Trump Just Made It Easier For Your ISP To Rip You Off With Bogus Fees [Techdirt]
Here’s a short crash course in U.S. telecom policy.
Giant and very unpopular companies like Comcast, AT&T, Verizon, and Charter created regional monopolies that work tirelessly to erode all meaningful competition and oversight, resulting in high prices, spotty service, slower speeds, and abysmal customer service. They also pay a bunch of dodgy pseudo-academic “free market” think tanks to insist this is all very innovative and exciting.
Every so often a few Democrats (the handful not too timid to stand up to the telecom lobby) propose the absolute bare minimum policy “solution” that usually involves nibbling around the edges of the actual problem (unchecked monopoly power coddled by corruption). These efforts are very often highly decorative and performative, and very rarely competently enforced.
Enter Republicans, who work seamlessly with the telecom lobby to destroy even these bare-bones proposals, framing them as radical. The result: no real oversight of telecom giants, who then double down on all of their worst behaviors.
This just happens again and again and again in U.S. policy (privacy, net neutrality, predatory business practices). And will keep happening until the U.S. addresses its corruption problems. Which, with a minimum 2.5 years of Trumpism left, doesn’t seem likely anytime soon.
The latest case in point: back during the Biden era, the FCC under Jessica Rosenworcel proposed a new “nutrition label for broadband” that required ISPs break down each individual fee and restriction on your bill. Note it didn’t actually stop ISPs from ripping you off, it just created a mostly voluntary system whereby ISPs were politely asked to list the real price of service, including usage caps and bullshit fees.
Studies found that unsurprisingly, most ISPs didn’t comply and the FCC, even under Biden, didn’t really enforce the rules.
Despite this being, once again, a bare minimum policy effort that didn’t even actually fix the underlying problem and was never meaningfully enforced, the telecom lobby very much didn’t like the idea of having to be transparent. Or the government telling them what to do. So they’ve lobbied the Trump administration to dismantle the requirements:
“The Federal Communications Commission will vote to eliminate a rule that requires Internet service providers to list all of their so-called “passthrough” fees on an easily accessible broadband price label. The FCC vote could also make the price labels themselves a bit harder for consumers to find.”
Great stuff. Very populist. Who wasn’t begging the government to make it easier for big shitty companies to rip you off with bullshit surcharges and fees?
Keep in mind it took the U.S. government thirty-five years of telecom monopoly predation to finally come up with the idea “maybe we politely ask giant telecom monopolies to be semi-honest about their price.” But even that was a bridge too far for a corrupt U.S. federal government.
It should be noted that this most recent “nutrition label” approach was technically required by Congress, which was trying to ensure that the $42.5 billion in broadband subsidies in the infrastructure bill resulted in semi-decent broadband. But as I’ve been exploring, the Trump administration has hijacked that program to slather Elon Musk with subsidies, stripping all meaningful oversight in the process.
Trump FCC boss Brendan Carr’s order rolling back the rules tries to pretend they’re doing this for the sake of consumer clarity:
“However, the Commission’s initial rules, adopted in 2022, resulted in sometimes confusing labels that strayed beyond the statutory framework Congress created, increasing compliance costs for providers in the process. With this order, we refocus the rules on ensuring that consumers have the clear, accurate, and concise information about broadband plans that they want, making the labels a more useful shopping tool.”
That is a blatant lie. Carr is simply folding like a weakling to the demands of Comcast, AT&T and friends. There is no consumer benefit to making broadband pricing less transparent. It simply works to further obscure the real problem: regional monopoly predation, coddled by captured regulators like Carr. Comcast didn’t like having to be even semi-honest about precisely how it rips you off.
To try and avoid making it clear he’s breaking the law and ignoring Congress, Carr is pretending the labels will technically still exist. They will, of course, feature fewer requirements, be harder to find, and there will be absolutely no enforcement should ISPs balk at the rules.
Carr has more important things to do, like dismantling the First Amendment because a comedian made fun of the president’s wife, or eliminating bare-bones regulations to make life even easier on shitty robocallers, prison phone monopolies, and telecom giants.
The United States is not a serious country. It’s too corrupt to function in the public interest. And it’s become a strange combination of painful, boring, and pathetic that we have journalists, policymakers, think tankers, and regulators too feckless or captured to be honest about any of it.
Resources and focus [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
There are lots of things you can do, but it’s not clear you should.
OpenAI has virtually unlimited resources. And in addition to building a chat-based AI, they chose to launch pretty good image generation, a basketball, a meme video generator (since cancelled), an upcoming speaker that actually moves around your house, and a myriad of other tools, with new ones coming all the time. A short list includes: Operator, Deep Research, Scheduled Tasks, Projects, Canvas, Connectors, famous voices and Record Mode.

At the same time, Anthropic follows a slower (sort of boring) path.
It’s precisely the same choices every solo freelancer and small business faces, except with more zeroes.
At its peak, Yahoo had nearly 200 links on its home page. They were defeated by Google, which had two.
Three things:
Pirate Sites’ Domain Hopping Habit Undermines Belgium’s New Blocking Order [TorrentFreak]
Belgium’s Department for Combating Online Infringement (BAPO) continues to build out the country’s site-blocking regime at a steady pace.
Since the framework officially launched in 2025, a series of orders have targeted sports streaming sites, shadow libraries, movie piracy portals, and pirate IPTV services.
The official blocklist has grown to more than 1,000 domain names and a new order, issued by the President of the French-speaking Business Court of Brussels on July 3, classified 113 additional domain names as copyright infringing.
BAPO published its implementation decision on 10 July, without revealing the names of the requesting rightsholders. However, since the targeted sites mostly deal with movie and TV piracy, it would not be a surprise if it comes from Hollywood, Netflix, and Apple again.
The implementation order does not mention any of the domains by name, but TorrentFreak obtained a copy of the full blocklist, which shows that 113 domain names were added through the latest order. Most of these domains are connected to the French-language download portals Zone-Telechargement and Wawacity. Others include Lookmovie, Movix and KissKH.

The order requires five of Belgium’s large ISPs, including Telenet, Proximus, Mobile Vikings, Orange Belgium, and DIGI Communications, to block these sites. Unlike one of the earlier orders, it does not require third-party DNS resolvers to act.
The French-language orientation makes sense given it was issued by the French-speaking Business Court of Brussels, but it also connects this order to a much older enforcement cycle in a neighboring country.
The list of all new domains, which is available below, shows that Zone-Telechargement and Wawacity use a wide variety of largely identical novelty TLDs. This appears to be a direct response to site blocking orders issued by France’s ARCOM.
Each time French ISPs implement a new round of DNS blocks, the operators register a fresh domain name and redirect their user base through dedicated landing pages and Telegram channels. These updates happen so frequently that the Belgian site blocking order was already outdated before ISPs got the chance to implement it.
To illustrate, the order includes 37 Wawacity domains and 36 Zone-Telechargement domains. However, both sites have been operating from a .poker TLD since July 9th, and several of the previous iterations such as .codes and .expert are not in the Belgian blocklist either.
The rightsholders are aware of the domain hopping habits of these sites, as they specifically requested the court to block “signpost” information pages that help people to bypass blockades.
For example, the blocklist includes wawacity-info.com and zone-telechargement-info.com. These sites do not host copyrighted content and do not link to any infringing files. They are simple landing pages that tell visitors what the current active domain is, and how blocking measures can be bypassed.

Rightsholders asked the court to block these domain names as well and this request was granted by the court and also approved in BAPO’s implementation order. While the signpost pages don’t link directly to infringing material, they are facilitating access.

This would fall under the Belgian blocking powers and the “facilitate access” language is specifically referenced in the implementation order, as shown above.
The two blocked signpost pages are nearly identical, suggesting that Wawacity and Zone-Telechargement are run by the same operation. This also explains why they change their domain names in tandem.
Whether the operators plan to change the domain names of their signpost pages is unclear. They also update tens of thousands of followers through Telegram, where the messaging is again identical, which points to a joint operation.

These sites are not the only ones that regularly change domain names either. Movix, which is also targeted in the same order, has already moved to a new TLD as well and remains accessible.
If anything, the Belgian example shows that site blocking itself is far from a perfect remedy. Although BAPO’s blocking order can be updated weekly with up to 50 new domains, pirate site operators often only need a few minutes to direct traffic to a new TLD.
It would not be a surprise to see rightsholders target the Telegram channels next, hoping to further limit the exposure. Whether these and other measures will eventually break the morale of pirates has yet to be seen.
—
A copy of BAPO’s most recent implementation decision is available here (pdf). The full Belgian piracy blacklist is published on the FPS Economy website.
A list of all newly added domain names is available below:
– animepahe.pw
– animepahe.com
– animepahe.org
– anime-sama.to
– anime-sama.pw
– anime-sama.org
– anime-sama.si
– anime-sama.tv
– kisskh.co
– kisskh.do
– kisskh.id
– kisskh.la
– kisskh.ovh
– kisskh.at
– kissdl.eu
– lookmovie.foundation
– lookmovie.pn
– lookmovie0.to
– lookmovie2.la
– lookmovie2.pe
– lookmovie2.to
– lookmovie4.to
– lookmovie5.to
– lookmovie6.to
– lookmovie7.to
– lookmovie8.to
– lookmovie9.to
– lookmovie.com
– movix.cash
– movix.chat
– movix.cloud
– movix.golf
– movix.club
– movix.llc
– movix.online
– streamex.net
– streamex.sh
– voir-anime.to
– watchseries.bar
– watchseries.best
– wawacity.tours
– wawacity-info.com
– wawacity.beauty
– wawacity.click
– wawacity.cv
– wawacity.diy
– wawacity.energy
– wawacity.farm
– wawacity.futbol
– wawacity.golf
– wawacity.gratis
– wawacity.im
– wawacity.ing
– wawacity.irish
– wawacity.lat
– wawacity.lifestyle
– wawacity.motorcycles
– wawacity.news
– wawacity.party
– wawacity.pet
– wawacity.pictures
– wawacity.pizza
– wawacity.promo
– wawacity.rent
– wawacity.rodeo
– wawacity.run
– wawacity.shop
– wawacity.supply
– wawacity.surf
– wawacity.taxi
– wawacity.team
– wawacity.tips
– wawacity.today
– wawacity.tools
– wawacity.town
– wawacity.win
– wawacity.zone
– zone-telechargement.tours
– zone-telechargement-info.com
– zone-telechargement.beauty
– zone-telechargement.cv
– zone-telechargement.diy
– zone-telechargement.energy
– zone-telechargement.farm
– zone-telechargement.futbol
– zone-telechargement.golf
– zone-telechargement.gratis
– zone-telechargement.im
– zone-telechargement.ing
– zone-telechargement.irish
– zone-telechargement.meme
– zone-telechargement.monster
– zone-telechargement.motorcycles
– zone-telechargement.news
– zone-telechargement.party
– zone-telechargement.pet
– zone-telechargement.pictures
– zone-telechargement.pizza
– zone-telechargement.promo
– zone-telechargement.rent
– zone-telechargement.rodeo
– zone-telechargement.run
– zone-telechargement.shop
– zone-telechargement.supply
– zone-telechargement.surf
– zone-telechargement.taxi
– zone-telechargement.team
– zone-telechargement.tips
– zone-telechargement.today
– zone-telechargement.tools
– zone-telechargement.town
– zone-telechargement.win
– zone-telechargement.zone
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
The Good & The Bad In Erica Schwartz’s Confirmation Hearings To Lead CDC [Techdirt]
There’s a lot of health news going on in the country right now, in no small part to the absolutely pitiful and pathetic job RFK Jr. is doing heading up HHS. It is a near certainty that by the end of this week, the CDC will have published an updated case count for measles that is greater than last year’s total case count, which was itself the largest since the 90s. Pertussis is also surging. There’s that new outbreak going around where you apparently just shit your pants constantly, like some kind of minor South Park character or something.
And so it was something of a breath of fresh air when the Trump administration nominated Erica Schwartz to lead the CDC, all because she appeared to be well qualified for the role and hadn’t said anything crazy-pants about things like vaccines. That this has become the standard for a feel-good HHS story is telling, but it was welcome news all the same.
Commenting on the nomination, Kennedy said he wouldn’t commit to taking CDC advice on vaccines, nor would he commit to not directly interfering with CDC operations and policy making.
Kennedy’s response Tuesday suggested Schwartz could face an equally short tenure. His answer came amid an exchange with Rep. Raul Ruiz (D-Calif.) in a hearing of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. Ruiz asked Kennedy: “If Dr. Schwartz is confirmed, will you commit on the record today to implement whatever vaccine guidance she issues without interference?”
Kennedy replied without hesitation: “I’m not going to make that kind of commitment.”
Which is part of what informed senators to ask Schwartz about resisting Kennedy’s fuckery in her confirmation hearings. Sadly, it appears that Schwartz refused to demonstrate that she in fact has a backbone.
[D]uring a hearing sometimes marked by heated exchanges, Dr. Erica Schwartz repeatedly declined to say whether she would resist political pressure from Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over vaccine policy.
Committee Chairman Bill Cassidy, R-La., repeatedly questioned Schwartz about whether she would have authority to make personnel and policy decisions without political interference from the Health and Human Services Department. Schwartz did not directly answer whether she could hire and dismiss CDC employees independently or whether she would refuse directives from Kennedy that conflicted with scientific evidence.
Asked by Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., whether she would carry out an order to discontinue a public campaign encouraging influenza vaccination, Schwartz replied, “I don’t speak in hypotheticals.”
And so, once again, the country will get to wonder whether the CDC really does have an actual director, or just some figurehead placed there to give Kennedy’s insanity the veneer of consensus. This is a very real problem given our current context and, frankly, these questions should not be terribly difficult to answer. For someone with integrity, at least, the answer should be something like, “As CDC’s Director, it would be my responsibility to refuse any order that would make the country less healthy, no matter who it comes from. And as CDC Director, I would have that authority by the nature of the position.”
All of that being said, Schwartz did at least reaffirm her sanity on the topic of vaccines.
