Century-Scale Storage lil.law.harvard.edu

Maxwell Neely-Cohen, writing for Harvard Law School’s Library Innovation Lab:

This piece looks at a single question. If you, right now, had the goal of digitally storing something for 100 years, how should you even begin to think about making that happen? How should the bits in your stewardship be stored with such a target in mind? How do our methods and platforms look when considered under the harsh unknowns of a century? There are plenty of worthy related subjects and discourses that this piece does not touch at all. This is not a piece about the sheer volume of data we are creating each day, and how we might store all of it. Nor is it a piece about the extremely tough curatorial process of deciding what is and isn’t worth preserving and storing. It is about longevity, about the potential methods of preserving what we make for future generations, about how we make bits endure. If you had to store something for 100 years, how would you do it? That’s it.

This was published in December but I only read it today. Here is the thing: I am going to read a lot of stuff this year, but I already know this is going to be one of my favourite essays. Well told and beautifully designed. Make the time for this thoughtful work.

Cacio e Pepe e Corn Starch nytimes.com

Alexander Nazaryan, New York Times:

A group of Italian physicists has dared to tinker with the traditional recipe for cacio e pepe, the challenging Roman dish consisting of pasta, pecorino cheese and black pepper. In a new study, the scientists claim to have “scientifically optimized” the recipe by adding an ingredient: cornstarch.

For some reason I cannot explain, the related paper was already in my history. It is an interesting read — no joke.

I am fascinated by the number of ways this simple recipe has been explored, from using two pans to incorporating cold water. I am not opposed to any of them on principle — I am not Italian, and anything that gets me closer to a perfectly smooth pasta-and-cheese snack is welcome — but there is something that feels a little perverse about an additional starch. Even though these science-backed techniques are tremendous, there is something very special about getting this emulsion just right without any real tricks.

X Is Barely Getting By wsj.com

Justin Baer, Alexander Saeedy, and Alexa Corse, Wall Street Journal:

In a January email to staff, Musk pointed to the company’s growing influence and power, but said the finances remain problematic.

“Our user growth is stagnant, revenue is unimpressive, and we’re barely breaking even,” he said in the email, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

“Barely breaking even” would have been an improvement for most of Twitter’s life. Given this fascist’s predilection for dishonesty, I would be surprised if this is an accurate reflection of the current state of X.

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Returning to ‘Origins’ unpopularfront.news

John Ganz:

If one reads closely, there is nothing in the ideology of the imperialist bourgeoisie that Arendt describes that is not shared by this new tech-oligarchy. What could explain better the apparent contradiction in the oscillation between their state-phobic libertarianism and sudden interest grasp for the reigns of state power; “What Imperialists actually wanted was expansion of political power without the foundation of a body politic.” Power without public accountability or a common good. And what about the strange transformation of many of these figures from Utopian “progressives” into dystopian reactionaries? Arendt account[s] for this as well. […]

File this under the essays that will be seen as either barely relevant or prescient for the next four-or-so years, all of which I hope are the former but will likely — and regrettably — fall into the latter camp.

Court Rules FBI’s Warrantless Searches Are Illegal arstechnica.com

Ashley Belanger, Ars Technica:

It’s official: The FBI’s warrantless searches of communications seized to protect US national security have at last been ruled unconstitutional and in violation of the Fourth Amendment.

In a major December ruling made public this week, US District Judge LaShann DeArcy Hall settled one of the biggest debates about feared government overreach that has prompted calls to reform Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) for more than a decade.

Critics’ primary concern was whether the FBI needed a warrant to search and query Americans’ communications that are often incidentally, inadvertently, or mistakenly seized during investigations of suspected foreign terrorists.

Some good news, American friends.

In 2023, then-FBI director Christopher Wray said a warrant “would amount to a de facto ban, because query applications either would not meet the legal standard to win court approval; or” because of the time required to meet legal obligations. To be sure, I bet there are lots of crimes the FBI could catch if it did more illegal stuff.

