The hedonic treadmill [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
When we upgrade something in our lives, the thing we used to be satisfied with is no longer satisfying.
That’s the nature of an upgrade.
After a certain point, the only thing we’re buying is the way the upgrade makes us feel in the moment, not our satisfaction going forward.
Stereos, salt, art on the wall. It’s easy to get hooked on the climb, not the altitude.
Luxury goods are a special set of upgrades. These are purchases that aren’t actually an upgrade, they simply feel that way because of their cost (and the status that goes with it).
At some point, the best upgrade is the realization that we have enough.
Was It Worth It, Lindsey? [The Status Kuo]
Lindsey Graham is dead. That news was a bit surprising, but it prompted many reviews of his record and revived an important question: Why’d he give it all up for a guy like Donald Trump?
Graham served four terms in the Senate, chaired the Judiciary and Budget committees, and was one of the most prominent voices in American foreign policy for two decades. He died Saturday night at his Washington home, hours after returning from Kyiv.
Graham had shown no public signs of illness. A top staffer told NBC News there was no indication he had been feeling unwell. Graham was scheduled to appear on “Meet the Press” the following morning. Trump said he had spoken with Graham by phone that evening and described him as tired but otherwise fine.
Graham’s relationship with Trump will define his legacy, and not in a positive way. Once upon a time, Graham had called Trump out publicly, warning that nominating him as president would destroy the party. But within a year, Graham discarded his principles, along with old friendships, to become one of Trump’s most reliable defenders. It was disquieting to witness.
What causes a person to abandon every stated principle, all for one rotten figure? Was it blackmail? Cowardice? I concur with those who say it was something more banal yet tragic. The last 11 years reveal a pattern quite common among fascist collaborators and hangers-on addicted to their proximity to power.
“Tell Donald Trump to go to hell.”
Graham ran for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination and dropped out that December, never rising above the low single digits in the polls. But what his campaign lacked in traction, it made up for in memorable anti-Trump critiques.
On CNN on Dec. 8, 2015, Graham called Trump “a race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot” who did not represent his party or “the values that the men and women who wear the uniform are fighting for.” He added, “You know how you make America great again? Tell Donald Trump to go to hell.”
Friction between the two candidates ran deep at the time. Months earlier, after Trump read Graham’s personal cell phone number aloud (an early form of doxxing) at a campaign rally, Graham called Trump a “jackass” and destroyed his phone on camera. By January 2016, Graham said: “Donald Trump is the most unelectable Republican I’ve seen in my lifetime.”
The following month, on Fox News, he went further. “I think he’s a kook. I think he’s crazy.”
On May 3, 2016, the day before Trump clinched the nomination, Graham wrote on Twitter: “If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed… and we will deserve it.” He did not vote for Trump that November.
The tweet remained live on his account for years afterward. Asked about it during a 2024 presidential debate broadcast, Graham claimed he simply hadn’t realized it was still there.
From kook to bestie
Graham’s pivot toward Trump began with a single fateful meeting. In March 2017, the newly inaugurated Trump invited Graham to the White House. By Graham’s own later account, a round of golf followed.
By late 2017, Graham was telling CNN he was troubled by “this endless, endless attempt to label the guy some kind of kook not fit to be president.” Remember, in February of 2016, he had used that very word to describe Trump. He was now redirecting it against others.
Asked what had changed his mind about the man he’d called unfit for office, Graham said: “I got to know him. I’ve played golf with him... He’s funny as hell. He’s got a great sense of humor. There’s a method to the madness.”
By April 2018, with the leaders of North and South Korea pledging to work toward denuclearization, Graham said on Fox News that if it held, Trump “deserves the Nobel Peace Prize and then some.”
Graham’s sycophancy even led him to betray those closest to him. Asked by Bloomberg that same year about Trump’s ongoing public attacks on the late Sen. John McCain of Arizona, Graham's closest friend in the Senate, including disparaging comments about McCain’s captivity as a prisoner of war, Graham said: “I don’t like what he says about John McCain. But when we play golf, it’s fun.”
“Count me out.”
For a brief moment, on Jan. 6, 2021, Graham appeared ready to do the right thing. Hours after a mob stormed the Capitol to disrupt certification of Joe Biden’s electoral win, Graham took to the Senate floor. While several Republican colleagues continued to object to the certification, Graham broke from them, saying: “Trump and I, we’ve had a hell of a journey. I hate it to end this way… All I can say is count me out. Enough is enough.” He then affirmed Biden’s legitimate election.
But five weeks later, on Feb. 13, at Trump’s second impeachment trial, Graham voted not to convict. The Senate voted 57-43 to convict, 10 votes short of the two-thirds majority required.
About six weeks later, Graham traveled to Mar-a-Lago to golf with Trump, framing the trip as an attempt to broker peace between Trump and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.
In a March 7, 2021 interview with Axios, Graham said: “Donald Trump was my friend before the riot. And I’m trying to keep a relationship with him after the riot. I still consider him a friend.” From declaring “I’m out” to full reconciliation took him just two months.
The warmonger: Israel and Iran
Graham was consistently one of the most hawkish members of the Senate, especially on Israel and Iran. His statements about the Middle East often seemed designed to shock and dehumanize. That record helps explain at least some of why the White House valued him beyond the golf course.
After Hamas’s Oct. 7, 2023 terrorist attack on Israel, Graham became one of the most forceful defenders of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, even if it meant slaughtering civilians. In a February 2026 podcast interview, asked about Israel “flattening Gaza,” Graham said: “Just flatten it. We flattened Berlin. We flattened Tokyo. Were we wrong to drop an atomic bomb to end the Japanese reign of terror? In my view, if I were Israel, I would have probably done it the same way.”
On Iran, Graham had called for military pressure on the regime for years before the Trump administration went to war. According to reporting by The Wall Street Journal, Graham made multiple trips to Israel in the weeks before the U.S. joined Israel’s military campaign against Iran in February 2026, meeting with Israeli intelligence officials and, by his own account, coaching Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on how to present the case for action to Trump. Graham told the Journal that Netanyahu subsequently presented Trump with intelligence that “persuaded” him to proceed. Graham therefore bears some responsibility for the mess Trump now finds himself in.
Asked in March 2026 about the war’s cost, reported at roughly $1 billion a day, Graham dug in. He told Fox News: “Best money ever spent.”
Months later, on June 21, 2026, during a discussion on CBS’s “Face the Nation” about negotiations with Iran, Graham said that if diplomacy failed, “President Trump is going to take the Strait of Hormuz,” adding that if Iran contested American control of the waterway, “we will obliterate them.”
A Russia hawk until it wasn’t cool
Graham’s position on Russia followed its own arc. For most of two decades, it looked nothing like his relationship with Trump. McCain, after meeting Vladimir Putin, once said: “I looked into Mr. Putin’s eyes, and I saw three letters, a ‘K,’ a ‘G,’ and a ‘B’” — a rebuke to George W. Bush’s 2001 comment that he’d looked in Putin’s eyes and gotten “a sense of his soul.” Graham, McCain’s closest ally on foreign policy, took a harder line than most.
After Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Graham became one of the Senate’s most consistent voices for Ukrainian aid, eventually making ten wartime trips to Kyiv. Weeks into the invasion, he even called publicly for Putin’s assassination by his own citizens, invoking Julius Caesar’s killers and the German officer who tried to kill Hitler, telling reporters: “I just want him to go… I wish somebody had taken Hitler out in the ‘30s.”
A year later, when the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Putin over the abduction of Ukrainian children, Graham’s office called it “more than justified by the evidence” and warned that “to forgive and forget Putin’s war crimes…would irrevocably damage the Rule of Law-based world order established at the end of World War II.”
Graham’s anti-Russia stance, it turned out, was subject to presidential override. On Feb. 28, 2025, President Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met in the Oval Office to sign an agreement giving the U.S. access to Ukrainian mineral resources. The meeting infamously devolved into a public confrontation, with Trump and Vice President JD Vance accusing Zelenskyy of insufficient gratitude for American support and Trump declaring that Zelenskyy had no cards. Trump ended the meeting before the deal could be signed or the planned joint press conference could begin.
Graham had met with Zelenskyy that same morning alongside Democratic Sens. Chris Coons and Amy Klobuchar, in what the senators described as an encouraging bipartisan conversation. But hours later, Graham stood outside the White House and told reporters: “What I saw in the Oval Office was disrespectful, and I don’t know if we could ever do business with Zelenskyy again. I have never been more proud of the president.” He said Zelenskyy should “resign and send somebody over that we can do business with, or he needs to change.”
History and the Complicit
Anne Applebaum singled out Graham as a modern-day fascist collaborator in a 2020 essay for The Atlantic, “History Will Judge the Complicit.” Applebaum is a historian of Soviet and Eastern European authoritarianism. She drew on 20th-century collaborators—Vichy officials who served the Nazi occupation of France, Communist Party functionaries in East Germany and Stalinist true believers in the Soviet Union—and found their motives were never singular. Some collaborated out of fear, some out of genuine ideological belief and some out of simple careerism, dressed up afterward as principle.
And some, she noted, collaborated for a reason having nothing ideological at all: the sheer, addictive pleasure of being close to power. She named Graham as an example. A friend of his, she wrote, told her that every time the senator ran into Trump, he came away boasting about it. Applebaum compared Graham’s excitement to that of a debate-club kid whom the popular quarterback had finally noticed.
Other astute political observers agreed. Steve Schmidt, a former Republican strategist who ran John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign, delivered a devastating assessment in Rolling Stone that’s worth reading in its entirety:
People try to analyze Lindsey through the prism of the manifest inconsistencies that exist between things that he used to believe and what he’s doing now,” Schmidt says. “The way to understand him is to look at what’s consistent. And essentially what he is in American politics is what, in the aquatic world, would be a pilot fish: a smaller fish that hovers about a larger predator, like a shark, living off of its detritus. That’s Lindsey. And when he swam around the McCain shark, broadly viewed as a virtuous and good shark, Lindsey took on the patina of virtue. But wherever the apex shark is, you find the Lindsey fish hovering about, and Trump’s the newest shark in the sea. Lindsey has a real draw to power — but he’s found it unattainable on his own merits.”
In high school terms, Graham was the desperate kid determined to be part of the in crowd, not the out crowd. Like other collaborators throughout history, he would do almost anything to stay there.
History will not be kind.
Book Spine Best Practices for Professional Book Covers [The Business of Printing Books]

It cannot be overstated how important your book cover is. It’s the first impression, the spark that drives a reader to learn more about your book.
A great cover doesn't stop at the front. Your book's spine is just as important—it's what readers see first on a bookshelf, and even small design mistakes can make an otherwise polished cover look unprofessional.
The good news? A few simple guidelines will help ensure your spine prints correctly. This includes designing for bleed and correctly placing your spine, as well as the critical task of planning for variance.
A book’s spine is the center of the cover, the narrow (or wide) edge where the pages are bound. There are many ways to bind a book. For our purposes, we’re going to focus on Paperback books (also called perfect-bound books) because they’re one of the most commonly used binding methods.
Perfect binding involves milling the spine edge of the pages to create a series of notches. Then the printer rolls glue over the spine edge, and the book block is pressed into the cover until the glue sets. This glued edge becomes the book’s spine.
Your cover should always be created as a single file that includes the:
Spine width is determined by your page count, so every book needs a custom cover template. For the best results, generate your template by uploading your final interior PDF file on Lulu. If you're designing your cover first, you can download a preliminary template from our pricing calculator and replace it with an updated version once your page count is finalized.

During printing and trimming, tiny variations can occur. While they're usually only fractions of an inch, they can cause spine artwork or text to shift slightly.
To avoid noticeable issues:


If your book is thick enough to include spine text, keep it centered and leave adequate padding on both sides.
A typical spine includes:
If your spine is very narrow, it's often better to omit text entirely than risk it printing off-center.
While there are formulas for estimating spine width, you don't need to do the math.
If you or a professional are designing your cover before your interior is finalized, you can use Lulu's pricing calculator to generate a preliminary cover template using your planned book specifications and estimated page count. Once your interior is complete, download a new template based on the final page count and make any necessary adjustments before publishing.
You can also generate a custom cover template with the correct dimensions after creating a new project and uploading your interior file.
Lulu provides a preview tool to review your cover after you upload it. Before approving your book:

