News

Monday 2025-12-15

10:00 PM

Hollywood Warns: ‘Extortionary’ Codec Patent Fees Could Hike Streaming Subscription Prices [TorrentFreak]

codecFor many online pirates, the H.264 and H.265 standards are synonymous with high quality pirate releases.

The underlying codecs and compression technologies they describe have established themselves as the preferred video piracy formats, appearing in thousands of online releases.

There are even dedicated ‘Scene’ rules for releasing pirated content in these formats. Yet, at the same time, streaming services such as Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Disney+, rely on the same technology.

Disney Sued for Patent Infringement

InterDigital owns more than 10,000 video and codec patents, including those essential to H.264 and H.265. To play content encoded in these formats, device makers such as computer and TV vendors must license their use.

Netflix, Prime Video and Disney+ use these codecs to encode their videos but, according to Interdigital, this is not always done with permission.

In February, the Pennsylvania-based patent corporation sued Disney for patent infringement. A complaint filed at a California federal court accused Disney of using the patented codecs for ESPN, Hulu, and Disney+.

InterDigital reached out to Disney in July 2022 to discuss a licensing agreement, but after that led nowhere, the company felt compelled to take legal action.

“Today, Defendants continue their widespread infringement of the Asserted Patents by utilizing the claimed technology that enables the efficiency and efficacy of Defendants’ video streaming business.”

Disney is not alone in this. Last month, InterDigital filed a nearly identical lawsuit against Amazon, accusing the retail giant of unauthorized use of the same video compression technology for Prime Video.

MPA Backs Disney

These high-stakes lawsuits strike at the core of the video streaming landscape. There is widespread concern, including at the Motion Picture Association (MPA), which submitted an amicus brief in the Disney lawsuit last week.

The MPA’s filing is submitted as part of Disney’s counter-lawsuit, filed in a Delaware federal court in August, which accuses InterDigital of antitrust practices.

The MPA, which counts Disney and the other major video streaming services among its members, is typically known for protecting IP-rights. In this case, however, it rallies against what it believes to be IP-abuse.

The brief notes that InterDigital stands accused of orchestrating a “global holdup campaign” designed to generate windfall profits, using extortionary demands and actions to force streaming services on board.

From MPA’s brief

extort demands

MPA sees InterDigital’s aggressive patent tactics as an antitrust violation. Their brief argues that InterDigital is effectively “double-dipping” by attempting to charge streaming services for the same video transmissions device manufacturers have already paid for.

Essentially, the patent holder wants to get paid for encoding and decoding the same video.

“InterDigital has sought to ‘double-dip,’ demanding that streaming providers take royalty-bearing licenses even where those providers stream content to devices whose manufacturers already are paying InterDigital to license the same patents,” the MPA writes.

InterDigital notes that, while the H.264/HEVC standards are mandatory for device makers, they are technically “optional” for streaming services. The company argues that Disney and others can use non-standard technology if they want to avoid the fees.

The MPA dismisses this counterargument as a “contrived excuse,” noting that the use of non-standard technology would make these streaming services incompatible with virtually every TV and smartphone on the market.

Beyond the “double-dipping” mechanics, the MPA’s brief supports Disney’s broader allegations that InterDigital engaged in a deceptive scheme where RAND obligations were effectively bypassed.

Price Hikes for Streaming Services

Ultimately, the MPA warns that this legal battle over patents will have real-world consequences for consumers. The movie industry group argues that, if “unscrupulous” patent holders are allowed to stack fees on top of fees, streaming services will face higher costs.

In its brief, the MPA draws a direct line between InterDigital’s conduct and the monthly bills paid by streaming subscribers.

“All of this involves substantial costs, which could lead to higher subscription fees or a reduction in the production and dissemination of content that is streamed,” the MPA notes.

Needless to say, the stakes in this patent battle are high, and the effects are felt globally. InterDigital has already obtained injunctions to block Disney’s content in both Germany and Brazil.

The Delaware court must now decide whether Disney’s antitrust claims should be dismissed, as requested by InterDigital, or if the case can continue.

A copy of the MPA’s amicus curiae brief, filed at the Delaware federal court last week, is available here (pdf)

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

11:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 試 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

小4

test, try, attempt, experiment, ordeal

こころ.みる ため.す

試合   (しあい)   —   match
試験   (しけん)   —   examination
入試   (にゅうし)   —   entrance examination
試し   (ためし)   —   trial
試み   (こころみ)   —   attempt
試写   (ししゃ)   —   preview
追試   (ついし)   —   replication (of an experiment)
試算   (しさん)   —   trial calculation
練習試合   (れんしゅうじあい)   —   practice game
試合終了   (しあいしゅうりょう)   —   end of a match

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 羨 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

中学

envious, be jealous, covet

セン エン

うらや.む あまり

羨ましい   (うらやましい)   —   envious
羨望   (せんぼう)   —   envy
羨む   (うらやむ)   —   to envy
ペニス羨望   (ペニスせんぼう)   —   penis envy

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

06:00 AM

Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt [Techdirt]

This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is drew repeating an important point about how ICE keeps deporting people while blowing off court rulings:

Nothing will change

Until the courts charge some people with contempt and issue some prison time.

In second place, it’s MrWilson with thoughts on the assertion that calling someone a Nazi is not a verifiable statement of fact:

Ironically, I’d actually dispute this. There are indeed a lot of poorly chosen usages of the terms, but they’re not all imprecise and many are verifiable according to several academic definitions.

When I call Trump or Musk a fascist, I’m referencing my knowledge of Eco, Britt, and other standards covered in academia on the subject. We can check off the list of criteria easily. It’s not loose wording. It’s not a substitute for “people I don’t like” or “people I disagree with politically.” Not everyone I disagree with is a fascist. Every fascist is a person I disagree with. If the Hugo Boss fits, then it’s an accurate term.

Ironically people claiming that calling a fascist a fascist is defamation are twisting the meaning of the word defamation to mean “label I don’t like,” rather than “intentionally maliciously untrue label.” And more often, fascists are anti-intellectuals so they don’t even understand what fascism is academically speaking, so they’re not in a position to dispute if the definition is accurate.

Although I wouldn’t say that’s quite the same thing as a “verifiable fact” as distinct from a reasonable and well-supported opinion, it’s a good point and one that’s succinctly summed up by Thad in our first editor’s choice for insightful:

Motherfucker gonna sieg heil and endorse great replacement theory and then get mad when people call him a nazi.

Next, it’s Arianity with a comment about the notion that Rep. Haley Stevens filing articles of impeachment against RFK Jr. is just a way to raise her profile and build voter turnout:

Not only do I not care, this is a good thing and is how representative politics is supposed to work. Doing good things that voters want to raise your profile is literally how politics is supposed to align incentives!

Hopefully it pays off, both because she deserves it and as a reminder to others that actually doing your job comes with benefits. The most remarkable thing has been Dems complete lack of self interest in the face of their constituents begging them to use the limited tools they have.

Over on the funny side, our first place winner is n00bdragon with a comment about Greg Abbott’s fears that the release of his communications with Elon Musk would reveal “intimate and embarrassing” exchanges:

Call me old fashioned but the sorts of people that I send “intimate and embarrassing” messages to are pretty much limited to my wife.

Is Mr. Abbott meaning to imply that he and Mr. Musk know each other in the biblical fashion?

In second place, it’s an anonymous comment even more succinctly summing up the points made by MrWilson and Thad about calling someone a Nazi:

If not Nazi, why Nazi shaped?

For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with a comment from BernardoVerda about a currently popular theory for explaining the state of our culture and the discourse:

Well… “Everyone is 12 now” would explain why more than half of Americans can’t read or write at the 6th grade level.

Finally, it’s an anonymous comment about the EU hitting ExTwitter with a massive fine:

Odds are that $140M is more that what Twitter actually worth right is now.

That’s all for this week, folks!

01:00 AM

Taken for granted [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

It’s an odd term, worth a look.

We don’t notice that the tree we planted a few years ago thrives just a bit more each day. We don’t notice that the mail shows up when it’s supposed to, that our civilization persists in the face of chaos, and that the lights (usually) go on when we flip a switch.

Granted?

What would happen if we paid as much attention to these persistent delights as we pay to the annoying surprises that unfold each day?

The narrative of our time here becomes our lived experience. We’re the directors of this very long cinéma vérité documentary, deciding what gets focused on and what we skip over.

And it turns out that choosing our focus often leads to the plot changing as well.

      

Winter Wonderland [The Status Kuo]

My family always celebrated Christmas the Kuo kids were growing up. Truth be told, it was more like “Yule” because we weren’t raised Christian, to the dismay of my deeply faithful grandmother, nor did we attend church.

For me, the Christmas Tree was always the focal point of the holidays. The sight of it, trimmed and accumulating presents beneath, always filled me with wonder and excitement.

Now with my own kids to raise, I’m hoping to continue that feeling of snug warmth, with the scent of fresh pine and sweet baking things and Bing Crosby crooning in the background. Old school! Riley wants to know what every ornament is called, of course. “This? This? This?” she asks, pointing at each.

It’s also a time for warm jammies…and high Rockette kicks from Ronan!

We had our first real snow-that-sticks of the winter season, and by far the happiest among us was Windsor. She has already demanded three times this morning to go up to the roof to romp in the accumulated powder.

Here she is with the snow zoomies!

I bundled Riley up and carried her upstairs for a quick play in the snow, but she was skeptical. She used her new favorite word “No” with me after just three minutes, but she did shriek with laughter watching Windsor play in it.

And yet, like many today, my heart isn’t fully joyful. Even as my own wintry Sunday in New York feels relaxed and magical, I know that at Brown University, not far from here, families are grieving for their loved ones from yet another lone gunman campus attack last night. And halfway across the world, celebration turned to horror when gunmen fired upon Hanukkah revelers on Bondi Beach in Australia in an appalling act of hate and terror upon Jews on vacation with their families.

We live in a violent, senseless world. I know that, one day, I will have to explain this violence to my children, including why they have to practice active shooter drills at school. There are personal and psychic costs to us all for our societal failures in both political leadership and public will.

Perhaps it’s a good time also to remember something I’ve written about before here. We can hold two things in our hearts at once: We can be happy in America, even while we are deeply unhappy with America. Indeed, being happy in America, as I choose to be, is more vital than ever as terrible news barrages us, threatening to darken our hearts and sink us into despair.

Ronan, at eight and half months, doesn’t know of the world’s troubles. His innocence is a salve. A binky and some baby formula, and someone picking him up and carrying him around, and he’s pretty much good to go! He’s still a bit too young to head out into this icy weather, but I did faithfully capture his personality and amazing coif in this photo.

I’m a big believer in baby smiles and laughs as perfect antidotes to these many painful headlines. I’ll leave you with a moment that had me smiling ear to ear a few days ago: Riley learning how to say “please” and even giving “thank you” a good try:

May your holidays be filled with smiles, warmth and happiness, and may your present joy outshine the world’s many fears and horrors to brighten every corner of your heart.

Jay

Sunday 2025-12-14

10:00 PM

Automated Real-Time Pirate IPTV Blocking in France “Within Six Months” [TorrentFreak]

arcom-sIn a report published this month, French telecoms regulator Arcom highlights the many challenges faced by those combating online piracy, particularly live sporting events.

Arcom reports big plans for fighting piracy in 2026 but begins by reviewing progress since 2009 when France launched its controversial ‘three strikes’ model to tackle once-dominant peer-to-peer file-sharing.

Citing an 80% decrease in P2P use over the past 16 years, and the 75% of ‘first warning’ notice recipients who don’t go on to receive a second, Arcom says that the impact of the French system on behavior “is undeniable.” Arcom further reports that the overall audience for illicit services in France “is now at the lowest level ever measured,” down 35% between 2021 and 2025, supported by blocking measures against 13,000 domains.

Existing Systems No Longer Effective

With the success of existing anti-piracy measures strictly confined to the past, few are given any chance of success moving forward. Internet users quickly move to new technologies and as a result, better tools are needed to mitigate piracy. Despite best efforts, Arcom says that online piracy “remains at worrying levels, even today.”

Loss of revenue for rights holders is now estimated at €1.5 billion, or 12% of the legal audiovisual market, a figure that doesn’t include blocking costs incurred by ISPs and sports rightsholders. Nor does it include Arcom’s annual anti-piracy expenses of approximately €2.2 million and the estimated €400 million reduction in state revenue attributable to non-payment of various taxes.