U.S. Cyberdefense Loses Its Head wired.com

Lily Hay Newman, Wired, interviewed Easterly near the end of her time running CISA:

The timing couldn’t be worse for the nation to lose its top cybersecurity cop. A Beijing-linked group called Salt Typhoon spent months last year rampaging through American telecoms and siphoning call logs, recordings, text messages, and even potentially location data. Many experts have called it the biggest hack in US telecom history. Easterly and her agency unknowingly detected Salt Typhoon activity in federal networks early last year — warning signs that ultimately sped up the unraveling of the espionage campaign.

The work of banishing Chinese spies from victim networks isn’t over, but the walls are already closing in on CISA. Trump’s nominee to run the Department of Homeland Security, Kristi Noem, told a senate committee last week that CISA needs to be “smaller” and “more nimble.” And a day after the inauguration, all members of the Cyber Safety Review Board — who were appointed by Easterly and were actively investigating the Salt Typhoon breaches — were let go.

By “more nimble”, Noem means curtailing CISA’s work around misinformation and disinformation — work which has been wildly mischaracterized as engaging in censorship. These efforts include election security education, a role which was not appreciated by this administration four years ago.

Becky Bracken, Dark Reading:

In a letter dated Jan. 20, acting secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Benjamine C. Huffman said the move was meant to avoid a “misuse of resources,” and terminated all current memberships on advisory committees immediately.

Ryan Naraine, SecurityWeek:

The CSRB was established under President Joe Biden’s Executive Order (EO) 14028 on “Improving the Nation’s Cybersecurity” to study major cyber incidents and recommend improvements. Its members served in a volunteer capacity and did not have regulatory or enforcement authority.

The board conducted three investigations — the Log4Shell crisis, the high-profile Lapsus$ attacks and Microsoft’s Exchange Online breach — and gained the respect of security professionals for harshly calling out corporate and technical deficiencies at major corporations.

This is probably a pretty good time to be embedded in the communications infrastructure of an entire nation.

Leader Key github.com

Leader Key is a neat new-ish app from Mikkel Malmberg:

Problems with traditional launchers:

  • Typing the name of the thing can be slow and give unpredictable results.

  • Global shortcuts have limited combinations.

  • Leader Key offers predictable, nested shortcuts — like combos in a fighting game.

Simple but powerful. Not a replacement for something like Keyboard Maestro or Spotlight, but totally comfortable alongside those two. Free on Github.

Million-Dollar Picture forbes.com

Charitably, the best you can say about Tim Cook’s appearance at the inauguration this week is to presume he is there reluctantly. A million-dollar contribution bought him the same proximity to this nakedly transactional administration as executives from Amazon, Google, Meta, and Uber. It is not his presence that would be conspicuous to this administration, but his absence.

If you believe all that, this is a photo of someone whose face appears between those of J.D. Vance and Donald Trump. I hope Cook will keep a framed copy on his desk as a reminder every time those two do something cruel, inhumane, or bleak.

Apple’s Next Software Updates Will Enable Apple Intelligence Automatically macrumors.com

Juli Clover, MacRumors:

When installing macOS Sequoia 15.3, iOS 18.3, or iPadOS 18.3, Apple Intelligence will be turned on automatically on compatible devices, Apple says in the developer release notes for the updates.

Eric Schwarz:

The documentation is for 15.3, so I suspect the version number is a typo. iOS 18.3 will also receive this “feature” — while there is a toggle to turn it back off, just having Apple Intelligence installed uses a lot of space. […]

This is a good point. According to my Mac, Apple Intelligence is consuming 5.75 GB of disk space. MacOS, as a whole and including Apple Intelligence, consumes 22 GB. The exact amount probably varies from device to device but, still, that is a considerable amount of new space required — a thirty-odd percent growth in operating system size in a nominally minor version update.

Apple still insists this is a beta, but it no longer has the excuse that users are opting in knowing the risks and flaws. These are just unfinished new features. It turns out problems and a lack of quality control magically become excusable if you just slap a beta badge on it. This is a trick Google has known about for decades.

The TikTok Executive Order bbc.com

You are probably aware already of the flurry of executive orders signed on the first day of Donald Trump’s second presidential term, a phrase that will hopefully not become as infamous as it already feels. His attack on transgender people is particularly appalling despite its predictability. To my likely overwhelmed U.S. readers, I ask only that you take care of yourselves and each other as best you are able.