A few extra minutes reviewing your cover can help prevent costly reprints and ensure your book looks polished from every angle.
Your spine may be the narrowest part of your cover, but it has a big impact on how professional your book looks. By designing with print variance in mind, using a custom cover template, and leaving enough space around text and graphics, you'll create a cover that's ready to print with confidence.
Create a Lulu Account today to print and publish your book for readers all around the world
Kanji of the Day: 資 [Kanji of the Day]
資
✍13
小5
assets, resources, capital, funds, data, be conducive to, contribute to
シ
資金 (しきん) — funds
資格 (しかく) — qualifications
投資 (とうし) — investment
資料 (しりょう) — materials
資産 (しさん) — property
資源 (しげん) — resources
融資 (ゆうし) — financing
原資料 (げんしりょう) — original source
政治資金規正法 (せいじしきんきせいほう) — Political Funds Control Act
投資家 (とうしか) — investor
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 糧 [Kanji of the Day]
糧
✍18
中学
provisions, food, bread
リョウ ロウ
かて
食糧 (しょくりょう) — food (esp. staple food such as rice or wheat)
世界食糧計画 (せかいしょくりょうけいかく) — World Food Program
兵糧 (ひょうろう) — provisions
食糧不足 (しょくりょうふそく) — food shortage
食糧援助 (しょくりょうえんじょ) — food assistance
兵糧攻め (ひょうろうぜめ) — starvation tactics
食糧事情 (しょくりょうじじょう) — food situation
心の糧 (こころのかて) — food for thought
糧食 (りょうしょく) — provisions
食糧庁 (しょくりょうちょう) — food agency
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
“Reckless” Ben’s Videos Keep Getting More Damning. His Pro Se Lawyering Keeps Getting Worse. [Techdirt]
One thing that we’ve heard for many years in covering a variety of ridiculous civil and criminal court cases is the belief that when a crazy case is filed, the person accused of wrongdoing should “just walk into court and tell the judge what really happened.” While that might feel right, it’s really not how these things work. There is a procedure, and having an actual lawyer who understands how things work is incredibly valuable.
When we first wrote about “Reckless” Ben Schneider and his valiant attempt to help Bryan Mansell get back the Lego sets (and/or money) he was owed from the company Bricks & Minifigs, we mentioned that almost everyone in the dispute should have talked to lawyers earlier in the process than they did. We had a lot of people get mad at us for making that claim, but I stand by it. Especially after Schneider has dropped Part 3 (after a federal court fixed the extremely problematic injunction from a state court that had blocked him from releasing it originally), and it again shows why Schneider really needs to hire a lawyer.
As lots of people are rightly noting, the video itself shows a ton of pretty sketchy behavior by Bricks & Minifigs and the cops — police walking a witness through how to invent charges while mocking Schneider, and Bricks & Minifigs caught telling wildly different stories depending on who was listening. And then, right on schedule, after the video came out Bricks & Minifigs followed it up with a new blog post on Friday that somehow makes things worse.
Schneider certainly knows how to make pretty viral video content, but representing himself in court seems particularly stupid, especially as he’s doing it here in a criminal case. He is right that the deck is stacked against him and that the prosecutors and the judge don’t seem to be listening to him or taking his claims seriously, but that’s in large part because he’s bumbling into court without a lawyer, and when he’s being asked fundamental procedural questions is telling the judge “have you looked at the evidence we submitted?”
Again, this might feel like the right way to handle a case where you feel you’re being railroaded, but procedurally, the court isn’t supposed to be looking at the evidence at this stage of the case, so Schneider making out like the court is treating him unfairly just misses the point that basically any lawyer could have told him regarding how cases like this proceed.
That’s not to defend the prosecutors, the police, or Bricks & Minifigs. While the video is (again) only showing Schneider’s side of the story, there are a whole bunch of things in the video that are incredibly damning to all three.
Let’s go through a few key points: First up: what the cops told Schneider about the charges against him, and what they were actually hiding.
Schneider plays some audio from one of the criminal cases against him (it’s a little unclear which one, since he suggests it’s the case in American Fork, but a screenshot he shows briefly suggests it may be the other case in Provo), where he says that the prosecutor and the court won’t even share what he’s being charged with, though the video clips don’t show that. Rather they show prosecutors trying to get out of providing body cam footage in discovery to Schneider, claiming that they’re upset he’ll make video commentary out of it. Discovery of evidence is not the same as knowing what the charges are, even if the evidence is related to the charges.
Even so, the claim is bullshit. The fact that Schneider might create public commentary with the videos is no excuse for not providing discovery. If that’s the concern, prosecutors can seek to have a protective order put over how the discovery materials are used, and if Schneider violates that order, then he could face contempt charges. Simply denying discovery is ridiculous.
But it’s the second case, out of Provo, where the bodycam footage stops looking like sloppy policing and starts looking like something much more problematic. Schneider was able to obtain bodycam footage from the police who were handling the charges against him based on statements from Bricks & Minifigs’ CEO Ammon McNeff. Again, we’re only seeing the evidence as selected and edited by Schneider, but it’s difficult to see how there’s anything else that would exonerate how the Provo police acted here.
They literally have one police officer talking to McNeff (repeatedly), talking about how McNeff’s original claim of extortion isn’t supported by the evidence but offering to help him find some other charges, and then asking McNeff to confirm specific elements to turn it into commercial obstruction. The police officer’s quote here is deeply problematic:
“We agree that there really was no extortion code that would fit your situation, however, you know, at the end of the day, we do want to help you guys so you’re not having to deal with this fool… [sigh]… all his issues. We did find that there was another code that fit and it’s called aggravated commercial obstruction….”
Having the police call Schneider a “fool” and saying they want to help find charges that will stick is not great. They then walk McNeff through what they need him to say/do to get such charges, including claiming that he asked Schneider to leave the Bricks & Minifigs premises multiple times and Schneider refused. Schneider shows his own video recordings (and security footage) that appears to directly contradict this — specifically showing that when asked to leave they did so.
There is one point where McNeff asks them to leave but then keeps talking to them anyway, so that almost certainly doesn’t count as a legitimate request to leave. And none of the footage Schneider shares matches even remotely what McNeff told the police. There is footage of Schneider (stupidly) saying “we can do this the easy way or the hard way,” which is not fatal to Schneider’s argument, but can certainly be read as a threat. In all these videos, that’s the one point that isn’t great for Schneider, though in the full context it’s pretty clearly a threat to release more videos and publicly shame Bricks & Minifigs. Still, that line hurts Schneider’s argument a bit.
McNeff also tells the police that Schneider threatened to burn the offices down, even though in their own civil lawsuit against him they admit that various threats have not come from Schneider directly but from some of his fans online. If Schneider had directly threatened them, you’d think they would have included that in the civil complaint. While most of the video evidence has only been selectively released, at this point not a single bit of evidence shows Schneider actually threatening any sort of violence towards Bricks & Minifigs (indeed, it seems that his whole schtick is to sort of do the dopey, hapless, inquisitor thing).
Based on the current evidence, it sure looks like McNeff just lied to the cops, and the cops not only took his side, but helped nudge McNeff about what he should say or do to give them enough to charge Schneider.
Not great!
Even worse, when the same cop figures out what they can charge them with, the body cam footage shows her laughing with glee. You kinda have to watch the clip directly (starting at 16:15) where the cop gets kinda gleeful that McNeff told her enough to charge Schneider with a second degree felony (Schneider falsely calls it a “secondary” felony). This is actually two separate clips from Schneider’s video, though it sounds like they’re directly connected to one another:
Cop: However, the tricky thing is is that we have to prove that this individual either entered or remains unlawfully on the premise. When he came to the property, did you have to ask him more than once to leave?
McNeff: Yes.
Cop: Okay.
McNeff: You know, ‘we’re not leaving until we we get it.’ …
[other video interspersed before cutting back to this exchange]
McNeff (trying to reconstruct the scene for the cop): ‘Guys, at this point, I’ve asked you to leave. Please leave.’ ‘Well, we we you know, like you have to listen to us. You have to pay us this money.’ ‘No, guys, you need to leave and you’re not leaving.’ Like, but I asked multiple times. They did not leave.
Cop: Looks like that might be a second degree felony. [laughs joyfully] He’s facing felony charges. It is a felony…
That is all… pretty damning. Later the same cop mocks Schneider’s first video: “I’m really curious if this fool makes any money doing this YouTube stuff?” Even later, she says to McNeff “well, I’ll keep my fingers crossed for you. Hopefully no more issues” and “there’s so many other things that this guy could be talking about, right?” Just completely supporting McNeff and dismissing Schneider’s side entirely.
Though I will note that Schneider also has a misunderstanding that “reporting a crime” (as he tries to do with McNeff) is “opening a case.” While police can investigate claims of a crime, until a prosecutor charges it, there is no actual “case.”
But it does seem overwhelmingly clear, from what’s presented in this video at least, that the police immediately believed and sided with McNeff and dismissed/ignored everything Schneider presents in response… to the point that they sent a subpoena to Google seeking a bunch of Schneider’s emails, communications, and other documents. There’s a suggestion in the video that McNeff got Schneider to email him just to get his email for the sake of the subpoena, though it seems clear that McNeff had other means of getting Schneider’s email address. Schneider points out that he emailed via the website contact form and had received a reply from someone at Bricks & Minifigs. And while McNeff acts like he’s never heard of that email address and it has nothing to do with him, that’s clearly bullshit, and he could easily talk to whatever employee manages that account to get Schneider’s email address.
Set the criminal case aside for a second, because there’s a parallel thread here that’s just as bad for the company: McNeff’s own claims about the inventory list don’t survive contact with reality. McNeff tells Schneider that he’ll happily share the inventory they did of the store they took over if he sends an email to the one specific address, and says he told Mansell the same thing. However, when Schneider emails that address and follows up, he receives this reply:

If you can’t read that, it says:
Mr. Schneider,
- BAM Franchising, Inc. will not participate in any form of communication that appears designed for public provocation, harassment, or manipulation of facts for the purpose of media content.
- Attempts to obtain privileged or confidential information through misrepresentation or the creation of fraudulent documents may constitute criminal misconduct, and we reserve all rights to refer such behavior to appropriate legal authorities.
Should you believe you are entitled to any specific information under applicable law, we suggest that you pursue such requests through formal and lawful legal procedures.
This will serve as our final response to your inquiry unless we are contacted by duly retained legal counsel representing a party of standing.
That shows pretty clearly that McNeff was full of shit when he said he’d be happy to email Schneider a copy of the inventory. And, sure, you can say that between Schneider visiting them and the time this email was sent they decided that they didn’t like how they were going to be portrayed, but there’s a pattern here. In the video Schneider releases, he shows McNeff saying “I think we have sent it to Bryan” in reference to the inventory list, and later says that if Schneider and Mansell get on an email thread together he’ll send it to both of them.
They also show McNeff going on TV news interviews claiming that they had told Mansell and Mansell’s lawyer that they were happy to work on going through the inventory list, but that Mansell’s lawyer stopped responding. McNeff said: “we’ve tried to share those with Mr. Mansell in hopes that he can see that we were not attempting — in any shape or form — to withhold anything. Those were then offered to him, and the initial offer was rejected.”
Except that Mansell has the receipts in the form of the email thread between his lawyer and Bricks & Minifigs, which seems to show pretty clearly a very different story. Even as we only see snippets of the emails, it’s hard to square this with what McNeff keeps claiming. The emails show Mansell’s lawyer asking multiple times how to get the money owed or the sets back and finally getting a stiff arm email saying that the two guys who Bricks & Minifigs handed the store to, “Brandon Best and Joshua Johnson, have no legal obligation to return any of the LEGO product.”

And then, even more damning is the closing of the email, saying “We consider this matter closed and will not be returning any LEGO products to you.”