“In this context, the tools devised by legislators, while initially effective, are now proving insufficient to guarantee the effectiveness of the fight against piracy in the face of cyclical changes in illicit consumption patterns, which have continually adapted to government responses,” the regulator reports.

Meeting the Demands of Live Sports Blocking

The first focus of Arcom’s plan for 2026 and beyond are the demands of live sports broadcasters. Through simplification and automation of existing blocking systems, and revising its control to be more flexible and responsive, Arcom believes it has the right formula to move forward.

Inspired by models in place in the UK and Italy, the plan is to establish an automated, dynamic, real-time blocking system, under Arcom’s control, to satisfy the urgent need to protect live broadcasts.

Simplification and Automation

Under the current system, manual verification and preparation of official reports can take several working days, compared to the proposed system in which it’s envisioned that blocking would be implemented in real time, or at least, within “timeframes compatible with the duration of sports transmissions.”

Automation is also expected to return significant improvements in blocking volumes. Right now, IP address blocking amounts to a few hundred requests per week, whereas an automated system is expected to process thousands while increasing blocking effectiveness against pirates who rapidly change their IP addresses.

Within this framework, Arcom sees its role shifting; the current requirement for systematic verification of blocking requests against each domain would be replaced by Arcom monitoring rights holders’ detection systems and general monitoring of the quality of submitted complaints.

Intermediaries: Carrots and Sticks

Arcom recognizes a need to “facilitate the actions of intermediaries” by maintaining an up-to-date list of pirate sites and services subject to blocking and improving the system so that new services can be added to boost effectiveness. It’s hoped that sharing the list with third parties will encourage a broader range of intermediaries to engage in the process voluntarily.

“Alternative DNS providers and VPNs, whose misuse for illicit purposes affects 66% of illicit consumers, are key partners. Beyond these players, the entire digital ecosystem must be involved in the fight against piracy: hosting providers, content delivery networks (CDNs), and online stores,” Arcom notes.

If intermediaries fail to comply with their legal obligations, granting Arcom “coercive power” would “strengthen the authority’s credibility in the digital space,” the regulator notes.

In the event that DNS providers and VPN companies view blocking as a marketing tool for their products, Arcom says that should be handled under laws regulating commercial influence and misuse of social media.

Legal Amendments Required But Arcom Will Press Ahead

Arcom’s proposals are reliant on changes to the existing legal framework, as outlined in the draft law on the organization, management, and financing of professional sport. Nevertheless, Arcom is already working with ISPs and sports rightsholders in anticipation of a green light during the next six months.

“All stakeholders (ISPs, sports rights holders and Arcom) are preparing for operational implementation no later than the end of the first half of 2026,” Arcom reports.

Arcom’s report, ‘The Challenges and Various Tools For Combating Piracy in the Cultural and Sporting Sectors’ is available here (pdf, French)

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

01:00 PM

Pluralistic: Federal Wallet Inspectors (13 Dec 2025) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]


Today's links

  • Federal Wallet Inspectors: Does tech *really* move too fast to regulate?
  • Hey look at this: Delights to delectate.
  • Object permanence: Soda can Van de Graff; Amazon rents a copy of the web; Boardgame Remix Kit; No furniture photos please we're British; Youtube vs fair use; Carbon offsets are bullshit; Arkham model railroad; Happy Birthday is in the public domain; Ted Cruz hires Cambridge Analytica; The kid who wanted to join the NSA; Daddy Daughter Xmas Podcast 2020.
  • Upcoming appearances: Where to find me.
  • Recent appearances: Where I've been.
  • Latest books: You keep readin' em, I'll keep writin' 'em.
  • Upcoming books: Like I said, I'll keep writin' 'em.
  • Colophon: All the rest.



A modified FBI badge. It now reads 'Federal Wallet Investigators.' It is made out to 'Timothy J Shotspotter.' It is held in the three-fingered, gloved grip of a cartoon character. Around its edges, we see a cartoon room from a public domain Betty Boop cartoon.

Federal Wallet Inspectors (permalink)

Look, I'm not trying to say that new technologies never raise gnarly new legal questions, but what I am saying is that a lot of the time, the "new legal challenges" raised by technology are somewhere between 95-100% bullshit, ginned up by none-too-bright tech bros and their investors, and then swallowed by regulators and lawmakers who are either so credulous they'd lose a game of peek-a-boo, or (likely) in on the scam.

Take "fintech." As Trashfuture's Riley Quinn is fond of saying, "when you hear 'fintech,' think 'unregulated bank'":

https://pluralistic.net/2022/03/02/shadow-banking-2-point-oh/#leverage

I mean, the whole history of banking is: "Bankers think of a way to do reckless things that are wildly profitable (in the short term) and catastrophic (in the long term). They offer bribes and other corrupt incentives to their watchdogs to let them violate the rules, which leads to utter disaster." From the 19th century "panics" to the crash of '29 to the S&L collapse to the 2008 Great Financial Crisis and beyond, this just keeps happening.

Much of the time, the bankers involved have some tissue-thin explanation for why what they're doing isn't really a violation of the rules. Think of the lenders who, in the runup to the Great Financial Crisis, insisted that they weren't engaged in risky lending because they had a fancy equation that proved that the mortgage-backed securities they were issuing were all sound, and it was literally impossible that they'd all default at once.

The fact that regulators were bamboozled by this is enraging. In hindsight (and for many of us at least, at the time), it's obvious that the bankers went to their watchdogs and said, "We'd like to break the law," and the watchdogs said, "Sure, but would you mind coming up with some excuse that I can repeat later when someone asks me why I let you do this crime?"

It's like in the old days of medical marijuana, where you'd get on a call with a dial-a-doc and say, "Please can I have some weed?" and the doc would say, "Tell me about your headaches," and you'd say, "Uh, I have headaches?" and they'd say "Great, here's your weed!"

The alternative is that these regulators are so bafflingly stupid that they can't be trusted to dress themselves. "My stablecoin is a fit financial instrument to integrate into the financial system" is as credible a wheeze as some crypto bro walking up to Cory Booker, flashing a homemade badge, and snapping out, "Federal Wallet Inspector, hand it over."

I mean, at that point, I kind of hope they're corrupt, because the alternative is that they are basically a brainstem and a couple of eyestalks in a suit.

What I'm saying is, "We just can't figure out if crypto is violating finance laws" is a statement that can only be attributed to someone very stupid, or in on the game.

Speaking of "someone very stupid, or in on the game," Congress just killed a rule that would have guaranteed that the US military could repair its own materiel:

https://federalnewsnetwork.com/congress/2025/12/congress-quietly-strips-right-to-repair-provisions-from-2026-ndaa-despite-wide-support/

Military right to repair is the most brainless of all possible no-brainers. When a generator breaks down in the field – even in an active war-zone – the US military has to ship it back to America to be serviced by the manufacturer. That's not because you can't train a Marine to fix a generator – it's because the contractual and technical restrictions that military contractors insist on ban the military from fixing its stuff:

https://www.pogo.org/fact-sheets/fact-sheet-the-right-to-repair-for-the-united-states-military

This violates a very old principle in sound military administration. Abraham Lincoln insisted that the contractors who supplied the Union army had to use standardized tooling and ammo, because it would be very embarrassing for the Commander-in-Chief to have to stand on the field at Gettysburg with a megaphone and shout, "Sorry boys, war's canceled this week, our sole supplier's gone on vacation."

And yet, after mergers of large military contractors resulted in just a handful of "primary" companies serving the Pentagon, private equity vampires snapped up all the subcontractors who were sole-source suppliers of parts to those giants. They slashed the prices of those parts so that the primary contractors used as many as possible in the materiel they provided to the US DoD, and then raised the prices of replacement parts, some with 10,000% margins, which the Pentagon now has to pay for so long as they own those jets and other big-ticket items:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/01/29/fractal-bullshit/#dayenu

This isn't a complicated scam. It's super straightforward, and the right to repair rule that Congress killed addressed it head on. But Congressional enemies of this bill insisted that it would have untold "unintended consequences" and instead passed a complex rule, riddled with loopholes, because there was something unique and subtle about the blunt issue of price-gouging:

https://www.warren.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/final_-_warren_letter_to_dod_re_right_to_repair_consequences_092524.pdf

Either these lawmakers are so stupid that they fell for the ole "Federal Wallet Inspector" gambit, or they're in on the game. I know which explanation my money is on.

Maybe this has already occurred to you, but lately I've come to realize that there's another dimension to this, a way in which critics of tech help this gambit along. After all, it's pretty common for tech critics to preface their critiques with words to the effect of, "Of course, this technology has raced ahead of regulators' ability to keep pace with it. Those dastardly tech-bros have slipped the net once again!"

The unspoken (and sometimes very loudly spoken) corollary of this is, "Only a tech-critic as perspicacious and forward looking as me is capable of matching wits with those slippery tech-bros, and I have formulated a sui generis policy prescription that can head them off at the pass."

Take the problem of deepfakes, including deepfake porn. There's a pretty straightforward policy response to this: a privacy law that allows you to prevent the abuse of your private information (including to create deepfakes) that unlawfully process your personal information for an illegitimate purpose. To make sure that this law can be enforced, include a "private right of action," which means that individual can sue to enforce it (and activist orgs and no-win/no-fee lawyers can sue on their behalf). That way, you can get justice even if the state Attorney General or the federal Department of Justice decides not to take your case.

Privacy law is a great idea. It can navigate nuances, like the fact that privacy is collective, not individual – for example, it can intervene when your family members give their (your) DNA to a scam like 23andme, or when a friend posts photos of you online:

https://jacobin.com/2021/05/cory-doctorow-interview-bill-gates-intellectual-property

But privacy law gets a bad rap. In the EU, they've had the GDPR – a big, muscular privacy law – for nine years, and all it's really done is drown the continent in cookie-consent pop-ups. But that's not because the GDPR is flawed, it's because Ireland is a tax-haven that has lured in the world's worst corporate privacy-violators, and to keep them from moving to another tax haven (like Malta or Cyprus or Luxembourg), it has to turn itself into a crime-haven. So for the entire life of the GDPR, all the important privacy cases in Europe have gone to Ireland, and died there:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/12/01/erin-go-blagged/#big-tech-omerta

Now, again, this isn't a complicated technical question that is hard to resolve through regulation. It's just boring old corruption. I'm not saying that corruption is easy to solve, but I am saying that it's not complicated. Irish politicians made the country's economy dependent on the Irish state facilitating criminal activity by American firms. The EU doesn't want to provoke a constitutional crisis by forcing Ireland (and the EU's other crime-havens) to halt this behavior.

That's a hard thing to do! It's just not a complicated thing to do. The routine violations of EU privacy law by American tech companies isn't the result of "tech racing ahead of the law." It's just corruption. You can't fix corruption by passing more laws; they'll just be corruptly enforced, too.

But thanks to a mix of bad incentives – politicians wanting to be seen to do something without actually upsetting the apple-cart; AI critics wanting to inflate their importance by claiming that they're fighting something novel and complex, as opposed to something that's merely boring and hard – we get policy proposals that will likely worsen the problem.

Take Denmark's decision to fight deepfakes by creating a new copyright over your likeness:

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/jun/27/deepfakes-denmark-copyright-law-artificial-intelligence

Copyright – a property right – is an incredibly bad way to deal with human rights like privacy. For one thing, it makes privacy into a luxury good that only the wealthy can afford (remember, a discount for clicking through a waiver of your privacy right is the same thing as an extra charge for not waiving your privacy rights). For another, property rights are very poorly suited to managing things that have joint ownership, such as private information. As soon as you turn private information into private property, you have to answer questions like, "Which twin owns the right to their face" and "Who owns the right to the fact that your abusive mother is your mother – you, or her? And if it's her, does she get to stop you from publishing a memoir about the abuse?"

Copyright – a state-backed transferable monopoly over expression – is really hard to get right. Legislatures and courts have struggled to balance free expression and copyright for centuries, and there's a complex web of "limitations and exceptions" to copyright. Privacy is also incredibly complex, and has its own limitations and exceptions, and they are very different from copyright's limits. I mean, they have to be: privacy rules defend your human right to a personal zone of autonomy; copyright is intended to create economic incentives to produce new creative works. It would be very weird if the same rules served both ends.

I can't believe that Denmark's legislators failed to consider privacy as the solution to deepfakes. If they did, they are very, very stupid. Rather, they decided that fighting the corruption that keeps privacy law from being enforced in the EU was too hard, so they just did something performative, creating a raft of new problems, without solving the old one.

