News

Friday 2026-05-01

07:00 PM

“The most exciting mobile trend is full Qwerty keyboards” [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

The creators of the Blackberry were sure that customers loved the keyboard. That’s what they heard all day from their users, and it must have been right since they had a huge share of the mobile phone market.

When the iPhone came out, it wasn’t seen as a threat because it had no keyboard. Blackberry was in the keyboard business, the iPhone sold something else.

We make this mistake more often than we imagine, and it’s worth looking at.

RIM, the makers of the Blackberry, didn’t actually sell keyboards. They sold the network. It’s easy to see this if you realize that a single Blackberry (with no one to connect to) was worthless, but an iPhone with millions of users and no keyboard is priceless.

Within three years, RIM went from dominating the market and reaping huge profits to essentially zero market share.

Instead of defending the keyboard, they could have defended the network.

They thought they made little boxes with batteries, but they actually made a network and gave their IT customers a story.

The heart of their customer base was business people, using business funds to pay for a business device. They wanted connection, success, and security. Freedom from fear dances with affiliation and status all day.

RIM could have offered IT departments exactly what they wanted–the chance to tell their bosses that they had control. Deniability. Security. The ability to monitor traffic and retain (or delete) information.

  • Encrypted transit
  • Server-side authentication and revocation
  • Audit logs of who accessed what when
  • Compliance documentation for regulators

By defending the network, they would have made it difficult for any of these users to eagerly switch to a different network, one that their peers weren’t on.

Instead of selling devices, RIM could have sold seats. At $45 a month (bring your own device), it would have been a bargain.

The hardware process was a sunk cost, a warehouse full of liability that felt like an asset.

We get hooked on our past wins (and our fears of past losses) instead of understanding the value we’re able to provide.

A Blackberry iPhone app would compete with their own devices in a way where RIM couldn’t lose. Feed the network first. Give people what they actually wanted (connection and status) not what said they wanted (a faster way to type).

      

01:00 PM

Online DRM Or A Bug: Sony’s Silence Adds To Recent PS Update Confusion [Techdirt]

Over a decade ago, Microsoft was getting set to release its new Xbox One console. In the lead-up to launch day, a bunch of rumors began swirling about some of the online requirements the console would come with. Details weren’t to be found, so the public was left to speculate what these requirements would entail. Would the console always need to be online when launching games? Would it need to check in online on a certain cadence for games to work, such as every day? Every 30 days?

Microsoft did very little to calm the waters in all this speculation. Very little came out from the Xbox team prior to launch, and what did come out was often confusing. What became very obvious, however, was that the lack of clear and direct messaging from Microsoft made a bad situation much worse. The backlash to the requirement rumors was severe and Xbox largely ended up scrapping them.

Fast forward to the present and the internet has exploded the past few days with claims that an update pushed to PlayStation consoles has introduced a 30 day online check in requirement for newly purchased games.

Some PlayStation users have noticed a new online DRM policy for digital games purchased on the PlayStation Store: newly purchased digital games now display a “Valid Period” tag showing a start date, an end date, and a countdown timer. If the console does not connect to the internet within 30 days, the game’s license reportedly expires, and the title becomes unplayable until an online connection is restored.

The story broke over the weekend through Lance McDonald, the well-known modder who managed to patch Bloodborne to run at 60 frames per second. He posted on X: “Hugely terrible DRM has now been rolled out to all PS4 and PS5 digital games. Every digital game you buy now requires an online check-in every 30 days. If you buy a digital game and don’t connect your console to the internet for 30 days, your license will be removed.

We thought about reporting this story as soon as McDonald surfaced it. However, several users also swore they saw nothing of the sort in their libraries, so we waited. Thus far, Sony has not made any official public statement, but a few hours ago, a PlayStation Support assistant confirmed to a user that the 30-day timer is not a bug at all.

That support assistant being referenced is a bot, however, not a human being behind a keyboard. You can see the response it gave in the screenshot below.

That is, at the time of this writing, the most that Sony has said about whatever the hell is going on here. As a result, all kinds of people, big and small within the gaming community, are losing their shit over this new “online DRM requirement” for existing consoles that previously didn’t have it. Oh, and it’s a requirement that Sony mocked Microsoft for trying to require way back in 2013 before the backlash.

The silence is, as they say, deafening. Is this fully intentional? Not all the reporting suggests that at all. Other reports indicate that this is just a bug in the update and this was not intended to be rolled out at all.

Shortly after the issue surfaced, video game preservation site Does it play? weighed in on the matter. It reported hearing from an anonymous insider that the timer was actually just a bug. “From what we gathered, Sony accidentally broke something while fixing an exploit. They’ve known about the confusing UI for a while, but didn’t see it as urgent,” their X post read.

However, many noted that an accidental deployment still implies Sony was testing the concept, since the interface had already been built. Throughout the confusion, Sony has yet to provide an official comment regarding the issue.

That last sentence is the most important one. Hey, Sony: what the actual hell is going on here?

The fact that all of this rumor, speculation, and angst has gone on for at least a couple of days now without a single word being uttered directly from Sony is remarkably stupid. The waters need to be calmed and that’s only going to happen by the company speaking up. Was it a bug? Cool, say so and let’s move on. Is the online requirement DRM now a thing? Much less cool, but at least we’ll know where the company stands (though, then we can start talking about Sony changing its policies on consoles after they are sold).

What can’t happen is this vacuum of information because Sony wants to give the public the silent treatment. That’s just bad business.

12:00 PM

Kanji of the Day: 戦 [Kanji of the Day]

✍13

小4

war, battle, match

セン

いくさ たたか.う おのの.く そよ.ぐ わなな.く

回戦   (かいせん)   —   event with ... rounds, innings, legs, etc.
対戦   (たいせん)   —   fighting (against)
挑戦   (ちょうせん)   —   challenge
戦い   (たたかい)   —   battle
戦闘   (せんとう)   —   battle
戦略   (せんりゃく)   —   strategy
戦争   (せんそう)   —   war
戦士   (せんし)   —   soldier
戦う   (たたかう)   —   to make war (on)
初戦   (しょせん)   —   first match (in a series)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 避 [Kanji of the Day]

✍16

中学

evade, avoid, avert, ward off, shirk, shun

さ.ける よ.ける

避け   (よけ)   —   protection
回避   (かいひ)   —   evasion
避難   (ひなん)   —   taking refuge
避ける   (さける)   —   to avoid (situation)
避難所   (ひなんじょ)   —   shelter
避妊   (ひにん)   —   contraception
避難生活   (ひなんせいかつ)   —   living in evacuation shelters
避難民   (ひなんみん)   —   evacuees
不可避   (ふかひ)   —   inevitable
避難場所   (ひなんばしょ)   —   emergency evacuation site (typically outdoors)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

09:00 AM

Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Age Against The Machine [Techdirt]

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

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

In this week’s roundup of the latest news in online speech, content moderation and internet regulation, Mike is joined by Jess Miers, law professor at University of Akron School of Law. Together, they discuss:

Support the podcast by joining our Patreon, with special founder membership available until May 28th.

08:00 AM

The GUARD Act Isn’t Targeting Dangerous AI—It’s Blocking Everyday Internet Use [Techdirt]

Lawmakers in Congress are moving quickly on the GUARD Actan age-gating bill restricting minors’ access to a wide range of online tools, with a key vote expected this week. The proposal is framed as a response to alarming cases involving “AI companions” and vulnerable young users. But the text of the bill goes much further, and could require age gates even for search engines that use AI. 

If enacted, the GUARD Act won’t just target a narrow category of risky chatbots. It would require companies to verify the age of every user — then block anyone under 18 from interacting with a huge range of online systems. It would block minors from everyday online tools, undermine parental guidance, and force adults to sacrifice their privacy. In the process, it would require services to implement speech-restricting and privacy-invasive age-verification systems for everyone—not just kids. 

Under the GUARD Act’s broad definitions, a high school student could be barred from asking homework help tools questions about algebra problems. A teenager trying to return a product could be kicked out of a standard customer-service chat. 

The concerns behind this bill are serious. There have been troubling reports of AI systems engaging in harmful interactions with young users, including cases involving self-harm. Those risks deserve attention. But they call for targeted solutions, like better safeguards and enforcement against bad actors, not sweeping restrictions. The bill’s sponsors say they’re targeting worst-case scenarios — but the bill regulates everyday use. 

The GUARD Act’s Broad Definitions Reach Everyday Tools

The problem starts with how the bill defines an “AI chatbot.” It covers any system that generates responses that aren’t fully pre-written by the developer or operator. Such a broad definition sweeps in the basic functionality of all AI-powered tools. 

Then there’s the definition of an “AI companion,” which minors are banned from using entirely. An AI companion is any chatbot that produces human-like responses and is designed to “encourage or facilitate” interpersonal or emotional interaction. That may sound aimed at simulated “friends” or therapy chatbots. But in practice, it’s much fuzzier. 

Modern chatbots are designed to be conversational and helpful. A homework helper might say “good question” before walking a student through a problem. A customer service chatbot may respond empathetically to a complaint (“I’m sorry you’re having this problem.”) A general-purpose assistant might ask follow-up questions. All of these could be seen as facilitating “interpersonal” interaction — and triggering the GUARD Act. 

Faced with steep penalties and unclear boundaries, companies are unlikely to take chances on letting young people use their online tools. They’ll block minors entirely or strip their tools down to something less useful for everyone. The result isn’t a narrow safeguard—it’s a broad restriction on everyday online interactions.

Homework Question? Show ID And Call Your Parents

Start with a student getting help with homework. Under the GUARD Act, the service must verify the user’s age using more than a simple checkbox—it must rely on a “reasonable age verification” measure, which could require a government ID or a third-party age-checking system. If the system decides a user is under 18, the company must decide if its tool qualifies as an “AI Companion.” If there’s any risk it does, the safest move is to block access entirely. 

The same logic applies to everyday customer service. A teenager trying to fix an order issue gets routed to a chatbot, and the company faces a choice: build a full age-verification system for a routine interaction, or restrict access to avoid liability. Many will choose the latter.

This isn’t a narrow restriction aimed at a few risky products. It’s a compliance regime that pushes companies to block or limit any product that generates text for minors, across the board. 

ID Checks for Everyone

The GUARD Act doesn’t just affect minors. The bill takes a big step towards an internet that only works when users are willing to upload a valid ID or comply with other invasive age-verification schemes. Companies must verify the age of every user—not through a simple self-declaration, but through a “reasonable age verification” system tied to the individual. 

In practice, that means collecting sensitive personal information: government IDs, financial data, or biometric identifiers. Companies can outsource verification, but they remain legally responsible. And the law requires ongoing verification, so this isn’t a one-time check. Worse, studies consistently show that millions of people have outdated information on their IDs, such as an old address, or do not have government ID. Should services require ID, many folks without current or any ID will be shut out. 

And for those who do have compliant ID, turning over this information repeatedly creates obvious risks. Databases of sensitive identity information become targets for breaches. Anonymous or pseudonymous use of online tools becomes harder or impossible. 

To keep minors away from certain chatbots, the GUARD Act would require everyone to prove who they are just to use basic online tools. That’s a steep tradeoff. And it doesn’t actually address the specific harms the bill is supposed to solve.

Vague Definitions, Huge Penalties

The GUARD Act’s broad scope is enforced with steep penalties. Companies can face fines of up to $100,000 per violation, enforced by federal and state officials. At the same time, key terms like “AI companion” rely on vague concepts such as “emotional interaction.” That combination will lead to overblocking. Faced with legal uncertainty and serious liability, companies won’t parse small distinctions. They’ll restrict access, limit features, or block minors entirely.