Ranking Member Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., asked Schwartz if she would remove a webpage updated last November on the CDC’s website on autism and vaccines. The webpage states that a link between the two has been ignored despite many studies finding no such link.
Schwartz said she accepted there is “overwhelming evidence” vaccines don’t cause autism, but did not commit to removing the webpage.
“Senator, I have been in situations where I have had to go to my superiors in the military to have conversations, very difficult conversations, about things that may have been concerning to the troops or to the military personnel, and I will do the same with [Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.],” she replied.
Once again, great that she is sane when it comes to vaccines, less great that she won’t commit to actually doing the right thing and removing the nonsense from CDC’s website.
I’m still relatively optimistic about Schwartz leading CDC. It may be that she didn’t want to publicly embarrass what would be her new boss if confirmed. It may be that she ends up pushing back hard on Kennedy’s attempts at interfering with her agency if confirmed, which will probably end up with her being fired. Even that would be fine by me, since it would be one more glaring data point of chaos at HHS under Kennedy.
If that led to Kennedy’s firing, it would be worth it.
FCC Officials Took Pricey Gifts From Paramount As The Company Needed Approval For Billion-Dollar Deals [Techdirt]
This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
The rich and famous who filed into the Kennedy Center’s opera house in December were there to enjoy one of the nation’s most exclusive celebrations of the performing arts: the center’s annual honors gala.
The black-tie event, hosted by President Donald Trump, prioritized tickets to people who donated more than $75,000 to the center. This year, it feted Hollywood icon Sylvester Stallone, the legendary glam rock band Kiss and the Grammy Award-winning disco pioneer Gloria Gaynor.
Among the attendees that evening were two lower-profile government officials whose regulatory decisions had been crucial to the future of the gala’s broadcast sponsor, CBS, and its parent company, Paramount.
Five months earlier, Federal Communications Commissioner Olivia Trusty cast a decisive vote approving Paramount’s historic $8 billion merger with Skydance Media. Now, the commissioner and a guest enjoyed the star-studded celebration thanks to tickets gifted to her by Paramount worth more than $12,000, according to ethics disclosure records obtained by ProPublica.
The other commissioner who approved the merger watched from a prized perch. FCC Chair Brendan Carr and his wife sat in a private skybox with Paramount CEO David Ellison and other executives from Paramount and CBS. Such seats sold for $125,000 a ticket, according to Kennedy Center guidelines.
It’s unclear if Paramount gifted Carr the premium seats because the FCC has yet to make public his financial disclosure for last year.
However, past disclosures show Carr and Trusty are among seven FCC commissioners who have accepted Kennedy gala tickets from CBS or its parent company over the last decade. Ethics experts told ProPublica this poses a blatant conflict of interest since the commission regulates the network. Carr’s previous financial statements show he has accepted tickets at least seven times since his 2017 appointment, totaling over $63,000 in gifts.
Last December’s ceremony attended by Trusty and Carr took place as Paramount was launching a hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, a move that would later result in a merger agreement that requires FCC approval.
Federal ethics rules ban employees from taking gifts from any entity that does business with, is regulated by or seeks official action from their agency.
Four ethics experts told ProPublica that by accepting the premium tickets Trusty and Carr compromised the FCC’s impartiality and should not take part in any upcoming decision on the merger.
“There’s no way that any top federal regulator should ever, ever accept a gift from a regulated company with interests their work will foreseeably affect,” said Walter Shaub, who led the federal Office of Government Ethics from 2013 to 2017. “The appearance of taking gifts like that is terrible. What’s at stake is nothing less than the public’s trust in government.”
Virginia Canter, who served as an ethics lawyer at the White House, Treasury Department, and Securities and Exchange Commission during the presidencies of George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama, said the commissioners who accepted tickets cannot participate in this matter without damaging the integrity of the government’s decision-making process.
“This is shocking. Pretty disturbing, that’s what I would say. I just don’t understand what they were thinking,” said Canter, who now works as chief counsel for ethics and corruption at the nonpartisan government watchdog group Democracy Defenders Fund.
The FCC’s review of the merger is one of the final hurdles facing a historic $110 billion consolidation of two of the five largest film studios in Hollywood. The deal would unite Paramount Skydance with Warner Bros., bringing under the control of one company Paramount+ and HBO Max streaming services; CBS and CNN; and scores of other major broadcast channels, cable networks, and digital platforms.
The new megacorporation, which could reshape how millions will access news, movies, sports and video games, faces fierce opposition from inside and outside Hollywood. More than 5,000 actors, producers and entertainment workers — including stars such as Robert De Niro, Javier Bardem, Joaquin Phoenix and Glenn Close — signed an open letter decrying how the consolidation would eliminate jobs and compromise “the integrity, independence, and diversity of our industry.”
On Monday, California, New York and 10 other Democratic states filed a lawsuit seeking to block the merger under federal and state anti-monopoly laws.
American and international regulators are evaluating the deal for its potential national security implications and impacts to consumers worldwide. Last week, the British government signaled it planned to investigate whether the new entertainment titan that would emerge from the union would unfairly stifle competition. The FCC’s ongoing review includes examining the Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds backing the deal, including from Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Abu Dhabi.
The FCC usually has five commissioners — all appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate to serve five-year terms — but the agency currently has only three. Any vote by the full commission would likely be decided by Republicans Carr and Trusty over Democrat Anna Gomez. Gomez was not at the December 2025 show but has accepted tickets from Paramount in the past. Because the FCC requires a three-commissioner quorum for a vote, any recusal could leave the panel unable to decide on the merger. Carr could decide to ask staff to approve the deal rather than bring it to a commission vote, but the ethics experts said he should recuse himself from any decisions affecting the Paramount merger.
The experts warned the commissioners’ gifts might become central in legal challenges and said the Justice Department should investigate potential violations of federal rules or laws.
Neither Carr nor Trusty responded to ProPublica’s requests for comment. Gomez said in a statement that she followed agency advice when she attended the event in 2023 and 2024. Her statement did not elaborate or otherwise address why taking gifts from Paramount did not pose a conflict of interest.
An FCC spokesperson said agency ethics officers have for years cleared commissioner appearances, finding it consistent with ethics law.
“FCC Chairs and officials have attended the same event, in the same ways, consistently from the Trump Administration to the Biden Administration to the Obama Administration,” the FCC said in a statement. “There has been no change in recent years.”
Shaub called the justification outrageous.
“It’s no excuse to say that you took the gift because everyone else was doing it or that your agency has had a bad habit of indulging in gift taking for a long time,” Shaub said. “That kind of explanation doesn’t work for school children, and it sure as hell doesn’t work for government officials who are supposed to have better judgment than a fifth grader.”
Despite their oversight role, FCC members have long enjoyed a night out at the Kennedy Center courtesy of CBS or its parent company. Seven of the 10 commissioners who served since 2016 accepted tickets worth more than $260,000, according to a ProPublica analysis of ethics disclosures.
Carr’s predecessor, Jessica Rosenworcel, who was appointed FCC chair by President Joe Biden and stepped down in January 2025, attended regularly.
Rosenworcel and several other former commissioners who accepted the tickets did not respond to requests for comment. The one commissioner who didn’t accept a single gift, Nathan Simington, said he received the Kennedy Center invites from CBS and Paramount but turned them down because it “wasn’t my cup of tea.”
A review of 10 years of disclosures shows commissioners accepted paid trips from various sponsors to appear at banquets and speak at conferences. Some of those gifts came from other media companies regulated by the FCC. NBCUniversal, ABC-Disney and Fox News, for instance, paid for commissioners to attend White House Correspondents’ Association dinners, records show. The total value of the combined gifts topped $308,000. But the vast majority came from CBS and its parent company.
Melissa Zukerman, Paramount’s chief communications officer, said it was a decades-long “CBS practice to invite government officials from both parties” to the Kennedy Center show. She didn’t address why the practice continued after new ownership took over last year, the purpose of the gifts or whether the tickets posed a conflict of interest.
Carr, who joined the FCC as a staffer in 2012 and rose to become the agency’s general counsel, was appointed to serve as a commissioner by Trump during his first term. Since then, Carr has accepted tickets annually, except when the 2020 event was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, according to his public disclosures.
Carr did not respond to an email request from ProPublica for his latest ethics report, which would indicate whether Paramount also paid for him to attend last December’s gala. The FCC referred us to the Office of Government Ethics, which told us that the FCC had not yet provided the disclosure. The FCC did not respond to our subsequent requests for the record.
A 2009 Office of Government Ethics memo gave federal employees the right to attend Kennedy Center events but explicitly said officials cannot accept free attendance “offered by persons other than the Kennedy Center and its trustees, officers and employees.” In 2016, the ethics office tightened its gift requirements, warning officials to avoid any appearance “of loss of impartiality.”
There is an exemption to the gift rules that allows free entry to gatherings that are widely attended and paid for by third parties, but only if certain conditions are met.
The event must “further agency programs or operations,” and the agency’s interest in an official attending must outweigh “concern that the employee may be, or may appear to be, improperly influenced in the performance of official duties,” according to the federal rules.
As an example, the Office of Government Ethics said an industry-wide seminar attended by more than 100 people could be allowed if the employee’s participation would be in the agency’s interest. But those attending should “represent a range of persons interested in a given matter” and the event must provide a “structured opportunity” to exchange ideas and views among invitees.
The office clarified in a 2007 memo that performing arts presentations would not count even if they, like the honors gala, have a reception before or afterward at which officials can mingle with other attendees.
Canter, the former White House ethics lawyer, said it would be a “stretch” for the FCC to argue the exemptions apply to the Kennedy Center’s annual show, where famous musicians perform and celebrities laud those who are being honored. “It’s not what we would consider a widely attended gathering,” she said.
Kedric Payne, general counsel and senior director of ethics at the Campaign Legal Center, a nonpartisan watchdog group, noted that federal rules also require agencies to weigh the market value of the attendance, its relevance to the agency, any sensitive pending matters involving the donor and whether accepting free tickets creates an appearance of preferential treatment.
“The ethics rules are designed to prevent this exact situation,” he said, adding that it is an “obvious conflict of interest” for an official to “accept expensive gifts from anyone with decisions pending before the agency. This matters because it makes the public question whether official decisions are free from the improper influence of wealthy special interests.”
An FCC official familiar with the legal guidance given to the commissioners said they were told the event met the criteria for the “widely attended gathering” exception. (The source was not authorized to talk publicly about agency legal discussions.)
Shaub, the former Office of Government Ethics head, disagreed, saying it would be “hard to understand what compelling interest the FCC could think it had in letting its commissioners” attend the gala.
“What possible reason could have outweighed the obvious ethics concerns?” he asked.
Federal rules require written authorization for an official to accept free entry to a widely attended gathering. The FCC did not respond to our requests to provide the authorizations for the Paramount tickets or say who authorized them. Two senior ethics officials at the agency, Kathleen Fulp and Lauren Northrop, did not respond to requests for comment.
While December’s event came at a particularly sensitive time for Paramount and the FCC, it wasn’t the first.
More than a year earlier, in September 2024, Paramount had filed paperwork seeking the commission’s approval for its merger with Skydance Media. A month later, the FCC launched an investigation of CBS after a conservative group complained about a “60 Minutes” interview with Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris. Trump later filed a lawsuit alleging the network deceptively edited the interview — an accusation CBS denied.
Then in November, less than two weeks after his election victory, Trump declared he would appoint Carr as FCC chair. Almost immediately, Carr accused CBS of biased election coverage and said it would be an obstacle to approving the Paramount-Skydance merger.
That December, Carr and three other commissioners — Rosenworcel, Gomez and Geoffrey Starks — accepted Kennedy Center gala tickets from Paramount worth a combined $48,156.
On Jan. 16, 2025, just days before Rosenworcel stepped down from the commission, she announced the agency was dismissing the election complaint against CBS. She and Gomez called the outcome a victory for the First Amendment.
But days later, Carr, the incoming FCC chair, reopened the investigation.
To resolve Trump’s lawsuit, CBS agreed to pay the president $16 million, a decision criticized by legal experts who decried Trump’s claims as baseless.
Two days after Trump posted on social media that he had received the settlement money, the FCC took up the Paramount-Skydance merger. To meet Carr’s demands, Paramount agreed to appoint an independent ombudsperson who would evaluate claims of bias. The company also pledged to eliminate its diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.
By then, Starks and Simington had unexpectedly stepped down from the commission. Trusty, a Trump appointee, had been confirmed by the Senate the previous month.
Trusty and Carr voted in favor of the merger. Gomez voted against, blasting the approval for requiring “never-before-seen forms of government control over newsroom decisions and editorial judgment.”
Experts said that while Trusty had no conflict yet, Carr and Gomez did. The fact that Gomez voted against Paramount did not mean she didn’t face a conflict under the rules, Shaub said.
Federal rules only require those who accept improper gifts to make a prompt reimbursement, but Shaub and the other experts said Carr and Gomez should have abstained from the vote.
“If you repay the face value of the ticket, the gift rules don’t require you to recuse — though common sense and any kind of conscience might lead you to recuse voluntarily for the good of the country,” Shaub said. “But if you refuse to repay the donor, I don’t see how anything short of recusal could remotely remediate the problem.”
With the Paramount-Skydance merger greenlit by the FCC, Ellison, the new company’s CEO, then set his sights on acquiring Warner Bros. Discovery.
Warner at first rebuffed Paramount’s overtures and on Dec. 5 — two days before the Kennedy Center gala — accepted a bid from Netflix to buy its studio and streaming assets. Ellison responded by making numerous calls to administration officials and had a long talk with Trump, according to The Wall Street Journal.
On the night of the gala, Trump told reporters the Netflix deal “could be a problem” and that he planned to get directly involved with the regulatory approval. Inside the Kennedy Center, Carr and his wife sat with Ellison in an exclusive skybox, Bloomberg reported. (Gomez said in her statement to ProPublica that she declined Paramount’s “invitation because of serious concerns about press independence connected to conditions Paramount agreed to as part of its merger transaction before the FCC.”)