Here in the USA, there's lots of lawmakers who are falling into this trap. Take the response to chatbots that give harmful advice to children and teens. The answer that many American politicians (as well as lawmakers abroad, in Australia, Canada, the UK and elsewhere) have come up with is to force AI companies to identify who is and is not a child and treat them differently.

This boils down to a requirement for AI companies to collect much more information on their users (to establish their age), which means that all the AI harms that stem from privacy violations (AI algorithms that steal wages, hike prices, discriminate in hiring and lending and policing, etc) are now even harder to stop.

A simple alternative to this would be updating privacy law to limit how AI companies can gather and use everyone's data – which would mean that you could protect kids from privacy invasions without (paradoxically) requiring them (and you) to disclose all kinds of private information to determine how old they are.

The insistence – by AI critics and AI boosters – that AI is so different from other technologies that you can't address it by limiting the collection, retention and processing of private information is a way in which AI critics and AI hucksters end up colluding to promote a view of AI as an exceptional technology. It's not. AI is a normal technology:

https://www.aisnakeoil.com/p/ai-as-normal-technology

Sometimes this argument descends into grimly hilarious parody. Argue for limits on AI companies' collection, retention and processing of private information and AI boosters will tell you that this would require so much labor-intensive discernment about training data that it would make it impossible to continue training AI until it becomes intelligent enough to solve all our problems. But also, when you press the issue, they'll sometimes say that AI is already so "intelligent" that it can derive (that is, guess) private information about you without needing your data, so a new privacy law won't help.

In other words, applying privacy limitations to AI means we'll never get a "superintelligence,"; and also, we already have a superintelligence so there's no point in applying privacy limitations to AI.

It's true that technology can give rise to novel regulatory challenges, but it's also true that claiming that a technology is so novel that existing regulation can't resolve its problems is just a way of buying time to commit more crimes before the regulators finally realize that your flashy new technology is just a boring old scam.


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 Americans smile, Brits grimace? https://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/11/magazine/national-smiles.html

#20yrsago HOWTO make a soda-can Van de Graaf https://scitoys.com/scitoys/scitoys/electro/electro6.html

#20yrsago Credit-card-sized USB drive https://web.archive.org/web/20051214084824/http://walletex.com/

#20yrsago Homeland Security: Mini-golf courses are terrorist targets https://web.archive.org/web/20060215153821/https://www.kron.com/Global/story.asp?S=4226663

#20yrsago Amazon rents access to a copy of the Web https://battellemedia.com/archives/2005/12/alexa_make_that_amazon_looks_to_change_the_game

#15yrsago Pornoscanners trivially defeated by pancake-shaped explosives https://web.archive.org/web/20101225211840/http://springerlink.com/content/g6620thk08679160/fulltext.pdf

#10yrsago HO fhtagn! Detailed model railroad layout recreates HP Lovecraft’s Arkham https://web.archive.org/web/20131127042302/http://www.ottgallery.com/MRR.html

#10yrsago Suicide rates are highest in spring — not around Christmas https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2015/12/no-suicides-dont-rise-during-the-holidays/419436/

#10yrsago Airbnb hosts consistently discriminate against black people https://www.benedelman.org/publications/airbnb-011014.pdf

#10yrsago What will it take to get MIT to stand up for its own students and researchers? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQdl_JdTars

#10yrsago Experts baffled to learn that 2 years olds are being prescribed psychiatric drugs https://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/11/us/psychiatric-drugs-are-being-prescribed-to-infants.html?_r=0

#10yrsago Happy Birthday’s copyright status is finally, mysteriously settled https://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/10/business/media/happy-birthday-copyright-case-reaches-a-settlement.html?_r=0

#10yrsago Proposal: keep the nuclear launch codes in an innocent volunteer’s chest-cavity https://blog.nuclearsecrecy.com/2012/09/19/the-heart-of-deterrence/

#10yrsago Obama promises statement on encryption before Xmas (maybe) https://web.archive.org/web/20151211042128/https://www.dailydot.com/politics/white-house-encryption-policy-response-petition/

#10yrsago Harlem Cryptoparty: Crypto matters for #blacklivesmatter https://web.archive.org/web/20151218183924/https://motherboard.vice.com/read/the-black-community-needs-encryption

#10yrsago Backslash: a toolkit for protesters facing hyper-militarized, surveillance-heavy police https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/12/backslash-anti-surveillance-gadgets-for-protesters/

#10yrsago Ted Cruz campaign hires dirty data-miners who slurped up millions of Facebook users’ data https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/dec/11/senator-ted-cruz-president-campaign-facebook-user-data

#10yrsago The Tor Project has a new executive director: former EFF director Shari Steele! https://blog.torproject.org/greetings-tors-new-executive-director/

#10yrsago What I told the kid who wanted to join the NSA https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2015/dec/11/west-point-cybersecurity-nsa-privacy-edward-snowden

#10yrsago Copyfraud: Disney’s bogus complaint over toy photo gets a fan kicked off Facebook https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/12/disney-initially-drops-then-doubles-down-on-dmca-claim-over-star-wars-figure-pic/

#15yrsago Sales pitch from an ATM-skimmer vendor https://krebsonsecurity.com/2010/12/why-gsm-based-atm-skimmers-rule/

#15yrsago Boardgame Remix Kit makes inspired new games out of old Monopoly, Clue, Trivial Pursuit and Scrabble sets https://web.archive.org/web/20101214210548/http://www.boardgame-remix-kit.com/sample/boardgame-remix-kit-sample.pdf

#10yrsago Britons will need copyright licenses to post photos of their own furniture https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2015/12/you-may-soon-need-a-licence-to-take-photos-of-that-classic-designer-chair-you-bought/

#5yrsago Outgoing Facebookers blast the company https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/12/fairy-use-tale/#badge-posts

#5yrsago Carbon offsets are bullshit https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/12/fairy-use-tale/#greenwashing

#5yrsago Youtube, fair use, competition, and the death of the artist https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/12/fairy-use-tale/#content-id

#5yrsago A lethally boring story https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/11/number-eight/#erisa

#5yrsago Daddy Daughter Xmas Podcast 2020 https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/11/number-eight/#youll-go-down-in-mystery

#5yrsago Antitrust and Facebook's paid disinformation https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/11/number-eight/#curse-of-bigness

#1yrago The housing emergency and the second Trump term https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/11/nimby-yimby-fimby/#home-team-advantage

#1yrago A Democratic media strategy to save journalism and the nation https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/12/the-view-from-somewhere/#abolish-rogan


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

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

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

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

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

Currently writing:

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


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

Medium (no ads, paywalled):

https://doctorow.medium.com/

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

https://twitter.com/doctorow

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 (12.13.25) [The Status Kuo]

Housekeeping note: Substack is cutting off emails that are “too long” which include all of my Saturday Skeets and Giggles installments. If your email gets truncated, you can always find the full length version (and all of my other posts) at my page: statuskuo.substack.com.

Let’s get caught up first. SNL had its deadly roundup of the prior week’s developments.

Image.heic

Note: Xcancel links like the one above mirror Twitter without sending it any traffic. Give it a second to load. Issues? Click the settings gear on the upper right of the Xcancel page and select “proxy video streaming through the server.” Then click “save preferences” at the bottom. Still no? Copy the link into a URL and remove the word “cancel” after the letter X in the URL and it will take you to the original video.

And with his numerous political defeats this week, there’s now a serious question over whether Trump is already a lame duck president just 11 months into his new term. Well, if he walks like a lame duck…

Image.heic

Yes, it’s an AI image, but I hope we all see what he did there.

With the new year fast approaching, it’s good to keep a bottle of bubbly handy.

Image.heic

Jimmy Kimmel continued to be a truth bomber and a welcome thorn in the side of the regime.

Image.heic

The NYT Pitchbot is back.

Image.heic

As the holiday season really kicked into gear, the Onion went there.

Image.heic

Meanwhile, Trump headed to Pennsylvania to try to salvage his floundering presidency. The Daily Show had some thoughts.

Image.heic

Newsom’s office took the clip and ran with it.

Image.heic

Canada demonstrated that it has Trump’s number.

Image.heic

On the subject of Trump’s numbers, he thinks you need to be a genius to “turn on” a lawnmower these days.

Image.heic

The right is trying to come for Newsom because of his “adultery,” which is just funny when you think about it for half a second.

Image.heic

Also, learn to spell his name.

The WH social accounts also tried to troll and lib-own by warping more beloved children’s titles.

Image.png

They were just asking for this:

Image.heic

Chinese accounts were wondering what’s up with Trump’s graphics people.

Image.heic

To fix the problem of falling asleep in public, the internet offered a solution.

Image.heic

The FIFA “peace award” was still on the minds of many because of its enduring absurdity. It gave a lot of this energy:

Image.heic

That moment, it reminded us of… oh yes.

Image.heic

Or for you LOTR fans…

Image.heic

Let’s remind him daily.

Image.heic

FIFA got a rebrand.

Image.heic

A sucker born every minute?

Image.heic

New Happy Meal just dropped.

Image.heic

When the WH calls a lid, we’ll think of this.

Image.heic

No idea is too wild, right? That’s how this works?

Image.heic

The Simpsons called it long ago.

Image.heic

Capitalism can be funny.

Image.heic

The awards are coming to every home in America.

Image.heic

Let’s actually get a closer look at that medal.

Image.heic

In Vice Presidential news,

Image.heic

DHS tried to get in on the Cruel Christmas vibe.

Image.heic

And Gramps raised a good point.

Image.heic

We’re all waiting for Nancy Mace to announce her departure from Congress. Meanwhile, why does she hate Christmas?

Image.heic

Speaking of mean women and the holidays, Melania tried to read a Christmas story to some kids. But it was weirdly about heat and night vision goggles so, this is what we all heard.

Image.heic

Sean Duffy’s plan to solve airline safety and performance issues involves (checks notes) exercising in the gym. Bro, whut?

Image.heic

The menswear guy found the perfect clip.

Image.heic

I’m gonna propose this solution everywhere.

IMG_0487.jpeg

The regime’s attacks upon the Somali population, which it claims is somehow “taking over America,” deserved an epic response. And it got one.

Image.heic

In the Culture Wars, we got an entry from a Turning Point USA student who turned in a failing paper, now claiming she’s the victim. Here’s our Lord and Savior responding.

Image.heic

The White House used pop star Sabrina Carpenter’s song in an ICE video, and it didn’t go over well.

Image.heic

Then, having not learned their lesson, they used a clip of her again without her consent. Which, you know, is how they roll. If you know her films, this meme is perf.

Image.heic

This week had two viral interview moments. Newsom handled this well:

Image.heic

The CEO of Palantir had this moment, which many speculated might be from substance use.

Image.heic

His claim that it was from neurodivergence led to some commentary.

Image.heic

Erika Kirk continued her grieving widow tour.

Image.heic

But maybe she should tone it down?

Image.heic

Otherwise she’ll earn more responses like this:

IMG_0554.jpeg

The money tissues. I can’t.

In business news that also could spell the end of the free press, two behemoths are vying for control of Warner Bros. Discovery, which owns CNN.

Image.heic

Also, who will own Sesame Street?!

Image.heic

I interrupt your scrolling for a quick plea for subscriber support! December is my “make or break” month, and I honestly need a lot of new subscribers to make up for the many who don’t renew their paid support for whatever reason. I’m looking for five folks to step up today to become new supporters!

If you enjoy these weekly funnies and my daily write-ups on politics and law, please consider becoming a paying subscriber so I can continue to devote myself fully to this work! Thanks in advance, and to all those who make this newsletter possible!

Subscribe now

On to the doggies! We have a lot of pooches to feature this week. At first I thought there was something sinister to this video, but then…

Image.heic

This little one is a basket case and a superstar all at once.

Image.heic

Considering putting a camera on my corgi in this way now.

IMG_0399.jpeg

Living his best life at the groomers. Happy Birthday, buddy!

Image.heic

What you really need is a series of dogs talking to their humans.

Image.heic

Speaking of talking dogs,

Image.heic

Or maybe a bustin’ moves with his rapper owner?

Image.heic

Meet John Paw II.

IMG_0493.jpeg

This was my favorite thing on the internet this week.

Image.heic

It’s the holidays. And for cat owners, this means

Image.heic

This was my Shaders when he went up on the roof after it snowed.

Image.heic

This community note FTW.

Image.heic

How things work, feline edition.