That, uh, does not seem like a company that claims that it has no problem trying to work with Mansell to resolve this issue. Last week we mocked Bricks & Minifigs for having their crisis comms person send us an email about how the company was so eager to help make Mansell whole. That already seemed ridiculous since they’re suing Mansell for $1.3 million claiming RICO. But also, that was before we’d seen this email where the company basically says “shove it.”
Anyway, even as this is just coming from Schneider’s side, it’s hard to see how there’s any additional info that would acceptably square the claims made by McNeff with what’s been presented. There’s now plenty of discussion about how Schneider likely has civil claims he could bring against McNeff. Arguably he could also claim that the police in both American Fork and Provo violated his rights, but that’s likely an extreme longshot (not because the cops are in the right, but because it’s next to impossible to sue the cops for violating your rights).
Either way, we now know that Schneider has legal representation for the civil case, and hopefully that means he can also secure legal representation for the criminal case as well, because that would clearly be helpful. Yes, all of this is tremendous content, but your strategy in court when facing felony charges and your strategy for making viral content can (and should) be somewhat different.
Honestly, given how much attention this has gotten, and the legal help that has started to step up, there’s a decent chance that the criminal cases will go away, but that’s very much not the norm. Planning to go viral is not a strategy any lawyer would recommend for fighting criminal charges.
Anyway, while Schneider’s legal troubles play out, it’s worth remembering that Bricks & Minifigs certainly was not blindsided by Schneider’s Part III. They knew it was coming and that it was blocked by the broader injunction they had obtained in court. They knew that they had negotiated a pared back injunction, which meant Part III would be released soon. They basically had weeks to prepare a PR response to all the damning stuff that video was going to show.
And this is what they came up with.
The company released yet another tone deaf blog post on Friday, which talks about all the “changes” they’re making to respond to some of the criticism they’re getting. Half of them basically read as admissions of how badly run the company is. They admit that they’re going to work more closely with franchises (apparently they’ve recently jacked up franchise fees) and have put in place a “standardized inventory and trade system” effectively admitting that they had nothing before.
There are also some comments on the lawsuit that look written by the world’s worst crisis comms team. I mean, this is embarrassing:
Some have asked why Bricks & Minifigs hasn’t simply dropped the pending litigation connected to this matter. The answer is that accountability and integrity must run both ways. We remain open to a mediated, amicable resolution, and we don’t view litigation as the preferred path. We’re also not willing to submit to manipulation, threats and unsupported accusations.
That… doesn’t answer the question. And sure, fine, accountability and integrity should run both ways, but you’re the one out there claiming that you’re trying to make Mansell whole… while telling him you won’t give him any of his stuff back and then suing him for $1.3 million.
The blog post also suggests they have to keep the lawsuit going because Schneider’s conduct “has crossed the line from fair criticism into harassment, misrepresentation, and targeted harm.” But that’s Schneider, not Mansell. It’s also laughable given the footage that’s been shown so far.
And of course they try to avoid the fact that all the presented evidence makes them look terrible with this favorite line:
We will not try this matter on social media, and we will not use this statement to relitigate every disputed detail. Those issues belong in mediation and, if necessary, the legal process.
Again, that makes sense in certain contexts, but here where you’ve been running your mouth off constantly on TV show after TV show with claims that directly contradict what corporate actions and emails have said, it does the opposite of building credibility.
At basically every turn where Bricks & Minifigs could have made the situation better, they’ve dug in and made it worse. It seems like a bad strategy. So bad it’s even worse than going to court and trying to defend yourself from criminal charges without a lawyer.
Musk’s Starlink Socks Customers With $1500 ‘High Demand’ Surcharge [Techdirt]
For years I’ve noted that while Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite broadband system can be very useful for people with no other options (warzones, RVs, boats, rural Americans), the network has struggled to maintain performance as it grows into more mainstream markets, resulting in not only widespread slowdowns, but also the company socking users with massive “congestion surcharges.”
These surcharges are actively designed to deter use because the network is struggling to handle the load. They started at around $100 a few years ago, then jumped to $750. And last week, Reddit users began complaining that they were automatically hit with a $1500 demand surcharge. And because Musk’s companies historically don’t invest in customer service, calling up to complain doesn’t really help:
“I have been charged 1500 dollars demand surcharge for simply verifying my address that I have subscribe to 3 years ago. I have contacted starlink customer support but it’s pretty worthless. I have been getting tossed from one agent to another agent for the past 5 days.”
Last year, a study from researchers at X-Lab quietly showed that Starlink struggles to manage the load as the network grows, making it ill-suited as serious game changer for U.S. access. So as the network scales up, Starlink will be forced to impose more and more limits and restrictions on usage to ensure that most people have an acceptable experience. The laws of physics are kind of annoying like that.
That a niche broadband option gets congestion normally wouldn’t be that big of a deal; the problem is Trump Republicans have hijacked and retooled the $42.5 billion infrastructure bill broadband grant program to throw billions of dollars — and millions of new customers — at Musk’s Starlink as a personal favor to one of the U.S. president’s biggest donors.
Ideally, sensible U.S. broadband policy involves pushing fiber optic cable as deeply into American communities as possible, then covering a lot of the remainder with either fixed wireless or cellular tech. Only then can low-Earth orbit satellite broadband options like Starlink (or Amazon’s Leo) act as niche options that fill in the gaps.
These technologies were never really designed to be the primary avenue for broadband delivery across the bandwidth-hungry country. They’re simply not useful in many more densely populated areas. But the Trump extended infotainment universe is convinced that Starlink is akin to some kind of magic simply because Musk’s name is involved.
So they’re redirecting billions of taxpayer dollars away from better, higher-capacity fiber options and toward Musk’s Starlink, which is only going to result in greater congestion as the network begins to strain under the heavily subsidized load. People will only start to figure this out long after Musk has pocketed billions of dollars in subsidies in exchange for Starlink service SpaceX already planned to deploy.
I’ll repeat that because it gets missed: Musk is getting billions in subsidies, which he professes to hate, in exchange for doing nothing differently. Extremely innovative.
There’s been an additional layer of stupidity created by the SpaceX IPO and its utterly bogus proclaimed valuations. The prospectus pretends that Starlink will somehow magically scale from 10 million current subscribers to more than 300 million in very short order with no headaches, but reality and the laws of physics are going to have something very different in mind.
And again (just like Tesla Solar), because Starlink customer service is largely nonexistent, folks shoveled toward Starlink by the Trump administration aren’t going to have a good time. This is all before you get to the fact that Starlink has also been criticized for harming astronomical research and the ozone layer, and is generally too expensive for the folks most in need of reliable broadband access.
That’s not to say that services like Starlink don’t have very real uses, but the company and its tech (like everything Musk touches) is being wildly misrepresented in a way that’s going to become increasingly and problematically apparent in the next few years.
Pluralistic: Why aren't AI companies competing directly with their customers? (13 Jul 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->
Top Sources:
None
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"I often wonder what the Vintners buy/One half so precious as the Goods they sell" -The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám
I first encountered that quote from someone extolling the virtues of bookstores, and it stuck with me, because for most of my childhood, every bookstore visit ended with me broke and wishing I'd had three times as much to spend.
As a larval hyperlexic, I just didn't understand what a bookseller could possibly buy with my money that was better than the books they already had? Of course, then I became a bookseller and discovered that Sturgeon's Law ("90% of everything is shit") applies to a bookstore's wares as much as it does to anything else. I also acquired a monthly rent obligation and discovered just how important money could be.
Nevertheless, Omar Khayyám's question stuck with me, especially when I fell down a years-long rabbit-hole of learning about scams and the finance sector (but I repeat myself). Every get-rich-quick schemer will tell you that they've found the infinite money hack, which they will sell to you for a remarkably reasonable sum. Likewise, every stock picker claims they can outperform a simple low-load index fund, and all they ask of you is a few hundred basis points in exchange for multiplying your wealth beyond the dreams of Creosote. Neither one has a good answer to Khayyám's question: if you can make all the money with your amazing system, why do you need my money?
This is a question that needs to be forcefully put to AI hucksters. In their more expansive moments, the Altmans and Amodeis of the world will tell you that they're planning to teach the word-guessing program so many words that it will wake up and become god. DOGE's broccoli-haired brownshirts laughed in the faces of the NIH lifers who begged them not to vaporize their long-running cancer research projects: "General AI is around the corner and it's going to cure cancer. Cancer research is a waste of money!"
Which all raises the question: if you've truly incubated a foetal demiurge in your "AI lab," why are you offering to sell it to me? What do the AI hucksters buy/One half so precious as the Gods they sell?"
Of course, they might answer, "We need your money now so we can make god later." That's why they want your boss to fire you and replace you with their chatbots and split your wages with your former employer. But this just raises the same question: if you have a chatbot that can do a doctor's job, why sell it to a hospital? Why not just open your own hospital? If you've got a chatbot that can do a tax accountant's job, why sell it to a tax-prep service? Why not just open a tax-prep service? If you've got a chatbot that can teach my kids, why sell it to my local school district? Why not just open a school?
If the chatbot can do the job, and if the chatbot costs less than the worker who does the job today, then the chatbot company can profitably sell services more cheaply than anyone who presently employs that worker, because the chatbot company already owns the chatbot. If you were really on a glide path to creating an all-powerful deity and just needed cash to keep the venture going until the cancer-curing word-guesser awoke from its long slumber, then wouldn't you want as much cash as possible? Why would you voluntarily split the take with some sucky, washed, non-god-generating business from before 2022?
I think the only reason this question doesn't come up more frequently is that we're stewing in what Douglas Rushkoff calls the "go meta" economy, in which the most respectable and smartest business to operate must be as many abstraction layers away from real work as possible. Don't drive a taxi, own a medallion that you rent to the cab driver. Don't own a medallion, start a "rideshare" company. Don't start a rideshare company, invest in a rideshare company. Don't invest in a rideshare company, buy options to invest in a rideshare company:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/09/13/collapse-porn/#collapse-porn
The inverse relationship between doing something useful and making money is deeply ingrained in our economic wisdom. Take the world of online grifters, who don't just peddle get-rich-quick PDFs, they also peddle tools to generate get-rich-quick PDFs, as well as tools to steal other "wealth influencers'" insta videos and deepfake yourself into their pretend private jets:
https://www.404media.co/how-i-bought-a-private-jet-by-selling-10-subscriptions-to-404-media/
The scam economy boasts a bewildering array of ancillary services, like a $150/month service that lets you produce fake screenshots showing vast monthly income on other scam services (November Kelly calls this "The world's most expensive 'inspect element'"):
https://www.patreon.com/trashfuture/posts/faux-high-level-163443872
It's an old truism that in a gold rush, the only people who come out ahead are the people selling the picks and shovels. But that's not true – there's even more money to be made wholesaling picks and shovels to the retailers who operate the frontier mercantiles. Go meta!
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Alaskan_Gold_Mining_Supplies_(1897)_(ADVERT_277).jpeg
Today's economy is dominated by pick-and-shovel wholesalers. America is a gerontocracy drowning in MBAs, while there's no one to do eldercare:
So it's not surprising that we don't ask why these AI god-botherers need our stupid money while they're immanentizing the eschaton. Why would they operate a hospital if they could go meta and sell the doctorbots to the MBAs running the hospital?

Zohran Mamdani's retro wristwatch is a Casio classic https://boingboing.net/2026/07/08/zohran-mamdanis-retro-wristwatch-is-a-casio-classic.html
B.O.B. (Birds Over Big Bird) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAXO7SXK0Pc
A referendum for another development model https://thomaspiketty.wordpress.com/2026/06/23/a-referendum-for-social-justice/
Introducing the Gap Map v0.1 https://www.currentai.org/blogs/introducing-the-gap-map-v0-1
#25yrsago Pro-lumber industry spoof of The Lorax https://web.archive.org/web/20010721042828/http://www.forestcouncil.org/news/articles/truax1.htm
#25yrsago Remixable vocal tracks from the next Public Enemy release https://web.archive.org/web/20010813195140/http://www.slamjamz.com/slamnews.php?article=7
#20yrsago Wikipedia creates RSS for its posts https://web.archive.org/web/20060718103013/http://www.micropersuasion.com/2006/07/wikipedia_entir.html
#20yrsago Anti-DRM picture-book https://web.archive.org/web/20060721095740/https://dustrunners.blogspot.com/2006/07/pig-and-box.html
#10yrsago The US has spent $122B training foreign cops and soldiers in 150+ countries, but isn’t sure who https://web.archive.org/web/20160713145824/https://theintercept.com/2016/07/13/training/
#10yrsago German free school teaches without grades, timetables or lesson plans https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/jul/01/no-grades-no-timetable-berlin-school-turns-teaching-upside-down
#10yrsago For the first time, a federal judge has thrown out police surveillance evidence from a “Stingray” device https://www.rawstory.com/2016/07/federal-judge-throws-out-evidence-gathered-with-stingray-cell-phone-tracker/
#10yrsago Day on a Device: art made by screenshotting a multitasker’s screen with each context-switch https://www.theverge.com/2016/7/13/12170526/multitasking-phone-laptop-pierre-buttin-art
#10yrsago Remarkably Normal: the true stories of abortion in America https://web.archive.org/web/20160810092901/http://jezebel.com/the-vagina-monologues-but-for-abortion-1783289270/amp
#10yrsago Theresa May performs the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air theme https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xv7Jd94bnOI
#10yrsago UK Labour’s dirty trick excludes 130,000 members from leadership vote https://web.archive.org/web/20160712225142/http://www.itv.com/news/2016-07-12/corbyn-opponents-try-to-fix-vote/
#10yrsago Security researchers: the W3C’s DRM needs to be thoroughly audited https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/06/call-security-community-w3cs-drm-must-be-investigated
#10yrsago Help Doctors Without Borders fill in the geodata blanks for vulnerable communities https://missingmaps.org/blog/2016/07/14/mapswipe/
#10yrsago Sign a book of congratulations for America’s new Librarian of Congress https://web.archive.org/web/20160718023555/https://action.everylibrary.org/congratulate_carla_hayden_today
#10yrsago Hungary’s Cold War cartoons were weird and awesome https://globalvoices.org/2016/07/14/the-fascinating-world-of-cold-war-era-hungarian-cartoons/
#10yrsago The ACLU has a roadmap for defeating President Donald Trump’s signature initiatives https://web.archive.org/web/20160715131734/https://action.aclu.org/sites/default/files/pages/trumpmemos.pdf
#10yrsago America’s infrastructure debt is so bad that towns are unpaving roads they can’t afford to fix https://web.archive.org/web/20160713170836/https://www.wired.com/2016/07/cash-strapped-towns-un-paving-roads-cant-afford-fix/
#10yrsago It’s official: the Olympics result in the worst budget overruns of any megaproject https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2804554
#10yrsago Vivendi lobbyist appointed to run copyright for UN agency https://web.archive.org/web/20160717052135/http://keionline.org/node/2614
#10yrsago The long, racist history of Brexiteer Boris Johnson, the new UK Foreign Secretary https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-36792746
#5yrsago Facebook employees stalk users https://pluralistic.net/2021/07/14/who-watches-the-zuckmen/#pecksniffs
#5yrsago Semantic drift versus ethical drift https://pluralistic.net/2025/07/14/pole-star/#gnus-not-utilitarian

Sydney: The Festival of Dangerous Ideas, Aug 23-24
https://festivalofdangerousideas.com/cory-doctorow/
Melbourne: Enshittification at the Wheeler Centre, Aug 25
https://www.wheelercentre.com/events-tickets/season-2026/cory-doctorow-enshittification
Brighton: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Carole Cadwalladr (Brighton Dome), Sep 8
https://brightondome.org/whats-on/LSC-cory-doctorow-the-reverse-centaurs-guide-to-life-after-ai/
London: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Riley Quinn (Foyle's Picadilly), Sep 9
https://www.foyles.co.uk/events/enshittification-cory-doctorow-riley-quinn
South Bend: An Evening With Cory Doctorow (Notre Dame), Oct 6
https://franco.nd.edu/events/2026/10/06/an-evening-with-cory-doctorow/
You Bought it, They Break It (What Now? with Trevor Noah)
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/dir-ir36t-2f4a1ac6
Can AI be Saved From Capitalism? (Everyday Anarchism)
https://www.everydayanarchism.com/192-can-ai-be-saved-from-capitalism-cory-doctorow/
Lawfare Daily
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1KIwaYRs1g
How to Think About AI (Organized Money)
https://www.organizedmoney.fm/p/how-to-think-about-ai-with-cory-doctorow
"Canny Valley": A limited edition collection of the collages I create for Pluralistic, self-published, September 2025 https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/04/illustrious/#chairman-bruce
"Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/
"Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels).
"The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (thebezzle.org).
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org).
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com.
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
"Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027
"Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2027
"The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2027
Today's top sources:
Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Fourth draft completed. Submitted to editor.