Hours after the gala ended, Paramount announced it was launching its hostile takeover bid of Warner Bros. Discovery.
About three months later, Carr publicly endorsed Paramount over Netflix on CNBC, promising swift approval.
If one or more commissioners choose to abstain from a merger vote because of ethical concerns, what would happen next is unclear. Under federal conflict of interest rules, an agency designee could theoretically permit commissioners to vote after considering several factors, including “the difficulty of reassigning the matter,” the nature of the relationship between the commissioners and Paramount, and the “effect that resolution of the matter would have upon the financial interests” of the firm.
Carr could bypass a full commission vote entirely, as he did with the recent acquisition of Tegna by Nexstar Media Group. In that case, Carr delegated authority to FCC staff to approve the takeover.
But any decision on the Paramount deal — whether by the full commission or by staff at the direction of the chair — is likely to be challenged.
Richard Painter, a former White House ethics attorney in the administration of George W. Bush, said while courts often defer to the government’s judgment, they also can become skeptical if a regulatory agency is shown to have violated ethics rules.
“A judge may very well say that the merger decision of the FCC isn’t worth jack because the process was corrupted,” he said.
Cops Continue To Prove They Can’t Be Trusted With Surveillance Tech [Techdirt]
This is probably nothing more than another data point in a deluge, but it’s worth pointing out because it’s instructive.
Cops are using a whole lot of surveillance tech these days. Flock Safety has been especially aggressive in pursuing the law enforcement market, offering cops access to a nationwide network of cameras, including many owned and operated by private citizens.
Flock — and its law enforcement partners — have generated a lot of negative press over the last couple of years. Some of this is due to cops abusing their access and/or performing searches for federal agencies that aren’t allowed to directly access Flock’s database. Some of this is due to Flock itself, which has seen the negative press and largely chosen to ignore it.
But now Flock has real problems. Federal legislators are demanding answers to uncomfortable questions. And dozens of cities are attempting to rid themselves of Flock cameras following public outcry and/or evidence of abuse by those with access.
In San Francisco, it’s a blend of both. And the answers/excuses made by Flock and the SFPD make it clear law enforcement agencies cannot be trusted with the tech they now have easy access to.
“During a routine compliance audit in May, SFPD officials found that the Northern California Regional Intelligence Center (NCRIC) had queried SFPD’s Flock network on behalf of federal and out-of-state agencies. There were 299 improper inquiries over approximately one year, which accounts for 0.005% of inquiries over that period,” the release states.
Each of these searches performed on behalf of federal agencies broke state law. To its credit, the SFPD pulled the plug on access following the results of this audit. And while that’s the sort of response we’d like to see from more law enforcement agencies, the statements issued by those involved (SFPD, Flock) make it clear the only way to prevent abuse is to never allow cops to have access to this tech in the first place.
Here’s what Flock Safety had to say about the audit results:
A Flock spokesperson in February said the company had disabled its national lookup feature for all California agencies and is confident its privacy protections comply with state law, local policy and community expectations.
[…]
In response to the San Francisco audit, Flock spokesperson Paris Lewbel told KTVU that the searches were not a result of a software malfunction, platform issue, unauthorized access, or any failure of the Flock system.
Without more information, it’s impossible to tell whether the first statement issued by Flock (in response to a lawsuit) is true. It could be that feds asked the SFPD to perform local searches, which would lend credence to Flock’s initial statement. The fact that 299 potentially illegal searches took place over the last year doesn’t generate a whole lot of confidence in either the supply or demand side of the Flock equation.
The second statement makes things a bit more clear: this wasn’t SFPD officers going outside of any limitations imposed by Flock or the department itself. Instead, they broke the law by running searches they most likely knew violated state regulations. In other words, this wasn’t Flock enabling lawlessness. This was cops working within the system to violate the law.
The implication gets even stronger now that the SFPD has issued its own statement. This appears to have been officers breaking the law, rather than the law being (accidentally or otherwise) bypassed because the software wasn’t configured correctly.
The San Francisco Police Department identified the activity through a routine audit of its own Flock network and took immediate action, Lewbel noted.
He added that no out-of-state or federal agencies had direct access to SFPD’s Flock system or any California Flock system.
The first sentence means something. The second sentence, however, is meaningless. The limitations placed on access by Flock and SFPD policies were circumvented to perform exactly the sort of searches they were meant to prevent. This audit could have come back completely clean if SFPD officers hadn’t decided to break the rules.
And even if 299 illegal searches are only “0.005%” of the total number of searches, that doesn’t mean the other 99.995% of searches were justified. Most people assume ALPR databases are only accessed when a license plate generates a hit due to prior placement on a watch list. That’s an false impression that’s been perpetrated for years by law enforcement, which constantly claims these are used to track down car thieves, kidnappers, bank robbers, and other dangerous criminals.
But when audits are only looking for searches that route around parameters, they don’t see all the searches being made by cops who are bored or are tracking their exes or trying to hunt down women who are doing nothing more than seeking to terminate unwanted pregnancies. The “0.005% of searches” assertion is likely misleading as well. Plaintiffs suing the state over its ALPR use alleged more than 1.6 million illegal searches during the same time period across the state. Not only that, but the number of total searches is likely inflated by those triggered by the system itself, which involve minimal interaction by officers utilizing the ALPR network.
On one hand, if we decide Flock is actually telling the truth this time, the blame lies with the officers who choose to break the rules and the law. On the other hand, if Flock’s representation of the facts is inaccurate, it only means cops who knew what the law was chose to break it simply because they easily could. Neither of these scenarios add up to the SFPD being trustworthy. And splitting the difference just means we can’t trust the SFPD’s camera provider either.
A Conspiracy-Laden Prime Time Speech [The Status Kuo]
I’m on a train heading to D.C. for the Human Rights Campaign summer board meeting, but I managed to turn in a piece to the editorial team about tonight’s speech by Trump. He’s grabbing a prime-time spot at 9pm ET, apparently to rehash long-debunked election fraud claims. So it’s a good time to take stock of where his efforts have led so far.
The good news is that he has suffered some serious set-backs in the courts, even at the Supreme Court level over mail-in ballots. Many of the tools he hoped to bring to bear this November aren’t materializing as a result.
The bad news is he is more desperate and more dangerous than ever, and to push his Big Lie about the 2020 election (and 2026 midterms) he’s got to concoct some wild stuff. I take a look at some of the likely candidates. And yes, it takes putting on a tin-foil hat to put ourselves in perspective of the election deniers.
If you’re subscribed to The Big Picture, Look for my piece in your inbox later this afternoon. If you’re not yet subscribed, you can do so here:
http://thinkbigpicture.substack.com/subscribe
It’s free to sign up, but we truly appreciate those who voluntarily support our work with a paid subscription!
I’ll be in board meetings all day tomorrow but back here with Skeets and Giggles on Saturday.
Jay
To Dodge A Fight With Trump, Law Firms Cut Deals. Now The Deals Are Creating A Fight With Trump. [Techdirt]
A few weeks ago, David Lat went on the Serious Trouble podcast and mentioned that things actually hadn’t turned out that poorly for the craven big law firms that had caved to Donald Trump’s ridiculous attacks on any law firm he didn’t like. The law firms that fought back keep winning in court, as it’s obviously ridiculous and unconstitutional to punish law firms because you don’t like the clients they’ve defended. And, to some extent, Trump’s legal strategy has succeeded in creating a chilling effect. Lat had earlier reported how the Big Law firms are mostly missing from the many, many legal challenges against Trump’s nonsense policies.
Of course, many of the “settlements” involved promises of pro bono work in support of MAGA/Trump causes, though it’s unclear if any of that has really turned up. There had been some talk last year that Trump’s personal lawyer, Boris Epshteyn, had tried to get those firms to help Trump negotiate his bullshit trade deals, though it’s unclear if that went any where.
Epshteyn’s involvement is interesting, because it has also been reported that he was the one who actively negotiated the craven “settlement” deals by the law firms that caved, despite not being a federal government employee.
That’s become a real problem for the firms. The American Bar Association had sued the White House last year to try to stop these attacks on law firms. Given the reporting on Epshteyn’s involvement (again, not as a government employee), the ABA has been demanding copies of communications involving Epshteyn.
This appears to have made the DOJ nervous (gee… wonder why?) and it has taken the somewhat strange step of issuing subpoenas to a bunch of the law firms, including most of the ones that “settled” with the administration, while also demanding that some of their top people sit for depositions. And all these big law firms who decided to ditch any principled stand and to agree to a deal with Trump are now put in the awkward position of deciding if they now need to fight the administration they already caved to… or reveal information they’d probably prefer not to reveal.
Mr. Epshteyn serves as Mr. Trump’s personal lawyer but negotiated the deals with the firms. Mr. Bannon has publicly praised the deals, saying that he hoped Mr. Trump’s executive orders against the law firms would destroy them.
In response to the demands the Trump administration hand over documents, the Justice Department has asked a federal judge to quash the requests. So far, the judge has not ruled. But in the meantime, the Justice Department subpoenaed the nine law firms that cut deals with Mr. Trump — and four that have fought the executive orders in court — for the same information the association was seeking from the administration.
The government’s subpoenas marked an escalation of the battle surrounding the lawsuit, and aim to put the law firms’ leaders under the same kind of pressure that the bar association’s subpoena put on Mr. Epshteyn, according to people familiar with the matter.
The subpoenas ask for all communications the firms had with Mr. Epshteyn and “any communications concerning the implementation, enforcement or monitoring of” agreements between the firms and the White House, according to the subpoena reviewed by Times.
Apparently, the strategic idea is that by issuing subpoenas to these law firms (again, most of whom already caved and basically admitted that they’re toadies of the administration), perhaps they’ll step in to the fight and help the DOJ try to block the sharing of Epshteyn’s communications. And that creates a fairly uncomfortable choice for these supposedly big, powerful law firms.
The demands have caught the firms flat-footed, unsure of how to respond. Faced with that uncertainty, they have hired high-powered Washington lawyers to represent them as they gear up to face the Justice Department….
Oh gosh, these big powerful lawyers who used to fight the government now have the government putting them in such an impossible position… that they have to hire other lawyers to figure out what to do? Please, someone fetch me the smallest violin.
Meanwhile, the firms that caved and promised to support Trump’s MAGA agenda are worried that if they fight these bogus subpoenas, they’ll be right back to square one, facing a new bullshit executive order that they were too chickenshit to stand up and fight against earlier:
But the Justice Department’s demands have placed the firms that made deals with Mr. Trump in a particularly difficult position, leaving them uncertain how to respond, according to the two people. Some firms fear that if they oppose the administration they will be hit with an executive order, one of the people said.
Maybe, next time, don’t cave. Don’t abandon all principles. Don’t meekly give in to a bully who was never going to leave well enough alone.
While some of the subpoenas went to the law firms that have fought back against Trump, it seems much easier for them to come out and fight the subpoenas, if they choose to do so. Or, hell, they could just cough up Epshteyn’s approaches to get them out there anyway.
When dealing with an authoritarian bully, never obey in advance, never give in when you can stand up for your rights. Those big law firms — Paul Weiss, Kirkland & Ellis, Latham & Watkins, Skadden Arps, Willkie Farr, Milbank, A&O Shearman, and Simpson Thacher — caved and now face even further embarrassment. There’s one other firm that’s in a weirder position. Cadwalader (NY’s oldest law firm) was another big law firm that caved, but… just recently merged with Hogan Lovells, which has not caved. And Hogan Lovells is claiming that Cadwalader’s promises to the Trump admin don’t apply to the merged firm. Good luck with that!
Either way, it’s hard to feel much sympathy for the position the Trump admin is now putting these firms in. They had a chance to show backbone when it actually mattered, and they folded. Immediately. Now they get to hire more lawyers to figure out how to avoid ratting out the guy they folded for. Lat may have been right that things “hadn’t turned out that poorly” — but ask again in a few months, once these firms are done choosing between betraying Trump or betraying themselves.
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The Benefits of Selling Your Books Direct with Lulu [The Business of Printing Books]

Selling books (or any product) online historically meant one thing: getting your book listed with retailers. That might be self-publishing and listing on Amazon or getting a small publisher to pick up the book and list it through Ingram’s network.
Today, direct sales have proven that retailers don’t have a monopoly on online selling. Recent census data shows that, in the USA, ecommerce sales account for nearly 17% of all retail sales. That’s a significant amount (something like $326 billion) that isn’t helping to line a retailer’s pocket.
That doesn’t mean Amazon is closing down anytime soon. But it does show that retail distribution is only one part of a strong book sales strategy.
Direct book sales create a new and lucrative sales channel. Instead of sending every reader to a retailer, you sell books directly to readers through your own website. That might mean building an author ecommerce store, connecting Lulu Direct to Shopify, Wix, or WooCommerce, or using another direct-to-consumer publishing setup that fits your business.
The goal is not to stop using retailers. The goal is to stop relying on retailers for every sale.
The appeal of selling directly comes not just from the improved profit margins (though those are nice). Rather, it’s about earning more access to your customers, retaining control over your content, and making more money.
When I was outlining this article, I went to ChatGPT and asked it to search the web and create a comprehensive list of all the reasons creators should sell their products directly to their customers. The list it created was… long. It had, and I’m not exaggerating at all, 34 bullets.
Thankfully, the list included what I consider the top five reasons to sell self-published books directly.
I like these five because they all stem from one important aspect that drives so many creators: control.
The clearest benefit of direct sales for authors is revenue. This is pretty easy math to do.
Let’s say your book costs $5 to print and $5 to ship. That’s a $10 total cost. You decide to price it at $20. Of the remaining $10 from each sale, the retailers are going to take 20-40% as their share, leaving you with as little as $6 in revenue from the sale. And if you’re using a distributor (like Ingram) to get into retailers, you’ll need to reduce the cost (called a wholesale discount) to allow for their margin, often cutting your earnings in half.
Yes, retailers provide access to a marketplace with a larger audience than you’ll likely be able to build on your own. But remember that the audience belongs to the retailer, not you. Depending on how your book is sold, you may have to deal with even more restrictive pricing rules, wholesale discounts, or distribution requirements.