That is the unfortunate result of the GUARD Act, even though the concerns animating it are worthy of fixing. But the GUARD Act’s broad terms will apply far beyond the concerning scenarios. 

In the end, that means a more restricted and more surveilled internet. Teenagers would lose access to tools they rely on for school and everyday tasks. Everyone else faces new barriers, including ID checks. Smaller developers, who aren’t able to absorb compliance costs and legal risk, would be pushed out, leaving the largest companies even more dominant. 

Young people — and all people — deserve protection from genuinely harmful products. But this bill doesn’t do that. It trades away privacy, access, and useful technology in exchange for a blunt system that misses the mark. 

Congress could act soon. Tell them to reject the GUARD Act

Republished from the EFF’s Deeplinks blog.

07:00 AM

One thing at a time [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

Multi-tasking is mostly an illusion.

What we’re actually doing is slicing our focus, jumping from one thing to another and then back again.

All that jumping decreases our productivity and worse, erodes our peace of mind.

You’re only doing one thing at a time anyway. Might as well embrace that instead of spending so much time shifting gears.

      

Pluralistic: How not to ban surveillance pricing (30 Apr 2026) [Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow]

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

Today's links



A busy 1950s grocery store. The scene has been altered: the massive, menacing, glaring red eye of HAL 9000 from Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey' hovers over the store, shooting red beams into the cash register. The store -- but not the shoppers at its front -- is suffused with red light.

How not to ban surveillance pricing (permalink)

If you want to piss me off, it's easy: just breezily assert that our tech regulation problems are the result of the fast pace of technological change racing ahead of the plodding speed of governmental action:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/04/22/uber-for-nurses/#go-meta

While there have been some instances in which this was true, it is far more often the case that there are blindingly obvious answers to tech problems, which our lawmakers and regulators ignore, amidst a rising chorus of warnings about the dire consequences of failing to act.

Take the new Maryland bill that (supposedly) outlaws surveillance pricing: this bill is, frankly, a terribly drafted piece of shit. Worse: it's a terribly drafted piece of shit bill that fails to resolve a serious and urgent problem. Even worse: the lawmakers who drafted this piece of shit bill and Maryland Governor Wes Moore were all loudly and repeatedly warned about the problems of this bill, and they did nothing and now the people of Maryland are fucked.

So what is surveillance pricing, why is it so dangerous, and what's wrong with Maryland's Protection Against Predatory Pricing Act?

Surveillance pricing is when a company spies on you ("surveillance") and uses the resulting dossier to raise its prices to the maximum it calculates you will be willing to pay ("pricing"). With surveillance pricing, a retailer reaches into your bank account and devalues your dollars. If you pay $2 for an apple at the grocery store and the same store only charges me $1 for that apple, then that grocer is telling you that your dollars are worth half as much as mine:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/06/24/price-discrimination/

There's a kind of economics brainworm that makes some economists looooove surveillance pricing. They will insist that this is an "efficient" way to price goods, and claim that surveillance pricing isn't just a way to raise prices on people who are willing to pay more, it's a way to lower prices for people who are willing to pay less.

What you're supposed to infer from this is that people who can afford more will end up paying more, while people who can afford less will pay less. It's pitched as the Robin Hood of pricing policies, gouging the rich to finance discounts for the poor. But in practice, that's not at all how surveillance pricing works. Instead, surveillance pricing is most often used to levy a "desperation premium" on people who have fewer choices and less leverage.

For example, there's a McDonald's investments portfolio company called Plexure that supplies surveillance pricing tools to fast food restaurants. Plexure advertises its ability to use surveillance data to find out when a customer has just gotten a paycheck so that vendors can increase the price of their usual breakfast sandwich order. This isn't aimed at wealthy people – it's explicitly designed to target people who are living paycheck to paycheck.

Surveillance pricing is also used to determine how much you get paid; when that happens, we call it "algorithmic wage discrimination." Gig platforms like Uber use surveillance data about their drivers to predict which workers are most desperate, and those drivers are offered less money per mile and per hour, because a desperate worker will take whatever is on offer. Gig work apps for health-care do the same thing to nurses:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/18/loose-flapping-ends/#luigi-has-a-point

Indeed, surveillance pricing represents a kind of cod-Marxism. Instead of "from each to their own ability, to each according to their need," the "efficient" surveillance pricing motto is, "from each according to their desperation, to each according to our power":

https://pluralistic.net/2025/01/11/socialism-for-the-wealthy/#rugged-individualism-for-the-poor

Surveillance pricing is anything but efficient. Because surveillance pricing is a transfer from consumers to investors, it has the net effect of reducing consumption overall. If your grocer can screw you out of an extra $50/month on your household food bill, that's $50/month you can't spend on a babysitter, a movie, or a couple of nice books for your kid. The American economy runs on consumption, and the American consumer has less discretionary income than they've had in generations. Anything that reduces consumption is a drag on the whole economy.

Surveillance pricing is rampant and getting worse all the time. During the Biden administration the FTC held hearings on the practice and developed a detailed, eye-watering record of all the ways that surveillance, combined with digital platforms that can alter prices for every visit by every customer, has resulted in a massive transfer from working people to wealthy investors:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/07/24/gouging-the-all-seeing-eye/#i-spy

Unfortunately – and predictably – Trump's new FTC chairman, Andrew Ferguson, killed off that action, replacing it with an initiative that encouraged FTC officials to anonymously rat each other out for being too "woke":

https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/21/trumpflation/#andrew-ferguson

He did this even as a whole bunch of surveillance pricing companies were blitzing their clients with messages about the surveillance pricing possibilities created by Trump's tariffs, which would condition buyers to expect higher prices, creating opportunities to smuggle in surveillance-priced premiums:

https://pros.com/learn/webinars/navigating-tariff-increases-future-proof-pricing-strategy

It's only gotten worse since. Back in January, Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced that the company had a new plan to make AI profitable: they would supply surveillance prices for sellers who used Google's advertising services. After all, Google spies on more people, more comprehensively, than anyone except Meta and the NSA, and Google has an advanced ad-targeting network and a giant AI arm. Put these three facts together and Google can offer merchants the ability to target you for ads and prices that are calculated, to the penny, to be the most you would be willing to pay:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/01/21/cod-marxism/#wannamaker-slain

All this – rampant, desperation-based price-gouging; federal inaction; a risk to the whole economy – is the backdrop for Maryland's new anti-surveillance pricing bill, which Governor Wes Moore has been trumpeting as the nation's first state bill banning surveillance pricing. This would be very cool – if it was real. But – as the American Economic Liberties Project's Pat Garofalo writes for the Economic Populist – the Protection Against Predatory Pricing Act is so badly drafted that it will have essentially no impact on surveillance pricing. It's positively riddled with loopholes:

https://economicpopulist.substack.com/p/gov-wes-moore-claims-maryland-banned

The first problem with this bill is its scope: it only regulates surveillance pricing for groceries. It has nothing to say about the use of surveillance data to reprice car rentals, apartments, healthcare, taxi rides, quick-service food, or the thousand other areas where surveillance pricing is already rampant. Worse: it is silent on algorithmic wage discrimination: the use of surveillance data to reprice your wages, penalizing workers for being poor by making them even poorer.

Now, helping people with their grocery bills isn't nothing. However, even within that very narrow scope, this bill is a disaster. As Garofalo points out, the bill's first glaring loophole here is how it permits surveillance pricing if a purchaser "consents." This is quite a loophole! After all, we live in an era in which "consent" consists of clicking "I agree" when presented with a gigantic list of terms and conditions, which you cannot negotiate, which are subject to change without notice, and which are so long that it would take 26 hours to review all the "agreements" you "consent" to in any given 24-hour day.

So if the company that you use to book your pet's veterinary check-ups is owned by the same company that provides your grocer with its surveillance pricing tools, you might "consent" to having that company jack you on every bag of groceries just by clicking "I agree" when your cat needs a vet appointment.

The bill also exempts "promotional offers" and "temporary discounts," suggesting that it was drafted by someone who has never encountered a merchant whose retail premises are always plastered with signs trumpeting the fact that every price in the shop is both "temporary" (ACT NOW!) and "promotional" (SALE! SALE! SALE!). Since the bill doesn't define either of these words, it effectively grants every grocer in the state an easy way to evade the law entirely.

Finally, the bill exempts two exceptionally scammy tactics that are already the major vehicle for surveillance price-based gouging: loyalty cards and subscription-based pricing.

Loyalty cards are often a total scam:

https://consumerlaw.berkeley.edu/news/price-loyalty-how-rewards-programs-trap-consumers-and-how-states-can-take-action-protect-them

And subscriptions are a scammer's best friend:

https://redrocks.org/financial-education/hidden-charges-and-fake-subscriptions-the-quiet-scam-costing-consumers-millions

But even if you are ripped off by a grocer who can't be bothered to call the scam a "sale" or a "temporary offer," who can't be bothered to dress it up as a "loyalty perk" or a "subscription price," you still can't get justice. That's because the Protection Against Predatory Pricing Act excludes the "private right of action," which means that you can't sue a grocer who rips you off. All this bill lets you do is petition the state Attorney General's office to sue the grocer on your behalf, and if the AG doesn't think you deserve justice, you're shit out of luck. And the Protection Against Predatory Pricing Act pre-empts other rights in Maryland's existing Consumer Protection Act, meaning that it actually gives Marylanders fewer rights than they had a month ago, before it was signed into law.

Legislation this bad doesn't happen by accident. The omissions and defects in this law aren't there because "technology moves so fast that lawmakers can't make sense of it." This is the result of lobbyists and sellout politicians conspiring to rip off the public, and of a governor who decided to ignore the warnings about the bill in order to get a chance to grandstand on Bill Maher while doing nothing to help Marylanders:

https://x.com/BlueGeorgia/status/2047868126365106631

From nurses' wages to your payday breakfast sandwich, surveillance pricing is everywhere, especially in groceries. Every time you use Instacart to shop at Albertsons, Costco, Kroger, and Sprouts Farmers Market, you might be getting ripped off for as much as 23% of the total price:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/12/11/nothing-personal/#instacartography

This isn't some silly-season fake controversy. It's an existential crisis for America's cash-strapped, heavily indebted households, whose lives have been made immeasurably worse by the inflation from Trump's Strait of Epstein disaster. Maryland had the chance to do something to help these people and instead they squandered it, selling out to lobbyists for companies whose bottom line depends on draining the bank accounts of the most desperate people in the state.

