News

Sunday 2026-06-14

07:00 AM

We didn't choose the pastel colors [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]

This Week in F-Droid

TWIF curated on Friday, 12 Jun 2026, Week 24

F-Droid core

F-Droid and F-Droid Basic were updated to 2.0-alpha10. We tooted a toot that you can read here, and yes, we are like an inch (or 25.4 mm if you’re on metric) close to release, do test it on your device today:

  • mess around with Material colors, do all screens look fine and readable?
  • install some apps and updates, do they get downloaded fast from mirrors?
  • your Chinese device can install apps or just gives up randomly?
  • the UI looks nice on your smart TV or is it hard to navigate?
  • the app is translated fully or some strings need more work?
  • are the meta categories enticing?
  • any other issue we should know about?

You’ve read above and want to help? Get the latest 2.0-alpha by navigating to the F-Droid or Basic app details page and check “Allow beta updates” in the top right three dot menu.

Community News

baresip was updated to 83.1.0 and its video enabled counter-part baresip+ to 72.1.0. These apps have been in F-Droid since 2018 and 2020 respectively, so they’re not “new” to the Android ecosystem and to Google’s vast surveillance system that spies on what apps users have installed, yet we are sad to see our packages being treated as malware and both users and developers getting abused.

Also Syncthing-Fork was updated to 2.1.1.0 and got the same FUD treatment from Google’s root-kit-like services that swear they want to protect the users.

Is Google protecting you or their share-holders? Time is short, keepandroidopen.org has some actionable ideas. Can you help?

Fedilab was updated to 3.41.0 adding the new “Collections” feature. What are those? We’ll just let the Mastodon devs to explain in a post.

Flip 2 DND was updated to 12.1.1-free after we skipped some versions. The developer lost, forgot, burned, deleted or just plain changed the key, hence it now has a new one. You had the app installed last week? Better uninstall and install the new one.

Notifications for FB was updated to 1.12.0 after… 9 years! While we can frown upon your usage of such an awful abusing silo, at least you can get notified in a better way.

While we featured ReFra two weeks ago, they deserve a mention yet again with update 5.0.0. Why? They’ve added Immich integration (ownCloud soon too) so you can browse remotely just like locally, cloud photo backup, backup wizard, more editor effects & filters, date grouping, albums sections, motion photos as MP4, Android Advanced Protection support, more location details, better APNG & JXL support, more performance enhancements and more.

Newly Added Categories

3 categories were newly added
  • Recorder: Audio, screen, call recorder
  • Camera: Camera, IP camera viewer and video recorder
  • Market & Price: Price, exchange rate, stock

Newly Added Apps

34 apps were newly added
  • Alchemist: Start with the four basic elements and create anything!
  • AppVerifier BG: Verify installed apps against shared signature hashes and databases
  • Conduit: Local-first SSH, Mosh, and SFTP for mobile
  • drejo player: Tiny ad-free player with reliable next/previous across mp4 + mkv folders
  • Email: A modern email client with a unified inbox
  • Ensemble: Unofficial client for Music Assistant
  • Entropy’s Defiance: Minimalist launcher and time-horizon task manager
  • Epoch: Time display for nerds: Unix, sidereal, binary clocks & more
  • Flac-R: Perfect your collection
  • Health: A health metric management health meant to replace Google Fit
  • Hermes Agent Fork: Run local AI models with chat, files, voice, and Android tools
  • Hisap Kitap: Shop ledger and billing app for small businesses
  • Kochi Transit Go: Offline Kochi Metro route planner and fare calculator. Fast, Free & Private.
  • LineShield: Verify phone lines registered to your name in Mexico CRT portals
  • Linthra: Local-first music player for music you own. No forced sync.
  • LocalTube: Self-hosted streaming server solution built on top of NewPipe Extractor
  • Metiq: Colored noise for focus, sleep, and relaxation. No ads, no tracking.
  • Motivational App: A tiny joke app that gives you brutally direct motivation in one tap
  • ONVIF Camera: Simple RTSP viewer for IP cameras
  • Open Hitomi: Floating hedgehog assistant with local chat and browser tools
  • OpenVitals: Private Health Connect summary; not medical advice
  • OW Camera 2 For Pebble: Control your phone’s camera remotely from your Pebble smartwatch
  • Passchain: Use security key with Bluetooth, NFC, USB or your phone secure element
  • PDF Inspector: Inspect, select, edit and delete the elements inside any PDF
  • Phylax: Viewer for Frigate NVR with smart URL switching and notifications
  • PicCollage: High-performance photo collage studio with 26 dynamic gradients and pro layouts
  • Pictionary Generator: A Pictionary-ish Word Generator
  • PixelPlayerOSS: Local-first music player for offline and self-hosted libraries
  • Prog Metronome: Metronome for practicing complex rhythmic ideas
  • RealmScore: Score keeper for the Fantasy Realms card game
  • Rocinante: Fast, private, and native client for the BookWyrm literary social network
  • SoundTree Recorder: Audio recorder with topic organization, marks, and page-like waveforms
  • time-tracking: Keep track of your working hours with precision and ease
  • whatIwatch: Track the series you’re currently watching

Updated Apps

288 more apps were updated
(expand for the full list)

Thank you for reading this week’s TWIF 🙂

Please subscribe to the RSS feed in your favourite RSS application to be updated of new TWIFs when they come up.

You are welcome to join the TWIF forum thread. If you have any news from the community, post it there, maybe it will be featured next week 😉

To help support F-Droid, please check out the donation page and contribute what you can.

06:00 AM

The troll button [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

There have always been trolls. Hecklers, jesters, and class clowns. The troll lives under the bridge and invents nonsense grievances in order to get attention.

But, until recently, there wasn’t much of a business model to support this career choice. It’s said that William Randolph Hearst started a war to sell newspapers, but few people owned newspapers…

Social media changes this. Algorithms can be gamed for attention. People who are willing to tear down others for fame and short-term gain can leverage their selfish actions, create clicks, and get paid for it. They stage a car crash and turn our rubbernecking attention into cash.

To make it worse, it compounds. Trolls have to outtroll each other to keep the attention coming.

Professional wrestling is a choice, but no one insisted we all watch it.

The solution is right in front of us, and won’t require many people to implement. Give us a troll button and set the default to opt-out. Deplatform the trolls, except for those who want to engage with them.

It’s not obvious how to rank and rate what qualifies as trolling, but I’m sure the algorithm wizards can figure that out. If the companies push back, they ought to be willing to acknowledge that trolling is a profit center for them, and they’re willing to trade our peace of mind and cohesion for a few bucks.

Your social media scroll might get a bit less amusing, but the upside is that the world we live in will get better. And so will your day.

When we change the incentives for people seeking attention, their actions will change as well.

You can’t go into a bank with a mask on and expect to be treated as a valued customer. We get the culture we reward.

      

Pluralistic: Shareholder supremacy and the precog CEO (13 Jun 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



A fake cover for CEO magazine. The central figure is a ZOLTAR fortune-telling animatronic, seated before various divination tools. The headline over him is FIDUCIARY DUTY. In the top right corner, there's a slug reading 'UNIVERSAL EXCUSE: A bright line test that's also *totally* unfalsifiable.' To Zoltar's left is another slug reading, 'FRIEDMAN SAID IT: I believe it. That's good enough for me.'

Shareholder supremacy and the precog CEO (permalink)

It's been 55 years since Milton Friedman – cursed be his name – published his NYT editorial, "The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits," in which he invented the idea of shareholder supremacy out of whole cloth and declared it to be a universal, freestanding, inarguable truth:

https://www.nytimes.com/1970/09/13/archives/a-friedman-doctrine-the-social-responsibility-of-business-is-to.html

Friedman's editorial railed against the idea of "corporate social responsibility," arguing that corporate managers should confine the exercise of their consciences to projects involving their own money and resources. At work, managers must harden their bleeding hearts and do nothing except increase the returns to their shareholders.

Friedman wasn't merely arguing that this would give rise to better companies – the crux of his argument was that by adopting this "fiduciary duty" standard, it would be easy to determine whether a company was being well-managed or run into the ground:

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

Friedman argued that "being a good person" was a squishy, undefinable standard that could never be objectively measured. But "maximizing shareholder value" was a crisp, bright-line test that could be readily evaluated by any reasonable person. "Did this manager make as much money as possible for the company's owners?" feels like the kind of question we can all agree on, while, "Did this manager behave in an ethical way?" is much harder to answer.

But even a few moments' thoughts reveal the flaw in this line of reasoning. We can all agree whether a manager made money for the shareholders – but how can we know whether the manager made as much money as possible?

Think about how much "corporate social responsibility" cashes out to performative and insincere nonsense and/or cynical marketing. Target didn't stock Pride merch because they love their LGBTQ friends. They stocked it because they thought they could sell it (same goes for BP marketing its "green" gasoline). Google supports its coders' environmental/queer/antipoverty efforts because being the "don't be evil" company lets you hire in-demand workers who might otherwise go to work for Meta, and every engineer a Silicon Valley firm hires adds an average of $1m to the company's annual bottom line.