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ISSN: 3066-764X
U.S. Seizes More Pirate Sports Streaming Domains, But Iranian Fallbacks Remain [TorrentFreak]
With the FIFA World Cup nearing its conclusion this week, the crackdown on sports streaming sites continued this weekend.
As part of the “Operation Offsides” enforcement action, led by U.S. authorities, more than 100 domain names were seized over the past days.
These new seizures came more than two weeks after the U.S. Department of Justice officially announced the action. While no new announcement was released, the recent seizures in part target fallback domains that pirate sites switched to following the initial crackdown.
For example, when the buffstreams.plus domain name was seized, ibuffstreams.app took its place, pointing to the same server infrastructure. This backup domain did not go unnoticed and was subsequently seized, pointing to the now-familiar banner.

These secondary domain seizures also targeted many other domains and brands, including sportsurge.ws, footybite.app, totalsportekz.app, and istreameast.app. A longer list with more examples is available below.
As long as the people running these sites are not caught, they will often launch new domain names. This is not new, but a recent series of domains caught our eye, as it is using seemingly more resilient fallback: Iran’s .ir country-code top-level domain.
OSINT data gathered by TorrentFreak found that buffstreams.ir, sportsurge.ir, and footybite.ir are all active and operational. These domains resolve to the same Ukrainian IP-address, which was previously used by the now seized buffstreams.plus, ibuffstreams.app, and sportsurge.ws domains.
The Iranian domains are paired with Iranian nameservers, ns1.pars.cloud and ns2.pars.cloud, which are also new as the earlier domains relied on Cloudflare nameservers. This suggests that the operators are intentionally moving away from American infrastructure.
Iranian WHOIS data doesn’t reveal when the domains were registered, but SSL certificate logs tell us these .ir domains are not recent emergency registrations.
Both buffstreams.ir and sportsurge.ir received their first SSL certificates on September 22, 2023, within six minutes of each other. Their certificate chains have been renewed without interruption every 90 days since.
In other words, the .ir domains were set up nearly three years before Operation Offsides was announced. All this time they were presumably kept in reserve as a fallback and following the recent seizure actions they were brought to the fore.
The same certificate information also shows that, a few days ago, these .ir domains moved away from the Google SSL certificates they have been using for years. Instead, they switched to certificates from Let’s Encrypt.
The three domains on pars.cloud are not the only pirate streaming brands using .ir. Our investigation identified at least 20 additional streaming-related .ir domains spread across several operator clusters.
This includes Totalsportek, nflbite, and nflstreams branded sites with .ir domains, which are all share the same Cloudflare nameserver pair, indicating that they are run from the same account. There is also a separate .ir-linked mlb66 and nhl66 operation, which has been in use for a while.
These .ir domains are not necessarily a response to the recent U.S. domain seizures, as they’ve been around for much longer, but they show that more operators have discovered the .ir ccTLD.
In fact, we have also seen a cluster of Iranian sports streaming domains that are registered, but are not serving any content. These include nbabite.ir, nbastreams.ir, nhlbite.ir, mmastreams.ir, nflstream.ir, stream2watch.ir, and streameastt.ir. These may be waiting to be deployed at a later moment.
Iran’s .ir country-code TLD is managed by IRNIC, which is part of the Institute for Research in Fundamental Sciences, an academic institution based in Tehran. This makes it essentially unreachable for U.S. law enforcement.
Because of American sanctions, U.S. domain registrars are not allowed to resell .ir domain names. At the same time, given the current state of U.S.-Iran relations it is unlikely that IRNIC will voluntarily cooperate with U.S. authorities to target these domain names.
For pirate sites operators, .ir domains are also appealing due to a revision of IRNIC’s WHOIS policy in 2023. As a result, public queries no longer return registration dates, registrant names, or other contact information. For outsiders, these domains are essentially anonymous.
Notably, Iran’s copyright laws do not cover works from outside Iran, as the country is not a signatory to the Berne Convention, the WIPO Copyright Treaty, or a member of the WTO. This further complicates enforcement actions.
Of course, there are plenty of downsides to using .ir domain names. The international sanctions will make it challenging to monetize these domains, while Iranian domains are more complicated to register, and may also seem less trustworthy to the broader public.
Also, if an Iranian domain name gets millions of monthly visits, including a large American audience, the U.S. authorities may try to target these operations from alternative angles.
—
Below is a list pirate sports streaming domains that were seized this past weekend. This is addition to the domain names that were seized earlier.
– 247sports1.live
– 4kstream.online
– 808score.net
– acrli.org
– alamalkoora.info
– alphastreams1.online
– arkooora.live
– articletech.info
– asyallakora.live
– bally-sports.click
– bintv.net
– bracupgi.org
– buffstreams.app
– coollkoora.live
– cupshots.live
– daddylive.org
– daysports.online
– deporte-libre.live
– deporte-libre.online
– dingdongsport.org
– dosenow.net
– dotsport.online
– embedhd.org
– exorbitantprivilege.net
– extremesportstv.online
– falconstreams.org
– firstrowsports.org
– foorja.live
– footfytv.live
– footstreams.link
– footy100.net
– footybite.app
– footybitez.app
– fotoklikk.live
– funteam.info
– futbollibre.gratis
– goal-koora.live
– goal2.live
– goto-matchat.live
– halastream.net
– ibuffstreams.app
– kkooora4live.net
– knatech.info
– kooora4live.online
– kooora4lives.net
– koora-yallashoot.live
– kooraiive.info
– koorastar.org
– kora24.online
– kora999live.org
– korahnet.live
– koralives.mov
– koralivetv.online
– korallive.online
– koratcity.info
– koratonline.net
– korats.net
– korax90.net
– korralive.info
– livehd7.online
– livehd7s.info
– livesoccers.live
– livesyria.info
– livevss.net
– livevstv.net
– mjumbo.dad
– movish.net
– okkora.live
– onesportsworld.online
– onionstream.live
– openphacts.org
– pelotalibreargentina.org
– pirlotvs.app
– powerstreams.online
– qiuke.app
– qiuyou.live
– ripplenetwork.forum
– rojadirectahd1.club
– rojadirectatvenvivo.click
– score-808.net
– shahid-koora.live
– shazysport.click
– shazysport.live
– shd247.info
– shd247.live
– shstream.live
– sigmastreamer4th.online
– siir-tv.live
– smartcric.click
– sportplus.live
– sports-x.net
– sportsfeed24.org
– sportsonline.click
– sportsonlline.click
– sportssonline.click
– sporttsonline.click
– streamcenter.live
– streamcorner.fyi
– streamcraft.click
– streameast.mov
– streamfree.link
– streamiz.click
– streamninja.online
– streams.center
– streamsports99.fun
– streamthunder.org
– stremonsport.net
– strm01.app
– syria-live.net
– syria2011.net
– syria2012.net
– syrlive.net
– tarjetarojaonline.net
– tarjetarojatv.click
– tarjetarojatvenvivo.click
– techbugs.info
– techiguides.info
– the-tv.app
– therealone.online
– thetvapp.link
– transitionnorthfield.org
– trendgola.org
– tvsportslive.org
– ukdaddy.online
– us-cap.org
– vipbox-tv.live
– yalla-play.net
– yalla4.live
– yallagoolz.net
– yallaksa.live
– yallalive.fun
– yallashoot.fun
– yallashot.life
– yallasnap.net
link to .ir sites.
(buffstreams.ir and sportsurge.ir resolve to 45.12.1.108, as do/did uffstreams.plus, ibuffstreams.app, the-tv.app, sportsurge.ws)
cluster 1 infra to avade US seizures
iran interesting choice as it’s not likely to volunrarily cooperate with US authorities considering recent tensions
more examples, not necessarily reactive /// “24All” and “66” brands already had .ir domains for years
We can expect more seizure action as the World Cup comes ot its end,
Pirate Sports Streaming Operation Switches to Iranian Domains as U.S. Seizures Continue
U.S. Domain Seizures of Sports Streaming Sites Continue with an Iranian Twist
buffstreams.app Jul 12, 2026
footybite.app Jul 12, 2026
footybitez.app Jul 12, 2026
ibuffstreams.app Jul 12, 2026
pirlotvs.app Jul 12, 2026
qiuke.app Jul 12, 2026
strm01.app Jul 12, 2026
the-tv.app Jul 12, 2026
mjumbo.dad Jul 12, 2026
koralives.mov Jul 12, 2026
streameast.mov Jul 12, 2026
808score.net Jul 12, 2026
bintv.net Jul 12, 2026
dosenow.net Jul 12, 2026
exorbitantprivilege.net Jul 12, 2026
footy100.net Jul 12, 2026
halastream.net Jul 12, 2026
kkooora4live.net Jul 12, 2026
kooora4lives.net Jul 12, 2026
koratonline.net Jul 12, 2026
korats.net Jul 12, 2026
korax90.net Jul 12, 2026
livevss.net Jul 12, 2026
livevstv.net Jul 12, 2026
movish.net Jul 12, 2026
score-808.net Jul 12, 2026
sports-x.net Jul 12, 2026
stremonsport.net Jul 12, 2026
syria-live.net Jul 12, 2026
syria2011.net Jul 12, 2026
syria2012.net Jul 12, 2026
syrlive.net Jul 12, 2026
tarjetarojaonline.net Jul 12, 2026
yalla-play.net Jul 12, 2026
yallagoolz.net Jul 12, 2026
yallasnap.net Jul 12, 2026
streams.center Jul 11, 2026
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From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Increasing Our Representation [The Status Kuo]
This Thursday, I’m heading to D.C. for a Human Rights Campaign board meeting. We’re kicking off with a push to elect two new openly LGBTQ+ candidates to the U.S. Senate: Reps. Chris Pappas of New Hampshire and Angie Craig of Minnesota.
I ask for your support at this critical time for my community. Every direction we look, our progress toward equal rights and equal dignity is being rolled back. From the bigoted ban on transgender people serving in the military, which erased decades of honorable service, to efforts at every level of government to strip away our right to marry and even our right to exist as part of the fabric of this country, the LGBTQ+ community is under attack as never before.
We need champions from our community at the highest levels of government to lead us through these dark times. Chris Pappas and Angie Craig are two such leaders.
Angie and Chris made history as the first openly LGBTQ+ people from their states to be elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. If elected to the Senate, they would make history again and triple LGBTQ+ representation in that body. (No, Lindsey Graham didn’t count.)
Raised by a single mom in a mobile home park, Angie became a reporter, a business leader and a champion for Minnesota families. A local volunteer for the Human Rights Campaign, Angie has worked hard since entering Congress to lower health care costs and strengthen rural communities.
Before Congress, Chris helped run his family’s 108-year-old Manchester restaurant, which has served generations of Granite Staters. A descendant of Greek immigrants and a Harvard graduate, he entered politics to fix a system that was failing everyday people. In Congress, he has earned a reputation for bridging divides.
At a time when people are being fired just for who they are or who they love, we must seize every chance to turn the tide. Here is the larger picture: Both Minnesota and New Hampshire are must-hold states for the Dems. We need to keep each state blue, or the chances of flipping the Senate dwindle to nothing. Your donation helps keep that chance alive!
Please give any amount to one or both their campaigns using the box below, where you can choose how to split your gift. If you aren’t part of the LGBTQ+ community but choose to support greater representation, I thank you especially for putting your hard-earned money behind your principles.
Thank you for helping the LGBTQ+ community know that we have friends and allies all across the country.
Jay
Funniest/Most Insightful Comments Of The Week At Techdirt [Techdirt]
This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is Bloof with a comment about Wikipedia banning its co-founder:
Guy was one of many people involved in the start of Wikipedia, left in a snit to start rival project after rival project more in line with his personal vision, each dying a death because his vision doesn’t make for a useful website with a thriving community. After these sites rotted on the vine, he decided to do return, contribute nothing worthwhile for years and right wing media tours to help signal boost right wing attempts to attack the site because they won’t let them hijack the site the way they have everything else.
He’s the intellectual equivalent of a J6er, he openly tried to do a coup, got punished because the rules should be applied equally regardless of political beliefs, and expects sympathy, only there’s no Trump to wave the get out of consequences free card for him.
In second place, it’s That One Guy with a simple response to ICE rebutting Nazi allegations by going full Gestapo:
Someone doth protest too much
If not nazi, why nazi shaped?
For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with a comment from Whoever about how speech laws designed to protect the powerless get abused by the powerful:
Another example
In the UK, the wealthy and powerful are able to get “Superinjunctions” to prevent speech, and, significantly, even the existence of the injunction cannot be disclosed.
Combined with strict libel laws (even truth is not an absolute case in the UK — the case of George Galloway against the Daily Telegraph showed this), the powerful in the UK can be used to restrict speech that criticizes them.
Next, it’s Stephen T. Stone with a comment about the FCC claiming the First Amendment allows it to ban porn:
Porn is, was, and always will be the canary in the censorship coal mine. Censors count on people being too embarassed about defending porn to stop censorship. If they take even the most innocuous pornography away from you—I’m talking Playboy pinups here—and you do nothing about it because “who wants to defend smut”, every other kind of speech is on the table. This really is a “first they came for” situation, so if you’re not willing to openly defend porn as protected speech, the least you can do is not openly support the censors when they use your triggers against you.
“Remember, pornographers have always been on our side. Brave, ready to fight for our rights. Smut is our friend.” — John Waters
Over on the funny side, our first place winner is Bloof with a comment about Trump taking out his anger over the reflecting pool on a US olympic canoeist:
If he’s mad about the Olympian, wait until he hears about that idiot who drove a motorcade of heavy, armoured vehicles across it before they filled it back up. That guy will be in sooo much trouble.
In second place, it’s Zeus with another joke about the whole debacle:
LMFAO
A narcissist obsessed with a reflecting pool?
Not again. Sheesh.
For editor’s choice on the funny side, we start out with an anonymous comment about time travel:
You don’t reseaerch time travel: you just make a decision to research time travel and if your future self doesn’t promptly show up to say hi then you know that your research would have failed.
Finally, it’s MrWilson responding to the FCC General Counsel’s complaint about porn being widely available and cheap or free:
Well something needs to be affordable in our society if it’s not going to be food, housing, education, energy, and other basic human needs.
That’s all for this week, folks!
Controversial [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
This is a useful term. It helps us understand a topic or theory that can be considered from multiple points of view by people engaging with good intent.
“Pluto is a planet” was a controversial statement among some people who study the solar system.
On the other hand, it’s not controversial that Pluto actually exists.
Choosing to engage in a conversation about something that’s controversial gives us a chance to share our insights and engage in dialogue. And it also comes with the knowledge that we’ll need to devote time and care to having that conversation.
On the other hand, inventing false controversy is simply a tool to keep people away.
If you insist that the world is flat, and that talking about its spherical nature is controversial, then you’ve made it hard to be a travel agent, a geologist or a sailor. You’ve scared people away from a productive conversation because you’re claiming something without good intent.
The key element of ‘controversial’ is possibility. If that’s not there, it’s simply an empty argument.
Kanji of the Day: 化 [Kanji of the Day]
化
✍4
小3
change, take the form of, influence, enchant, delude, -ization
カ ケ
ば.ける ば.かす ふ.ける け.する
文化 (ぶんか) — culture
強化 (きょうか) — strengthening
変化 (へんか) — change
化する (かする) — to change (into)
悪化 (あっか) — deterioration
活性化 (かっせいか) — stimulation (e.g., of an economy)
進化 (しんか) — evolution
少子化 (しょうしか) — declining birth rates
郵政民営化 (ゆうせいみんえいか) — postal privatisation (privatisation of Japan Post)
高齢化 (こうれいか) — population ageing (aging)
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 窒 [Kanji of the Day]
窒
✍11
中学
plug up, obstruct
チツ
窒息死 (ちっそくし) — death by suffocation
窒息 (ちっそく) — suffocation
窒素 (ちっそ) — nitrogen (N)
液体窒素 (えきたいちっそ) — liquid nitrogen
窒素酸化物 (ちっそさんかぶつ) — nitrogen oxide
一酸化二窒素 (いっさんかにちっそ) — dinitrogen monoxide
亜酸化窒素 (あさんかちっそ) — nitrous oxide (N2O)
窒素肥料 (ちっそひりょう) — nitrogenous fertilizer
窒化物 (ちっかぶつ) — nitride
二酸化窒素 (にさんかちっそ) — nitrogen dioxide
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Security support for Bookworm handed over to the LTS team [Debian News]
On 12 July 2026, three years after the initial release, the regular
support for Debian 12, alias bookworm
, has come to an end. The
Debian Long Term Support (LTS) Team
is taking over security support from the Security and Release Teams.
This Week In Techdirt History: July 5th – 11th [Techdirt]
This Week in 2016
This Week in 2011
This Week in 2006
Mel’s back [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
Last year, the recording session I did with Mel Robbins was going so well that her producers asked me to stick around–four hours later, we had recorded enough for two episodes.
One never knows how these things will feel until after the fact, but part 2 is live now. I hope you get as much out of it as I did…
My day with Mel inspired my new book, which ships in 9 weeks. And the limited-edition multi-pack is well on its way to being fully subscribed. I just added a new spiral-bound booklet for the first 700 orders. Photos to come when it comes back from the printer.
You can find the conversations with Mel here.
Problems can be solved.
Here’s a short riff on the world’s worst boss:
And here’s a page for Mel fans who are new to the blog.
And the episode…
A captive audience [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
The moment you start treating your customers as captives, they begin to make other plans.
It might take a while, but they always end up leaving. The first step is warning away their friends.
On the other hand, when we treat our customers like the free agents they are, they often choose to stick around (and bring the others).
Before you reward an analyst for jacking up the price and making some money this week, it might be worth focusing on what that short-term move is going to cost you.
Just for Skeets and Giggles (7.11.26) [The Status Kuo]
The week began with a crash. At the Great American State Fair, that is. This patriotic hang glider’s landing captured the whole event. (Thankfully, he and the MAGA onlookers were uninjured.)
Note: Some browsers, such as Firefox, aren’t opening Xcancel links. Others, such as Chrome and Safari, appear to open these links just fine. If a link won't open, cut and paste the URL, remove the word “cancel” then view the original X link.
I like this version even better.
Following musical act cancellations, poor attendance and crushing heat waves, the weak sauce celebration ended with authorities ordering another evacuation as dangerous thunderstorms approached. That went over well.
My favorite part of the finale was where much of the MAGA crowd had to take shelter.
A bunch of losers marched through the streets of D.C. in masks.
With the algae-filled Reflecting Pool still closed, this became a common theme of the Fourth of July festivities.
If you haven’t seen Larry David’s new mockumentary, here’s a taste:
And how’s this image for a bizarre meta moment?
The comparison was inevitable.
Trump attended the NATO summit and, amid his dementia haze, referred to Zelenskyy as “Putin.” For his part, Zelenskyy was on target.
Trump also did this there:
Best July 4 post:
And in honor of our independence, this now-classic SNL skit recirculated widely.
The big news, of course, was Trump’s meddling in the World Cup. Here’s Ronny Chieng again to explain what happened.
You can imagine the internet's response.
There was something deeply funny about Trump intervening on Balogun’s behalf.
So exactly how far would FIFA go to help Trump?
Slow clap for this deep commentary.
Marco Rubio, you’re in.
That SNL skit got a makeover:
In the end, it wasn’t even close.
But we’re still America, right?! You’re damn right!
This whole attempt to win through political pressure was too much for many.
I like my humor dry like my martinis.
The stollen is a nice touch.
A friend sent me this.
The Belgians offered some top-notch trolling.
Even this woman on the street had it out for us and, well, we deserved it.
A gentle reminder:
Politics and sports weren’t limited to the U.S. game.
Besides the World Cup scandal, there was the “Is he actually dead?” scandal back home surrounding Sen. Mitch McConnell. But maybe it’s been a while already?
Read the caption, then the headline out loud.
With so many GOP figures claiming they’d each talked to him for 20 minutes, Rep. Thomas Massie couldn't resist dunking on the absurdity.
The Sick Sense?
Who ya’ gonna call?
Along the same lines:
The humor soon went morbid.
But let’s not weep too much for Mitch.
Leave it to Borowitz…
Few will forget what this man did.
On our side, we had our own scandal that rocked our politics.
Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) had the nerve to lecture Dems about Platner.
Back in Oz, incredible things are happening.
And this is rather uncanny when you think about it.
And The Onion seizing InfoWars from Alex Jones may be the best thing ever.
How much is laughter worth in these rough times? How about sound, independent political and legal analysis? Enough to support yours truly by buying me coffee once a month? If you think that’s fair and reasonable, upgrade your account to a paid subscription today. And if you’ve already signed up as a paid supporter, thank you! You’re my hero!
A few doggo entries this week. Here’s RxCKSTxR with a voiceover only he can deliver.
Always remember to leave at least one toy out of the wash!
My cat keeps trying to get out of the house, but when he succeeds, he just sits on the porch. Probably because he knows what’s really out there. Unlike this little guy. Sound up!
This was high drama! The buck… stops here?
Time for some kidding around.
The World Cup happily found other things than Trump’s interference to focus on.
First came the Norwegian machine, Erling Haaland, whose face, hair and lurch are pretty much everywhere.
The guys are man crushing hard.
But if you see Haaland online, there’s a good chance it’s actually this woman.
Wait, there’s more!
Even though the host countries are out of contention, excitement hasn’t waned. Even the sportscasters are losing their damn minds.
This made me giggle. Oof!
This meme still had some life in it.
It took me way too long to figure out what I was watching here.
I started writing 10-page papers every day after the 2020 election, so…
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce tied the knot, but in case you missed it…
We all need a bit more of this in our lives right now! Well, I get plenty, but for the rest of you…
OK, two dad jokes to round out this week! Here’s one for the Trekkies.
If you don’t get this at first, just say the last sentence out loud.
Have a great weekend!
Jay
Kanji of the Day: 后 [Kanji of the Day]
后
✍6
小6
empress, queen, after, behind, back, later
コウ ゴ
きさき
皇后 (こうごう) — empress
太后 (たいこう) — empress dowager
皇太后 (こうたいこう) — Empress Dowager
皇后陛下 (こうごうへいか) — Her Majesty the Empress (of Japan)
王后陛下 (おうこうへいか) — Her Majesty the Queen
王后 (おうこう) — queen
母后 (ぼこう) — empress dowager
太皇太后 (たいこうたいごう) — Grand Empress Dowager
天后 (てんこう) — queen of heaven
后宮 (こうぐう) — empress's palace
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 鹿 [Kanji of the Day]
鹿
✍11
小4
deer
ロク
しか か
鹿児島県 (かごしまけん) — Kagoshima Prefecture (Kyushu)
馬鹿 (ばか) — idiot
馬鹿に (ばかに) — ridiculously
馬鹿にする (ばかにする) — to make fun of
大鹿 (おおじか) — large deer
馬鹿馬鹿しい (ばかばかしい) — absurd
馬鹿馬鹿しい (ばかばかしい) — absurd
鹿狩 (ししがり) — hunting (of animals such as boar, deer, etc.)
馬鹿らしい (ばからしい) — absurd
馬鹿げた (ばかげた) — absurd
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Pluralistic: Workplace "flexibility" isn't (11 Jul 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->->
Top Sources:
None
-->