(Image: Cryteria, CC BY 3.0, modified)


Hey look at this (permalink)



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

Object permanence (permalink)

#25yrsago Google's now running on 8,000 Linux servers https://web.archive.org/web/20010501043429/http://www.internetweek.com/story/INW20010427S0010

#25yrsago Karl Schroeder’s Ventus in the NYT https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/01/04/29/reviews/010429.29scifit.html

#20yrsago Sony screwing artists out of iTunes royalties, customers out of first sale https://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/30/technology/cheap-trick-allman-brothers-sue-sony-over-download-royalties.html

#20yrsago Robot Lego CD thrower can shatter discs https://www.techeblog.com/hammerhead-the-lego-cd-thrower/

#15yrsago Understanding alternative voting, with coffee and beer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtW3QkX8Xa0

#15yrsago Battleshoe https://philnoto.tumblr.com/post/4613522934/quite-busy-with-work-today-so-heres-a-little

#15yrsago Filling Paris’s potholes with knitwork https://www.flickr.com/photos/39380641@N03/albums/72157622189211405/

#15yrsago Pinhole cameras made out of hollow eggs https://www.lomography.com/magazine/71984-the-pinhegg-my-journey-to-build-an-egg-pinhole-camera

#15yrsago Canadian pro-Net Neutrality/anti-censorship/anti-surveillance party gaining support https://web.archive.org/web/20110429020845/http://www.ekospolitics.com/index.php/2011/04/ndp’s-new-status-as-second-runner-holding-april-26-2011/

#15yrsago We Say Gay: Tennessee kids fight bill that would prohibit discussing homosexuality in school https://web.archive.org/web/20110501072834/https://wesaygay.com/

#15yrsago HOWTO build an impossible Escher perpetual motion waterfall https://www.instructables.com/Perpetual-Motion-Machine-The-real-life-version-of/

#15yrsago RIP Keith Aoki, copyfighting law prof, comics illustrator, musician and writer https://www.thepublicdomain.org/2011/04/27/rip-keith-aoki/

#5yrsago Unpack the court with judicial overrides https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/27/bruno-argento/#crisis-of-legitimacy

#5yrsago Pharma's anti-generic-vaccine lobbying blitz https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/27/bruno-argento/#pharma-death-cult

#5yrsago Klobuchar on trustbusting https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/27/bruno-argento/#klobuchar

#5yrsago Robot Artists & Black Swans https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/27/bruno-argento/#fantascienza

#1yrago The enshittification of tech jobs https://pluralistic.net/2025/04/27/some-animals/#are-more-equal-than-others

#5yrsago Dems want to give $600b to the one percent https://pluralistic.net/2021/04/28/inequality-r-us/#neotrumpism


Upcoming appearances (permalink)

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



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

Recent appearances (permalink)



A grid of my books with Will Stahle covers..

Latest books (permalink)



A cardboard book box with the Macmillan logo.

Upcoming books (permalink)

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

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

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

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

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



Colophon (permalink)

Today's top sources:

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

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

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

  • A Little Brother short story about DIY insulin PLANNING


This work – excluding any serialized fiction – is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license. That means you can use it any way you like, including commercially, provided that you attribute it to me, Cory Doctorow, and include a link to pluralistic.net.

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

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


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Bursting Hegseth’s Bubble [The Status Kuo]

Note: We are covering the horrific (but sadly expected) Callais decision where SCOTUS gutted Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act in The Big Picture later today. If you’re not subscribed to that Substack, you can do so here to receive it later today in your inbox.

Image courtesy of The New York Times

Pete Hegseth spent years at Fox comfortable in a world he understood well: friendly hosts, no follow-up questions, and any challenge treated as bad faith rather than a question requiring an answer.

When he became Defense Secretary, he rebuilt that world inside the Pentagon. He took questions only from sympathetic reporters. He fired military leaders who pushed back. He withheld budget data from Congress. And he went nearly a year without testifying before lawmakers at all.

For months, that protected system held. On Wednesday, it didn’t.

Testifying before the House Armed Services Committee for the first time, Hegseth sat in a room with people who weren’t part of his carefully constructed world asking the questions. They were lawmakers armed with receipts, including survivor testimony and his own prior statements. What followed, across nearly six hours of contentious questioning, was less a terrible performance than a demonstration of how fragile Hegseth’s false world actually was.

Wednesday offered six stark examples of what happens when the bubble bursts. Here’s what they revealed.

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If it was obliterated, why are we at war?

For months, Hegseth made public statements about Iran’s nuclear program to audiences who weren’t in a position to cross-examine him. This time was different.

The sharpest exchange of the day came from Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA), the ranking member on the committee. Pressed on the White House’s strategy for reducing Iran’s nuclear threat, Hegseth told Smith that Iran’s nuclear facilities had been “obliterated”—a line he has deployed consistently and largely unchallenged for weeks in friendly briefings and sympathetic interviews.

Smith pounced. “We had to start this war, you just said 60 days ago, because the nuclear weapon was an imminent threat,” Smith said. “Now you’re saying it was completely obliterated?”

Hegseth had no clean answer. When Smith pressed further by asking whether “Operation Midnight Hammer” in June 2025 had actually accomplished nothing of substance, Hegseth shifted his framing. He argued that Trump had acted to dismantle Iran’s “conventional shield” for its nuclear program. Smith was unmoved, noting, “Yet they still haven’t given up their nuclear capabilities.”

DNI Tulsi Gabbard had stated in a written submission to Congress in March that Iran’s nuclear enrichment program was “obliterated” and that Iran had made “no efforts since then to try to rebuild their enrichment capability”—a statement that raises its own questions about the urgency of launching a new war. As Smith noted in his opening statement:

Iran’s nuclear program is exactly what it was before this war started. They have not lost their capacity to inflict pain, they still have a ballistic missile program, they’re still able to blockade the Strait of Hormuz.

Hegseth had offered versions of both claims—both “obliterated” and an “imminent threat”—for months, but only yesterday did someone actually place them side by side and force him to reconcile them.

Soldiers sent into harm’s way

The deaths of six American service members early in the Iran war received sustained attention at Wednesday’s hearing. The incident illustrated a specific vulnerability of the world Hegseth had built: It did not account for survivor testimony.

The six soldiers were working out of a makeshift office space in Shuaiba, an industrial port south of Kuwait City, when they were hit by an Iranian drone strike. Rep. Pat Ryan (D-NY), a combat veteran who serves on the Armed Services Committee, laid out what he said the intelligence record showed:

“Before the war started, there was clear intelligence Shuaiba was high on Iran’s target list. Internal analysis had said the site was indefensible from aerial attack and should not be used. Yet you sent our soldiers from the 103rd Sustainment Command there anyway. Is that true or false?”

Hegseth dodged. He responded that the military had taken proactive measures to protect American forces and that the soldiers who died are “remembered every day.” Rep. Ryan then turned to people who were actually at Shuaiba. He read from a CBS News report in which one survivor described the base’s drone defenses: “I would put it in the none category from a drone defense capability.”

Hegseth said that “whenever humanly possible, counter-UAS are always made available.” Ryan responded, “I’ll save you the time—they did not.”

This is a dynamic that has played out before. Operation Southern Spear, the regime’s campaign of military strikes on alleged drug vessels off the coast of Venezuela, drew similar scrutiny. The family of Colombian fisherman Alejandro Carranza filed a complaint with the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, alleging he was doing nothing more than fishing for marlin and tuna when his boat was struck and he was killed. Surviving family members of two Trinidadian men killed in a separate strike filed a wrongful death lawsuit in U.S. federal court, describing their relatives as fishermen returning home from Venezuela. And a Washington Post report on a September 2 incident involving shipwrecked sailors cited two people with direct knowledge saying a second strike was ordered on the survivors. Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) called it “an extrajudicial killing amounting to murder or a war crime.”

In short, the accounts cutting through Hegseth’s assurances came from people who have direct knowledge of the victims or the attacks. His generalized statements don’t hold up against these witnesses.

Perhaps Hegseth could manage that dynamic from the Pentagon briefing room. But he could not manage it on Wednesday.

A $25 billion secret

The world Hegseth built also required controlling what numbers reached the public. And for months, that worked.

Pentagon comptroller Jules Hurst told the committee that the Iran war has cost an estimated $25 billion so far, with the largest share going to munitions. The figure was notable not just for its size, but for the circumstances of its disclosure. Rep. Adam Smith noted it was the first time he had been given a cost figure, despite repeated prior inquiries to the department. The administration had sent no supplemental spending request to Congress to finance the war, and White House budget director Russell Vought had declined to estimate the cost of the war as recently as April 15.

The economic ripple effects have not been contained in the same way. Since the war began, oil prices have spiked globally, with U.S. crude hitting $106 per barrel and the global benchmark Brent rising to $118 per barrel on Wednesday before climbing to $126 per barrel today. Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) pressed Hegseth on cascading costs to ordinary Americans in food and transportation prices. These, once again, were questions the Pentagon had never been made to answer in a setting where answering is required. Hegseth had no answer but to retort with what it would cost to allow Iran to build a nuclear weapon.

At least 168 dead, still under investigation

If the cost figures illustrated how Hegseth’s system manages numbers, the U.S. strike on an elementary school in Iran exemplified how it manages accountability by deferring it indefinitely.

The strike on the girls’ school in Minab killed scores of children and teachers and appears to have included an illegal second strike when rescuers were searching for survivors. Preliminary findings of an internal military investigation, reported by the New York Times and Reuters, suggest the Minab strike may have resulted from the U.S.’s use of outdated targeting data. When pressed at Wednesday’s hearing, Hegseth said only that “that unfortunate situation remains under investigation.” He has given the same answer for two months.

There is also an institutional dimension that Wednesday’s hearing brought into sharper focus. Senate Democrats, in a letter sent to Hegseth last week, raised concerns about his cuts to the Pentagon’s Civilian Harm Mitigation and Response Office and its Civilian Protection Center of Excellence, two offices explicitly tasked with preventing exactly this kind of outcome. The Civilian Protection Center of Excellence was mandated by Congress in the FY2023 National Defense Authorization Act and established in early 2023, and cuts to it were made over the objections of senior military officials.

With the cuts, Hegseth dismantled the very offices designed to flag problems like this before they happened, then declined to answer for the consequences once they had. At Fox News, that’s usually the end of the segment. But before Congress, the testimony goes into the record and can become a big policy issue gone terribly wrong.

Firing generals during wartime

The world Hegseth has been building at the Pentagon has a specific makeup. He has fired or sidelined more than a dozen senior military officials since taking over, including Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George, Navy Secretary John Phelan, Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. C.Q. Brown, and Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Lisa Franchetti. He has also blocked the promotion of four colonels to brigadier general, two women and two Black officers, in what officials described as unprecedented interference in the promotions process. His stated rationale throughout has been the need to build a “warrior culture” at the Pentagon. In practice, that has meant purging the military’s most decorated senior officers and blocking the advancement of women and minorities.

Wednesday was the first time he had to describe that world out loud, in public, to people with the ability to push back.

Rep. Chrissy Houlahan (D-PA), a former Air Force officer, pressed Hegseth directly on the firing of Gen. George, widely regarded as one of the most respected officers in the Army. Hegseth’s explanation was that “new leadership” was needed. When Houlahan challenged him, he repeated it, and she was unimpressed. “You have no way of explaining why you fired one of the most decorated and remarkable men,” Houlahan said before Hegseth interrupted her.

The pushback was not limited to Democrats. Rep. Austin Scott (R-GA) told Hegseth directly: “I disagree with the firing of Gen. George” and warned that bipartisan support would be necessary to pass any defense budget. Rep. Don Bacon (R-NE), a retired Air Force brigadier general, acknowledged Hegseth’s legal authority to make the changes while saying it “doesn’t make it right or wise.” He noted that Congress had held a “huge bipartisan majority” of confidence in both George and Phelan.

The timing of the firings, as tensions continue to rise, made this critique particularly pointed. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) put it plainly in recent days when asked about George’s firing. “We’re in the middle of a war. We got to know that things are being managed well.”

“New leadership,” offered twice by Hegseth as a rationale for the firings with nothing else behind it, is simply not an adequate answer. This is especially true when, as now, the war threatens to spread and disrupt much of the world’s oil and natural gas supply.

