The Sad Story of the Long-Promised 3 GHz Power Mac G5 512pixels.net

With just a few days to go until WWDC, Stephen Hackett chronicled the history of the mythical 3 GHz Power Mac G5, previewed at the conference over twenty years ago:

The heat generated by the G5 would become an issue later on, but first we need to talk about Steve Jobs broke a fundamental rule of Apple:

We don’t comment on future products.

The Power Mac G5 was before my time as a Mac user, but I remember the otherworldly impression it made on me. I am no Mac historian, but it still feels to me like it began a distinct era of flagship Macs that were both powerful and relatively accessible — the inflation-adjusted price of the best G5 spec, without build-to-order upgrades, is nearly $2,000 less than the base price of today’s Mac Pro.

Microsoft Redesigns Office Portal to Prioritize Copilot reddit.com

I, like millions of people, spend a good chunk of my Mondays through Fridays in Microsoft 365 (formerly Office) applications, many of which I partly or wholly access through a browser. For years, I could just type portal.office.com in my browser and get links to Word, Excel, Outlook — all the classics — plus some organization-specific applications.

Microsoft being Microsoft, it has decided to bury all that. We are in the artificial intelligence era now, baby. Instead of seeing the applications millions of people rely on, Microsoft has decided the default view should be a Copilot chat. The familiar suite of apps is in another page accessible from the sidebar; each app can, at least, be pinned to that same sidebar. This was barely announced and seems to have taken many by surprise.

But, hey, Copilot should at least make me more productive, right? It is Microsoft’s own service — albeit backed by OpenAI’s work — and integrated, in theory, with our organization’s applications and files. Maybe it could function as an application launcher. So I told Copilot to “launch Word”. Copilot:

I can’t directly launch Microsoft Word from here, but I can help you open it on your device. Here’s how you can do it:

On Windows:

  1. Press the Windows key on your keyboard or click the Start menu.

  2. Type “Word” in the search bar.

  3. Click on Microsoft Word from the search results.

On macOS:

  1. Open Finder or press Command + Space to open Spotlight Search.

  2. Type “Word” and press Enter when Microsoft Word appears.

Truly embarrassing stuff to interrupt users’ learned workflow for something worse because it is important for Microsoft to be seen as a cutting-edge innovator. It has made Copilot part of its branding — so much so that it will advertise Copilot even where it is not available, for “consistency”.

Texas Will Soon Be the Ninth State to Pass a Popular ‘Right to Repair’ Law techdirt.com

Richard Lawler, the Verge:

Texas moved closer to becoming the next state with a right to repair law on the books, as the state Senate unanimously voted 31 – 0 to finalize HB 2963 this weekend. It would require manufacturers to make spare parts, manuals, and necessary tools available for equipment sold or used in the country’s second most populated state.

Maddie Stone, Grist:

That [if Ohio’s bill becomes law] would mark an important political inflection point for the right-to-repair movement. While most of the states that have passed repair laws so far are Democratic strongholds, bills have been introduced in all 50 as of February. The adoption of a right-to-repair law in deep red Ohio — where Republicans control the state House, Senate, and the governor’s office, and Donald Trump won the last presidential election by more than 10 percentage points — would further underscore the broad, bipartisan popularity of being allowed to fix the stuff you own.

Karl Bode, TechDirt:

This is definite progress, and I hate to be a buzzkill, but it’s worth reiterating that of the 8 states that have passed right to repair reforms so far, not a single one has actually enforced them in any meaningful way. This despite no shortage of bad corporate actors working overtime to kill independent repair shops, make manuals and parts hard to find, use obnoxious DRM, or claim that repairing your own stuff violates warranty.

The problem with corporations insisting upon the safety and reliability that only comes from staying within their own ecosystem of parts and accessories is that they are frequently lying or, at least, exaggerating about the dangers. At least lawmakers across the political spectrum and around the world are beginning to call them on their tall tales.

Canadian Liberal Party Border Bill Also Includes Warrantless Access Provisions michaelgeist.ca

Michael Geist:

The government yesterday introduced the Strong Border Act (Bill C-2), legislation that was promoted as establishing new border measure provisions presumably designed to address U.S. concerns regarding the border. Yet buried toward the end of the bill are lawful access provisions that have nothing to do with the border. Those provisions, which raise the prospect of warrantless access to information about Internet subscribers, establish new global production orders of subscriber information, and envision new levels of access to data held by electronic service providers, mark the latest attempt in a longstanding campaign by Canadian law enforcement for lawful access legislation. Stymied by the Supreme Court of Canada (which has ruled that there is a reasonable expectation of privacy in subscriber data) and by repeated failures to present a compelling evidentiary case for warrantless access, law enforcement has instead tried to frame lawful access as essential to address everything from organized crime to cyber-bullying to (now) border safety. […]

As has become frustratingly typical for laws of this type, there are secrecy requirements and warrant workarounds based on urgency. But it is tucked into an unrelated bill that only exists because of provocations from our southern neighbour. This is a completely dishonest runaround to legislate long-desired capabilities.

Update: Jeremy Appel, the Orchard:

I have a Liberal campaign flyer pinned to my office wall, where I place election campaign literature I accumulate from various elections, which reads: Making life more affordable, protecting your rights and standing up to Trump.

This legislation doesn’t do any of these things, and in fact does the opposite of two of the three.

Profound weakness masquerading as strength and confidence.

The Who Cares Era dansinker.com

Dan Sinker:

Hanif Abdurraqib, in one of his excellent Instagram mini-essays the other week, wrote about the rise of content that’s designed to be consumed while doing something else. In Hanif’s case, he was writing about Time Machine, his incredible 90 minute deep dive into The Fugees’ seminal album The Score. Released in 2021, Hanif marveled at the budget, time, and effort that went into crafting the two-part 90 minute podcast and how, today, there’s no way it would have happened.

He’s right. Nobody’s funding that kind of work right now, because nobody cares.

(It’s worth pointing out that Hanif wrote this using Stories, a system that erased it 24 hours later. Another victim of the Who Cares Era.)

This does not seem like it is a brand new feeling. It is plausible that one could create a Paul Fairie-esque collection of similar complaints throughout history — of art created only for commerce’s sake; of shallow media intended for brief consumption instead of a lasting impression.

I think it is more useful to de-emphasize the “era” part of Sinker’s criticism, and to instead consider how carelessness creeps in. Sarah Wynn-Williams published “Careless People” earlier this year. I wrote in April about Perplexity’s carelessness of ethics and privacy. Perhaps both of these examples are better described as corrosion or corruption. What Sinker is describing is more like cultural and societal ennui.

Les Orchard:

The user isn’t the customer. And they’re not the product either. The real product is behavioral optimization — metrics on a dashboard. The paying customer is somewhere else entirely, and the “content” is just a means to nudge behavior and juice KPIs.

There have always been measures for success, but the ability to relentlessly optimize for them is a fairly new phenomenon. Plenty of films and plays are created by reverse-engineering the tropes favoured by award committees, but they still need to be good in order to draw an audience.

Update: A lack of care is, in part, downstream of other forces (previously linked).

How the V60 Became the Coffee Brewer of Choice for Many youtube.com

I am a daily user of a V60, so this new James Hoffmann video scratched an itch I did not know I had. Not to spoil it, but the V60 does not make a significant appearance until the last four minutes, but the journey is worth the wait.

The discussion of the mid-2000s specialty coffee movement in Canada brought back some memories, too. Vancouver was the most significant place in the country and perhaps one of a few places in the world where this attitude toward coffee was taking over, and Calgary luckily received some of the reflected glory. There are shots of menus from 2006 with by-the-cup brewing for two or three dollars, around the same time Phil & Sebastian was getting started here. There is a note at the bottom of one of the menus from Elysian advertising advance purchases of a forthcoming award-winning coffee at the then-devastating price of ten dollars per cup.

Turns out twenty years is a long time.

Meta and Yandex Apps on Android Have Been Tracking Users in Newly Creepy Ways localmess.github.io

Aniketh Girish, et al.:

We disclose a novel tracking method by Meta and Yandex potentially affecting billions of Android users. We found that native Android apps — including Facebook, Instagram, and several Yandex apps including Maps and Browser — silently listen on fixed local ports for tracking purposes.

Dan Goodin, Ars Technica:

The covert tracking — implemented in the Meta Pixel and Yandex Metrica trackers — allows Meta and Yandex to bypass core security and privacy protections provided by both the Android operating system and browsers that run on it. Android sandboxing, for instance, isolates processes to prevent them from interacting with the OS and any other app installed on the device, cutting off access to sensitive data or privileged system resources. Defenses such as state partitioning and storage partitioning, which are built into all major browsers, store site cookies and other data associated with a website in containers that are unique to every top-level website domain to ensure they’re off-limits for every other site.

The difference between targeted advertising and spyware is there is no difference.

After Girish, et al., disclosed this behaviour, Meta’s apps ceased tracking users with this method, and Goodin said Yandex will also stop. Meta is still under a consent decree struck in 2019 with a $5 billion penalty after violating a 2012 agreement. Executives at Meta do not care about privacy, rules, laws, or common sense. They will keep doing stuff like this. Ad tech is an indefensible industry run by megalomaniacs who would better serve society if they were made to live in a cave under an ice sheet, though I do not care which one.

A.I. Calvin and Hobbes Strip social.lol

This, from Adam Newbold, is a perfect encapsulation of a bunch of ethical problems related to artificial intelligence. The prompt:

Generate an image for a Calvin & Hobbes strip. Four panels. Calvin and Hobbes are walking through the woods, talking to each other, both holding smart phones and looking at them intently the entire time.

Panel 1: Calvin says to Hobbes, “This strip was made entirely with ChatGPT, which should be impossible given the strict intellectual property rights restrictions on Calvin & Hobbes content.”

Panel 2: Hobbes responds to Calvin, “Oh? Then how did it make it?”

Panel 3: Calvin responds to Hobbes, “Some guy just typed this into a box and clicked a button. That’s all it took.”

Panel 4: Hobbes responds to Calvin, “That’s so fucked up.”

This is entirely doable without generative artificial intelligence, but it requires far more skill. The ease of this duplication is maddening. I find this offensive in exactly the way Newbold intended it to be.

More important, I think, is the control exercised over the likenesses of Calvin and Hobbes by the strip’s creator Bill Watterson, as Newbold noted in the strip. Watterson famously rejected all but a handful of licensed merchandising ideas. But the mechanism for how he might protect this is the same as the one used by Disney when it fights parody and reinterpretation of its vast intellectual property, even though the motivations are different. Watterson’s protective quality is admirable, driven by artistic integrity to the extent he has left many millions of dollars’ worth of tchotchkes on the table to retain the spirit of the strips. Disney’s is entirely business motivated, evidenced by the tens of billions of dollars in licensed tchotchkes sold last year alone.

This is not the first “Calvin & Hobbes” strip made with generative A.I., nor does generative A.I. begin and end at self-referential prompts like these. Some assholes have created plugins — more-or-less — to badly emulate Watterson’s unique style in generative A.I. programs. It is awful.

I want to live in a world where we can differentiate between the necessary reinterpretation of intellectual property while respecting the wishes of artists. This is a tricky line, I know. It requires us — individually, but also the organizations responsible for generative A.I. stuff — to think about who is making such a request in good faith, and decide whether we are going to honour that.

One more thing: Watterson is a pretty private person, rarely giving interviews. But, right above this paragraph, I think we can get a sense of how he might feel about this.

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On Browsers, A.I., and the Web manuelmoreale.com

Manuel Moreale:

Now, while I’m here let me tackle a somewhat related issue I’ve been thinking about lately and that is the idea that AI is going to become the default layer between users and the web. We all yelled and screamed because the web has too many gatekeepers, we all lamented Google search results going to shit, and we all celebrated when new search engines were coming up. Why would I be happy trading a search result page filled with links — even if ranked in a flawed way — for a block of text that gives me an opinionated answer and maybe some links?

A fantastic question. One could easily ask the same about why we would trade the vast surveillance of online advertising for the universal surveillance gestured toward by Perplexity, too. It is all familiar, but more — in ways we might appreciate, and ways we loathe.

Why Take9 Will Not Improve Cybersecurity darkreading.com

Bruce Schneier and Arun Vishwanath, Dark Reading:

There’s a new cybersecurity awareness campaign: Take9. The idea is that people — you, me, everyone — should just pause for nine seconds and think more about the link they are planning to click on, the file they are planning to download, or whatever it is they are planning to share.

There’s a website — of course — and a video, well-produced and scary. But the campaign won’t do much to improve cybersecurity. The advice isn’t reasonable, it won’t make either individuals or nations appreciably safer, and it deflects blame from the real causes of our cyberspace insecurities.

We will always struggle to accurately identify malicious emails because that is the whole point of them. When criminals are able to scam those who are professionals in this field — people like a LastPass system engineer, Jim Browning, and Troy Hunt — it is clear we cannot expect an average user to be a so-called human firewall.

Artificial Intelligence Should Bear Responsibility for Its Costs drewdevault.com

Drew DeVault:

Now it’s LLMs. If you think these crawlers respect robots.txt then you are several assumptions of good faith removed from reality. These bots crawl everything they can find, robots.txt be damned, including expensive endpoints like git blame, every page of every git log, and every commit in every repo, and they do so using random User-Agents that overlap with end-users and come from tens of thousands of IP addresses – mostly residential, in unrelated subnets, each one making no more than one HTTP request over any time period we tried to measure – actively and maliciously adapting and blending in with end-user traffic and avoiding attempts to characterize their behavior or block their traffic.

As curious and fascinating as I find many applications of generative artificial intelligence, I find it difficult to square with the flagrantly unethical way it has been trained. Server admins have to endure and pay for massive amounts of traffic from well-funded corporations, without compensation, all of which treat robots.txt as something to be worked around. Add to that the kind of copyright infringement that would cost users thousands of dollars per file, and it is clear the whole system is morally bankrupt.

Do not get me wrong — existing intellectual property law is in desperate need of reform. Big, powerful corporations have screwed us all over by extending copyright terms. In Canada, the number of works in the public domain will be stagnant for the next eighteen years after we signed onto the Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement. But what artificial intelligence training is proposing is a worst-of-both-worlds situation, in which some big businesses get to retain a tight grip on artists’ works, and others get to assume anything remotely public is theirs to seize.

Sky Extends A.I. Automation to Your Entire Mac macstories.net

Federico Viticci, MacStories:

For the past two weeks, I’ve been able to use Sky, the new app from the people behind Shortcuts who left Apple two years ago. As soon as I saw a demo, I felt the same way I did about Editorial, Workflow, and Shortcuts: I knew Sky was going to fundamentally change how I think about my macOS workflow and the role of automation in my everyday tasks.

Only this time, because of AI and LLMs, Sky is more intuitive than all those apps and requires a different approach, as I will explain in this exclusive preview story ahead of a full review of the app later this year.

Matthew Cassinelli has also been using an early version of Sky:

Sky bridges the gap between old-school scripting, modern automation, and new-age LLM technology, built with a deep love for working on the Mac as a platform.

This feels like the so-far-unfulfilled promise of Apple Intelligence — but more. The ways I want to automate iOS are limited. But the kinds of things I want help with on my Mac are boundless. Viticci shares the example of automatically sorting a disorganized folder in Finder, and that is absolutely something I want to do easier than I currently can. Yes, I could cobble together something with AppleScript or an Automator workflow, but it would be so much nicer if I could just tell my computer to do something in the most natural language I understand. This is fascinating.

Judge Dismisses 2021 Rumble Antitrust Suit Against Google on Statute of Limitations Grounds reuters.com

Mike Scarcella, Reuters:

Alphabet’s Google has persuaded a federal judge in California to reject a lawsuit from video platform Rumble accusing the technology giant of illegally monopolizing the online video-sharing market.

In a ruling on Wednesday, U.S. District Judge Haywood Gilliam Jr said Rumble’s 2021 lawsuit seeking more than $2 billion in damages was untimely filed outside the four-year statute of limitations for antitrust claims.

Rumble is dishonest and irritating, but I thought its case in which it argued Google engages in self-preferencing could be interesting. It seems to rank YouTube videos more highly than those from other sources. This can be explained by YouTube’s overwhelming popularity — it consistently ranks in the top ten web services according to Cloudflare — yet I can see anyone’s discomfort in taking Google’s word for it, since it has misrepresented its ranking criteria.

This is an unsatisfying outcome, but it seems Rumble has another suit it is still litigating.

The CIA’s 2010s Covert Communication Websites ourbigbook.com

Ciro Santilli:

This article is about covert agent communication channel websites used by the CIA in many countries from the late 2000s until the early 2010s, when they were uncovered by counter intelligence of the targeted countries circa 2010-2013.

This is a pretty clever scheme in theory, but seems to have been pretty sloppy in practice. That is, many of the sites seem to share enough elements allowing an enterprising person to link the seemingly unrelated sites — even, as it turns out, years later and after they have been pulled offline. That apparently resulted in the deaths of, according to Foreign Policy, dozens of people.

Apple Gets Its Annual Fraud Prevention Headlines apple.com

Apple issued a news release today touting the safety of the App Store, dutifully covered without context by outlets like 9to5Mac, AppleInsider, and MacRumors. This has become an annual tradition in trying to convince people — specifically, developers and regulators — of the wisdom of allowing native software to be distributed for iOS only through the App Store. Apple published similar stats in 2021, 2022, 2023, and 2024, reflecting the company’s efforts in each preceding year. Each contains similar figures; for example:

  • In its new report, Apple says it “terminated more than 146,000 developer accounts over fraud concerns” in 2024, an increase from 118,000 in 2023, which itself was a decrease from 428,000 in 2022. Apple said the decrease between 2022 and 2023 was “thanks to continued improvements to prevent the creation of potentially fraudulent accounts in the first place”. Does the increase in 2024 reflect poorer initial anti-fraud controls, or an increase in fraud attempts? Is it possible to know either way?