Further: it would be absurd to hold managers to the "make as much money as possible" standard in a competitive market, because in that market, there will always be a company that comes in second. If "as much money as possible" is the standard and you're Chairman of the Board of the number two company, with $10b in profit, while the number one pulled in $11b, "as much money as possible" demands that you fire the C-suite immediately, since they objectively could have done 10% better.

So the real standard isn't "make as much money as possible," it's "try to make as much money as possible." And here again, there's no objective way to evaluate managerial performance. Target made a lot of money by selling Pride merch…until they didn't. Do we fire the Target C-suite because they failed to anticipate that 2024 would mark America's transition into the chuddocene, an era in which selling Pride tchotchkes makes you cucked and soy and, you know, gay?

Whether it's "make as much money as possible" or "try to make as much money as possible*," shareholder supremacy can only be evaluated with the aid of a crystal ball…or a time machine.

Which raises a question: what made this nonsensical shareholder supremacy standard so damned attractive to corporate leaders?

Well, what if the ambiguity of shareholder supremacy was a feature and not a bug? What if the function of shareholder supremacy was to absolve the cruelest people for indulging their most sociopathic instincts? What if this "bright line test" was actually a universal excuse, an all-purpose accountability sink that could be used to justify any cruelty or cowardice? "Why didn't I fire my college buddy when I found out that he was sexually abusing his colleagues? Well, he was the best salesman on the team, and I have an obligation to my shareholders. Sorry, my hands were tied."

In other words: Don't get mad at me.

Get mad at Milton Friedman.


Hey look at this (permalink)



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

Object permanence (permalink)

#20yrsago Microsoft gets Linux geeks evicted from convention center https://web.archive.org/web/20010619154332/http://www.newsforge.com/article.pl?sid=01/06/01/1540231

#20yrsago Stanford prof sues James Joyce estate for right to study Joyce https://web.archive.org/web/20060615203517/http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060613/ap_on_en_ot/james_joyce_lawsuit

#20yrsago Inside China’s iPod sweat-shops https://web.archive.org/web/20060616173514/http://www.macworld.co.uk/news/index.cfm?RSS&NewsID=14915

#15yrsago Terry Pratchett initiates assisted suicide process https://web.archive.org/web/20110614215922/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/8571142/Sir-Terry-Pratchett-begins-process-that-could-lead-to-assisted-suicide.html

#15yrsago Lego-making machine made of Lego https://www.eurobricks.com/forum/forums/topic/56346-review-moulding-machine-4000001-lego-insider-tour-exclusive/

#10yrsago It’s getting harder and harder to use gag clauses to silence laid off workers in America https://web.archive.org/web/20160611202305/https://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/12/us/laid-off-americans-required-to-zip-lips-on-way-out-grow-bolder.html

#5yrsago The ACCESS Act https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/12/access-act/#interop


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

  • "The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, June 2026 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374621568/thereversecentaursguidetolifeafterai/)

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

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

  • "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Third draft completed. Submitted to editor.

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Quotations and images are not included in this license; they are included either under a limitation or exception to copyright, or on the basis of a separate license. Please exercise caution.


How to get Pluralistic:

Blog (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

Pluralistic.net

Newsletter (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

https://pluralistic.net/plura-list

Mastodon (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic

Bluesky (no ads, possible tracking and data-collection):

https://bsky.app/profile/doctorow.pluralistic.net

Medium (no ads, paywalled):

https://doctorow.medium.com/

Tumblr (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising):

https://mostlysignssomeportents.tumblr.com/tagged/pluralistic

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

READ CAREFULLY: By reading this, you agree, on behalf of your employer, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all NON-NEGOTIATED agreements, licenses, terms-of-service, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, browsewrap, confidentiality, non-disclosure, non-compete and acceptable use policies ("BOGUS AGREEMENTS") that I have entered into with your employer, its partners, licensors, agents and assigns, in perpetuity, without prejudice to my ongoing rights and privileges. You further represent that you have the authority to release me from any BOGUS AGREEMENTS on behalf of your employer.

ISSN: 3066-764X

Just for Skeets and Giggles (6.13.26) [The Status Kuo]

The week got off to a rough start for the president, who cut short his interview with Kristen Welker, threw his mic to the ground and stepped on it, and stormed off the set. Jimmy Kimmel had footage of the moment.

Image.heic

Note: Xcancel links mirror Twitter without sending traffic. Some GIFs may load; just swipe them down. Issues? Click the gear on the Xcancel page’s upper right, select “proxy video streaming through the server,” then “save preferences” at the bottom. For sanity, don’t read the comments; they’re all bots and trolls. Won’t load? Paste the link into your browser and remove “cancel” after the X in the URL.

Here’s what most of the country saw during that moment.

Image.heic

Unable to let anything be about anyone else, Trump decided to attend Game 3 of the NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Jimmy Fallon had some thoughts.

Image.heic

Jimmy Kimmel also weighed in with some mighty burns.

Image.heic

Trump’s presence caused significant disruption to the event and killed the Knicks’ mojo, as they lost for the first time in more than 40 days.

Image.heic

And then the president fell asleep at the tensest moment of the game. Dozing off in public is now becoming a regular thing for him.

Image.heic

It often happens when someone else is speaking. A new nickname was born:

Image.heic

Trump now sometimes goes days without anyone seeing him, leading to much speculation.

Image.heic

As California continued to count mail-in ballots and verify millions of voters’ signatures, it became clear that Republican Spencer Pratt, a reality TV personality, would not place in the top two in the LA mayor’s race. And that set Trump off.

Image.heic

With everything going on, people began wondering if we would forget about the Epstein files. And then the NYT dropped a bombshell report about how the cover-up went down inside the White House. The cover-up scandal got a new name too:

Image.heic

At least Trump didn’t plan to show up at Game 4 (lots of content on that amazing game below), and Jimmy Fallon hoped to keep it that way.

Image.heic

The big vulgar UFC stage is set up to host a fight in honor of Trump’s 80th birthday. Borowitz again with the best take:

Image.heic

They even made a “commemorative coin” for the event. The Daily Show ripped into that idea.

Image.heic

This shifted quickly and quite perfectly.

Image.heic

Thousands tuned in to watch workers take down Trump's name from the Kennedy Center by court order. Even though workers draped tarps to keep the public from seeing the letters come down, the heavens offered up their view.

Image.heic

Pete Hegseth is either getting punked by his media team, or he really is just this lame.

Image.heic

In happy news, Tuesday’s primary in South Carolina gave us a real gift. Rep. Sarah McBride (D-DE) summed it up for us.

Image.heic

Hard not to notice the irony of that fifth place finish.

Image.heic

The Onion for the finishing blow.

Image.heic

Some heroes gathered to leave the White House their message on the National Mall.

They are eager to get to the bottom of who’s responsible, but it could get awkward.

Image.heic

And this moment was the icing on a week of political cake.

Image.heic

If you enjoy my writing and want to support it, this is a great time to become a paid supporter. Your contribution makes it possible to keep this newsletter free to those on disability or fixed income. Thanks to all who have chipped in to help!

Subscribe now

It is already a hot summer, and our little friends need to cool off too.

Image.heic

My nephew’s big dog, Ginkgo, who is sharing a house with my little corgi, Windsor, also recently pulled this particular move.

Image.heic

Only in Australia.

Image.heic

I think it’s the soundtrack that makes this perfect. Sound up!

Image.heic

I long for the day my fur babies, Windsor and Shade, are this way. It may never come.

Image.heic

There are just some days, right?

Image.heic

When the cameras roll, the cats patrol.

Image.heic

This wins for cutest moment on video this week.

Image.heic

In fairness to the octopus, we don’t know what the fish may have done or said to it.

Image.heic

If you are a basketball fan, or a New Yorker, you couldn't have missed the biggest news this week. After Trump ruined Game 3 by showing up and poisoning the vibe, people were burning sage to get back the mojo. And boy, did it work! As The Daily Show put it,

Image.heic

It’s hard not to smile ear to ear (unless you’re a Spurs fan). So this next section, if you’ll indulge me, is for sharing the joy and excitement.

The Knicks came back from a 29-point deficit to win with seconds to go, with a game-winning move from OG Anunoby.

Image.heic

My favorite thing is watching the fan reactions.

Image.heic

.The Spurs had a chance to claw back the win, but watch what happened: KAT got a hand on it!

Image.heic

The entire city of New York went crazy when the Knicks went up after being down all game.

Image.heic

The whole world, in fact, was left agape.

Image.heic

If you wanna see how the last part of the game went, and how they came back from way behind to win the game, here’s a compilation. It’s worth it just to hear the crowd begin to believe!

Image.heic

How that last quarter felt:

Image.heic

To have this happen, under a mayor who is widely adored and has brought the city together like never before, has made us all believers.

Image.heic

With Game 5 on everyone’s mind, we had to go back and find this street poet, who famously declared, “My Mayor is Muslim, My bagel is Jewish, My Christian’s Dior! Knicks in Four!”