Congress itself as the enemy

When the protective bubble Hegseth has wrapped himself inside can provide no answer to critical questions, he has only one remaining move: declare the people asking the questions to be the problem.

That works on Fox News. The host can turn to the camera and question the critics’ motives instead of their argument. On Wednesday, that was the only tool Hegseth had left, and it showed.

In his opening remarks, Hegseth said the biggest “adversary” the U.S. faces at this point in the war is the “reckless, feckless and defeatist words of congressional Democrats and some Republicans.” When Rep. John Garamendi (D-CA) called the war a “quagmire” and a “political and economic disaster at every level,” Hegseth accused him of “handing propaganda to our enemies” and demanded to know “who are you cheering for here?”

This aggressive posture did not go unchallenged. Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA) seized on Hegseth’s “feckless” characterization, asking, “Do you think Congress was smart or feckless when it failed to ask tough questions of the Bush administration and gave them a blank check for Iraq?” Hegseth, who had been openly critical of that war, called it “a false comparison.”

Hegseth was resisting responding to precisely what the law requires. Trump notified Congress of the U.S.-Israeli strikes on March 2, starting the 60-day clock under the 1973 War Powers Resolution that requires either congressional authorization or withdrawal. That deadline falls on Friday, May 1. Republicans control both chambers of Congress and have broadly signaled they will not force a vote, leaving the conflict on uncertain legal footing.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

A war launched without congressional approval, defended by a Defense Secretary who considers the very act of questioning the war disloyalty, is where the bubble begins to burst. Hegseth walked into the hearing room past protesters chanting “arrest Hegseth” and “war criminal,” then delivered an opening statement about rebuilding a military that “instills unrelenting fear in our adversaries.” But the adversaries he seemed least prepared for were the ones already in the room.

Since his confirmation, there has been a question hanging over the Pentagon: What happens when a Fox News personality with no executive experience has to run the United States military during wartime? Wednesday’s hearing was the most complete answer we’ve seen. It turns out, it looks like a man who has never had to answer a hard question suddenly having to answer many of them—and getting quickly backed into a corner.

06:00 AM

Tor Project Statement on the Abrupt Cancellation of RightsCon 2026 [Tor Project blog]

The Tor Project is deeply saddened by the last-minute cancellation of RightsCon 2026 in Lusaka, Zambia, and online. The right to assemble, associate, and speak freely must not be conditioned on political approval. Convenings like RightsCon are essential precisely because they create space for difficult, urgent, and necessary conversation about power, technology, rights, and accountability.

Tor's work is rooted in the belief that everyone should be able to speak freely, safely, and privately. We build tools that help people connect, communicate, organize, and seek information; especially those facing censorship, surveillance, repression, discrimination, and other forms of vulnerability. The disruption of a space dedicated to advancing these shared goals represents a serious gutpunch to the global human rights community.

While the cancellation may have been the only responsible path to prevent further harm to the community, the circumstances that made it necessary are unacceptable. This moment underscores why the fight against censorship, surveillance, and restrictions on civic participation remains urgent.

We share the deep concerns expressed by those directly affected: participants who were already traveling or preparing to travel, speakers and organizers who invested significant labor into this gathering, communities who were counting on these conversations, and local partners and small businesses who now face the consequences of a cancellation imposed over night.

We stand in solidarity with the RightsCon and Access Now teams, who have worked to protect the safety and integrity of the community under extremely difficult circumstances. We also stand firmly with local organizers, digital rights defenders, and civil society actors in Zambia and across the region, who are left to absorb the backlash of a broader and longstanding pattern of repression against civil society.

For Tor, RightsCon has been especially important because it allows us to connect directly with the people and organizations who use, teach, and share our tools with their communities. Our organization has participated in RightsCon since its first edition in 2011. Over the years, it has become a central gathering place for our broader community: a space where small open source hacker nonprofits could collaborate with more established, mainstream human rights organizations.

Tor remains committed to advancing human rights online AND offline, supporting vulnerable internet users globally, and building technologies that help people break through censorship and reclaim their right to communicate freely. We will continue to work alongside the digital rights community in solidarity.

Palantir Workers Are Finally Noticing The Skulls On Their Caps [Techdirt]

There’s a famous Mitchell & Webb sketch where two SS officers, mid-conversation on the Eastern Front, suddenly notice something troubling about their uniforms. “Hans,” one asks, peering at his cap, “are we the baddies?” The skulls had been there the whole time. The skulls are kind of a giveaway. But it took a while for the question to surface. You’ve probably seen it:

I thought about that sketch reading Wired’s reporting on the internal turmoil at Palantir, where both current and former employees are starting to ask that question of their own work:

Around that time, two former employees reconnected by phone. Right as they picked up the call, one of them asked, “Are you tracking Palantir’s descent into fascism?”

“That was their greeting,” the other former employee says. “There’s this feeling not of ‘Oh, this is unpopular and hard,’ but ‘This feels wrong.’”

Two weeks ago, we wrote about Palantir going mask-off for fascism, specifically about CEO Alex Karp’s company posting a 22-point manifesto that included some genuinely ugly stuff about how “certain cultures” are “regressive and harmful” and how pluralism is a “shallow temptation.” I argued that this kind of public ideological positioning was both morally bankrupt and strategically suicidal. The moral bankruptcy part should be obvious (if it’s not, go do some soul-searching). But doing so at a time when American-style fascism is historically unpopular basically everywhere, including within the US, just seems like you’ve bet on the losing team at a time when it’s clear they have no chance of coming back to win.

That’s quite a decision for the company, given that Palantir is supposed to be in the business of using technology to predict how strategic decisions will play out.

It turns out a lot of Palantir employees agree that maybe it’s not so good for them or the company to be picking the morally bankrupt, historically unpopular position. Better late than never, I suppose.

There’s a “well, duh” element to all of this that we shouldn’t gloss over. Palantir has been Palantir for two decades. The company is named after the corrupting all-seeing surveillance orb from Lord of the Rings. Its initial venture capital came from the CIA. Peter Thiel co-founded it. The entire pitch has always been mass data aggregation in service of authoritarian state power. If you took a job there at any point in the last twenty years, the skulls were sitting right on top of the cap, plainly visible, and people were pointing at them constantly.

So in one sense, the current employee soul-searching is just the sort of late-to-the-party realization that deserves to be called out. Where, exactly, did people think this was going?

But it’s also a sign of how far Karp is willing to go — stripping away the plausible deniability that let employees tell themselves they were just building tools, not endorsing a worldview. Palantir didn’t just keep doing what it had always been doing. Karp made a deliberate choice to escalate, both in what the company is building and in how openly it’s announcing what it’s building it for.

The Wired piece documents the various moments where things began shifting internally: the deepening ICE deportation infrastructure work, the death of nurse Alex Pretti during anti-ICE protests, the questions about whether Palantir’s Maven targeting system was used in the missile strike on an Iranian elementary school that killed more than 120 children. And then, to top it all off, Karp published a manifesto telling employees and customers and the entire world that the company now believes pluralism itself is a civilizational error.

The most damning revelation in the Wired piece comes from a Palantir privacy and civil liberties (PCL) employee in a recorded internal AMA — and it shows that the entire concept of a PCL team at the company is window dressing, there so Karp and others in management can pretend they’re not quite as authoritarian as they actually are.

At least one of these AMAs was organized independently of PCL leadership by two team leads, including one who worked directly on the ICE contract for a period of time. “This was very rogue,” a PCL employee who worked on the ICE contract said in a February AMA, a recording of which was obtained by WIRED. “Courtney [Bowman, head of the privacy and civil liberties team] doesn’t know that I’m spending three hours this week talking to IMPLs [Palantir terminology for its client-facing product teams], but I think this is the only real way to start going in the right direction.”

Throughout the lengthy call, employees working on a variety of Palantir’s defense projects posed hard questions. Could ICE agents delete audit logs in Palantir’s software? Could agents create harmful workflows on their own without the company’s help? What is the most malicious thing that could come out of this work?

Answering these questions, the PCL employee who worked on the ICE contract said that “a sufficiently malicious customer is, like, basically impossible to prevent at the moment” and could only be controlled through “auditing to prove what happened” and legal action after the fact if the customer breached the company’s contract.

And then the big (if unsurprising) reveal that Karp doesn’t seem to think much of civil liberties and these employees are basically forced to see if they can distract the dictator-wanna-be at the top (does this sound familiar?):

At one point during the call, one of the employees tried to level with the group, explaining that Palantir’s work with ICE was a priority for Karp and something that likely wouldn’t change any time soon.

“Karp really wants to do this and continuously wants this,” they said. “We’re largely at the role of trying to give him suggestions and trying to redirect him, but it was largely unsuccessful and we seem to be on a very sharp path of continuing to expand this workflow.”

So the internal civil liberties function has been reduced to politely suggesting that maybe the CEO not do the worst version of the worst thing, and getting overruled.

Cool cool cool.

What seems to have finally broken the dam, though, was not the deportation work or the missile strike — it was the manifesto. As one employee posted internally after the company published its 22-point screed:

“I’m curious why this had to be posted. Especially on the company account. On the practical level every time stuff like that gets posted it gets harder for us to sell the software outside of the US (for sure in the current political climate), and I doubt we need this in the US?” wrote one frustrated employee. The message received more than 50 “+1” emojis.

The actual harms — the deportations, the surveillance infrastructure, the dead children — generated internal Slack threads and uncomfortable AMAs. The branding embarrassment generated more of a revolt.

The skulls were always on that hat. People only really started pointing at them when management decided to put the hats on billboards.

Two things are worth calling out separately:

Workers who take jobs at companies like Palantir have an obligation to think harder about what they’re building before they build it. The “I was just writing code” defense has always been weak, and it gets weaker the more obvious the application becomes. We wrote recently about how the “bring your whole self to work” era has pretty much ended, and how workers in a tighter labor market are increasingly going to find themselves at companies whose values they can’t fully stomach. That’s part of what’s happening in a labor market where management has way more leverage. But it’s also true that some companies have been waving very large red flags for a very long time, and “hey, I needed a job” excuse only goes so far when the job is building deportation infrastructure and missile targeting software that ends up blowing up schoolchildren. That shit sticks to people. And it should.

The second is that better-late-than-never still matters. The PCL employees pushing back internally, the Slack threads demanding accountability, the rogue AMAs organized without leadership’s blessing — this is the kind of pressure that has, in the past, gotten Google to drop Project Maven (which the amoral Palantir, naturally, swooped in to take over). Internal dissent is one of the only mechanisms that actually constrains what companies like this do. When employees stop accepting the rationalizations, things change. Sometimes the company changes. Sometimes the employees leave and build something better. Either one is better than just letting things continue as they are.

You can argue that Palantir taking on Project Maven when Google dropped it means that internal protest is fruitless, but that’s simply not true. Internal protest makes it more expensive and difficult for companies to get away with doing bad things. It may not stop them all, but it adds real friction. And if, as now, we start to add some real social baggage for being the software devs who were “just coding for a paycheck,” it can definitely make a bigger difference over time.

Which brings us back to why Karp’s manifesto might end up being a strategic disaster even setting aside the moral question. Palantir’s value proposition has always rested on a kind of plausible deniability: yes, we build surveillance tools, but we have a civil liberties team, we care about safeguards, we’re the responsible adults in the room. The manifesto torched that framing on purpose. And now the company’s own engineers are saying, in writing, that the post is making it harder to sell software, harder to recruit, harder to defend the work to friends and family.

These kinds of things should be costly. That’s how society prevents people from just going along with enabling horrendous human rights violations because the pay and perks are decent.