Direct sales change the math. Now imagine that same book. $5 to print, $5 to ship. Same retail price of $20. Once you make the sale, the $5 for printing and $5 for shipping go to your fulfillment provider, and you keep the rest.
That’s it.
Okay, not quite it. There’ll likely be a transaction fee for the order of $1 or so. And maybe some additional overhead for the ecommerce service you use.
When you sell your books on your website you control the list price, any discounts or promotions, and most importantly, the presentation of your product page. There won’t be any ‘You Might Also Like’ section or that Amazon cookie reminding you about the slow cooker you were scoping last week.
Higher book royalties are not the only reason to sell direct. But if your book is part of your income, your brand, or your larger content business (which it should be), then keeping more revenue from each sale is a crucial business decision.
I’m not saying you should try to be buddies with your readers. But the book sale should not be the end of the relationship.
After the concern about how much of your revenue retailers take, owning the customer relationship is the biggest problem you’ll have with retail sellers. When a reader buys your book from Amazon, you will never know who they are. That buyer is just a line item in your payout dashboard. That’s it.
Think about how you shop online—every retail checkout experience is going to ask for your email so they can market to you in the future. If you’re selling through retailers, you’re sacrificing the opportunity to tell them about your next book, send them to your newsletter, or share any relevant updates.
The retailer owns the customer relationship. Direct-to-reader book sales give you back that relationship.
When readers buy from your website, you control their customer journey from the moment they land on your site until the final step in checkout. Think about some of the content you might want them to see or actions you want them to take (beyond just buying your book).
When you sell from your site, you’re not just making a sale. You’re also building an audience.
Branding isn’t just for iconic companies like Nike, McDonald's, or Apple.
For individual creators and small publishers, branding is about being remembered and recognized outside of your own site, social media, or newsletters. Even if you do not think of yourself as a brand, you are. Readers form an opinion based on how they find your book, how they buy it, the experience they have on your website, and what happens after they order.
Buying your book from a retailer means the customer is only seeing that retailer’s branding. The buying experience belongs to the retailer: the product page is built to match their site design, checkout uses their system, and all the emails come from them.
Your site is yours, and you can build it to suit. The product pages can do more than list a title, cover, price, and description. It can explain who the book is for. It can show sample pages. It can include reviews, videos, bonus content, FAQs, and links to related products. It can fit naturally into the rest of your author website.
When you use direct sales tools like Lulu Direct or an API integration, you’ll have control over the packing slips and shipping emails. That means you can leverage your own branding both on your site and social platforms and for the books your users get in the mail. The customer buys from you, and the experience stays centered on your brand.
Many years ago, I worked for a literary magazine that published quarterly. When the new edition was ready, boxes of books would be printed and shipped to the little office space we worked out of. Then a few of us would spend hours packaging, labeling, and shipping out books to our readers.
Tedious, time-consuming, and rough on the hands (paper cuts are the worst). The trade-off was that we were selling the anthologies directly from a simple WordPress site. No Amazon or Barnes & Noble.
For most authors, the prospect of packing and shipping their own books isn’t worth the time and effort. They’d rather take the hit from retailers and save themselves time to do more writing or marketing.
That is fair. No one wants to turn their living room into a shipping station.
Today, print-on-demand book fulfillment eliminates the need to hold inventory. Indie authors are using this modern print technology to send individual orders directly to their readers. And ecommerce tools like Shopify make selling from their own storefront simple and affordable.
The combination of ecommerce accessibility and print-on-demand gives you complete control over the fulfillment process.
Finally, there is your backlist. BookScan found that, in 2023, backlist sales in the US accounted for 70% of all book sales.
For individual authors and creators, selling backlist books before print-on-demand meant keeping extra copies and fulfilling them yourself. Now, you can offer every book you’ve ever created without holding a single copy on hand.
Retailers want to sell products. Bookstores want to sell books. They don't care if they're your books or not.
When you sell books directly, you control the product pages, pricing, and special offers.
You can create book bundles for a series you’ve written. Or maybe you pair a book with a workbook, course, calendar, download, template, or piece of merchandise.
Because Lulu’s direct sales tools connect with the most popular ecommerce platforms, you’ll also be able to take advantage of other selling options from said platforms. Upsell your print book by offering a digital download of a sample chapter for a new book. Create volume discounts when readers buy multiple books.
That flexibility is powerful and helps you meet your reader’s expectations and desires. Not every reader wants the same thing.
Offering paperback, hardcover, ebook, and even audiobooks (with additional resources, Lulu doesn’t offer audiobook publishing at the moment) gives your readers the options they want. And it helps ensure you make a sale.
All of these benefits—and the many others I didn’t touch on—come back to control. Creators no longer have to give away control over their work to a publisher. You are the publisher.
That said, selling direct is not a replacement for other book sales channels. It’s a way to build control into your publishing strategy and improve the longevity of your business by building direct relationships.
The goal is not to completely ditch retailers. Amazon still has a place in your toolbox of selling options. But what you do want to do is avoid depending on any single retailer for your entire book business.
The real value of selling books directly is control. The value of selling through retailers is reach. Keep that distinction in mind as you develop your book sales strategies.
Kanji of the Day: 皮 [Kanji of the Day]
皮
✍5
小3
pelt, skin, hide, leather, skin radical (no. 107)
ヒ
かわ
皮膚科 (ひふか) — dermatology
皮膚 (ひふ) — skin
皮肉 (ひにく) — irony
皮切り (かわきり) — beginning
頭皮 (とうひ) — scalp
中皮腫 (ちゅうひしゅ) — mesothelioma
毛皮 (けがわ) — fur
皮脂 (ひし) — sebum
脱皮 (だっぴ) — ecdysis
薄皮 (うすかわ) — thin skin
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 拉 [Kanji of the Day]
拉
✍8
中学
Latin, kidnap, crush
ラツ ラ ロウ
らっ.する ひし.ぐ くだ.く
拉致 (らち) — taking captive
拉致問題 (らちもんだい) — abduction issue (esp. of those Japanese abducted by North Korea)
拉麺 (らーめん) — ramen (chi:)
踏み拉く (ふみしだく) — to trample
拉致る (らちる) — to kidnap
拉丁語 (ラテンご) — Latin (language)
拉丁 (ラテン) — Latin (language)
拉げる (ひしげる) — to be crushed
拉ぐ (ひしぐ) — to crush
打ち拉ぐ (うちひしぐ) — to crush (with the weight of misfortune)
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Pluralistic: Deranged billionaires and their syndromes (16 Jul 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]
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The theory of markets goes like this: even the best of us can fall prey to selfishness and rationalization, so let's arrange society so that people acting on their most selfish impulses end up producing benefit for all of us. That'll be easier and more reliable than convincing everyone to be more generous.
How do you arrange society so that selfishness produces public benefit? With markets. Faced with relentless competition, the most effective way to accumulate and retain wealth is by striving to make your wares cheaper and better. In a competitive labor market, we can secure fair treatment for workers without labor law or unions – bosses who treat their workers badly will lose them to better bosses. Just "align the incentives" and let markets do the rest.
This is an area where there's broad overlap between the left and the right. Chapter one of The Communist Manifesto is Marx and Engels' love letter to the incredible power of markets to improve everyone's material conditions by increasing production while lowering costs:
Meanwhile, over in Wealth of Nations, Adam Smith comes to the same conclusion:
It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.
In other words: if you get the incentives right, then even the greediest baker will resist the temptation to fill his loaves with sawdust and gravel. The greedier he is, the more he'll strive to make his bread cheap and delicious, because that will let him sell as many loaves as possible, thus maximizing his own wealth.
It's not exactly horseshoe theory vindicated, but if you squint just right, you'll see both communists and capitalists agreeing on this one thing: if you want the bourgeoisie to bend its efforts to producing something that the rest of us can benefit from, you'll get further by appealing to their fear and greed than by trusting in their munificence.
This is how you can have both leftists and market true believers coming onto the same side on antitrust: they may not both exactly agree that the best way to run things is by appealing to capitalists' fear of being dethroned by a competitor, but they absolutely agree that the worst way to run things is to simply trust in capitalists' generosity.
They're right, of course. As Lina Khan likes to say, companies that are too big to fail become too big to jail, and thus too big to care. If you doubt it, consider this internal email sent by an Apple executive insisting that the company is wasting money by making iPhones that are too good, and counseling a corporate strategy of deliberate shittiness:
In looking at it with hindsight, I think going forward we need to set a stake in the ground for what features we think are 'good enough' for the consumer. I would argue we're already doing more than what would have been good enough. But we find it very hard to regress our product features YOY [year over year]." Existing features "would have been good enough today if we hadn't introduced [them] already," and "anything new and especially expensive needs to be rigorously challenged before it's allowed into the consumer phone.
https://www.justice.gov/d9/2024-06/423137.pdf
Policymakers can assume the profit motive, but they have to craft the conditions under which that motive is shaped by competitive anxiety to produce quality goods and services at a fair price.
Anyone who believes in markets must also tacitly believe that successful market participants don't believe in markets. They should understand that capitalists hate capitalism, that every pirate yearns to be an admiral. They should understand that capitalism's winners only defend disruption when they're the ones doing the disrupting. They should understand that profits are only good when you're a scrappy challenger, but once you've conquered the market, every capitalist seeks to become a feudal lord, converting profits to rents and insulating themselves from an exhausting life of constant competition:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/28/cloudalists/#cloud-capital
The (smart) defenders of markets do understand this, but they face a dilemma. By definition, the benefactors with the most money and power to contribute to their think-tanks, university economics departments, conferences and publications are the rentiers – the billionaires who've shored up their fortunes with Warren Buffet's beloved "moats and walls." They're the blitzscaling billionaires who thrive on predatory acquisitions and high capital costs that prevent new market entrants from challenging their incumbency and its easy profits. They're the pirates who've become admirals.
As Upton Sinclair famously quipped, "It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it." When your right-wing, "pro-market" think-tank depends on the largesse of someone who made their money by capturing a market, capturing its regulators, and capturing its labor force, you need to tie yourself into some very weird knots to explain why your market advocacy shouldn't start with stripping your funders of their power, wealth and position.
This is pretty much the entire edifice of neoclassical economics. There's the "consumer welfare" theory of antitrust, that says that monopolies are efficient and insists that an inefficient monopoly would immediately tempt new competitors into the market who would compete away the monopolist's advantage:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/11/06/vertical-blinds/#invest-dont-acquire
"Consumer welfare" is a perfect apologetic because it contains a lurking syllogism: it holds that "inefficient monopolies" will always bring forth competitors who trash their margins, which means that any actual monopoly we see in the wild must be efficient. If it wasn't, it would have been competed out of existence by now. QED. This means that you can be a "pro-market" think-tank and take infinite money from monopolists without any contradiction: by definition, any monopolist with extra cash on hand to fund your PR blitz on its behalf must be efficient, otherwise it would have gone broke.
This is the structure of so many of economics' "empirical, scientific" theories that boil down to new ways of saying, "Actually, your boss is right."
Take "revealed preferences," the idea that people's actions are a better indicator of their preferences than the things they say they prefer. While this theory has a certain superficial plausibility, it can really only be embraced by people who have suffered the highly specific neurological injury you get by taking an economics degree: an injury that makes you incapable of perceiving or reasoning about power.
To fully embrace "revealed preferences" is to observe someone who has just sold their kidney to make rent and exclaim, "Look at this person with a revealed preference for only having one kidney":
https://pluralistic.net/2026/03/30/players-of-games/#know-when-to-fold-em
Then there's the right's conception of regulatory capture. When you think of "regulatory capture," you might picture a company or sector that has grown so powerful that it can boss the government around, so that it can abuse you with impunity. But for a neoclassical, "regulatory capture" isn't the result of too much corporate power – it's the result of too much state power. If states have the ability to do real things (the theory goes), then capitalists will do everything they can to take over the state and use it to punish their competitors, so the only answer is to eliminate state capacity altogether:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/06/05/regulatory-capture/
And finally, there's "meritocracy," which is a way of dressing up the Puritans' concept of divine providence as a scientific theory about how society must work. Puritans insisted that their god reached down into the human realm to elevate the truly virtuous among us, and that this divine favor could be discerned in the way that wealth and power were distributed among us. The rich and powerful were god's "elect." You could tell this was true, because they were rich and powerful. The corollary is that the poor and downtrodden are disfavored by god, and must therefore lack some virtue that the rich and powerful possess.
This same syllogistic thinking underpins the economic doctrine of "meritocracy," which holds that markets are giant computers that process uncountable trillions of decisions we all make about what to buy and sell and at what price, seeking out the "correct" price for every commodity and also elevating the people who are best at allocating capital in ways that arrive at the best prices for the best goods. Just as a Puritan believes that wealth is evidence of virtue, a hewer to economic orthodoxy believes the meritocratic system graces the best among us, giving them control over our lives by allowing them to "allocate capital" to create or destroy jobs, or entire firms, or whole sectors of the economy. You can tell they're the right people to do be doing this because the market chose them – if they were bad capital allocators, they'd have gone broke by now. QED.
When capital allocators' kids end up allocating capital too, well, that just shows that "merit" is a heritable trait and the people who have it are born to rule over us. Meritocracy cashes out to a eugenic belief in royal blood and royal dynasties. We know King Arthur was suited to rule us because he pulled a sword out of a stone, and we know Bill Gates is suited to rule over us because he pulled a fortune out of an operating system:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/05/20/big-cornflakes-energy/#caliper-pilled
Consumer welfare, revealed preferences, regulatory capture and meritocracy are just some of the ways that capitalism's alleged defenders cooked up to insist that they love the competitive discipline imposed by markets while being totally dependent on self-described capitalists who have utterly escaped from that discipline and have committed to doing everything in their power to prevent themselves from ever coming under any form of constraint.