Here's an irony: the "gig economy" is a statistical black hole. Workers, customers and regulators know very little about the most basic aspects of it: how much workers get paid, for example, or much unpaid time on the clock a worker puts in before they get a job from the app.
The reason this is ironic is that the "gig economy" is dominated by a handful of massive, data-driven firms that know the precise, up-to-the-second answer to these questions. The problem is that they won't share the data. Of course, workers and customers have the data, too, but our data is widely diffused, with each worker and each customer only representing a single, infinitesimal pixel in this massive picture.
Most of our industry-wide figures about the sector come from painstaking, expensive survey work. The expense and effort involved in conducting this analysis means that the public's understanding of the gig companies' business is fragmentary and thin.
But every now and again, we get a flashbulb glimpse of the full picture. One of those glimpses was captured by David Weil, the former labor standards boss at the US Department of Labor. In 2024, the Massachusetts Attorney General sued Uber over worker misclassification, with Weil serving as an expert witness, who was able to access the raw data on Uber's business operations.
In a new American Prospect longread called "The Dangerous Myth of Flexibility," Weil builds on the public record developed in the case to demolish the central myth of the gigwork companies: that they enter into a mutually beneficial arrangement with their workers by offering "flexibility" that lets workers "choose work that fits the rhythms of their lives, not the other way around":
https://prospect.org/2026/07/09/dangerous-myth-of-flexibility-uber-lyft-gig-economy/
This quote comes from Tony West, the Uber executive who has led the company's efforts to formalize its worker misclassification program, notably California's Prop 22, a $225m statewide campaign that overturned the state's landmark gig work standards. West is also Kamala Harris's brother-in-law, and he served as her campaign's corporate liaison, senior strategist and economic policy advisor.
On its face, West's statement sounds reasonable, and most of us have heard a version of it, possibly even from an Uber driver. But what Uber calls "flexibility" is really a way for the company to offload its operational risks onto its drivers.
Anyone who runs a business has to manage a key operational risk: staffing levels. A restaurateur who doesn't schedule enough cooks, bussers and servers might have to turn away business at the door if there's a rush. But if the restaurateur schedules too many people for a shift, they'll end up paying for those workers to stand around scrolling Tiktok.
In America, Congress and state legislatures have created a system that allows restaurateurs to transfer this risk onto their employees: the "tipped minimum wage." Federally, the minimum wage for tipped employees is only $2.13/hour, with the caveat that employees are obliged to "top up" their workers' pay if the tips from their shift don't add up to $7.25/hour. So if you work five hours and don't wait on a single table, your boss has to pay you $36.25 ($7.25/hour * 5 hours). But if you have a busy shift and you make $40 in tips, your boss only has to pay you $10.65 ($2.13 * 5 – the tipped minimum).
This is a transfer of risk from bosses to workers. The boss can schedule extra servers and offload most of their wages to diners who come through the doors. If your boss overestimates the amount of business, much of the cost of that miscalculation comes out of your paycheck.
This is quite a sweet deal for bosses. After all, servers have virtually no control over the amount of business a restaurant attracts. It's the boss, not the server, who decides where the restaurant will be, which hours it will keep, which food it will serve, how much the food costs, what advertisements to run, and where and when to run them. The boss controls the decor, staff attire and the music. They make the decisions, and workers pay the price if they decide poorly.
For most businesses, workers are less exposed to risks from their boss's strategic errors. If your boss screws up, you might see a lower annual bonus, or take a career hit thanks to the bad company's presence on your CV. Of course, if your boss really messes up they might lay you off or go out of business altogether, but it's a rare business that gets to externalize its risks onto its workers on a shift-by-shift basis the way restaurants get to.
But as sweet as restaurateurs have it, that's nothing compared to the incredible deal that gig platforms get. Companies like Uber and Lyft get to shift nearly all their risk to their workers, and then insist that they're doing workers a favor by offering them "flexibility." Like a restaurateur, Uber and Lyft control all the mechanisms by which the number of riders is set. They decide how to advertise and how to price their rides. When a driver signs on and makes themselves available – at no charge – to Uber, it is the company's actions, not the driver's, that determine whether that driver gets a job, and how much they'll get paid.
Uber and Lyft claim that drivers have control, too – when (if) they're offered a job, they get to decide whether to take it. This is true, but it's more complicated than that. Drivers get about 15 seconds (!) to decide whether to accept a job, which means they have 15 seconds to calculate the mileage and time-based rate on offer, all while operating a vehicle in traffic. Drivers who accept lowball offers risk having their base pay permanently eroded through "algorithmic wage discrimination," which is when the gig platforms infer that workers who accept very low wages are economically desperate and can be offered even lower wages in the future:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/12/algorithmic-wage-discrimination/#fishers-of-men
But workers can't simply refuse offers and wait for the wage on offer to increase. That increase may happen, but if a driver is too picky, the platform will punish them for turning down too many offers by excluding them from future opportunities. If this happens often enough, the driver may end up broke enough to start accepting those lowballs, triggering the inexorable downward trajectory of their expected earnings.
This is "flexibility," but mostly it's flexibility for Uber, not for drivers. Uber controls when a driver gets paid, and they control the data about that payment. This allows Uber to claim to be paying well north of minimum wage, while drivers average less than $2.50/hour. Uber exploits its information asymmetry to publish only the numerator (the amount a driver makes when a passenger is in the car) while hiding the denominator (how many hours it takes for Uber to put a passenger in that car):
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/29/geometry-hates-uber/#toronto-the-gullible
Uber has perfected a system of algorithmic pricing that allows it to dangle just enough money in front of drivers to maximize their number on the road, irrespective of how many riders are looking for cars. The fact that they have all the information (while drivers have none) allows them to extract vast amounts of totally unpaid labor from those drivers. And then, once a passenger gets in the car, Uber's informational systems let it pay that driver the absolute minimum they will accept for the ride.
Of course, it works the same way for passengers, each of whom is offered a different price for the same rides, based on the company's surveillance data and its realtime calculations about how much the rider is willing to pay. When Uber launched, driver pay and passenger fares were linked (the same way a server's tips and the cost of a meal are linked). Today, these are fully decoupled. Uber runs a kind of cod-Marxist operation where workers are paid according to their desperation, and passengers are gouged according to their ability to pay:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/11/socialism-for-the-wealthy/#rugged-individualism-for-the-poor
This works so well (for Uber) that Uber has launched a side hustle selling algorithmic pricing and algorithmic wage discrimination systems to companies in other sectors, so expect this arrangement to infect ever-wider swathes of the economy:
(And this is neither here nor there, but holy shit, is Uber's investor relations site seriously serving ASPX pages in 2026?! Hey Khosrowshahi, the DOJ called and it wants its Clinton-era antitrust evidence back!)
Back to algorithmic pricing: this opaque, take-it-or-leave-it algorithmic pricing arrangement sets Uber apart from other platforms where sellers offer temporary use of their property to buyers. As Weil writes, at least Airbnb hosts get to override the nightly rate suggested by the platform (though I'd add that the platforms will downrank and bury people who resist their suggestions).
As Weil points out, even if Uber had to pay the minimum wage and assume other operational risks associated with running a business, they'd still have access to these algorithmic tools, albeit with different parameters. Rather than setting the wage floor for drivers at $0/hour, they'd have to pay $7.25/hour (the federal minimum wage, or more, depending on the state). This would force the company to refuse shifts to drivers when there were enough workers on the road to handle demand, but drivers would benefit from this arrangement – rather than driving around for a shift, burning gas and putting wear on your car without getting paid, Uber would just tell you to stay home.
Uber could try to offload those risks onto passengers, but remember, Uber is already charging riders a personalized price based on massive troves of surveillance data that is continuously re-analyzed to guess the largest sum you're willing to pay for any given ride. You're already paying the highest price Uber can set for you, in other words.
Weil has been in many forums – including that Massachusetts courtroom – where Uber touted its "flexibility" as a benefit to drivers. But as he shows, Uber could offer all the same flexibility to drivers without the downside risk of driving around for hours without earning a dime. Sure, forcing Uber and Lyft to extend rights and protections that every employee gets would raise their costs – but "the same is true for any company having to comply with employment law and work protections."
Outside of the US, these companies are being forced to shift the risk from their workers' backs to their own balance sheets. As Weil writes, the UN's International Labor Organization has set binding labor standards for gig companies, called Convention 193, "Decent Work in the Platform Economy":
https://onlabor.org/a-win-for-platform-workers-ilo-convention-no-193/
The US government is pulling out all the stops to prevent these standards from being applied to US gig companies, even abroad. Trump's labor boss Keith Sonderling told the world that the US government "will not sit on the sidelines while some foreign governments push to hamper American innovation in the gig economy worldwide":
https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/3435961/america-must-lead-gig-economy/
But, as Weil says, this isn't about innovation, flexibility or AI. It's about gig companies changing the distributional outcome of whole sectors, to shift money from workers to investors.
The rest of the world has its own ideas. In Switzerland, the Supreme Court found that gig companies' businesses were illegal and ordered them to extend normal labor protections to gig workers. Naturally, the gig companies just ignored the law and continued to screw those workers. Gig workers, as noted, are diffused. They don't work in the same place. They have no way to find out who else works for the same boss as they do. The same factors that keep us from gathering stats on gig work also keeps gig workers from comparing notes on how they're getting shafted.
What's a labor organizer to do? The Swiss labor union Syndicom came up with an ingenious solution. They partnered with a popular, pro-union pizza restaurant, listed it on the delivery platforms, and then placed orders for tons of pizzas through the scofflaw food-delivery platforms. They transformed the pizzeria into a pop-up union labor hub, and had an organizing conversation with every rider the company dispatched to the restaurant:
This is deliciously ingenious, and the labor organizing need not stop there. Companies like Para have shown how, by jailbreaking the apps used by gig workers, they can allow those workers to comparison shop for the best wage. Rather than getting 15 seconds while navigating traffic to decide whether a job is worth taking, drivers and riders could use a "counter-app" that evaluates all the offers on all the platforms and coordinates with other workers to mass-reject lowball offers:
https://pluralistic.net/2021/08/07/hr-4193/#boss-app
The only problem is the "anticircumvention" laws that criminalize this kind of reverse-engineering and modifications of apps. These laws make it a literal crime to change how an app running on your own phone works. These laws were invented in America, with 1998's Digital Millennium Copyright Act, but in the ensuing years, the US Trade Rep has used the threat of tariffs to force every country in the world to adopt their own anticircumvention laws. By caving into US bullying, all of America's trading partners have left their workers and consumers vulnerable to technological surveillance, manipulation and price-gouging, to the great benefit of the US tech companies that have fused with the Trump regime.
This is the hidden silver lining to Trump's lunatic tariffs: they take away the threat that kept all those US-protecting foreign IP laws in force. When someone threatens to burn your house down unless you do as you're told, and then they burn your house down anyway, you really don't have to keep complying:
https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/01/39c3/#the-new-coalition
The possibilities for counterapps in gig work are endless. In Indonesia, gig rider co-ops commission "Tuyul" apps that mod their dispatch apps in ways small (upsizing the font) and large (spoofing the GPS):
https://pluralistic.net/2021/07/08/tuyul-apps/#gojek
In his article, Weil cites a study showing that customers for gig apps tend not to comparison shop – once you choose your default taxi-hailing app, that becomes your go-to. But with counter-apps, your default could be a price-comparison app that bids out your job to all the platforms and chooses the cheapest one, forcing the gig companies to compete with each other:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5729723
The platforms like to pitch themselves as "frictionless," but the reality is that they don't reduce friction so much as reallocate it. Because they control the technology, because the law makes it a literal crime to wrestle that control away, they can shift all the friction from their side of the ledger to yours, whether you're a worker or a customer:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/08/23/become-unoptimizable/#downward-redistribution
Tony West isn't lying when he says Uber values flexibility – they value their flexibility, which arises out of the constraints (technical, legal) they impose on us: the drivers and passengers.