  • Apple says it deactivated “nearly 129 million customer accounts” in 2024, a significant decrease from deactivating 374 million the year prior. However, it blocked 711 million account creations in 2024, which is several times greater than the 153 million blocked in the year before. Compare to 2022, when it disabled 282 million accounts and prevented the creation of 198 million potentially fraudulent accounts. In 2021, the same numbers were 170 million and 118 million; in 2020, 244 million and 424 million. These numbers are all over the place.

  • A new statistic Apple is publishing this year is “illicit app distribution”. It says that, in the past month, it “stopped nearly 4.6 million attempts to install or launch apps distributed illicitly outside the App Store or approved third-party marketplaces”. These are not necessarily fraudulent, pirated, or otherwise untoward apps. This statistic is basically a reflection of the control maintained by Apple over iOS regardless of user intentions.

There are plenty of numbers just like these in Apple’s press release. They all look impressive in large part because just about any statistic would be at Apple’s scale. Apple is also undeniably using the App Store to act as a fraud reduction filter, with mixed results. I do not expect a 100% success rate, but I still do not know how much can be gleaned from context-free numbers.

Lawyers Keep Failing Clients By Relying on A.I. theguardian.com

Nicholas Chrastil, the Guardian:

State officials have praised Butler Snow for its experience in defending prison cases – and specifically William Lunsford, head of the constitutional and civil rights litigation practice group at the firm. But now the firm is facing sanctions by the federal judge overseeing Johnson’s case after an attorney at the firm, working with Lunsford, cited cases generated by artificial intelligence – which turned out not to exist.

It is one of a growing number of instances in which attorneys around the country have faced consequences for including false, AI-generated information in official legal filings. A database attempting to track the prevalence of the cases has identified 106 instances around the globe in which courts have found “AI hallucinations” in court documents.

The database is now up to 120 cases, including some fairly high-profile ones like that against Timothy Burke.

Here is a little behind-the-scenes from this weekend’s piece about “nimble fingers” and Apple’s supply chain. The claim, as framed by Tripp Mickle, in the New York Times, is that “[y]oung Chinese women have small fingers, and that has made them a valuable contributor to iPhone production because they are more nimble at installing screws and other miniature parts”. This sounded suspicious to me because I thought about it for five seconds. There are other countries where small objects are carefully assembled by hand, for example, and attributing a characteristic like “small fingers” to hundreds of millions of “young Chinese women” seems reductive, to put it mildly. But this assumption had to come from somewhere, especially since Patrick McGee also mentioned it.

So I used both DuckDuckGo and Google to search for relevant keywords within a date range of the last fifteen years and excluding the past month or so. I could not quickly find anything of relevance; both thought I was looking for smartphones for use with small hands. So I thought this might be a good time to try ChatGPT. It immediately returned a quote from a 2014 report from an international labour organization, but did not tell me the title of the report or give me a link. I asked it for the title. ChatGPT responded it was actually a 2012 report that mentioned “nimble fingers” of young women being valuable, and gave me the title. But when I found copies of the report, there was no such quote or anything remotely relevant. I did, however, get the phrase “nimble fingers”, which sent me down the correct search path to finding articles documenting this longstanding prejudice.

Whether because of time crunch or laziness, it baffles me how law firms charging as much as they do have repeatedly failed to verify the claims generated by artificial intelligence tools.

‘Nimble Fingers’ Racism and iPhone Manufacturing

Tripp Mickle, of the New York Times, wrote another one of those articles exploring the feasibility of iPhone manufacturing in the United States. There is basically nothing new here; the only reason it seems to have been published is because the U.S. president farted out yet another tariff idea, this time one targeted specifically at the iPhone at a rate of 25%.1

Anyway, there is one thing in this article — bizarrely arranged in a question-and-answer format — that is notable:

What does China offer that the United States doesn’t?

Small hands, a massive, seasonal work force and millions of engineers.

Young Chinese women have small fingers, and that has made them a valuable contributor to iPhone production because they are more nimble at installing screws and other miniature parts in the small device, supply chain experts said. In a recent analysis the company did to explore the feasibility of moving production to the United States, the company determined that it couldn’t find people with those skills in the United States, said two people familiar with the analysis who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

I will get to the racial component of this in a moment, but this answer has no internal logic. There are two sentences in that larger paragraph. The second posits that people in the U.S. do not have the “skills” needed to carefully assemble iPhones, but the skills as defined in the first sentence are small fingers — which is not a skill. I need someone from the Times to please explain to me how someone can be trained to shrink their fingers.

Anyway, this is racist trash. In response to a question from Julia Carrie Wong of the Guardian, Times communications director Charlie Stadtlander disputed the story was furthering “racial or genetic generalizations”, and linked to a podcast segment clipped by Mickle. In it, Patrick McGee, author of “Apple in China”, says:

The tasks that are often being done to make iPhones require little fingers. So the fact that it’s young Chinese women with little fingers — that actually matters. Like, Apple engineers will talk about this.

The podcast in question is, unsurprisingly, Bari Weiss’; McGee did not mention any of this when he appeared on, for example, the Daily Show.

Maybe some Apple engineers actually believe this, and maybe some supply chain experts do, too. But it is a longstanding sexist stereotype. (Thanks to Kat for the Feminist Review link.) It is ridiculous to see this published in a paper of record as though it is just one fact among many, instead of something which ought to be debunked.

The Times has previously reported why iPhones cannot really be made in the U.S. in any significant quantity. It has nothing to do with finger size, and everything to do with a supply chain the company has helped build for decades, as McGee talks about extensively in that Daily Show interview and, presumably, writes about in his book. (I do not yet have a copy.) Wages play a role, but it is the sheer concentration of manufacturing capability that explains why iPhones are made in China, and why it has been so difficult for Apple to extricate itself from the country.


  1. About which the funniest comment comes from Anuj Ahooja on Threads. ↥︎

Dara Khosrowshahi Knows Uber Is Just Reinventing the Bus theverge.com

Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi was on the Verge’s “Decoder” podcast with Nilay Patel, and was asked about Route Share:

I read this press release announcing Route Share, and I had this very mid-2010s reaction, which was what if Uber just invented a bus. Did you just invent a bus?

I think to some extent it’s inspired by the bus. If you step back a little bit, a part of us looking to expand and grow is about making Uber more affordable to more people. I think one of the things that makes tech companies different from most companies out there is that our goal is to lower prices. If we lower the price, then we can extend the audience.

There is more to Khosrowshahi’s answer, but I am going to interject with three objections. First, the idea that Route Share is “inspired” “to some extent” by a bus is patently ridiculous — it is a vehicle with multiple passengers who embark and disembark at fixed points along a fixed route. It is a bus. A bad one, but a bus.

Second, tech companies are not the only kinds of companies that want to lower prices. Basically every consumer business is routinely marketed on lowering prices and saving customers money. This is the whole entire concept of big box stores like Costco and Walmart. Whether they are actually saving people money is a whole different point.

Which brings me to my third objection, which is that Uber has been raising prices, not reducing them. In the past year, according to a Gridwise report, Uber’s fares increased by 7.2% in the United States, even though driver pay fell 3.4%. Uber has been steadily increasing its average fare since 2018, probably to set the groundwork for its 2019 initial public offering.

Patel does not raise any similar objections.

Anyway, back to Khosrowshahi:

There are two ways of lowering price as it relates to Route Share. One is you get more than one person to share a car because cars cost money, drivers’ time costs money, etc., or you reduce the size or price of the vehicle. And we’re doing that actively. For example, with two-wheelers and three-wheelers in a lot of countries. We’ve been going after this shared concept, which is a bus, for many, many years. We started with UberX Share, for example, which is on-demand sharing.

But this concept takes it to the next level. If you schedule and create consistency among routes, then I think we can up the matching quotient, so to speak, and then essentially pass the savings on to the consumer. So, call it a next-gen bus, but the goal is just to reduce prices to the consumer and then help with congestion and the environment. That’s all good as well.

Given the premise of “you get more than one person to share a car because cars cost money”, you might think Khosrowshahi would discuss the advantageous economics of increasing vehicle capacity. Instead, he cleverly pivots to smaller vehicles, despite Khosrowshahi and Patel discussing earlier how often their Uber ride occurs in a Toyota Highlander — a “mid-size” but still large SUV. This is an obviously inefficient way of moving one driver and one passenger around a city.

We just need better public transit. We should have an adequate supply of taxis, yes, but it is vastly better for everyone if we improve our existing infrastructure of trains and buses. Part of the magic of living in a city is the viability of shared public services like these.

An Elixir of Production, Not of Craft brilliantcrank.com

Greg Storey begins this piece with a well-known quote from Plato’s “Phaedrus”, in which the invention of writing is decried as “an elixir not of memory, but of reminding”. Storey compares this to a criticism of large language models, and writes:

Even though Plato thought writing might kill memory, he still wrote it down.

But this was not Plato’s thought — it was the opinion of Socrates expressed through Thamus. Socrates was too dismissive of the written word for a reason he believed worthwhile — that memory alone is a sufficient marker of intelligence and wisdom.

If anything, I think Storey’s error in attribution actually reinforces the lesson we can draw from it. If we relied on the pessimism of Socrates, we might not know what he said today; after all, human memory is faulty. Because Plato bothered to write it down, we can learn from it. But the ability to interpret it remains ours.

What struck me most about this article, though, is this part:

The real threat to creativity isn’t a language model. It’s a workplace that rewards speed over depth, scale over care, automation over meaning. If we’re going to talk about what robs people of agency, let’s start there. […]

Thanks to new technologies — from writing to large language models, from bicycles to jets — we are able to dramatically increase the volume of work done in our waking hours and that, in turn, increases the pressure to produce even more. The economic term for this is “productivity”, which I have always disliked. It distills everything down to the ratio of input effort compared to output value. In its most raw terms, it rewards the simplistic view of what a workplace ought to be, as Storey expresses well.

Reflecting on Tom Cruise’s Stunt Work nytimes.com

Ryan Francis Bradley, New York Times Magazine:

Only — what if we did know exactly how he did the thing, and why? Before the previous installment of the franchise, “Dead Reckoning,” Paramount released a nine-minute featurette titled “The Biggest Stunt in Cinema History.” It was a behind-the-scenes look at that midair-motorbike moment, tracking how Cruise and his crew pulled it off. We saw a huge ramp running off the edge of a Norwegian fjord. We heard about Cruise doing endless motocross jumps as preparation (13,000 of them, the featurette claims) and skydiving repeatedly (more than 500 dives). We saw him touching down from a jump, his parachute still airborne above him, and giving the director Christopher McQuarrie a dap and a casual “Hey, McQ.” We heard a chorus of stunt trainers telling us how fantastic Cruise is (“an amazing individual,” his base-jumping coach says). And we hear from Cruise himself, asking his driving question: “How can we involve the audience?”

The featurette was an excellent bit of Tom Cruise propaganda and a compelling look at his dedication to (or obsession with) his own mythology (or pathology). But for the movie itself, the advance release of this featurette was completely undermining. When the jump scene finally arrived, it was impossible to ignore what you already knew about it. […]

Not only was the stunt compromised by the featurette, the way it was shot and edited did not help matters. Something about it does not look quite right — maybe it is the perpetual late afternoon light — and the whole sequence feels unbelievable. That is, I know Cruise is the one performing the stunt, but if I found out each shot contained a computer-generated replacement for Cruise, it would not surprise me.

I am as excited for this instalment as anyone. I hope it looks as good as a $300 million blockbuster should. But the way this franchise has been shot since “Fallout” has been a sore spot for me and, with the same director, cinematographer, and editor as “Dead Reckoning”, I cannot imagine why it would be much different.

Update: Of course, the practical stunts are only part of the story.

Tim Cook Called Texas Governor to Stop App Store Age Checking Legislation wsj.com

Rolfe Winkler, Amrith Ramkumar, and Meghan Bobrowsky, Wall Street Journal:

Apple stepped up efforts in recent weeks to fight Texas legislation that would require the iPhone-maker to verify ages of device users, even drafting Chief Executive Tim Cook into the fight.

The CEO called Texas Gov. Greg Abbott last week to ask for changes to the legislation or, failing that, for a veto, according to people familiar with the call. These people said that the conversation was cordial and that it made clear the extent of Apple’s interest in stopping the bill.

Abbott has yet to say whether he will sign it, though it passed the Texas legislature with veto-proof majorities.

This comes just a few months after Apple announced it would be introducing age range APIs in iOS later this year. Earlier this month, U.S. lawmakers announced federal bills with the same intent. This is clearly the direction things are going. Is there something specific in Texas’ bill that makes it particularly objectionable? Or is it simply the case Apple and Google would prefer a single federal law instead of individual state laws?

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U.S. Spy Agencies Get One-Stop Shop to Buy Personal Data theintercept.com

Remember how, in 2023, the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence published a report acknowledging mass stockpiling of third-party data it had purchased? It turns out there is so much private information about people it is creating a big headache for the intelligence agencies — not because of any laws or ethical qualms, but simply because of the sheer volume.

Sam Biddle, the Intercept:

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence is working on a system to centralize and “streamline” the use of commercially available information, or CAI, like location data derived from mobile ads, by American spy agencies, according to contract documents reviewed by The Intercept. The data portal will include information deemed by the ODNI as highly sensitive, that which can be “misused to cause substantial harm, embarrassment, and inconvenience to U.S. persons.” The documents state spy agencies will use the web portal not just to search through reams of private data, but also run them through artificial intelligence tools for further analysis.

Apparently, the plan is to feed all this data purchased from brokers and digital advertising companies into artificial intelligence systems. The DNI says it has rules about purchasing and using this data, so there is nothing to worry about.

By the way, the DNI’s Freedom of Information Act page was recently updated to remove links to released records and FOIA logs. They were live on May 5 but, as of May 16, those pages have been removed, and direct links no longer resolve either. Strange.

Update: The ODNI told me its “website is currently under construction”.

Speculating About the Hardware Ambitions of OpenAI 512pixels.net

Berber Jin, Wall Street Journal:

Altman and Ive offered a few hints at the secret project they have been working on [at a staff meeting]. The product will be capable of being fully aware of a user’s surroundings and life, will be unobtrusive, able to rest in one’s pocket or on one’s desk, and will be a third core device a person would put on a desk after a MacBook Pro and an iPhone.

Ambitious, albeit marginally less hubristic than considering it a replacement for either of those two device categories.

Stephen Hackett:

If OpenAI’s future product is meant to work with the iPhone and Android phones, then the company is opening a whole other set of worms, from the integration itself to the fact that most people will still prefer to simply pull their phone out of their pockets for basically any task.

I am reminded of an April 2024 article by Jason Snell at Six Colors:

The problem is that I’m dismissing the Ai Pin and looking forward to the Apple Watch specifically because of the control Apple has over its platforms. Yes, the company’s entire business model is based on tightly integrating its hardware and software, and it allows devices like the Apple Watch to exist. But that focus on tight integration comes at a cost (to everyone but Apple, anyway): Nobody else can have the access Apple has.

A problem OpenAI could have with this device is the same as was faced by Humane, which is that Apple treats third-party hardware and software as second-class citizens in its post-P.C. ecosystem. OpenAI is laying the groundwork for better individual context. But this is a significant limitation, and it is one I am curious to see how it is overcome.

Whatever this thing is, it is undeniably interesting to me. OpenAI has become a household name on a foundation of an academic-sounding product that has changed the world. Jony Ive has been the name attached to entire eras of design. There is plenty to criticize about both. Yet the combination of these things is surely intriguing, inviting the kind of speculation that used to be commonplace in tech before it all became rote. I have little faith our world will become meaningfully better with another gadget in it. Yet I hope the result is captivating, at least, because we could use some of that.

GeoGuessr Community Maps Go Dark in Protest of EWC Ties to Human Rights Abuses engadget.com

Jessica Conditt, Engadget:

A group of GeoGuessr map creators have pulled their contributions from the game to protest its participation in the Esports World Cup 2025, calling the tournament “a sportswashing tool used by the government of Saudi Arabia to distract from and conceal its horrific human rights record.” The protestors say the blackout will hold until the game’s publisher, GeoGuessr AB, cancels its planned Last Chance Wildcard tournament at the EWC in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, from July 21 to 27.

Those participating in this blackout created some of the most popular and notable maps in the game. Good for them.

Update: GeoGuessr says it is withdrawing from the EWC.

The Carbon Footprint Sham mashable.com

Thinking about the energy “footprint” of artificial intelligence products makes it a good time to re-link to Mark Kaufman’s excellent 2020 Mashable article in which he explores the idea of a carbon footprint:

The genius of the “carbon footprint” is that it gives us something to ostensibly do about the climate problem. No ordinary person can slash 1 billion tons of carbon dioxide emissions. But we can toss a plastic bottle into a recycling bin, carpool to work, or eat fewer cheeseburgers. “Psychologically we’re not built for big global transformations,” said John Cook, a cognitive scientist at the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University. “It’s hard to wrap our head around it.”

Ogilvy & Mather, the marketers hired by British Petroleum, wove the overwhelming challenges inherent in transforming the dominant global energy system with manipulative tactics that made something intangible (carbon dioxide and methane — both potent greenhouse gases — are invisible), tangible. A footprint. Your footprint.

The framing of most of the A.I. articles I have seen thankfully shies away from ascribing individual blame; instead, they point to systemic flaws. This is preferable, but it still does little at the scale of electricity generation worldwide.

