM

Debian 10 Long Term Support reaching end-of-life [Debian News]

The Debian Long Term Support (LTS) Team hereby announces that Debian 10 buster support will reach its end-of-life on June 30, 2024, nearly five years after its initial release on July 6th, 2019.

This Week In Techdirt History: June 9th – 15th [Techdirt]

Five Years Ago

This week in 2019, we looked at the two-sided political attacks on Section 230, while an appeals court issued a strong but easily-misrepresented Section 230 ruling, and the law was also used to begin smackin down a lawsuit from Craig Brittain. A prominent copyright troll ran away when finally challenged, the NY Times was demanding money from Google, and the news was spreading that Amazon Ring cameras are cops. We also wrote yet again about the mismatch in privacy scrutiny given to tech companies and telcos.

Ten Years Ago

This week in 2014, the EFF published a list of the top five lies being spread by NSA defenders, while James Clapper admitted something everyone else had been saying for months, and a former NSA lawyer was trying to disappear Techdirt’s posts about him via the right to be forgotten. Copyright troll Malibu Media was slinging around some wild accusations, and we took a look at the proliferation of bogus broadband astroturf organizations.

Fifteen Years Ago

This week in 2009, fashion designers were starting to realize that fashion copyright would seriously harm their business. The Canadian patent office rejected software and business model patents, video game companies were still complaining about used game sales, and there was a trademark fight over chocolate bunnies. Texas was taking an early swing at terrible internet laws, the recording industry was taking the wrong message from a study about file sharers, and a new website from NetChoice set out to track all the bad proposed internet legislation in America.

Saturday 2024-06-15

08:00 PM

Better than Google [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

I haven’t done a Google search in months.

Perplexity is more powerful, more pleasant and more effective.

Instead of being corrupted by invasive ads, surveillance and sneaky dark patterns, it presents you with a simple, footnoted explanation of exactly what you’re looking for. Asked and answered.

And I like that there’s a pro version that we can pay for. This makes us the customer, not the product.

Most of all, the limited scope of the promise gives AI a chance to shine. ChatGPT often comes across as both arrogant and bumbling, because it promises that it can do everything, all at once. Perplexity is simply a smart search partner without the corrosion that racing for more ad dollars will cause. At least for now.

So far, I’d give it five stars. It’s worth checking out.

      

03:00 PM

11th Circuit Strips Immunity From Cop Who Shot And Killed Dog That Had Already Been Neutralized By A Taser [Techdirt]

We know cops kill dozens of dogs every day. This much has been verified by the US Department of Justice, which called it an “epidemic.” It’s not just anecdotal evidence generated by a handful of court cases.

We also know most cops who kill dogs get away with it, even though multiple courts have ruled that killing a pet is “seizure” under the Fourth Amendment — something that must be supported by probable cause to remain constitutional.

And the cops got away with this killing, too. At least until they reached the appellate level. The lower court saw nothing unconstitutional about killing a dog that no longer posed a threat (if it ever posed a threat at all) to officers because it had already been tased into submission.

The facts of the case — as recounted in the Eleventh Circuit Appeals Court decision [PDF] — raise a lot of questions no police officer or official are willing to answer honestly.

Plowright, a resident of Miami-Dade County, called 911 to report someone trespassing in the vacant property near his home. Miami-Dade police officers Leordanis Rondon and [Sergio] Cordova responded to the call, approaching Plowright’s front door “through a dimly lit driveway.” As Plowright came out to greet the officers, they drew their guns and “immediately began shouting” at Plowright to show them his hands. When Plowright’s dog Niles, an “American Bulldog weighing less than 40 pounds,” entered the scene, the officers ordered Plowright to get control of him. Before Plowright did so, Rondon fired his taser at Niles, sending him “into shock.” Then, “[a]fter the dog was already down from the [t]aser,” Cordova “fired at least two shots from his gun, killing the dog for no reason.” The officers then ordered the “emotionally devast[ated]” Plowright to the ground as Niles “laid dying.”

Let’s start unpacking this. While it’s understandable officers might have exercised caution because the first person they approached on the property might have been the trespasser, it’s just as understandable that Plowright might have confused by being treated as a criminal suspect by the people he had called to report a crime.

Then there’s the order to “control” the dog, which was given to Plowright as soon as the dog appeared. What was not given to Plowright was any time to comply with this order. Officer Rondon tased the dog and Officer Cordova finished the job moments later. Why bother issuing orders if you’re not going to give people time to comply with them? The only thing I can think of is that officers issue orders they know they’re not going to give someone a chance to comply with for the sole reason of generating justification for any acts of violence or rights violation they engage in past that point. “Subject refused to comply,” etc.

Going beyond that, the officers still treated Plowright as a suspect even while tacitly admitting he wasn’t by ordering him to “control” his dog. If they still thought Plowright was the trespasser, they wouldn’t have given this order. They would have neutralized the dog and moved on to the rest of the stuff they did here, like ordering the person to the ground. But here, they tried to have it both ways: they treated Plowright as the owner of the dog (which would mean he was most likely the owner of the property) and as a criminal trespassing suspect by pointing guns at him and ordering him to the ground.

Logically, none of this works out. Fortunately, it didn’t work out for Officer Cordova either, despite his earlier success in the lower court. The immunity he obtained there is stripped away by the Appeals Court, which says it doesn’t even need a case on point to do so. The rights here were so clearly established by other precedent and, you know, common sense, there’s no way the officer could have honestly believed his violent actions were justified.

Here, a reasonable officer would have known that it was unlawful to shoot Niles under the circumstances alleged in the complaint—even without caselaw directly on point. Even a cursory reading of Barrow and Jacobsen reveals that shooting a domestic animal amounts to a seizure, meaning that it is subject to the Fourth Amendment’s reasonableness requirement. And, because the “nature and extent” of such a seizure is so serious, Place tells us that it can be justified only by significant countervailing government interests. Although it is true that “a general standard such as ‘to act reasonably’” will seldom “put officers on notice that certain conduct will violate federal law” given the “intensely fact specific” nature of the inquiry, the facts alleged in Plowright’s complaint take Cordova’s actions “well beyond the ‘hazy border’ that sometimes separates lawful conduct from unlawful conduct.”

Even without these cases, however, Cordova’s conduct was “so obviously at the very core of what the Fourth Amendment prohibits that the unlawfulness of [his] conduct” should have been “readily apparent to [him], notwithstanding the lack of case law.” Just as “no reasonable officer could ever believe that it was appropriate” to tase a compliant, non-threatening bystander at the scene of an arrest, Fils v. City of Aventura, 647 F.3d 1272, 1276–77, 1292 (11th Cir. 2011), no reasonable officer could ever believe that it was appropriate to shoot an incapacitated, non-threatening domestic animal during a 911 investigation.

That means this case will move forward, rather than be short-circuited by a cop who was too impulsive to keep himself from killing a neutralized “threat,” but suddenly so cognizant of relevant case law he thought he could secure immunity because no cop before him had done the exact same thing he did under the exact same circumstances.

And there may be even more evidence on the way that will undercut Officer Cordova’s testimony. The appeals court decision says “body cam footage or other evidence” may introduce facts that move the officer closer to qualified immunity or favorable verdict. But, given what’s claimed here and the officers’ responses to the lawsuit, chances are any additional information will only make things worse for Officer Cordova.

In addition to the Fourth Amendment violation, the appeals court says the elements of state law are satisfied here. And that means Officer Cordova will also be facing intentional infliction of emotional distress allegations and will not be able to avail himself of immunity at the state level either.

Given this, one would expect a settlement in the near future. Then again, cops are playing with house money, so if the state of Florida considers protecting a cop from the consequences of his unconstitutional actions, this case may still have a bit of run time before it reaches a resolution.

Kanji of the Day: 餓 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

starve, hungry, thirst

う.える

飢餓   (きが)   —   starvation
餓狼   (がろう)   —   hungry wolf
餓死   (がし)   —   starvation
飢餓感   (きがかん)   —   hunger
餓鬼   (がき)   —   brat
施餓鬼   (せがき)   —   service for the benefit of suffering spirits
饑餓   (きが)   —   starvation
餓鬼道   (がきどう)   —   hungry ghost (preta) realm
餓鬼大将   (がきだいしょう)   —   leader of the pack (of a group of kids)
餓鬼共   (がきども)   —   damn kids

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

11:00 AM

Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Moderating Politics & Politicizing Moderation [Techdirt]

Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw.

Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed.

In this week’s round-up of the latest news in online speech, content moderation and internet regulation, Mike and Ben cover:

This episode is brought to you with financial support from the Future of Online Trust & Safety Fund.

Roku Continues To Screw With Customers Via Firmware/Software Updates [Techdirt]

Whether intentional or not, the process for tech companies to fall to the process of enshittification seems to be a very real trend. The term, coined by Cory Doctorow, describes the process by which once good and useful technology platforms devolve to become worse and less useful as the owners of those platforms move on from creating a great user experience and turn instead towards aiming purely at profitability. This typically involves injecting advertisements anywhere possible, or altering useful features via firmware updates, or cutting cost by axing development and support teams. All of this leads to platforms pissing customers off to the point of un-adoption.

And that brings us to Roku. Roku, over recent months, appears to be fully engulfed in the process of enshittification. The platform recently began the process of layering advertisements foisted on customers where there once were none. They’re legal and communications teams are clearly not thinking things through when they pull stuff like sending out a new ToS requirement for already purchased devices with a threat to brick them if users don’t agree.

And now a recent OS update for some Roku TVs has managed to lock in users to a motion-blurring option that they may not even want.

Reports on Roku’s community forums and on Reddit find owners of TCL HDTVs, on which Roku is a built-in OS, experiencing “motion smoothing” without having turned it on after updating to Roku OS 13. Some people are reporting that their TV never offered “Action Smoothing” before, but it is now displaying the results with no way to turn it off. Neither the TV’s general settings, nor the specific settings available while content is playing, offer a way to turn it off, according to some users.