Image.heic

Let’s hear from more stunned, happy fans:

Image.heic

And from all around the City:

Image.heic

People were so happy they even started cheering random things.

Image.heic

There were some memorable crowd moments.

Image.heic

Do not do this in a crowd, but man, what are the chances?

Image.heic

This move was admittedly less impressive, but it still made me laugh out loud.

Image.heic

Speaking of impressive, here’s a cautionary PSA about too much plastic surgery. So good.

Image.heic

Give this guy a medal.

Image.png

Meanwhile, over in Asian America,

Image.heic

And I am this woman lately.

Image.heic

This did not at all go as expected, which made it so good. Also, this would be me.

Image.heic

I never considered this, but now that I am a driver again, I may have to start doing this.

Image.heic

Dad joke time, British version.

Image.heic

Okay, just one more.

Image.heic

Have a great weekend!

Jay

05:00 AM

Saturday 2026-06-13

06:00 PM

Pluralistic: Google's new remote attestation scheme is every bit as terrible as its old remote attestation scheme (12 Jun 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



A pig in a sty. It is wearing badly applied lipstick. From behind one hairy ear pokes the Android droid.

Google's new remote attestation scheme is every bit as terrible as its old remote attestation scheme (permalink)

Long before "agentic AI," we had the idea that software would act as your agent on the internet. That's why the old-fashioned technical term for a browser is a "user agent." Your browser acts on your behalf to retrieve information and then show it to you, in the format you choose. It's your agent:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/07/treacherous-computing/#rewilding-the-internet

This is a powerful and profound idea. It is because browsers are our "agents" that we expect them to accept our directives, say, by blocking pop-ups, or by turning off autoplay sound, or by blocking commercial surveillance trackers:

https://privacybadger.org/

Your browser does all that because your browser works for you. The reason your browser can work for you is that the web is an open, standardized technology. In theory, anyone who follows the standards published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) can make a browser, and that web browser can connect to any web server. Browsers and servers are interoperable. It's the same force that means you can put anyone's gas in your gas-tank, or anyone's shoelaces in your shoes, or anyone's milk on your cereal.

But what if manufacturers could dictate those choices to you? What if your light socket refused to use a lightbulb unless it was officially blessed by the socket's manufacturer? What if your dishwasher refused to wash your dishes unless you bought them from one of the manufacturer's "dish partners"? What if your toaster refused to toast "unauthorized bread"?

https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2020/01/unauthorized-bread-a-near-future-tale-of-refugees-and-sinister-iot-appliances/

It's hard to see how a company could win its market with this strategy. After all, if the dishes are really better than the competition's, you'd buy them voluntarily, without any need for law or technology to force the matter. The only reason to make a dishwasher that refuses a rival's dishes is if the manufacturer's own dishes are ugly, expensive, and/or badly made.

But once a company owns the market – once they've achieved dominance by buying out their rivals; by bribing potential competitors to stay out of their lane; and by engaging in deceptive conduct to trap key suppliers and customers – they could cement their dominance by blocking interoperability, keeping out rival dishes, milk, gas, lightbulbs, shoelaces and bread, capturing their whole market and squeezing it.

That's what Google has done, and that's what Google wants to do more of. Google's commercial behavior has been so unethical, deceptive and abusive that the company just lost three federal antitrust cases:

https://www.bigtechontrial.com/p/google-loses-the-adtech-monopolization

This thrice-convicted monopolist bribed Apple – more than $20b/year – to stay out of the search market:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/02/how-do-you-solve-problem-google-search-courts-must-enable-competition-while

They cheated app vendors, ripping them off with sky-high junk fees and onerous conditions that raised prices while lowering the share of your spending that went to the companies whose products you were paying for:

https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/boom-google-loses-antitrust-case

They cheated advertisers, rigging the ad market to gouge businesses on ad prices and underinvesting to fight rampant ad-fraud, sucking hundreds of billions out of the productive economy for overpriced ads that no one saw:

https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/department-justice-prevails-landmark-antitrust-case-against-google

Google wasn't always this way. The "don't be evil" company owes its very existence to the open web ecosystem. When the company started to index the web in 1998, it was playing on an open field, where any web server could talk to any "user agent," even one whose user was a startup like Google, that was making a copy of every page on the server.

For years, Google thrived on the open web, and built open technologies. Android – the mobile operating system that Google bought in 2005 – was presented as an "open" alternative to existing mobile offerings, and as the mobile market collapsed into two companies – Google and Apple – Google always presented Android as the open alternative to Apple's "walled garden."

There were always ways in which Google's "open" Android wasn't exactly open. The company engaged in illegal "tying" arrangements that forced hardware vendors and carriers to lock out versions of Android that were created by Google's competitors:

https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_18_4581

In other words, even though Google offered a mobile platform that was (mostly) technically open, they used commercial and legal strategies to choke off the market oxygen for alternative Android versions that tried to capitalize on that technical openness.

But life finds a way. The existence of an open, modifiable, tinkerer-friendly mobile operating system meant Android hackers could create alternatives to Google's (de facto) walled garden, which thrived in the cracks in that garden wall. Operating systems like CalyxOS, PureOS and Graphene offered a more private, more secure Android experience, one that was largely "de-Googled," blocking Google's relentless acquisition of your private data:

https://grapheneos.org/

And Google's data-hunger is relentless. Android exfiltrates a chunk of your personal and behavioral data every five minutes. The "resting heartbeat" of Android surveillance pulses and pulses, irrespective of whether you're using your device, and the instant you unlock your screen, that heartbeat quickens, sending even more data to the company:

https://digitalcontentnext.org/blog/2018/08/21/google-data-collection-research/

All that data has proved irresistible to authoritarian governments. Donald Trump's enforcers have seized on Google data as a vital source of information about the identity of protesters and the location of migrants hunted by ICE:

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/04/google-broke-its-promise-me-now-ice-has-my-data

So there are plenty of reasons why users would seek out these de-Googled alternatives to Android, finding them in spite of Google's illegal commercial tactics to block access to competing technologies. The worse it got, the better those alternatives looked.

Perhaps this explains Google's years-long effort to increase the technical barriers to using modified versions of Android, beefing these up to match the commercial restrictions that stand in the way of a de-Googled existence.

Back in 2023, Google floated the idea of "Web Environment Integrity" (WEI), a set of modifications to web standards that would force your computer to disclose its operating environment to the web servers it connected to, even if you objected to this disclosure:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/08/02/self-incrimination/#wei-bai-bai

WEI was a form of "remote attestation." That's when your device uses a sub-processor (sometimes called a "Technical Protection Module" or "TPM") or a walled off part of its main processor (sometimes called a "secure enclave") to produce a cryptographically signed description of your device and its configuration: which hardware, software, plug-ins and settings you're running.

When you connect to a server, it demands that your device send this "attestation" before it handles your request. If your device won't provide this data, or if the server doesn't like (or recognize) your device and its details, it can refuse to deal with you. And because the attestation is prepared by a TPM or a secure enclave that you can't modify or override, you don't get to decide which facts about your device it's allowed to see.

Practically speaking, this means that remote attestation lets a server refuse to deal with you until you turn off your ad-blocker and your tracker-blocker. It means that the server can discriminate against users who block auto-play sound and video, who block pop-ups, who put the tab in the background when it's playing a mandatory pre-roll ad.

WEI was especially disturbing in light of Google's efforts to kill ad-blockers and privacy blockers through updates to Chrome, an effort that continues to this day:

https://protonprivacy.substack.com/p/google-is-finally-killing-ublock

These blockers are an important part of the dynamic between web publishers and their users. In the real world, when you get an offer, you can make a counter-offer. That's all an ad-blocker is: a way for users to respond to a server whose opening bid is, "How about you give me all your data and let me take over your computer in exchange for showing you this page?" with "How about 'Nah?'"

https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2019/07/adblocking-how-about-nah

We didn't get rid of pop-up ads by making them illegal, or by boycotting advertisers who used them. We got rid of pop-up ads when web users installed pop-up blockers, which made pop-up ads pointless. Take away our ability to block obnoxious digital content and you guarantee that we will be flooded with it.

These kinds of modifications aren't just used to block ads – they're also key to accessibility. People who have photosensitive epilepsy or who (like me) suffer from low-contrast vision problems use add-ons to reformat pages so that we can safely and legibly access them.

WEI's creators said they were only trying to put the web on a level playing field with apps, which routinely rat you out to the companies you connect to. Apps are a source of bottomless enshittification, not least because (unlike the web), they enjoy special, dangerous legal protections that make it very legally risky to modify them:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/07/31/unsatisfying-answers/#systemic-problems

WEI wasn't an effort to level the playing field between apps and the web – it was a race to the bottom, an attempt to make the web as enshittogenic as the app hellscape.