These champions of "free markets" have spent decades defending policies like noncompetes, which makes it a crime for a fast-food worker to quit their job at Wendy's and take a job at the McDonald's across the street in order to get a $0.25/hour raise:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/09/germanium-valley/#i-cant-quit-you
They defend anticircumvention laws that make it a literal felony for you to install someone else's app store on your phone or put someone else's ink in your printer:
https://memex.craphound.com/2012/01/10/lockdown-the-coming-war-on-general-purpose-computing/
They somehow believe that value arises when the best among us are forced to contend with the stark terror of losing everything to a competitor, but also that there is a group of people who are so perfect, so virtuous and brilliant that they do not need this kind of goad to prod them into action. Indeed, these genetic sports and generational talents are so amazing that to force them to sully themselves with grubby competition is to deny us all the fruits of their genius.
Who are these people? Why, they're billionaires of course. All billionaires: after all, if providence and the market's invisible hand has seen fit to bestow nine or more zeroes upon someone, that is an indicator of 10^9 times more virtue than someone with only a dollar to their name. But especially: intellectual billionaires, the kinds of "curious" billionaires who write books, give lectures, and (especially), make gigantic cash donations to think-tanks, university economics departments, conferences and journals.
Billionaires like Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, in other words.
These are the billionaires that capitalism's (alleged) defenders are caping for when they deplore "billionaire derangement syndrome," and fret that candidates for office now routinely cite enmity for billionaires in their campaign materials:
https://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2026/07/andrew-hall-is-on-a-roll.html
But as Tim O'Reilly writes, these billionaire-defending intellectuals always told us that markets would protect us from the madness of kings, by constraining the folly of the wealthy and powerful through the discipline of competition. Meanwhile, those billionaires were busily transforming themselves into kings, unshackled from rules, morals or consequences:
Reflecting on this, the political scientist Henry Farrell notes that the most vocal defenders of billionaireism – the Musks and Thiels of the world – never made a secret of their desire to become kings and insulate themselves from markets and discipline of every kind, and they've grown brazen. Musk makes social media posts deploring the very idea of elections, agreeing with the idea that only "makers" should be allowed to vote and that "takers" should not, because "universal suffrage leads to universal suffering":
https://nitter.net/elonmusk/status/2073312715985309698
As for Thiel, he has long openly advocated the idea that there exists among us a latent aristocracy who do not need the discipline of markets to keep them from lapsing into folly or self-dealing. These people – born to found tech startups and to rule – are nonconformists who, in Thiel's writing, are "the most important" and "should be let off the hook":
https://blakemasters.tumblr.com/post/24578683805/peter-thiels-cs183-startup-class-18-notes
Thiel makes no bones about his idea that people who have the right stuff should be exempted from any constraint. He writes "capitalism and competition are opposites." Rather than compete, Thiel says the true entrepreneur should seek to establish a monopoly, because "Monopolists can afford to think about things other than making money; non-monopolists can’t…Only one thing can allow a business to transcend the daily brute struggle for survival: monopoly profits."
It's not that Thiel opposes constraints per se – he clearly thinks that most of us should operate under constraints – constraints that are dreamed up and enforced by people like him. Those people are born to rule: they emerged from a lucky orifice, in possession of lucky genes. How can we tell they were born to rule? Because they're ruling. If they weren't born to rule, they wouldn't be in a position to rule. As ever, a syllogism solves all our ideological and existential problems.
Thiel lives in what Naomi Klein would call "the mirror world." While counterculturists have long celebrated misfits and communities of nonconformists, they were invested in the idea of a space protected from power, where weirdos could let their freak flags fly:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/05/not-that-naomi/#if-the-naomi-be-klein-youre-doing-just-fine
But Thiel's version of this is to celebrate the "nonconformists" whose heterodox belief is that labor, privacy, finance and consumer protection laws shouldn't apply to them. He wants to protect those people so they can wield power. They should form "mafias" (like the "Paypal mafia") not solidaristic affinity groups. As Farrell writes:
Entrepreneurial risk taking can be awesome; weird people are often more likely to be original; densely linked communities have many advantages. Furthermore, I would guess that none of these factors was sufficient on its own to precipitate the madness of princes that we see today. It is perfectly possible that they would have worked together in much more benign ways under different external circumstances. But we are in the world we’re in: one where the boundless appetites and irrationalities of a small number of billionaires seem increasingly incompatible with the need to maintain a stable civil society.
A new would-be aristocracy was always the visible trajectory of these guys. The only people who couldn't see it were the think-tankies they funded to write papers explaining that their paymasters didn't need market discipline to keep them from sinking into folly or attempting to overthrow democracy.
Today, these Renfields clutch their pearls at the "demonization" of the ultra-rich, calling it "billionaire derangement syndrome." But the only "billionaire derangement syndrome" that matters is the syndrome that affects billionaires and convinces them that they are above any discipline or rules.

Don't Take Advice From Your Enemies https://www.hamiltonnolan.com/p/dont-take-advice-from-your-enemies
Against Money https://press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/book/chicago/A/bo265118979.html
Inside the Personal Computer – An Illustrated Introduction in 3 Dimensions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ofcXVA4GUm8&t=86s
Canadian Workers Among the Most Restricted by Non-Compete Clauses https://www.donotpassgo.ca/p/canadian-workers-among-the-most-restricted
#25yrsago Gadget-friendly chinos https://web.archive.org/web/20010717133013/http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/wireless/2001-07-16-smart-pants.htm
#15yrsago Brazilian bodges: “Gambiologia” https://web.archive.org/web/20110720231142/https://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/archives/2011/07/gambiologia.php
#15yrsago Privacy risks in collaborative filters https://blog.citp.princeton.edu/2011/05/24/you-might-also-privacy-risks-collaborative-filtering/
#15yrsago Tenn. state rep: “I carved my initials in my desk in the House, but I don’t understand why it’s news” https://web.archive.org/web/20110715202451/http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2011/jul/11/state-rep-hurley-admits-carving-initials-house-flo/
#15yrsago Who holds the copyright to a picture taken by a monkey? https://www.techdirt.com/2011/07/13/can-we-subpoena-monkey-why-monkey-self-portraits-are-likely-public-domain/
#15yrsago Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe slams Internet censorship, copyright disconnection https://web.archive.org/web/20121108080007/https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2011/07/yet-another-report-internet-disconnections-a-disproportionate-penalty/
#10yrsago Mississippi’s prison town are in danger of collapse, thanks to tiny reforms in the War on Drugs https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/mississippi-jails-revenue_n_57100da1e4b06f35cb6f14e8
#10yrsago Pokemon Go players: you have 30 days from signup to opt out of binding arbitration https://web.archive.org/web/20160715142246/https://consumerist.com/2016/07/14/pokemon-go-strips-users-of-their-legal-rights-heres-how-to-opt-out/
#10yrsago Trump makes it easy to forget what a dumpster fire all the other GOP nomination hopefuls were https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v38/n15/eliot-weinberger/they-could-have-picked
#5yrsago Interop and the Public Interest Internet https://pluralistic.net/2021/07/16/pidgin/#splicers
#1yrago Ellen Ullman's "Close to the Machine" https://pluralistic.net/2025/07/16/beautiful-code/#hackers-disease

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/
How To Think About AI Before It’s Too Late (This Is Hell)
https://thisishell.com/episodes/1919
AI Won't Replace You… But This Might (Deep Focus)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oorWq_m48AQ
Who Owns Your Tractor? (Growing the Future)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IU9eBPUZBI4
You Bought it, They Break It (What Now? with Trevor Noah)
https://www.podbean.com/media/share/dir-ir36t-2f4a1ac6
"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
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Florida’s Stop WOKE Act Shut Down (Again) By Eleventh Circuit Appeals Court [Techdirt]
Florida Republicans’ bigoted little piece of speech policing — the former “Stop WOKE Act” — has already been terminated multiple times by federal courts. Two lawsuits with two sets of plaintiffs have generated the same results: a ruling declaring the law unconstitutional and an injunction blocking the state from enforcing it.
The law aims to directly regulate speech in classrooms, allowing the government to punish teachers and administrators from engaging in any speech the Florida GOP doesn’t agree with. In practice, this means eliminating discussions about racism, equitable treatment, or anything related to LGBTQ+ issues.
The two lawsuits have generated some pretty stark paragraphs from presiding judges. Both take their cues from pop culture. Noting the cognitive dissonance of state lawmaking, the court said this in 2022:
In the popular television series Stranger Things, the “upside down” describes a parallel dimension containing a distorted version of our world. See Stranger Things (Netflix 2022). Recently, Florida has seemed like a First Amendment upside down. Normally, the First Amendment bars the state from burdening speech, while private actors may burden speech freely. But in Florida, the First Amendment apparently bars private actors from burdening speech, while the state may burden speech freely.
The same court said this when the second lawsuit against the Stop WOKE law crossed its desk:
“It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen,” and the powers in charge of Florida’s public university system have declared the State has unfettered authority to muzzle its professors in the name of “freedom.” To confront certain viewpoints that offend the powers that be, the State of Florida passed the so-called “Stop W.O.K.E.” Act in 2022—redubbed (in line with the State’s doublespeak) the “Individual Freedom Act.” The law officially bans professors from expressing disfavored viewpoints in university classrooms while permitting unfettered expression of the opposite viewpoints. Defendants argue that, under this Act, professors enjoy “academic freedom” so long as they express only those viewpoints of which the State approves. This is positively dystopian.
The state appealed both decisions. The Eleventh Circuit Appeals Court upheld the injunction in March 2023. The state continued to assault the court with motions to undo this injunction, prompting the Eleventh Circuit to issue this additional order:
The Clerk is DIRECTED to treat any motion for reconsideration of this order as a non-emergency matter.
Forced to wait its turn, Ron DeSantis and his MAGA buddies have had to wait more than three years just to find out they still won’t be able to enforce this blatantly unconstitutional law. The state’s lawyers will read the whole thing looking for ways to argue this differently if (or when) the US Supreme Court decides to hear their appeal.
But anyone wanting to know how this turns out for Florida’s public service bigots won’t have to dip too far into the 85-page ruling. By the middle of the fourth page, you’ll know what you need to know. From the decision [PDF]:
When several groups of professors challenged Florida’s new restrictions, the State cast about for an existing case or doctrine that could support its speech ban in the university setting. Finding none, it tried to marry public-employee speech cases with government speech doctrine, resulting in a new rule: if the government pays a professor’s salary, it has total control over her classroom speech.
That is not a blessed union. Florida’s salary-for-speech rule is a breathtaking assertion of power to ban unpopular ideas from public discourse in the very places the State’s own statutes recognize as centers of inquiry—classrooms where students are trusted to puzzle through ideas that are good and bad, easy and hard, ideally getting ever closer to the truth. This new rule also runs headlong into the Supreme Court’s repeated, if imprecise, endorsements of academic freedom. If the First Amendment offers any boundary of protection at all for public university classrooms, this statute crosses it.
The injunction stays in place, presumably forever. While there are certainly some members of the Supreme Court who would love to tie their precedent and ethics into knots just to block speech they personally don’t like, this doesn’t appear to be the case they’d choose since it would likely generate precedent that might work against the bigots in the Supreme Court when they go to bat for bigots in the White House.
The appeals court has already blocked the other part of the law — the clauses attempting to regulate speech in private workplaces by forbidding mandatory meetings that promoted views the GOP doesn’t agree with. The last ditch attempt to claim the government can regulate speech in college classrooms doesn’t fare any better, even if it’s not quite as clear cut in terms of constitutional violations as telling private companies what they can and can’t say.
Claiming that all speech by government employees is “government speech” is a non-starter. The state couldn’t find precedent to support its novel take on the First Amendment. And the few odds and ends it threw at the judicial wall in hopes of seeing something stick failed as well.
More credibly, the State explains that it also seeks to protect its “most cherished ideals.” But that justification fails, too. Though the government has plenty of ways to promote its own viewpoint, puppeteering every university professor in the state is not one of them.
The court spends 50 pages dismantling each and every one of the state’s arguments, citation by citation. There can be no doubt the law is unconstitutional, not that it matters to the state, which has already announced it will be appealing the ruling. But this is censorship that can’t even be bothered to pretend it’s anything but the very thing it claims it is opposed to. “Individual Freedom Act” (as it was renamed), my ass.
Florida seeks to strip public university professors—and by extension their students—of the ability to fully engage with ideas that are, for better or for worse, very popular in some academic circles. The State asks us to consider its rules a means of targeting discrimination. But hearing an idea you disagree with is not discrimination; it is an opportunity to come up with a better idea, or maybe even change your mind.
There’s a dissent that runs nearly as long as the opinion. Written by Judge Barbara Lagoa (someone with a history of anti-trans rulings), it’s 30+ pages of wasted time. To paraphrase: none of these plaintiffs should have been granted standing, much less relief and also: [bunch of Justice Alito quotes].
Doesn’t really matter, since it’s the dissent but I guarantee if anyone’s going to start polling for an en banc rehearing, it’s going by Judge Lagoa.
Suck it, DeSantis. Until that happens (if it ever will), your stupid hateful law is as dead as the eyes of your sycophants.
Writers Guild Of America Also Sues Paramount, Citing Looming Merger Layoff Bloodbath [Techdirt]
Not long after twelve states sued Paramount claiming its $111 billion merger with Warner Brothers would harm market competition, the Writers Guild of America (WGA) filed their own lawsuit, warning that the massive debt load from the media industry’s latest megamerger will result in an ocean of layoffs for an already reeling U.S. entertainment industry.
The lawsuit notes that the current film industry is dominated by just five players: Disney (ABC), NBCUniversal (Comcast), Sony, Paramount (CBS), and Warner Brothers. Comcast recently restructured to make it easier to sell off its NBC and Universal properties, opening the door to a lot of very quick consolidation in addition to the speedy Skydance/Paramount/Warners merger.
“With fewer competitors, the merged Paramount-Warner Bros. entity would have both the incentive and the ability to lower costs by suppressing writers’ wages and reducing output. Writers will be paid less and have fewer employment opportunities,” the WGA complaint said.
Supreme Court precedent (for whatever that’s worth anymore) has long indicated that any merger
yielding a post-merger market share exceeding 30% (which this deal does) is presumptively anticompetitive. The WGA notes that muted competition will result not just in fewer jobs, but lower wages and fewer opportunities for creatives overall across both film and television.