When it works, a signal looks more fluid and, as the name implies, smooth. When it is left on and a more traditional signal at 24 or 30 frames per second is processed, it works somewhat too well. Shows and films look awkwardly realistic, essentially lacking the motion blur and softer movement to which we’re accustomed. Everything looks like a soap opera or like you’re watching a behind-the-scenes smartphone video of your show. It’s so persistent an issue, and often buried in a TV’s settings, that Tom Cruise did a whole PSA about it back in 2018.

If you’ve ever played around with your TVs image settings, you know all about this sort of thing. Motion blurring may have its uses, but it tends to come up as a topic when people are watching content that has fast movement on the screen, particularly with watching sports. The viewing experience suddenly looks janky, like you’re watching the screen pan in a way that makes everything look slightly fake by, ironically, looking too real compared with the rest of the content.

It can be a major frustration for those looking for the best viewing experience. So suddenly pushing out an update that locks in customers to this option they may not want is, well, certainly a choice. It would be as though you couldn’t adjust the image brightness or color scheme settings to make it the best experience for your particular device in your particular home.

Now, I have no doubt that this was done in error and that Roku will put in a fix for this. But that isn’t really the point. Roku is going down a road that often leads to ruin, simply because it’s paying less attention to the experience of its customers and instead focusing only inward.

With Multiple Deputies Headed To Jail, Sheriff Vows To Get To Bottom Of ‘Goon Squad’ Horror Show He Ignored For Years [Techdirt]

Reminding everyone that racism is just a thing we do in the United States, six Rankin County deputies were indicated on criminal charges related to the literal torture of two black men. All six pleaded guilty. Deputy Hunter Elward was sentenced to 17.5 years in prison. The other officers are also currently serving prison time.

This all began because a “helpful” Mississippi resident called the cops because they had witnessed the most Mississippi of crimes: black men hanging out with a white woman. What went on from there not only chills the blood, but triggers the gag reflex:

During a search of the house, OPDYKE kicked in the padlocked door to the front bedroom. Inside, he found a white-flesh-toned dildo and a BB gun. OPDYKE mounted the dildo on the end of the BB gun and brought the dildo to the living room, where M.J. and E.P. were handcuffed and seated on the couch. OPDYKE forced the dildo into the mouth of E.P., and attempted to force the dildo into the mouth of M.J.

[…]

DEDMON forced M.J. and E.P. onto their knees with their backs to DEDMON, and DEDMON threatened to anally rape M.J. and E.P. with the dildo. DEDMON grabbed the back of M.J.’s pants and moved the dildo toward M.J.’s backside, but DEDMON stopped when he noticed that M.J. had defecated himself.

[…]

M.J. and E.P., still handcuffed, were forced onto their backs on the floor of the living room. ELWARD held them down, and DEDMON poured milk, alcohol, and chocolate syrup on their faces and into their mouths, forcing M.J. and E.P. to involuntarily ingest [these fluids]; and DEDMON poured cooking grease on E.P.’s head.

[…]

Pointing out that M.J. and E.P. had been tased by both RCSO-issued tasers and an RPD-issued taser, the defendants decided to test their tasers on M.J. and E.P. to see which one was more powerful.

At this point, DEDMON, MIDDLETON, HARTFIELD, and ELWARD tased M.J. and E.P. repeatedly: ELWARD’s taser was discharged 8 times, HARTFIELD’s taser was discharged 5 times, and DEDMON’s taser was discharged 4 times.

[…]

ELWARD surreptitiously removed a bullet from the chamber of his gun.

ELWARD forced M.J. onto his knees, stuck the gun in M.J.’s mouth, and pulled the trigger. The unloaded gun clicked but did not discharge.

ELWARD racked the slide, intending to dry-fire a second time. When ELWARD put the gun back into M.J’s mouth and pulled the trigger, the gun discharged. The bullet lacerated M.J.’s tongue, broke his jaw and exited out of his neck.

I want to set the scene for what’s been happening since then. The six members of the self-proclaimed “Goon Squad” are all now facing jail time. The sheriff who oversaw this group (and by “oversaw,” I mean “ignored”) has not only received a raise that makes him the highest paid law enforcement official in the state, but is now pretending he’s capable of cleaning this mess up.

And who better to do this than the sheriff who, in 2014, abused the subpoena process to dig up info on his girlfriend. He presented a subpoena for phone records to the local DA under the pretense that he was requesting general info to present to a grand jury. But the phone records request targeted his girlfriend (who was cuurently married to someone else) and the school employee the sheriff believed she was romantically involved with. An investigation was opened, but it dead-ended after the chairman of the (LOL) House Committee on Ethics recused himself because of his “years-long friendship” with the sheriff. It was then passed on to the state attorney general who simply decided not to pursue it.

Another bombshell of bad press has rocked the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department still run by ethically-challenged sheriff Bryan Bailey. A collaborative report produced by the New York Times and Mississippi Today uncovered messages sent between deputies in the “Goon Squad” WhatsApp group.

As can be assumed from the description of the atrocities committed by Goon Squad members in the only case they’re currently facing prison time for, the contents of these messages is more of the same:

Some of the messages discuss brutalizing and demeaning suspects, as well as exchanging disturbing crime scene photos and pictures of “rotting corpses,” the report said.

In one exchange from a 2022 domestic violence arrest, then-Deputy Hunter Elward wrote, “Did you Tase him in the face!?”

Fellow Goon Squad member Daniel Opdyke asked if they had shocked the man in the anus.

Another deputy said the suspect would have “gotten more lovings,” seeming to indicate they held back because of potential witnesses, saying, “All the neighbors were outside watching.”

Chat members also “discussed taking nude pictures of a woman they had arrested,” the Times reported.

Another exchange discusses deputies getting “points” for shooting someone.

One member of this chat group has already opted for the “locker room talk” defense popularized by convicted felon Donald Trump:

One member of the group chat, who no longer works for the sheriff’s department, called his messages “absolutely all jokes,” in an interview with the New York Times.

Huh. Well, they don’t look like “jokes.” Jokes are supposed to be funny. Were these messages only funny because they were true? Because, given what’s reported, the “jokes” referenced acts of violence Goon Squad members actually committed. If these were jokes, they were in-jokes that were only funny in the context of habitual acts of torture and violence committed by members of the Goon Squad group.

The state should be jumping in here to take the lead on an independent investigation of the members of this chat group. But it hasn’t done that, which has allowed none other than Sheriff Bryan Bailey to get a head start on exonerating himself, if not the rest of chat group participants not currently serving federal prison time.

The Rankin County Sheriff’s Office says it will conduct a review and analysis after a Wednesday report from The New York Times and Mississippi Today detailed messages in an encrypted WhatsApp group chat between known “Goon Squad” members and other law enforcement officers, some of whom are still employed by the county.

[…]

Neither the department nor Sheriff Bryan Bailey “knew of the existence of ‘a shift of officers who called themselves the ‘Goon Squad’ until a bill of information was filed in federal court,” the sheriff’s office statement said.

Bullshit. If the sheriff was truly unaware of the existence of a “Goon Squad” or the violent tactics of its members, he’s either incompetent or a liar. The acts committed by these officers were not the acts of officers who went a little off the rails when dealing with violent or extremely hostile arrestees. These are the acts of officers who felt truly comfortable torturing their fellow human beings, secure in the knowledge they would most likely get away with it — either because their boss was bad at his job or was willing to ignore their criminal acts. Neither is a good look for the person who’s supposed to be on top of everything happening in his department.

If Sheriff Bailey actually cared about this, he would have asked for an outside law enforcement agency to handle this “review and analysis.” If the state cared at all about this, it would have already initiated an independent investigation utilizing its Inspector General’s office or, at the very least, the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation. Although the latter is still a law enforcement agency and just as prone to look for reasons to exonerate fellow officers, it still wouldn’t be the extremely compromised Sheriff Bailey pretending he can provide a competent investigation of stuff he was either too stupid or too corrupt to notice despite running this department for more than a decade.

The Supreme Court Continues To Struggle With How To Apply The First Amendment In Intellectual Property Cases [Techdirt]

For not the first time, the Supreme Court seems to regard the First Amendment as secondary when it comes to cases involving some form of intellectual property. This has happened all too frequently. Perhaps most famously, in Eldred v. Ashcroft, the Court more or less said that the First Amendment gets a pass in copyright cases, so long as fair use exists as a sort of (rarely used) vent.

More recently, we wrote about how the Supreme Court seemed to forget about the First Amendment entirely in the Andy Warhol Foundation case.

It just seems way too easy for the Court to somehow dance around the First Amendment when it comes to copyright law, and sometimes that extends to other areas as well. Often that’s because the First Amendment and the tests it already gives us are kind of inconvenient if they were applied properly.

Last summer, we wrote about the Vidal v. Elster case, which the Supreme Court decided on Thursday.

In this case, Steve Elster tried to register a trademark on the phrase “Trump too small” and it was rejected, based on a part of the Lanham Act that bars trademark registrations on the names of living people. For some, the case was reminiscent of Matal v. Tam, the case about the band “The Slants” not being able to get a trademark on their name, because it was deemed to be disparaging, and the USPTO would not issue disparaging trademarks under the Lanham Act.

In that case, the Court found that the Disparagement Clause of the Lanham Act violated the First Amendment. So, some thought that the “no living people” part of the Lanham Act might be similarly voided by the First Amendment. As we pointed out last year, building on an argument made in an amicus brief from Public Citizen, was that it was important not to get too caught up in whether or not the First Amendment voided the clause, but rather to make sure the court thought more broadly about what the First Amendment supported more broadly regarding speech.

And that’s because trademark law, in some ways, is in conflict with the concept of free speech. It is literally giving trademark holders at least some ability to limit the speech of others. So, in some cases, you could argue that large parts of trademark law are potentially against the First Amendment. The way to get around this is to view trademark law the way it should naturally be used: as a consumer protection law where the only issue is about protecting consumers from products that falsely claim to be from one company.

Public Citizen argued that no one should be barred from using the phrase “Trump Too Small,” because it was “core political speech.” Therefore, the First Amendment argument shouldn’t be that the “living people” clause was unconstitutional, but that this phrase specifically, as political speech, should be denied a trademark on First Amendment grounds.