Public outrage to WEI killed the project, but Google's commitment to augmenting its illegal commercial lockdown efforts with technical lockdowns never ended. Now, Google has rolled out an experimental "reCAPTCHA Mobile Verification" that uses an app, your camera, and your device's TPM or secure enclave to produce an attestation about your Android device:

https://support.google.com/recaptcha/answer/16609652

This will make it much easier for the apps and other services you interact with to block your device if you run an Android alternative, or if you install a mod that overrides the actions of Google's stock Android:

https://www.reddit.com/r/PrivacySecurityOSINT/comments/1tbdjbj/privacy_concerns_around_googles_recaptcha_mobile/

This is a terrible idea – it's every bit as bad as WEI was. In an age in which Big Tech is ever-more tied to authoritarian governments, redesigning our devices to tell strangers things we don't want them to know isn't just shortsighted, it's inexcusable.


Hey look at this (permalink)



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

Object permanence (permalink)

#20yrsago Images from anti-DRM protest at the San Fran Apple Store https://www.flickr.com/photos/quinn/tags/drmprotest/

#15yrsago Reasons people were arrested at the Toronto G20 https://memex.craphound.com/2011/06/11/reasons-people-were-arrested-at-the-toronto-g20/

#15yrsago Paul Krugman: Rule by rentiers favors billionaires, Chinese bond-holders over jobs and homeowners https://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/10/opinion/10krugman.html?_r=1

#15yrsago Ontario publicly funded Catholic school bans rainbows, appropriates student donations for LGBT cause and gives them to Catholic charity https://web.archive.org/web/20110610125236/https://www.xtra.ca/public/Toronto/Rainbows_banned_at_Mississauga_Catholic_school-10262.aspx

#10yrsago How to be less wrong about the First Amendment https://web.archive.org/web/20160611221927/https://popehat.com/2016/06/11/hello-youve-been-referred-here-because-youre-wrong-about-the-first-amendment/

#10yrsago Mounties used Stingrays to secretly surveil millions of Canadians for years https://web.archive.org/web/20160610182607/https://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-rcmp-surveilled-thousands-of-innocent-canadians-for-a-decade

#5yrsago Privacy Without Monopoly, EU edition https://pluralistic.net/2021/06/11/technological-self-determination/#dma


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

  • "The Reverse-Centaur's Guide to AI," a short book about being a better AI critic, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, June 2026 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374621568/thereversecentaursguidetolifeafterai/)

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

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

  • "Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Third draft completed. Submitted to editor.

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Quotations and images are not included in this license; they are included either under a limitation or exception to copyright, or on the basis of a separate license. Please exercise caution.


How to get Pluralistic:

Blog (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

Pluralistic.net

Newsletter (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

https://pluralistic.net/plura-list

Mastodon (no ads, tracking, or data-collection):

https://mamot.fr/@pluralistic

Bluesky (no ads, possible tracking and data-collection):

https://bsky.app/profile/doctorow.pluralistic.net

Medium (no ads, paywalled):

https://doctorow.medium.com/

Tumblr (mass-scale, unrestricted, third-party surveillance and advertising):

https://mostlysignssomeportents.tumblr.com/tagged/pluralistic

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

READ CAREFULLY: By reading this, you agree, on behalf of your employer, to release me from all obligations and waivers arising from any and all NON-NEGOTIATED agreements, licenses, terms-of-service, shrinkwrap, clickwrap, browsewrap, confidentiality, non-disclosure, non-compete and acceptable use policies ("BOGUS AGREEMENTS") that I have entered into with your employer, its partners, licensors, agents and assigns, in perpetuity, without prejudice to my ongoing rights and privileges. You further represent that you have the authority to release me from any BOGUS AGREEMENTS on behalf of your employer.

ISSN: 3066-764X

05:00 PM

Married Couple Behind ‘Billion-Visit’ Webtoon Piracy Network Caught in Vietnam [TorrentFreak]

hari logoKorea’s Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism rarely names the pirate sites it helps shut down, and its June 12 announcement was no exception.

It redacted the three high-profile target domains as “Hari***,” “Manhwa***” and “Kun***.”

These match the names of three well-known manhwa aggregators: Harimanga, Manhwaclan and Kunmanga, all of which started having access problems in late May, right when Vietnamese police seized their servers.

Initially it wasn’t clear why the sites suddenly went offline, but the authorities confirmed that this was the result of a large enforcement operation that has been in the works for a long time.

The three sites have reportedly been operated by a Vietnamese couple since January 2023, serving unauthorized English translations of Korean webtoons to readers across Asia, North America and Europe, while paying the bills with banner ads and member donations.

The sites carried around 14,700 titles, about 70 percent of them Korean, and pulled in more than 1.1 billion visits a year by SimilarWeb’s count. Industry estimates put the damage to Korea’s content business at 207.2 billion won, roughly $136 million.

One Operation, Three Sites

Naver Webtoon, which did much of the early legwork, says a single operation ran all three portals, and it had been chasing these exact domains for years. We can independently confirm the latter, as Harimanga, Manhwaclan and Kunmanga all appear by name in a 2023 DMCA subpoena Naver sent to Cloudflare.

Kunmanga, when it was still online

kunmanga

This time, the company mapped the network with open-source intelligence and handed the evidence to Korean officials, who passed it to Vietnamese authorities.

Vietnamese police questioned the couple on May 19 and seized the servers three days later. Prosecutors plan to charge them locally, with Korea’s copyright agency and Naver helping on the paperwork. Korea has also suggested extraditing the couple for trial and recovering their earnings, though that is a hope more than a plan.

A Broader Crackdown

The takedown did not arrive alone. Around the same time, Korea announced the extradition of a 37-year-old man suspected of running Newtoki, which is described as the country’s most notorious manga and webtoon pirate site.

The man reportedly left Korea in 2017 and took Japanese citizenship in 2022, which normally puts a person out of reach. Officials say it is the first time Japan has handed one of its own nationals to Korea under a treaty the two signed in 2002.

The Korean piracy crackdown coincides with a new emergency blocking power, which has been live since May 11. This enables the government to order internet providers to block pirate sites without first clearing it with a review committee. The ministry blocked 34 sites on day one.

Newtoki and its sister sites shut themselves down on April 27, just before the power took effect.

On Washington’s Watchlist

There is also a bigger backdrop in Hanoi. In May, the U.S. Trade Representative branded Vietnam a “Priority Foreign Country” over online piracy, its harshest label and the first in thirteen years, then opened a Section 301 investigation that put tariffs on the table.

Washington’s complaint is that Vietnam rarely makes piracy hurt. Even in its biggest cases, against the operators of Fmovies and BestBuyIPTV, courts handed down suspended sentences and small fines with little deterrent effect.

This Korea-driven case now tests exactly that. Police seized the servers and pulled the couple in for questioning, firmer than the usual response. Whether that will continue has yet to be seen.

For now, Harimanga, Manhwaclan and Kunmanga are unlikely to come back in their original form. That said, sites like these have a habit of returning under new names, and at the time of writing, several clones remain online.

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

03:00 PM

American Diabetes Association Fucked Up Real Bad Trying To Placate Trump Administration [Techdirt]

As we near the halfway point in the second Trump presidential term, there’s something that is worth remembering: Donald Trump, like most nasty viruses, is a temporary condition. Trumpism may not be, though I have my doubts as to how long a cult of personality can survive without that specific personality leading the cult. But Donald Trump as president will come to an end in the not too distant future.

The millions and millions of people who have been negatively impacted by him and by those who have decided to bow at his cultish altar, are not temporary. They are not going to go away. And they will remember the actions of many during this time.

And I imagine the American Diabetes Association, and specifically those currently leading it, will be in the memories of its members and many others for a long, long time. It’s been nearly a week since the ADA had five diabetes scientists, including its own former president, involuntarily removed from outside the ADA’s annual conference by police. Their crime? Distributing a copy of an editorial from the April edition of the ADA’s own journal.

The scientists were distributing the editorial outside the conference’s opening speech, which was originally scheduled to be given by Jay Bhattacharya, head of the National Institutes of Health under Trump. Bhattacharya canceled at the last minute, and senior NIH official Rick Woychik took his place.

Within minutes of beginning to hand out the editorial, police reportedly escorted the scientists out of the conference, which was held in New Orleans. The police reportedly shoved at least one scientist, took all of their conference badges, and threatened to arrest them if they tried to return. Louisiana State Police later told media that they acted at the request of the ADA. The ADA subsequently barred the five scientists from the rest of the conference.

The editorial just so happened to be very critical of the Trump administration and RFK Jr.’s funding at NIH and other health agencies and groups. It’s quite obvious that the ADA feared repercussions from the Trump administration if it wouldn’t allow these scientists to hand the article out while members of the administration were speaking and tried to use the police to silence them. And then, when this whole thing went viral, the ADA offered up justifications for its actions. Justifications that kept changing, as it turns out.

In an email to ADA members Saturday, the association said the scientists were removed because they didn’t have prior approval to distribute material at the conference and that it was “not because of the viewpoints expressed in those materials,” according to reporting from Science.

In a statement Sunday, the organization, which is a nonprofit, said it removed the scientists because it was complying with federal regulations for 501(c)(3) nonprofits, which requires “maintaining a strictly nonpartisan environment at all organizational events and functions while engaging across party affiliations to advance our mission.” However, the federal regulations do not restrict leaders of organizations from sharing political views in a personal capacity or from speaking on important public policy issues.