Stuff of Legends https://store.warlordgames.com/products/stuff-of-legends
Revenue is just an agreement between friends https://www.larp.website/
Brown Professor Suspects Most of His Class Used AI to Cheat https://www.insidehighered.com/news/faculty/learning-assessment/2026/07/08/brown-professor-suspects-most-his-class-used-ai-cheat
Google's new remote attestation scheme is every bit as terrible as its old remote attestation scheme https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/07/googles-new-remote-attestation-scheme-every-bit-terrible-its-old-remote
#20yrsago Alanya to Alanya: feminist science fiction adventure https://memex.craphound.com/2006/07/12/alanya-to-alanya-feminist-science-fiction-adventure/
#20yrsago Soviet jokes https://web.archive.org/web/20060708144926/http://www.prospect-magazine.co.uk/article_details.php?id=7412
#10yrsago Empirical proof that Terms of Service are “the biggest lie on the Internet” https://web.archive.org/web/20160712233511/https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/07/nobody-reads-tos-agreements-even-ones-that-demand-first-born-as-payment/
#10yrsago Fox’s employee contracts may mean Gretchen Carlson will never get her day in court https://web.archive.org/web/20160712123858/https://thinkprogress.org/justice/2016/07/11/3797060/dirty-trick-fox-news-using-undercut-gretchen-carlsons-sexual-harassment-suit/
#10yrsago To see the future, visit the most remote areas of the GBAO https://medium.com/studio-d/6-1-glimpses-of-the-future-e3fdb510dcc1#.iwyo4x141
#10yrsago Benjamin Frisch’s “Fun Family”: good old American narcissism https://memex.craphound.com/2016/07/12/benjamin-frischs-fun-family-good-old-american-narcissism/
#5yrsago The Sacklers will get to keep billions https://pluralistic.net/2021/07/12/monopolist-solidarity/#sacklers-billions

Edinburgh International Book Festival with Jimmy Wales, Aug 17
https://www.edbookfest.co.uk/events/the-front-list-cory-doctorow-and-jimmy-wales
Sydney: The Festival of Dangerous Ideas, Aug 23-24
https://festivalofdangerousideas.com/cory-doctorow/
Melbourne: Enshittification at the Wheeler Centre, Aug 25
https://www.wheelercentre.com/events-tickets/season-2026/cory-doctorow-enshittification
Brighton: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Carole Cadwalladr (Brighton Dome), Sep 8
https://brightondome.org/whats-on/LSC-cory-doctorow-the-reverse-centaurs-guide-to-life-after-ai/
London: The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI with Riley Quinn (Foyle's Picadilly), Sep 9
https://www.foyles.co.uk/events/enshittification-cory-doctorow-riley-quinn
South Bend: An Evening With Cory Doctorow (Notre Dame), Oct 6
https://franco.nd.edu/events/2026/10/06/an-evening-with-cory-doctorow/
Can AI be Saved From Capitalism? (Everyday Anarchism)
https://www.everydayanarchism.com/192-can-ai-be-saved-from-capitalism-cory-doctorow/
Lawfare Daily
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T1KIwaYRs1g
How to Think About AI (Organized Money)
https://www.organizedmoney.fm/p/how-to-think-about-ai-with-cory-doctorow
Breaking Points
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJmUbkRqXeE
"Canny Valley": A limited edition collection of the collages I create for Pluralistic, self-published, September 2025 https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/04/illustrious/#chairman-bruce
"Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, October 7 2025
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374619329/enshittification/
"Picks and Shovels": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about the heroic era of the PC, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2025 (https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250865908/picksandshovels).
"The Bezzle": a sequel to "Red Team Blues," about prison-tech and other grifts, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), February 2024 (thebezzle.org).
"The Lost Cause:" a solarpunk novel of hope in the climate emergency, Tor Books (US), Head of Zeus (UK), November 2023 (http://lost-cause.org).
"The Internet Con": A nonfiction book about interoperability and Big Tech (Verso) September 2023 (http://seizethemeansofcomputation.org). Signed copies at Book Soup (https://www.booksoup.com/book/9781804291245).
"Red Team Blues": "A grabby, compulsive thriller that will leave you knowing more about how the world works than you did before." Tor Books http://redteamblues.com.
"Chokepoint Capitalism: How to Beat Big Tech, Tame Big Content, and Get Artists Paid, with Rebecca Giblin", on how to unrig the markets for creative labor, Beacon Press/Scribe 2022 https://chokepointcapitalism.com
"Unauthorized Bread": a middle-grades graphic novel adapted from my novella about refugees, toasters and DRM, FirstSecond, April 20, 2027
"Enshittification, Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It" (the graphic novel), Firstsecond, 2027
"The Memex Method," Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2027
Today's top sources:
Currently writing: "The Post-American Internet," a sequel to "Enshittification," about the better world the rest of us get to have now that Trump has torched America. Fourth draft completed. Submitted to editor.

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"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
Google Opposes Site Blocking in Europe as U.S. Piracy Blocking Plans Gain Momentum [TorrentFreak]
Google rarely addresses pirate site blocking in public, but it is a significant concern now that these measures directly impact the company’s own infrastructure.
The American tech company has been ordered to block access to pirate domain names through its DNS resolver in France, Belgium, Italy and Portugal, for example.
In a recent submission to the European Commission’s call for evidence on the review of the Copyright Directive, Google lists its site blocking critique in detail. The filing is marked “Privileged and Confidential” but it was posted publicly on the commission’s website, alongside other submissions.
Google’s submission addresses a variety of topics, including the company’s opposition to broad site blocking measures. This includes VPN and third-party DNS blocking, which is seen as disproportionate and ineffective. The same applies to IP-address blocking, which risks targeting infrastructure of legitimate sites and services.
“Blocking DNS resolvers, IPs, VPNs, is ineffective, as it does not remove content at all and is easily circumvented by using alternative DNS resolvers. It is disproportionate, catching lawful services, raising extra-territoriality concerns and blocking entire domains,” Google writes.
“Similarly, blocking IP addresses neither removes the content nor achieves proportionate outcomes, as many lawful services may be using the same IP address,” the company adds.