Image.heic

Boxer Rebellion?

Image.heic

I love that Horse answered this.

Image.heic

In human affairs, it’s not too soon, right?

Image.heic

Also, too soon?

IMG_0196.jpeg

Saving this for when my kids are ready for it.

Image.heic

The holidays mean lots of warm bread and smells of sweets baking

Image.heic

Oh God, it’s true… just watch.

Image.heic

Here’s another hard-to-accept truth.

Image.heic

Speaking of Indy movies, can we talk about this?

Image.heic

Getting into the holiday spirit with…Creed?

Image.heic

Okay, more seasonal music, but in the best way.

Image.heic

I’m trying to imagine the planning meetings for this.

Image.heic

Did someone have a cool idea and it just…snowballed?

I’d like to cosign the tomato in sandwich issue.

Image.heic

My feed was peppered with holiday food memes.

Image.heic

The British should just do all the comedy. Exhibit 1 from way back when.

Image.heic

Siri, what’s an example of gallows humor?

Image.heic

People nowadays:

Image.heic

More people nowadays.

Image.heic

The headline writers need editors, too.

Image.heic

If you’re a Stranger Things fan…

Image.heic

Harvard Law School made a goofy acceptance call promo, into which Jay of Jay & Sharon inserted himself perfectly. Really, they were asking for it.

Image.heic

It took me too long to figure out what was happening in this video.

Image.heic

Best use of a Chappell Roan song ever.

Image.heic

Who knew Harrison Ford had dad jokes at the ready? He really committed to this.

Image.heic

Here’s a holiday dad joke for ya.

Image.heic

And if/when my kids finally get mobile devices, this will be me.

Image.heic

Have a great weekend! And remember, I’m looking for five new volunteer supporters!

Jay

10:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 投 [Kanji of the Day]

✍7

小3

throw, discard, abandon, launch into, join, invest in, hurl, give up, sell at a loss

トウ

な.げる -な.げ

投手   (とうしゅ)   —   pitcher
投稿者   (とうこうしゃ)   —   contributor
投票   (とうひょう)   —   voting
投げ   (なげ)   —   a throw
投稿   (とうこう)   —   contribution (to a newspaper, magazine, etc.)
投資   (とうし)   —   investment
投球   (とうきゅう)   —   pitching
投開票   (とうかいひょう)   —   casting and counting votes
投票日   (とうひょうび)   —   election day
投入   (とうにゅう)   —   throwing in

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 柄 [Kanji of the Day]

✍9

中学

design, pattern, build, nature, character, handle, crank, grip, knob, shaft

ヘイ

がら え つか

銘柄   (めいがら)   —   brand
小柄   (こがら)   —   small build
人柄   (ひとがら)   —   personality
役柄   (やくがら)   —   role
絵柄   (えがら)   —   pattern
事柄   (ことがら)   —   matter
間柄   (あいだがら)   —   relationship
身柄   (みがら)   —   one's person
大柄   (おおがら)   —   large build
仕事柄   (しごとがら)   —   for work

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

07:00 AM

This Week In Techdirt History: December 7th – 13th [Techdirt]

Five Years Ago

This week in 2020, the ACLU told congress not to add a terrible copyright bill to the must-pass government funding bill, Senator Tillis was trying to slide a dangerous felony streaming bill in as well (the details of which showed it was a weird gift to Hollywood at the expense of taxpayers), and Trump was doubling down again on his threat to veto the NDAA if it didn’t include a repeal of Section 230 (among other things). Meanwhile, as a parting shot on her way out of congress, Tulsi Gabbard introduced yet another attack on Section 230, while Biden’s top tech advisor trotted out his own dangerous ideas for “reforming” 230.

Ten Years Ago

This week in 2015, it was Hillary Clinton doubling down on attacks on tech, in this case demanding a “solution” for encryption and a clampdown on free speech, while Mitch McConnell was asking Obama to spell out a law that would ban encryption so the Senate could deliver it, Rep. McCaul was proposing a “commission” to “force” Silicon Valley to undermine encryption, and James Comey was teaming up with Dianne Feinstein to mislead the public about encryption and promise new legislation. Meanwhile, in the wake of the shutdown of the NSA’s Section 215 program, Senators were calling for mandatory data retention for telcos, the Associated Press was making disingenuous claims about the program, and it turned out the NSA would still be accessing the old phone metadata it collected.

Fifteen Years Ago

This week in 2010, the Wikileaks fallout continued. The more people tried to kill it, the more it spread. Twitter decided not to block it as a trending topic but stayed silent on whether it would shut down its account, while Senator Lieberman was saying the NY Times should be investigated for publishing Wikileaks documents (and we pointed out how strange it would have been if the paper had ignored them), and the State Department repeated its bizarre demand for Wikileaks to “return” leaked cables. Visa and Mastercard cut the site off after its latest leak was about them, the Defense Department appeared to be blocking any website with Wikileaks in the title, and amidst all this the State Department was going ahead with… hosting World Press Freedom Day.

12:00 AM

Where did kiwi come from? [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

And shiitake mushrooms, spaghetti squash, ginger and even packaged tofu?

In the 1960s, the culture changed, and so did the supermarket. Small markets with fifty or sixty kinds of fruits and vegetables transformed into supermarkets carrying hundreds of varieties. Cooking shows and cookbooks raced to teach home cooks about the new, interesting and exotic.

And Frieda Caplan showed up to orchestrate a connection between a desire for novelty and unknown international foods.

Frieda didn’t invent the kiwi. But she named it, told a story about it and brought it to the merchants who needed it. She saw that markets in flux often need narrators.

The metaphor is something we see all the time–when markets and culture change, there’s room for an agent of change to bring leverage and innovation to the world. The extraordinary thing about Frieda’s was the scale of it. One person, in the right place, the right moment, with the right attitude, transformed the diet of millions of people.

Is there any doubt that right now we’re seeing a similar shift in the culture all around us?

Go find a kiwi.

[You can see the documentary here.]

      

Online Piracy Can Boost Box Office Revenue, Study Suggests [TorrentFreak]

avengers assembleThe general belief in Hollywood is that piracy causes billions of dollars in lost revenue and is predominantly harmful.

However, if research has shown anything over the years, it’s that piracy can have positive effects too.

Indeed, a new study from researchers at Monash University and San Jose State University, published in Research Policy, provides fresh evidence for this. It suggests that, under the right conditions, piracy can boost box office ticket sales.

The paper, titled “Avengers assemble! When digital piracy increases box office demand”, uses a dataset that matches U.S. box office revenue with the timing of high-quality piracy releases between 2004 and 2020.

The paper: Avengers assemble!

assemble

The researchers find that the impact of piracy on movie theater attendance differs for various types of films.

The ‘Spectacle’ vs. ‘Story’ Divide

For this study, the researchers make a distinction between “Spectacle” films, which include stunning visual blockbusters or action flicks, and “Story” films, such as dramas and comedies.

Spectacle films are broadly defined as movies where the in-theater experience significantly adds to the experience. For example, through stunning visuals and immersive surround sound. Story films, however, rely more on the dialogue, screenwriting, and acting—qualities that can also be enjoyed on a laptop or TV.

After categorizing the films, the researchers analyzed a dataset of U.S. box office figures, matching these with upload data from The Pirate Bay to track when high-quality pirated copies appeared online. Since the timing of these pirate releases is quasi-random, the research effectively infers a causal effect of piracy on box office revenues, depending on the movie type.

‘High-Quality Piracy Boosts Box Office Revenue’

These narrowed-down results are striking. While piracy seemingly hurt dramas and comedies, it appears to act as a promotional tool for ‘spectacle’ films, driving audiences to the movie theater rather than keeping them at home.

This isn’t a small effect either. The study estimates that high-quality pirate releases increase weekly box-office revenue by approximately 24.4% for spectacle films. For story films, the effect flips, as pirate releases lead to a 26.6% decline in weekly box-office revenue.

“Our research shows that digital piracy does not harm all movies equally,” says the paper’s co-author Wendy Bradley, who works as an assistant professor of management at San José State University. She notes that, for spectacle-oriented films, piracy can act as a nudge to go to the box office.

“Watching a pirated copy may convince people that the real value of the film comes from the shared cinematic experience, not just the story, and encourage them to watch in theaters. In contrast, story-driven movies are more vulnerable because piracy is a better substitute for in-theater visits,” Bradley says.

This is corroborated by the paper’s lead author, Klaus Ackermann, who notes that some movies are simply better suited for today’s movie theater experience.

“A romantic comedy or ‘chick flick’ like 27 Dresses offers a limited in-cinema experience by itself, while Marvel movies are a different story,” Ackermann notes, adding that movie theaters have already started to respond to this by offering more ‘experiences’ and special events.

‘Low-Quality Releases Hurt Revenues’

Importantly, the positive effects on box office revenues are unique to high-quality piracy leaks, which include “BluRay” or “HD” rips. The researchers found that low-quality versions, including CAM rips, consistently hurt box office revenues across all genres.

The impact is substantial here as well, as low-quality pirate releases were typically linked to a 24% drop in box office revenues.

27 Dresses

dresses

While these results may seem counterintuitive, the authors have statistically ruled out several alternative explanations. That said, the study relies on a quasi-random research design that tried to simulate causality. Therefore, follow-up research is needed to replicate and potentially expand these spectacular results.

A Structural Shift?

The paper suggests that future research may also want to consider the effect of piracy on legal streaming subscription services like Netflix, or other forms of entertainment, such as video games.

For the movie industry, the paper once again suggests that a focus on adding value is key to competing with piracy. This is in line with research we covered last month, which showed that investments in the movie theater experience can help deter piracy.

Bradley stresses that their research indicates that piracy does not have to be met with more enforcement all the time. Instead, studios may want to focus on offering a better theater experience. Then, high quality pirate releases serve as promotion.

“My takeaway for studios is that digital piracy isn’t going away,” Bradley says.

“Rather than fighting it predominantly through legal means, whether that be lobbying for anti-piracy policy or expensive IP litigation, studios can strategically design, price, and release movies so that theatrical value becomes harder to replicate at home,” she concludes.

—-

Ackermann, K., Bradley, W. A., & Cameron, J. F. (2025). Avengers assemble! When digital piracy increases box office demand. Research Policy, 54, 105266. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2025.105266.

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

Saturday 2025-12-13

02:00 PM

The Measles Outbreak In South Carolina Is Growing [Techdirt]

I’m certain some people are getting tired of this refrain, but I’m going to keep repeating it to make the point: we shouldn’t have to talk about measles in this country in 2025. This is a disease that had been officially put in elimination status for America over two decades ago. We were done with this, thanks in large part to a dedicated campaign of MMR vaccinations and a government that advocated for those same vaccinations. It was after that when the anti-vaxxer campaigns really began to spring up. RFK Jr. was, of course, one of, if not the, leading voices in that movement.

Now that he is in charge of American health, I suppose it’s not surprising to see measles included in a number of diseases that are raging when they shouldn’t be. We recently talked about an outbreak currently going in South Carolina, which itself originated from the Texas outbreak earlier in the year. Well, that outbreak is getting worse, and health officials are suggesting it will continue getting even worse for some time.

A measles outbreak that began in South Carolina at the start of October is showing no signs of slowing as officials on Tuesday reported 27 new cases since Friday. Those cases bring the outbreak total to 111.

In an update on Tuesday, South Carolina’s health department suggested the spread is far from over. Of the state’s 27 new cases, 16 were linked to exposure at a church, the Way of Truth Church in Inman. And amid the new cases, new exposures were identified at Inman Intermediate School. That’s on top of exposures announced Friday at four other schools in the region, which led to well over 100 students being quarantined.

The end result is that there are, as of this writing, over 250 people quarantining. All of them reportedly are both unvaccinated for measles and have been recently exposed to the disease. If any appreciable percentage of those in quarantine end up ill, and I have no doubt that will happen, it could mean that there is a much larger pre-symptom spread that occurred, which itself will lead to even more infections. That how infectious diseases work, after all, and there are few if any diseases as infectious as measles.

And these are, of course, in counties and areas where there are both relatively low vaccination rates and a very high rate of those seeking religious exemptions from vaccination requirements.

The two counties’ low vaccination rates are coupled with high rates of religious exemptions. Spartanburg has the state’s highest rate, with 8.2 percent of students exempt from the school vaccination requirement based on religious beliefs. Neighboring Greenville has a religious vaccination exemption rate of 5.3 percent.

It’s very interesting just how much one god or another enjoys infecting their believers with measles.