And from there, the Streisand Effect took over. The editorial, which you can find right here, went somewhat viral itself, getting a ton more attention than it had to date. But the real backlash came from the public and from within the medical community itself. There have been resignations in protest of the ADA’s actions. An open letter to the ADA signed by 40 members was written to torch leadership’s actions and treatment of the scientists at the conference. Another open letter was also written, likewise demanding an apology.

And, finally, the ADA did in fact apologize days later.

In the video Wednesday, ADA CEO Charles Henderson personally apologized to the five scientists, including Aaron Kelly, pediatrics professor at the University of Minnesota; Justin Ryder of Northwestern University; and Irl Hirsch, also of the University of Washington, in addition to Kahn and Schatz.

“What transpired is not reflective of who I am, the values I hold, or the way I was raised,” Henderson said. “I will work hard to bring our community back together to build on the progress we have collectively made for those affected by diabetes.”

In addition to apologizing to the five ejected scientists, Henderson apologized to the community as a whole, saying that the ADA would commission a “thorough independent review of the events that occurred as well as the policies, procedures, and decision-making process that guided our actions.”

Yeah, no, not good enough. The fish stinks from the head down, as the saying goes, and there have been days worth of attempts to make this stupidity anyone’s fault but leadership at the ADA. This was a clear attempt to lick the Trump administration’s boots, at the very moment when clear leadership from medical groups is so sorely needed, and that’s a bell that cannot be un-rung.

Henderson needs to go. And I have little doubt that he will before too long. Trump and RFK Jr. will eventually be gone, as well.

But we won’t forget how groups like the ADA, and the people leading them, acted during this time.

11:00 AM

And Now Basically Everyone In This LEGO Dispute Looks Sketchy [Techdirt]

A couple weeks ago I wrote 6,000 words about the Reckless Ben/Bricks & Minifigs LEGO mess and concluded that pretty much everyone involved had made serious mistakes — with the Utah contingent (Bricks & Minifigs corporate, Joshua Johnson, Brandon Best, and the American Fork police) looking the worst of all. That take upset basically everyone: some felt I was too hard on Reckless Ben, some felt I was too easy on the American Fork police, and probably a few people just resented spending that much time reading about legos. Since then, a lot more has come out, and the situation has only gotten murkier. My original read still holds up, but the Utah folks look even worse, and some of the other players are looking sketchier too.

And, I think it’s fair to say, mistakes were made by pretty much everyone involved.

Just as before, many of the new details are in long YouTube videos, but if you want watch just one, start with this one by Stephen Findeisen, who is better known as Coffeezilla and who regularly researches financial and cryptocurrency scams:

That video goes deep — Findeisen gets basically everyone on the phone at some point or another (except the cops), accesses a ton of evidence not previously public, and, unlike most of the earlier YouTube coverage, actually tries to find the truth instead of just stoking outrage.

He makes a few points that are hard to argue with:

  • The Lego collection was never actually worth $200k (we had suggested this in our initial post as well). It was probably closer to $100k (and possibly a bit less).
  • Some of it was definitely sold before all this, but much of it had not been.
  • Plenty of it clearly remained in the store after Brandon Best showed up the night in November 2024 to kick out Law and take over the store.
  • Best also showed up with a U-Haul truck, and there are some (slightly conflicting) reports that he subsequently appeared at his other Oregon Bricks & Minifigs store with a bunch of Star Wars Lego sets. Bricks & Minifigs corporate initially insisted this was false and said he showed up in a rental car. But Coffeezilla has visual proof of a U-Haul parked outside that night, which is pretty damning, which led Bricks & Minifigs to revise their story with a complicated one about hauling a camper trailer, which doesn’t make that much sense.
  • Coffeezilla dropped this thread, in part because of a disagreement over the timeline, though it’s not clear to me that the timeline doesn’t really line up. It seems entirely possible that Best could have taken a bunch of legos out of the Gormans’ old store and taken them to his other store and then returned the U-Haul truck.
  • Law & Gorman appear to have sold some of Mansell’s collection and not paid him for that, and it could be a lot of money. Law admits that she may have been a bit sloppy on the record keeping, saying she hadn’t done an inventory in a while and suggesting employees maybe hadn’t told her when certain sets from the collection were sold. But there’s also a credibility problem regarding sets that were listed as being on layaway, but where the spreadsheet suggests they were actually sold, but not accounted for as sold.
  • To her credit, she admits it’s possible she owes Mansell some money and that if she can see evidence of this she will make sure that Mansell is paid what he is owed. But given how quick the Gormans were to insist this was entirely Bricks & Minifigs corporate who were the problem, it’s not a good look.
  • Bricks & Minifigs corporate claims that there were about $5k worth of Star Wars legos left. That appears to be bullshit and wouldn’t really help their case, because even if it was just $5k of Mansell’s legos, those are still stolen legos.
  • Bricks & Minifigs’ CEO and COO (the McNeff brothers) claim that they never were sent a spreadsheet of the collections, and the best moment in the video is when Coffeezilla points out that the Google Docs spreadsheet he’s been using is owned by their account and has been sitting there since 2024. That really makes the McNeffs look sketchy.

That video also includes dueling photographic and videographic evidence of what was in the store the night Best kicked the Gormans out (as well as a few weeks earlier when Best apparently surreptitiously filmed inside the store to see what was there). There are way more empty shelves the night Best kicked out Law & Gorman, but they say that’s because they had moved the high value consignment items to the safes they had purchased for that purpose, which were in the back. Later in the video Coffeezilla shows the McNeffs additional images from Law that appear to show Star Wars lego sets in what appears to be a safe, and which Matt McNeff (the company’s COO) admits they don’t appear to have listed in their own spreadsheet, which they had originally said was a complete listing of all the Star Wars legos in the store the night they took it over.

The McNeffs still look terrible, and Brandon Best also looks a bit sketchy. But it also appears that Law & Gorman’s record keeping was pretty sketchy as well, and while the McNeffs have gone overboard in claiming that they were responsible for Mansell’s “missing” legos, it does appear likely that Law owes Mansell for a decent number of Star Wars legos her store sold.

As for the American Fork Police department and Brandon Best’s partner, Joshua Johnson, we need a different video, this one from Legal Eagle. It breaks down just how many things they did wrong:

There were a lot of assumptions made about the police department, particularly around how they redacted the footage they released to Schneider. There was plenty of smoke, but no actual fire. As it turns out, beyond possibly being corrupt, the American Fork Police Department might also just be incompetent: they accidentally uploaded all the unredacted bodycam footage, which is now available on the Internet Archive.

Schneider initially claimed a hacker obtained the videos, which raised some questions about provenance. Once the department itself admitted the release was accidental, that question went away — and what’s in the footage is pretty hard to explain away. The police were way too credulous with Johnson. The “refusing to accept service” situation alone is maddening: Johnson claims the lawsuits are fake, the officer calls the court and confirms they’re real, and then… still lets Johnson refuse service. Beyond that, there are the extended traffic stops on no real probable cause, and the arrests on a search warrant instead of an arrest warrant — and they didn’t even find what they were looking for. Legal Eagle walks through all of it, and it’s a long list of failures.

Schneider is a more complicated case. He’s clearly one of the good guys here, and the attention he generated did move the needle when nothing else was. But some of his own claims haven’t held up. He never independently verified the value of the collection — and in the Coffeezilla video, he appears genuinely surprised it’s nowhere near $200k, which is a bad look for someone who made that figure central to his coverage. The small claims court situation is worse: Schneider said Johnson and Best had defaulted on those cases, but they were basically all dismissed for being filed against the wrong defendants, or never properly served. In a followup video, Reckless Ben admits he thought he’d won by default simply because he and his friends filed for default. Which goes back to the original point: talk to a lawyer, even just for an hour.

The Mexico situation is its own category of self-inflicted damage. In multiple videos he’s mentioned that after facing criminal charges he had fled to Mexico and joked about how Utah law enforcement can’t reach him there. Whether or not he actually left the country, publicly bragging about being a flight risk while facing criminal charges is exactly the kind of thing that hands prosecutors an easy argument. He has real defenses available to him. This doesn’t help.

And then there’s Law & Gorman, who aren’t villains, but they aren’t blameless either. It appears Law owes Mansell for a fair number of sets her store sold without paying him out — and the record-keeping problems aren’t fully explained by sloppy bookkeeping. The layaway-versus-sold discrepancy in the spreadsheet is a credibility problem, not just an accounting one. To her credit, Law has said she’ll make it right if shown the evidence. But the Gormans were also quick to frame this entire situation as purely a Bricks & Minifigs corporate problem, and that framing looks increasingly incomplete.

Every side of this story is a disaster. We’ve got a corporation willing to say anything to save face, a police department that accidentally leaked its own bad behavior, franchise owners who likely shortchanged their client, and a YouTuber whose good intentions were undercut by bad execution. About the only thing missing is anyone who actually handled this well.