Unfortunately, the Supreme Court decided to make this… messy. I mean:

THOMAS, J., announced the judgment of the Court and delivered the opinion of the Court, except as to Part III. ALITO and GORSUCH, JJ., joined that opinion in full; ROBERTS, C. J., and KAVANAUGH, J., joined all but Part III; and BARRETT, J., joined Parts I, II–A, and II–B. KAVANAUGH, J., filed an opinion concurring in part, in which ROBERTS, C. J., joined. BARRETT, J., filed an opinion concurring in part, in which KAGAN, J., joined, in which SOTOMAYOR, J., joined as to Parts I, II, and III–B, and in which JACKSON, J., joined as to Parts I and II. SOTOMAYOR, J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment, in which KAGAN and JACKSON, JJ., joined.

Clear as mud.

In short, all the Justices agree that the First Amendment does not restrict a prohibition on giving trademarks on the names of living people. But they really don’t agree to why the First Amendment works that way. Some point to history and tradition, while others point to existing First Amendment tests.

So only part of the opinion is actually agreed upon by enough Justices to make it matter. It starts out okay, highlighting how the court has, reasonably, in the past tossed out rules that discriminate based on viewpoints.

In the trademark context, we have twice concluded that trademark restrictions that discriminate based on viewpoint violate the First Amendment. In Matal v. Tam, 582 U. S. 218, 223 (2017), we held that the Lanham Act’s bar on disparaging trademarks violated the First Amendment. All Justices in Tam agreed that this bar was viewpoint based because it prohibited trademarks based only on one viewpoint: “[g]iving offense.” Id., at 243 (plurality opinion); see also id., at 248–249 (Kennedy, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment). And, in Brunetti, we held that the Lanham Act’s bar on trademarks containing immoral or scandalous matter likewise violated the First Amendment. 588 U. S., at 390. We concluded that the bar was viewpoint based because it prohibited trademarks based only on one viewpoint, immoral or scandalous matter, while permitting trademarks based on other viewpoints.

But, they note:

The names clause does not facially discriminate against any viewpoint

The court notes, as it has done before, that the entire concept of trademarks should be deemed constitutional. This is because they date back to the time of the Constitution and no one argued that they violate the First Amendment. But, as part of the history lesson, the Court explains that there have always been some limitations on trademarks:

This first law contained prohibitions on what could be protected as a trademark. For example, the law would not protect a trademark that contained “merely the name of a person . . . only, unaccompanied by a mark sufficient to distinguish it from the same name when used by other persons.” Id., at 211. It thus restricted a trademark based upon its content (i.e., whether it contained more than a name). As trademark disputes increased, courts continued to assess trademarks based on their content. For example, this Court’s first trademark decision explained that a trademark cannot consist of a purely geographical name, rejecting an attempt by one of several coal producers in Pennsylvania’s Lackawanna Valley to trademark “Lackawanna coal.” Canal Co. v. Clark, 13 Wall. 311, 321 (1872). Throughout its development, trademark law has required content-based distinctions.

And thus, the Supreme Court basically looks to punt on the larger issues:

We have acknowledged that trademark rights and restrictions can “play well with the First Amendment.” Jack Daniel’s, 599 U. S., at 159 (internal quotation marks omitted). In this case, we do not delineate an exhaustive framework for when a content-based trademark restriction passes muster under the First Amendment. But, in evaluating a solely content-based trademark restriction, we can consider its history and tradition, as we have done before when considering the scope of the First Amendment.

And, based on that, they say the restriction on names is probably fine, again pointing to history.

Recognizing a person’s ownership over his name, the common law restricted the trademarking of names. It prevented a person from trademarking any name—even his own—by itself. In “the early years of trademark law,” courts recognized that “there can be no trade-mark in the name of a person, because . . . every person has the right to use his own name for the purposes of trade.” 2 McCarthy §13:5 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Restatement §14, Comment e (“[A]t early common law, the recognition of an unencumbered right to use one’s name in trade effectively precluded the existence of trademark or trade name rights in personal names”); W. Browne, Law of TradeMarks §206, p. 219 (2d ed. 1885) (“The rule is, that a man cannot turn his mere name into a trade-mark”); McLean v. Fleming, 96 U. S. 245, 252 (1878) (explaining that a person cannot obtain “the exclusive use of a name, merely as such, without more”).

The common law did, however, allow a person to obtain a trademark containing his own name—with a caveat: A person could not use a mark containing his name to the exclusion of a person with the same name. “A corollary of the right to use one’s own name and identity in trade is the right to stop others from doing so—at least those who don’t share the same name.” J. Rothman, Navigating the Identity Thicket, 135 Harv. L. Rev. 1271, 1306 (2022); see also Treadway 143–144. In other words, a person’s right to his name cannot be exclusive as to other people bearing the same name: John Smith cannot acquire a trademark that prohibits other John Smiths from using their own names. See McLean, 96 U. S., at 252 (“[H]e cannot have such a right, even in his own name, as against another person of the same name, unless such other person uses a form of stamp or label so like that used by the complaining party as to represent that the goods of the former are of the latter’s manufacture”); accord, Brown Chemical, 139 U. S., at 542; MeNeely v. MeNeely, 62 N. Y. 427, 432 (Ct. App. 1875); see also Treadway 143; accord, post, at 10 (opinion of BARRETT, J.). Consider the case of John L. Faber and John H. Faber, two men who independently manufactured lead pencils near Nuremberg, Germany. Both men stamped the pencils they manufactured with their shared surname. After recognizing that each man “had the right to put his own name on his own pencils,” the New York Supreme Court declined to allow one man to effectively trademark the other man’s name.

And thus:

We conclude that a tradition of restricting the trademarking of names has coexisted with the First Amendment, and the names clause fits within that tradition. Though the particulars of the doctrine have shifted over time, the consistent through line is that a person generally had a claim only to his own name. The names clause reflects this common-law tradition by prohibiting a person from obtaining a trademark of another living person’s name without consent, thereby protecting the other’s reputation and goodwill.

And… for the most part, it’s hard to argue with that point, which is why everyone agrees. It’s just that they all seem to agree for different reasons. And that creates a bit of a mess for thinking through the First Amendment.

Because, from there we get a bunch of concurrences and arguments over the specifics, which really shows how much of a mess trademark law is when it comes to the First Amendment. It’s not clear what is being protected or why. It’s not clear who is getting a benefit or why. And it’s certainly not clear what kind of test the courts should use going forward in looking over similar questions.

The various concurrences only drive home that point.

Kavanaugh thinks the history lesson is unnecessary and the same ruling can be made based on other tests. Justice Barrett also feels the history lesson is not just unnecessary, but potentially cherry-picks arguments. Rather, she feels that existing First Amendment tests bring us to this conclusion (Kagan agrees, while Sotomayor and Jackson agree to parts of it).

Sotomayor writes separately (which Kagan and Jackson signed onto) to make a similar point, again pointing out that we don’t need the history lesson and can come to the same conclusion just using First Amendment precedent.

This case involves a free-speech challenge to a viewpoint-neutral, content-based condition on trademark registration. In deciding how to evaluate this kind of challenge, the Court faces two options: Either look only to the history and tradition of the condition, or look to trademark law and settled First Amendment precedent. The first option, which asks whether the history of a particular trademark registration bar plays well with the First Amendment, leads this Court into uncharted territory that neither party requests. The other guides it through well-trodden terrain. I would follow the well-trodden path.

But… none of this gets to the underlying point that we (and Public Citizen) talked about last year regarding why core political speech shouldn’t be eligible for a trademark in the first place, because the trademark creates a way to suppress the political speech of others. That just doesn’t even get addressed.

Which is too bad.

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DC Appeals Court Says CIA Can Continue To Withhold 35-Year-Old Memo Already Published By Another Gov’t Agency [Techdirt]

Certain government agencies are of the opinion that records requesters shouldn’t even be able to pry the documents they’re seeking from their cold, dead fingers. Long after anyone could be affected and long after the people who’ve created the documents have passed on to the Great Bureaucracy in the Sky, agencies are still refusing to relinquish paperwork that’s long past its (and its creators’) expiration date.

The CIA has been battling a FOIA request in court, using the unlimited amount of time and money it has at its disposal. At the center of the battle is a single memo that was written in 1989, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the eventual collapse of the USSR. Somehow, this document is too sensitive to be released to the public even though it has already been (mostly) released to the public. (h/t Short Circuit)

Here’s the background on the document, as recounted by the DC Circuit Court of Appeals in its decision [PDF]:

In 1983, during the Cold War, Leonard H. Perroots, then an Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence in the United States Air Forces in Europe, allegedly recommended a course of action to his Commander in response to an elevated alert status demonstrated by the military forces of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (“Soviet Union”), which helped avert a nuclear crisis. Subsequently, in January 1989, Lieutenant General Perroots wrote an End of Tour Report Addendum (“Perroots Memo”) to detail the “chain of events” from 1983 to help the U.S. Intelligence Community learn lessons “as relates to our [Indications and Warning] capability and exercise planning.”

Thirty-two years later, the National Security Archive (which is not a government entity, despite its pretty official-sounding name) sent the CIA an FOIA request for the Perroots’ 1989 memo. The CIA refused to hand over the memo itself, but gave the National Security Archive the memo’s cover letter, which did not even come close to fulfilling the request, much less the Archive’s desire to obtain the memo. The Archive sued the CIA, leading to this appeal.

But between the creation of the memo (1989) and the Archive’s request and ensuing litigation (2021), the CIA made the Archive aware of the existence of this document by pretty much publishing the memo in full.

In February 2021, the United States Department of State (“DOS”) published a transcribed version of the Perroots Memo in a volume of the Foreign Relations of the United States (“FRUS”) series documenting 1981–1988.

In order to engage in this publication, the State Department needed to get it declassified by the CIA. Those are the rules, and by the “rules,” I mean federal law. The State Department published the transcription, accompanied by a citation to its CIA source, as well as a written “thank you” to CIA staff for assisting in the declassification review.