“With fewer competitors, the merged Paramount-Warner Bros. entity would have both
the incentive and the ability to lower costs by suppressing writers’ wages and reducing output.
Writers will be paid less and have fewer employment opportunities,” the lawsuit states.
While Paramount would like to pretend this is a debate, and most U.S. press outlets bury the lede, U.S. history is vividly clear on the harms created by media consolidation. That was most recently personified by AT&T’s disastrous acquisitions of DirecTV and Time Warner, which resulted in upward of 50,000 layoffs, higher prices, worse service, and no shortage of shuttered creative projects.
The rushed acquisitions of both CBS/Paramount and Warner Brothers — all so Larry Ellison’s son can play media mogul — have created a particularly heavy debt load of $79 billion. Such debt is always paid for by consumers and labor, often in more ways than one.
Paramount has promised to release 30 theatrical releases per year and to keep them in exclusively for theaters for 45 days, but as I’ve long made clear, pre-merger promises are utterly worthless. Especially in a country dead set on steadily lobotomizing its public interest regulators. As we’ve seen with consolidation in sectors like wireless, America’s favorite pastime is pretending to ignore the harms of pointless mergers.
This is a pretty clear example of the kind of consolidation that should be blocked for the benefit of labor, markets, and consumers, but despite a lot of rambling pretense about a love of free market competition and entrepreneurial spirit, America consistently fails to walk the talk on antitrust, the impact of which is abundant and getting exponentially worse under pay-to-play Trumpism.
Two kinds of word salad [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
The right words in the right sequence create information. Ideas that change our world.
The first kind of word salad allows the writer to hide. Fancy words, carefully juxtaposed, saying nothing. This can serve a valuable function for politicians, academics and bosses–but there’s no real information for the reader. It’s simply a collection of words pretending to be an idea.
The second kind of word salad is different. This is the reader’s choice. An idea that’s complex, frightening or brand new can be difficult to embrace. Dismissing it as word salad is the easiest way to maintain the status quo and move on.
The simple tell: Is anyone else getting the idea? If the emperor is actually wearing clothes, insisting that they’re naked doesn’t do you any good.
Important ideas often seem like word salad at first.
Sony Deletes A Bunch More Movies From The Accounts Of People Who ‘Bought’ Them [Techdirt]
In all of our discussions about how the digital revolution has created a system in which people don’t actually own the things they think they’re buying, I get particularly frustrated by the lack of change in it all. We’ve spilled much ink complaining that this clearly anti-consumer practice needs to be done away with, where an unsuspecting public thinks they’re buying “a thing” only to learn months or years later that “the thing” they bought was actually a license to use/view/listen to another “thing”, and that license exists at the pleasure of the company that collected the money for it. And if you want to see the lack of change or action really honed in upon, let’s take a look at Sony’s PlayStation Store.
In 2022, due to “evolving licensing agreements” with distributor StudioCanal, German and Austrian users had hundreds of movies disappear from their PS accounts, long after buying them through Sony. Then in 2023, it happened again in America, specifically when Sony ended its licensing agreement with Discovery after the Warner Bros. merger, which, of course, has since been bought by Paramount Skydance. That resulted in customers having hundreds and hundreds of episodes of TV shows deleted from their accounts. Nowhere in any of this were there refunds, of course. No recompense at all, actually. Just a thing you thought you’d bought taken away from you by the very people you thought you bought it from.
And now it’s happening again. Due to another licensing agreement fallout with StudioCanal, hundreds of movies and TV shows are being ripped from the accounts of PS Store customers, and there appears to be fuck all that they can do about it.
This news was brought to people’s attention by X user somatyk, who posted the notification they had received from PlayStation this week. Along with the unapologetic news that the purchased movies would be deleted from their account on September 1, the message concluded with, “Click here for a full list of affected titles that will no longer be supported. Thank you.” The same warning is now reproduced in full on the PlayStation website, along with the list of 551 films and TV series that are being pulled from people’s libraries.

As Kotaku notes later in their post, part of what is striking in all of this is the sheer mundanity of the announcement. Because there have been no consequences, or any action at all from the public or government, Sony treats this all as if it’s perfectly normal and no big deal. You can tell me all you want about how the Ts and Cs in these purchases do in fact note that the nature of the purchase is a temporary licensing of the content for an undetermined time period… but I can promise you that the public in general doesn’t understand that. They think they’re buying a thing, not a license.
And that’s because of the purposeful obfuscation of that fact. Sony damned well knows that the vast majority of people don’t read those Ts and Cs. It knows that the public largely doesn’t understand how these backend licensing agreements with distributors work, or that they even exist. And Sony isn’t exactly putting out a big blinking sign on its store pages informing the public of all of this. Instead, the company is only too happy to collect money from a public that is being purposefully kept ignorant of what they’re buying.
Of course, when you scroll past the endless EULAs when you first use your PlayStation, and click “Agree” the first time you load the store, you’re unwittingly agreeing that nothing you buy is really truly bought, and that it can be taken away from you at any point, and there’s nothing you can do. The same is true of your games.
This, too, will probably pass without any real action. The government has done its best to gut our consumer protection agencies, so they won’t be any help. Angry customers won’t coalesce into activism or action, most likely. And I’ll probably be writing another one of these posts in a couple of years when it all happens again.
But it shouldn’t be that way. There are common sense things that can be done to better inform the public. Rules for how the store should inform people with each and every purchase. Someone just needs to demand it be done.
A Troubling Milestone: Most Supreme Court Rulings Are Secretive Votes With Little Justification [Techdirt]
This story was originally published by ProPublica. Republished under a CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 license.
In its term that ended last October, the Supreme Court passed an important milestone that went unnoticed: For the first time, it decided more cases by secret ballot, and with few signed opinions, than it did for cases argued in open court.
These decisions, which make up the court’s “shadow docket,” are a fast-track way to get a decision from the top court. They rarely include arguments, have limited briefings and have expedited timetables, and justices infrequently provide explanation of how they voted or to cite legal precedent.
The Supreme Court’s increased willingness to bypass its regular process has empowered President Donald Trump at the same time as the administration has increased use of executive authority. The court has repeatedly green-lit policies of his that lower courts have blocked — and has done so with little to no explanation.
These emergency decisions have thrown lower courts’ processes into turmoil and have sometimes directly contradicted longstanding legal precedent. The outcomes have been consequential: The high court has used the process to limit federal courts from issuing nationwide injunctions and diminished Congress’ authority over federal agencies, and it has allowed for the detention of American citizens by immigration agents.
ProPublica analyzed over two decades of Supreme Court rulings, which cover all of the years under Chief Justice John Roberts and go as far back as the online archives allow. We found that when the last court term ended, justices had issued 63 orders on the shadow docket, as opposed to 56 orders on the more traditional merits docket — where the court hears oral arguments scheduled months in advance and the justices issue signed opinions.
Legal scholars and court watchers were shocked by our finding. They told ProPublica it’s likely the first time in modern history that so many consequential decisions were made in secret by its nine members.
“The patterns show a court going out of its way to enable Trump,” said Stephen Vladeck, a law professor at Georgetown University and a Supreme Court analyst. He said that our findings reinforce the appearance that the justices are voting on their political preferences.
“That’s the real blow to the court’s credibility,” he said.
Representatives from the Supreme Court did not respond to a detailed list of questions.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the White House wrote, “President Trump has faced a historically unprecedented number of injunctions by liberal lower court judges, the same judges who would rather push their own policy schemes and undermine the Administration’s lawful agenda. President Trump will not stop implementing the America First initiatives on which he was elected.”

There are two ways to get a decision from the Supreme Court. One is to exhaust your appeals to lower courts and ask to argue your case in front of the high court. The justices determine whether to take the case on, and if they do, lawyers argue their case in front of them. The other is to petition the justices directly via the emergency docket — to freeze a lower court ruling or government policy while the case goes through appeal.
The appeals to the emergency docket have long outnumbered those to the merits docket, but most are procedural requests or requests to stay execution for capital offenses. When those are removed, what’s left is known as the shadow docket — cases that seek to skip the usual order of things and ask for a quick ruling from the court’s justices.
The modern shadow docket was born in 2016 when the Supreme Court issued an emergency stay against President Barack Obama’s Clean Power Plan, experts say. Papers obtained by The New York Times show that liberal justices at the time urged Roberts not to decide the case on an emergency basis because it broke with longtime precedent. The conservative justices, meanwhile, forcefully argued that the president’s plan would eventually be overturned by the court anyway and that it would put too much of a burden on the energy industry.
Driven by its numerous losses in lower courts, the current Trump administration appeals to the emergency docket significantly more often than previous administrations, and the court has increasingly agreed to take quick action on its appeals.
The Obama and George W. Bush administrations together filed just eight petitions in 16 years. The Trump administration filed 32 in 2025 alone, an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice found.
The increased willingness of the Roberts court to intervene on Trump’s behalf — as well as in other issues that favor conservatives and Trump allies — has upended American life, said Donald Ayer, a former deputy solicitor general and deputy attorney general who served under the Reagan and George H.W. Bush administrations.
“On many subjects of real importance to our future, they’ve demolished what used to be the law,” he said.
Public scrutiny of the shadow docket ramped up in September 2021 after the Supreme Court used it to issue a one-paragraph, unsigned opinion that further rolled back abortion rights established in the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling. In the order, the court refused to block Texas’ Senate Bill 8, the “Heartbeat Act,” which banned abortion after an embryo’s cardiac activity is detectable, typically at six weeks of pregnancy and before many people know they are pregnant. Protests erupted nationwide, and the Senate held a hearing on the shadow docket.
In an unusual public acknowledgement, Justice Elena Kagan referenced the shadow docket by name in her scathing dissent, accusing the majority of green-lighting a “patently unconstitutional law” with only a cursory review in less than 72 hours.
“In all these ways, the majority’s decision is emblematic of too much of this Court’s shadow docket decisionmaking — which every day becomes more unreasoned, inconsistent, and impossible to defend,” Kagan wrote.
That an opinion was even issued and that four of the justices signed their names to it was uncommon. On the shadow docket, justices do not have to make their votes known. In rare cases, their votes are revealed in terse indications that they grant or deny the application, or even more rarely, as an opinion. We found that just 17% of votes cast had any sort of public record of a vote or opinion.
Responding to public criticism, Justice Samuel Alito contended that the court isn’t to blame for the rise in shadow docket cases. “We do not file these emergency applications,” he said. “Parties file them.”
The debate has continued. “We cannot expect the public to have faith in our judicial system if, without clear explanation, we consistently green-light harmful acts that do real damage,” Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson said during an April speech on the shadow docket at Yale Law School.
Until this past Supreme Court term, emergency applications fluctuated year to year but showed no clear upward trend. The applications are given first to a single justice, who decides if a case is worth referring to the full court. In recent years, justices have referred more of such appeals for a review and vote by the full court.
Last term, when there were both more cases and more referrals to the full court, the appeals to the shadow docket finally overtook those to the merits docket.

The cases were consequential. On June 23, 2025, after a lower court had ruled that eight men being deported to South Sudan should have due process, the Supreme Court intervened after a request from the administration to stop that order. The men were deported. The majority didn’t issue an opinion justifying its ruling.
Three months later, the Supreme Court voted to allow immigration agents to stop people based on racial or ethnic characteristics while still-ongoing litigation against it proceeded. To justify the decision, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote a rare shadow docket opinion that people who were in the country legally would be “free to go after the brief encounter.” These became known as “Kavanaugh stops.” Last year, ProPublica found more than 170 citizens who had been stopped and detained by ICE agents. The more than 50 Americans held even after agents learned of their citizenship were almost all Latino.
And in May, while an election in Louisiana was already underway, the justices allowed the state to immediately redraw its electoral map, removing one of the two majority-Black voting districts. Louisiana can now use that map for the 2026 midterms as part of a nationwide redistricting battle for control of the House of Representatives — an effort touched off by Trump’s call for Republican-led states to create more safe seats for themselves.
Roberts once signed on to a Kagan dissent that assailed the shadow docket. But our analysis found that he has referred more substantive cases for a vote by the full court than any other justice, going from just one in the 2005 term when he joined the court to nearly half of all referrals in the last term.
There is an additional difference between the shadow docket and the merits docket. After the court holds public argument, the justices’ ultimate merits decisions are closely watched and extensively covered by the press. The summer’s “decision season,” when the final and most significant rulings come down, has a predictable cadence that ends when the justices go on summer recess. Not so with the shadow docket. Increasingly, the justices are making big decisions after they’ve issued their final merits docket decision, when public attention has waned.
A group of Democrats led by Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., have sponsored legislation to make the shadow docket more transparent.
Raskin told ProPublica that the court’s legitimacy has fallen with every significant decision made without “real opinions or analysis.”
“Lower federal courts have been deciding against the Trump administration in an overwhelming majority of cases with weighty and well-reasoned opinions,” Raskin said in a written statement. “Yet when things get to the twilight zone of the shadow docket, the Supreme Court is overturning 100-page opinions with a flippant sentence or two.” He added, “The result is a body that looks less like a Supreme Court and more like a Royal Court rubber stamping the madness and folly of the Trump Administration.”
“The jurisprudence of the Roberts Court today is as murky as the green algae water in the Reflecting Pool.”
To compare the number of cases on the Supreme Court’s shadow docket to the traditional merits docket, we compared emergency applications listed on the court’s online docket search with counts of decisions compiled in Penn State’s Supreme Court Database (Version 2025 Release 01). For the merits docket, we counted only signed decisions in argued cases, the typical format for those rulings.
The court’s online docket goes back to the year 2000, but our analysis looks at Supreme Court terms from October 2003 to October 2025, where emergency applications are easily identified by the letter “A” in their docket number.
We identified more than 27,000 emergency applications during that period, including thousands of requests that are not commonly understood to be a part of the shadow docket. Most appeals to the emergency docket are the type of requests that were traditionally handled there: procedural requests, such as extending the time to file, and requests to stay execution for capital offenses. The remainder are the focus of our reporting.