Kanji of the Day: 母 [Kanji of the Day]

✍5

小2

mother

はは も

母親   (ははおや)   —   mother
お母さん   (おかあさん)   —   mother
義母   (ぎぼ)   —   mother-in-law
お母様   (おかあさま)   —   mother
祖母   (うば)   —   grandmother
母さん   (かあさん)   —   mother
母乳   (ぼにゅう)   —   mother's milk
実母   (じつぼ)   —   one's real mother
母子   (おやこ)   —   mother and child
祖父母   (そふぼ)   —   grandparents

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 踪 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

remains, clue, footprint

ソウ ショウ

あと

失踪   (しっそう)   —   disappearance
失踪宣告   (しっそうせんこく)   —   court decision declaring a missing person legally dead

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

08:00 AM

07:00 AM

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for June 10 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
Hills of České Středohoří (Central Bohemian Highlands): Malý Křižák, Křižák, Brník, Srdov, Milá

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

Picture of the day
Panorama of Hong Kong's harbour and skyline, as seen from Victoria Peak on a rainy night of June 11, 2019.

Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for June 12 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]

Picture of the day
A memorial to victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting in front the Stonewall Inn in New York City. On June 12, 2016, a terrorist shot and killed 49 people and wounded 53 more in a mass shooting at Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, USA.

Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Cupertino d’État [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. To get extended episodes with additional coverage, support us on Patreon.

In this week’s episode, Mike and Ben cover:

And in the extended episode for Patreon supporters, they cover:

Our fun links this week are the 7-0 World Cup game (Ben) and Chipotlai Max (Mike).

Ctrl-Alt-Speech is the podcast where we make sense of the major debates shaping online speech, platform power, content moderation and the future of the internet. It’s co-hosted by Mike Masnick (Techdirt) and Ben Whitelaw (Everything in Moderation).

If you’re already a Patreon supporter, you can get the extended episode on Patreon.

05:00 AM

Nü Tennis [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Every day, about 16,000,000 hours of tennis are played. The percentage of that devoted to tournament play approaches zero.

So why is informal tennis built on a zero-sum model? In a game, every shot is designed to have the opponent fail. The goal is to have your opponent miss the ball, hit it into the net, or simply wear them out.

What would happen to the experience of the game if the goal was to help your opponent do ever better? To extend, to thrive, and to be in sync?

No one wins at jazz. That’s the point.

There are plenty of ways we could imagine keeping score–from high-tech watch-tracking solutions to simple ways of counting and encouragement. There are many ways to win, and we can find useful ones if we try.

The lazy use of points revolves around elimination, scarcity, and solo victory.

But we’re not lazy if we don’t want to be.

      

Michigan Lawmakers Want To Ban Chinese-Tagged Vehicles From Even Visiting The State. You Know, For Privacy. [Techdirt]

Michigan lawmakers are pushing legislation that wouldn’t just ban the sales of Chinese-made cars in the The Great Lakes State, it would ban cars with Chinese tags from even visiting. The Protecting America From Chinese Cars Act joins the Connected Vehicle Security Act aiming to protect U.S. car companies from cheaper Chinese EV competition in an election season where every campaign contribution dollar matters.

This new legislation is required, we’re told by Michigan Democratic Senator Elissa Slotkin and Rep. Haley Stevens, because the country simply cares that much about jobs, consumer privacy, and national security:

“We’re gonna be aggressive here because Michigan jobs are on the line, but also so is national security. So close our border to Chinese vehicles and Chinese technology in the vehicles, even for day trips. That’s how aggressive we believe we need to be right now,” Stevens said while speaking at a policy conference.

Her partner in the legislation went much further. “They can certainly come across the border, drive up to Selfridge Air Force base, take some video with the car. The car is a traveling surveillance package. And all of that data that the car is collecting is being sent straight back to Beijing,” Slotkin said.”

So, a few things. One, it’s curious how normally very vocal “free market” Libertarian groups always mysteriously get quiet when this sort of obvious anti-competitive pandering to large corporate campaign donors pops up. Two, it’s adorable how Slotkin and Stevens want you to believe that simply banning Chinese cars somehow solves the major privacy issues inherent with modern, connected cars.

For one, U.S. and most of the overseas vehicles sold in the U.S. basically have nonexistent security standards. Carmakers collect an ocean of biometric, location and phone data, and then sell that data to a parade of largely unregulated data brokers, who in turn sell access to that data to any random asshole with money to spend — including domestic and foreign intelligence.

They then lie about it when asked. And if they do openly acknowledge it, they insist it’s okay because the resulting data has been “anonymized” (a term that means absolutely nothing).

Which is to say the Chinese, if they really want access to detailed U.S. street information and public movement data, don’t need to sell their cars in the U.S. to obtain it. Because Congress has been too corrupt to pass a meaningful internet-era privacy law any time in the last quarter century. In part because we’re greedy, but also in part because the U.S. government also buys this data to avoid getting warrants.

As a result of this country’s grotesque corruption, we’ve been awash in major privacy and national security scandals for 25 years, including the recent revelation that sensitive U.S. location data obtained by telecoms, apps, and every other device we use (whether it’s made in China or not) is being bought from data brokers by other countries and then utilized to track, target, and kill U.S. troops.

So maybe Stevens and Slotkin actually care about this stuff, but generally privacy is used as a lazy talking point by politicians who have other motivations; in this case making giant U.S. carmakers who don’t want to face meaningful price competition happy ahead of the midterms to ensure the campaign financing funding keeps flowing.

Slotkin was one of numerous Dems who supported the “banning of TikTok,” which really just involved offloading most of the app and its profits to Trump’s billionaire friends, who are as bad, if not worse, on issues like privacy and propaganda than ByteDance ever was. Now Slotkin is going around calling cheaper Chinese EVs “TikTok on wheels,” as if the whole Dem TikTok face plant never happened.

Pretending you’re being extra tough on privacy by going so far as to even ban cars with Chinese tags from visiting from Canada (as if Canadians want to visit the U.S. right now anyway) is particularly weird, performative, and ignores the real problem.

U.S. politicians need to pass a meaningful internet-era privacy law and tightly regulate data brokers, or shut up about how much they care about consumer privacy and national security.

Daily Deal: The Learn to Code with React Bundle [Techdirt]

The Learn to Code with React Bundle has 9 courses to help you learn more about React, Redux, and JavaScript. Used by the likes of Instagram, Facebook, Netflix, and Imgur, React is an efficient and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces. Meanwhile, Redux is a predictable state container that helps you manage the data your pages display. Together, these two tools play a key part in building professional, well-functioning apps; and you’ll explore mastering them both in this training. It’s on sale for $25.

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.

USPS Is Trump’s Election Chokepoint Target [The Status Kuo]

Image courtesy of The New York Times

Earlier this year, Rebekah Caruthers, president of the Fair Elections Center, made a clear prediction. She expected federal intimidation at the polls, with ICE agents stationed near voting locations and federal officers deployed to suppress turnout among minority voters. This was a reasonable fear. The Trump White House, after all, had spent the last year signaling exactly that kind of escalation.

She now thinks she was wrong about the weapon of choice: Trump has targeted the U.S. Postal Service as a vulnerable choke point.

“We can’t just look at this new post office rule in a vacuum,” Caruthers said recently. In her view, the defining threat to voting rights this fall isn’t federal thugs at the polls. It’s whether your ballot arrives in the mail at all.

Subscribe now

The rule and the order

The weapon Trump has handed the USPS was forged from a proposed rule, published on June 2, implementing an earlier White House executive order. In March, Trump directed the agency to withhold mail ballot delivery from any state that refuses to hand over its voter rolls to the federal government. The rule was then drafted to comply with that directive.

There are two operative parts that concern voting rights activists.

DMM 705.24.4 provides,

“States (including authorized election officials and their mail service providers) will notify the Postal Service of the individuals to whom they are mailing a mail-in or absentee ballot, along with the unique barcode applied to the outbound and return ballot mail envelope for such individuals such that the name and barcode of the voter will be included on a Mail-In and Absentee Participation List.”

DMM 705.24.5 then states,

“The proposed rule also implements a verification procedure for compliance with the proposed standards prior to acceptance by the Postal Service of the outbound ballot mailpiece and the blank return ballots included within such mailings. The verification process by the Postal Service would confirm that a state submitted a list consistent with the conditions laid out in the proposed rule, and that the outbound ballot mail, and thus the blank ballot that could be returned by mail, is destined to individuals on the list, by checking the barcodes.”

If your eyes are glazing over, let me put that into plain English, with an example.

Under the first part, before any mail ballots go out, a state’s election officials must register with USPS and upload a list of every voter slated to receive one. That list must include not just the voter’s name and address but a unique barcode tied to that specific voter’s outbound envelope and the return envelope they would mail back. The list can be updated until the last day the state is legally allowed to send ballots out, but not after. On or about Election Day, USPS would provide the state with the compiled list as the official record of who was enrolled to receive a ballot.