The Energy Footprint of A.I. technologyreview.com

Casey Crownhart, MIT Technology Review:

Today, new analysis by MIT Technology Review provides an unprecedented and comprehensive look at how much energy the AI industry uses — down to a single query — to trace where its carbon footprint stands now, and where it’s headed, as AI barrels towards billions of daily users.

We spoke to two dozen experts measuring AI’s energy demands, evaluated different AI models and prompts, pored over hundreds of pages of projections and reports, and questioned top AI model makers about their plans. Ultimately, we found that the common understanding of AI’s energy consumption is full of holes.

This robust story comes on the heels of a series of other discussions about how much energy is used by A.I. products and services. Last month, for example, Andy Masley published a comparison of using ChatGPT against other common activities. The Economist ran another, and similar articles have been published before. As far as I can tell, they all come down to the same general conclusion: training A.I. models is energy-intensive, using A.I. products is not, lots of things we do online and offline have a greater impact on the environment, and the current energy use of A.I. is the lowest it will be from now on.

There are lots of good reasons to critique artificial intelligence. I am not sure its environmental impact is a particularly strong one; I think the true energy footprint of tech companies, of which A.I. is one part, is more relevant. Even more pressing, however, is our need to electrify our world as much as we can, and that will require a better and cleaner grid.

Jony Ive’s ‘io’ Acquired by OpenAI; Ive to Remain as Designer openai.com

Last month, the Information reported OpenAI was considering buying io Products — unfortunate capitalization theirs — for around $500 million. The company, founded by Jony Ive and employing several ex-Apple designers and engineers, was already known to be working with OpenAI, but it was still an external entity. Now, it is not, to the tune of over $6 billion in equity.

OpenAI today published a press release and video — set in LoveFrom’s distinctive proprietary serif face — featuring Ive and Sam Altman in conversation. There is barely a hint of what they are working on but, whether because of honesty or just clever packaging, it comes across as an earnest attempt to think about the new technologies OpenAI has successfully brought to the world as part of our broader cultural fabric. Of course, it will be expressed in something that can be assembled in a factory and sold for money, so let us not get too teary-eyed. We have heard a similar tune before.

The video promises revealing something “next year”.

Two Major Newspapers Published an A.I.-Generated Guide to Summer Books That Do Not Exist defector.com

Albert Burneko, Defector:

Over this past weekend, the Chicago Sun-Times and Philadelphia Inquirer’s weekend editions included identical huge “Best of Summer” inserts; in the Inquirer’s digital edition the insert runs 54 pages, while the entire rest of the paper occupies 36. Before long, readers began noticing something strange about the “Summer reading list for 2025” section of the insert. Namely, that while the list includes some very well-known authors, most of the books listed in it do not exist.

This is the kind of fluffy insert long purchased by publishers to pad newspapers. In this case, it appears to be produced by Hearst Communications, which feels about right for something with Hearst’s name on it. I cannot imagine most publishers read these things very carefully; adding more work or responsibility is not the point of buying a guide like this.

What I found very funny today was watching the real-time reporting of this story in parallel with Google’s I/O presentation, at which it announced one artificial intelligence feature after another. On the one hand, A.I. features can help you buy event tickets or generate emails offering travel advice based on photos from trips you have taken. On the other, it is inventing books, experts, and diet advice.

The Future of British Television in a U.S. Streaming World bbc.com

Katie Razzall, BBC News:

When the increasingly expensive contracts to provide broadcast channels and digital terrestrial services like Freeview come to an end, the UK’s broadcasters are likely to pivot to offering digital-only video on demand. (However this won’t happen without a campaign to ensure older people are protected, as well as rural and low-income households who may not have high quality internet access.)

But if the aerials are turned off in 2035, is this the moment TV as we know it changes forever? If it becomes a battle between online-only British streamers and their better-funded US rivals, can the Brits survive? And, crucially, what will audiences be watching?

One of the things British television has in its favour is its established cultural relevance. The BBC has problems, but it matters to people. If a country values its domestic media — particularly public broadcasting — it should watch the future of British media closely and figure out what is worth emulating to stay relevant. The CBC is worth it, too.

At Trial, Tech Companies Skirt Legal Obligations wsj.com

Tim Higgins, Wall Street Journal:

Each company is accused of being overly aggressive in holding back internal documents under special legal standing — known as privilege — that should have, in fact, been turned over to the government or lawyers suing on behalf of Epic. The videogame company has been fighting separate multiyear battles against Apple and Google over its desire to load its app on smartphones outside the tech giants’ 30% commission.

Come for the story, stay for the photos of boxes on trolleys.

License Plate Reader Company Flock Is Building a Massive People Lookup Tool 404media.co

Joseph Cox, 404 Media:

Flock’s new product, called Nova, will supplement license plate data with a wealth of personal information sourced from other companies and the wider web, according to the material obtained by 404 Media. “You’re going to be able to access data and jump from LPR to person and understand what that context is, link to other people that are related to that person […] marriage or through gang affiliation, et cetera,” a Flock employee said during an internal company meeting, according to an audio recording. “There’s very powerful linking.” One Slack message said that Nova supports 20 different data sources that agencies can toggle on or off.

According to Cox’s reporting, this includes the usual smattering of creepy data brokers but, also, private data made public due to illegal breaches. One may consider that “open source” in much the same way as Meta benefitting from pirated books, which is to say that it is something for which a normal person would be criminally prosecuted, but is apparently fine for corporations. It may be unwise for the limits of our privacy to be governed by the greed of capitalism.

Update: The good news is that Flock has decided not to use leaked data. The bad news is this is apparently a decision the company can make instead of a law it needs to follow.

Apple Is Working to Permit Other Default Virtual Assistants on iOS, but Only in the E.U. macrumors.com

Over the weekend, Mark Gurman and Drake Bennett, of Bloomberg, published a lengthy examination of Apple’s fumbling history of artificial intelligence features. It is surprisingly warm to John Giannandrea, who is portrayed as someone who tried hard to build talent and resources at Apple, only to hit walls imposed by other senior leadership figures.

There is a fair bit of news about Siri and Apple Intelligence, which you would know if you read MacRumors because it built four separate articles from various pieces of it. I guess rewriting the whole thing as a single article would have been unethical. Anyway, I thought the one about changing the default virtual assistant was notable:

Apple is planning to give users in the EU the ability to set a default voice assistant other than Siri, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman and Drake Bennett.

[…]

Apple is working on this change in response to expanding EU regulations, the report said.

The way Joe Rossignol phrased this surprised me because I had assumed the DMA already covered default virtual assistant, but it seems that none were designated gatekeepers. I can imagine how difficult it will be for third-party services to act as a drop-in replacement for Siri, too.

Federico Viticci, of MacStories, writing last month about Perplexity’s Voice Assistant feature, a piece which I am chopping up here to make a point but you should read in full anyhow:

[…] Perplexity’s iOS voice assistant isn’t using any “secret” tricks or hidden APIs: they’re simply integrating with existing frameworks and APIs that any third-party iOS developer can already work with. […]

[…] Then there are all the integrations that are exclusive to Siri, which Perplexity can’t implement because Apple doesn’t offer related developer APIs. Only Siri can run shortcuts, set timers, call App Intents, send messages, create notes, open and change device settings, and more. […]

There is a long way to go from this to a full Siri replacement, but I will be hugely envious of those who will be able to take advantage of changing the default. The state of Siri was embarrassing ten years ago. The condition it is in today is a testament to the power of unchangeable defaults and a lack of competition within the iOS universe.

Make no mistake, however: Apple is barely about to “let” E.U. users switch from Siri to something else, as the MacRumors headline claims. It is doing so with the reasonable anticipation Siri’s in-universe monopoly will fall on the wrong side of regulations already established. Good.

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Uber to Introduce Bus techcrunch.com

Rebecca Bellan, TechCrunch:

Ride-hail and delivery giant Uber is introducing cheap, fixed-route rides along busy corridors during weekday commute hours in major U.S. cities — one solution to a world that feels, for most people, more expensive every day.

This is a bus. A worse, less efficient bus. And, with a half-priced discount compared to a standard Uber ride, a very expensive bus at that.

I suppose this is an obvious next step for the progenitor company for undermining existing infrastructure to the benefit of rich people. Uber is rolling this out in cities like Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco — and I think they may already have public transit. What would be better for everybody is if we just improved trains and buses for everyone. But that requires money in the public purse, and Uber dodges taxes despite benefitting from taxpayer-funded programs.

Conversion Rates of In-App Purchases Compared to Web Purchases on iOS revenuecat.com

Jacob Eiting, of RevenueCat:

Turns out, in-app purchases are good for conversion rates. In fact, at least 30% better. That’s one of the things we found while running the first large-scale, side-by-side test of in-app vs web purchases in history.

[…]

The initial conversion rate for variant B is between 27% and 30%, while the equivalent web flow in variant D is between 17% and 19%. This is a large decrease, a 25% to 45% relative drop between the two. Digging into the funnel, most of that drop occurs from the payment sheet through to purchase. That’s a lot of fall off.

This is limited data, but maybe one reason In-App Purchases convert better is because Apple says other means of purchasing must be kneecapped.

Sarah Perez, TechCrunch:

[…] Last week, the Patreon iOS app (version 125.5.0) added an option that let users pay via the web using a variety of payment methods, including credit cards, Venmo, PayPal, and even Apple Pay.

These options appeared within an in-app browser, providing a more seamless checkout experience for Patreon users. Now, Patreon’s checkout flow opens in an external browser instead — a change Patreon made based on Apple’s feedback.

Again, it is worth emphasizing this approach is just for digital goods purchases and remains U.S.-only. Apple has no problem with people entering their credit card details from within Amazon’s app, but apparently a browser sheet offers an experience too straightforward for users buying Patreon subscriptions.

Microsoft’s A.I. Executives Have Gross Ideas About the World bloomberg.com

Austin Carr and Dina Bass, in a largely defensive but, somehow, still pretty positive profile of Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in Bloomberg:

Working out of offices in London and Mountain View, California, Suleyman’s employees set about creating a version of Copilot designed for life away from the office. As they’d done at Inflection, they taught this Copilot empathy, humor and kindness. Do people want an emotional connection with the company that makes Excel? Suleyman thinks so. Or at least he believes it’ll be harder to switch to a competitor if the user sees Copilot as a friend or therapist.

For those in the camp seeing artificial intelligence technologies as one tool among many to be incorporated into larger products and services — and I count myself among them — the idea of a faux emotional companion as a standalone goal appears utterly ludicrous. I do not think we should view these tools in this way. They do not substitute for real-life friendships. And why would anyone trust something which can be so easily swayed by bad actors? Using an emotional connection as a product differentiator or a matter of lock-in seems entirely unethical.

Also:

Nadella points out that Microsoft was once less relevant in videoconferencing too. “Everybody would say, ‘Hey, Zoom, Zoom, Zoom,’” Nadella says. “We won that in the enterprise.” (A Zoom spokesperson declined to comment.)

It did so by illegally advantaging Teams, and what Nadella seems to be saying here is that it would again be happy to use its disproportionate power to push its version of other new technologies.

Apple’s ‘Private and Secure Payment System’ Warning Notice mjtsai.com

Viktor Maric:

first time seeing this. Apple will punish the apps with external payment system

Maric includes a screenshot of an App Store listing for Instacar, which features a exclamation mark-decorated banner at the top reading “This app does not support the App Store’s private and secure payment system. It uses external purchases.”

Via Michael Tsai:

It’s confusing to follow all the changes, but apparently — unlike in the US — external purchases in the EU don’t need to have corresponding IAP versions.

You have probably already seen this, but I am catching up on a week’s worth of news. And the thing about waiting a week to write about it is that it already generated substantial discussion, including a response from Apple.

Sarah Perez, TechCrunch:

However, the iPhone maker confirmed to TechCrunch that these user-disclosure screens have been live on the EU App Store since the beginning of Apple’s DMA Compliance Plan back in March 2024. They were not newly added, as some had reported.

[…]

In its response to TechCrunch, Apple also noted that it intended to update the message after initial pushback. In August 2024, the company announced a series of changes to its DMA plan that would have included a change to the user disclosure screen. Instead of warning users of the dangers of using external purchases, the new message would have read: “Transactions in this app are supported by the developer and not Apple.” (See below).

Apple wanted to scare users, as we learned during its U.S. trial; its preference would have been the terrifying phrasing. But it softened the language — how much is the result of public criticism and how much is because of regulators’ concerns is a good question.

In any case, does this message show on listings for any applications accepting payments through means other than In-App Purchases? I assume Apple is not warning users about the dangers of paying for a ride through Uber or a hotel room through Kayak. But subscribing to something without using Apple’s own payment mechanism? May as well shout your credit card number in a crowded room.

It is not like Apple is taking an elevated level of responsibility for payments made through In-App Purchases, either. This warning tone carried through in documentation may not be lying to users, but it is bullshitting them and that, in most places, is not a sign of trust or respect. Perhaps things are different in Silicon Valley.

Gurman: iOS 19 Will Be Less Buggy, and Use A.I. To Improve Battery Life bloomberg.com

Mark Gurman, Bloomberg:

The company is planning an AI-powered battery management mode for iOS 19, an iPhone software update due in September, according to people with knowledge of the matter. The enhancement will analyze how a person uses their device and make adjustments to conserve energy, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the service hasn’t been announced.

Set aside for now the question of how the notoriously power-hungry group of technologies we call “artificial intelligence” can improve battery life. Gurman says this is “part of the Apple Intelligence platform”, but also says it “will be available for all iPhones that have iOS 19”. This is confusing. Apple has so far marketed Apple Intelligence as being available on only a subset of devices supporting iOS 18. Either Apple’s delineation of “Apple Intelligence” features is about to get even fuzzier, or one of the two statements Gurman made is going to be wrong.

Also:

Besides the AI additions and interface changes, Apple is pushing engineers to ensure that this year’s releases are more functional and less glitchy. Past upgrades were criticized for bugs and features that sometimes didn’t work properly.

I will believe it when I see it. But how is this not the highest priority every year?

A Fairer Angle for Covering Teenaged Wellnesss Influencers nytimes.com

Rina Raphael, New York Times:

But what makes this influencer unusual is her age. She’s only 17, and a high school junior.

Ms. [Ava] Noe, a self-described “crunchy teen,” is just one of a number of young influencers who appeal to other health-conscious kids their age. At times, their anti-establishment viewpoints fall in line with those of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and the “Make America Healthy Again” movement, which has expressed skepticism of the scientific community and large food corporations.

The teens’ videos, while at times factually questionable, highlight a desire among some to avoid the chronic illnesses and other conditions that have plagued their elders.

This article keeps rattling around my brain because, I think, this is a subject potentially deserving media coverage but not with this framing. The most appropriate context for these teenagers’ beliefs would undoubtably be seen as pretty brutal — they are not “skeptical”, they are young people who have no idea what they are talking about. Trying to rebut them would seem unkind and I do not think it would be effective.

This article could instead be hung on the dieticians who are concerned about the number of young people getting their health information in this way. Raphael quotes one doctor and one dietician, and they do provide necessary context, but the story is heavily weighted toward the claims these kids are spreading. The Times hired three photographers for this article, entirely for the influencers. They link to the social media accounts for two of them. Perhaps the reason this story is being told from this perspective is because these teenagers are not actually that influential. That is potentially good news. But the Times has now platformed these accounts and is once again guiding readers to information marketed as edgy and anti-establishment, when it is simply bad.

To the extent there is any good information spread by these influencers, it is the kind of stuff you already know. Choose more fruits and vegetables — that kind of thing. Noe may protest that is the advice she is giving; in a response to this Times story, she says “literally all I do is eat whole foods”. It is “common knowledge that fruit is good for you, for the most part, and Skittles are bad for you”. But that is not descriptive of what Noe is doing. She, according to Raphael’s reporting, “use[s] ChatGPT to ask about the benefits of, say, red light therapy, then read the suggested studies”. Whether Noe can actually understand and weigh the credibility of those studies is a good question. But she happens to have a partnership with some red light therapy company.

It seems to me these influencers have succumbed to the same bizarre information space as a bunch of adults, and are selling that back to their peer group. That is an interesting story to me, and I wish it is the one told by the Times. Instead, we get a too-soft profile of some kids who have found online success repeating the things they hear on podcasts, balanced by a few quotes from two professionals. While I have no food or nutrition expertise, I do know what skepticism looks like. I am not sure the Times does.

Irish Data Protection Commission Fines TikTok €530 Million dataprotection.ie

The Irish Data Protection Commission:

The decision, which was made by the Commissioners for Data Protection, Dr Des Hogan and Mr Dale Sunderland, and has been notified to TikTok, finds that TikTok infringed the GDPR regarding its transfers of EEA User Data to China and its transparency requirements. The decision includes administrative fines totalling €530 million and an order requiring TikTok to bring its processing into compliance within 6 months. The decision also includes an order suspending TikTok’s transfers to China if processing is not brought into compliance within this timeframe.

It turns out data use expectations can be consistent and it is possible to penalize violators when there are privacy laws. This seems preferable over ad hoc responses.

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Minimum Viable Curiosity randsinrepose.com

Michael Lopp:

In a hypothetical future world where all I ever knew was sitting in the back of a robot car, I would not appreciate the work involved because I’d never had the opportunity to learn to drive. This might be fine for many humans on the planet, but not for me. I learned how to drive on Highway 17, a scary mountain freeway that required me to become a competent driver as quickly as possible. I remember those lessons, they made me… me.

I liked learning to drive.

Better yet, I like learning. It gives me appreciation of the craft.