This continues to be a problem nation wide. We’re quickly approaching 2,000 (!!!!!) confirmed cases of measles this year, blowing past total case counts for the last several decades. More undiagnosed cases certainly exist. We’re going to blow way past that 2,000 number as well, in no small part thanks to this outbreak in South Carolina.

Measles is a horrible disease. Just get your damned shots.

11:00 AM

How Cops Are Using Flock Safety’s ALPR Network To Surveil Protesters And Activists [Techdirt]

It’s no secret that 2025 has given Americans plenty to protest about. But as news cameras showed protesters filling streets of cities across the country, law enforcement officers—including U.S. Border Patrol agents—were quietly watching those same streets through different lenses: Flock Safety automated license plate readers (ALPRs) that tracked every passing car. 

Through an analysis of 10 months of nationwide searches on Flock Safety’s servers, we discovered that more than 50 federal, state, and local agencies ran hundreds of searches through Flock’s national network of surveillance data in connection with protest activity. In some cases, law enforcement specifically targeted known activist groups, demonstrating how mass surveillance technology increasingly threatens our freedom to demonstrate. 

Flock Safety provides ALPR technology to thousands of law enforcement agencies. The company installs cameras throughout their jurisdictions, and these cameras photograph every car that passes, documenting the license plate, color, make, model and other distinguishing characteristics. This data is paired with time and location, and uploaded to a massive searchable database. Flock Safety encourages agencies to share the data they collect broadly with other agencies across the country. It is common for an agency to search thousands of networks nationwide even when they don’t have reason to believe a targeted vehicle left the region. 

Via public records requests, EFF obtained datasets representing more than 12 million searches logged by more than 3,900 agencies between December 2024 and October 2025. The data shows that agencies logged hundreds of searches related to the 50501 protests in February, the Hands Off protests in April, the No Kings protests in June and October, and other protests in between. 

The Tulsa Police Department in Oklahoma was one of the most consistent users of Flock Safety’s ALPR system for investigating protests, logging at least 38 such searches. This included running searches that corresponded to a protest against deportation raids in February, a protest at Tulsa City Hall in support of pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil in March, and the No Kings protest in June. During the most recent No Kings protests in mid-October, agencies such as the Lisle Police Department in Illinois, the Oro Valley Police Department in Arizona, and the Putnam County (Tenn.) Sheriff’s Office all ran protest-related searches. 

While EFF and other civil liberties groups argue the law should require a search warrant for such searches, police are simply prompted to enter text into a “reason” field in the Flock Safety system. Usually this is only a few words–or even just one.

In these cases, that word was often just “protest.” 

Crime does sometimes occur at protests, whether that’s property damage, pick-pocketing, or clashes between groups on opposite sides of a protest. Some of these searches may have been tied to an actual crime that occurred, even though in most cases officers did not articulate a criminal offense when running the search. But the truth is, the only reason an officer is able to even search for a suspect at a protest is because ALPRs collected data on every single person who attended the protest. 

Search and Dissent 

2025 was an unprecedented year of street action. In June and again in October, thousands across the country mobilized under the banner of the “No Kings” movement—marches against government overreach, surveillance, and corporate power. By some estimates, the October demonstrations ranked among the largest single-day protests in U.S. history, filling the streets from Washington, D.C., to Portland, OR. 

EFF identified 19 agencies that logged dozens of searches associated with the No Kings protests in June and October 2025. In some cases the “No Kings” was explicitly used, while in others the term “protest” was used but coincided with the massive protests.

Law Enforcement Agencies that Ran Searches Corresponding with “No Kings” Rallies
* Anaheim Police Department, Calif.
* Arizona Department of Public Safety
* Beaumont Police Department, Texas
* Charleston Police Department, SC
* Flagler County Sheriff’s Office, Fla.
* Georgia State Patrol
* Lisle Police Department, Ill.
* Little Rock Police Department, Ark.
* Marion Police Department, Ohio
* Morristown Police Department, Tenn.
* Oro Valley Police Department, Ariz.
* Putnam County Sheriff’s Office, Tenn.
* Richmond Police Department, Va.
* Riverside County Sheriff’s Office, Calif.
* Salinas Police Department, Calif.
* San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Office, Calif.
* Spartanburg Police Department, SC
* Tempe Police Department, Ariz.
* Tulsa Police Department, Okla.
* US Border Patrol

For example: 

  • In Washington state, the Spokane County Sheriff’s Office listed “no kings” as the reason for three searches on June 15, 2025 [Note: date corrected]. The agency queried 95 camera networks, looking for vehicles matching the description of “work van,” “bus” or “box truck.” 
  • In Texas, the Beaumont Police Department ran six searches related to two vehicles on June 14, 2025, listing “KINGS DAY PROTEST” as the reason. The queries reached across 1,774 networks. 
  • In California, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Office ran a single search for a vehicle across 711 networks, logging “no king” as the reason. 
  • In Arizona, the Tempe Police Department made three searches for “ATL No Kings Protest” on June 15, 2025 searching through 425 networks. “ATL” is police code for “attempt to locate.” The agency appears to not have been looking for a particular plate, but for any red vehicle on the road during a certain time window.

But the No Kings protests weren’t the only demonstrations drawing law enforcement’s digital dragnet in 2025. 

For example:

  • In Nevada’s state capital, the Carson City Sheriff’s Office ran three searches that correspond to the February 50501 Protests against DOGE and the Trump administration. The agency searched for two vehicles across 178 networks with “protest” as the reason.
  • In Florida, the Seminole County Sheriff’s Office logged “protest” for five searches that correspond to a local May Day rally.
  • In Alabama, the Homewood Police Department logged four searches in early July 2025 for three vehicles with “PROTEST CASE” and “PROTEST INV.” in the reason field. The searches, which probed 1,308 networks, correspond to protests against the police shooting of Jabari Peoples.
  • In Texas, the Lubbock Police Department ran two searches for a Tennessee license plate on March 15 that corresponds to a rally to highlight the mental health impact of immigration policies. The searches hit 5,966 networks, with the logged reason “protest veh.”
  • In Michigan, Grand Rapids Police Department ran five searches that corresponded with the Stand Up and Fight Back Rally in February. The searches hit roughly 650 networks, with the reason logged as “Protest.”

Some agencies have adopted policies that prohibit using ALPRs for monitoring activities protected by the First Amendment. Yet many officers probed the nationwide network with terms like “protest” without articulating an actual crime under investigation.

In a few cases, police were using Flock’s ALPR network to investigate threats made against attendees or incidents where motorists opposed to the protests drove their vehicle into crowds. For example, throughout June 2025, an Arizona Department of Public Safety officer logged three searches for “no kings rock threat,” and a Wichita (Kan.) Police Department officer logged 22 searches for various license plates under the reason “Crime Stoppers Tip of causing harm during protests.”

Even when law enforcement is specifically looking for vehicles engaged in potentially criminal behavior such as threatening protesters, it cannot be ignored that mass surveillance systems work by collecting data on everyone driving to or near a protest—not just those under suspicion.

Border Patrol’s Expanding Reach 

As U.S. Border Patrol (USBP), ICE, and other federal agencies tasked with immigration enforcement have massively expanded operations into major cities, advocates for immigrants have responded through organized rallies, rapid-response confrontations, and extended presences at federal facilities. 

USBP has made extensive use of Flock Safety’s system for immigration enforcement, but also to target those who object to its tactics. In June, a few days after the No Kings Protest, USBP ran three searches for a vehicle using the descriptor “Portland Riots.” 

USBP also used the Flock Safety network to investigate a motorist who had “extended his middle finger” at Border Patrol vehicles that were transporting detainees. The motorist then allegedly drove in front of one of the vehicles and slowed down, forcing the Border Patrol vehicle to brake hard. An officer ran seven searches for his plate, citing “assault on agent” and “18 usc 111,” the federal criminal statute for assaulting, resisting or impeding a federal officer. The individual was charged in federal court in early August. 

USBP had access to the Flock system during a trial period in the first half of 2025, but the company says it has since paused the agency’s access to the system. However, Border Patrol and other federal immigration authorities have been able to access the system’s data through local agencies who have run searches on their behalf or even lent them logins

Targeting Animal Rights Activists

Law enforcement’s use of Flock’s ALPR network to surveil protesters isn’t limited to large-scale political demonstrations. Three agencies also used the system dozens of times to specifically target activists from Direct Action Everywhere (DxE), an animal-rights organization known for using civil disobedience tactics to expose conditions at factory farms.

Delaware State Police queried the Flock national network nine times in March 2025 related to DxE actions, logging reasons such as “DxE Protest Suspect Vehicle.” DxE advocates told EFF that these searches correspond to an investigation the organization undertook of a Mountaire Farms facility. 

Additionally, the California Highway Patrol logged dozens of searches related to a “DXE Operation” throughout the day on May 27, 2025. The organization says this corresponds with an annual convening in California that typically ends in a direct action. Participants leave the event early in the morning, then drive across the state to a predetermined but previously undisclosed protest site. Also in May, the Merced County Sheriff’s Office in California logged two searches related to “DXE activity.” 

As an organization engaged in direct activism, DxE has experienced criminal prosecution for its activities, and so the organization told EFF they were not surprised to learn they are under scrutiny from law enforcement, particularly considering how industrial farmers have collected and distributed their own intelligence to police.

The targeting of DxE activists reveals how ALPR surveillance extends beyond conventional and large-scale political protests to target groups engaged in activism that challenges powerful industries. For animal-rights activists, the knowledge that their vehicles are being tracked through a national surveillance network undeniably creates a chilling effect on their ability to organize and demonstrate.

Fighting Back Against ALPR 

ALPR systems are designed to capture information on every vehicle that passes within view. That means they don’t just capture data on “criminals” but on everyone, all the time—and that includes people engaged in their First Amendment right to publicly dissent. Police are sitting on massive troves of data that can reveal who attended a protest, and this data shows they are not afraid to use it. 

Our analysis only includes data where agencies explicitly mentioned protests or related terms in the “reason” field when documenting their search. It’s likely that scores more were conducted under less obvious pretexts and search reasons. According to our analysis, approximately 20 percent of all searches we reviewed listed vague language like “investigation,” “suspect,” and “query” in the reason field. Those terms could well be cover for spying on a protest, an abortion prosecution, or an officer stalking a spouse, and no one would be the wiser–including the agencies whose data was searched. Flock has said it will now require officers to select a specific crime under investigation, but that can and will also be used to obfuscate dubious searches. 

For protestors, this data should serve as confirmation that ALPR surveillance has been and will be used to target activities protected by the First Amendment. Depending on your threat model, this means you should think carefully about how you arrive at protests, and explore options such as by biking, walking, carpooling, taking public transportation, or simply parking a little further away from the action. Our Surveillance Self-Defense project has more information on steps you could take to protect your privacy when traveling to and attending a protest.

For local officials, this should serve as another example of how systems marketed as protecting your community may actually threaten the values your communities hold most dear. The best way to protect people is to shut down these camera networks.  

Everyone should have the right to speak up against injustice without ending up in a database. 

Originally posted to the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

A Hurl The Heinz Day for the White House [The Status Kuo]

Image from Ebay

It’s hard to imagine how yesterday could have gone worse for the Trump regime. From the Indiana legislature to the federal courts to Capitol Hill, the White House and its lackeys were pummeled into the dust, their schemes and plans foiled and their tails between their legs.

Taken together, the broad and varied losses point to a rather surprising assessment: Trump is fast becoming a lame duck president, not even one year into his second term. If that continues and he remains mostly checked out, the consequences could be disastrous for the GOP, especially as they realize the environment has shifted to “every coward and grifter for themselves.”

It’s a delightful Schadenfriday, so let’s enjoy this bounty of Trump’s humiliations, even if the banquet tablecloth is now amply spattered with ketchup.

Subscribe now

Hoosier daddy?!

Kudos to Pete Buttigieg who was one of the few who confidently predicted that, with enough outcry from the public, the plan would go down to defeat.

Despite a massive pressure campaign from the White House, which included two visits by JD Vance (oooh, scary!), calls from Speaker Mike Johnson (oooh, trembling!), and daily rants by Trump on social media (oooh, yawn…) state senators in Indiana voted overwhelmingly yesterday to block a Trump-backed redistricting plan.