And at Palantir, the skulls are on the cap. Some people are finally noticing.

Hans, are we the baddies? Yeah. You probably are. So, are you going to keep wearing those skulls?

Daily Deal: The Ultimate AWS Data Master Class Bundle [Techdirt]

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Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackSocial. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.

02:00 AM

Migrant Deaths Hit Record High Under Trump 2.0 [Techdirt]

Not that ICE was ever that great about taking care of all the people it detains. It certainly wasn’t during Trump’s first term. The DHS Inspector General released a report that said there were numerous problems in a single detention facility. Not only that but what was contained in the report was incomplete because the inspectors were both unwilling and unable to dig deep into the issues. ICE officers and officials were far from compliant and inspectors made it worse by questioning detainees about conditions in public areas often containing… you guessed it: ICE officers.

They’re certainly not any better now. Detentions are way up and this iteration of immigration enforcement officials cares even less about the rights and well-being of detained migrants than those employed during Trump 1.0. Not for nothing, but there’s a very obvious reason DHS is doing everything it can to prevent congressional members from inspecting detention centers. We know what it is. Congressional reps know what it is. And for damn sure the people keeping them out of detention centers know what it is.

If the ignition point is the indiscriminate ejection of non-white people from the United States, overseen by ghoulish MAGA acolytes with white Christian nationalist leanings, and carried out by roving bands of masked kidnappers.

The inevitable outcome of everything listed above is this:

The number of immigrants who have died while in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody has reached an all-time high this fiscal year.

Twenty-nine people have died in ICE custody since October, the start of the federal government’s fiscal year, already surpassing 2004’s toll of 28, the previous record, according to government data.

The latest death in custody has been, of course, conveniently blamed on the victim.

The most recent death was  of 27-year-old Aled Damien Carbonell-Betancourt, a Cuban man held in ICE custody in Miami, Florida. According to an initial report released by ICE on the evening of April 16, Carbonell-Betancourt was found unresponsive in his cell on the morning of April 12. The report lists the cause of death as a “presumed suicide,” but the official cause remains under investigation.

Since it appears the government will be investigating itself, we can safely assume “presumed” will be removed from the cause of death as soon as the DHS makes the cause official.

And, of course, ICE (via its acting director) said this was exactly what we should expect from it:

During a congressional hearing also on Thursday, acting ICE Director Todd Lyons said there are a high number of deaths this fiscal year “because we do have the highest amount in detention that ICE has ever had since its inception in 2003.” 

Not a great excuse. While it’s obviously true that increases in one thing might lead to increases in related things, it’s not guaranteed. And it’s not a great look to tell Congress of course more people are dying. More people are being detained.

You’re supposed to keep the numbers down on the death side, no matter how many people you decide absolutely can’t be allowed to go un-detained for the (allegedly) engaging in civil violations. And while (now former) acting director Lyons goes on to say “We don’t want anyone to die in custody,” I kind of don’t believe him?

He also said this:

“I hope that’s a policy of anyone that has to be tasked with detaining someone.”

You hope? You set the policies. You enforce them. You’re not allowed to hope.

More deaths are happening where most migrants are being sent: Texas. Texas is in the Fifth Circuit, which has been incredibly receptive of every new awfulness this administration engages in. Consequently, as many migrants as possible are sent there as soon as possible, no matter where they’re initially detained. Those deaths include one that has been ruled a homicide: the killing of Geraldo Luna Campos, who the DHS initially claimed had been placed in segregation after he allegedly became “disruptive” while waiting in line for medication. That narrative has since been replaced with something far closer to the truth.

[T]he El Paso Medical Examiner’s Office ruled his death a homicide due to “asphyxia due to neck and torso compression.” The FBI is now investigating the death.

This won’t be the last homicide. The DHS only has the most minimal interest in protecting and caring for the thousands of people federal officers have detained. ICE is completely unwilling to police itself. And the administration overseeing all of this could not care less about the people they’ve decided are unworthy of residing in this country. And the fiscal year isn’t even over yet. There are still five months to go. A ghastly record is going to be set by this administration. Hopefully, it will never be broken.

12:00 AM

New Release: Tails 7.7.1 [Tor Project blog]

This release is an emergency release to fix important security vulnerabilities in Tor Browser.

Changes and updates

We are not aware of these vulnerabilities being exploited in practice until now.

  • Update Thunderbird to 140.10.0.

  • Stop making it possible to start our ISO images from a USB stick.

Since 2019, we recommend USB images to start Tails from a USB stick, which is by far the most common way of running Tails.

We still distribute ISO images to start Tails from a DVD or in a virtual machine. Until now, these ISO images worked on USB sticks as well, but provided a degraded experience without automatic upgrades or Persistent Storage.

Our ISO images no longer work on USB sticks to save a few megabytes and prevent confusion for people who use USB sticks.

For more details, read our changelog.

Get Tails 7.7.1

To upgrade your Tails USB stick and keep your Persistent Storage

  • Automatic upgrades are available from Tails 7.0 or later to 7.7.1.

  • If you cannot do an automatic upgrade or if Tails fails to start after an automatic upgrade, please try to do a manual upgrade.

To install Tails 7.7.1 on a new USB stick

Follow our installation instructions.

The Persistent Storage on the USB stick will be lost if you install instead of upgrading.

To download only

If you don't need installation or upgrade instructions, you can download Tails 7.7.1 directly:

Support and feedback

For support and feedback, visit the Support section on the Tails website.

Thursday 2026-04-30

10:00 PM

Paramount Is Trying To Blame Netflix For All The Negative Merger Press [Techdirt]

More than 4,000 Hollywood insiders recently signed a letter blasting Paramount’s planned $111 billion merger with Warner Brothers, noting that the massive consolidation will be very harmful to labor, consumers, and creatives.

As we saw with the AT&T Warner deal, history generally supports this; these debt-riddled deals are broadly, uniformly harmful. Companies that take on this kind of debt always try to address it by cutting corners, raising prices, and firing thousands of people. With the debt from both the CBS and Warner deals (and over-leverage into AI), the Ellison’s media buying spree has the potential to be extra ugly.

Amusingly, as they gun for regulatory approval, the Ellisons are apparently trying to circulate the claim that all of the recent negative press about the merger is somehow Netflix’s fault. Paramount insiders have been trying to seed the idea in outlets like Puck News that the Hollywood campaign is some sort of Netflix op:

“But I’m also hearing that there’s some suspicion inside Paramount and beyond that Netflix is astroturfing the glitzy campaign as a way to either delay the deal—remember, the Ellisons have to pay WBD shareholders a ticking fee of roughly $650 million per quarter if the closing drags past September 30—or kill it outright.”

There’s absolutely no evidence this is actually true. The organizers of the letter, including Democracy Defenders Fund (which denied any Netflix involvement to Puck), the Committee for the First Amendment, and the Future Film Coalition, are opposing it because it will be a labor bloodbath for an already reeling Hollywood.

Puck goes on to note that Netflix is hiring policy folks to oppose the deal as it faces regulatory approval challenges (most likely among state AGs), but that’s not particularly surprising:

“So is this groundswell as organic as it looks? The Democracy Defenders Fund, run by veteran Washington operative Norm Eisen, strenuously denies that Netflix is meddling backstage—and Netflix also insists it has nothing to do with the letter or protest. That said, I’ve heard Netflix has been quietly shopping for public affairs operatives to help oppose the deal, and has retained economist Nicholas Hill—a former D.O.J. Antitrust Division official who testified for the plaintiffs in the Live Nation trial—to engage with regulators about the Paramount–WBD merger.”

You’ll recall that Netflix’s $82.7 billion offer was beaten out by Paramount’s $111 billion proposal.

No mergers would have been the ideal outcome in a country with functional antitrust enforcement. If you had to choose one, the Netflix offer was likely the better one for Hollywood.

Netflix and Warner Brothers had far less structural redundancies, which likely meant fewer overall layoffs. Netflix was willing to pay mostly cash, whereas Paramount is backing the deal with a bunch of Saudi and Chinese investment, which raises influence concerns. Oh, and Larry Ellison has been an open and enthusiastic supporter of authoritarianism.

That said, if history is any indication, Netflix doesn’t have to do much of anything. There’s serious potential this could make stuff like Yahoo, Tumblr, or Quibi seem extremely competent.

Every Warner Brothers transaction to date has been a disaster, and there’s very little indication this deal will be any exception. Should Paramount executives stumble in execution to remain competitive and manage the debt load (and there’s very good evidence to suggest that’s already happening), all Netflix has to do is sit back, watch Paramount/Warner collapse, then buy it for half the price (or less) a few years from now.

MPA Renews Push for U.S. Site-Blocking Legislation, Citing Live Sports Piracy [TorrentFreak]

congressFor a long time, pirate site blocking was regarded as a topic most U.S. politicians would rather avoid.

This lingering remnant of the SOPA debacle drove copyright holders to focus on the introduction of blocking efforts in other countries instead, and not unsuccessfully.

More than 14 years after the last serious try, site-blocking calls have gained momentum once again.

As we reported in early April, lawmakers, including Representative Zoe Lofgren (D-CA) and Senator Tillis (R-NC) are working on a unified, bipartisan site-blocking bill. Both sides initially started working on their own bills, FADPA and Block BEARD, but together they will have a stronger front.

MPA Flags Live Sports Piracy Challenge

The site blocking lobby has mostly taken place behind closed doors. Slowly but gradually, however, stakeholders are also commenting in public. This week, the Motion Picture Association used World IP Day to make a fresh case for U.S. site-blocking legislation.

In a blog post, MPA Senior Executive Vice President and Global General Counsel Karyn Temple addressed the planned U.S. site-blocking push, with a particular focus on live sports. According to Temple, these live events deserve all the protection they can get due to their time-sensitive nature.

“All forms of online piracy are harmful. But live sports piracy is uniquely corrosive. Matches and live events are extremely time sensitive—their value drops sharply after that final whistle blows, the clock runs out, and the winning team is announced,” Temple writes.

The MPA, ACE, and others have already booked some decent successes on this front. Most notable is the takedown of a massive Streameast-branded live sports piracy network last year. While that was a major win, the original Streameast operation and many other sports piracy threats remained online.

MPA, ACE, and other stakeholders will do their best to address these and other piracy threats through their enforcement efforts. However, they also hope that U.S. lawmakers will also offer a helping hand by implementing site-blocking legislation.

Congress Should Create a Site Blocking Tool

Temple recognizes that Congress is trying to bridge the gaps and get site blocking passed. This is much needed and long overdue, she argues, pointing out that dozens of other countries have similar powers in place.

“To truly protect American sports fans, teams, and rightsholders in the era of live piracy, the U.S. Congress should create a judicially supervised website blocking tool similar to those proven to work in over 55 nations around the world, including many of our strongest allies,” Temple writes.

“By blocking access to lawless foreign piracy sites from inside the U.S., judicial site blocking shuts down piracy in real time, critical in all cases but especially so in the case of live sports events,” she adds.

From Temple’s blog post

block

MPA’s Senior Executive Vice President notes that more than 28,000 websites are now blocked globally in these countries, without sharing further detail.

To get a complete picture of the global site-blocking efforts, we asked the MPA for more information about the 55 countries that were mentioned, but that request remained unanswered. There is no doubt, however, that site blocking is relatively widespread, particularly in Europe.