A great essay, in large part because I do not know that there is a perfect answer to any of the questions posed — and that is okay. That is basically where Lopp ends up at the end. There is, in an uncharitable reading, an element of young people today no longer know how to write a cheque as though that is essential. Maybe it is not inherently worthwhile to know how to drive or write a standardized corporate letter.

But we learn these things both for the end and for the means of getting there. A teacher is not assigning essay writing to high school students because they are expecting profound conclusions. The purpose of that exercise is to teach research skills, citing sources of information, structuring an argument, and writing persuasively. These are all skills with broad uses. As a formerly delinquent high school essay-writer, it took a long time for me to understand why this would become important or useful.

The shortcuts we have today seem useful, in the sense they can get you closer to a finished product with seemingly less work than before. They have their uses. But they are also missing an undervalued emotional quality and, at the heart of it, curiosity.

Apple Seeks to Pause ‘Extraordinary’ App Store Ruling macrumors.com

Tim Hardwick

Apple has filed an emergency motion asking the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to pause key parts of a recent ruling that dramatically changes how the App Store operates, following a contempt finding in its long-running legal battle with Fortnite maker Epic Games.

As expected. I will bet Apple is going to try and take this part of the case to the Supreme Court, even though it did not have much luck in the first attempt.

Israeli Spyware Giant NSO Group Ordered to Pay Nearly $170M to Meta politico.com

Maggie Miller, Politico:

Israeli spyware company NSO Group was ordered by a U.S. federal court on Tuesday to pay WhatsApp and its parent company Meta almost $170 million in damages after its cyber tools were used to hack around 1,400 WhatsApp accounts.

I remain confused why Apple thought this case was not worth fighting.

Meta:

In this specific case, we know we have a long road ahead to collect awarded damages from NSO and we plan to do so. Ultimately, we would like to make a donation to digital rights organizations that are working to defend people against such attacks around the world. Our next step is to secure a court order to prevent NSO from ever targeting WhatsApp again.

[…]

Finally, we’re publishing (unofficial) transcripts of deposition videos that were shown in open court so that these records are available to researchers and journalists studying these threats and working to protect the public. We intend to add official court transcripts once they become available.

If Meta so desperately wants to make this donation, it could do so at any time.

Also, while the deposition transcripts are nice to have and certainly contain revealing moments, they are incomplete. Huge chunks of time are missing. This is perhaps for confidentiality or because Meta only wants to publish salient portions, but I would prefer if more were available. Context matters.

Anyway, good for Meta for seeing this through to the end. I am sure it will spend its winnings wisely.

Despite Misleading Marketing, TeleMessage Can Access Plaintext Chat Logs micahflee.com

Micah Lee:

Despite their misleading marketing, TeleMessage, the company that makes a modified version of Signal used by senior Trump officials, can access plaintext chat logs from its customers.

In this post I give a high level overview of how the TeleMessage fake Signal app, called TM SGNL, works and why it’s so insecure. Then I give a thorough analysis of the source code for TM SGNL’s Android app, and what led me to conclude that TeleMessage can access plaintext chat logs. Finally, I back up my analysis with as-of-yet unpublished details about the hack of TeleMessage.

TeleMessage suspended its service after NBC News reported a completely different breach to the one Lee and 404 Media reported Sunday. It is horribly bad form to speculate, but if two separate attackers publicly demonstrated their ability to download archived chats without permission, it seems plausible an eager state actor could have also done so. To be clear, there is no evidence for this; all I am saying is it would not surprise me.

Signal is secure. TeleMessage is certainly not.

While TeleMessage has been in the news for its association with various U.S. government agencies, it has a large customer base. You have heard of many of its users. How many of them, do you think, are still comfortable trusting it to capture their internal communications for record-keeping purposes?

Patreon’s iOS App Can Now Accept Web Payments in the U.S. (Again) techcrunch.com

Sarah Perez, TechCrunch:

In the updated version released on Monday (version 125.5.0), users now have the option of making a purchase via the web, where they can choose to pay with other payment methods, including credit cards, Venmo, and PayPal, as well as with Apple Pay.

The option to use Apple’s own in-app purchases method, meanwhile, is shown only in very small text below the larger, bold “Join” button. This change will likely direct more customers to pay via Patreon’s website instead of through Apple’s in-app purchases.

Patreon’s app, for many years, supported web-based payment options, until Apple decided it no longer could.

Matt Birchler’s summary of Apple’s stance on in-app payments is maybe the most cogent I have read:

Apple’s logic around “safety and security” for allowed payment methods was:

- it’s safe enough to enter your credit card in an app to buy physical goods

- it’s safe enough to enter you card into an app to buy digital goods you enjoy on other devices

- it’s unsafe to enter your card in an app to buy digital goods you enjoy on that device

I am jealous of the simplicity and clarity in these four lines.

This nonsense remains true outside the U.S. and the other regions that have mandated, to varying degrees, a revision to Apple’s payment terms. It makes no sense at all — but, of course, nothing about this really does. It is all reverse justification — a way for Apple to absorb a slice of an economy it feels it is owed for little reason other than because. A common thing I now see and hear from people whose work is supported by Patreon — plug — is advising people to subscribe outside the app to avoid giving Apple a cut. The sooner Apple’s “post-PC” devices are treated less like permanent extensions of the company which we are graciously allowed to use, the better it will be for all of us.

A.I. Mistakes Are Way Weirder Than Human Mistakes spectrum.ieee.org

Last week, I published some thoughts on Meta’s eventual repositioning as a kind of television channel stocked with generated material for any given user:

Then TikTok came around and did away with two expectations: that you should have to work to figure out what you want to be entertained by, and that your best source of entertainment is your friend group. Meta is taking it a step further: what if the best source of entertainment is generated entirely for them? I find that thought revolting. The magic of art and entertainment is in the humanity of it. Thousands of years of culture is built on storytelling and it is not as though this model has been financially unsuccessful. That is not the lens through which I view art, but it is obviously relevant to Meta’s goals.

I have one small addition to this: there is also humanity in the mistakes we make in creating art. Take any of the examples pointed out by Todd Vaziri recently. Notice how human they are: a period-correct prop license plate covering a more modern one falls off; a camera crew visible in a reflection. These are evidence of the human hands responsible for this art.

Compare this to the mistakes common in generated A.I. images and video, which only serves to underscore the lack of human involvement. When there are errors, they are sometimes human-esque, or at least plausibly so; however, much of the time, they are unnerving.

Bruce Schneier and Nathan E. Sanders wrote, for IEEE Spectrum in January, a pretty good overview of what this is like from a mostly text perspective:

To the extent that AI systems make these human-like mistakes, we can bring all of our mistake-correcting systems to bear on their output. But the current crop of AI models — particularly LLMs — make mistakes differently.

AI errors come at seemingly random times, without any clustering around particular topics. LLM mistakes tend to be more evenly distributed through the knowledge space. A model might be equally likely to make a mistake on a calculus question as it is to propose that cabbages eat goats.

However, the ways mistakes appear in generated visual material is difficult for me to rationalize in the same way. They are unnerving in straightforward videos generated from reality-based prompts, and noticeable even in those intended to be unsettling. It is like if surrealism were expressed through a fungus-infected mind made of Play-Doh.

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TeleMessage, Used by Various U.S. Government Officials, Has Been Breached 404media.co

Earlier this week, Joseph Cox of 404 Media noticed a photograph of U.S. official Mike Waltz — previously — using a third-party Signal client from TeleMessage. The whole point of TeleMessage is that it captures and archives messages from third-party messaging apps, including WhatsApp and Signal. Both services are known for being end-to-end encrypted — a degree of protection that disappears when you store messages outside their apps.

And, so.

Joseph Cox, 404 Media, and Micah Lee:

A hacker has breached and stolen customer data from TeleMessage, an obscure Israeli company that sells modified versions of Signal and other messaging apps to the U.S. government to archive messages, 404 Media has learned. The data stolen by the hacker contains the contents of some direct messages and group chats sent using its Signal clone, as well as modified versions of WhatsApp, Telegram, and WeChat. TeleMessage was recently the center of a wave of media coverage after Mike Waltz accidentally revealed he used the tool in a cabinet meeting with President Trump.

I remember when people used to pretend to care, for political gain, about the storage and retention of sensitive government information.

Publisher Opt-Outs Affected Half of Google’s A.I. Training bloomberg.com

Davey Alba, Bloomberg:

Google can train its search-specific AI products, like AI Overviews, on content across the web even when the publishers have chosen to opt out of training Google’s AI products, a vice-president of product at the company testified in court on Friday.

That’s because Google’s controls for publishers to opt out of AI training only cover work by Google DeepMind, the company’s AI lab, and not any other organization at the company, said Eli Collins, a Google DeepMind vice-president.

This confirms reporting by Alba and Julia Love last year: if publishers want to appear in Google Search, they have to be okay with some amount of A.I. training. If they had a choice, however, it seems unlikely to me they would take it. In court, the Department of Justice showed Collins a document regarding Gemini training:

According to that document, Google removed 80 billion of 160 billion “tokens” — snippets of content — after filtering out the material that publishers had opted out of allowing Google to use for training its AI. The document also listed search “sessions data,” or data collected during a period of time in which a user interacted with Google Search, as well as YouTube videos, as data that could augment Google’s AI models.

Half. Half of the data Google uses to train its A.I. models was removed when publishers were made aware they could opt out. That does not mean the other half have affirmatively opted in, of course, but it means at least half of publishers do not approve of Google’s desire to absorb their corpus of information without payment and with scant credit.

2027 iPhone Will Reportedly Feature an All-Screen Design macrumors.com

Joe Rossignol, MacRumors:

The Information today cited multiple sources who said that at least one new iPhone model launching in 2027 will have a truly edge-to-edge display. The device’s front camera and Face ID system would both be placed under the screen.

I know the Dynamic Island was a clever way of transforming a necessary hardware compromise into a signature feature, albeit an imperfect one. This is a fun visual design problem to have: a hardware improvement to the iPhone will, in time, render some well-considered software obsolete. I imagine this all-screen iPhone will be self-evidently cool and, so, the Dynamic Island just goes away. But I am curious.

Meta’s A.I. Television

If you were listening out of context to something Mark Zuckerberg said in a recent interview with Dwarkesh Patel, you might think he is deeply concerned about meaningful personal friendships:

There’s this stat that I always think is crazy: the average American, I think, has I think it’s fewer than three friends. Three people that they’d consider friends. And the average person has demand for meaningfully more — I think it’s like fifteen friends, or something. […] The average person wants more connectivity — uh, connection — than they have.

For what it is worth, I tried to find the source for these numbers. The “three friends” figure correlates with the findings and phrasing of a 2021 American Enterprise Institute survey (PDF), though other surveys have found broadly similar numbers. In 2023, Pew Research found 39% of Americans say they have one to three close friends, while 38% say they have five or more. Recent YouGov polling finds over 52% saying they have one to three, while 22% say they have four or five.

The second appears to come from the work of Robin Dunbar. The accuracy of this number is disputed.

Still, it sounds like Zuckerberg simply cares about the number of friends people say they have compared to the number they want. And, so, you would think the CEO of the world’s biggest social networks would be concerned about making sure we maintain the real-life connections we already have, and perhaps finding new ones. Alas, the technological solutions along those lines sound pretty boring unless they are marketed based on their quaint vintage appeal.

That is not what Zuckerberg is being interviewed to promote. This line of questioning is bookended by questions about artificial general intelligence and DeepSeek. And, in fairness, I did not quote Patel’s question which prompted this response:

On this point of A.I.-generated content or A.I. interactions, already people have meaningful relationships with A.I. therapists, A.I. friends, you know, maybe more. And this is just gonna get more intense as these A.I.s get more unique and more personable — more intelligent, more spontaneous, and funny, and so forth. […] People are going to have relationships with A.I.s. How do we make sure these are healthy relationships?

Zuckerberg barely answers this. Instead, he pivots to more comfortable territory about how Meta’s vision of A.I. will increase the number of entirely generated “friends” people can have. Or, in the words of Paul Fairie:

The average American has 3 eggs, but has demand for 15. So here are 12 photographs of eggs. I am a business man.

Zuckerberg acknowledges “I think there are all these things that are better about physical connections when you can have them,” but his primary complaints with A.I. relationships are how technologically primitive they are.

My goal is not to dump on anyone except Henry Blodget who may have found some kind of personal fulfilment in some A.I. program. That is not my place and I have no idea where to begin. What is notable to me is the role Meta plays in manipulating the experience of real-world friendships.

Kyle Chayka, the New Yorker:

[…] The people we follow and the messages they post increasingly feel like needles in a digital haystack. Social media has become less social.

Facebook’s founder, Mark Zuckerberg, admitted as much during more than ten hours of testimony, over three days last week, in the opening phase of the Federal Trade Commission’s antitrust trial against Facebook’s parent company, Meta. The company, Zuckerberg said, has lately been involved in “the general idea of entertainment and learning about the world and discovering what’s going on.” This under-recognized shift away from interpersonal communication has been measured by the company itself. During the defense’s opening statement, Meta displayed a chart showing that the “percent of time spent viewing content posted by ‘friends’” has declined in the past two years, from twenty-two per cent to seventeen per cent on Facebook, and from eleven per cent to seven per cent on Instagram.

What “friends” mean in this context is different from how it is used by Zuckerberg and in the surveys above. Also, the rest of this material is not necessarily A.I.-generated. Even so, 7–17% of users’ time is spent viewing stuff they say they want to see, and that is not necessarily because they have elected to view it less. That is driven to a considerable degree by the posts Meta has selected for you to see first, and the order in which your friends’ Stories are displayed.

If Meta had an institutional responsibility to help users maintain their real-world friendships, it is failing to do so based on these numbers. But that is not the role it seems to want to play.

John Herrman, of New York magazine, nails it:

Meta’s AI strategy less resembles a bet on an unrecognizable future than a belief, or a wish, that it can simply be Meta, but more so. (It’s also a bet that large-language-model-based AI will present more opportunities for entertainment than for work.) Zuckerberg isn’t just envisioning a Meta staffed by AI engineers and AI moderators, but platforms that stock themselves with content, allow users to request whatever types of interactions they want, and are even more effective at holding attention, keeping people engaged, and, of course, serving and targeting advertising.

Perhaps what people ultimately want — in general and on average — is entertainment brought to them. That is not a denigration of society or anything; it makes sense. We once turned on the radio and enjoy audio-only plays and discussions. Then we had podcasts. We once turned on the television and scrolled through channels until we settled on something we liked. Then we had Netflix and YouTube. Both provide suggestions on what to watch, and some podcast apps have their own recommendations, but there is still a manual quality to discovery.

Then TikTok came around and did away with two expectations: that you should have to work to figure out what you want to be entertained by, and that your best source of entertainment is your friend group. Meta is taking it a step further: what if the best source of entertainment is generated entirely for them? I find that thought revolting. The magic of art and entertainment is in the humanity of it. Thousands of years of culture is built on storytelling and it is not as though this model has been financially unsuccessful. That is not the lens through which I view art, but it is obviously relevant to Meta’s goals.

This is not enough. Meta, institutionally, sees its world through quantities — of friends, of posts made, of ads served, of engagement, of time spent, of interactions — and envisions abundance delivered through A.I. means. Its efforts so far have been sloppy. Maybe they will, as Patel appears to believe, get better: “more unique and more personable” and so forth. Regardless, they will still be fake. I am not the biggest A.I. downer, but this worldview sucks. Human-created art is as irreplaceable by A.I. as is a human friendship. Not every problem is one which can be solved through technological development, and not every problem is real — who is to say that three close friends is too few for most people, or that the amount of entertainment produced by human beings is insufficient?

It would seem an empire can be built only so far on what is real.

MacDailyNews’ Sexist Response to Yesterday’s Epic Games Ruling

Following yesterday’s ruling finding Apple has disregarded a U.S. court’s instructions to permit links to external purchases from within iOS apps under reasonable terms, the publisher of MacDailyNews responded with the site’s take. In case you are not already familiar, MacDailyNews has a consistently right-libertarian editorial slant. It is not one I agree with, but that has only the tiniest bit of relevance to this commentary.

Also, while the site was founded by Steve Jack, it attaches no byline to its articles and so I am uncertain who specifically wrote this tripe:

It’s too bad Gonzalez Rogers expected Apple to provide a service that she ordered for free, because it makes no sense for Apple to do such a thing. Gonzales ordered Apple to allow developers to advertise lower prices elsewhere within Apple’s App Store. It is Apple’s App Store. Despite what Epic Games wishes and misrepresents, the App Store is not a public utility. Apple built it. Apple maintains it. Apple owns it, not Epic Games or some ditzy U.S. District Judge. Advertising within Apple’s App Store has value, a fee for which its owner has every right to charge, regardless of whatever the blank-eyed Gonzalez Rogers, bless her heart, expected.

I am sure there are plenty of people out there who believe Apple is entitled to run the iOS App Store as it sees fit. It is an argument with which I have sympathies outweighed by disagreements, but I get it.

What I do not get is describing a U.S. district court judge as “ditzy”.

It is an adjective invoked by MacDailyNews to describe just two people: Gonzalez Rogers and former European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager. It is an inherently sexist term — a cheap shot thrown at women who happen to have legally restricted the world’s most valuable corporation. Agree or disagree with their work, this kind of response is pathetic.

If, however, one is desperate to be a misogynist, they had better be certain the rest of their argument is airtight. And MacDailyNews falls on its face.