The proposed map would have eliminated the state’s last remaining Democratic congressional seats, transforming a 7-2 Indiana congressional delegation into a 9-0 one and endangering plans by the Democrats to retake the House majority in next year’s midterm elections. As the vote on the new proposed map drew near, lawmakers faced increasing threats to their own safety but stayed the course. Politico noted, “The hesitant local lawmakers held out in spite of pipe bomb threats, unsolicited pizza deliveries to their personal addresses and swattings of their homes.”

Even their family members felt the intense political pressure. CNN reported on one state senator’s experience:

Jean Leising spoke at a breakfast this fall at her 8th grade grandson’s school. Hours later, when she was set to give him a ride home from basketball practice, he bashfully told her that his entire team had received text messages about her that day — “and they were all bad.”

Recounting the moment to CNN shortly after she joined 20 other Republican state senators in rejecting President Donald Trump’s redistricting push, Leising said she laughed the moment off with her grandson — but that it ultimately led to her opposing the president.

“Boy, when I got home that night, that’s when I decided,” said Leising, a 76-year-old grandmother of eight, first elected to the Senate in 1988. “I was angry. So the next day, I said, ‘I’ve got to talk about this.’ Because this is over the top. This shouldn’t be the way it was.”

Trump also threatened to withhold federal funds from the state if the senators didn’t go along. Heritage Action, an arm of the Heritage Foundation, issued an open threat on social media:

President Trump has made it clear to Indiana leaders: if the Indiana Senate fails to pass the map, all federal funding will be stripped from the state.

Roads will not be paved. Guard bases will close. Major projects will stop. These are the stakes and every NO vote will be to blame.

#PassTheMap

But the pressure campaign backfired— bigly. In his floor speech in support of his “no” vote, GOP state Sen. Greg Goode blasted the tactics. “The forces that define vitriolic political affairs in places outside of Indiana have been gradually and now very blatantly infiltrat(ing) the political affairs in Indiana.” He continued, “Misinformation. Cruel social media posts over the top pressure from within the state house and outside, threats of primaries, threats of violence, acts of violence. Friends, we’re better than this.”

According to Democracy Docket, 11 GOP state senators faced death threats over their hesitancy to vote for the wipe-out gerrymander.

The move also faced huge outcry from the public as voters who would be disenfranchised by the new map flooded lawmakers’ offices with calls and emails, and vocal protests occurred at the state legislature.

In the end, the vote wasn’t even close. A full 21 Republican senators defied Trump, joining 10 Democrats to send the bill down to defeat 31-19. Commenting on the vote, Secretary Buttigieg, who served many years as mayor of South Bend, Indiana, observed of the senators, “To be clear, they didn’t stop being Republicans. This is a conservative state. These are conservative legislators. But they figured out that the right thing to do and the smart thing to do was to say no to the White House, no to Donald Trump, and no to JD Vance.”

Trump tried to downplay the loss even while issuing threats upon those responsible, including top Republican state senators Rod Bray, who oversaw the redistricting effort, blaming them for his humiliation. Per Politico, Trump told reporters yesterday,

“Bray, whatever his name is,” Trump said, threatening to “certainly support anybody that wants to go against him,” and reasoning that he had “done a tremendous disservice.”

“It’s funny ’cause I won Indiana all three times by a landslide, and I wasn’t working on it very hard,” Trump said, despite his team’s well-documented involvement in the matter.

House Speaker Johnson echoed Trump’s awkward denial. Asked if the Indiana GOP’s rejection of the Trump map shows his grip is weakening and that he is now a lame duck, Speaker Johnson responded, “He is not a lame-duck. He’s the most powerful person of this generation.” (Here’s some unsolicited communications advice, Moses: Don’t repeat the bad part of the question.)

“He did not put a major pressure campaign,” Johnson added, notwithstanding Trump’s threats of primaries, funding cuts and political retribution.

I want to end this section with some uplifting words from Pete Buttigieg, who really led on the effort to defeat this map in his home state.

No detention, no indictment (again)

Two notable targets of Trump’s racism and ire got him a pair of pokes in the eye yesterday.

First, a federal judge ordered Kilmar Abrego Garcia freed from ICE custody citing misrepresentations to the court by federal authorities. Per Bloomberg’s Zoe Tilman, “Kilmar Abrego Garcia was released from a US immigration detention facility shortly before 5pm today and headed home to Maryland, his lawyer confirmed, after a federal judge ruled this morning that the Trump administration lacked valid legal grounds to keep him in custody.”

Not only did Judge Paula Xinis order him released, she blasted the Trump regime for its misconduct in her court. As Kyle Cheney of Politico reported, “Judge Xinis said the administration misrepresented Costa Rica’s willingness to accept Abrego Garcia and also failed to produce a “final order of removal” necessary to deport him at all.

In another federal courtroom, a grand jury, now for the second time, declined to indict New York Attorney General Letitia James on trumped-up mortgage fraud charges. The New York Times header on the news noted, “It was a striking rejection of the administration’s retribution campaign.”

As investigative journalist Allison Gill noted, “This is actually the fourth time Trump has failed to indict Letitia James,” once you count Erik Siebert’s refusal to bring charges, the disqualification of Lindsey Halligan from the case, the next attempt by a new grand jury, and now this one.

At this point, these Keystone Klan efforts are just embarrassing.

Stumble then flee

Trump’s lackeys were back before an energized set of Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill. And it made for some great moments that have since gone viral.

The FBI witness, Michael Glasheen, provided one of those. It was something of a surprise because Glasheen wasn’t viewed, at least until yesterday, as someone who had drunk the MAGA kool-aid. It underscored what the Lincoln Project’s Rick Wilson has been saying for years: Everything Trump Touches Dies. As MS NOW’s Ken Dilanian noted, “Remarkable moment. Glasheen is a well regarded career agent. Lots of his former colleagues are scratching their heads over these comments.”

The comments came out of questioning by Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-MS), whom you may recall co-chaired the January 6 Committee with former GOP Rep. Liz Cheney. Glasheen claimed “antifa” was the biggest immediate threat the U.S. now faces from domestic terrorism. Right…

So Thompson asked him some very basic questions, and he got Glasheen to concede, through unresponsive sputtering and then awkward silence, that he didn’t know where its headquarters were or how many members it had. That would be important things to discover, one would think, if antifa truly posed an imminent domestic terror threat.

The exchange was remarkable, and the transcript summary doesn’t give it justice, so be sure to watch the clip itself:

The humiliation wasn’t complete yet for the Trump folks. Kristi Noem was up, too, and one point the Homeland Security Secretary falsely claimed her department had never deported veterans. So in a moment made for the internet (nice messaging work, Democrats!) a deported U.S. veteran appeared on livestream to refute that. Here is that moment, at the end of which Noem commits to reviewing his case.

Rep. Daniel Goldman (D-NY) took Noem to task over her deporting people who were lawfully applying for asylum and whose cases were still pending. She tried to place the blame on Joe Biden (this is apparently the GOP strategy everywhere now) but Goldman wouldn’t have it.

By the time Noem was set to go before Rep. Julie Johnson (D-TX), whom many here have supported with donations as an embattled redistricted Texas Democrat (thank you!), she was ready to run. And in fact, she did, fleeing the hearing early citing a FEMA meeting conflict (even though that meeting had been canceled).

Johnson remarked humorously on Noem’s departure that she must have been scared of her questions, and Noem was heckled by observers on her way out.

Political oddsmakers are starting to bet that Noem isn’t long for her job. And based on her performance yesterday, she may not get to cosplay for national security and ride around in that DHS jet for much longer.

Trump and the Golden discharge

Apologies for that visual from the header, but the joke was sitting right there.

Earlier this year, Trump sought to eliminate certain union job protections for federal workers. As NBC reported,

Trump signed an executive order this year terminating collective bargaining with federal agencies tied to national security, citing authority under the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978. That law makes exceptions to organizing and collective bargaining for “agencies or units within an agency which has as a primary function intelligence, investigative, or national security work.”

The order in March affected the departments of State, Defense, Veterans Affairs, Energy, Health and Human Services, Treasury, Justice and Commerce and part of Homeland Security focused on border security.

But today, the GOP-led House voted to reinstate those collective bargaining rights thanks to a discharge petition introduced by Democrat Jared Golden of Maine. This was the second discharge petition to successfully circumvent Speaker Mike Johnson and take a matter directly to the floor for a vote. It passed 231-195 with 20 Republicans joining all Democrats in favor of it.

“This is solidarity in action. I’m proud of the bipartisan coalition who passed this bill,” Golden tweeted on Thursday. Rep. Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), considered a “centrist” Republican, concurred. He posted that the measure “restores something fundamental: the right of public servants to be heard, respected, and represented in their workplace,” and urged the Senate to “finish the job.”

Zooming out, this is a humiliation both for Trump and his puppet speaker, Mike Johnson. The discharge petition represents a loss of control for Johnson of his own conference and of action on the floor.

The Trump high is wearing off

When Trump started the year, he was riding high and pushing hard. He claimed a mandate out of a close election, and used it to target federal employees, law abiding undocumented immigrants, political enemies, and even democracy itself with an aggressive plan to steal the midterms through mid-decade gerrymandering of red state maps.

But his midterm plans are now in shambles, federal courts are calling out his Justice Department and freeing detained immigrants, grand juries are refusing to play along with his politicized prosecutions, his officials are floundering in their jobs, and his own Republican-led Congress is rebuking him.

Trump is looking like a weak second-term lame duck who is untethered from the political process and whom others are now prepared to ignore despite his excessive shouting and threats. That doesn’t normally happen within the first year of any second term presidency, so it is notable that Trump is losing his grip on power before 2025 is even over.

If history is any guide, Trump’s next moves will be even more over the top as he seeks to reassert his relevance and turn the headlines his way. Democrats understand this, which is why they are gearing up with more Epstein file releases while they hammer him on affordability, especially soaring healthcare costs.

In the meanwhile, keep an eye on what the rest of the GOP is doing. If there’s anything self-serving politicians do well, it is knowing when to jump ship. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (Q-GA) already did, and more may soon follow. Those who are left will fight over the scraps and try to claim Trump’s mantle if it looks like the king is going down.

And no, I don’t mean on Bubba.

10:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 窓 [Kanji of the Day]

✍11

小6

window, pane

ソウ ス

まど てんまど けむだし

窓口   (まどぐち)   —   counter
同窓会   (どうそうかい)   —   alumni association
相談窓口   (そうだんまどぐち)   —   inquiry counter
窓ガラス   (まどガラス)   —   windowpane
車窓   (しゃそう)   —   train window
同窓生   (どうそうせい)   —   graduate of the same school
窓際   (まどぎわ)   —   window
窓辺   (まどべ)   —   by the window
ガラス窓   (ガラスまど)   —   glass window
窓枠   (まどわく)   —   window frame

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 粒 [Kanji of the Day]

✍11

中学

grains, drop, counter for tiny particles

リュウ

つぶ

大粒   (おおつぶ)   —   large drop (rain, sweat, tears, etc.)
粒子   (りゅうし)   —   particle
一粒   (いちりゅう)   —   one grain
小粒   (こつぶ)   —   small grain
素粒子   (そりゅうし)   —   elementary particle
顆粒   (かりゅう)   —   granule
米粒   (こめつぶ)   —   grain of rice
微粒子   (びりゅうし)   —   corpuscle
粒状   (つぶじょう)   —   granular
全粒粉   (ぜんりゅうふん)   —   whole wheat flour

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

09:00 AM

07:00 AM

Trump Pretends To Block State AI Laws; Media Pretends That’s Legal [Techdirt]

The mainstream media just failed a basic civics test so badly that you’d think their brains have been pickled by the kinds of folks who spend all their time on X (oh, wait…). Headlines across major outlets are breathlessly reporting that Donald Trump “blocked states from passing AI laws” with an executive order. Except, that’s not how any of this works, and anyone who stayed awake during middle school social studies should know better.

Look at this:

That’s the New York Times, CNN, CNBC, NBC, and the Guardian all confidently telling their readers that Trump can magically override state sovereignty with a memo. These aren’t fringe blogs—these are supposedly serious news organizations with actual editors who apparently skipped the day they taught how the federal government works. They have failed the most simple journalistic test of “don’t print lies in the newspaper.”

Executive orders aren’t laws. They’re memos. Fancy, official memos that tell federal employees how to do their jobs, but memos nonetheless. You want to change what states can and can’t do? You need this little thing called “Congress” to pass this other little thing called “legislation.” Trump can’t just declare state laws invalid any more than he can declare himself emperor of Mars.