For whatever reason,1 among the highest of priorities for this new administration is the status of TikTok. Specifically, delaying enforcement of last year’s law requiring U.S. businesses to not facilitate TikTok’s availability lest they be subject to massive penalties. But laws are only as real as those with power demand them to be and, in this case, one man believes he can override both its enforcement and its stated goals.

Cristiano Lima-Strong and Drew Harwell, Washington Post:

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday aimed at halting the ban against TikTok for 75 days so he can “pursue a resolution” outside of a complete prohibition, a legally dubious maneuver that could test his power to stave off a measure he once championed.

The order directs the Justice Department to not take any action to enforce the law nor to “impose any penalties” against companies that carry TikTok for 75 days, a slightly shorter window than Trump had previously suggested. The goal, the order says, is to “determine the appropriate course forward in an orderly way that protects national security while avoiding an abrupt shutdown of a communications platform used by millions of Americans.”

I wish to issue a small correction. I wrote Sunday that the “leadership of Akamai and Oracle are quite possibly betting their companies on” deferred enforcement, and I am not sure why I hedged. Those leaders are most certainly not betting their companies. Four years down the line, do you really believe the Justice Department will go after Akamai and Oracle for breaking this law? It would be fully capable of doing so, but I guarantee it will not.

Alas, Apple and Google are still not taking that bet. They have enough high-profile legal drama for now.

Lily Jamali and Peter Hoskins, BBC News:

He floated the possibility of a joint venture running the company, saying he was seeking a 50-50 partnership between “the United States” and its Chinese owner ByteDance. But he did not give any further details on how that might work.

I am no legal scholar, but the law specifically says the ownership stake from adversary nations must be less than twenty percent. Not only does the president believe he is capable of nullifying this law’s penalties, he also thinks he can change its requirements on a whim. That is quite the precedent.

On Digital Sovereignty mollywhite.net

Molly White:

The TikTok ban, the Musk Twitter takeover, the Facebook moderation policy changes, the Republicans’ rapidly intensifying crackdowns on speech… let these be the proof you needed to move anything you care about online to a space you control.

A good reminder, indeed. We can debate how much any of us control our spaces so long as any part of it is provided by someone else, but just having your own domain name is a fantastic starting point. Services like Micro.one and omg.lol make that first step super easy. Return proprietary social media to its rightful place as a nice addition to your online presence, not the centre of it. It is not much, and it is not something everyone can do, but it is a start.

A.I. Is the New Annoying Ad You Will See Everywhere matduggan.com

Mat Duggan:

Last week I awoke to Google deciding I hadn’t had enough AI shoved down my throat. With no warning they decided to take the previously $20/user/month Gemini add-on and make it “free” and on by default. If that wasn’t bad enough, they also decided to remove my ability as an admin to turn it off. Despite me hitting all the Off buttons I could find: […]

Users were still seeing giant Gemini chat windows, advertisements and harassment to try out Gemini.

I am not sure I agree with Duggan’s conclusion — that the “A.I. bubble is bursting” — but I share his derision for how aggressively these features are being promoted. Ever since software updates became distributed regularly as part of the SaaS business model, it has become the vendors’ priority to show how clever they are through callouts, balloons, dialogs, toasts, and other in-product advertising. I understand why vendors want users to know about new features. But these promotions are way too much and way too often. Respecting users has long been deprioritized in favour of whatever new thing leads to promotions and bonuses.

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What Happens to the Great Apps Apple Acquires? tapsmart.com

Craig Grannell:

In November 2024, Pixelmator announced that the company would join Apple. Although the post said there would be “no material changes” to the company’s apps, fans were worried. The assumption was that Photomator and Pixelmator (the latter being a rare sort-of-Photoshop for iPhone) were on borrowed time.

But is it always bad news for fans of an app when Apple buys it? Let’s explore some key examples from the past 30 years and see how they inform what Apple might do with Pixelmator’s apps.

One thing I noticed in Grannell’s analysis is that more recent acquisitions — with the exception of Dark Sky — are adopted somewhat whole, whereas the older examples are more like foundations. That could be a coincidence based on the specific examples Grannell chose — it bought Texture in 2018 and built Apple News Plus on top of it, for instance.