We defined a substantive application on the shadow docket as any filing where the full court was asked to intervene in the traditional appeals process, such as staying a lower court’s order.
Most of the cases we excluded are decided by just one justice, each of whom oversees one or more federal circuits and has the power to refer filings to the wider court. When the cases are referred to the full court, they are the subject of a vote by the justices. We ran our approach by multiple experts, all of whom found it sound.
A filer can appeal to another justice if their application is denied. The next justice to receive the application always refers it to the full court. We did not include these renewed applications because our analysis found the court has never granted one.
The court has labeled capital punishment cases only since the October 2017 term. To identify them prior to that, we flagged applications for stays of execution. We then manually reviewed every case referred to the full court. For applications decided by a single justice, we used an AI model to flag potential capital cases by examining the parties on the application and the relief requested. The model flagged over 60 possible capital cases, and those were manually reviewed. Despite our effort, it is possible some capital cases may still be included in our final tallies before the 2017 term.
Although rulings on the shadow docket are typically unsigned and do not include vote breakdowns, we were able to identify how a justice voted in some cases. The analysis is based on either the opinions issued by the justices, most of which are dissenting opinions, or if the justice indicated they would have granted or denied. In some decisions, the justices issued a statement not attached to either a grant or denial. We did not record these as votes.
Disposable software [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
Even though it’s invisible, easily transported and weightless, software used to stick around. It took years to architect and build a complex bit of software, and thousands of people to help maintain it. Even a complex website could be seen as a durable technical asset.
Now, with Claude Code on everyone’s desk, new software is often easier to write than old software is to maintain.
No one gives a second thought to disposable cups or bottles–and we’re in the midst of an explosion of temporary and disposable software that will dwarf what came before.
And yet, one thing persists: The network.
When an organization is at the center of a network, it doesn’t matter if a competitor makes a fresh new piece of software. The network sticks around.
A vibrant network is more valuable than ever. People like us are here, doing things like this. Why would we go over there?
Fifth Circuit Looks Like It’s Ready To Roll Back Its Decision Recognizing Due Process Rights For Migrants [Techdirt]
Well, it was fun while it lasted. And even while it still (theoretically) lasts, it’s really nothing more than the Fifth Circuit saying rights can violated, but only for 90 days at a time.
Earlier this month, the Fifth Circuit managed to deliver a very un-Fifth Circuit decision, finding in favor of rights and against the Trump administration’s war on migrants. As almost every court has recognized for decades, people residing in the United States — even illegally — have constitutional rights. The Fifth Circuit has long been one of the exceptions to this rule.
The administration chose to ignore this because doing would slow its horrific roll towards an eventual evacuation of everyone who wasn’t white enough for this administration to recognize as Americans. To justify ignoring long-held constitutional rights, the administration first invoked the Alien Enemies Act (best known for our atrocities against Japanese migrants and residents during World War II). Then it pretended that anyone who had been in the country for weeks, years, or decades should be treated the same as anyone apprehended while illegally crossing the border.
The Fifth Circuit couldn’t bring itself to rule that migrants arrested long after they’ve crossed the border have access to their due process rights on day one of their apprehension. Instead, it decided (without really explaining why) these rights don’t actually kick in until someone has been in custody for more than 90 days.
That meant nothing would really change. People arrested by ICE and other DHS components all over the nation would be hastily relocated to the Fifth Circuit (Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi) ASAP to prevent them from challenging their detention for 90 days. Presumably, the administration hoped to have most of these detainees deported long before they were allowed to invoke their constitutional rights.
Apparently, 90 days of denying rights isn’t long enough. It looks as though enough judges in the Fifth Circuit think these rights should never be available to migrants. Less than a month after handing down its decision, the Fifth Circuit has declared it will be taking another pass at this.
A majority of the circuit judges in regular active service and not disqualified having voted in favor, on the Court’s own motion, to rehear this case en banc,
IT IS ORDERED that this cause shall be reheard by the court en banc with oral argument on a date hereafter to be fixed. The Clerk will specify a briefing schedule for the filing of supplemental briefs. Pursuant to 5th Circuit Rule 41.3, the panel opinion in this case dated July 02, 2026, is VACATED.
So, we’re now back to the Fifth Circuit status quo. The government can ignore constitutional rights on day one and continue ignoring them until they’ve ejected migrants into whatever war-torn human rights hellhole will have them.
Sure, there’s a very slim (I’d say “nonexistent”) chance the petitioners for rehearing think the Fifth Circuit screwed up by giving the administration a 90-day head start on ignoring constitutional rights. But come on. We’re talking about the Fifth Circuit here.
The most likely reason for this rehearing action is that a lot of Fifth Circuit judges think the Trump administration shouldn’t have to recognize the rights of migrants ever, which is why they want to take another stab at setting precedent that would cover some of the DHS’s largest detention facilities.
The best case scenario would appear to be the circuit upholding its previous ruling, with its (unconstitutional) 90-day 14th Amendment snooze button. The worst case scenario is the entire panel agrees with this hideous, racist administration and says anyone in the country without documentation should be treated like someone caught in the act of crossing the border illegally. I’m not holding my breath for a positive outcome. I need that breath for stuff that’s actually feasible and foreseeable.
Will Elon Musk Be Charged With Election Bribery? [The Status Kuo]
On July 9, the Wisconsin Elections Commission voted 5-1, across party lines, to refer two complaints against Elon Musk to Brown County District Attorney David Lasee. The bipartisan commission found probable cause that Musk violated the state’s election bribery statute when he offered $1 million to people who voted in the 2025 Wisconsin Supreme Court race “in order to induce them to vote in that election.” Lasee now has 40 days to report back to the commission on what, if anything, he intends to do.
The matter now rests with Lasee, a local Republican prosecutor. And like much of the news in this upside-down era, what looks straightforward on its face gets a bit more complicated the closer you look.
Buying voters
Musk was deeply involved in Wisconsin’s 2025 Supreme Court race, which became something of a referendum on outside oligarch money in state and local politics. He personally donated at least $3 million to the campaign of Republican-backed candidate Brad Schimel, while America PAC and a second Musk-funded group, Rebuilding America’s Future, spent roughly $19 million more on Schimel’s behalf. Combined spending across the race topped $100 million, making it the most expensive judicial election in American history.
The spending built on a model Musk had already used in the 2024 presidential race. In that cycle, Musk’s America PAC raffled off daily $1 million payments to registered swing-state voters who signed a petition supporting the First and Second Amendments. In Wisconsin’s judicial race, his PAC adapted the approach: $100 for signing a petition opposing “activist judges,” another $100 for referring a signer, and $20 for door-knocking on the campaign’s behalf.
The million-dollar checks came at the end as over-the-top spectacle. Musk appeared at a town hall in Green Bay on March 30, 2025, and handed two novelty checks for $1 million each to voters his PAC had selected as spokespeople for the cause. A third Wisconsin voter had received another $1 million check days earlier. The Wisconsin Elections Commission took issue with the offer itself, its probable cause finding centering on a social media post offering the money specifically to people who voted in the race.
Musk’s millions didn’t carry the day. Schimel lost to Democratic-backed candidate Susan Crawford by 10 percentage points. Musk posted afterward that “the long con of the left is corruption of the judiciary.” A month later, Musk said he would scale back his political spending.
The criminal referral
The commission’s finding rests on Wisconsin’s bribery statute, which bars anyone from offering “anything of value” to an elector “in order to induce” that person to vote. In a motion reviewed by the Associated Press, the commission applied that language directly to Musk’s own words. His social media post offered $1 million to people who voted in the Supreme Court race, worded “to induce them to vote in that election.” (Musk’s fans consider him fairly smart, but this was pretty boneheaded, and his lawyers probably winced.)
The commission’s framing narrows the case considerably. Its finding centers on the voting inducement itself, not on the earlier $100 petition payments or the $20 door-knocking incentive, both of which involved a different kind of exchange. In total, three Wisconsin voters ultimately received $1 million checks from Musk, two in person at the Green Bay rally.
The complaints that triggered the commission’s vote came from a Milwaukee man and a Green Bay woman. The complainants’ identities and allegations remain confidential under Wisconsin law beyond that description. The commission itself is evenly split by design, with three Democratic appointees and three Republican ones. The referral vote was 5-1, commission spokesperson Emilee Miklas confirmed.
Neither side has said much since. Lasee did not return a message seeking comment. Spokespeople for Musk also did not respond to requests for comment.
The DA’s own paper trail
Here’s something I haven’t seen reported much: Lasee has threatened criminal charges under Wisconsin’s election bribery statute before, and he did not wait for a referral to do it.
In April 2024, a coalition of Green Bay nonprofits, including 9to5 Wisconsin, Casa ALBA Melanie, We All Rise African American Resource Center, COMSA and United Front for Social Change, organized a get-out-the-vote event ahead of that spring’s election. The plan included free rides to the polls, free food, an open bar and a social media contest offering prizes of up to $1,000 to whoever turned out the most voters.
Lasee considered the plan legally troubling enough to send the groups an unprompted letter before Election Day. He stated that the influencer contest they intended to host “may run afoul of Section 12.11 of the Wisconsin Statutes which prohibits ‘election bribery.’” Lasee urged whoever was responsible for it to discontinue the activity immediately.
Lasee did not stop at the $1,000 contest. He also warned the organizers that the rest of their event carried the same risk: “making any item of value available based on whether someone votes or does not vote would violate the law,” he wrote, explicitly naming the free food, drinks and rides.
The groups canceled the contest within hours. Casa ALBA Melanie posted that it was calling off the contest “to avoid misunderstandings and conflicts.” We All Rise African American Resource Center posted Lasee’s letter directly, writing that its get-out-the-vote effort had been “cancelled” and apologizing “for any inconvenience this may have caused.”
The letter is strong evidence of how Lasee reads Section 12.11 when he acts on his own initiative, before an election and without a commission handing him a probable cause finding. His theory in 2024 did not turn on cash value alone; pizza and a free ride counted too, if either was tied to voting. It turned on whether anything of value was made contingent on voting.
Musk’s million dollar checks presumably meet that description.
Conflicted out?
There’s another twist. Lasee supported Schimel during the 2025 race too. That support went beyond his name on an endorsement list: In March 2025, Lasee appeared at a news conference in De Pere alongside Fond du Lac County District Attorney Eric Toney and three area sheriffs, standing with Schimel to make the case for his election directly to reporters. He said he was disappointed by attack ads against Schimel and defended his record as attorney general and judge.
That endorsement now creates a possible conflict, because the commission’s referral asks Lasee to decide whether the largest single donor to Schimel’s campaign broke the law trying to elect him.
Wisconsin has no independent mechanism that reviews a prosecutor’s conflicts and orders recusal. Under state law, a special prosecutor can be appointed only if the district attorney determines a conflict exists, or if a court appoints one on its own motion once a case is already in the system. Nothing requires Lasee to make that determination here, and the statute does not expressly identify a political endorsement, on its own, as a conflict that would force his hand.
As of this week, no elected official, watchdog group or party organization has publicly called on Lasee to step aside or request a special prosecutor.
Musk’s likely defense
Musk has argued that the First Amendment protects his actions, ever since Wisconsin’s Democratic attorney general first tried to block the checks in 2025. His attorneys argued in court filings that the payments were “intended to generate a grassroots movement in opposition to activist judges,” not an exchange for votes, and framed the giveaways as protected political speech. State courts rejected the attorney general’s attempt to stop the payments before the election. That same framing succeeded in Pennsylvania, where a judge allowed a nearly identical 2024 giveaway to continue after finding prosecutors had failed to prove it was an illegal lottery.
But the strongest authority behind that defense, Brown v. Hartlage, protects less than it might first appear to. In that 1982 case, the Supreme Court overturned a Kentucky ruling that had voided a county commissioner’s election over his public campaign pledge to take a pay cut, holding that an open promise made to the entire electorate, subject to scrutiny and criticism, was core political speech. But the Court was explicit that its protection did not extend to every kind of exchange. Brown’s pledge was “very different in character from corrupting private agreements and solicitations historically recognized as unprotected by the First Amendment,” and the Court declined to equate an open campaign promise with “a candidate’s promise to pay voters privately for their support.”
Musk’s checks sit closer to the excluded category of promises and payments than to the facts in Brown. They were not a general pledge offered to the electorate as a whole. They went to specific, named individuals, two of whom received checks in person at a rally, after Musk had publicly tied eligibility to having voted. A prosecutor could readily draw that distinction, regardless of how Musk’s public messaging characterized the underlying goal.
Wisconsin law also narrows one line of defense potentially available to Musk, in a manner common under state law. Under § 939.23(5), criminal intent “does not require proof of knowledge of the existence or constitutionality of the section under which the actor is prosecuted.” A genuine but mistaken belief that the payments were constitutionally protected would not, on its own, defeat the intent element of the crime. The state would need to show that Musk intended to make the payments and knew the facts that made the conduct criminal, not that he believed those facts added up to a crime.
A mixed bag in other jurisdictions
Philadelphia offered the first real test of Musk’s giveaway model. Musk prevailed, but on narrower grounds than the win suggests. District Attorney Larry Krasner sued Musk and America PAC in 2024 over the same $1-million-a-day structure, arguing it violated Pennsylvania’s election and lottery laws. As CNN reported at the time, a Pennsylvania judge let the payments continue through Election Day after finding prosecutors had not shown the giveaway was an illegal lottery, a specific and comparatively narrow legal theory. The ruling never reached the broader question Wisconsin’s referral now raises: whether paying named individuals to vote is protected political speech. It answered a different question and left this one open.
A separate case is proceeding in federal court in Texas. Two Arizona women sued Musk and America PAC over the 2024 giveaway, alleging they were misled into handing over personal information by a false promise that winners would be chosen “randomly.” On June 25, U.S. Magistrate Judge Susan Hightower recommended that the fraud claim proceed to a jury, finding a genuine factual dispute over whether Musk’s language about random selection was misleading. She also ordered Musk to sit for a deposition. She dismissed a companion breach-of-contract claim, but allowed the fraud theory to proceed.