Unintended Consequences

Thus far, there hasn’t been a lot of public opposition against the U.S. site-blocking plans from intermediaries. Internet providers remain silent on the issues, and the same applies to large DNS resolvers such as Google, Cisco, and Cloudflare, who will likely be targeted as well.

These intermediaries might wait with a formal response until they know what the final text of the law will be that Congress will have to decide on.

According to MPA’s Karyn Temple, there is little to be concerned about. She suggests that unintended consequences, affecting free speech, are no longer much of an issue after years of foreign site-blocking experience.

“While questions were once raised about unintended consequences or the impact of site blocking tools on free speech, it is now clear based on well over a decade of experience around the globe, that we can establish a safe, effective, judicial site blocking remedy that protects consumers, distributors, and rightsholders, without any meaningful risk to lawful expression and participation online,” Temple writes.

This is partly true when looking at countries such as Belgium, where site blocking is fully transparent and limited to domain names. However, recent site-blocking efforts in Spain and Italy have shown that IP address blocking can harm many legitimate sites and services, if they target shared server infrastructure.

How risk-free the American site-blocking proposal will be depends on the details, which, thus far, have yet to be finalized.

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

03:00 PM

The Other Side: Game Dev Tim Cain Isn’t Helping In The AI In Gaming Debate [Techdirt]

You’re all sick of me saying we need to have more nuance in the discussion about AI use in the gaming industry. I get it. I’m also not going to stop. And I hope you will have noticed that I have called for nuance in both directions. While I’m more optimistic than many in our community that there is a place for this technology in the industry, and that it could actually have some net positive effects therein, I’m also not blind to the potential negative consequences. Concerns about industry jobs are a very real thing. A desire to protect the artistic intent of game makers is a worthy enterprise. Quality of output is paramount.

That’s why I’ve been repeating over and over again that we should be talking about how AI will be used in games, not if. The “if” question has already been answered in the affirmative, at least for some portion of the industry. Now we need to build very real guardrails around the “how.”

And, to be frank, comments such as those from Fallout co-creator Tim Cain are wildly unhelpful in the opposite direction.

Fallout co-creator Tim Cain says a world where AI generates games, TV shows, and even doctor’s appointments is inevitable, and he’s even “looking forward” to that future.

In arguably the veteran game developer’s saddest “fun Friday” video ever, Cain envisions a world in which dead MMOs come back to life with AI-generated players mimicking real-life personalities, where generative AI makes Joey from Friends a lawyer instead of a struggling actor, and where you take vacations in VR. Yes, really.

He goes way, way beyond even that. He talks at some length about using AI to create more episodes of retired shows that people still hunger for. As a massive fan of Firefly, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I’ve been these past several weeks with Nathan Fillion’s announcement that the show would be coming back in an animated form to build on the story that was infamously canceled by Fox after only 1 season. If that announcement was instead made by the rightsholder and said the new episodes would be created whole cloth using AI and that they would be customizable and tailored to my desires, my reaction would have been horror, not excitement.

AI needs to be a tool on the perimeter, not the creative force itself. I don’t want the pen telling me the story of Odysseus; I want the writer to use the pen to do so. And if the pen turns into a typewriter, which then turns into a word processor, that all works. There is still a human being telling the story.

Even Cain’s remarks tailored specifically for the gaming industry ring super hollow.

Cain goes on to say this will be especially handy for MMO players, in particular those who miss being able to play games that aren’t active anymore. “Have an AI make a local server,” he proposes. “Great, now you can play it again. Oh, it’s empty? Fill it with AI players. Have it watch videos of people who have played that game and just fill it up with players, and it mimics their personalities.”

Look, Cain is a veteran of the industry who was instrumental to one of the most beloved video game IPs of all time, but with all due respect, the idea of playing Ultima Online with AI-generated players designed to mimic the personalities of my friends who I used to play with… is genuinely one of the grimmest, most dire, dystopian realities I can possibly fathom. Likewise, my heart sinks at the thought of playing AI-generated stories with AI-generated characters that I can change however I want. That sounds like it would entirely rob a game, or any work of art, of its artistic intent. But alas, Cain reckons this is all inevitable, so get ready.

This is what the AI detractors are worried about. And when you hear an industry veteran speak so glowingly about gamers operating within these soulless arenas designed merely to mimic the authentic fun that these games produced, it’s easy to understand the concern. This isn’t helpful. Pretending to not understand that the very fucking point of MMOs is to play with other human beings in a single realm, not ginned-up robots pretending to be human, is incredibly frustrating.

And Cain, oddly enough, seems completely unconcerned with artistic intent at all. There is no reason why his example of requesting changes to a TV show wouldn’t translate into a video game. And if people can just customize games not through mods, but through fundamental changes driven by AI requests, then there is no game anymore. There is merely a shell of a game where the player is then free to remix it to extents that transform the intent of the maker completely.

I had to search around a lot to see if Cain was being sarcastic or making a fake attempt at over the top AI evangelism purely to make a point. Everything I have seen and read indicates that’s not what this was. And, again, that makes all of this very unhelpful if you want to get into some real discussions about where this technology should be used and where it shouldn’t.

11:00 AM

Kanji of the Day: 毎 [Kanji of the Day]

✍6

小2

every

マイ

ごと -ごと.に

毎日   (まいにち)   —   every day
毎年   (まいとし)   —   every year
毎週   (まいしゅう)   —   every week
毎月   (まいげつ)   —   every month
毎回   (まいかい)   —   every time
毎朝   (まいあさ)   —   every morning
毎晩   (まいばん)   —   every night
毎に   (ごとに)   —   one by one
毎日毎日   (まいにちまいにち)   —   day after day
毎日毎日   (まいにちまいにち)   —   day after day

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

Kanji of the Day: 璃 [Kanji of the Day]

✍15

中学

glassy, lapis lazuli

瑠璃   (るり)   —   lapis lazuli
浄瑠璃   (じょうるり)   —   joruri
玻璃   (はり)   —   quartz
瑠璃色   (るりいろ)   —   lapis lazuli blue
瑠璃鶲   (るりびたき)   —   red-flanked bluetail (species of flycatcher, Tarsiger cyanurus)
瑠璃鶇   (るりつぐみ)   —   eastern bluebird (Sialia sialis)
瑠璃鳥   (るりちょう)   —   Formosan whistling thrush (Myophonus insularis)
瑠璃野路子   (るりのじこ)   —   indigo bunting (Passerina cyanea)
瑠璃虎の尾   (るりとらのお)   —   beach speedwell
瑠璃羽太   (るりはた)   —   gold-ribbon grouper (species of fish, Aulacocephalus temmincki)

Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.

09:00 AM

Leading Cancer Charity Stops Funding Open Access Publishing Because It’s Just Not Working [Techdirt]

As numerous posts on this blog have emphasised, the underlying idea of open access (OA) – allowing anyone to read and share published academic research for free – is great in principle, but in practice has failed in important ways. That’s because traditional academic publishers have subverted the open access model to such an extent that the costs for research institutions of publishing in OA journals have barely changed at all. And yet one of the other key aims of open access was to save money while widening availability. Against that background, a natural question to ask is: if open access has failed to deliver savings, why bother supporting it? Cancer Research UK, the world’s leading cancer charity, has evidently asked itself that question and come up with an answer, which it explains in a post entitled “Why we won’t be funding open access publishing any more”:

We need efficient scholarly communications to spread scientific ideas via a fair economic model. We currently don’t have that. The open access movement was bold and promising, but ultimately disappointing. Now is the time to stop and call for a new way to make publishing work…

Ceasing to fund open access in the way we currently do will save us £5.2m of donors’ money over the next three years. That’s a substantial amount which can be put towards cancer research.

The post by Dan Burkwood, Director of Research Operations and Communications at Cancer Research UK, explains what exactly the problem is:

We currently fund open access publishing for our researchers in a number of ways. Despite hopes that this would enable a flourishing of open access dissemination of science, most of the growth has occurred in hybrid journals. These are publications that combine OA articles with those behind a paywall – this means the publishers will still charge for university and institute libraries to access them, even though researchers have paid for their work to be published. For us, this means we currently use donated money to fund our researchers, institutes and centres to publish OA research articles, yet they still have to pay to access the majority of journals in which those articles appear. The publishers are – so to speak – having their cake whilst also eating it.

These so-called “hybrid models” are discussed at length in Chapter 3 of Walled Culture the book (free digital versions available). They were presented as a transitional approach towards journals that were fully open access, but in many cases that transition hasn’t happened, not least because the hybrid model is so profitable for publishers, who therefore have little incentive to move to fully open access titles. Burkwood rightly points to a key reason why academic publishers continue to wield such power: the academic world’s insistence on using published articles in prestigious titles as a metric of success.

Cancer Research UK are working to widen the way we evaluate research in order to mitigate the heavy focus on publication outputs. It’s clear to us that a broader view of an applicant’s career is vital to gauge potential success. By signing up to DORA (San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment), we encourage our reviewers to assess the quality and impact of research through means other than just journal impact factor. Additionally, we invite applicants to submit a narrative CV, allowing a more holistic view of their track record, research outputs and career progression.

But as he acknowledges, “Despite our, and others, attempts to limit the emphasis of the ‘publish-or-perish’ mindset, it will take time for the culture to change.” In the meantime, he suggests:

If researchers have no access to publishing funds they can publish their work for open access at no cost, but the publication will sit behind a paywall for 6 months (under embargo) before being deposited on Europe PMC open access – this is known as green open access.

Green open access provides full and free access to papers, but only after an embargo period, typically six months, but sometimes longer (gold open access provides instant access, but requires payment by researchers’ institutions.) That makes green OA a poor substitute for real, immediate open access.

The problem here is that such embargo periods have long been accepted as the norm, but that is only because a terrible blunder was made over two decades ago by the Research Councils UK (RCUK). In 2005, the RCUK stipulated that the work it funded would require open access publication. However, when the final version of the RCUK’s policy appeared in June 2006, it had a significant flaw, expressed in the following provision: ‘Full implementation of these requirements must be undertaken such that current copyright and licensing policies, for example embargo periods or provisions limiting the use of deposited content to non-commercial purposes, are respected by authors.’ As the leading open access scholar Peter Suber wrote at the time, this was a completely unnecessary concession:

Researchers sign funding contracts with the research councils long before they sign copyright transfer agreements with publishers. Funders have a right to dictate terms, such as mandated open access, precisely because they are upstream from publishers. If one condition of the funding contract is that the grantee will deposit the peer-reviewed version of any resulting publication in an open-access repository [immediately], then publishers have no right to intervene.

At the root of the issue of embargoes lies copyright. If researchers retained full control of the copyright of their articles, rather than assigning it to publishers, they could prevent any embargoes being applied to them.

Cancer Research UK’s decision is regrettable but understandable. The fear has to be that others will follow suit. While the hybrid model is not universal, it is widespread enough to undermine the open access idea. Until researchers refuse to publish in such hybrid titles, publishers will continue to profit from them. Given the unnecessary embargoes imposed on articles released under green open access, that leaves alternatives such as diamond open access, where there are no charges for anyone, an approach that has long been espoused on this blog.

Follow me @glynmoody on Mastodon and on Bluesky. Originally posted to Walled Culture.

Appeals Court Dumps California Law That Would Have Banned Federal Officers From Wearing Masks [Techdirt]

Raids and arrests around the nation by federal immigration officers all feature the same thing: a bunch of people in masks shoving people into unmarked vehicles. What’s happening under Trump during his second term doesn’t feel like America. And it certainly doesn’t look like America. Instead, it looks like the actions of paramilitary jump-out squads, roaming US streets looking for people to “disappear.”