Then, under the second part, before USPS accepts a filled-out ballot into the mail stream (meaning before it takes the envelope from the election office or mail vendor), a USPS employee would check two things: first, that the state actually submitted a compliant list; second, that the voter addressed on this ballot appears on that list, confirmed by matching the barcode on the envelope. If either check fails, USPS does not accept the mailpiece—and the ballot never enters the mail system.

Here’s an example of how it could block a mail-in ballot. Say a voter in Arizona registered to vote by mail and was properly added to the state’s mail voter rolls. Arizona uploads its participation list to the federal portal before ballots are scheduled to go out. But say the voter moved within the county before the upload and only updates her address with the DMV but not separately with the county election office because Arizona law allows DMV updates to carry over automatically.

The address update didn’t sync to the county’s mailing system before the list was uploaded. Her name is on the list, but the barcode on her envelope was generated from the old address record. When the county delivers its ballot mailing to the post office, a USPS employee scans the barcode on her envelope. It doesn’t match what’s on the federal list. USPS rejects the envelope. Her ballot is returned to the county office.

By then it’s days before the election. If the county catches the error, reprints the envelope with the corrected barcode, re-uploads a corrected list and resubmits, and if USPS processes the correction in time, she might still receive a new ballot. If any one of those steps slips, she won’t get one.

That’s just one example among many. In the wrong hands (i.e., someone intent on obstructing as many mail-in ballots as possible), the "federal list” could knock out millions of valid votes, with voters completely unaware of what happened.

In short, the rule would transform USPS from a neutral carrier of election mail into a federal gatekeeper. It would suddenly have the authority to decide, before a single ballot enters the mail stream, which voters are eligible to even receive one.

That is a power the Postal Service has never held. Election administration is the province of the states and, to a degree, Congress. The power does not belong to the executive branch, and certainly not to the agency that delivers our mail. But the order and the rule reveal plenty about Trump’s broader strategy heading into the midterms and the particular vulnerability he has chosen to exploit.

Why the obsession with mail-in votes?

Trump spent years convincing his own base that mail-in voting was a fraud-riddled scam. Enough Republicans believed him that the two parties now vote in fundamentally different ways. In 2024, 37 percent of Democrats voted by mail compared to 24 percent of Republicans—a 13-point spread. Trump built the asymmetry himself, and is now moving to exploit it. He knows that restricting mail-in balloting will suppress more Democratic voters than Republican ones.

That asymmetry explains both the urgency of his executive order and the White House’s willingness to absorb the legal and possible political costs of pursuing it. Mail balloting, at its current scale, represents a self-created structural disadvantage the administration has decided it can no longer afford.

On March 9, standing before a gathering of House Republicans, Trump told his party that passing the SAVE America Act—legislation that would, among other things, restrict mail-in voting with limited exceptions for illness, disability, military service or travel—was essential. “It will guarantee the midterms,” he said. “If you don’t get it, big trouble.”

He added, in the same breath, that he wasn’t doing it for that reason at all. Which, of course, meant he was.

The legislative push for the SAVE Act failed twice. It cleared the House 218–213 in February, then fell short of the 60-vote threshold in the Senate in March. Republicans tried an end-run through a process called reconciliation, where only a simple majority is required, but that effort collapsed too, after four GOP senators—Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Thom Tillis of North Carolina and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky—joined Democrats to kill it earlier this month. Senate Majority Leader John Thune has acknowledged publicly that the votes simply aren’t there.

What Trump can’t accomplish through legislation, he typically pursues by fiat. His executive order arrived between those two legislative defeats, and the USPS rule was published after the legislative options ran out.

Trump hasn’t been subtle about any of this. In a February speech in Georgia, he told the crowd that his voting changes would mean the GOP would “never lose a race.”

Legal challenges

The new USPS rule faces two distinct categories of resistance, and either one could be enough to stop it before November.

Let’s start with why it’s unconstitutional. Under Article I, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution, the states set the rules for federal elections, subject to Congress’s power to override them. The president isn’t supposed to be involved:

The Times, Places and Manner of holding Elections for Senators and Representatives, shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislature thereof; but the Congress may at any time by Law make or alter such Regulations, except as to the Places of chusing Senators.

Yes, “chusing” was a perfectly respectable spelling variant at the time.

As the Brennan Center noted, Trump’s executive order doesn’t just violate that allocation of authority over federal congressional elections. The same problem extends to USPS itself. Congress, not the executive branch, holds constitutional authority over the Postal Service, which Congress reorganized as an independent federal agency by statute in 1970. That move was meant to insulate the mail service from political interference.

Notably, when Trump attempted to direct the Election Assistance Commission, another independent federal agency, to change federal voter registration forms in his 2025 executive order, a federal court found that “neither the Constitution nor the NVRA grants the President the authority” to do so, and blocked the order. The same reasoning would apply to the USPS, which is also supposed to be an independent federal agency. (This is why we are all very nervous about the Supreme Court’s move to give the president full and unfettered control over independent agencies.)

The NAACP has identified a separate legal problem entirely apart from the constitutional questions. In 2020, amid pandemic-era mail delays that threatened millions of voters, the organization sued USPS. The resulting 2021 settlement required the agency to safeguard the timely delivery of election mail through 2028. The proposed rule, the NAACP argues, violates that agreement on its face; an agency that has committed under court order to deliver election mail cannot simultaneously construct a system for withholding it.

Practical implementation issues

There are significant practical obstacles that compound the legal issues. And in court, they may be just as important.

As discussed earlier, the rule’s core mechanism is a new federal registry—the “Mail-In and Absentee Participation List”—that states must populate before a single ballot goes out. At least 30 days before ballots are mailed under a state’s laws, each state’s chief election official must submit to USPS the names and addresses of every voter eligible to receive a mail ballot, along with unique barcodes tied to each outbound and return envelope. As the example earlier showed, any ballot that does not match the list—or whose envelope fails the new design standards—can be rejected before entering the mail stream.

Building such a system from scratch is no small burden. Even ballot envelope design can be costly and time-consuming. Tammy Patrick, chief programs officer at the Election Center and a former architect of the Postal Service’s own ballot-tracking barcode system, explained that a ballot envelope design is “way more complicated than one would ever believe it to be.” Even minor changes to envelope folding can affect how ballots are tabulated.

There is also a staffing shortage. More than a third of election offices nationwide lack a full-time employee. Some have no dedicated computer. Patrick said compliance will be impossible for many offices. “I haven’t seen much here that is giving me much confidence this can be done by the fall without creating a lot of confusion and potential chaos,” she said.

Former Pennsylvania Secretary of the Commonwealth Kathy Boockvar put the broader picture plainly. “Especially in situations like this, where there is no funding being provided and no time for election officials and voters to absorb the required changes,” she said, “voters will bear the brunt of a poorly planned, last minute attempt to upend electoral processes.”

The timeline makes Boockvar’s assessment hard to dispute. Trump’s executive order directs USPS to finalize the rule no later than July 29, or just over six weeks from today. Under the rule’s own terms, states would then have until August 4, just two business days, to submit their voter lists 90 days before the November 3 election.

Some experts say that the trap is the point. UCLA election law professor Rick Hasen wrote that the executive order “seems aimed to sow chaos in elections and depress turnout.” Any real engagement with it as serious policy, he argued, misreads its purpose.

The Brennan Center’s structural analysis points in the same direction. States that attempt compliance face operational chaos, forced to build untested systems on an impossible timeline. States that refuse face having their mail ballots withheld entirely.

A third path—“partial compliance”—carries its own cost. Some election officials have noted that submitting voter lists to satisfy the rule would hand the federal government essentially complete mail-voter rolls, the same data the Justice Department has been trying unsuccessfully to extract from blue states through litigation. In universal vote-by-mail states like California and Oregon, that list would amount to a near-complete voter database. In other words, the rule creates a suppression mechanism no matter what states do.

These practical obstacles could strengthen the legal case for blocking the rule before it does real damage. To obtain an emergency injunction, plaintiffs must show that harm is real, imminent and not easily undone. A rule forcing thousands of underfunded election offices to build new federal compliance systems in weeks—with no funding, no guidance and no margin for error before millions of ballots go out—makes that showing almost by itself.

Where things stand

Taken together, the legal landscape is well-trodden. Trump’s first executive order on elections, issued in March 2025, targeted proof-of-citizenship requirements and mail ballot grace periods. Multiple federal courts blocked it, and appeals continue.

The pattern is familiar: an aggressive executive action, a wave of litigation, judicial skepticism at the district court level, and a slow appellate process that may outlast the election at stake.

The difference this time is the clock. The November election is far closer, and the rule’s comment period closes July 2. The administration has until July 29 to finalize it. Meanwhile, election offices across the country are already preparing ballot materials for an election that the federal government is now threatening to disrupt.

One final observation: The “tackling fraud” justification for the executive order and the proposed USPS rule has never matched the evidence. Noncitizen voting, which these changes are supposed to address, is vanishingly rare. Every post-2020 audit and investigation has confirmed this. The order and the rule purport to fix a nonexistent problem, but their true purpose is to suppress valid votes by handing the regime unprecedented power over whose mail-in ballots get accepted.