The obvious point of the Archive’s request was to compare the transcription published by the State Department with the original memo. There may have been zero difference between the two. But we’ll perhaps never know because the CIA (the agency that apparently assisted the State Dept. with a declassification review) claims the document mostly made public more than 32 years after it was written is still far too sensitive to be turned over to the National Security Archive.

You would think the presumption of disclosure, the prior publication of the declassified transcription, and the age of the document itself would weigh in favor of the Archive. But you’d be wrong. Some secrets get to remain secrets forever, even if they’re (1) barely secret, (2) old enough to start worrying about 401(k) contributions, and (3) of significant historical interest.

The lower court took a look at the Archive’s case and the CIA’s counterarguments and decided to give the government the benefit of the doubt. Nothing has improved by moving up the judicial ladder. The CIA will get to keep its secrets even if it’s extremely improbable there’s anything in there of national security value.

While the DC Appeals Court agrees the Archive suffered a “concrete injury” when the CIA refused to release the original memo, it says the transparency-focused entity will just have to walk it off. It says the official acknowledgement of the document doesn’t prevent the CIA from using FOIA exemptions related to executive orders to refuse to release it. Nor does its apparent cooperation with the State Department in the release of the memo transcription change the FOIA equation.

According to its own previous rulings (which have been largely shaped by litigation involving agencies like the CIA due to the DC Circuit being the most common forum for federal entity targeting FOIA lawsuits), the government can both make a document public and refuse to release pretty much the same document when hit with a FOIA request.

As we have emphasized in our precedent, the mere public disclosure of information does not eliminate potential risks posed by further disclosure to national security interests—and cannot overcome an otherwise valid FOIA exemption.

Supposedly, there are still some secrets in this mostly public document. The National Security Archive doesn’t know what those might be. Neither does the general public. We just have to take the court’s word for it, along with the assertions made by the CIA directly to the judge in the lower court, which weren’t even about the presence of any sensitive info:

We reject these contentions because the record, as observed by the district court, contains classified, supplemental, ex parte, and in camera declarations which establish that the CIA was not involved in the disclosure of the Perroots Memo.

That’s it. That’s all the CIA did. It told the lower court it did not actually help the State Department with a declassification review of the Perroots Memo. Because it (allegedly) did not assist in declassification, it could still consider the memo “classified” and avail itself of multiple FOIA exemptions. The fact that the CIA did nothing to prevent the State Department from publishing a transcription of the memo suggests it had nothing it needed to keep the public from seeing. But when asked for the same document, it played hardball and managed to obtain a ruling saying it can continue to blow off future requests for this memo in seeming perpetuity.

This is a ridiculous outcome. The only way this can be overturned is if the National Security Archive can convince the Supreme Court that’s something worth doing. Considering there’s only a single memo at stake here, it seems unlikely to be something the nation’s top court would be interested in resolving. As it stands now, the CIA is free to invoke FOIA exemptions to withhold documents that are not only decades old, but have been released publicly in one form or another previously. That’s a big win for completely pointless opacity, which seems to be the kind of opacity national security related agencies tend to prefer.

Big Telecom Still Pushing Hard For Broadband Tax On Big Tech [Techdirt]

Telecom lobbyists have been working overtime for years in both the US and EU, trying to get policymakers to support the idea of “Big Tech” paying “Big Telecom” billions of additional dollars for no coherent reason.

This taxation effort always involves some variant of the claim that popular tech services are getting a “free ride” on the Internet, so it’s “only fair” that they help pay telecom giants for broadband expansion.

But what’s usually portrayed as a good faith adult effort to bridge the digital divide is, however, a several decade old quest by telecom monopolies to force tech companies to pay them billions of dollars in additional subsidies they haven’t earned and most certainly don’t deserve. Especially since they routinely waste or abuse the billions in taxpayer dollars they’ve already received.

With the recent death by Trumpublicans of a low income COVID broadband discount program, the opportunists at AT&T and other telecoms are ramping up these efforts once again. In several filings spotted by Ars Technica, US Telecom, primarily backed by AT&T, once again trots out the claim that tech giants are somehow freeloaders that should be subsidizing broadband:

“Through focusing on the Big Tech companies who benefit most from broadband connectivity, the Commission will fairly allocate the burden of sustaining USF.”

The FCC’s Universal Service Fund helps fund rural and school broadband expansion, and is primarily funded by a levy on traditional phone lines, which are obviously in decline. To shore up the program, there’s been a push to include a small tax on broadband and wireless lines, which the telecom industry opposes because it would only boost consumer annoyance at already high prices.

Instead, they consistently prefer that the levy be offloaded to tech companies, under the pretense that they’ve been freeloading. Except in U.S. telecom, nobody gets a “free ride.” Decades of consolidation and monopolization ensures that there’s muted competition, in turn ensuring that everybody pays significantly more than the developed nation average for broadband access. Tech companies included.

Here’s the thing: tech companies already pay billions of dollars annually not only for bandwidth, but for their own cloud, CDN, transit, undersea cable, and other infrastructure. Google technically is already a broadband provider when you factor in Google Fi (wireless) and Google Fiber.

Here’s the other thing: there’s nothing about this telecom lobbying effort that’s good faith, even though the news outlets that cover it can’t help but treating it as such.

Telecom is an industry that has waged a relentless, multi-decade war on both regulatory oversight and competition, ensuring that U.S. broadband prices are sky high. If policymakers truly cared about broadband affordability, they’d take aim at corruption and monopolization in telecom.

But that would involve standing up to telecoms patriotically tethered to our domestic intelligence and first responder networks. So instead, we basically throw billions of dollars at telecom giants in exchange for unaffordable fiber networks that are routinely left half completed.

So again, before policymakers expand the contribution base to this lazy subsidy parade, it makes a lot of sense to start implementing significant reforms. Including a survey of numerous school subsidy programs companies like AT&T have been accused of ripping off for decades. Do an honest audit there, then come back to consider expanding any telecom subsidy investment base.

It’s not that having big tech pay some amount of money to genuinely fund broadband expansion is the worst idea ever conceived. It’s that the telecom companies proposing this idea envision a program where they get billions in additional poorly managed dollars managed by feckless bureaucrats who lack the backbone to ensure this money actually goes where it’s supposed to.

In the EU, one big telecom proposal involves directly taxing tech companies that that account for over 5 percent of a telco’s average peak traffic. That plan includes no government involvement or oversight — just a massive wad of cash thrown annually at telecoms with minimal accountability. This is their ideal vision: just billions in unaccountable dollars and euros funneled from tech to telecom under the pretense of progress.

If Trump wins the Presidency, I think there’s an extremely good chance the FCC finally makes the telecom tax on big tech come true. Likely under the guidance of Commissioner Brendan Carr (who has never seen an AT&T idea he didn’t like). That we should reform and audit the billions in regulatory favors and subsidies already thrown at companies like AT&T curiously never enters into frame.

08:00 AM

Pluralistic: Microsoft pinky swears that THIS TIME they'll make security a priority (14 Jun 2024) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links



A frame from a Peanuts animation, depicting Lucy yanking the football away from Charlie Brown, who is somersaulting through the sky. It has been altered. Lucy's head has been replaced with Microsoft's Clippy. Charlie Brown's head has been replaced with a 19th century caricature of a grinning Uncle Sam. The sky has been replaced with a 'code waterfall' effect as seen in the Wachowskis' 'Matrix' movies.

Microsoft pinky swears that THIS TIME they'll make security a priority (permalink)

As the old saying goes, "When someone tells you who they are and you get fooled again, shame on you." That goes double for Microsoft, especially when it comes to security promises.

Microsoft is, was, always has been, and always will be a rotten company. At every turn, throughout their history, they have learned the wrong lessons, over and over again.

That starts from the very earliest days, when the company was still called "Micro-Soft." Young Bill Gates was given a sweetheart deal to supply the operating system for IBM's PC, thanks to his mother's connection. The nepo-baby enlisted his pal, Paul Allen (whom he'd later rip off for billions) and together, they bought someone else's OS (and took credit for creating it – AKA, the "Musk gambit").

Microsoft then proceeded to make a fortune by monopolizing the OS market through illegal, collusive arrangements with the PC clone industry – an industry that only existed because they could source third-party PC ROMs from Phoenix:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/08/ibm-pc-compatible-how-adversarial-interoperability-saved-pcs-monopolization

Bill Gates didn't become one of the richest people on earth simply by emerging from a lucky orifice; he also owed his success to vigorous antitrust enforcement. The IBM PC was the company's first major initiative after it was targeted by the DOJ for a 12-year antitrust enforcement action. IBM tapped its vast monopoly profits to fight the DOJ, spending more on outside counsel to fight the DOJ antitrust division than the DOJ spent on all its antitrust lawyers, every year, for 12 years.

IBM's delaying tactic paid off. When Reagan took the White House, he let IBM off the hook. But the company was still seriously scarred by its ordeal, and when the PC project kicked off, the company kept the OS separate from the hardware (one of the DOJ's major issues with IBM's previous behavior was its vertical monopoly on hardware and software). IBM didn't hire Gates and Allen to provide it with DOS because it was incapable of writing a PC operating system: they did it to keep the DOJ from kicking down their door again.

The post-antitrust, gunshy IBM kept delivering dividends for Microsoft. When IBM turned a blind eye to the cloned PC-ROM and allowed companies like Compaq, Dell and Gateway to compete directly with Big Blue, this produced a whole cohort of customers for Microsoft – customers Microsoft could play off on each other, ensuring that every PC sold generated income for Microsoft, creating a wide moat around the OS business that kept other OS vendors out of the market. Why invest in making an OS when every hardware company already had an exclusive arrangement with Microsoft?

The IBM PC story teaches us two things: stronger antitrust enforcement spurs innovation and opens markets for scrappy startups to grow to big, important firms; as do weaker IP protections.

Microsoft learned the opposite: monopolies are wildly profitable; expansive IP protects monopolies; you can violate antitrust laws so long as you have enough monopoly profits rolling in to outspend the government until a Republican bootlicker takes the White House (Microsoft's antitrust ordeal ended after GW Bush stole the 2000 election and dropped the charges against them). Microsoft embodies the idea that you either die a rebel hero or live long enough to become the evil emperor you dethroned.