Even the text of the actual executive order admits all this:

My Administration must act with the Congress to ensure that there is a minimally burdensome national standard — not 50 discordant State ones.  The resulting framework must forbid State laws that conflict with the policy set forth in this order.  That framework should also ensure that children are protected, censorship is prevented, copyrights are respected, and communities are safeguarded.  A carefully crafted national framework can ensure that the United States wins the AI race, as we must.

Right there in black and white: “must act with the Congress.” Apparently, someone in the White House briefly remembered how government works, even if the president and the entire mainstream media have forgotten.

And look, I actually do mostly agree that we’d be much better off with a single federal solution here, rather than a bunch of piecemeal (and perhaps conflicting) rules from every state. But, that’s why you actually have to work with Congress, and if there’s anything this Congress has shown over the past 11 months, it’s that it is inherently unable to do anything particularly competently.

Only a few news orgs managed to call out the problems with this executive order. Barron’s rightly noted that there would be “court battles” over the law:

NPR, however, came out and pointed out that this overall executive order probably isn’t legal:

NPR’s right. The order contradicts itself so blatantly it’s almost impressive. First paragraph: “we need Congress.” Rest of the document: “never mind, we’ll just do whatever we want.”

Within 30 days of the date of this order, the Attorney General shall establish an AI Litigation Task Force (Task Force) whose sole responsibility shall be to challenge State AI laws inconsistent with the policy set forth in section 2 of this order, including on grounds that such laws unconstitutionally regulate interstate commerce, are preempted by existing Federal regulations, or are otherwise unlawful in the Attorney General’s judgment, including, if appropriate, those laws identified pursuant to section 4 of this order. 

You can’t just say that because a law goes against the intent of this executive order that the DOJ can challenge it. That’s not how that works. At all.

But here’s where this gets kinda funny (in a stupid way): that “interstate commerce” language could backfire spectacularly. Almost all state laws trying to regulate the internet—from child safety laws to age verification to the various attempts at content moderation laws—might run afoul of the dormant commerce clause by attempting to regulate interstate commerce if what the admin here claims is true (it’s not really true, but if the Supreme Court buys it…). Courts had been hesitant to use this nuclear option because it would essentially wipe out the entire patchwork of state internet regulation that’s been building for years, and a few decades of work in other areas that hasn’t really been challenged. Also, because they’ve mostly been able to invalidate those laws using the simple and straightforward First Amendment.

If Trump’s DOJ starts aggressively pursuing dormant commerce clause challenges to keep his Silicon Valley donors happy, they might accidentally create precedent that invalidates every state’s attempts to regulate social media, require age verification, or mandate content filtering. Every red state law targeting “Big Tech censorship,” every blue state law pretending to protect kids online—all of it could get swept away by Trump’s own legal strategy.

Wouldn’t that be something? In some ways, it would be hilarious, since I think almost all of these state laws are awful and a mess and waste everyone’s time… but it would certainly put a dent in a ton of efforts by Republicans and Democrats alike. All to keep the AI bros happy.

There’s also some extortion in here:

Within 90 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of Commerce, through the Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information, shall issue a Policy Notice specifying the conditions under which States may be eligible for remaining funding under the Broadband Equity Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program that was saved through my Administration’s “Benefit of the Bargain” reforms, consistent with 47 U.S.C. 1702(e)-(f).  That Policy Notice must provide that States with onerous AI laws identified pursuant to section 4 of this order are ineligible for non-deployment funds, to the maximum extent allowed by Federal law.  The Policy Notice must also describe how a fragmented State regulatory landscape for AI threatens to undermine BEAD-funded deployments, the growth of AI applications reliant on high-speed networks, and BEAD’s mission of delivering universal, high-speed connectivity.

We’ve talked about BEAD a lot here. That’s the Biden-era program that poured billions of dollars into broadband investment, which took way too long because Trump’s first FCC had fucked up the allocation process of earlier broadband grants. The Biden admin didn’t want a repeat of that, and thus tasked NTIA with figuring out a better allocation system, which took so long that Trump is back in office.

And rather than figure out the best way to allocate those funds, he’s holding them for ransom, and states that comply with his policy wishes might get it, and those that don’t won’t. It’s hellishly corrupt, but that’s what you get these days.

The other potentially interesting tidbit that is going to create a huge mess is Section 7:

Within 90 days of the date of this order, the Chairman of the Federal Trade Commission shall, in consultation with the Special Advisor for AI and Crypto, issue a policy statement on the application of the Federal Trade Commission Act’s prohibition on unfair and deceptive acts or practices under 15 U.S.C. 45 to AI models.  That policy statement must explain the circumstances under which State laws that require alterations to the truthful outputs of AI models are preempted by the Federal Trade Commission Act’s prohibition on engaging in deceptive acts or practices affecting commerce.

This seems like an improper use of the FTC’s power to deal with unfair and deceptive practices, but the Trump administration abusing and twisting laws to get what it wants is kind of standard operating procedure these days.

The real story here isn’t that Trump signed some groundbreaking AI policy—it’s that the entire mainstream media apparatus completely failed to understand the most basic principles of American government. Executive orders aren’t magic spells that override federalism. They’re memos.

That said, the potential for this legal strategy to completely backfire is darkly amusing. If Trump’s DOJ successfully argues that state AI laws violate the dormant commerce clause, they’ll have handed every future administration—and every tech company—a nuclear weapon against state internet regulation. Every privacy law, every age verification requirement, every attempt by states to regulate online platforms could get vaporized by precedent that Trump’s own lawyers established.

It wouldn’t surprise me if one of the tech bro folks in and around the administration got that dropped into this executive order without much of the administration realizing it.

Google Removes Sci-Hub Domains from U.S. Search Results Due to Dated Court Order [TorrentFreak]

Sci-HubIn 2017, American Chemical Society (ACS), a leading source of academic publications in the field of chemistry, won a lawsuit against Sci-Hub and its operator, Alexandra Elbakyan.

The ‘Pirate Bay of Science’ had failed to appear at a Virginia federal court, resulting in an easy win for the publisher and a $4.8 million default judgment award for damages.

A Broad Anti-Piracy Injunction (2018)

More important, perhaps, was the broad permanent injunction that the Virginia federal court signed off on in 2017. This order effectively gave ACS free rein to take down existing and newly registered Sci-Hub domain names.

The injunction also required all parties “in active concert or participation” with Sci-Hub to “cease facilitating access” to these domain names, including search engines, hosting providers, ISPs, and domain name registrars, the order clarified.

From the 2018 injunction

acs sci-hub injunction

On paper, this injunction enabled ACS to request American ISPs and search engines to ‘block’ existing and future Sci-Hub domains. However, there was no sign that the publisher was doing so. Aside from a few suspended domains, Sci-Hub remained widely accessible.

Whether ACS did not feel the need to enforce the order against search engines and other intermediaries or if these companies actively objected to the requested actions was unknown. And as time passed, the injunction became a distant memory, at least for a few years.

Google Complies with Zombie Injunction? (2025)

Earlier this week we spotted a unique request in the Lumen Database, where the 2018 injunction was cited. The notice in question asks Google to deindex 34 (sub)domains linked to Sci-Hub.

None of these domains were referenced in the 2018 injunction but are indeed linked to Sci-Hub. Many of the partially redacted domains appear to be domain variations of the scihubtw.tw mirror network, such as edu.scihubtw.tw and freeus.scihubtw.tw.

Court order notice

lumen sci

It’s surprising to see this type of enforcement seven years after the injunction was issued, but the request is legitimate. Google is certainly taking it seriously and has deindexed these domains from its search results in America. In other countries, the same domains remain accessible.

First “US-Only” Sci-Hub Removals

The December 2 notice was sent by UK law firm Wiggin LLP, which sent a similar request in September this year, targeting a few dozen other Sci-Hub domains. In total, we spotted seven notices, with the earliest dating back to 2022.

The results of these removals are also clearly visible in Google search. Those who search for Sci-Hub in the U.S. will see the following notice at the bottom of the results.

Removed by legal request

removed

It’s not clear why it took five years before ACS urged Google to take action in response to the injunction. However, these removals are similar to Google’s removal of pirate site domains in other countries in response to ISP-blocking orders. Voluntary cooperation by Google was uncovered shortly before ACS first notified the search engine.

“In Active Concert”?

Google’s voluntary cooperation with ISP blocking orders in Australia, the Netherlands, France, the UK, and elsewhere also brings up an important question. Is Google cooperating with the permanent injunction in the U.S. because it feels legally compelled to do so, or is that a voluntary gesture too?

The 2018 injunction requires all parties “in active concert or participation” with Sci-Hub to take action. While search engines are mentioned as an example, Google and other tech companies have previously argued that neutral third-party services are not necessarily “in active concert or participation”.

It is likely that Google maintains this stance, opting to voluntarily comply with orders targeting other third parties. That would mirror its response to site-blocking orders elsewhere.

We contacted Google hoping to hear answers to these questions, but the company did not respond to our request for comment.

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

05:00 AM

Rep. Green Again Pounds The Drum On Impeachment, And This Time A Majority Of Democrats March To The Beat [Techdirt]

This week Representative Al Green (Texas) filed another set of impeachment articles against Trump. They didn’t move forward; in fact, they failed an initial vote for Congress to decide to even think about moving them forward. But that impeachment didn’t move forward this time is not the story, because even though it didn’t, pursuing it was hardly for naught. It was, at minimum, an opportunity to get everyone on the record about whether they were in favor of pursuing impeachment against Trump. And the good news is that, importantly, and for the first time, a significant majority of Democrats went on record saying yes.

And at this stage that’s the result that matters. Because it’s a first step to build the momentum necessary so that someday all the Democrats, and even enough Republicans, will be able to get the impeachment effort over the finish line.

Of course, that day has not yet arrived. As it was there were 23 Democrats who still said no to impeachment. (Note: their “no” votes look like “yes” votes, but in this case “yes” meant “yes, let’s ignore these impeachment articles”). But it appears that number was originally going to be higher, suggesting that several “no” votes switched to “present” before the voting finished.

Voting “present,” as Democrat leadership declared it would, is, of course, a cowardly way of handling the question of whether impeachment should be pursued. After all, the oath every member of Congress took compels them to act to end Trump’s presidency as soon as possible. And the rationale that “leadership” cited for why they didn’t want to vote to move impeachment along was nonsense: no extensive investigations and hearings are necessary to chuck him out of office— Trump’s crimes are happening in plain sight. Impeachment can happen immediately, as soon as there are enough votes for it.

On the other hand, the fact that several “no” votes switched to “present” suggests Congress is starting to feel significant political pressure to finally get behind the impeachment effort. Also, voting “present” was a lot less destructive to the impeachment movement than a no vote would have been. So while the 47 “present voters” still chickened out on lending their support to the initiative, at least they didn’t try to sabotage it like so many Democrats had on an earlier occasion when Rep. Green had brought forth impeachment articles, when their “no” votes not only doomed the effort to fail but also kneecapped the overall impeachment movement, instead of letting it build momentum. Whereas this time the momentum survives. And with 140 Democrats now openly saying yes to the idea of impeaching Trump, it signals to those remaining hold-out Democrats, Republicans across the aisle, Senate colleagues, the public, and even Trump himself that comeuppance is at last coming.

And maybe even before the midterms, as exigency requires. Further impeachment articles therefore need to be brought forth again before too long, to keep pounding that drum until no one in Congress will be able to still to turn a deaf ear to the need to get Trump removal from office finally done.

But in the meantime there are two more sets of impeachment articles waiting in the wings, with Rep. Thanedar having drafted impeachment articles against Pete Hegseth and Rep. Stevens bringing them against RFK Jr.

There are so many members of the Trump Administration deserving of immediate ejection from their positions of trust. RFK Jr. and Hegseth aren’t even the only ones with body counts—Noem’s lawless goons and deportations have already caused deaths, as has Rubio’s unlawful closure of USAID, for instance—but RFK Jr. and Hegseth are a good place to start. RFK Jr. is responsible for the premature deaths of countless people due to his war on health science, and Hegseth for his war on everyone else. He’s not just destroyed the military readiness of our nation, leaked secrets to our adversaries, and squandered the nation’s military resources, human and otherwise, but he’s also doing murder and war crimes and making the rest of us accomplices to his atrocities.