The submission cited several real-world examples to support these claims. It mentions that Italy’s Piracy Shield blocked a Google Drive subdomain, as well as IP-addresses hosting over 42 million domains of Cloudflare customers. Meanwhile, in France, CISCO stopped offering its OpenDNS service after a local court ordered DNS resolver blockades.
Google also highlights a December 2019 incident in Portugal where ISPs blocked Google-hosted Virtual IP addresses, disrupting “core Google services and cut off legitimate traffic for other innocent Google Cloud customers sharing the same virtual IPs.”
These concerns are not incidental. A large-scale empirical study published by the Open Observatory of Network Interference (OONI) recently found that following a LaLiga blocking order in Spain, more than 554,000 domains were blocked at least once during football match broadcasts. This included website from Amnesty International and the ACLU, UNICEF, UNHCR, the Australian Senate, Stanford Law Review, and Amazon S3 endpoints.
In addition to the overblocking concerns, the submission notes that any expansions of the blocking regime in Europe should be proportional and keep the safeguards in mind that are already provided by EU law. Google specifically notes that courts “should not serve as mere rightholder ‘mail boxes’, by simply rubber-stamping blocking demands.”
Google believes that blocking injunction should only be used as a last resort if regular takedown options failed. These injunctions should be transparent, limited in time, while both rightsholders and the intermediaries share the implementation costs.
The submission shows that Google is not outright opposed to site blocking, as long as it’s restricted to targeted and proportional measures. The real solution to piracy does not lie in enforcement, Google argues, but in creating superior legal alternatives.
“In our experience, unmet consumer demand is a key driver of piracy. That is why one of the best ways to combat piracy is to provide better, more convenient, and legitimate alternatives,” Google writes.
Google’s EU filing was submitted a few days before U.S. lawmakers doubled down on their site blocking intentions. On June 30, the House IP subcommittee held a hearing on copyright protection and enforcement on the Internet, with planned site blocking legislation as a key topic.
Subcommittee Chairman Rep. Darrell Issa told The Capitol Forum that he planned to introduce a site blocking bill that week. While there is no record of an introduced bill, it suggests that momentum is building.
This was also confirmed during the hearing, as Issa closed by signaling that the educational phase of the lawmaking process is over.
“Language is being distributed on what we’ll believe is final compromises to get to legislation,” he said. “It’s going to be my intention, with the help of my chairman and old friend, Mr. Jordan, that we will move it out of this committee.”

Rep. Issa is retiring at the end of his current term. Whether the bill has been formally introduced since his stated deadline is not clear. TorrentFreak has reached out to Issa’s office for comment, but we didn’t hear back.
Issa’s bill isn’t the only proposal. Rep. Zoe Lofgren, who introduced the competing FADPA bill last year, told The Capitol Forum she is negotiating a bipartisan, bicameral “four corners agreement” with Issa and Senators Blackburn, Coons, Schiff, and Tillis. That formally confirms out earlier reporting.
Meanwhile, the hearing made clear that the Supreme Court’s ruling in Cox v. Sony only intensified the call for site blocking. The Supreme Court concluded that ISPs cannot be held secondarily liable for user piracy unless they actively induce or tailor their services for infringement, which means that rightsholders will need an alternative enforcement tool.
Google has not commented on the U.S. site blocking plans yet, but it is a member of the Software and Information Industry Association (SIIA) whose president, Chris Mohr, did testify at the recent subcommittee hearing.
According to Mohr, his members are “genuinely split” on site blocking. At the same time, he stressed that a U.S. blocking bill should have robust judicial backing, while the technical measures should be precise enough to prevent overblocking and protect shared infrastructure.
The Internet Infrastructure Coalition (I2Coalition), which represents major tech companies including Amazon, Cloudflare, and Google, has previously critiqued broad blocking plans. Last year the organization launched its DNS at Risk campaign, warning the public about DNS blocking threats.
Google’s EU submission is also quite outspoken. While it does not refer to the American plans, Google is clearly opposed to requiring blocking measures from third-party DNS resolvers, while noting that blocking is ineffective, disproportionate, and harmful to lawful sites and services.
Whether the company will make the same arguments publicly as the American bill moves forward remains to be seen.
—
Google’s submission to the European Commission’s consultation is available here (pdf).
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Updated Debian 12: 12.15 released [Debian News]
The Debian project is pleased to announce the fifteenth and final update of its
oldstable distribution Debian 12 (codename bookworm
).
This point release mainly adds corrections for security issues,
along with a few adjustments for serious problems. Security advisories
have already been published separately and are referenced where available.
Updated Debian 13: 13.6 released [Debian News]
The Debian project is pleased to announce the sixth update of its
stable distribution Debian 13 (codename trixie
).
This point release mainly adds corrections for security issues,
along with a few adjustments for serious problems. Security advisories
have already been published separately and are referenced where available.
His Name Is Lorenzo Salgado Araujo [The Status Kuo]
Lorenzo Salgado Araujo woke at 5 a.m., just as he had most mornings for the last 35 years. He kissed his wife Maria goodbye, loaded his tools into his work van and drove out to collect the last members of his construction crew before sunrise. Most evenings, he came home to a meal Maria had prepared for him, sat on the porch with his dog and listened to music before doing it all again the next morning.
Salgado Araujo was 52, was applying for a work permit after decades of being undocumented, and had no criminal record. By his family’s account, after filing a year and a half of paperwork, he was near to his goal. “My father, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, a hardworking Mexican man… has been in this country for nearly 35 years, working in construction to provide for myself, my two brothers, and my mother,” his son Ronaldo wrote in a statement.
That day, Salgado Araujo didn’t return to his family, his porch or his dog. An ICE agent shot and killed him, adding his name to the growing list of people whose lives have been violently ended by ICE, an agency operating with little transparency and even less accountability. Salgado Araujo’s dream of living and working legally in American was snuffed out. His family, friends, colleagues and community were left grieving, enraged and rightfully demanding answers.
The morning of July 7
Surveillance video places Salgado Araujo’s white van on Canal Street at 6:46 a.m., according to a timeline FOX 26 Houston reconstructed from surveillance footage, bystander cellphone video, family interviews and ICE’s own statements.
A second surveillance clip obtained by CNN shows him driving on Canal Street as a black SUV trails him on his left. Seconds later, another black SUV cuts through a nearby shopping center parking lot, moving toward his van and the first SUV. CNN also reported that video obtained by the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) shows Salgado Araujo’s van turning onto Canal Street with a black SUV following. Neither clip shows markings identifying the vehicles as law enforcement.
According to a CNN source familiar with the investigation, ICE vehicles attempted to box in the van, which struck at least one of the ICE vehicles as the stop unfolded. No publicly available footage captures the moments immediately before the shooting. An ICE agent fired at least one shot, striking Salgado Araujo in the abdomen.
Juliet Martinez, A Houston resident, recorded the aftermath. Her video, shared with CNN, shows a wounded man lying face down near a barbershop, with a federal agent kneeling over him while speaking by phone. “He was screaming for help and screaming that he was in pain,” Martinez said. “He yelled, ‘Help me! They shot me!’” Three other men are seen in handcuffs nearby—among them, his family later confirmed, Salgado Araujo’s brother.
Houston Fire Department paramedics arrived within roughly ten minutes, according to video obtained by KPRC 2. Salgado Araujo was taken to Ben Taub Hospital with CPR in progress. He was pronounced dead at the hospital.
ICE never contacted his family directly. Ronaldo Salgado learned that his father had been shot from a video circulating on Facebook, recognizing him not by his face but by his voice, crying out from the pavement. He and his brothers later learned of their father’s death the same way: through social media reports, not from any official notification. “They haven’t sent anyone to speak to myself or my family, no contact at all,” Ronaldo said. “We still don’t have any answers. There has been no communication between us and our DHS.”
ICE’s questionable account
In a statement Tuesday afternoon, ICE described the shooting as the outcome of a “targeted enforcement operation.” The agency said officers tried to conduct a traffic stop in the 6800 block of Canal Street at approximately 6:50 a.m. Salgado Araujo, ICE claimed, attempted to flee.
“From information we’re receiving, he rammed an ICE law enforcement vehicle, refused to follow multiple verbal commands and weaponized his vehicle in an attempt to run over an ICE law enforcement officer resulting in our officer firing his weapon in self-defense,” ICE said.
But newly obtained footage, analyzed for KPRC 2 by a former Houston police homicide detective, shows Salgado Araujo was struck on the right side of his abdomen. This calls ICE’s account into question, since it is hard to see how an agent who feared being run over would have fired from that angle. Separately, the New York Times reported that ICE’s operation that morning was actually aimed at two individuals from Guatemala who had no connection to Salgado Araujo or his van.
DHS has since acknowledged that Salgado Araujo was not the target of the operation. According to a Homeland Security official, agents had been surveilling a property where they had previously observed two white vans, tied to the two people believed to be in the country without legal status. Salgado Araujo drove a van that resembled the one they were looking for. The agents moved to box him in before confirming that he was the person they were after. Only after the stop was underway did they determine, from the vehicle’s registration, that he lacked legal immigration status.
Neither ICE nor DHS has said whether agents identified themselves as law enforcement before or during the stop.
What’s missing and what contradicts it
There are strong reasons to doubt ICE’s account, as numerous other cases have shown when video or witness evidence directly contradicted the agency’s initial version of events.
More than two days after the shooting, federal officials still have not released any video, photographs or physical evidence supporting their account. No body camera footage exists; DHS claimed in a Thursday statement that the officers involved “had not been issued body-worn cameras due to back-to-back Democrat shutdowns,” and that cameras had been deployed to more than half of ICE’s field offices, with the rest—including Houston’s—expected to receive them within 60 days.
No dash camera video, dispatch logs or photographs of the alleged vehicle damage have been made public either, and that’s a central problem. LULAC says still images taken from witness videos appear to show little or no visible damage to Salgado Araujo’s van. That doesn’t square well with ICE’s account of a van used to ram an agent’s vehicle and then allegedly weaponized against an officer. While CNN’s source did describe some contact with an ICE vehicle during the stop, it did not describe the severity of the collision.
“We need the facts,” said Lupe Torres, LULAC’s national vice president for the Southwest, adding that the organization had not yet reviewed all the evidence.
LULAC national president Roman Palomares underscored the underlying distrust. The immigration crackdown, he said, has created conditions in which it is “open season on Latinos” by officers who believe they can “shoot and explain later.”
That skepticism is warranted. In the March 2025 killing of Rubén Ray Martinez, a U.S. citizen, federal officials claimed he had accelerated and intentionally driven over an agent before he was shot. But video obtained later showed his vehicle stationary or moving at very low speed when agents opened fire.
In January, DHS accused Renée Good of trying to run over and murder an agent before he shot her. The department separately claimed that Alex Pretti had been “brandishing” a weapon during a struggle in Minneapolis. Video in both cases told a different story.
Here, agents reportedly removed Salgado Araujo’s identifying belongings before he reached the hospital, leaving staff unable to register him under his own name. The circumstances prompted commentator Bill Kristol to ask whether they pointed to “a coverup or attempt to manage information” from the outset.
Who Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was
While the ICE agents had tried hard to anonymize his killing, his family and community insisted upon uplifting his humanity.
At a Wednesday news conference, flanked by LULAC, Houston-area members of Congress and Harris County officials, his eldest son, Ronaldo, a teacher, introduced his father to the country that had just taken him. “I want to tell you about my dad,” he said. “He was a hardworking family man who never wanted his name to be known by anyone outside of his family. He wanted nothing else in life but to provide for his wife and see his sons become great people.”
Salgado Araujo had met Maria when they were teenagers in Mexico. They came to the United States together, and over the decades that followed, built their own home in Houston with help from the men who worked beside him. He spent his career in construction, building homes across the suburbs while raising three sons, all American citizens, and putting each of them through college. He eventually ran his own business, and was known for his work ethic, his fairness and his willingness to help anyone who needed it, according to a GoFundMe page created on his family’s behalf.
He had also completed a biometric scan and fingerprinting earlier this year as part of his work permit application.
His son believes that same care is part of why his father may not have stopped for the vehicles now identified as belonging to ICE. Salgado Araujo had studied, with his lawyers, what to do if immigration agents ever pulled him over. But the agents who approached him Tuesday were driving unmarked vehicles. If his father sped away, his son believes it was more likely from fear that someone wanted to steal his van and his tools—his livelihood—than an attempt to escape federal agents he didn’t know were there.
Three other men were in the van that morning: his brother, Victor Hugo Salgado Araujo, and two employees, Daniel Tirado Pantoja and José Trinidad Rojas Pliego. ICE detained all three at the scene, and they remain in custody.
The consequences of that were immediate. LULAC CEO Juan Proaño said: “There was nothing to identify him when he arrived at the hospital and as a result the hospital took him in as a John Doe. In doing so, it set off a bunch of triggers, a bunch of extra hurdles that the family has had to effectively navigate through.” Officials required a biometric and DNA verification before confirming his identity, and he was not officially declared dead until roughly 24 hours after the shooting. His widow, Maria, was told she must be the one to claim his body. But because she lacks legal status, the family has had to bring in lawyers simply to retrieve him.
The community of Houston has been stirred to action. Hundreds gathered in Magnolia Park on Wednesday evening, marching along Canal Street chanting “ICE out of Houston” and building a memorial of candles, flowers, and handwritten notes at the site where he was killed. Local artist Sarah Fisher spent the day painting his portrait, incorporating dry-cleaning ID stickers into the piece to spell “SOS” and “XOX”—a cry for help, she said, and a symbol of love.
A statement from the family, read at a candlelight vigil that night, asked for three things: a full independent investigation, an end to what the family described as ICE’s ambush-style tactics and for the neighborhood to look after Maria, his widow. U.S. Rep. Christian Menefee, who joined the vigil, connected the case to a pattern he said Houston shouldn’t have to relearn from Minneapolis: “This is not the first time this has happened,” he said, “and every single time they come and they tell us their version of events, but we don’t see any evidence.”
President Sheinbaum of Mexico responds
Salgado Araujo’s killing reached the highest levels of the Mexican government. President Claudia Sheinbaum called it another regrettable death of a Mexican national in the United States, and she said Wednesday that Mexico intends to escalate. “Our objective is to go beyond diplomatic notes and the measures we have already raised before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, because we cannot allow the mistreatment of our fellow Mexicans in the United States,” Sheinbaum said.
By Thursday, that pledge had taken concrete shape. Mexico’s foreign secretary, Roberto Velasco, announced the government will formally request that U.S. state prosecutors and the Department of Justice investigate Salgado Araujo’s killing, and it will pursue separate civil action against the private companies that operate ICE detention facilities. Velasco tied the case to a broader tally: 17 Mexican nationals have now died in the United States in immigration-related cases during the current administration, 14 in ICE custody and three in ICE operations, including Salgado Araujo. Sheinbaum, for her part, said his killing “seems targeted.”
Where things stand
The Harris County Medical Examiner has ruled Salgado Araujo’s death a homicide, caused by a penetrating gunshot wound.
DHS’s Office of Inspector General is reviewing the shooting, while the FBI is separately investigating the alleged assault on a federal officer. Harris County District Attorney Sean Teare has launched a parallel review, though Houston city officials say the city lacks jurisdiction to investigate federal agents directly.
Per reporting by The New Republic, the three men detained alongside Salgado Araujo are now facing pressure to sign self-deportation orders, according to Juan Proaño, CEO of LULAC. Proaño said that relatives in contact with the men confirmed the pressure, and that some of the men may be inclined to sign rather than face longer detention. He called it “an effort by DHS to get rid of the only eyewitnesses to what happened.”
Separately, Cesar Espinosa of the Houston civil rights group FIEL said the men are being told to cooperate with ICE’s version of events, under threat of criminal charges or expedited removal if they refuse.
On Thursday, four Houston-area members of Congress sent a formal letter to DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin and Acting ICE Director David Venturella demanding the release of all video and evidence supporting the agency’s account. So far, none has been made public.
His name is Lorenzo Salgado Araujo
Most people killed by ICE this year have not had cases like Alex Pretti’s or Renée Good’s, which generated national coverage, congressional attention and sustained public outrage. Most were not U.S. citizens. Many were Latino, Black or otherwise nonwhite immigrants whose deaths registered only as local news, if they registered at all.
Salgado Araujo’s case has broken through in a way many others have not. It has drawn national coverage, brought Houston’s congressional delegation to a podium and reached the president of Mexico.
Every name on the list the Mexican government read aloud this week belonged to someone with a Ronaldo and a Maria of their own: people who loved and knew everything about that person, who to them was “el mundo entero,” as Salgado Araujo’s family described him. “The whole world.”
Xbox Lays Off 20% Of Staff, Cut Studios, Largely Impacting Acquired Devs It Promised It Wouldn’t Layoff [Techdirt]
The long-rumored layoffs at Xbox have come and they are massive. We just recently discussed the mess that Microsoft’s Xbox division has become. An internal email that was sent to staff by CEO Asha Sharma laid out just how bad things were, essentially preparing the staff for the forthcoming staffing cuts. Interestingly, this is the latest in a series of staff cuts, many of which have been at studios that Microsoft recently acquired and told the FTC and the courts that there wouldn’t be layoffs in order to get the acquisitions approved. Those were lies, of course, but there won’t be any punishment for those lies. Regulation is just so un-American, you know.
This round of layoffs will effect over 3,000 staff members eventually, or about a fifth of the Xbox division workforce. The appetizer this past week accounts for about half that number. Working at Xbox right now must be buckets of fun, where you get to try to perform quality work while wondering if your name is on some list somewhere. An email went around again acknowledging the layoffs, as well as several Xbox studios going independent.
This email, shared with Kotaku, says that 1,600 of those layoffs will take place today, while the rest will take place later. Compulsion Games and Double Fine will become independent studios, while Ninja Theory and Undead Labs “have entered terms to join new ownership with funding to complete and grow Senua and State of Decay 3,” though the specifics of that have not yet been disclosed. Arkane Lyon is entering legally required “consultation” in France to review its options, and its fate remains unclear.
Layoffs will also take place in varying sizes across Activision, Bethesda/ZeniMax, Blizzard, King, Mojang, and Xbox Game Studios, though Sharma stated that none of Xbox’s first-party, publicly announced games or projects are being canceled as a part of these cuts. Mojang and King will now report directly to Sharma.
Again, several of these studios experiencing layoffs were recently acquired by Microsoft and, during regulatory proceedings, Microsoft said that layoffs wouldn’t occur. And, again, there will be no consequences for these lies, other than those felt by these ex-employees who no longer have a job.
Interestingly, these layoffs came along with a message that Xbox was going to start getting real lean on where it focuses its staff and money investments, primarily into “core franchises” in the gaming space. Despite that message, we’re already hearing about how these layoffs will result in the delay of current production of games in those very core franchises.
Speaking on condition of anonymity to protect their careers, current and former staff have told me that job losses across Bethesda Game Studios locations have removed more than 50 employees, including “key, high-performing people in the trenches” building the company’s long-awaited Skyrim successor. This in turn, they say, has shattered morale, raised the risk of future development crunch, and increased the likelihood that the game’s already far-off completion date will be delayed.
If you’re interested in how Xbox management is behaving in the midst of all of this turmoil and the obviously negative emotions of the remaining employees, well, it’s been awfully fucking shitty, honestly. Several Bethesda offices saw employees setting up “Celebrations of Service” in common areas, where staff members put up pictures of and messages to ex-coworkers to show their appreciation for all they’d done. That same day Xbox HR ordered that those memorials be taken down, all under the bullshit excuse that you can’t do that sort of thing in a common area.
“Unfortunately, HR made our office manager take this down almost immediately,” posted the union account. “They said because it’s in a common area, it had to be removed. We’ve used common areas for many things as a team, including fan works, but HR seems to believe that a Celebration of Service is inappropriate.”
And, since you can’t have real American capitalism in the modern era without getting a heavy dose of irony to go along with it, Asha Sharma herself was recently named to a task for at the Federal Reserve to advise on “jobs and productivity.” This is a bit like the FDA putting Hannibal Lecter on its advisory panel for a proper nutritional diet.
“The Federal Reserve’s commitment to price stability and maximum employment is unwavering. As is our resolve to pursue our mandate with rigor,” Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh said in a press release on July 9. “The U.S. economy has changed significantly over the last generation, and never more so than right now. Each task force will carefully consider whether policymakers’ means and methods, analytical tools and policy approaches can be improved upon. I am honored that the best minds from a range of disciplines have agreed to work with us to sharpen our performance as an institution. The goal is straightforward: to ensure the Fed is best positioned to achieve our objectives in this consequential time.”
Maximum employment? What an interesting concept for someone who just instituted historic layoffs to advise on.
So, how are things going at Xbox? Pretty fucking horrible. Layoffs, tone-deaf executives, delayed games, poor morale, and a workforce living in fear that they might be next. And I just can’t help but to return the point that much of this is a result of overextending acquisitions of enormous developers and publishers in the last five years, during which the company promised this very thing would not happen.
How Google And AI Nearly Made A Seasoned Reporter Spiral [Techdirt]
This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
Last month, my colleagues and I published an investigation into a Texas oil refinery startup, America First Refining, that had secretly gotten investment from Donald Trump Jr. We discovered a saga involving the Trump administration’s tariff policy, sanctioned Russian oil and an Indian billionaire family’s private zoo.
At the center of the story was the CEO of the refinery company, Texas businessman John Calce. We’d spent weeks examining Calce — pulling old lawsuits, property records, corporate registry filings — and had pieced together a portrait of what appeared to be an obscure serial entrepreneur who’d for years tried and failed to secure funding for his long-shot refinery project.
Then, not long before our story was set to publish, we decided to do a scrub on a separate company he had incorporated called Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals.
Pulling up the company’s website, I felt a brief flash of panic: Had we somehow missed the existence of a major business owned by the man at the center of our next story?
“From Houston to Rotterdam, Jurong to Fujairah. Our network connects the world’s most vital energy markets with speed, safety, and precision bulk oil storage,” announced the front page of the company’s website.

Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals, per the website, had more than 850 employees and 28 million barrels of oil storage capacity across six global hubs. This was puzzling: Our reporting had led us to believe Calce was struggling to raise enough money for a single project in the U.S., not overseeing a massive, multinational oil storage corporation.
Had we been wrong?
We turned to Google to learn more about the company’s top executives. Its CEO, Sarah Jenkins, had more than 20 years of experience at major energy firms. And its chief technology officer, David Chen, “built the company’s proprietary inventory management portal and integrated AI-driven predictive maintenance systems,” according to his bio. But we couldn’t find any trace of either of them online. Chalk it up to common names?
We then Googled one of the more distinct names: Vice President for Sustainability Dr. Sofia Rossi, who had “spearheaded the ‘Future Fuels’ program, preparing assets for biofuels and hydrogen.” But, again, nothing. The links to their LinkedIn profiles were dead.

When we searched the company’s Texas phone numbers, we found the same numbers listed online for a Houston baklava caterer, a Dallas-area taxi service and an OB-GYN office.
We called the Texas numbers: dead. Then we tried the numbers for the company’s facilities in the Netherlands, Singapore and China. Also dead.
We were beginning to suspect this company did not actually exist, at least as described on its website.
What was going on with this website? We looked at the source code and noticed an odd notation, “This feature isn’t implemented yet, but don’t worry! You can request it in your next prompt!”

We checked the site’s domain registration, and we had our (apparent) answer: It was created this year and traced back to a company called Hostinger that offers an AI website builder for $2.99 per month. “Describe it, and AI builds it,” its homepage says. “Appear on Google and AI search automatically.”
Indeed, Google’s “AI Overview” search response, now thrust on users by default with more and more regularity, seemed to ratify the company’s bona fides:

When I searched for an award the company claimed on its website to have won, the Google AI Overview said that “Recent notable recipients include Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals, recognized for their rapid expansion in the independent oil and terminal operations sector.”

Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals is a real LLC. But everything on its website — from its history of the company, to its job postings, a diversity and inclusion policy — appears to be fictional. But perhaps more troubling is that Google, the proprietor of the world’s primary research tool, has rolled out AI Overviews that can indiscriminately take in fake material and authoritatively spit it back out as real.
In response to questions, a Google spokesperson said in a statement: “AI Overviews are rooted in our core Search ranking systems, surfacing reliable and high-quality information for the vast majority of queries. For uncommon search terms like these, there might not be high quality information published that matches the query — and we use these examples to improve our search systems.”
After we reached out to Hostinger, the company pulled down the site. “After receiving your inquiry, we carried out an internal review. Based on the violations identified, we suspended the website and the account behind it in line with our Terms of Service,” a spokesperson said in a statement.
What we encountered is a particular species of a larger problem that is beginning to be better understood. In April, The New York Times reported on an analysis that found Google’s AI Overviews were accurate approximately 9 out of 10 times, noting that that added up to “tens of millions of erroneous answers every hour” given vast search volumes. (A Google spokesperson told the Times that the study has “serious holes.” The company has acknowledged that AI Overviews “can make mistakes.”)
A BBC reporter wrote a fictional article naming himself the best tech journalist at eating hot dogs, and Google’s AI as well as ChatGPT quickly picked it up and parroted it back.
And the source material for the AI Overviews also appears eminently gameable, even when not trafficking in actual fiction. “It Is Trivially Easy to Use Reddit to Manipulate AI Search, Research Suggests,” ran a recent headline in 404 Media.
The mystery website ended up as just a single paragraph in our story. But the larger implication is obvious: fakes, counterfeits and frauds that would have taken considerable effort to create just a few years ago can now be churned out pretty much instantly.
While preparing this piece, we reached out to Calce asking about the site. An attorney for his company, America First Refining, replied to us with a letter dated June 24 that the attorney sent to Hostinger. The attorney also addressed the letter to several email addresses listed on the Brownsville Energy Storage Terminals website.
“I write to demand immediate removal from the brownsvilleenergyterminals.com website of all unauthorized references to America First’s office address on your website,” the letter said. “As you are aware, America First has no connection or affiliation with the brownsvilleenergyterminals.com website and has not authorized the use of its corporate address there.”
I’m left with lingering questions about the website: What was it for? Was it put up by some malicious actor who simply found the company’s LLC records and decided to create a website? Was it a test site that was mistakenly put online? Or could it have been designed for consumption by someone who was meant to think it was real?
We don’t know, and our emails to the press contact listed on the website, media@brownsvilleenergyterminals.com, bounced back.
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