Gonzalez Rogers has not demanded an entirely free ride. In fact, she gave Apple substantial opportunity to explain how it arrived at (PDF) a hefty 27% commission rate for external purchases. Apple did not do so. It took hearings this year to learn it went so far as to get the Analysis Group to produce a report which happened to find (PDF) Apple was responsible for “up to 30% of a developer’s revenue”. But, Gonzalez Rogers writes, this study was not the basis for Apple’s justification for a 27% cut for external purchases, nor could it have been, because it was produced after records show Apple had already decided on that rate. It was reverse-engineered to maintain Apple’s entirely unjustified high commission rate.

To quote Gonzalez Rogers:

This is an injunction, not a negotiation. There are no do-overs once a party willfully disregards a court order. […]

And again:

Apple was afforded ample opportunity to respond to the Injunction. It chose to defy this Court’s order and manufacture post hoc justifications for maintaining an anticompetitive revenue stream. Apple’s actions to misconstrue the Injunction continue to impede competition. This Court will not play “whack-a-mole,” nor will it tolerate further delay.

Apple could have taken this up in a legally justifiable way that, plausibly, could have given it some reasonable commission on some sales. It did not do that, so now the court says no commission whatsoever is permissible. Simple. Besides, developers pay for hardware, a developer membership, and plenty of Apple’s services. They are not getting a free ride just by linking to an external payment option.

Moreover, developers do not “advertise” in the App Store. They can, but that is not what is being adjudicated in this case.

Media commentators can disagree on this ruling, on the provisions of the Digital Markets Act, and on Apple’s treatment of developers. There are many legitimate views and angles, and I think it is great to see so much discussion about this leading up to WWDC. But we can all do this without resorting to lazy sexism. Do better.

U.S. Judge Rules Apple Is Not in Compliance With Injunction in Epic Games Case

In September 2021, U.S. judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers issued a judgement in Epic Games’ case against Apple. She mostly sided with Apple but, critically, ruled third-party developers must be permitted to link to external purchasing mechanisms from within their apps.

Even that barest of changes, however, has apparently been too onerous for Apple to comply with in the spirit the court intended. Instead of collecting a typical 30% commission on in-app purchases, Apple said it would take 27% of external purchases made within seven days of someone using an in-app link. This sucks. The various rules Apple implemented, including the different commission rate, have been a problem ever since. In a ruling today, Gonzalez Rogers finds Apple’s measures do not comply with the court’s expectations.

Kif Leswing, CNBC:

Apple willfully violated a 2021 injunction that came out of the Epic Games case, Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers said in a court filing on Wednesday.

[…]

Rogers added that she referred the matter to U.S. attorneys to investigate whether to pursue criminal contempt proceedings on both [Apple executive Alex] Roman and Apple.

The judge’s order (PDF) is full of withering remarks and findings, like this footnote on the sixth page (citation removed):

Apple’s “entitlement” perspective and mantra persisted beyond the Injunction. For example, Apple’s Communications Director, Marni Goldberg, texted her colleague during the first evidentiary hearings, that “It’s Our F***ING STORE.” Not surprisingly (nor convincingly), she did not “recall” sending those messages.

There are several points like these where the judge makes clear she does not appreciate Apple’s obstinate approach. But the business-related findings are notable, too. For example, this passage on pages 17–18 (citations removed for clarity):

Further, in May 2023, Apple through Oliver and others received feedback from Bumble, a large, well-known developer on Apple’s and Google’s alternative billing programs. Bumble specifically advised Apple that “[p]ayment processing fees average out significantly higher than the 4% fee reduction currently offered by Google in the [user choice billing] program or [the] 3% fee in Apple’s … solution resulting in negative margin for developers.” In other words, Bumble explained to Apple that a “3% discount” was not economically viable for a developer because the external cost of payments exceeds 3%. Apple’s own internal assessment from February 2023 reflects data meriting the same conclusion — that the external costs of payments for developers on link-out purchases would exceed Apple’s 3% discount if it demanded a 27% rate.

The evidence uncovered in the 2025 hearing demonstrated Apple’s knowledge and expectation that the restrictions would effectively dissuade any real developer participation, to Apple’s economic advantage.

To all those who have said Apple’s regulatory and legal responses have amounted to malicious compliance, you appear to be correct. Stripping more formal language, as the judge has done here, reveals how fed up she is with Apple’s petulant misconduct.

Throughout this filing, Phil Schiller comes across very well, unlike fellow executives Luca Maestri, the aforementioned Alex Roman, and Tim Cook. In internal discussions, he consistently sounds like the most reasonable voice in the room — though Gonzalez Rogers still has stern words for him throughout. (For example, Schiller claimed external purchasing links alongside in-app options would make users more susceptible to fraud, even though under Apple’s rules it must review and approve those links. The judge writes “[n]o real-time business documents credit that view”.)

Gonzalez Rogers also has critical words about Apple’s current visual interface design patterns. In a section on page 32 featuring screenshots of possible button styles permissible for developers to provide external links, she writes of a “plain link or button style” not dissimilar to many post-iOS 7-style “buttons”:

Nothing about either example appears to be a “button,” by the ordinary usage and understanding of the word. There is, certainly, an external-link icon next to the call to action and hyperlink, but Apple strains to call either of these strings of text a “button.”

Yet, of a subsequent screenshot featuring one button of this style and another with a rounded rectangle background:

The lower example is readily identifiable as a button.

A final set of passages I would like to point to in this filing is the suspicion of Apple’s intellectual property justification for charging such onerous fees in the first place. Quite a bit of this is repeated from other judgements and filings in this case, but it is quite something to read them all together. For example, in a footnote on page 60 (citations removed for clarity):

[…] Apple also argues that the question of whether Apple’s commission appropriately reflects the value of its intellectual property is not an issue for injunction compliance, and that it is legitimate for a business to promote the value of its corporation for stockholders. Apple misses the point. The issue is that Apple flouted the Court’s order by designing a top-down anticompetitive system, in which its commission played a fundamental role.

For the same reasons, the Court disagrees that requiring Apple to set a commission of zero constitutes and unconstitutional taking. For instance, as described infra Section IV, in the trademark context, “a party who has once infringed is allowed less leniency for purposes of injunction enforcement than an innocent party.” Apple does not have an absolute right to the intellectual property that it wields as a shield to competition without adequate justification of its value. Apple was provided with an opportunity to value that intellectual property and chose not to do so.

On page 21, the judge cites an internal email on the topic:

[T]he team has discussed variations on the commission options with lower rates, but we struggled to land on ironclad pricing rationales that would (1) stand up to scrutinizing comparisons with defenses of the commission and existing discounting approaches in other jurisdictions and (2) that we could substantiate solidly on a bottoms up basis without implicitly devaluing our IP / proprietary technology.

The justification for Apple’s commission is entirely fictional. The company is not expected to, in its words, “give away [its] technology for free”, but it is clearly charging commissions like these simply because it can. It owns the platform and it believes it is entitled to run it in any way it chooses. At Apple’s scale, however, that argument does not fly.

Legal bodies around the world are requiring similar changes, and Apple’s reluctance to rip off the bandage and adopt a single global policy seems increasingly stupid. The longer it drags this stuff out, the worse it looks.

I am sure there are smart people at Apple who believe they are morally and legally correct to keep fighting. But Gonzalez Rogers accused an executive of lying under oath, seems to find the rest of the company’s executive team legally contemptible, and finds the behaviour of the world’s most valuable company to be pretty outrageous. All of this because, according to the company’s internal records on page 42, it might “lose over a billion [dollars] in revenue” if 25% of users chose to use external purchase links and the company collected no commission on them.

Documents Show How Police Track Cars Using Subscription Features wired.com

Dell Cameron, Wired:

A cache of more than two dozen police records recently reviewed by WIRED show US law enforcement agencies regularly trained on how to take advantage of “connected cars,” with subscription-based features drastically increasing the amount of data that can be accessed during investigations. The records make clear that law enforcement’s knowledge of the surveillance far exceeds that of the public and reveal how corporate policies and technologies — not the law — determine driver privacy.

On Bluesky, Cameron published a screenshot of what is available by car make and model year “as a treat”. Owners of Ferraris will be delighted to know they are not on this list.

Cameron’s reporting indicates law enforcement is able to obtain information from automakers and cellular network operators. Four years ago, Joseph Cox, then at Vice, reported on capabilities offered by the Ulysses Group, previously linked. Then, last year, Kashmir Hill of the New York Times reported the sharing of data by General Motors to insurance companies and data brokers. Each of these depicts an entirely different avenue by which individual vehicles may be surveilled, stockpiling data which may be produced without a warrant.

In Praise of a Democracy on Paper theglobeandmail.com

The Globe and Mail’s editorial board:

There are, of course, practical arguments in favour of the system used for federal elections. Paper ballots cannot be hacked. A hand-count allows for maximum transparency.

But the best reason for a paper ballot is not practical at all. It is more fundamental. A paper ballot gives physical form to democracy. The choice literally sits in a voter’s hand.

I will confess to having an immediately negative reaction to what seems like a saccharine take. Then I thought about it a little bit more and I came around. When everything around us is based on pixels and transistors, the simple action of marking a little bit of paper feels somehow more direct.

And it is not even particularly slow, to boot. We knew within a few hours of polls closing that the Liberal party would get the most votes in a dramatic turnaround over the past few months.

Backblaze Responds to Claims of ‘Sham Accounting’ From Sketchy ‘Research’ Firm arstechnica.com

In March, a firm named Morpheus Research published its first report examining Solaris Energy and taking a short position against it. Last week, they published their second report alleging a massive financial scam is brewing at Backblaze. Again, they are shorting Backblaze stock.

There is no information about who is behind Morpheus Research, only an about page saying it is a “team of financial analysts dedicated to exposing fraud and corporate misconduct in financial markets”. That is one clumsy sentence. The domain was only registered in February, and I cannot find any clues about who is behind it aside from a tweet indicating at least some staff used to work at Hidenburg Research before it was shut down earlier this year.

Nevertheless, perhaps it is possible to assess the report on its merits. The facts are not dependent on who is behind it or what interest they have. The gist of its arguments is that Backblaze bet on enterprise storage, but was undercut by a competitor. The company has been consistently unprofitable, and its stock-based compensation program has been undermined by massive sales of shares held by executives. Its current financial reports are, allegedly, fraudulent to some extent.

Scharon Harding, Ars Technica:

Ars Technica reached out to Backblaze about its response to concerns about the company’s financials resulting in lost backups. Patrick Thomas, Backblaze’s VP of marketing, called Morpheus’ claims “baseless.” He added:

The report is inaccurate and misleading, based largely on litigation of the same nature, and a clear attempt by short sellers to manipulate our stock price for financial gain.

Thomas also claimed that “independent, third-party reviews” have already found that there have been “no wrongdoing or issues” with Backblaze’s public financial results.

I am worried about this because Backblaze is part of my backup strategy. If it reduces its focus on backups in favour of an enterprise clientele it cannot win, it seems likely both are at risk — assuming Morpheus Research’s findings are in any way accurate. It is possible it arrived at its bet against the company after producing this report; it seems equally possible it created this report to justify a short position by using some cherry-picked quotes. It is a lengthy report that I, like many other readers, do not have time to fully fact-check.

What I do know is I have always been a little bit suspicious of Backblaze. Hacker News commenter klodolph says it well:

I recommend worrying about any service where you don’t pay a fee that scales with usage. This includes Backblaze. Yes, I recommend worrying about Backblaze and I’ve recommended worrying about it for a while.

I have many terabytes backed-up with Backblaze. I entrust it with my precious photos and music collection — the latter was the motivation for my subscription in the first place. But I should have always been more cautious given the company’s flat-rate promise. I simply assumed it would eventually become a tiered system. Now, I feel like I have reason to worry a little more.

Another Papercut from the Always-On Display Feature pxlnv.com

In August, I wrote about a number of small usability problems with the iPhone’s Dynamic Island and always-on display features, none of which have been resolved in software updates. Here is another.

Sometimes, I will be listening to a podcast in Overcast, and need to pause it for an extended period of time to work on something else. I cannot listen to words whilst typing different words. The media controls will be displayed on the always-on display. However, when I tap the display, the controls disappear if I have been paused for a long time. I think Overcast has been kicked out of background tasks or something. There are two problems here.

The first is that controls shown on the always-on display do not respond to taps in the same way as when the phone is awake. You might see media controls or a series of tasks, but tapping those controls merely wakes the display; it does not activate the control.

The second problem is the mismatch in the visibility of media controls between changed states.

These are both obvious — to me — user experience issues that should have been resolved when prototype iPhones with this display were being used internally. Yet there are now three years of always-on iPhone models with the same problems. The Apple promise is “seamless integration”, but the display and its software feel like they were developed by two companies who are not on speaking terms.

The Group Chats of the Elite semafor.com

Ben Smith, of Semafor, has a scoopy look inside the group chats of elite media and business figures, particularly those who pretend they are not. I often disagree with Smith’s framing — calling Christopher Rufo an “anti-woke conservative activist” and Richard Hanania a “conservative academic” dramatically undersells the vile views held by both — but the article successfully explores the coordination of these people.

One thing is for certain: a Signal group is so much dorkier than a secret society.

Canada’s Tech Executives Are Not Scared of Mark Carney disconnect.blog

Paris Marx:

As [Mark] Carney appears set to form government, Canadians must be on guard for the consequences of his alignment with domestic tech CEOs. They may not wield as much power as the billionaires of Silicon Valley, but that does not mean Canada will be immune from short-sighted policy decisions justified in the name of efficiency and innovation that enrich tech executives, while justifying government austerity.

Marx is understandably cautious, a position I welcome. I do not think it is wise to replace the influence one set of oligarchs with another simply because they are domestic. However, given the parallel need to dilute the overwhelming U.S. influence in the industry, we should encourage Canadian businesses while upholding values and ethics. The Carney-led Liberal platform seems like a mixed bag. It will be important for Canadians to keep his government in check.

The Tree Farms Powering Tech Companies’ Carbon Neutral Goals technologyreview.com

Apple, earlier this month:

Apple today announced that the company has surpassed a 60 percent reduction in its global greenhouse gas emissions compared to 2015 levels, as part of its Apple 2030 goal to become carbon neutral across its entire footprint in the next five years. The company achieved several other major environmental milestones, including the use of 99 percent recycled rare earth elements in all magnets and 99 percent recycled cobalt in all Apple-designed batteries. Apple shared this and other progress in its annual Environmental Progress Report, published today.

[…]

Apple’s 2030 strategy prioritizes cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 75 percent compared with its 2015 baseline year, before applying high-quality carbon credits to balance the remaining emissions. Last year, Apple’s comprehensive efforts to reduce its carbon footprint — including the continued transition of its supply chain to renewable electricity and designing products with more recycled materials — avoided an estimated 41 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions.

The phrasing of Apple’s 2030 goals is slightly different than when announced, when it said 25% of its emissions would be offset by “developing innovative carbon removal solutions”. Turns out, that is planting trees.

Gregory Barber, MIT Technology Review:

On a practical level, the answer seemed straightforward. Nobody disputed how swiftly or reliably eucalyptus could grow in the tropics. This knowledge was the product of decades of scientific study and tabulations of biomass for wood or paper. Each tree was roughly 47% carbon, which meant that many tons of it could be stored within every planted hectare. This could be observed taking place in real time, in the trees by the road. Come back and look at these young trees tomorrow, and you’d see it: fresh millimeters of carbon, chains of cellulose set into lignin.

At the same time, Apple and the others were also investing in an industry, and a tree, with a long and controversial history in this part of Brazil and elsewhere. They were exerting their wealth and technological oversight to try to make timber operations more sustainable, more supportive of native flora, and less water intensive. Still, that was a hard sell to some here, where hundreds of thousands of hectares of pasture are already in line for planting; more trees were a bleak prospect in a land increasingly racked by drought and fire. Critics called the entire exercise an excuse to plant even more trees for profit.

This is a long and detailed exploration of how these projects work. I think is worth your time in part because of how captivating it is in words and, indeed, in photographs. I learned plenty.

The Carelessness of Perplexity

Alex Heath, of the Verge, spoke with Aravind Srinivas, CEO of Perplexity, earlier this week, and they had quite the conversation.

Many publishers have been upset with you for scraping their content. You’ve started cutting some of them checks. Do you feel like you’re in a good place with publishers now, or do you feel there’s still more work to be done?

I’m sure there’s more work to be done, but it’s in a way better place than it was last time we spoke. We are scraping but respecting robots.txt. We only use third-party data providers for anything that doesn’t allow us to scrape.

Heath has no followup, no request for clarification — nothing — so I am not sure if I am reading this right, but I think I am. Srinivas here says that Perplexity’s scraper itself respects website owners’ permissions but, if it is disallowed, the company gets the same data through third-parties. If a website owner does not want their data used by Perplexity, they must disallow its own scraper plus every single scraper that might sell to Perplexity. That barely resembles “respecting robots.txt”.

Again, I could have this wrong, but Heath does not bother to clarify this response.

Perplexity is currently working on its own web browser, Comet, and has signalled interest in buying Chrome should Google be forced to divest it. Srinivas calls it a “containerized operating system” and explains the company’s thinking in response to a question about ChatGPT’s Memory feature:

Our strategy is to allow people to stay logged in where they are. We’re going to build a browser, and that’s how we’ll access apps on behalf of the user on the client side.

I think memory will be won by the company that has the most context. ChatGPT knows nothing about what you buy on Instagram or Amazon. It also knows nothing about how much time you spend on different websites. You need to have all this data to deeply personalize for the user. It’s not about who rolls out memory based on the retrieval of past queries. That’s very simple to replicate.