DHS and ICE officials have repeatedly tried to justify this level of person-by-person obfuscation as being essential to the safety of federal officers. But we all know what this is really about: protecting these officers from the consequences of their own actions. If safety was so paramount, the ICE officers sent to airports to… well, mainly just stand around… would have been wearing masks. But they weren’t. So the context (like detaining children or straight up murdering people on the streets) matters.

California’s legislature passed a law banning federal officers from wearing masks while carrying out their mass deportation efforts in the state. Governor Gavin Newsom signed it, triggering an immediate round of apoplectic responses from federal officials.

The law, however, didn’t last long.

A federal judge blocked the mask ban in February, ruling that it discriminated against the federal government because it did not apply to state troopers. The law made exceptions for undercover agents, protective equipment like N95 respirators or tactical gear, and other situations where not wearing a mask would jeopardize the operation. That judge let the ID law stand.

The state of California appealed this decision. Unfortunately for Californians and government accountability in general, the Ninth Circuit Appeals Court has upheld the lower court’s ruling.

We conclude that § 10 of the No Vigilantes Act attempts to directly regulate the United States in its performance of governmental functions. The Supremacy Clause forbids the State from enforcing such legislation.

While the lower court did suggest the California law might find its way around the Supremacy Clause issue by rewriting it to cover all law enforcement officers, not just federal officers, the Appeals Court wasn’t nearly as receptive to this argument. The legislature already has a bill prepped to do exactly this, but it seems unlikely to survive a federal court review following this ruling.

The district court asked the wrong question. By looking to the degree § 10 interfered with the activities of the United States, the district court applied a standard pertaining to States’ regulation of federal contractors and third-party employers, not the standard applicable to direct regulation of governmental activities of the United States.

[…]

The district court also misunderstood Clifton v. Cox, 549 F.2d 722 (9th Cir. 1977). There, in concluding that California could not criminally prosecute a federal officer despite allegations that he “exceeded his express authority” under federal law, we asked “whether the [officer’s] conduct was necessary and proper under the circumstances.” That standard is inapplicable here because § 10 of the No Vigilantes Act directly regulates inherently governmental conduct of federal officers carrying out their duties under federal authority.

Finally — and perhaps most distressingly — the Ninth Circuit completely sidesteps the public safety concerns that were the basis for this bill. The concerns weren’t theoretical. They were echoed by Trump’s own FBI, which issued a memo to law enforcement informing them that masked criminals posing as law enforcement officers had committed robberies, kidnappings, and sexual assaults.

None of that matters to the Ninth Circuit, which says it doesn’t even need to discuss the kind of public safety concern law enforcement generally uses to justify police misconduct or repeated rights violations.

California nonetheless contends that even if we determined that § 10 of the No Vigilantes Act likely violates the Supremacy Clause, we would still need to balance the equities. California specifically urges us to consider the public safety concerns which spurred the Act’s enactment. We decline to do so. Because the United States has shown a likelihood that the Act violates the Supremacy Clause, it has also shown that both the public interest and balance of the equities tip “decisively in . . . favor” of a preliminary injunction.

Oh, well. The masks stay on. And if it failed in this circuit, similar efforts are likely to fail in other appellate jurisdictions. The administration gets another “win” by arguing against the interests of the public it’s supposed to be serving.

05:00 AM

Photoshopping the package [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]

I bought a snack food the other day, and was disappointed to discover that the thing inside the container had little in common with the picture on the front. It was pallid, lifeless and drab.

The marketer who decided to improve the picture was making a choice, one with consequences. When you choose to disappoint a customer later so you can make a sale right now, you’ve also chosen to create disappointment for a living.

If you’re not proud of it, don’t serve it. Improving the image on the package shouldn’t be a substitute for making something people want to buy.

      

Daily Deal: The Complete Ethical Hacking Course [Techdirt]

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It Was Spelled In Seashells By The Seashore. The DOJ Now Pretends It’s A Felony. [Techdirt]

James Comey is not exactly someone we’ve ever been a fan of on Techdirt. He was a terrible FBI director in so many ways. We’ve spent years criticizing the man — for his crusade against encryption, his supporting the FBI’s ridiculously aggressive impersonation of reporters, his embrace of the FBI’s program to coerce and entrap people down on their luck into fake terrorist plots, and much more. And, while the impact has been exaggerated, it is true that he took multiple actions violating DOJ procedures that likely helped get Donald Trump elected in 2016. So it’s not like I’m rushing to support the guy. He’s a bad cop and has been for some time.

But the indictment the Department of Justice handed down against James Comey on Tuesday is a truly embarrassing legal document, and everyone involved in producing it should be professionally radioactive for the rest of their careers. I would have said it’s one of the most embarrassing legal documents that this DOJ has produced, but remember, just a day earlier they filed a legal brief that was indistinguishable from a Truth Social post.

The charge, in its entirety, concerns this Instagram post from May 2025:

If you can’t see that, it’s an Instagram post from Comey showing some shells on some sand with the shells spelling out 8647 and the caption on the post saying:

Cool shell formation on my beach walk

For this — for posting a photo of arranged seashells in a slightly sassy pattern and posting it to Instagram — Comey has been charged with two federal felonies: threatening the President under 18 U.S.C. § 871, and transmitting a threat in interstate commerce under 18 U.S.C. § 875(c). (For what it’s worth Comey has claimed he didn’t arrange the sea shells, but just found them. It’s unclear if that makes much of a difference, it’s protected speech either way).

Ken “Popehat” White, who has perhaps done more than any other lawyer in America to explain First Amendment doctrine to laypeople, didn’t mince words about what this is:

The charge is preposterous and no competent or honest prosecutor would bring it. It represents a betrayal of the professional and ethical obligations of every U.S. Department of Justice attorney involved, and reflects the complete collapse of the Department’s credibility and independence in favor of a cultish and cretinous devotion to Donald Trump.

He’s right, and the way to understand just how right he is requires understanding the path that brought us here.

Because this is the second time the Trump DOJ has tried to indict Comey. The first attempt collapsed in spectacular fashion last year, after Trump — in what was apparently supposed to be a private direct message but accidentally went out as a public Truth Social post — demanded that Pam Bondi install Lindsey Halligan, a former insurance lawyer with no relevant experience, as a U.S. Attorney specifically because she had promised to indict Comey. The problem: Halligan wasn’t legally appointed. The entire indictment got tossed before the court could dismiss it for being ridiculous (which would have happened) because the person who filed it wasn’t allowed to file it.

As we noted at the time, this pattern of procedural self-sabotage is a recurring feature of an administration that treats legal procedure as an inconvenience rather than the actual point of having a justice system.

So how did the DOJ respond to that humiliation? By coming back with something substantively even worse. In theory, they tried fixing the “wrong person filed it” problem by having an actually legally appointed person file something… even if that something has no legal basis whatsoever. Progress! Sort of?

The seashell indictment was filed by W. Ellis Boyle, the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, with Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew R. Petracca listed as the prosecuting attorney. Remember those names. They put their signatures on this. Boyle is listed as the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, but he’s serving in an acting capacity — Trump has nominated him multiple times, yet the Senate has still refused to confirm him.

The legal problem with the indictment is pretty easy to spot: to convict someone under either of the threat statutes the DOJ is invoking, the government has to prove the communication constituted a “true threat.” Under controlling Fourth Circuit precedent (this case is in North Carolina), a true threat is something “an ordinary, reasonable recipient who is familiar with the context in which the statement is made would interpret as a serious expression of an intent to do harm.”

As Ken White noted, the Supreme Court established this framework in Watts v. United States, a 1969 case involving an 18-year-old draft protester who said:

They always holler at us to get an education. And now I have already received my draft classification as 1-A and I have got to report for my physical this Monday coming. I am not going. If they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L. B. J.

The Court found this was protected political hyperbole, not a true threat. An explicit statement about wanting a President in your rifle sights — protected.

If Watts isn’t damning enough, there’s United States v. Bagdasarian, a much more recent Ninth Circuit case where a man posted online statements about wanting to shoot then-candidate Barack Obama, including some genuinely vile racially explicit language about hoping Obama would be killed. The court held that even that did not constitute a true threat under the relevant statutes.

I’d be curious to hear from anyone defending this indictment whether they think Bagdasarian was wrongly decided. Or do we change the “true threat” standard when the target is Trump?

So the descending ladder of seriousness looks like this:

  • Explicit racial language about wanting a President shot: protected
  • Telling a crowd you want LBJ in your rifle sights: protected
  • Posting a photo of seashells arranged on a beach to spell “86 47”: two federal felonies

Any first-year law student who’s taken a basic First Amendment course could tell you the seashell post is constitutionally protected. Any prosecutor with five minutes of research time would know that Bagdasarian and Watts exist. But, of course, as we’ve seen over and over and over again in the Trump era, the point is not to bring a good case or a winnable case. The point is just to punish Trump’s enemies with vexatious, vindictive prosecutions in hopes of creating a chilling effect among the populace and stopping them from criticizing the President with the thinnest skin possible.

Now, “86” has had various meanings over the years — to “86” something in restaurant slang means to remove it from the menu or get rid of it. The DOJ’s theory is apparently that when used about a person, it means to kill them. No one else believes that. This is the kind of motivated reading that requires ignoring both the dictionary and how actual humans use language.

But fine, let’s grant the absolute most uncharitable reading and say “86 47” means “get rid of the 47th President through killing.” Even granting that — even doing all the work for the prosecution — it’s still obviously protected political expression, and still obviously not a true threat under the controlling case law.

Which brings us to the part that genuinely cannot be explained by anything other than pure vindictiveness. Here is a tweet from Jack Posobiec, a prominent Trump loyalist/conspiracy theorist, posted in January 2022:

That tweet is still up. I just made that screenshot minutes ago. As of this writing, it has been online for nearly four years. No FBI investigation. No federal indictment. No felony counts. Literally no one thought that was an actual threat. Because it’s not. Apparently the DOJ’s theory of criminal threats has a loyalty-based expiration date — the same numerical expression is a felony when arranged in shells by a Trump critic and a perfectly fine tweet when posted by a Trump supporter about a different President.

Indeed, the fact that Posobiec seems to have no issue keeping this tweet up is itself a sign that the MAGA world knows it’s engaged in purely theatrical vindictive prosecution — and wants you to know they know. To them, once again, nothing here is about justice or the rule of law. It’s just “will this make the people I dislike upset.” That is their only motivating factor.

The DOJ has baked the selective prosecution argument directly into its own theory of the case. Comey’s lawyers will surely refresh the selective prosecution motion they filed in the first, dismissed indictment, and the facial absurdity of this one — combined with the existence of identical, ignored expression by Trump allies — makes that motion approximately as easy to support as such motions ever get.

There’s a specific kind of institutional rot in play here, driven entirely by Donald Trump and his minions. Competent authoritarianism is dangerous in obvious ways. Incompetent authoritarianism that keeps trying anyway is dangerous in different ways: it normalizes the use of state power for personal vengeance while demonstrating that the people wielding it will stop at nothing — even on the most facially ridiculous grounds. That’s a chilling effect doubled: a politicized DOJ, staffed by people who can’t pass a First Amendment quiz.

White is right that the indictment is unlikely to survive. Comey’s attorneys can challenge it on its face, arguing that even taking every allegation as true, seashells spelling “86 47” are protected by the First Amendment as a matter of law. The assigned judge was appointed by a Republican but is reportedly not a partisan hack, and the case law here is so clear that it would take extreme judicial bad faith to let this proceed. The selective prosecution motion is also stronger now than it was the first time, with Posobiec’s untouched tweet sitting there as Exhibit A.