From the first, Microsoft has pursued three goals:

  1. Get too big to fail;

  2. Get too big to jail;

  3. Get too big to care.

It has succeeded on all three counts. Much of Microsoft's enduring power comes from succeeding IBM as the company that mediocre IT managers can safely buy from without being blamed for the poor quality of Microsoft's products: "Nobody ever got fired for buying Microsoft" is 2024's answer to "Nobody ever got fired for buying IBM."

Microsoft's secret sauce is impunity. The PC companies that bundle Windows with their hardware are held blameless for the glaring defects in Windows. The IT managers who buy company-wide Windows licenses are likewise insulated from the rage of the workers who have to use Windows and other Microsoft products.

Microsoft doesn't have to care if you hate it because, for the most part, it's not selling to you. It's selling to a few decision-makers who can be wined and dined and flattered. And since we all have to use its products, developers have to target its platform if they want to sell us their software.

This rarified position has afforded Microsoft enormous freedom to roll out harebrained "features" that made things briefly attractive for some group of developers it was hoping to tempt into its sticky-trap. Remember when it put a Turing-complete scripting environment into Microsoft Office and unleashed a plague of macro viruses that wiped out years worth of work for entire businesses?

https://web.archive.org/web/20060325224147/http://www3.ca.com/securityadvisor/newsinfo/collateral.aspx?cid=33338

It wasn't just Office; Microsoft's operating systems have harbored festering swamps of godawful defects that were weaponized by trolls, script kiddies, and nation-states:

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

Microsoft blamed everyone except themselves for these defects, claiming that their poor code quality was no worse than others, insisting that the bulging arsenal of Windows-specific malware was the result of being the juiciest target and thus the subject of the most malicious attention.

Even if you take them at their word here, that's still no excuse. Microsoft didn't slip and accidentally become an operating system monopolist. They relentlessly, deliberately, illegally pursued the goal of extinguishing every OS except their own. It's completely foreseeable that this dominance would make their products the subject of continuous attacks.

There's an implicit bargain that every monopolist makes: allow me to dominate my market and I will be a benevolent dictator who spends my windfall profits on maintaining product quality and security. Indeed, if we permit "wasteful competition" to erode the margins of operating system vendors, who will have a surplus sufficient to meet the security investment demands of the digital world?

But monopolists always violate this bargain. When faced with the decision to either invest in quality and security, or hand billions of dollars to their shareholders, they'll always take the latter. Why wouldn't they? Once they have a monopoly, they don't have to worry about losing customers to a competitor, so why invest in customer satisfaction? That's how Google can piss away $80b on a stock buyback and fire 12,000 technical employees at the same time as its flagship search product (with a 90% market-share) is turning into an unusable pile of shit:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/21/im-feeling-unlucky/#not-up-to-the-task

Microsoft reneged on this bargain from day one, and they never stopped. When the company moved Office to the cloud, it added an "analytics" suite that lets bosses spy on and stack-rank their employees ("Sorry, fella, Office365 says you're the slowest typist in the company, so you're fired"). Microsoft will also sell you internal data on the Office365 usage of your industry competitors (they'll sell your data to your competitors, too, natch). But most of all, Microsoft harvests, analyzes and sells this data for its own purposes:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/25/the-peoples-amazon/#clippys-revenge

Leave aside how creepy, gross and exploitative this is – it's also incredibly reckless. Microsoft is creating a two-way conduit into the majority of the world's businesses that insider threats, security services and hackers can exploit to spy on and wreck Microsoft's customers' business. You don't get more "too big to care" than this.

Or at least, not until now. Microsoft recently announced a product called "Recall" that would record every keystroke, click and screen element, nominally in the name of helping you figure out what you've done and either do it again, or go back and fix it. The problem here is that anyone who gains access to your system – your boss, a spy, a cop, a Microsoft insider, a stalker, an abusive partner or a hacker – now has access to everything, on a platter. Naturally, this system – which Microsoft billed as ultra-secure – was wildly insecure and after a series of blockbuster exploits, the company was forced to hit pause on the rollout:

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/06/microsoft-delays-data-scraping-recall-feature-again-commits-to-public-beta-test/

For years, Microsoft waged a war on the single most important security practice in software development: transparency. This is the company that branded the GPL Free Software license a "virus" and called open source "a cancer." The company argued that allowing public scrutiny of code would be a disaster because bad guys would spot and weaponize defects.

This is "security through obscurity" and it's an idea that was discredited nearly 500 years ago with the advent of the scientific method. The crux of that method: we are so good at bullshiting ourselves into thinking that our experiment was successful that the only way to make sure we know anything is to tell our enemies what we think we've proved so they can try to tear us down.

Or, as Bruce Schneier puts it: "Anyone can design a security system that you yourself can't think of a way of breaking. That doesn't mean it works, it just means that it works against people stupider than you."

And yet, Microsoft – who's made more widely and consequentially exploited software than anyone else in the history of the human race – claimed that free and open code was insecure, and spent millions on deceptive PR campaigns intended to discredit the scientific method in favor of a kind of software alchemy, in which every coder toils in secret, assuring themselves that drinking mercury is the secret to eternal life.

Access to source code isn't sufficient to make software secure – nothing about access to code guarantees that anyone will review that code and repair its defects. Indeed, there've been some high profile examples of "supply chain attacks" in the free/open source software world:

https://www.securityweek.com/supply-chain-attack-major-linux-distributions-impacted-by-xz-utils-backdoor/

But there's no good argument that this code would have been more secure if it had been harder for the good guys to spot its bugs. When it comes to secure code, transparency is an essential, but it's not a sufficency.

The architects of that campaign are genuinely awful people, and yet they're revered as heroes by Microsoft's current leadership. There's Steve "Linux Is Cancer" Ballmer, star of Propublica's IRS Files, where he is shown to be the king of "tax loss harvesting":

https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/24/tax-loss-harvesting/#mego

And also the most prominent example of the disgusting tax cheats practiced by rich sports-team owners:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/07/08/tuyul-apps/#economic-substance-doctrine

Microsoft may give lip service to open source these days (mostly through buying, stripmining and enclosing Github) but Ballmer's legacy lives on within the company, through its wildly illegal tax-evasion tactics:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/13/pour-encoragez-les-autres/#micros-tilde-one

But Ballmer is an angel compared to his boss, Bill Gates, last seen some paragraphs above, stealing the credit for MS DOS from Tim Paterson and billions of dollars from his co-founder Paul Allen. Gates is an odious creep who made billions through corrupt tech industry practices, then used them to wield influence over the world's politics and policy. The Gates Foundation (and Gates personally) invented vaccine apartheid, helped kill access to AIDS vaccines in Sub-Saharan Africa, then repeated the trick to keep covid vaccines out of reach of the Global South:

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

The Gates Foundation wants us to think of it as malaria-fighting heroes, but they're also the leaders of the war against public education, and have been key to the replacement of public schools with charter schools, where the poorest kids in America serve as experimental subjects for the failed pet theories of billionaire dilettantes:

https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/millionaire-driven-education-reform-has-failed-heres-what-works

(On a personal level, Gates is also a serial sexual abuser who harassed multiple subordinates into having sexual affairs with him:)

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/13/technology/microsoft-sexual-harassment-policy-review.html

The management culture of Microsoft started rotten and never improved. It's a company with corruption and monopoly in its blood, a firm that would always rather build market power to insulate itself from the consequences of making defective products than actually make good products. This is true of every division, from cloud computing:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/09/28/other-peoples-computers/#clouded-over

to gaming:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/27/convicted-monopolist/#microsquish

No one should ever trust Microsoft to do anything that benefits anyone except Microsoft. One of the low points in the otherwise wonderful surge of tech worker labor organizing was when the Communications Workers of America endorsed Microsoft's acquisition of Activision because Microsoft promised not to union-bust Activision employees. They lied:

https://80.lv/articles/qa-workers-contracted-by-microsoft-say-they-were-fired-for-trying-to-unionize/

Repeatedly:

https://www.reuters.com/technology/activision-fired-staff-using-strong-language-about-remote-work-policy-union-2023-03-01/

Why wouldn't they lie? They've never faced any consequences for lying in the past. Remember: the secret to Microsoft's billions is impunity.

Which brings me to Solarwinds. Solarwinds is an enterprise management tool that allows IT managers to see, patch and control the computers they oversee. Foreign spies hacked Solarwinds and accessed a variety of US federal agencies, including the National Nuclear Security Administration (which oversees nuclear weapons stockpiles), the NIH, and the Treasury Department.

When the Solarwinds story broke, Microsoft strenuously denied that the Solarwinds hack relied on exploiting defects in Microsoft software. They said this to everyone: the press, the Pentagon, and Congress.

This was a lie. As Renee Dudley and Doris Burke reported for Propublica, the Solarwinds attack relied on defects in the SAML authentication system that Microsoft's own senior security staff had identified and repeatedly warned management about. Microsoft's leadership ignored these warnings, buried the research, prohibited anyone from warning Microsoft customers, and sidelined Andrew Harris, the researcher who discovered the defect:

https://www.propublica.org/article/microsoft-solarwinds-golden-saml-data-breach-russian-hackers

The single most consequential cyberattack on the US government was only possible because Microsoft decided not to fix a profound and dangerous bug in its code, and declined to warn anyone who relied on this defective software.

Yesterday, Microsoft president Brad Smith testified about this to Congress, and promised that the company would henceforth prioritize security over gimmicks like AI:

https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2024/06/microsoft-in-damage-control-mode-says-it-will-prioritize-security-over-ai/

Despite all the reasons to mistrust this promise, the company is hoping Congress will believe it. More importantly, it's hoping that the Pentagon will believe it, because the Pentagon is about to award billions in free no-bid military contract profits to Microsoft:

https://www.axios.com/2024/05/17/pentagon-weighs-microsoft-licensing-upgrades

You know what? I bet they'll sell this lie. It won't be the first time they've convinced Serious People in charge of billions of dollars and/or lives to ignore that all-important maxim, "When someone tells you who they are and you get fooled again, shame on you."