If you are a money person, there is a logical next step to this, which Srinivas revealed on a small podcast with a couple of finance bros as they ask a question that just so happens to promote one of their sponsors: “how are you thinking about advertising in the context of search? […] Is there a future where, if you search for ‘what’s the best corporate card?’, Ramp is going to show up at the top if they bid on that?”, to which Srinivas responds “hopefully not” before going on to explain how Perplexity could eventually become ad-supported.

Julie Bort, TechCrunch:

“On the other hand, what are the things you’re buying; which hotels are you going [to]; which restaurants are you going to; what are you spending time browsing, tells us so much more about you,” he explained.

Srinivas believes that Perplexity’s browser users will be fine with such tracking because the ads should be more relevant to them.

“We plan to use all the context to build a better user profile and, maybe you know, through our discover feed we could show some ads there,” he said.

These are comments on a podcast and perhaps none of this will come to pass, but anyone can see how this is financially alluring. The “business friendly” but privacy hostile environment of the U.S. means companies like Perplexity can do this stuff with impunity. Its pitch sounds revolting now — exactly how Google’s behaviourally targeted ads sounded twenty years ago.

Perplexity is another careless business. It does not care if a website has specifically prohibited it from scraping; Perplexity will simply rely on a third-party scraper. Perplexity does not care about your privacy. I see no reason to treat this as a problem specific to individual companies, and these technologies do not respect geographic boundaries, either. We need better protections as users, which means more policy-based protections by governments taking privacy seriously.

But this industry is moving too fast. It is a “race”, after all, and any attempts to regulate it are either knocked down or compromised. There is a real need for lawmakers and regulators who care about privacy as a fundamental human right. These companies do not care and will not regulate themselves.

Apple Aims to Source All U.S. iPhones From India by End of 2026 ft.com

Michael Acton, Stephen Morris, John Reed, and Kathrin Hille, Financial Times:

Apple plans to shift the assembly of all US-sold iPhones to India as soon as next year, according to people familiar with the matter, as President Donald Trump’s trade war forces the tech giant to pivot away from China.

The push builds on Apple’s strategy to diversify its supply chain but goes further and faster than investors appreciate, with a goal to source from India the entirety of the more than 60mn iPhones sold annually in the US by the end of 2026.

Obviously this is not fulfilling the stated aim of U.S. tariffs to onshore manufacturing of all kinds of products, including iPhones. But it seems unlikely to substantially lessen our global dependence on supply chains in China, either — in addition to individual parts sourced there, these reporters say factories in China are still responsible for “pre-assembled component sets” which are brought to India for final iPhone assembly.

Google Ends Support for Early Nest Thermostats, Degrading Their Functionality arstechnica.com

Ryan Whitwam, Ars Technica:

As Google points out, these products have had a long life, and they’re not being rendered totally inoperable. Come October 25, 2025, these devices will no longer receive software updates or connect to Google’s cloud services. That means you won’t be able to control them from the Google Home app or via Assistant (or more likely Gemini by that point). The devices will still work as a regular dumb thermostat to control temperature, and scheduling will remain accessible from the thermostat’s screen.

Google stopped selling the second-generation Nest Thermostat in 2015. A ten-year lifespan may be acceptable by consumer electronics standards, it is not impressive for a thermostat. And, while a typical programmable thermostat might slowly fail on its own accord, it is disconcerting that Google can simply pull the plug on its smart features.

This is, however, a fairly graceful degradation of its functionality, all things considered. Nests will apparently continue to work like a programmable thermostat. Also, after Ecobee ended support for its earliest thermostat models last year, it sounded like newer models’ HomeKit integration would allow smart features to keep working when Ecobee discontinues those, too. It would be better if Google could have done something similar with the Nest. It is not encouraging for the smart home fantasy.

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Making ‘Careless People’ Care pluralistic.net

Cory Doctorow:

The important thing about Facebook’s carelessness is that it wasn’t the result of the many grave personality defects in Facebook’s top executives – it was the result of policy choices. Government decisions not to enforce antitrust law, to allow privacy law to wither on the vine, to expand IP law to give Facebook a weapon to shut down interoperable rivals – these all created the enshittogenic environment that allowed the careless people who run Facebook to stop caring.

The corollary: if we change the policy environment, we can make these careless people – and their successors, who run other businesses we rely upon – care. They may never care about us, but we can make them care about what we might do to them if they give in to their carelessness.

This is a prudent conclusion to draw from “Careless People”. It is tempting to wonder if things would be much different with others in charge, but what Meta represents today is not an individualized problem.

Apple and Meta Are Mad Over Minimal E.U. Fines ec.europa.eu

The European Commission:

Today, the European Commission found that Apple breached its anti-steering obligation under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), and that Meta breached the DMA obligation to give consumers the choice of a service that uses less of their personal data. Therefore, the Commission has fined Apple and Meta with €500 million and €200 million respectively.

The two decisions come after extensive dialogue with the companies concerned allowing them to present in detail their views and arguments.

A Financial Times article last month suggested these fines would be “minimal”, but I suppose that is entirely relative. Apple and Meta could have been fined up to 10% of their annual worldwide revenue — earnings which total hundreds of billions of dollars each — so €500 million does, in fact, seem to be “minimal”. And that speaks to the power and size of these corporations. Call it a warning.

Jon Brodkin, Ars Technica:

“The European Commission is attempting to handicap successful American businesses while allowing Chinese and European companies to operate under different standards,” Meta Chief Global Affairs Officer Joel Kaplan said.

[…]

“Today’s announcements are yet another example of the European Commission unfairly targeting Apple in a series of decisions that are bad for the privacy and security of our users, bad for products, and force us to give away our technology for free,” Apple said. “We have spent hundreds of thousands of engineering hours and made dozens of changes to comply with this law, none of which our users have asked for. Despite countless meetings, the Commission continues to move the goal posts every step of the way.”

I am halfway through “The Big Myth” and it is striking to read so many of the same complaints from detractors of regulation no matter when or for what issue. Pick any of the past couple-hundred years and it is apparently a regulatory sweet spot, according to industry representatives at the time. These complaints feel derivative.

That does not mean all new regulation is justified, well-considered, or without negative consequences. However, it is not as though either Apple or Meta stumbled into the exact structure they did to comply with their interpretation of the law on paper while evading the Commission’s expectations. Nobody expects either company to “give away [their] technology for free”, in the words of an unnamed Apple spokesperson. One cannot, for example, run iOS apps on non-Apple system, and the company builds the cost of software and updates into each product’s price.

The Anti-Pirate Code fedi.rib.gay

Melissa Lewis on Bluesky:

TIL: The 2000s piracy PSA used a font designed by the fantastic Just van Rossum, whose brother Guido created the Python programming language.

[…]

I reached out to van Rossum, and Xband Rough is indeed an “illegal clone” of FF Confidential; it’s just been around forever and is ubiquitous. I have no idea whether the PSA used the original, and felt too shy to ask!

Rib”:

Naturally, it would be hilarious if the anti-piracy campaign actually turned out to have used this pirated font, so I went sleuthing and quickly found a PDF from the campaign site with the font embedded (https://web.archive.org/web/[…]150605_8PP_brochure.pdf).

So I chucked it into FontForge and yep, turns out the campaign used a pirated font the entire time!

They are more like guidelines, you could say.

On the ‘Streaming Is More Expensive Than Cable’ Complaint birchtree.me

Matt Birchler:

A social media post flew by today where someone was complaining that they stopped paying $180 for cable and now they’re paying $200 for streaming apps. I see this sort of complaint a lot, and I find myself feeling like I’m taking crazy pills whenever I do: I had cable, I know how bad it was, and the new streaming world seems so much better to me, even if it is creeping up in price.

I always appreciate when people bring evidence to a discussion instead of basing their analysis entirely on vibes. Here, Birchler demonstrates the combined cost of streaming services is, for lots of people in the U.S., less than cable television.

I remember when the cost of cable was a routine complaint. You paid for all these channels, but you only watched a handful of things on three of them — and, so, would it not be better if we could just buy the channels we wanted?

I have nothing to support this, but I strongly suspect the rosy glasses reaction to cable in a streaming world is driven by two things. First, the lack of bundling feels worse. If you were told you could get a “complete streaming package” for $60 per month — including Apple TV Plus, Disney Plus, Hulu, Max, Netflix, Paramount Plus, Peacock, and Prime Video — that might sound like a better deal than subscribing to them individually for the same total cost. A single cable subscription made you feel like you were getting everything, while you now need multiple subscriptions if you like to watch a lot of stuff.

Second, as Birchler acknowledges, some stuff still is not available on streaming, and so some people still feel they must add a cable subscription, too. Because most of the big streaming services are owned by the same broadcasters as cable channels, it gives them an opportunity to double-dip.

Canadian Election Coverage and Meta’s Response to the Online News Act thelogic.co

Martin Patriquin, the Logic:

More than 25 different Facebook accounts, some with Canadian-themed names, have promoted multiple fake news articles involving political actors, including a three-minute video of a deepfake CBC report fronted by anchor Rosemary Barton, in which a deepfake Musk, appearing on a deepfake Joe Rogan podcast, accuses a deepfake Carney of lying about a non-existent passive income scheme.

The posts are widespread on the Meta-owned platform, with 25 per cent of Canadians saying they’ve seen content on Facebook mimicking legitimate news in the last month, according to the Canadian Digital Media Research Network (CDMRN), which is part of a digital literacy coalition monitoring the federal election campaign.

Leyland Cecco, the Guardian:

More than a quarter of Canadians have been exposed to fake political content on social media that is “more sophisticated and more politically polarizing” as the country prepares to vote in a federal election, researchers have found, warning that platforms must increase protections amid a “dramatic acceleration” of online disinformation in the final weeks of the campaign.

In a new report released on Friday, Canada’s Media Ecosystem Observatory found a growing number of Facebook ads impersonating legitimate news sources were instead promoting fraudulent investment schemes, often involving cryptocurrency.

Rob Brown, reporter for CBC News in Calgary, interviewed Aengus Bridgman of the Media Ecosystem Observatory — previously linked — about Meta’s restriction of news links for Canadian users. This is one effect of the Online News Act, which required Google and Meta to pay news publishers for links on their platforms. Meta, in deciding not to, has effectively permitted only links which do not qualify as “news” to spread among Canadians on its platforms.

Meta may be a belligerent and frustrating company, but the Online News Act remains a blight. In a stopped-clock credit to the Conservatives, they pledge to reverse it, something which all parties ought to consider. We can do better with policies that do not, in practice, discourage the sharing of links to news stories.

The Paid A.I. Hype Guys ft.com

Siddharth Venkataramakrishnan, Financial Times:

One hint that we might just be stuck in a hype cycle is the proliferation of what you might call “second-order slop” or “slopaganda”: a tidal wave of newsletters and X threads expressing awe at every press release and product announcement to hoover up some of that sweet, sweet advertising cash.

That AI companies are actively patronising and fanning a cottage economy of self-described educators and influencers to bring in new customers suggests the emperor has no clothes (and six fingers).

The (verified) X accounts producing threads of links to bad A.I. products, boosted by dozens of replies from other verified X accounts, are annoying spam, but seem relatively harmless. But the newsletters profiled here are curious.

One is Rowan Cheung’s Rundown AI newsletter, which Cheung bills as the “world’s most read daily AI newsletter”, which is different from the other newsletter in the article, Zain Kahn’s Superhuman AI, the “world’s biggest AI newsletter”. As alluded to by Venkataramakrishnan but not expanded upon, both attract some heavy-hitting sponsors. The Rundown was recently sponsored by Salesforce, HubSpot, Sana, and Writer, while Superhuman’s recent sponsors include companies like HubSpot, Sana, and Writer — no Salesforce.

While Cheung’s newsletter is mostly A.I. boosterism with sponsorships, there is a block near the end of each issue for a sibling product: the Rundown University. The first thing you need to know about it is that it is not a university, obviously. It is online training through individual “courses” offered at $50 apiece with individual lessons on using A.I. tools, some of which — like Gamma and Zapier — happen to have sponsored of the newsletter. Or, if you want access to all the “courses” plus workshops, tutorials, and some kind of group chat, you can get all that for just a penny shy of $1,000 per year. Just above the footer sits a carousel of inspirational quotes about A.I. from people like Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Mark Cuban, and Elon Musk. None are actually specific to Rundown “University”, just vibes about the importance of A.I. and its impact. It all feels a bit much.

I am fascinated by the knock-on effects of a hype cycle, and A.I. has produced some magnificent examples — including those above. It is illuminating to search Google for a phrase like intitle:"how" intitle:"is using ai to" and witnessing what is ostensibly breathtaking innovation across industries. A 2023 Guardian story says the “oldest surviving newspaper in the world” — untrue and in spirit only — is using ChatGPT to generate articles from council meeting minutes. According to the Harvard Business Review, construction companies are using large language models to, among other things, summarize documents. Stitch Fix is, according to a disguised ad in Vogue Business, using A.I. to detect trends.

There are countless examples of articles like these illustrating how companies are benefitting from the glow of hype while contributing to it. None of this is to say it is necessarily unearned — maybe detecting money laundering really is more reliable when you run it through A.I. processes. But I remember stories like these in the days when the hot new thing was called “machine learning” or, before that, “big data”. I would not be surprised if these technologies are truly beneficial yet it is hard not to feel the weight of hype and the marketing people behind it all.

Bluesky Verification Is Decentralized in Theory steveklabnik.com

Steve Klabnik:

The underlying [verification] protocol is totally open, but you can make an argument that most users will use the main client, and therefore, in practice it’s more centralized than not. My mental model of it is the bundled list of root CAs that browsers ship; in theory, DNS is completely decentralized, but in practice, a few root CAs are more trusted than others. It’s sort of similar here, except there’s no real “delegation” involved: verifiers are peers, not a tree.

This core design allows Bluesky to adjust the way it works in the future fairly easily, they could allow you to decide who to trust, for example. We’ll see how this feature evolves over time.

The way Bluesky described verification made it sound like a centralized service, but it is not. I have corrected my post.

Bluesky Adds Verification Badges bsky.social

In a post attributed to the Bluesky Team, the company announced a familiar verification method with a twist:

In 2023, we launched our first layer of verification: letting individuals and organizations set their domain as their username. Since then, over 270,000 accounts have linked their Bluesky username to their website. Domain handles continue to be an important part of verification on Bluesky. At the same time, we’ve heard from users that a larger visual signal would be useful in knowing which accounts are authentic.

Now, we’re introducing a new layer — a user-friendly, easily recognizable blue check. Bluesky will proactively verify authentic and notable accounts and display a blue check next to their names. Additionally, through our Trusted Verifiers feature, select independent organizations can verify accounts directly. Bluesky will review these verifications as well to ensure authenticity.

The domain-based verification Bluesky already implemented was a good start, but incomplete. My profile is connected to my personal domain but, even with that single line of text, there is no obvious indicator. You can see the problem on Bluesky’s own profile which tells you to “check username👆” to confirm it is, indeed, the real one.

Then there is the problem of public personalities. Maybe a musician or actor wants to confirm their profile is really them, but is domain-based verification really the best way for them? Does Pedro Pascal have a dot-com? What about a journalist who could “verify” an account connected to an employer, but they also want a separate personal account? Both ought to be verified, but only one is employer-connected. Then, when they leave that employer, they will need to change their username, and Bluesky does not automatically redirect moved profiles. (Followers, posts, and so forth are moved to the new profile, but any links to posts made under the previous profile are not redirected.)

A verification checkmark is not an offensive idea unto itself, but it comes with a new set of concerns. First, what does it mean? Bluesky says it is for “authentic and notable accounts”, but what that means is not clear. Twitter used to assign itself an authoritative role in determining which accounts fit similar criteria. In doing so, it helped make this badge a bizarre mark of status. Now, Meta and X let you simply buy a badge to confirm an account belongs to the person or organization claimed. If the goal is to avoid controversy with notable figures, surely self-verification and manual profile confirmation achieve those purposes. But a parody account is also legitimate in its own way, right?

Second, while it makes sense to have a quick identifier of accounts susceptible to impersonation, the badge also comes with risks. If such an account is hijacked, for example, its posts carry additional weight.

Bluesky seems like it is trying to solve some of these issues by allowing others to vouch for the authenticity of an account. In theory, this minimizes its own role in being the voice of authority. In its example, the New York Times’ account can verify the authenticity of others’ accounts. But Bluesky still plays a central role in this process — it appears to determine whether an account can become a Trusted Verifier, and its moderators confirm each verification request from third-party verifiers. I take it this latter requirement is necessary because it is not clear to me whether there are any limits to which accounts a Trusted Verifier can approve. Still, it means Bluesky is the final say in which accounts belong to the person or organization claimed.

Update: I was wrong, according to Bluesky technical advisor Jeremy Johnson:

anyone can publish a verify record, any app can choose who to display verifies from. And as this thing bakes a bit we’re going to make it easier to pick different verifiers in our app.

If you were to run your own app view then you definitely don’t have to care at all what Bluesky PBC does here, just collect all the app.bsky.graph.verification records and go ham.

It sounds like I could verify my own accounts — or, indeed, vouch for any account — but it is up to the client how it wants to display that verification attempt. Bluesky itself is only trusting itself and select others for now.

The Charm of Movie Mistakes fxrant.blogspot.com

Todd Vaziri:

I’m particularly obsessed with moments that reveal the craft and artistry of the magic trick of a shot that slightly shatters the illusion of cinema. These revealing moments have been in movies since the dawn of cinema, and are everywhere (if you know exactly where to look).

I have always loved spotting “mistakes” in movies. Not from the perspective of ha ha, you messed up, but more because of exactly what Vaziri describes here: they show the little moments of craft. These ones are charming.

