Submission + - Fifteen Years Later, Citizens United Defined the 2024 Election (brennancenter.org)
Comment Re:Could he be retried for one of the hit attempts (Score 1) 339
Submission + - Anti-Trump Searches Appear Hidden on TikTok (ibtimes.com)
Silk Road Creator Ross Ulbricht Pardoned (bbc.com) 339
"The scum that worked to convict him were some of the same lunatics who were involved in the modern day weaponization of government against me," Trump said in his post online on Tuesday evening. "He was given two life sentences, plus 40 years. Ridiculous!" Ulbricht was found guilty of charges including conspiracy to commit drug trafficking, money laundering and computer hacking. During his trial, prosecutors said Ulbricht's website, hosted on the hidden "dark web", sold more than $200 million worth of drugs anonymously.
Submission + - Trump Pardons Silk Road Founder (nypost.com)
Submission + - Decentralized Social Media Is the Only Alternative to the Tech Oligarchy (404media.co)
The problem with decentralized social media platforms thus far is that their user base is minuscule compared to platforms like TikTok, Facebook, and Instagram, meaning the cultural and political influence has lagged behind them. You also cannot directly monetize an audience on Bluesky or Mastodon—which, to be clear, is a feature, not a bug—but also means that the value proposition for an influencer who makes money through the TikTok creator program or a small business that makes money selling chewing gum on TikTok shop or a clothes brand that has figured out how to arbitrage Instagram ads to sell flannel shirts is not exactly clear. I am not advocating for decentralized social media to implement ads and creator payment programs. I’m just saying that many TikTok influencers were directing their collective hundreds of millions of fans to follow them to Instagram or YouTube, not a decentralized alternative.
This doesn’t mean that the fediverse or that a decentralized Instagram or TikTok competitor that runs on the AT.Protocol is doomed. But there is a lot of work to do. There is development work that needs to be done (and is being done) to make decentralized protocols easier to join and use and more interoperable with each other. And there is a massive education and recruitment challenge required to get the masses to not just try out decentralized platforms but to earnestly use them. Bluesky’s growing user base and rise as a legitimately impressive platform that one can post to without feeling like it’s going into the void is a massive step forward, and proof that it is possible to build thriving alternative platforms. The fact that Meta recently blocked links to a decentralized Instagram alternative shows that big tech sees these platforms, potentially, as a real threat.
Submission + - TikTok is censoring anti-Trump content (newsweek.com)
A post on X, formerly Twitter, which has received 4.5 million views at the time of reporting, claims that "TikTok is now region locking Americans from looking up things like "fascism" and "Donald Trump rigged election"."
The post includes two screenshots of the TikTok app. The screenshot is of the search page, and in both the search term is "Donald Trump rigged election." The post states that: "On the left are results from a device in America, and on the right are results from one in the UK."
The post on the left shows a results page stating "No results found," while on the left it shows two videos of the President.
Another post from the account Dustin Genereux said that, "Censorship on TikTok is at an all time high with accounts being deleted, posts going back years being flagged, people losing access to the creator fund for saying anything Anti-Trump, MAGA, Elon, etc. But free speech and all that right?"
Great Barrier Reef Hit By Its Most Widespread Coral Bleaching, Study Finds (theguardian.com) 15
Only 92 coral colonies escaped bleaching entirely and by July, when the analysis for the study ended, 193 were dead and a further 113 were still showing signs of bleaching. Prof Maria Byrne, a marine biologist at the University of Sydney and lead author of the study, has been researching and visiting the island for 35 years.
Brendan Carr is Officially in Charge of the FCC (theverge.com) 71
Carr's priorities might also be gleaned from a document you might have already heard about: Project 2025. That's because he authored the FCC chapter of the Heritage Foundation's wishlist for a Donald Trump presidency. In that chapter, Carr proposes actions including: limiting immunity for tech companies under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, requiring disclosures about how platforms prioritize content, requiring tech companies to pay into a program that funds broadband access in rural areas, and more, quickly approving applications to launch satellites from companies like Elon Musk's Starlink.