Hey look at this (permalink)



A Wayback Machine banner.

This day in history (permalink)

#20yrsago Canadian copyfight hots up: Liberal MPs on the take from copyright industries? https://www.michaelgeist.ca/2004/06/copyright-reform-needs-a-balanced-approach/

#15yrsago Digital TV’s history in America: the DTV transition nearly cost the USA its technological freedom https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2009/06/dtv-era-no-broadcast

#15yrsago Hundreds of top British cops defrauded the public for millions in phony expense racket https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2009/jun/14/expenses-fraud-detectives-scotland-yard

#15yrsago $134.5 BILLION worth of US bonds seized from smugglers at Swiss border https://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=15456&size=A

#10yrsago Atheism remains least-trusted characteristic in American politics https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2014/05/19/for-2016-hopefuls-washington-experience-could-do-more-harm-than-good/

#10yrsago Canadian Supreme Court’s landmark privacy ruling https://www.michaelgeist.ca/2014/06/scc-spencer-decision/

#10yrsago Court finds full-book scanning is fair use https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2014/06/another-fair-use-victory-book-scanning-hathitrust

#10yrsago Not selling out: Teens live in commercial online spaces because that’s their only option https://medium.com/message/selling-out-is-meaningless-3450a5bc98d2

#5yrsago Porno copyright troll sentenced to 14 years: “a wrecking ball to trust in the administration of justice” https://torrentfreak.com/copyright-troll-lawyer-sentenced-to-14-years-in-prison-190614/

#5yrsago Ukrainian oligarchs accused of laundering $470b, buying up much of Cleveland https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/how-kolomoisky-does-business-in-the-united-states/

#5yrsago Empirical review of privacy policies reveals that they are “incomprehensible” drivel https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/12/opinion/facebook-google-privacy-policies.html

#5yrsago Beyond lockpicking: learn about the class-breaks for doors, locks, hinges and other physical security measures https://memex.craphound.com/2019/06/14/beyond-lockpicking-learn-about-the-class-breaks-for-doors-locks-hinges-and-other-physical-security-measures/

#5yrsago Hong Kong’s #612strike uprising is alive to surveillance threats, but its countermeasures are woefully inadequate https://www.securityweek.com/surveillance-savvy-hong-kong-protesters-go-digitally-dark/

#5yrago Reverse mortgages: subprime’s “stealth aftershock” that is costing elderly African-Americans their family homes https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/news/investigations/2019/06/11/seniors-face-foreclosure-retirement-after-failed-reverse-mortgage/1329043001/

#5yrsago Maine’s new ISP privacy law has both California and New York beat https://thehill.com/policy/technology/447824-maine-shakes-up-debate-with-tough-internet-privacy-law/

#1yrago How Amazon transformed the EU into a planned economy https://pluralistic.net/2023/06/14/flywheel-shyster-and-flywheel/#unfulfilled-by-amazon


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"When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla" -Joey "Accordion Guy" DeVilla

There Is No Quiet Part [The Status Kuo]

Let’s say you’re the presumptive nominee of the GOP, and in about one month, your party will hold its nominating convention in the great city of Milwaukee.

That location was no accident. Wisconsin is a key swing state. A narrow victory there helped deliver the White House to you in 2016, but a narrow loss there helped elect Joe Biden in 2020. It’s hugely important for your campaign to win back the state in 2024.

Indeed, it was Milwaukee that did you in last time. You fought hard to have all of those votes thrown out because they contained so many African American ones. But you did not succeed, and now your co-conspirators are under indictment in Wisconsin for forging fake elector slate certifications.

So you want to win back the hearts of Milwaukee residents and the state of Wisconsin, right? Not if you’re Donald Trump. In remarks before his GOP colleagues at the Capitol on Thursday—his first return to the scene of the crime since January 6, 2021—Trump said, “Milwaukee, where we are having our convention, is a horrible city.”

Ruh-roh.

Republicans are scrambling to deny or explain his remarks, but they had better get used to playing clean up. Whenever Trump has spoken in public lately, he can’t help but say whatever he is actually thinking at the time. Sometimes that comes out as pure gibberish, and sometimes it comes out like a form of political Tourettes, if you’ll excuse the reference, where he insults the very people who are showing up to hear him or, in the case of Milwaukee, hosting his convention.

Let’s look at some recent examples and then come back to the Milwaukee comment.

Subscribe now

Leaving Las Vegas

Nevada is another key swing state in the election. So earlier this week, someone in the Trump Campaign thought it would be a great idea to hold an outdoor rally in the scorching heat of Las Vegas, where temperatures hit above 100 degrees. 

Trump showered love and praise upon those who had braved the high temperatures to see him. Just kidding! He did quite the opposite. Trump first whined about the heat, and how everyone including the Secret Service was more worried about the state of people in the crowd than about his own discomfort.

“They never mentioned me. I’m up here sweating like a dog,” Trump complained. “This is hard work.”

Then came the brutal truth, as Trump urged people not to leave early and joked, “I don’t want anybody going on me. We need every voter. I don’t care about you. I just want your vote.”

I can see it on campaign bumper stickers now:

Trump 2024! 

He doesn’t care about me.

He just wants my vote.

It was a revealing moment of candor, or perhaps the inevitable result of a complete lack of filter. But a joke about not caring about his voters, after exposing them at length to dangerous desert sun, feels callous, not funny. In fact, the campaign already knew it was in for a difficult day. It had hired extra medics and brought in misting tents, extra water and fans, while allowing attendees to carry umbrellas for shade. Still, because of the extreme setting, six people had to be sent to the hospital, and 24 were treated on site, mostly for heat-related symptoms.

This wasn’t even the Trump Campaign’s first experience this year with overheated MAGA crowds. During a rally in Arizona the week before, where temperatures outside had reached 113 degrees, 11 people had to be transported to hospitals for heat exhaustion. Many supporters had waited in line for hours, and some were unable to get inside before the mega-church venue was at capacity. 

Shark week

During the speech, Trump veered off into a nonsensical soliloquy about (checks notes) sharks, batteries and boats. Had Joe Biden said anything remotely like this, he would be done: 

I say, ‘What would happen if the boat sank from its weight and you’re in the boat and you have this tremendously powerful battery and the battery’s underwater, and there’s a shark that’s approximately 10 yards over there?’ By the way, a lot of shark attacks lately. Do you notice that? A lot of shark… I watched some guys justifying it today: ‘Well, they weren’t really that angry. They bit off the young lady’s leg because of the fact that they were not hungry, but they misunderstood who she was.’ These people are crazy.

As Prof. Brian Klaas pointed out in his excellent piece in The Atlantic, Trump always seems to get a pass because of the “banality of crazy,” meaning Trump is so crazy that when he says more crazy, unhinged things, it barely registers any more. By contrast, a single gaffe by Biden is pounced on by the media as evidence that he is too old and addled to serve.

(It should also be noted that Trump, ever the stable genius, is unfairly maligning sharks and gets the science completely wrong on batteries underwater. Sharks are not attacking humans in greater numbers, and batteries in the water would not electrocute nearby humans, who conduct electricity far more poorly than seawater itself.)

What both the “I don’t care about you, I just want your vote” and the shark/boat/battery word vomit demonstrate is this: Trump off-script is a walking disaster and has less mental acuity than a hamster. But will swing state voters, who may have forgotten how truly soul-sucking it was to listen to him every day as president, wake up to the fact that he’s worse than ever? 

Trouble brewing in Milwaukee

One way to remind a section of these voters is to amplify what Trump actually said about their hometown. Remember, Trump thinks he can peel off large numbers of African American voters this time, citing way-too-early polls showing that such voters may be more persuadable this time around.

The city is split nearly evenly in its racial make-up between whites and African Americans, at around 38 percent each. Hispanics, whom Trump is also trying to court, are around 13 percent. That makes Milwaukee one of the most racially diverse cities in America. But there is also civic pride that unites the residents, including a recent NBA championship win by the Milwaukee Bucks and iconic characters and moments in film and television. 

The Morning Joe show put a nice compilation together today to remind America:

No one likes to hear a politician, let alone a convicted felon from Florida, call their home “horrible.” And Wisconsin’s elected representatives didn’t hold back.

Said Milwaukee mayor Cavalier Johnson in response, “All of us lived through his presidency, so right back at ya, buddy."

Rep. Gwen Moore, who represents the district in Congress, posted, “Once he's settled in with his parole officer, I am certain he will discover that Milwaukee is a wonderful, vibrant and welcoming city full of diverse neighborhoods and a thriving business community.”

And Wisconsin’s Sen. Tammy Baldwin quipped, “Milwaukee makes the greatest beer, brats, and motorcycles in the world. It's home to some of our most vibrant communities, hardest workers, and is a part of what makes Wisconsin the best state in the nation. Donald Trump wouldn’t understand even if a jury told him so.”

The blowback could explain why some Republicans’ first instinct was to deny Trump ever said it. Chief apologist for Trump, Speaker Mike Johnson, was the worst offender. On Sean Hannity’s show, Speaker Johnson was asked to “settle one thing once and for all” over whether Trump “took a shot” at Milwaukee. “Did he do that?” Hannity asked him.

”I didn't hear it,” Johnson said with a poisonous smile, “and I was sitting right next to him.”

When denial didn’t work, especially after Trump later confessed to saying it, other GOP apologists insisted Trump was referring to crime, or voter fraud, or something else, as if calling the city crime-ridden or full of ballot cheats is somehow better.

With all my usual caveats about polling, it’s worth noting that these comments by Trump come as polling averages actually show him down in the important battleground state of Wisconsin. Decision Desk’s polling average of 22 state level polls currently has Biden leading Trump by 3.1 points in Wisconsin.

This is a state that Biden won by less than half a percentage point in 2020, just around 20,000 votes. This November, every vote there is going to count, so Trump is doing himself no favors by running his mouth off about Milwaukee being a “horrible” city—even before a friendly crowd like the congressional GOP conference. 