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Apple’s Rebranded Apple Ads Probably Forecasts More Advertising digiday.com

Benjamin Mayo, 9to5Mac:

Apple today announced that it has officially rebranded Search Ads as ‘Apple Ads’, reflecting the expanding scope of Apple’s advertising business.

When Apple first launched ads in the App Store, they were only shown as promoted search results, hence the name ‘Search Ads’. But the company now offers advertising placements in many more places beyond just the Search tab, so the old name had become a bit anachronistic.

Seb Joseph and Krystal Scanlon, Digiday:

The timing matters. Apple has spent years building its defenses, designing its own chips, overhauling supply chains — but tariffs on Chinese imports, especially under Trump’s return to the campaign trail, are reintroducing uncertainty. Some products have dodged the impact, others haven’t. And with hardware margins already tight, Apple needs new ways to protect its bottom line.

I do not think it is nitpicking to dispute calling margins of 35% on hardware “tight”.

Still, Apple is at risk of being squeezed in both hardware and software — to the extent a corporation the size of Apple can actually be squeezed, of course. Its hardware made in China is now exempt from Trump’s escalating and volatile tariff demands, but that could obviously change if Tim Cook is insufficiently grateful. Meanwhile, its Google search deal with 100% margins is at risk of being disallowed.

The advertising market is an obvious but dispiriting place to find money. Apple already has a few spots available in the App Store, and in News and Stocks, and I could see the potential for placements in apps like Maps, Music, Podcasts, and Wallet.

This rebranding and the increasingly important Services revenue charts look like a forecast for more ads. I hope I am wrong. I do not use News or Stocks, but the ads in the App Store are already a gross exploitation of Apple’s position owning these platforms. It is the kind of move that encourages understandable regulatory scrutiny.

Microsoft Is Bringing Recall Back to Windows arstechnica.com

Dan Goodin, Ars Technica:

Following months of backlash, Microsoft later suspended Recall. On Thursday, the company said it was reintroducing Recall. It currently is available only to insiders with access to the Windows 11 Build 26100.3902 preview version. Over time, the feature will be rolled out more broadly.

Kevin Beaumont:

After a bunch of discussions with a bunch of folks, it’s pretty clear there’s been zero published research on Copilot Recall in almost a year – all the news articles have just reprinted Microsoft’s talking points saying it is secure now.

Beaumont says there are improvements to the onboarding process and security, but also found there is still no way for applications to opt out of being recorded, and it still captures private information like Signal chats and credit card numbers. Oh, and Beaumont may have found the decryption key. I see the utility in a feature like this, but I am not sure that outweighs the risks for the user or anyone they communicate with.

Google Loses Online Advertising Monopoly Case axios.com

Scott Rosenberg and Sara Fischer, Axios:

Google’s dominance of the online advertising and ad-tech markets violates U.S. antitrust laws, a federal court ruled Thursday, in a decision that could scramble the massive digital ad universe.

[…]

The court drew a distinction between the markets for advertising exchanges and ad servers, where it found Google has an illegal monopoly, and the general market for display ads online, where it found Google does not.

Emma Roth and Lauren Feiner, the Verge:

“We won half of this case and we will appeal the other half,” Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google’s vice president of regulatory affairs, said in a statement to The Verge. “The Court found that our advertiser tools and our acquisitions, such as DoubleClick, don’t harm competition. We disagree with the Court’s decision regarding our publisher tools. Publishers have many options and they choose Google because our ad tech tools are simple, affordable and effective.”

If the conclusion of this case is held after what I assume will be a lengthy and expensive appeals process, the corrections for this and Google’s illegal search monopoly will have a noticeable effect on the web.

Bluesky, Censorship, and Country-Based Moderation fediversereport.com

Laurens Hof, the Fediverse Report:

There is a technical story, of how Bluesky and the AT Protocol (ATProto) do composable moderation for specific countries. But this is not just an interesting technology, it has implications of government censorship more broadly. Not only is the Turkish censorship of accounts even easier to sidestep, it also allows for new ways to highlight and create visibility for the content that the Turkish government wants to be hidden. To explain how that all works, first a closer look at how moderation works on Bluesky.

I understand why some would disagree with Bluesky’s approach and prefer the way of Mastodon. But I do not think Bluesky’s handling is invalid or necessarily inferior — just different.

MITRE Makes CVE Program Independent After U.S. Government Funding Expires krebsonsecurity.com

Brian Krebs:

A critical resource that cybersecurity professionals worldwide rely on to identify, mitigate and fix security vulnerabilities in software and hardware is in danger of breaking down. The federally funded, non-profit research and development organization MITRE warned today [April 15] that its contract to maintain the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) program — which is traditionally funded each year by the Department of Homeland Security — expires on April 16.

[…]

Update, April 16, 11:00 a.m. ET: The CVE board today announced the creation of non-profit entity called The CVE Foundation that will continue the program’s work under a new, unspecified funding mechanism and organizational structure.

I do not love how I am learning how many critical things worldwide are dependent on an increasingly unstable U.S. government.

Lyft Texted a Rider a Transcript of the Conversation She Had in a Car cbc.ca

Nicole Brockbank, CBC News:

Anvi Ahuja noticed a “freaky” new text message from a number she didn’t know right after getting back to her downtown Toronto apartment last month.

The text was a transcript of the conversation she’d just had with her roommates during their eight-minute Lyft ride home from a friend’s place.

[…]

The company confirms the incident took place, but has offered varying explanations.

None of Lyft’s explanations make sense to me. Bizarre and creepy.

Meta’s Poor Prebuttal to “Careless People”

I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall when Mark Zuckerberg and the rest of the Meta’s leadership team found out about Sarah Wynn-Williams’ book “Careless People”. This conversation could have taken place anywhere, but I imagine it was in a glass-walled meeting room which would allow one of these millionaire’s shouted profanities to echo. That feels right. Wynn-Williams, a former executive at Facebook, is well-placed to tell stories of the company’s indifference to user privacy, its growth-at-all-costs mentality, its willingness to comply with the surveillance and censorship requirements of operating in China, and alleged sexual harassment by Joel Kaplan. And, of course, its inaction in Myanmar that played a “determining role” in a genocide that killed thousands in one month in 2017 alone.

Based on some of the anecdotes in this book, I am guessing Zuckerberg, Kaplan, and others learned about this from a public relations staffer. That is how they seem to learn about a lot of pretty important things. The first public indication this book was about to be released came in the form of a preview in the Washington Post. Apparently, Meta had only found out about it days before.

It must have been a surprise as Meta’s preemptive response came in the form of a barely formatted PDF sent to Semafor, and it seems pretty clear the company did not have an advance copy of the book because all of its rebuttals are made in broad strokes against the general outline reported by the Post. Now that I have read the book, I thought it would be fun and educational to compare Meta’s arguments against the actual claims Wynn-Williams makes. I was only half right — reading about the company’s role in the genocide in Myanmar remains a chilling exercise.

A caveat: Wynn-Williams’ book is the work of a single source — it is her testimony. Though there are references to external documents, there is not a single citation anywhere in the thing. In an article critical of the book, Katie Harbath, one of Wynn-Williams’ former colleagues, observes how infrequently credit is given to others. And it seems like it, as with most non-fiction books, was not fact-checked. That is not to disparage the book or its author, but only to note that this is one person’s recollections centred around her own actions and perspective.

One other caveat: I have my own biases against Meta. I think Mark Zuckerberg is someone who had one good idea and has since pretended to be a visionary while stumbling between acquisitions and bad ideas. Meta’s services are the product of bad incentives, an invasive business model, and a caustic relationship with users. I am predisposed to embracing a book validating those feelings. I will try to be fair.

Anyway, the first thing you will notice is that most of the points in Meta’s response do not dispute the stories Wynn-Williams tells; instead, the company wants everyone to think it is all “old news” and it resents all this stuff being dredged up again. Yet even though this is apparently a four-hundred-page rehash, Meta is desperate to silence Wynn-Williams in a masterful gambit. But of course Wynn-Williams is going to write about things we already know a little bit about; even so, there is much to learn.

Most of Meta’s document is dedicated to claims about the company’s history with China, beginning with the non-news that it wanted to expand into the country:

SWW’s “New” Claim:

Facebook Had A Desire To Operate In China.

Old News:

Zuckerberg Addressed This In 2019 Televised Speech. Mark himself said in a televised address in 2019, “[He] wanted our services in China … and worked hard to make this happen. But we could never come to agreement on what it would take for us to operate there.’ That is why we don’t operate our services in China today.”

No, it is not just you: the link in this section is, indeed, broken, and has been since this document was published, even though the page title suggests it was available six months prior. Meta’s communications staff must have known this because they include a link to the transcript, too. No, I cannot imagine why Meta thought it made sense to send people to an inactive video.

At any rate, Zuckerberg’s speech papers over the lengths to which the company and he — personally — went to ingratiate himself with leaders in China. Wynn-Williams dedicates many pages of her book to examples, but only one I want to focus on for now.

But let me begin with the phrase “we could never come to an agreement on what it would take for us to operate there”. In the context of this speech’s theme, the importance of free expression, this sounds like Meta had a principled disagreement with the censorship required of a company operating in China. This was not true. Which brings me to another claim Meta attempts to reframe:

SWW’s “New” Claim:

Facebook Developed Censorship Tools For Use By Chinese Officials.

Old News:

2016 New York Times Report On Potential Facebook Software Being Used By Facebook In Regard To China; Noted It “So Far Gone Unused, And There Is No Indication That Facebook Has Offered It To The Authorities In China.” […]

This is not a denial.

Wynn-Williams says she spent a great deal of time reading up on Facebook’s strategy in China since being told to take it over on a temporary basis in early 2017. Not only was the company okay with censoring users’ posts on behalf of the Chinese government, it viewed the capability as leverage and built software to help. She notices in one document “the ‘key’ offer is that Facebook will help China ‘promote safe and secure social order’”:

I find detailed content moderation and censorship tools. There would be an emergency switch to block any specific region in China (like Xinjiang, where the Uighurs are) from interacting with Chinese and non-Chinese users. Also an “Extreme Emergency Content Switch” to remove viral content originating inside or outside China “during times of potential unrest, including significant anniversaries” (like the June 4 anniversary of the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests and subsequent repression).

Their censorship tools would automatically examine any content with more than ten thousand views by Chinese users. Once this “virality counter” got built, the documents say that Facebook deployed it in Hong Kong and Taiwan, where it’s been running on every post.

Far from a principled “agreement on what it would take for us to operate [in China]”, Facebook was completely fine with the requirements of the country’s censorial regime until it became more of a liability. Then, it realized it was a better deal to pay lobbyists to encourage the U.S. government to ban TikTok.

SWW’s “New” Claim:

Facebook Tested Stealth App In China.

Old News:

2017 New York Times Headline: “In China, Facebook Tests The Waters With A Stealth App” “We have long said that we are interested in China, and are spending time understanding and learning more about the country in different ways,” Facebook said in a statement.”

Wynn-Williams provides plenty more detail than is contained in the Times report. I wish I could quote many pages of the book without running afoul of copyright law or feeling like a horrible person, so here is a brief summary: Facebook created an American shell company, which spun up another shell company in China. Meta moved one of its employees to an unnamed “Chinese human resources company” and makes her the owner of its Chinese shell company. A subsidiary of that company then launched two lightly reskinned Facebook apps in China, which probably violate Chinese data localization laws. And I need to quote the next part:

“Are Mark and Sheryl okay with it?” I ask.

He [Kaplan] admits that they weren’t aware of it.

I am unsure I believe Zuckerberg did not know about this arrangement.

As far as I can find, most of these details are new. The name of the Chinese shell company’s subsidiary was published by the Times, but the only reference I can find — predating this book — to the other shell companies is in an article on Sohu. I cannot find any English-language coverage of this situation.

Nor, it should be said, can I find any discussion of the legality of Facebook’s Chinese operations, the strange leadership in the documentation for the shell companies, the other apps Facebook apparently released in China, and the fallout after the Times article was published. Meta’s anticipatory response to Wynn-Williams’ book pretends none of this is newsworthy. I found it captivating.

SWW’s “New” Claim:

Chinese Dissident Guo Wengui Was Removed Due To Pressure From The Chinese Government.

Old News:

The Reasons Facebook Removed Guo Wengui From The Platform Were Publicly Reported In 2017;

Unpublished His Page And Suspended His Profile Because Of Repeated Violations Of Company’s Community Standards.

Wynn-Williams says this is false. She quotes the same testimony Facebook’s general counsel gave before a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing, but only after laying out the explicit discussions between Facebook and the Cyberspace Administration of China saying the page needed to be removed. At a time when Facebook was eager to expand into China, the company’s compliance was expected.

Then we get to Myanmar:

SWW’s “New” Claim:

Facebook Dragged Its Feet On Myanmar Services.

Old News:

Facebook Publicly Acknowledged Myanmar Response In 2018. The facts here have been public record since 2018, and we have said publicly we know we were too slow to act on abuse on our services in Myanmar […]

“Too slow to act” is one way to put it — phrasing that, while not absolving Meta, obscures a more offensive reality.

Myanmar, Wynn-Williams writes, was a particularly good market for Facebook’s Free Basics program, a partnership with local providers that gives people free access to services like Facebook and WhatsApp, plus a selection of other apps and websites. It is an obvious violation of net neutrality principles, the kind Zuckerberg framed in terms of civil rights in the United States, but seemed to find more malleable in India. Wynn-Williams’ description of the company’s campaign to save it in India, one that was ultimately unsuccessful, is worth reading on its own. Facebook launched Free Basics in Myanmar in 2016; two years later, the company pulled the plug.

From 2014 to 2017, Kevin Roose reported for the New York Times, Facebook’s user base in Myanmar — a country of around fifty million people — grew from two million to thirty million, surely accelerated by Free Basics. During that time period, Wynn-Williams writes, Facebook observed a dramatic escalation in hate speech directed toward the Rohingya group. As this began, Meta had a single contractor based in Dublin who was reviewing user reports. One person.

Also, according to Wynn-Williams, Facebook is not available in Burmese, local users “appear to be using unofficial Facebook apps that don’t offer a reporting function”, and there incompatibility between Unicode and Zawgyi. As a result, fewer reports are received, they are not necessarily in a readable format, and they are processed by one person several time zones away.

Leading up to the November 2015 election, Wynn-Williams says they doubled the number of moderators speaking Burmese — two total — plus another two for election week. Wynn-Williams says she worked for more than a year to get management’s attention in a candidate for Myanmar-specific policies, only for Kaplan to reject the idea in early 2017.

From the end of August to the end of September that year, 6,700 people are killed. Hundreds of thousands more are forced to leave the country. All of this was accelerated by Facebook’s inaction and ineptitude. “Too slow to act” hardly covers how negligent Facebook was at the scale of this atrocity.

SWW’s New Claim:

Facebook Offered Advertisers The Ability To Target Vulnerable 13-17 Year Olds.

Old News:

Claim Was Based On A 2017 Article By The Australian, Which Facebook Refuted. “On May 1, 2017, The Australian posted a story regarding research done by Facebook and subsequently shared with an advertiser. The premise of the article is misleading. Facebook does not offer tools to target people based on their emotional state.”

In fact, Wynn-Williams quotes the refutation, calling it a “flat-out lie”. She says this is one of at least two similar slide decks discussing targeting ads based on a teenager’s emotional state, and in an internal discussion, finds an instance where Facebook apparently helped target beauty ads to teenage girls when they deleted pictures of themselves from their accounts. She also writes that the deputy chief privacy officer confirmed it is entirely possible to target ads based on implied emotion.

After the “lie” is released as a statement anyway, Wynn-Williams says she got a phone call from a Facebook ad executive frustrated by how it undermined their pitch to advertisers for precise targeting.

SWW’s New Claim:

Donald Trump Was Charged Less Money For Incendiary Adverts Which Reached More People.

Old News:

Claim Was Based On A 2018 Article By Wired, Which Facebook Refuted.

The argument made by Meta’s Andrew Bosworth, in a since-deleted Twitter thread, was that Trump’s average CPM was almost always higher than that of the Clinton campaign. But while this is one interpretation of the Wired article — one the publication disputed — this is not the claim made by Wynn-Williams. She only says the high levels of engagement on Trump’s ads drove their prices down, but not necessarily less than Clinton’s ads.

Those were all of the claims Meta chose to preemptively dispute or reframe. The problem is that Wynn-Williams did make news in this book. There are plenty of examples of high-level discussions, including quoted email messages, showing the contemporaneous mindset to build its user base and market share no matter the cost. It is ugly. Meta’s public relations team apparently thought it could get in front of this thing without having all the details, but their efforts were weak and in vain.

Following its publication, Meta not only sought and received a legal demand that Wynn-Williams must stop talking about the book, it followed its “playbook for answering whistleblowers”. I am not a highly paid public relations person; I assume those who are might be able to explain if this strategy is effective. It does not seem as though it is, however.

This is all very embarrassing for Meta, yet seems entirely predictable. Like I wrote, I have my own biases against the company. I already thought it was a slimy company and I hate how much this confirms my expectations. So I think it is important to stay skeptical. Perhaps there are other sides to these stories. But nothing in “Careless People” seems unbelievable — only unseemly and ugly.

The Acquisition of Instagram Made Sense to Facebook Even at the Time nytimes.com

Mike Isaac, New York Times:

In 2012, when Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg cut a $1 billion check to buy the photo-sharing app Instagram, most people thought he had lost his marbles.

“A billion dollars of money?” joked Jon Stewart, then the host of The Daily Show. “For a thing that kind of ruins your pictures?”