With the impeachment articles against the two of them, Congress will now have a chance to clearly and boldly say, “Enough,” and start moving for their removal. And perhaps impeachment may even soon succeed, as RFK and Hegseth’s behavior has raised ire on both sides of the aisle. Impeaching either may not even be a political reach for Republicans, or at least trying to save them not worth the political capital. But even if Republican members of Congress continue to refuse to fulfill their own oversight responsibilities and support impeachment, by at least forcing the issue by filing these articles it forces everyone to make a public choice about whether or not they support removing them from office. Which means there can be a political price paid for that choice if any rep chooses wrong—as if the choice to fire someone like Hegseth or RFK Jr. is one that anyone is likely to regret.

But while their dismissal would be a good beginning to taking back our government from the incompetent monsters currently running it, and, on its own, help protect America from their further destruction, no impeachment of any Trump appointee itself solves the real problem, which is Trump himself. Everything he does endangers us, in such volume that it is simply not possible to address each threat one at a time. It is long past time to strike at the root of all the problems he and his cohorts have caused and evict him from the Oval Office. And while it will obviously take still more time to get there, it is good that Democrats have at last taken the first step.

Daily Deal: 3-in-1 Magnetic Wireless Charging Pad [Techdirt]

This 3-in-1 Magnetic Wireless Charging Pad integrates three charging modules for cell phones, headphones, and watches—a maximum power of 15W for cell phone charging, 5W for Airpods charging, and 2.5W for Apple Watch charging. This charging pad can be folded and used as a phone stand. It’s slim and compact, easy to put in your pocket or backpack, and perfect for office and travel. It’s on sale for $35.

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.

India’s Government Rolls Back Invasive Cell Phone Tracking Mandate 48 Hours After Issuing It [Techdirt]

The government of India — especially under Prime Minister Narendra Modi — has never been shy about wanting to know what every one of its billion-plus citizens are up to at any given time.

Not only does the government apparently have access to pretty much every bit of internet traffic generated by its citizens, it has also taken steps to ensure those seeking to avoid this pervasive surveillance won’t be allowed to opt out via VPNs or other options that might make their web surfing a bit less visible.

Modi’s government has also made it clear it doesn’t like American companies that undercut its surveillance efforts by notifying residents that their smartphones may have been compromised by state actors.

Everything went a step further last week. The government of India ordered smartphone providers to preemptively compromise devices sold to the country’s citizens.

India’s government sent a notice to private companies last week giving them 90 days to ensure that a government app was “preinstalled on all mobile handsets manufactured or imported for use in India.”

The order said the requirement was meant “to identify and report acts that may endanger telecom cybersecurity.” On Tuesday, the government explained that the app, Sanchar Saathi, was intended to prevent crime, including the theft and smuggling of phones and the call-center fraud that wreaks havoc within India and abroad.

Yeah, that’s fucked up. The government reiterated — even as it slowly walked backwards — that this was just a thing that anyone who didn’t want to be surveilled could easily avoid.

By Tuesday afternoon, the government appeared to be backpedaling. Jyotiraditya Scindia, the minister of communications, said that while “this app exists to protect them from fraud and theft,” it was also “completely optional.”

“If you don’t wish to register, you shouldn’t register and can remove it at any time,” he told reporters outside the Parliament building.

That assertion doesn’t appear to be supported by the facts. According to analysts, the order contained wording that suggested phone providers were expected to ensure the functionality of the government-mandated spyware was “not disabled.”

Not that it matters much at the moment. Less than two days after becoming the subject of international headlines (apparently debuting first at Reuters), the Modi government is scrambling to make this all go away as quickly as possible:

India’s government revoked an order on Wednesday that had directed smartphone makers such as Apple and Samsung to install a state-developed and owned security app on all new devices. The move came after two days of criticism from opposition politicians and privacy organizations that the “Sanchar Saathi” app was an effort to snoop on citizens through their phones.  

“Government has decided not to make the pre-installation mandatory for mobile manufacturers,” India’s Ministry of Communications said in a statement Wednesday afternoon. 

That’s better. Much better. But it still leaves manufacturers with the option of pre-loading this snitchware app voluntarily, which might be an option some take to score a few points with what is presumably a “regime for life” government headed by a relatively charismatic autocrat.

And while the government is currently getting bashed for attempting to slide this past the populace, it continues to insist it’s the public that’s wrong about this:

While the order for it to be installed universally was revoked, the government continued defending the app on Wednesday, saying the intent had been to “provide access to cybersecurity to all citizens,” and insisting that it was “secure and purely meant to help citizens.” 

While the app does allow users to make use of the tracking software to locate lost or stolen phones and/or defend against scammers using fraudulent numbers or online accounts, it was obvious from the secretive rollout that any benefits enjoyed by citizens were just the unavoidable byproduct of an app clearly meant to give the government expanding surveillance capabilities. It’s the sugar-coating on the poison pill. And all the government has to say in defense of its failed ratfuckery is that a rounding error (“2.6 million lost or stolen phones“) in a nation with 1.5 billion cell phones (that would be 0.17% of all phones) outweighs whatever evil it planned to do if it had been able to make this mandate stick.

01:00 AM

Keeping it open (video version) [F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository]

This Week in F-Droid

TWIF curated on Thursday, 11 Dec 2025, Week 50

F-Droid core

We had great reach with our “F-Droid and Google’s Developer Registration Decree” post and its sequel, “What We Talk About When We Talk About Sideloading”, to raise awareness about the future of Android. But we hope we broke out of our tech-savvy bubble, so everyone hears about what the proposed changes entail, and how F-Droid’s goal, of freedom for all users, is truly the way forward.

But if you didn’t read those yet, or you want an audio/video to go along, our own board member and writer, Marc Prud’hommeaux, recently had an 1 hour interview that covers it.

While the interview is one month old by now, and Google announced some initial modifications to how this will presumably work, we still believe these are not enough and device owners need full control and freedom.

The keepandroidopen.org site has all the info, a call to action and resources so you can make your voice heard.

Community News

Which apps make your top trio? In this 5 minutes post, in French, we get a glimpse of one Luxembourg sysadmins preferences.

39C3: Power Cycles, the 39th Chaos Communication Congress will take place between 27-30 December in CCH Hamburg. The 39C3 Schedule app was updated to 1.73.0 so make sure to have it ready.

ArcaneChat was updated to 2.33.0 to add some fixes and polish. But hidden there in plain site, there’s a boring change “New experimental feature: several addresses per profile” which sounds rather bland, what are profiles anyway? Well… this new option allows one to change the relay (read it as server) used to send and receive messages. This is a nice feature and you might need to read the guide to get the gist on how to switch them. Delta Chat will get updated soon too.

FOSS Warn was updated to 1.0.1 and some issues were fixed for UnifiedPush integration, hence Conversations and forks like Cheogram or monocles chat can be used as distributors again.

MediLog was updated to 3.5.0 and we also added MediLog (Reproducible build) signed by the developer.

Thunderbird Beta for Testers was updated to 16.0b2 and the devs posted their monthly report with the bonus 40+ mins video. Shock news: Material/You is not good enough and will be dropped!

Newly Added Apps

8 more apps were newly added
  • LinxShare: Share images on your device with others through your self-hosted linx server
  • LiveGalGame: An amazing app that lets you chat with girls like a GalGame
  • Lux Alarm: Wake up with light! This alarm can only be turned off when your room is bright
  • Messages: A fast messaging app designed to make conversations simple and effortless (A fork of QUIK SMS; description and app info will get fixed in the next version)
  • PlayHex: Play Hex board game online
  • Poker Payout: Professional poker tournament management with payouts and timers
  • Running Services Monitor: Monitor running services on your Android device with Shizuku integration
  • Tensy: Select numbers that sum to ten

Downgraded Apps

1 apps were downgraded
  • Clock was downgraded from 2.27 to 2.26 as we picked up an unstable version.

Updated Apps

154 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.

Friday 2025-12-12

11:00 PM

Politico’s Union Journalists Win Key Ruling In Battle Against Lazy, Undercooked AI [Techdirt]

The rushed integration of half-cooked automation into the already broken U.S. journalism industry simply isn’t going very well. There have been just countless examples where affluent media owners rushed to embrace automation and LLMs (usually to cut corners and undermine labor) with disastrous impact, resulting in lots of plagiarism, completely false headlines, and a giant, completely avoidable mess.

Earlier this year, we noted how Politico was among the major media companies rushing to embrace AI without really thinking things through or ensuring the technology actually works first. They’ve implemented “AI” systems –without transparently informing staff — that generate articles rife with all sorts of gibberish and falsehoods (this Brian Merchant post is a must read to understand the scope).

Politico management also recently introduced another AI “report builder” for premium Politico PRO subscribers that’s supposed to offer a breakdown of existing Politico reporter analysis of complicated topics. But here too the automation constantly screws up, conflating politicians and generating all sorts of errors that, for some incoherent reason, aren’t competently reviewed by Politico editors.

Actual human Politico journalists are understandably not pleased with any of this, especially because the nontransparent introduction of the new automation was in direct violation of the editorial union’s contract struck just last year. So unionized Politico employees spent much of this year battling with Politico via arbitration. And they just won a key battle in the fight, the first of its kind:

“The arbitrator ruled that Politico officially violated the collective bargaining agreement by failing to provide notice, human oversight, or an opportunity for the workers to bargain over the use of AI in the newsroom.

“If the goal is speed and the cost is accuracy and accountability,” the arbitrator wrote in his decision, “AI is the clear winner. If accuracy and accountability is the baseline, then AI, as used in these instances, cannot yet rival the hallmarks of human output, which are accuracy and reliability.” He also confirmed that the report-building product contained “erroneous and even absurd” AI-generated materials.

Politico leadership have made all sorts of crazy claims in the run up to this ruling, including Politico deputy editor-in-chief Joe Schatz claiming that AI can’t and shouldn’t be held to the same ethical standards as actual journalists, because it was technically created by programmers and not journalists.

In a statement, unionized Politico workers hope this sets a precedent at other news organizations:

“We are going to continue holding the line. This ruling is a great example of the important role unions play in ensuring workers have a say over working conditions–including the rollout of new technologies. I hope it emboldens our colleagues at other news shops across the country fighting AI deployments that similarly degrade ethical standards, and I hope it sends a message to managers at POLITICO and news executives everywhere that adopting new technology cannot come at the cost of accuracy and accountability.”

These aren’t “AI doomers.” They’re people who believe AI can be a useful tool, they just want it implemented competently and transparently, within the lines of existing union agreements.

There are, of course, caveats. Most U.S. journalists aren’t protected by a union, and we live in a country where labor regulators are being steadily lobotomized. And Politico itself, owned by yet another weird rich, Trump-friendly zealot, engages in a lot of false equivalency (“both sides,” “view from nowhere”) journalism with or without the help of undercooked automation.

By and large it’s pretty clear what the extraction class ownership of U.S. media want to build: a lazy, badly-automated, clickbait engagement ouroboros that shits out ad engagement and subscription money without the pesky need to pay so many annoying humans for things like health insurance. A system that basically just props up all of billionaire-ownerships’ laziest priors without interference by the plebs.

But, if nothing else, it’s refreshing to see some effective, organized resistance against the rushed implementation of under-cooked automation by the kind of rich assholes for whom informed consensus and the public interest are the very last thing on their minds.

RSSSiteUpdated
XML About Tagaini Jisho on Tagaini Jisho 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML Arch Linux: Releases 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Carlson Calamities 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Debian News 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML Debian Security 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML debito.org 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML dperkins 2025-12-15 02:00 PM
XML F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository 2025-12-15 01:00 AM
XML GIMP 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Japan Bash 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML Japan English Teacher Feed 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML Kanji of the Day 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Kanji of the Day 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Let's Encrypt 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Marc Jones 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Marjorie's Blog 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML OpenStreetMap Japan - 自由な地図をみんなの手で/The Free Wiki World Map 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML OsmAnd Blog 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow 2025-12-15 02:00 PM
XML Popehat 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Ramen Adventures 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Release notes from server 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect 2025-12-15 02:00 PM
XML SNA Japan 2025-12-15 02:00 PM
XML Tatoeba Project Blog 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML Techdirt 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML The Luddite 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML The Popehat Report 2025-12-15 02:00 PM
XML The Status Kuo 2025-12-15 02:00 PM
XML The Stranger 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML Tor Project blog 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML TorrentFreak 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML what if? 2025-12-15 10:00 PM
XML Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed 2025-12-10 08:00 PM
XML Write, Publish, and Sell 2025-12-15 11:00 AM
XML xkcd.com 2025-12-15 10:00 PM