Authors Seek Meta's Torrent Client Logs and Seeding Data In AI Piracy Probe (torrentfreak.com) 15
"By downloading through the bit torrent protocol, Meta knew it was facilitating further copyright infringement by acting as a distribution point for other users of pirated books," the amended complaint notes. "Put another way, by opting to use a bit torrent system to download LibGen's voluminous collection of pirated books, Meta 'seeded' pirated books to other users worldwide." Meta believed that the allegations weren't sufficiently new to warrant an update to the complaint. The company argued that it was already a well-known fact that it used books from these third-party sources, including LibGen. However, the authors maintained that the 'torrent' angle is novel and important enough to warrant an update. Last week, United States District Judge Vince Chhabria agreed, allowing the introduction of these new allegations. In addition to greenlighting the amended complaint, the Judge also allowed the authors to conduct further testimony on the "seeding" angle. "[E]vidence about seeding is relevant to the existing claim because it is potentially relevant to the plaintiffs' assertion of willful infringement or to Meta's fair use defense," Judge Chhabria wrote last week.
With the court recognizing the relevance of Meta's torrenting activity, the plaintiffs requested reconsideration of an earlier order, where discovery on BitTorrent-related matters was denied. Through a filing submitted last Wednesday, the plaintiffs hope to compel Meta to produce its BitTorrent logs and settings, including peer lists and seeding data. "The Order denied Plaintiffs' motion to compel production of torrenting data, including Meta's BitTorrent client, application logs, and peer lists. This data will evidence how much content Meta torrented from shadow libraries and how much it seeded to third parties as a host of this stolen IP," they write. While archiving lists of seeders is not a typical feature for a torrent client, the authors are requesting Meta to disclose any relevant data. In addition, they also want the court to reconsider its ruling regarding the crime-fraud exception. That's important, they suggest, as Meta's legal counsel was allegedly involved in matters related to torrenting. "Meta, with the involvement of in-house counsel, decided to obtain copyrighted works without permission from online databases of copyrighted works that 'we know to be pirated, such as LibGen," they write. The authors allege that this involved "seeding" files and that Meta attempted to "conceal its actions" by limiting the amount of data shared with the public. One Meta employee also asked for guidance, as "torrenting from a corporate laptop doesn't feel right."
Comment Re: quit giving Ryan air ideas (Score 1) 150
It's New Zealand you Muppet. We don't use pounds.
Comment Re:Download an app? (Score 1) 229
Great, so what if they had a flip phone, or no data connection was available? Or maybe the phone decides to throw up a smarmy "you can't install this app on this device" for whatever reason?
I don't get this opposition. You'd do something else, wouldn't you? Why would you consider always going to the lowest common denominator just because someone might have a flip phone?
It is truly dangerous to rely on an "app". This should only be used as an option for when all else fails, not something to solely rely on.
If the options are "rely on an app", "don't rely on an app", and you can't do the first because your phone can't do that for whatever reason, you fall back to the second. But if you can do the first in a particular case and it works better for that case, why wouldn't you? It's wrong to use the better solution as a last resort, it's better to use the best solution that is available to the situation.
Comment Re:UBI doesn't work... under our current system (Score 1) 1022
Comment Re:UBI doesn't work... under our current system (Score 1) 1022
Gold is great. It just has a few flaws:
- - Hard to divide below certain amounts. Impractical for micropayments when used directly.
- - Hard to transfer large amounts physically.
- - Hard to secure physically.
- - Supply isn't completely fixed or known due to the limitations of our knowledge of what's available, and potential future asteroid mining.
- - Gold isn't indestructible due to being physical (it's very robust and that's great, but not completely so).
When used indirectly to try to get around these problems, (e.g. gold backed dollars), new problems spring up due to the ridiculous level of trust required in the institutions who are "looking after" the gold:
- - They can lie about reserves and debase the value in secret. This is hard to measure or notice until it's far too late.
- - They can stop electronic transactions they deem as 'undesirable' ("use of money" == "communication of value" therefore "governmental restrictions on use of money" == "governmental intervention in free speech"; something I'm strongly against)
- - There are central points of failure with control over vast amounts of value which are juicy targets for malicious actors (in the modern age of digital use of money vastly outstripping physical, reserve holders for a gold-backed dollar would be the world's most attacked computer systems by a long long stretch).
So, what's needed is a purely non-physical asset with the same positive monetary properties as gold but without the above negative properties that make it impractical in the modern world without resorting to the different set of problems introduced when using proxies like gold backed dollars. That way, you don't need to have a currency "backed" by the asset, but can instead use it directly. For the Happylandians in my silly little story, that's Joycoin. For us here in the real world, it's Bitcoin.
Just for full disclosure of anyone else reading this: I screwed up the inflation maths in my original comment since I did it based on population growth instead of economic growth. It doesn't actually change the result though, just the exact numbers that are there.