Mr. Stewart called the decision “really lame.” His audience — and much of the rest of the world — agreed that Mr. Zuckerberg had overpaid for an app that highlighted a bunch of photo filters.

While Stewart’s bit remains funny, I must again note that many people with actual expertise in this area treated the acquisition as a reasonable cost to neutralize a surging competitor.

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission Takes on Meta nytimes.com

Cecilia Kang, Mike Isaac, and David McCabe, New York Times:

The case against Meta could affect its 3.5 billion users, who on average log on to Facebook, Instagram or WhatsApp multiple times a day for news, shopping and texting. Instagram and WhatsApp have attracted more users in recent years as Facebook, Meta’s flagship app, has stopped growing.

“For more than 100 years, American public policy has insisted firms must compete if they want to succeed,” said Daniel Matheson, the F.T.C.’s lead litigator in the case, in his opening remarks. “The reason we are here is that Meta broke the deal.”

“They decided that competition was too hard and it would be easier to buy out their rivals than to compete with them,” he added.

Lily Jamali, BBC News:

Meta countered that the lawsuit from the FTC, which reviewed and approved those acquisitions, is “misguided.”

Meta “acquired Instagram and WhatsApp to improve and grow them alongside Facebook,” the company’s attorney Mark Hansen argued.

To my layperson’s eyes, this does not seem like a counterpoint to the FTC’s arguments as much as it is a reframing of them.

Jennifer Newstead, Meta’s chief legal officer:

In order for the FTC to win this case, they need to prove both that Meta has a dominant share in a properly defined product market that includes all competitors, and that the two acquisitions harmed competition and consumers. They are wrong on both claims. That’s why they’ve gerrymandered a fictitious market in which Facebook and Instagram compete only with Snapchat and an app called MeWe. In reality, more time is spent on TikTok and YouTube than on either Facebook or Instagram – if you only add TikTok and YouTube into the FTC’s social media market definition, Meta has <30% market share.

This is going to be a fascinating trial. It seems clear based on evidence in emails, chats, and underhanded tactics that Instagram and WhatsApp were acquired to neutralize their competitive power. Yet we have no idea what the tech landscape of today would look like had both remained independent companies. Meta’s products still have competition from other social networks and, in theory, it must fight them for every user-minute and ad dollar. However, we know for certain Meta does not need to compete today against Instagram and WhatsApp.

Lawsuits Allege Trade Desk Secretly Breaks Privacy Laws adweek.com

Kendra Barnett, AdWeek:

Filed on March 31 in the Central District of California, one of the class action cases takes aim at The Trade Desk’s Unified ID 2.0 (UID2) identifier, alleging that the tracking tech collects personally identifiable information, like email addresses and phone numbers, and uses it to enable user profiling and real-time bidding.

[…]

The Trade Desk, plaintiffs allege in this case, operates like a data broker as it tracks, profiles, and de-anonymizes internet users without their knowledge or consent via its Adsrvr Pixel, which follows users across different parts of the web and across devices.

I mentioned UID2 in passing a couple of years ago. The claims (PDF) in these lawsuits (PDF), untested in court, are certainly worrisome but only as much as any of these user identification and enrichment services. At least California has privacy laws to hold the Trade Desk accountable instead of relying on the Federal Trade Commission’s less direct processes.

How Record Store Day Became the Stupidest Day in Music defector.com

John Semley, Defector:

At a very basic level, commodity fetishism is fine, and probably pretty normal: a way of declaring, “Here is my stuff that I like.” It can be an expression not only of personal curatorial habits, but of taste, and identity. But commodities conceived along the line of Record Store Day exclusives push this to an extreme. Their use-value is practically nil. They are only commodities. And as far as statements of taste and identity go, they announce only “I am a big-time commodity fetishist!”

It is truly remarkable to me how pliable we all are even when we know these tactics. We know this is why smartphones come in different colours every year, and why there is the very notion of a “limited edition” even if that edition numbers in the hundreds of thousands.

To repurpose or recontextualize Goodhart’s law, when something becomes the product of attention, it will eventually lose the reason for that attention. Record Store Day began in good faith, which has been taken advantage of to, in 2025, sell Post Malone’s Nirvana livestream on vinyl for $37. Be quick — there are only seventeen thousand copies available.

Taking the User by the Reins rakhim.exotext.com

Rakhim Davletkaliyev:

Overall, consistency, user control, and actual UX innovation are in decline. Everything is converging on TikTok — which is basically TV with infinite channels. You don’t control anything except the channel switch. It’s like Carcinisation, a form of convergent evolution where unrelated crustaceans all evolve into something vaguely crab-shaped.

There is an element of this critique that feels very now and may become outdated, as TikTok’s relevance could perhaps fade with time, but platforms wresting control from users and foisting decisions upon them is a long and ongoing trend. To wit, here is Davletkaliyev:

Even the “New” section [in Netflix] is meaningless. It opens with a “For You” row (huh?), then “Continue Watching”, followed by generic “Popular in ” rows. It feels like YouTube search: ask for something specific, get a few hits, and then a flood of unrelated “popular” and “recommended” content.

The screenshots preceding this paragraph show Netflix’s homepage in 2012. The subtitle on the page reads “Based on what you like, we’ve filled it with personalized suggestions JUST FOR YOU”. The first row of items is “Popular on Netflix”. These are superficially similar qualities to those Davletkaliyev complains about in Netflix today.

If you scratch a little deeper, I think the version today feels different for two reasons. First, Netflix has a lot more original media; instead of a page filled with movies and shows you recognize, it is now full of Netflix-branded material. Second, Netflix is just one of many services prioritizing recommendations and suggestions, and perhaps this feeling accumulates to the point where none seem to be serving our interests. Davletkaliyev’s other example is Spotify, but it could just as easily be Apple Music. I use it very simply, yet I feel as though I am fighting with its home screen. I have to use entirely separate apps — MusicHarbor and Record Club — to learn about new releases from my favourite artists. If I dip into one of the suggestions and then go back to the home screen, the whole thing usually refreshes and shows me entirely different suggestions. It is all just one big fight with large business interests.

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Post-Twitter Services as Covered by the New Yorker newyorker.com

Kyle Chayka, of the New Yorker, wrote a pretty good profile of Bluesky and its CEO Jay Graber recently which, as it turns out, is his third in what is now a set of articles about the post-Twitter services trio. On Mastodon in November 2022:

Users who want to have a lively, varied experience on Mastodon have to put in effort, too. On Twitter, you log in to your account and are immediately thrust into the melee of the “global town square,” for better or worse. On Mastodon, you can start accounts on as many servers as you like but you have to log on to each one in turn, as if each were its own separate social network. The server your account is hosted on is embedded in your username (mine is @chaykak@zirk.us) and becomes a kind of home base. Mastodon offers various feed configurations, from a “local” one that shows only posts from accounts on your server to a more bustling admixture of all the users you follow across any server. There’s a tool called Debirdify that can tell you which Twitter users you follow are already on Mastodon. But Mastodon’s built-in friction and fragmentation make it harder to communicate with many people at once. You can peer into servers you don’t belong to, like a curious tourist, but you won’t be able to post to their feeds.

This is a strange interpretation of how Mastodon works. It is technically correct but irrelevant; there is no need for someone to have accounts on multiple servers as they all communicate over the same protocol. You do not need a Gmail account to send a message to a Gmail user, for example. But I think it illustrates the perceived complexity of the service while, unfortunately, doing little to clarify it.

Do not get me wrong — I like Mastodon a lot. It is the post-Twitter service I use most often. But it reminds me a lot of something like Usenet or mailing lists while the others remind me of forums. It has a little more technical overhead and a few more quirks. If you are sent a link to a post on another server, for example, and you want to boost it, you have to go find it from your own server. It remains a clunky process.

Next up, Chayka wrote about Threads in July 2023, shortly after it launched:1

[…] It is currently impossible to see posts solely from followed accounts; Meta executives promise that a chronological feed is in the works, but, as on Facebook and Instagram, that feature is unlikely to be the default. As a result, much of what I see on Threads is the kind of banal celebrity and brand self-promotion that I tried to avoid on Twitter — posts from Chris Hemsworth and Ellen DeGeneres, Spotify asking fans for their favorite playlists, and suggestions to follow Kardashians. The Threads feed rarely appears in a chronological order and often serves up disparate posts from the same account in a row.

Even though Meta has made many changes to Threads in the interim, it still feels like a pretty hollow place. Jon Passantino, of Status, attributes this “lifeless” feeling to “Meta’s antagonistic relationship with power users” — an “indifference toward those powering the platform”. Perhaps.

I think the problem is simpler: Threads has no character. It feels like the conference room at any three-star chain hotel. It has all the attitude of a corporate retreat and the energy of a midsize rental car. That is simply the vibe Meta brings. No amount of power users can change that.

Finally, on Bluesky. This is the second such article published by the New Yorker about the platform; the first was in May 2023, but that one was shorter and not by Chayka, so it does not fit the theme I am setting. Chayka:

With its post-election boom, Bluesky has become by far the largest decentralized social network and Graber (who, citing privacy concerns, gives her age as “around thirty-three”) the most high-profile female head of a social network in an industry known for eccentrically megalomaniacal men. With Trump and Musk in power, Silicon Valley leaders have taken a rightward turn. At Meta, Mark Zuckerberg has cut back on fact checking, abandoned D.E.I. efforts, and said that the corporate world needs more “masculine energy.” Amazon’s Jeff Bezos, who owns the Washington Post, has ordered that the paper’s opinion pages publish only pieces that support “personal liberties and free markets.” Graber, who defines her politics as “anti-authoritarian,” sees Bluesky as a corrective to prevailing social media that subjects users to the whims of billionaires. “Elon, if he wanted to, could just delete the whole X time line — just do these totally arbitrary things,” she said, adding, “I think this self-styled tech-monarch thing is worth questioning. Do we want to live in that world?”

A punk rock attitude is not really compatible with being a corporate executive — only to the detriment of the latter — yet Graber and Mastodon’s Eugen Rochko are the closest I have felt to that spirit. I hope I am not wrong about either of them. I feel like these two platforms can coexist without either one needing to win or become absorbed in the drama of the other. I am a little disappointed to read the two “discussed a collaboration that would have allowed their two protocols to interoperate, but each told me that the other seemed more interested in having the rival platform migrate onto their own protocol”. I think it is fine to keep them entirely separate, but it makes sense to me for the two to be compatible so long as they retain a spirit of openness and portability.


  1. This article ends:

    […] What I still miss is the dependable simplicity of Twitter, the digital Brutalism of two-hundred-and-forty-character bursts of news in a constant stream. Neither Twitter itself nor its competitors have lately been able to capture that energy.

    This appears to be a reference to Twitter’s character limit, but that was 140 characters before becoming 280. One could make the argument the latter character limit is inclusive of Chayka’s example, but that is clearly not what he is going for. One would think that is something the New Yorker’s famously rigorous fact-checkers would ask about. ↥︎

How Crawlers Impact the Operations of the Wikimedia Projects diff.wikimedia.org

Birgit Mueller, Chris Danis, and Giuseppe Lavagetto, of the Wikimedia Foundation:

Since January 2024, we have seen the bandwidth used for downloading multimedia content grow by 50%. This increase is not coming from human readers, but largely from automated programs that scrape the Wikimedia Commons image catalog of openly licensed images to feed images to AI models. Our infrastructure is built to sustain sudden traffic spikes from humans during high-interest events, but the amount of traffic generated by scraper bots is unprecedented and presents growing risks and costs.

Given the sheer volume of stuff scraped by A.I. companies, it is hard to say how much value any single source has in generating material in response to an arbitrary request. Wikimedia might be the exception, however. It is so central and its contents so expansive that it is hard to imagine many of these products would be nearly so successful without it.

I do not see the names of any of the most well-known A.I. companies among the foundation’s largest donors. Perhaps they are the seven anonymous donors in the $50,000-and-up group. I suggest they, at the very least, give more generously and openly.

Established Writers Are Making More Money After Leaving Substack digiday.com

Alexander Lee, Digiday:

A year after leaving Substack in early 2024, newsletter writers are making more money peddling their words on other platforms.

Across the board, writers such as Marisa Kabas, Luke O’Neil, Jonathan M. Katz and Ryan Broderick — all of whom exited Substack in early 2024 following the publication of an open letter in December 2023 decrying the presence of politically extreme voices on the platform — told Digiday that they are receiving a higher share of subscription revenue after making the switch from Substack to rival newsletter services such as Ghost and Beehiiv.

That these services are less expensive for writers is distinct from subscriber growth. Substack’s network is surely a subscription driver, but that becomes less important as a writer’s popularity grows and people begin spreading their work in other ways. Beehiiv and Ghost are a little more old-fashioned — which is not necessarily a bad thing: they focus on providing a specific service instead of trying to be a social media company. But that means more self-promotional efforts by less established writers.

Safari Technology Preview Supports a More Comprehensive Interpretation of ‘Pretty’ Text-Wrap webkit.org

I needed cheering up after the last post. Sorry about that.

Jen Simmons, of Apple’s WebKit team:

While support for pretty shipped in Chrome 117, Edge 177, and Opera 103 in Fall 2023, and Samsung Internet 24 in 2024, the Chromium version is more limited in what it accomplishes. According to an article by the Chrome team, Chromium only makes adjustments to the last four lines of a paragraph. It’s focused on preventing short last lines. It also adjusts hyphenation if consecutive hyphenated lines appear at the end of a paragraph.

The purpose of pretty, as designed by the CSS Working Group, is for each browser to do what it can to improve how text wraps.

Where many in my profession get excited for new APIs to make web apps more capable, this is what brings me similar joy. Maybe more. I love to see any typography improvements on the web which I, in my finest fuddy-duddy fashion, still regard as a primarily document-based environment.

A ‘U.S.-Made iPhone’ is Pure Fantasy 404media.co

Jason Koebler, 404 Media:

These articles are good exercises but they are also total fantasy. There is no universe in which Apple snaps its fingers and begins making the iPhone in the United States overnight. It could theoretically begin assembling them here, but even that is a years-long process made infinitely harder by the fact that, in Trump’s ideal world, every company would be reshoring American manufacturing at the same time, leading to supply chain issues, factory building issues, and exacerbating the already lacking American talent pool for high-tech manufacturing. In the long term, we could and probably will see more tech manufacturing get reshored to the United States for strategic and national security reasons, but in the interim with massive tariffs, there will likely be unfathomable pain that is likely to last years, not weeks or months.

Apple itself is already attempting to make its manufacturing less dependent on factories in China, specifically, but it is a slow transformation over years, and not necessarily in a single direction. Notably, it is not moving production to the United States, instead working with Foxconn to build factories in India, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam. Not only do these countries have lower labour costs and proximity to parts sourcing countries, they also have higher population densities permitting a greater workforce near a factory. Foxconn’s ridiculous con of a U.S. factory for “AI 8K+5G” was built on farmland outside a village outside Wisconsin’s fifth biggest city. Total population of the entire county: 197,727. That is less than the workforce of just one of Foxconn’s factories making iPhones.

Anyone who has spent time digging into the supply chains of just about any industry is probably similar parts amazed and disgusted by what they find, and rightfully so. It strains my ability to understand anything to know a device as precise as a smartphone can be made at scale, about as much as I am also baffled when I see Walmart selling a pair of jeans for less than $20. The only way this is possible is at a huge human cost. This happens far away and — in a way beneficial to the name brands involved — at third-party factories, subcontractors, or a component business deep in the supply chain. But this human exploitation is not relegated to over there; it happens closer to home too.

I think it is fair and correct to support greater diversification of manufacturing, including to rich countries. What bothers me is how much of the discussion I have seen concerns the dollar value of a hypothetical made-in-the-U.S. iPhone, and how little focuses on higher labour standards no matter where a product is made. Workers’ rights are not what U.S. tariffs are ultimately about. But the exploitation is ours. We, the richest countries in the world, go into developing nations and extract from their people and environment the products we want for the incredibly generous lifestyle we have. Some factory owners have become very rich in being able to meet our demands; many people have not. And then we just move on. Now the U.S. is punishing everyone around the world for partaking, necessarily, in an entrenched global system of trade. Maybe iPhones get more expensive later this year, and maybe that means we buy fewer. The human and environmental cost will be similar. But we will still buy them.

White House Investigation Implicates Siri Suggestions in ‘Signalgate’ theguardian.com

Hugo Lowell, the Guardian:

According to three people briefed on the internal investigation, [the Atlantic’s Jeffrey] Goldberg had emailed the campaign about a story that criticized Trump for his attitude towards wounded service members. To push back against the story, the campaign enlisted the help of [Mike] Waltz, their national security surrogate.

Goldberg’s email was forwarded to then Trump spokesperson Brian Hughes, who then copied and pasted the content of the email – including the signature block with Goldberg’s phone number – into a text message that he sent to Waltz, so that he could be briefed on the forthcoming story.

Waltz did not ultimately call Goldberg, the people said, but in an extraordinary twist, inadvertently ended up saving Goldberg’s number in his iPhone – under the contact card for Hughes, now the spokesperson for the national security council.

Then, when Waltz went to add Hughes to the Signal chat, so this goes, he instead added Goldberg. Presumably, this is related to Siri suggestions. This version of events sounds plausible to me, if a little too perfect, but stranger things have happened.

The distrustful and cynical voice deep inside me wants to think Waltz has been a source or contact for Goldberg, and that this is a neat way to keep that secret. There is no evidence for this. The White House’s explanation really does sound right. But try telling anyone they should trust the results of an internal investigation into one of the most dunderheaded security breaches in living memory — even surpassing the time when a couple of lawyers during the first Trump administration were blabbing within earshot of a New York Times reporter.