Comment Colorado Bill Requires ID Checks embedded into OS (Score 1) 21
Colorado Senate Bill Would Require Apple and Google to Embed ID Checks into the Operating Systems
Colorado Senate Bill Would Require Apple and Google to Embed ID Checks into the Operating Systems
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/0...
Mississippi has gone from 49th in the country on national tests in 2013, to a top 10 state for fourth graders learning to read — even as test scores have fallen almost everywhere else.
https://x.com/bx_on_x/status/2...
Things like this may cost them big if they don't do age verification.
Chinese law, specifically Article 7 of the National Intelligence Law compels all citizens and organizations to act as covert arms of state security on demand, even if overseas. There is no saying no. There is no even admitting it’s happened. Chinese owned technology companies can deny this as much as they like, in fact they have to, but the law is clear.
A consumption tax would eliminate much of the IRS. Nine states already have no income tax, and they function fine.
Upsides
I have zero sympathy for H&R Block or TurboTax. They're products of a corrupt, bloated system.
Downsides and Fixes
A pure consumption tax is regressive—it hits lower-income people harder as a share of their earnings, since they spend most of what they make. (A pure income tax is regressive too without progressive brackets or exemptions.)
Income-tax regressivity is fixed by exempting the first ~$25,000 or so of income. A consumption tax can be fixed the same way: Send every U.S. citizen a monthly prebate (e.g., ~$200 per person, a rough estimate) to offset sales taxes paid on essentials up to the poverty line. This makes the effective tax progressive for low earners while keeping it simple.
The federal income tax needs to go. A well-designed consumption tax with a prebate would be simpler, less intrusive, and better for growth—without the current system's complexity or bias against saving and investment.
I wouldn't put it past some IOT devices to have it enabled.
Exactly. Palo Alto's 15 minutes of fame, but not quite the way they wanted it.
“It takes a lifetime to build a good reputation, but you can lose it in a minute.”
- Will Rogers
Expect this to be referenced for a long time like Sony's root-kit.
He ruined the life of an innocent person
He betrayed his countrymen for money
He compromised security for everyone
This may get people killed.
In every hierarchy the cream rises until it sours. -- Dr. Laurence J. Peter