But please, just keep talking, Donald. Say what you’re thinking out loud. We already know there is no quiet part.

06:00 AM

Denuvo Owner Shuts Down Clone Sites, Perpertrators Seem Up For a Chase [TorrentFreak]

denuvo-newMirror and clone sites were once deployed to keep popular sites alive as they imploded under the weight of their own popularity and ensuing traffic.

The strategy was famously deployed around Suprnova, one of the original torrent giants. Given how often the whole site went down, unable to cope with unprecedented success, in hindsight it was given an unintentionally appropriate name.

Today, some clone and mirror sites still exist for the same purpose but most fall off the end of a streaming site conveyor belt, to trade on the popularity of sites with known brands, generate confusion with similar domains, or both.

As a leading cybersecurity and anti-piracy vendor, Irdeto will be only too aware of the mirror and clone site phenomenon. Whether it expected its own website to be cloned and placed online is up for debate. As the owner of Denuvo, perhaps the most hated anti-piracy tech currently on the market, it probably didn’t come as a surprise.

DMCA Takedown Notice to GitHub

Irdeto’s DMCA notice was sent to GitHub on its own behalf, which probably doesn’t happen very often.

“We are writing to you from Irdeto B.V. (‘Irdeto’). We own the exclusive copyright to Irdeto.com and its related assets,” the notice begins.

Responding to GitHub’s request to identify the original copyrighted work that had allegedly been infringed, Irdeto pointed towards its own website.

“Irdeto.com and it’s related assets (such as text, website design, and images) is our copyrighted corporate website. The reported repositories have duplicated the Irdeto website code and assets. As this repository contains a direct copy of Irdeto.com, confirm that we own the copyright for all the contents within the repository.”

Cloned Sites Operating Under Two Domains

Irdeto goes on to claim that the owner of the infringing repos, described simply as “this individual” had attempted to impersonate Irdeto. One of the domains used in connection with the cloned website was Irdeto.fr but whether there was a broader plan isn’t revealed in the notice. That being said, the existence of a mail server quite rightly generated additional concern.

impersonator

After identifying the repos to be removed, Irdeto requested a rapid takedown and action against the alleged culprit.

“We respectfully request that Github removes the infringing content expeditiously and suspends the user. If anything is preventing you from removing the reported content, please let us know what additional information is required,” the company wrote.

git-ird-clone-dmca

The first request was obviously granted by GitHub but whether it took any action against the user is unknown.

Unexpected

Suspended from GitHub or not, taking on a company like Irdeto has the potential to end quite badly. At the very least, there are much less risky targets, so who would choose to take on a corporation expecting to beat it at its own game?

Unable to resist a short look around, we began with basic questions; who owns Irdeto.fr, what other domains do they own, and why are WHOIS records nearly always frustrating?

Yet amazingly, not at all frustrating today. With no blanket of redactions, no wall-to-wall privacy service, Irdeto.fr seems like an image of openness.

Registered on January, 28, 2024, Irdeto.fr offers something most domains do not, personal information – or at least that’s what the information suggests it might be. Unwilling to fall into any mischief traps, or possible registration proxies, details redacted below.

whois-irdeto-fr

With limited time, the next easy step was to find other domains registered by the same person. Using the email address listed for Irdeto.fr we ran a check and got another suspiciously easy hit.

The same email address is not only listed against another domain, but a .US domain, which are not usually redacted. This was no exception.

stop-trying-to-reverse-us

At this point completely out of time, we took that as a direct order. Almost certainly, Irdeto will not, despite 121K domains left to trawl.

Irdeto’s DMCA notice is available here

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

Friday 2024-06-14

07:00 PM

Boundaries and limits [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

They serve different purposes.

The fence near the train tracks is a boundary. You can go near it without risk. The electrified third rail, on the other hand, is a limit. If you touch it, you’re done.

Boundaries can give us room to innovate and thrive. Budgets, schedules and specifications all exist to show us where the safe areas are. Sure, go to the edges and challenge the boundaries, that’s why they’re there.

But limits aren’t boundaries. Limits are the end, the danger zone, the thing to avoid.

Some people bristle at boundaries. They’d like to have a project with no budget and no deadline. The problem with living without boundaries is that the limits sneak up on you, and then, boom, it’s over.

We shouldn’t always color inside the lines, but creative work is better when there are lines.

      

TorrentGalaxy Goes Offline With Mysterious Message to Users (Update) [TorrentFreak]

torrentgalaxyNote: the site appears to be back online at a new domain name, see updates below.

In little over five years, TorrentGalaxy has grown out to become a leading player in the torrent ecosystem.

The site originally set out to ‘bridge the gap‘ between torrent and streaming sites, but it became much more than that.

With a dedicated group of uploaders and an active community, TorrentGalaxy provided a safe haven for many avid torrenters. The disappearance of other key torrent sources, including the demise of RARBG last year, made TorrentGalaxy’s position as a torrent distribution portal increasingly important.

TorrentGalaxy Goes Offline

Against this backdrop, it’s no surprise that users are disappointed when the site suffers downtime. When the downtime is accompanied by a somewhat cryptic message, alarm bells start to go off.

A few hours ago, TorrentGalaxy’s main website and mirrors suddenly displayed the following mysterious message.

“TGX is offline. Updates will be posted in case of any changes.”

torrentgalaxy

This message doesn’t have to be alarming; the site may simply return in a few hours after some much-needed maintenance. In that case, however, “TGx is down for maintenance, updates will be posted when more information is available” would have been a more appropriate message.

IF

The wording of the current message suggests that TorrentGalaxy is offline, may not come back soon, and updates will only follow IF anything changes.

We have reached out to our contacts at the site asking for clarification. At the time of publication, we have yet to receive any response. If we hear anything new, this article will be updated accordingly.

In addition to the main TorrentGalaxy.to domain, all official mirrors and proxies are down as well. The domain name of the status page, which showed all mirrors and proxies, is currently parked. That’s not a positive sign for users either.

The TorrentGalaxy downtime is not only felt at the site itself. Since it also provides a steady flow of [TGx] releases to other torrent sites, it will be noticeable there as well. This includes the popular ‘TGxGoodies’ user at 1337x, whose releases have been halted for now.

The current downtime might be related to enforcement actions. TorrentGalaxy has been on the radar of anti-piracy groups for a long time as a major source of copyright infringement and, earlier this year, the U.S. Trade Representative flagged it as one of the most notorious piracy sites.

With the information that’s available to us presently, we can do little more than speculate. However, we will keep an eye out for updates and changes in the coming hours and days.

Update: we’re aware that some copycat sites are still online, but there have nothing to do with the original.

Update: A TGx admin informed TorrentFreak that the site operators haven’t informed them about the downtime either.

Update: TGx has changed the initial message to the following. “4ever?”

4ever? torrentgalaxy

Update: After more than a day, TorrentGalaxy.to now redirects to Torrentgalaxy.mx, through the following banner. The site appears to be back as new uploads are coming though as well.

TorrentGalaxy uploads at other torrent sites are coming though as well.

The reason for the downtime and the domain switch are still unclear. If more information comes available we will cover it accordingly.

forever

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

05:00 PM

European Content Removal Laws Are Scrubbing The Internet Of Completely Legal Content [Techdirt]

A lot of laws have been passed in Europe that regulate the content American companies can carry. Most of these laws were passed to tamp down on speech that would be otherwise legal in the United States, but not so much in Europe where free speech rights aren’t given the same sort of protections found in the US.

Since most of the larger tech companies maintained overseas offices, they were subject to these laws. Those laws targeted everything from terrorist-related content to “hate speech” to whatever is currently vexing legislators. Attached to these mandates were hefty fines and the possibility of being asked to exit these countries completely.

Of course, the most important law governing content takedown demands was passed much, much earlier. I’m not talking about the CDA and Section 203 immunity. No, it’s a law that required no input from legislators or lobbyists.

The law of unintended consequences has been in full force since the beginning of time. But it’s never considered to be part of the legislative process, despite hundreds of years of precedence. So, while the consequences are unintended, they should definitely be expected. Somehow, they never are.

And that brings us to this report [PDF] from The Future of Free Speech, a non-partisan think tank operating from the friendly confines of Vanderbilt University in Tennessee. (h/t Reason)

Legislators in three European countries have made many content-related demands of social media services over the past decade-plus. The end result, however, hasn’t been the eradication of “illegal” content, so much as it has been the eradication of speech that does not run afoul of this mesh network of takedown-focused laws.

When you demand communication services respond quickly to vaguely written laws, the expected outcome is exactly what’s been observed here: the proactive removal of content, a vast majority of which doesn’t violate any of the laws these services are attempting to comply with.

This analysis found that legal online speech made up most of the removed content from posts on Facebook and YouTube in France, Germany, and Sweden. Of the deleted comments examined across platforms and countries, between 87.5% and 99.7%, depending on the sample, were legally permissible.

Equally unsurprising is this breakdown of the stats, which notes that Germany’s content removal laws (which have been in place longer and are much more strict due to its zero-tolerance approach to anything Nazi-adjacent) tend to result in highest percentage of collateral damage.

The highest proportion of legally permissible deleted comments was observed in Germany, where 99.7% and 98.9% of deleted comments were found to be legal on Facebook and YouTube, respectively. This could reflect the impact of the German Network Enforcement Act (NetzDG) on the removal practices of social media platforms which may over-remove content with the objective of avoiding the legislation’s hefty fine. In comparison, the corresponding figures for Sweden are 94.6% for both Facebook and YouTube. France has the lowest percentage of legally permissible deleted comments, with 92.1% of the deleted comments in the French Facebook sample and 87.5% of the deleted comments French YouTube sample.

This isn’t just a very selective sampling of content likely to be of interest to the three countries examined in this report. Nearly 1.3 million YouTube and Facebook comments were utilized for this study. It’s a relatively microscopic in terms of comments generated daily by both platforms but large enough (especially when restrained to three European countries) to determine content removal patterns.