But as White notes, surviving the motion to dismiss isn’t actually the point:

The point of the indictment is to demonstrate that the United States Department of Justice is wholly an instrument of Donald Trump’s senescent pique, no more independent of him than a boil on his ass. The point is to show that the administration can, and will, use the Department’s mechanisms to punish enemies. The point is to show that the Department can, and will, punish protected speech. The point is to show that the Department is staffed by committed fanatics willing to do anything, however unethical and unconstitutional, to promote Trump.

The point is to show that in the war between Donald Trump and the U.S. Department of Justice, Trump has won. Now they’re on the field slitting the throats of the wounded and looting bodies.

W. Ellis Boyle and Matthew R. Petracca put their names on this indictment. They will, presumably, lose this case the way the previous Comey case was lost — embarrassingly, on grounds that any competent attorney not engaged in cult-like performative fealty to a wannabe authoritarian could have anticipated. And when this is all over, when there is some accounting for what was done to the Department of Justice in these years, the people who signed the seashell indictment should never be trusted with prosecutorial power, a bar membership, or any position requiring professional judgment ever again.

The shells, for what it’s worth, were on a beach. The tide has presumably long since rearranged them. The Instagram post was taken down fairly quickly when the MAGA world lost their minds over it. The federal felony charges, somehow, remain.

Here We Go Again… [The Status Kuo]

Image courtesy of Glenn Kirschner

The Trump bus continues on its revenge tour, and two stories that broke yesterday show us where it is headed.

A federal grand jury in North Carolina indicted former FBI Director James Comey, for the second time. His crime? Sharing a picture of seashells spelling out “86 47.”

Also yesterday, the FCC ordered Disney’s television company ABC to file early license renewals for all eight of its owned-and-operated stations, a move widely understood as retaliation for a Jimmy Kimmel joke about Melania Trump.

Both moves are almost certainly losers in court. Yet both are happening anyway, because the point is to intimidate the regime’s enemies and frighten its critics. Let’s take a closer look at each, then discuss why, with Todd Blanche now acting attorney general, the attacks are coming faster and more furious.

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He shared seashells on the seashore

Last May, James Comey posted a photo to Instagram. It showed seashells on a beach arranged to spell out “86 47.” His caption: “Cool shell formation on my beach walk.” He said he spotted the shells during a walk near his North Carolina beach house and assumed they were a political message. He took the post down the same day, writing that he “didn’t realize some folks associate those numbers with violence.”

The Trump regime was an opening. The Secret Service hauled Comey in for an hours-long interview, an uncommon step for a non-specific threat. The cabinet pile-on was nearly immediate. Now former (yay!) Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem claimed that Comey had “just called for the assassination” of the president. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard called for Comey to be imprisoned.

Trump even appeared on Fox to assert that Comey “knew exactly what that meant. A child knows what that meant.”

No immediate charges followed. Instead, last September, Comey was charged in Virginia with lying to Congress and obstruction. His lawyers called it politically motivated revenge.

In November, a federal judge dismissed the case, not on the merits but because the prosecutor who brought it, Lindsey Halligan, a former personal lawyer for Trump, had been unlawfully appointed. Comey posted a video soon afterward:

“I know that Donald Trump will probably come after me again, and my attitude is going to be the same. I’m innocent. I am not afraid, and I believe in an independent federal judiciary — the gift from our founders that protects us from a would-be tyrant.”

This was prescient. On Tuesday, a federal grand jury in the Eastern District of North Carolina indicted Comey, this time directly over the seashells photo. The specific charges have not been made public, and Comey’s attorneys had no immediate comment.

FBI Director Kash Patel went before cameras to assert that this somehow was the culmination of months of investigations. And in the process he appears to have violated grand jury secrecy.

Apart from continuing FBI leadership incompetence, let’s be clear. The legal obstacles to convicting Comey on these facts are formidable. The Supreme Court held in Counterman v. Colorado (2023) that proving a “true threat” requires showing the defendant subjectively understood their words would be perceived as threatening, not merely that a reasonable person would find them so. The facts in that case were stark: Billy Counterman had sent hundreds of threatening Facebook messages to a named victim over several years. Even then, the Court reversed his conviction 7-2 because Colorado had applied only an objective standard.

The contrast with Comey could hardly be sharper. Comey photographed shells he found on a beach, captioned them neutrally, and deleted the post the same day he learned of the violent interpretation, publicly stating it had never occurred to him. Prosecutors would have to convince a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that Comey consciously disregarded the risk that a beach photo would be read as a presidential assassination threat. His contemporaneous disavowal is direct evidence against that theory.

As legal analyst and former federal prosecutor Naveed Rahmani explained to Newsweek, “Intent to harm is necessary and nothing in his post expresses any type of intent. It’s a loser case and a judge would probably toss it.”

There is also the uncomfortable matter of selective enforcement. Legal scholar Jessica Levinson noted that politicians, including Matt Gaetz, have used “86” in political contexts without triggering federal investigations. And with “86 47” now a common protest slogan adopted by millions of Americans during No Kings rallies, the implications of this prosecution and its impact on free speech extend well beyond Comey’s beach walk.

The Trumps are obsessed with Kimmel

On April 23, Jimmy Kimmel taped a mock White House Correspondents’ Dinner segment. In it, he quipped that Melania Trump had “a glow like an expectant widow.” (I laughed when I heard it. It was pretty funny.)

The joke, as later explained by Kimmel, turned on the fact that Trump is nearly 80 and Melania is younger than Kimmel.

Two days later, an armed man charged through a security perimeter at the Washington Hilton Correspondents’ Dinner. The suspect, Cole Allen, has been charged with attempting to assassinate Trump.

Trump moved immediately to link Kimmel’s joke to the shooting, calling it a “despicable call to violence” and demanding Disney and ABC fire Kimmel “immediately.” Melania Trump chimed in, calling Kimmel’s words “corrosive” and “intended to divide our country.” She called on ABC to “take a stand.”

White House Communications Director Steven Cheung called for Kimmel to be “shunned for the rest of his life.”

Disney aired Kimmel’s show Monday night, and he opened with a First Amendment tutorial: “Trump is allowed to say whatever he wants to say, as are you and as am I and as are all of us, because under the First Amendment we have as Americans the right to free speech.”

Then the FCC weighed in. On Tuesday afternoon, the commission, chaired by Trump sycophant Brendan Carr, ordered Disney’s ABC to file license renewals for all eight of its owned-and-operated stations by May 28. Those licenses were not due for renewal until 2028 at the earliest.

The FCC’s official rationale was an ongoing investigation into Disney’s “DEI” practices, and not, it insisted, the Kimmel controversy. Nobody bought it. Seth Stern of the Freedom of the Press Foundation said the FCC “is neither the journalism police nor the humor police. This is nothing but illegal jawboning intended to intimidate ABC into kissing the ring.” Stern noted that Carr had repeatedly said the FCC has no role policing late-night jokes, at least until Trump needed a favor. Anna Gomez, the FCC’s only Democratic commissioner, called the move “unprecedented, unlawful, and going nowhere.”

The legal battle isn’t likely to hobble ABC. Communications attorney Andrew Schwartzman noted that “the legal standard for denying a license renewal is almost insurmountable,” and that a hearing plus judicial review would take years, during which time the broadcaster would continue operating. Even a successful FCC action would not take ABC off the air.

This of course is not the first time this playbook has been run against Kimmel or his employer. Last September, amid an earlier pressure campaign over comments about the killing of Charlie Kirk, ABC suspended Kimmel’s show briefly, then brought it back less than a week later following a wave of public outcry and mass cancellations of Disney subscriptions by angry viewers.

“I love you, sir.”

These two stories—a seashell indictment and a broadcast license shakedown—may look like separate controversies, but they are iterations of the same strategy, playing out simultaneously across two different arms of the federal government.

The playbook is consistent: Find a pretextual legal or regulatory hook (“DEI” violations, a “true threat” statute), deploy it immediately after a political provocation, and count on the process itself to inflict pain even when the underlying case collapses.

Comey faces costly litigation over a beach photo. Disney faces a possible years-long regulatory proceeding because of a late-night monologue. Neither requires the regime to prevail in court to send a message; the investigation itself is the punishment. The chilling effect on every journalist, comedian, and executive watching is the point.

The administration has been running this playbook for months. It forced cancellation of regime critic Stephen Colbert’s show by leveraging its regulatory say over the Paramount/Skydance merger. The DOJ is prosecuting journalists Don Lemon and Georgia Fort under the FACE Act, a statute intended to protect abortion clinics. Their “crime”? Covering a church protest.

Trump sought $15 billion from the New York Times and $10 billion from the Wall Street Journal over unfavorable coverage (and that pesky birthday note to Jeffrey Epstein). He keeps losing in court, but that hasn’t prevented the next suit. A federal judge struck down Trump’s executive order defunding NPR and PBS, calling it “unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination.” While courts keep saying no dice, the administration keeps finding new ways to apply pressure.

The main difference now is Todd Blanche, who seems as intent on doing Trump’s bidding at the DOJ as Brendan Carr has been at the FCC.

Blanche is a man on a mission. On April 2, Trump fired Pam Bondi as attorney general. The reported reason was his frustration that, under her leadership, the Justice Department had failed to deliver successful prosecutions of his political enemies. The indictments of Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James were both thrown out in November after U.S. District Judge Cameron Currie ruled that the prosecutor who brought them, Lindsey Halligan, had been unlawfully appointed. The DOJ tried and failed to reindict James in Norfolk—and then tried again in Alexandria. The grand jury refused again.

In February, another grand jury rejected criminal charges against six Democratic lawmakers who had posted a video urging service members to defy illegal orders. Bondi’s Weaponization Working Group, tasked with building cases against Trump’s adversaries, had not produced a single report by the time she left office.

Blanche has now stepped in as acting AG. A former federal prosecutor, he later became Trump’s personal criminal defense attorney and sat beside Trump at his hush-money trial in New York. At his first press conference, when asked whether he wanted the job permanently, Blanche said: “I love working for President Trump. It’s the greatest honor of a lifetime.” Then he added, “If he chooses to nominate somebody else and asks me to go do something else, I will say, ‘Thank you very much. I love you, sir.’”

I’m sorry, but blech.

CNN reported that Trump told Blanche to treat the acting period as an audition. The job is “his to lose.”

And so Blanche has moved fast. Within his first weeks, he intensified the investigation into former CIA Director John Brennan, hiring Trump ally Joe diGenova to lead it. He opened investigations into former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson. He filed charges against the Southern Poverty Law Center. He oversaw an effort to vacate the convictions of Proud Boys and Oath Keepers involved in the January 6 attack. And on Tuesday, he indicted James Comey again, this time over a seashell photo.

The timing—three days after the WHCD shooting, with Kimmel simultaneously under FCC fire—is not accidental. The administration is pressing on every front at once.

Whether Blanche will succeed where Bondi failed is another question. As Bondi’s former chief of staff, Chad Mizelle, put it: “Part of the reason the weaponization work has been difficult is that you need people who are MAGA and who are really competent. Many career prosecutors are not interested in this kind of work. It’s a very small group of people.”

Pam Bondi failed to prosecute Trump’s foes successfully and lost her job as a result. Todd Blanche may soon also discover the high cost of failure.

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