03:00 AM

Bill Introduced That Would Codify The Right To Record Federal Law Enforcement Officers [Techdirt]

Good news! (Maybe?) Federal legislators have introduced a bill that, if passed, would finally guarantee the right to record law enforcement officers. Here’s Reason’s CJ Ciaramella with the details:

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D–Conn.) and Rep. Maxwell Frost (D–Fla.) introduced the “Right to Record Act of 2026,” which they say would create new consequences for individual federal officers who violate a person’s First Amendment right to document and record police.

The legislation would create a right to sue a federal law enforcement or immigration officers who engage in wide range of retaliatory behavior, including threatening and harassing videographers, surveilling them, and seizing and destroying their equipment.

So, there’s a lot to discuss here. First off, the only reason a bill like this is necessary is the current iteration of the Supreme Court. This court has repeatedly shrugged off cases that may have finally established the right to record law enforcement officers (and other public officials). Most (but not all!) lower courts have already established this right.

The Supreme Court is the holdout. Maybe that’s just because it doesn’t feel it’s necessary to step in when the issue seems to have been pretty much settled at the district level. If that’s the case, the excuse is lazy and convenient. It takes the Supreme Court to fully settle an issue when there are outliers bucking against the trend. So far, it has refused to do so.

Next up is the caveat in the introduced law: it only affects federal law enforcement officers.

While it would be nice for the proposed law [PDF] to codify the right to record any law enforcement officer, there are good reasons for introducing the bill with this specific wording.

One of the compelling reasons has been created by federal officers, especially those engaged in Trump’s mass deportation efforts. Not content to simply overreact to protests and friction with violence and actual murders, officers have been witnessed deliberately targeting journalists and observers for the obvious reason of deterring further recordings and seizing/destroying what’s already been captured.

The lawmakers cited recent allegations of federal officers targeting videographers in New JerseyMemphis, and elsewhere across the country, as well as the importance of video evidence in refuting the false government narratives of several shootings of U.S. citizens by immigration agents.

[…]

[D]epartment of Homeland Security (DHS) officials have repeatedly suggested that [recording officers] is doxing and obstruction of justice. Over the past two years, videos from around the country—from Oregon to Maine to the Florida Keys—have shown federal immigration agents arresting or threatening to arrest people for filming them.

This right needs to be recognized if it’s going to mean anything when federal officers violate it. That brings us back to this same Supreme Court, which in recent years has made it impossible to successfully sue federal officers for violating rights. Part of this is due to this version of court steadily narrowing the Supreme Court’s 1971 Bivens ruling to allow lower courts to immediately reject anything that doesn’t exactly match the facts of the original case.

The rest of it is due to this court’s conservative majority having almost no interest in establishing rights, while being more than happy to eliminate rights that have been recognized for decades.

That’s the other meaningful part of this bill: it creates a cause of action the courts can’t just shrug off. If it is shown the “right to record” has been violated, individual officers and their employer (the US government itself) can be held liable for these violations. The bill’s text also eliminates the federal government’s “sovereign immunity” option, which means it has to take the loss if its employees are ruled to have violated this right.

This is Congress beating the Supreme Court at its own game. The nation’s top court loves to tell citizens whose rights have been violated that if they don’t like the fact federal officers are 99.9% immune from civil suits they should take it up with Congress. Well, Congress is taking it up. And if the bill becomes law (which seems extremely unlikely), the Supreme Court (and lower courts) can’t talk their way around the rights violations by pretending (1) the right isn’t established or (2) the remedy lies elsewhere.

The bill provides a long list of actions that are presumptive violations of the right to record. This includes everything from merely trying to deter recordings to threatening observers, pursuing them to other locations, placing them under surveillance, or demanding to see their identification. That’s not the entire list either. It also covers attempts to seize or destroy recordings and engaging in any actions that appear to be retaliatory.

In the current climate under the current administration, there’s almost zero chance this will be passed by Congress. But this administration won’t last forever (assuming this Republic can be kept). And this effort needs to be made, even if it results in little more than more congressional reps and federal officials going on record expressing their disdain for the public and their rights. As long as this Supreme Court retains its current makeup, the best option may be legislation, rather than litigation. This puts the administration on the defensive and calls the Supreme Court’s bluff.

Friday 2026-06-12

11:00 PM

Cable Lobbyists Show How Trump FCC’s Extortive ‘Foreign Router Ban’ Isn’t Workable [Techdirt]

Back in March I noted how the Trump FCC under Brendan Carr had announced a “new ban” on all routers made overseas (which is pretty much all of them). At the time we also noted how this was less of a ban and more of a shakedown, with router manufacturers required to beg the Trump FCC for conditional waivers (fees, favors, whatever) to continue doing business in the States.

Several router manufacturers (like Amazon’s Eero and Netgear) have subsequently received exemptions from the Trump administration, but because there is zero transparency to the process, we have no idea what they agreed to. Did they pay the Trump administration a bribe? Did they agree to surveillance backdoors for ICE operations? Who knows? Great stuff.

Now the cable lobby appears to be balking at the purported foreign router ban. In a petition filed with the FCC last week (spotted by Ars Technica) NCTA (The Internet & Television Association) — the cable industry’s biggest lobbying org — asked for a massive exemption from the restrictions, noting that they’re simply not practical in real-world practice:

“NCTA requests an expedited grant of this waiver to enable its members and their suppliers to navigate unavoidable supply chain shortages and prevent disruptions in the availability of broadband for NCTA members’ customers, while still fulfilling the rules’ national security and public safety purpose.”

So basically you’ve got a ban on foreign routers that is more about extortion than protecting national security. Which the cable industry says it can’t adhere to because AI hype, tariffs and unnecessary wars have driven up the costs of many internal router components, making adherence expensive if not impossible. Great stuff, very savvy policymaking by people who definitely know what they’re doing.

Part of the “foreign router ban” was supposed to involve forcing hardware manufacturing to return to the states. But because Trump and much of his administration have a fourth-grader-level understanding about how this stuff works (like his desire to suddenly have smartphones built in the U.S.), the cable industry’s filing notes that the “onshoring” of manufacturing and supply chains isn’t realistically possible either:

“Like AT&T, NCTA members are encouraging their suppliers to quickly pursue required onshoring, and, in the meantime, seek Conditional Approvals for Covered Routers as necessary. However, unavoidable supply chain shortages in critical substrate material and memory modules (including both volatile and nonvolatile memory) significantly constrain the industry. AT&T’s suppliers are not unique; the same impediments they are experiencing impose inevitable limitations on NCTA’s suppliers. Accordingly, NCTA seeks the same relief on behalf of its suppliers. Given the immediacy of these issues and the concrete harms that would result from disruptions to the availability of broadband to large swaths of US consumers and businesses, the grant of this Petition is warranted.”

These companies, many of which supported and enabled Trump, now have to pretend this all makes sense as they navigate a costly minefield of weird bullshit that won’t accomplish any of its purported goals.

This is all exceptionally chaotic and dumb, and it’s unlikely that Brendan Carr, who spends most of his time trying to censor comedians and whining about “wokeness,” is capable of managing the scale of this sort of overhaul — even if it were practical, which it isn’t.

When you read most press coverage of this router ban, they don’t really make it clear to readers that this is all very unworkable and stupid. Trump and his administration are given undeserved credit on competency and policy, as the press, companies, and policymakers all try to trip over themselves to normalize the sheer pointless stupidity and expense of it all.

If the country cared about national security we’d focus on corruption. We’d pass a meaningful modern internet privacy law. We’d shore up, staff, and properly fund cybersecurity regulators. We’d regulate data brokers. Instead we get a giant pile of unworkable extortion slop being overseen by weird zealots.

RSSSiteUpdated
XML About Tagaini Jisho on Tagaini Jisho 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML Arch Linux: Releases 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Carlson Calamities 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Debian News 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML Debian Security 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML debito.org 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML dperkins 2026-06-14 06:00 AM
XML F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository 2026-06-14 07:00 AM
XML GIMP 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Japan Bash 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML Japan English Teacher Feed 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML Kanji of the Day 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Kanji of the Day 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Let's Encrypt 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Marc Jones 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Marjorie's Blog 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML OpenStreetMap Japan 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML OsmAnd Blog 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow 2026-06-14 06:00 AM
XML Popehat 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Ramen Adventures 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Release notes from server 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect 2026-06-14 06:00 AM
XML SNA Japan 2026-06-14 06:00 AM
XML Tatoeba Project Blog 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML Techdirt 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML The Business of Printing Books 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML The Luddite 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML The Popehat Report 2026-06-14 06:00 AM
XML The Status Kuo 2026-06-14 06:00 AM
XML The Stranger 2026-06-13 11:00 AM
XML Tor Project blog 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML TorrentFreak 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML what if? 2026-06-14 09:00 AM
XML Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed 2026-06-13 07:00 AM
XML xkcd.com 2026-06-14 09:00 AM