The researchers discovered that more than half the comments removed by these platforms under these countries’ laws were nothing more than the sort of thing that makes the internet world go round, so to speak:

Among the deleted comments, the majority were classified as “general expressions of opinion.” In other words, these were statements that did not contain linguistic attacks, hate speech or illegal content, such as expressing the support for a controversial candidate in the abstract. On average, more than 56% of the removed comments fall into this category.

So, the question is: are these policies actually improving anything? More to the point, are they even achieving the stated goals of the laws? The researchers can’t find any evidence that supports a theory that collateral damage may be acceptable if it helps these governments achieve their aims. Instead, the report suggests things will continue to get worse because the geopolitical environment is in constant flux, which means the goalposts for content moderation are similarly always in motion while the punishments for non-compliance remain unchanged. And that combination pretty much ensures what’s been observed here will only get worse.

[M]oderation of social media is understood by several countries as a delicate balance between freedom of expression, security, and protection of minorities. However, recent events and geopolitical developments could disrupt this perceived balance. National security concerns have caused governments to try to counter misinformation and interference from hostile nations with blunt tools. Additionally, but without making any definitive conclusions, there is some indication that legislation, such as the NetzDG, aimed at strengthening citizens and granting them certain rights, has the unintended effect of encouraging social media platforms to delete a larger fraction of legal comments. This is a preview into the potential impact of the EU’s DSA now in force on freedom of expression.

The report is far kinder in its observations than it probably should be. It says multiple EU governments “understand” that content moderation is a “delicate balance.” That rarely seems to be the case. This report makes it clear that content moderation at scale is impossible. But when companies point this out, regulators tend to view these assertions as flimsy excuses and insist this means nothing more than tech companies just aren’t trying hard enough to meet the (impossible) demands of dozens of laws and hundreds of competing interests.

The takeaway from this report should be abundantly clear. But somehow adherence to the law of unintended consequences is still considered to be a constant flouting of the Unicorns Do Exist laws passed by governments that firmly believe that any decree they’ve issued must be possible to comply with. Otherwise they, in their infinite wisdom, wouldn’t have written it in the first place.

Daily Deal: Rosetta Stone [Techdirt]

Embark on the journey of language learning with the Rosetta Stone lifetime subscription for all languages. Rosetta Stone has been the go-to software for language learning for the past 27 years. With its immersive and intuitive training method, you might be reading, writing, and speaking a new language with confidence in no time. It’s on sale for $190.

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.

Meta Won’t Fight Online Kid Safety Regulations Because It Sees Them As A Competitive Moat [Techdirt]

Forget everything you think you know about Mark Zuckerberg and his army of lobbyists blocking any attempt to regulate social media. The truth is more nuanced (but perhaps less complicated). Meta is actually happy with internet regulations: they keep down competitive threats.

I’ve been trying to make this point for a while: while politicians and the media falsely believe that Meta is standing in the way of internet regulations, nothing is further from the truth. Meta knows full well that it has the legal firepower to comply with basically any internet regulations, and as the company has had to deal with growing competition, it loves the idea of using regulations as a moat to keep competitors at bay.

Remember, Meta’s (then Facebook’s) vocal support of FOSTA caused that bill to become law. That was after we were told for months that it was “big tech” that was blocking this horrible law, that has since been shown to have cost many lives (just as many of us critics predicted). Back then, those of us who protested FOSTA were told we were “big tech shills,” only to then have it be made clear that “big tech” was perfectly happy with the law.

There’s a pretty straight through line from FOSTA to the kid safety bills we see today. FOSTA was seen as a way to “attack big tech” over sex trafficking. Politicians have tried to run the same playbook on a number of topics, including terrorism, illegal drugs, and now “child safety.” Child safety is the one that stuck, but it’s the same cynical game: by painting “big tech” as the enemy, politicians can dismiss principled criticism and score easy political points.

So, whenever we hear claims about how Meta and Google are standing in the way of “child safety” laws, or that Meta and Google need to “come to the table” on various regulatory proposals, we have to laugh. Meta and Google have no problem with most of these laws. They know that it’s the government building a moat for them that helps limit the ability of upstart competitors to compete in the marketplace.

For the last couple of years, as various “protect the children online” laws have been passed, one of the most frustrating bits has been lots of people falsely insisting that any criticism of these laws is “big tech talking points.” That was the line trotted out by New York politicians in response to any criticism of their “SAFE for Kids Act.” And we’ve heard similar criticism from politicians (and, frankly, media folks) in other states from Florida to California to Texas to Utah to Ohio and more.

Behind the scenes, I’ve been hearing all this time that companies like Meta, Google, and even Apple are actually fine with all these laws and don’t even want them challenged. NetChoice, the trade organization that has been at the forefront of challenging many of these laws, has a unique setup in that their members don’t control the organization’s actions and don’t control which lawsuits it takes or doesn’t take.

So while everyone has assumed that NetChoice lawsuits are really proxies for “big tech” member companies like Meta and Google, I keep hearing whispered rumors that the companies are actually upset about the lawsuits and would be quite happy with just letting these laws go into practice. They know they can handle the compliance costs and (more to the point) that upstart competitors can’t.

Still, I’ve never had anything more than rumors and whispers, which was not enough to report on it all… until now. The Washington Post got its hands on a letter from lawyers representing Meta to a Maryland legislator saying that it would not stand in the way of any “protect the children” laws:

The social media giant would not back an attempt to block the measure in court, a lawyer for the firm Rifkin Weiner Livingston wrote in a previously unreported email to Maryland Del. Jared Solomon (D-Montgomery), according to a screenshot obtained by the Tech Brief.

Solomon was worried that NetChoice and others would sue over Maryland’s newly passed “Maryland Kids Code” law. That law has most of the problems of California’s Age Appropriate Design Code, which has already been (correctly) declared unconstitutional. Apparently, believing the false hype that Meta controls NetChoice, Solomon sent a letter threatening the companies not to sue to block the law. And Meta responded saying “sure, no problem, we’re not going to get in the way.”

Amid concern that NetChoice would also challenge the similar Maryland law, Solomon and other state lawmakers urged the group’s member companies in letters last month to “comply” and “not attempt to undermine this bipartisan, lifesaving effort by suing to block its enactment.”

“Meta is not aware of a legal challenge to [the] Maryland Kids Code and does not plan to support one,” Meta’s outside law firm wrote in response to the letter.

Solomon said that while he is “pleased they will not support a lawsuit,” he hopes Meta “will urge their partners at NetChoice, which they help fund, to do the same and help us implement these common sense protections for kids instead of trying to needlessly drag this through the courts.”

So, there’s a lot to comment on here, but let’s start with this: in an age where we’re supposedly concerned with government “jawboning” to suppress speech, it’s pretty ridiculous for a legislator to demand companies “not attempt to undermine this bipartisan, lifesaving effort by suing to block its enactment.”

First off, it’s not “lifesaving.” It’s actively harmful. We’ve gone over this dozens of times, but legislation of this nature is based on a moral panic that misunderstands the actual concerns and challenges facing kids these days. It substitutes the moral panic-induced ignorance of lawmakers as expertise, while ignoring what actual experts say.

Second, telling companies not to challenge laws that are unconstitutional is fucking crazy. If the law is unconstitutional (and it is), then let that play out in the courts, rather than effectively threatening companies not to challenge it.

But, most importantly, this revelation should make it clear that, despite the narrative making the rounds that Meta, Google, and Apple are somehow pulling the strings on all these lawsuits, that’s not the case at all.

Sometimes it really is true that the people challenging these laws actually recognize that these laws are unconstitutional attacks on the rights of users of these platforms and are challenging the laws accordingly.

Of course, I assume that this basic fact made clear here will be forgotten the next time it’s convenient for supporters of these laws to insist that any criticism is just “big tech talking points.” The fact is that “big tech” is pretty happy with most of these laws.

The laws are often written in a way that the “big tech” companies already comply with them, so there’s little additional cost. But they make it so that it’s prohibitively expensive for anyone else to comply. And that means these laws help Meta and Google and hamstring any upstarts and competitors.

Canada Imposes 5% Tax On Streaming To Fund Local News, Diverse Content [Techdirt]

Canadian Regulators are leaning on new authority built into the 2023 Online Streaming Act to impose a new 5 percent tax on streaming TV and music services like Netflix and Spotify; funding that the regulator says will then be used to help fund Canadian broadcasting.

According to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) announcement, the plan should drive $200 million in new funding annually to local news and a variety of other public interest content:

“The funding will be directed to areas of immediate need in the Canadian broadcasting system, such as local news on radio and television, French-language content, Indigenous content, and content created by and for equity-deserving communities, official language minority communities, and Canadians of diverse backgrounds.”

The fee systems effectively mirrors the fees already imposed on local broadcasters. Past efforts on this front (in the U.S. and Canada) haven’t been received particularly well by streaming giants, and the same applied here. The Digital Media Association, which represents Amazon Music, Apple Music and Spotify, insisted in a statement that the new tax will only expand what they’re calling an “affordability crisis”:

“As Canada’s affordability crisis remains a significant challenge, the government needs to avoid adding to this burden. This is especially true for younger Canadians who are the predominant users of audio streaming services.”

Huge contracts for the likes of Joe Rogan and Wall Street’s insatiable demand for relentless quarterly growth have more to do with streaming affordability than anything else, though in this case the services are correct in that they’ll simply pass the cost of the new taxes directly on to users. Facing slowing subscriber growth, streaming giants have already been pretty relentlessly raising rates.

That said, real journalism (especially independent and minority owned) is consistently facing a funding crisis, and much of the conversation (both in the U.S. and Canada) tends to be centered around what isn’t possible, shouldn’t be done (usually framed around the interests of giant corporations), as opposed to actually fixing the problem.

At the same time, similar efforts are often derailed by corruption, and there’s no guarantee the money guaranteed for useful things actually finds the way it its original destination.

Efforts to tax streaming companies to help fund broadband deployment in the States, for example, risk being hijacked by telecom giants looking to exploit corrupt policymakers simply to pad their wallets. Municipalities in Texas have also tried to tax Netflix with a fairly broad disdain for existing law and no particular public interest initiative in mind.

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