The order drew on testimony already in the record. America PAC’s director, Christopher Young, testified in a February 2026 deposition that Musk’s language surprised him, saying it “was not the way that we had — you know, with legal counsel and consultation, discussed the program and how it would run.” (More lawyer wincing here.)
Musk has not yet sat for his deposition, and a date had not been set as of late June. Whatever he says under oath in Austin, in a case built on the same giveaway model, could conceivably land somewhere inside Lasee’s 40-day window.
A range of penalties… but don’t get too excited
A violation of § 12.11 is a Class I felony under § 12.60(1)(a), Wisconsin’s penalty schedule. It applies to whoever commits the crime, including the person offering the payment, not only the person accepting it. A conviction carries a maximum of 3½ years in prison, a $10,000 fine or both.
A conviction under this statute would carry less weight than the word "felony" implies. Class I is the lowest felony class in Wisconsin, and the statute carries no mandatory minimum sentence.
The $10,000 maximum fine underscores the point. Musk spent more than $20 million supporting Schimel. A fine capped at $10,000 means nothing to him; Wisconsin’s bribery statute was simply not written with a defendant of Musk’s resources in mind.
But that doesn’t make the referral inconsequential. A felony conviction would be a formal legal finding that a specific and well-documented act—offering $1 million to induce a vote—crossed the line the state draws around its elections. That finding would exist independent of what it costs Musk personally to live with it. And it would likely keep Musk from trying to cross the legal line in November or in 2028, as he could at least be under probation if convicted.
That is admittedly enjoyable to imagine.
Lasee what he’ll do…
Doing the math, 40 days from July 9 puts us in mid-August. By then, Lasee will have reported what action, if any, he plans to take, whether he announces his decision publicly or not.
The question before him is not especially complicated in any legal sense. He already answered a version of it in his letter to the nonprofit voting groups and their $1,000 raffle. Musk’s checks were each a thousand times larger, handed to specific named voters, and conditioned on the same act Lasee flagged in 2024, namely, casting a ballot. A million dollars buys a lot of pizza and rides to the polls.
If Lasee refuses to charge Musk, he will invite the conclusion that the statute exists only for people who can’t afford to violate it. If he does charge Musk, he will show his constituents that Wisconsin’s election laws still mean something, even when the person testing them is the richest man in the world.
Rubio Wanted To Ban ‘Censors’ From Entering The US. A Court Says He’s The One Censoring. [Techdirt]
Last year, the Marco Rubio-run State Department announced that it would start denying visas to people who worked in misinformation/disinformation research, content moderation, fact-checking, or other compliance and trust & safety roles. So, yeah, if you were an EU-based person who worked on preventing child sexual abuse material from appearing online, the US government decided you were not allowed in the country, bizarrely (and falsely) claiming you engaged in “censorship of protected expression.”
Except, as we’ve explained over and over again, that makes no sense. Only government officials or those working directly at the behest of the government can engage in censorship of protected expression. Otherwise it’s just private parties using their own rights of association to figure out what content they wish to associate with. And the actual reality (which MAGA culture warriors refuse to recognize) is that nearly all trust & safety work has fuck all to do with removing content. Much of it is literally about making platforms better and more trusted overall.
But, because the MAGA crew has been whipped up into a misinformation frenzy over the last decade that any research regarding mis- or disinformation is “censorship,” Trump and Rubio decided to throw the base some red meat and claim they were going to deny visas to people who worked in the field.
Thankfully, a federal court has pointed out that the only one engaging in censorship here is the Rubio State Department. By designating a group of people to be denied visas based on their own speech and association regarding disinformation research, the State Department engaged in unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination.
Judge Boasberg (who traditionally has been pretty conservative, but with Trump nonsense appearing before him quite frequently seems to now recognize that this administration is full of shit) notes how silly all of this is. After highlighting that most users of websites actually do want those sites to block scams and spam (what most content moderation is), though admitting that some people think of it as censorship, he points out that Rubio’s policy punishes researchers (the plaintiffs in this case) for trying to research and fact check disinformation.
The First Amendment reflects “a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open.” N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964). That commitment is not confined to stump speeches, editorials, or familiar forms of political advocacy….
Those principles cover the activity chilled here. CITR’s work depends on researchers who study how platforms structure public debate, report on misinformation and disinformation, advocate for access to platform data, petition officials, speak to the press, and collaborate with one another to set standards and press for reform. Some of that work culminates in reports, interviews, comments, petitions, and testimony. Some of it occurs before publication, in the candid exchange among researchers and organizations that makes public-facing work possible. Those activities, at least as reflected in this record, fall within the Amendment’s protection for speech, publication, petitioning, and expressive association. They also sit directly within the contested public debate over how online platforms structure discourse and whether, when, and how they should moderate harmful or false content….
CITR’s asserted injury is therefore not merely derivative of what its noncitizen members might say or what CITR might hear. The policy allegedly impairs CITR’s own work: who will contribute to its reports, what those reports can say, who will attach their names to them, and whether researchers will participate in the convenings and candid exchanges from which CITR’s public work emerges. See supra Section III.A.2.a. That is itself a First Amendment burden, as the Amendment protects both an organization’s creation and dissemination of information, Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc., 564 U.S. 552, 570 (2011), and the associational activity that makes collective speech possible….
The judge points out that the visa policy is already having an impact on this kind of research:
The reaction here was not merely predictable; it was all but ordered. Announcing the enforcement actions against leaders of two CITR member organizations, Rubio warned others engaged in the same work to “reverse course” or face the same. … The record shows that the message landed. Member A has refrained from international travel, including to CITR’s 2025 summit in Berlin, because of fear of being denied reentry under the policy; has limited public advocacy with CITR to a behind-the-scenes role because of fear of detention and deportation; and says that he or she would be substantially more likely to resume public association with CITR were the policy no longer in place…. Dr. Emma L. Briant, a U.K. citizen and Visiting Associate Professor at Notre Dame, likewise avers that the policy has caused her to self-censor in her writing and public speaking, hesitate to travel internationally, and evaluate even domestic speaking invitations against the risk of detention or deportation.
The judge calls out how the State Department started combing through visa applications to block “ordinary work” done by researchers and fact checkers, not limited to anyone actually engaged in any “censorship.”
The December cable supplies part of the answer. It directed consular officers to “thoroughly explore” visa applicants’ work histories, resumes, social-media profiles, and media appearances for involvement in “combatting misinformation, disinformation or false narratives, fact-checking, content moderation, compliance, and trust and safety,” and, on locating it, to pursue a finding of ineligibility…. Those categories do not describe the exercise of foreign sovereign power. They describe the ordinary work of researchers, fact checkers, platform employees, compliance officers, and nonprofit advocates who study, criticize, participate in, or press for content moderation. A cable that treats that work as evidence of immigration ineligibility reaches far beyond the coercive acts described in the May Memo: threats of arrest, payment freezes, legal compulsion, detention, fines, and demands for private data directed at American platforms or persons in the United States.
While the Court declines to review specific visa denials, it notes that the State Department clearly seems to be denying visas to people by claiming “censorship” when they had nothing to do with censorship. Indeed, the denials usually were about the State Department punishing people for First Amendment protected speech that the US government didn’t like. None of the justifications appear to actually be censorial:
The actions matter because State held them out as examples of the policy at work. Its public rationales identify the activity it treats as “complicity” in “censorship”: a report on hate speech and disinformation, advocacy directed at advertisers and platforms, disinformation-risk ratings, a petition for researcher access to platform data, a broadcast interview, and nonprofit leadership in organizations that help targets of online abuse seek removal of content aimed at them… Some of those justifications are tied to familiar First Amendment activity: reporting, speaking, petitioning, advocating for platform regulation, and associating through nonprofit leadership. Id. At least as to the private researchers and nonprofit leaders in CITR’s field, the public explanations do not identify any exercise of foreign sovereign power akin to the coercive acts the May Memo enumerates.
As Judge Boasberg notes, if you call all of that “complicity in censorship” then the term “censorship” has no real meaning:
If disinformation-risk ratings, reports on hate speech, petitions for platform-data access, advocacy, or nonprofit work seeking to limit abusive content can count as “complicity” in “censorship,” the policy has no clear stopping point short of the field itself — a concern sharpened by the Department’s announcement that it “stands ready and willing to expand” the list…. A lawful permanent resident working on a platform’s trust-and-safety team, a noncitizen researcher urging stronger disinformation labels, a compliance employee helping apply moderation rules, or an advocacy leader pressing advertisers away from sites that spread falsehoods could reasonably understand the policy to place their immigration status at risk — not because they wield foreign sovereign power or facilitate its censorship, but simply because they work in content moderation.
In its response, the DOJ pulled the usual MAGA nonsense of stomping its feet and just repeating “but content moderation is censorship” and making vague assertions about how these researchers aid foreign governments in censorship. The judge is not impressed.
The trouble is that the enforcement record does not honor that line. The Government has tied none of the private researchers and nonprofit leaders targeted in December to any exercise of foreign sovereign power. Pressed on that gap, counsel did not supply the missing connection. The Government stepped back from the five examples, explaining that it lacked “the full factual records or the reasons for those determinations” and that it would not be “fair to rely on those five” in gauging the policy’s scope…. But Defendants cannot publicly announce examples of the policy at work, warn that the Department stands ready to expand them, and then — when those examples prove inconvenient — deny that they reveal anything about the policy’s reach. A limiting principle that the Government cannot reconcile with its own enforcement record is no limit at all.
And thus, all this is classic, unconstitutional, viewpoint discrimination:
The policy, at its core, does not burden all speech about platforms, all research into content moderation, or all advocacy about online harms. It presses its enforcement thumb against one side of the scale: the view that platforms should do more to moderate content, label disinformation, restrict abuse, share data with researchers, or take responsibility for the harms their systems amplify. The Government, in other words, has not set itself against everyone who speaks about platform governance. It has set itself against those whose work favors more moderation rather than less. A noncitizen calling for less moderation, after all, has no comparable reason for concern under the policy.
Such action lies at the core of viewpoint discrimination. “At its most basic, the test for viewpoint discrimination is whether — within the relevant subject category — the government has singled out a subset of messages for disfavor based on the views expressed.” ….
The First Amendment does not permit officials to resolve that dispute by attaching legal burdens to the side they condemn
But that’s exactly what Rubio did here. If you worked on calling out disinformation, you could get your visa denied (or if you already had it, pulled). Judge Boasberg notes that if the policy were actually limited to foreign officials engaged in censorship, then the State Department might have an argument. But it’s not.
Even better, the court states that you can’t just call disinformation research “censorship” and pretend that’s a fact when reality says otherwise:
Protecting Americans from foreign officials who use sovereign power to suppress protected expression in the United States is in the Government’s interest. But the record does not show that the policy serves only that end. It instead brands a range of private expressive and platform-governance activity as “censorship,” without identifying any foreign-sovereign power that those actors exercised or helped exercise. The Government cannot make protected private expression a facially legitimate and bona fide basis for immigration consequences simply by placing it under the capacious and contested label of “censorship.”
He even notes that policy would violate the First Amendment under lower levels of scrutiny, meaning that even if the government could convince the court there was some justification for the policy, it still wouldn’t survive First Amendment scrutiny.
The judge doesn’t kill the policy entirely, noting that there may be cases where the State Department has a legitimate reason to deny a visa to someone actually engaged in efforts to silence Americans. It also hurts that when the Court sought evidence of visas being denied to actual censorship by sovereign officials, the State Department apparently came up empty:
The Department reportedly examined whether European regulators were using the Digital Services Act to censor American speech and found “no evidence that Member States of the European Union are overreaching the [Digital Services Act] to censor and criminalize online content.”
Oops! Sure, that goes against the narrative Rubio and MAGA folks have spun up about the EU being nothing but a bunch of censors, but when they can’t show the court any proof that they’re using this policy to go after actual government censors (while the plaintiffs can show where the policy was used to suppress or punish the speech of non-government censors) the end results are unlikely to make Rubio happy.
Measured against one another, the policy’s legitimate applications ultimately do not carry the day. The mismatch between Defendants’ asserted interest and the policy’s demonstrated operation is stark…. The defect identified above is not a feature of any one application; it is the policy’s selection criteria itself, and it travels wherever the policy does — into visa screening, exclusion, and removal alike. The policy’s legitimate applications, by contrast, remain episodic and largely undemonstrated. Whatever arithmetic might refine the comparison, the overbreadth inquiry asks whether a measure “prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech relative to its plainly legitimate sweep,” Hansen, 599 U.S. at 770, and a policy that selects its targets by an unconstitutional criteria, while its lawful uses remain occasional and largely unproven, answers that question.
Thus, the Court throws out this particular visa policy, though it doesn’t go quite as far as the researchers asked in requesting a protective order that would bar the government from using information related to this case in an immigration enforcement action. The judge recognizes that it’s still possible that the government could retaliate against these researchers, but hopes that this ruling will make them think twice about doing so. It also notes that if the government ramps up threats or actual retaliation against the researchers in this case, they can return to the courtroom to contest those actions.
For years, the loudest voices screaming about a “Biden censorship industrial complex” falsely insisted that pointing out disinformation was itself an attack on free speech. Now a federal court has found an actual, textbook case of unconstitutional censorship — carried out by the Secretary of State explicitly stripping visas from researchers based on their protected speech. I’m sure we’ll be hearing the same kind of outrage about Biden officials asking social media companies if they could be better in stopping health misinformation from spreading?
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Kanji of the Day: 容 [Kanji of the Day]
容
✍10
小5
contain, form, looks
ヨウ
い.れる
内容 (ないよう) — contents
容疑者 (ようぎしゃ) — suspect
容疑 (ようぎ) — suspicion
容認 (ようにん) — approval
美容 (びよう) — beauty
容器 (ようき) — container
容易 (ようい) — easy
容量 (ようりょう) — capacity
容姿 (ようし) — appearance (of a person)
収容 (しゅうよう) — accommodation
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
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