This reminded me of a different and unrelated part of Apple’s acquisition strategy, which is when it retains a standalone company. You might think of Beats or Claris, but there are a few others: BIS, Shazam, and — until recently — Beddit. Apple feels like such a monolithic brand to me, and it surprises me whenever I remember that it also has these somewhat independent subsidiaries.

TikTok’s Service Providers Risk Billions in Penalties for Bringing It Back Online theverge.com

Lauren Feiner, the Verge:

Trump seems to want TikTok available for his inauguration on Monday, because “Americans deserve” to see the event. But TikTok is officially banned starting today until it sells to a non-Chinese company, and there’s no deal in sight. Flouting that ban could get Apple and Google’s app stores, as well as service providers Akamai and Oracle, dinged for potentially $850 billion in penalties. Despite all this, Trump has reportedly assured companies they won’t face these fines if they let TikTok keep operating. Now, the question is simple: will Trump-friendly companies risk breaking the law to make the president happy?

Trump is, as of writing, thirteen hours from having actual power, and already corporations and their leaders are proving their fealty. This whole spectacle is embarrassing to watch as a foreigner. Whether he is a true authoritarian or more of a La Croix-esque suggestion of an authoritarian is a matter debatable by political science types and historians. But he has still managed to get tech companies to fall in line behind his administration’s agenda. The leadership of Akamai and Oracle are quite possibly betting their companies on it. And that is before he has any power.

I am worried about how far they will go.

Apple Intelligence Is Inventing a Husband for Joanna Stern techthings.cmail20.com

Joanna Stern, in her Tech Things newsletter:

Here’s a notification for you, Apple: There is no husband.

Despite what my iPhone’s frequent notification summaries report, my husband isn’t messy, he isn’t sad and he definitely didn’t take out the garbage — because, again, I don’t have one. Wife? Yes. Husband? No.

An Apple spokesperson told Stern the company’s A.I. services “were built with responsible AI principles to avoid perpetuating stereotypes and systemic biases”, but here we are.

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U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Law Banning TikTok if It Is Not Sold apnews.com

Mark Sherman, Associated Press:

The Supreme Court on Friday unanimously upheld the federal law banning TikTok beginning Sunday unless it’s sold by its China-based parent company,holding that the risk to national security posed by its ties to China overcomes concerns about limiting speech by the app or its 170 million users in the United States.

The opinion (PDF) is predicated solely on data collection concerns. The justices did not even consider questions about TikTok’s recommendations system, finding that national security alone is worth a change in TikTok’s ownership.

This was a per curiam opinion, but both Sonia Sotomayor and Neil Gorsuch elaborated separately. Sotomayor (I trimmed references in these excerpts but otherwise left them whole):

[…] The Act, moreover, effectively prohibits TikTok from collaborating with certain entities regarding its “content recommendation algorithm” even following a qualified divestiture. […] And the Act implicates content creators’ “right to associate” with their preferred publisher “for the purpose of speaking.” […] That, too, calls for First Amendment scrutiny.

Gorsuch:

First, the Court rightly refrains from endorsing the government’s asserted interest in preventing “the covert manipulation of content” as a justification for the law before us. […] One man’s “covert content manipulation” is another’s “editorial discretion.” Journalists, publishers, and speakers of all kinds routinely make less-than-transparent judgments about what stories to tell and how to tell them. Without question, the First Amendment has much to say about the right to make those choices. […]

These are two ideologically divergent justices similarly compelled by arguments for TikTok to moderate and recommend as it sees fit. Perhaps the court would have ultimately come down differently on these questions if the justices had spent more time considering them, but all this produced is understandable concern over user data. Requiring TikTok to be sold off or banning it is not very useful for correcting that misbehaviour, but that was not the question before the court.

P.E.I. Homeowner Captures Sound and Video of Meteorite Strike on Camera cbc.ca

Stephen Brun, CBC News:

The timing of their departure that day last July proved lucky. Just seconds later, a meteorite would plummet onto the front walkway of [Joe] Velaidum’s home in Marshfield, Prince Edward Island, shattering on impact with a reverberating smack.

[…]

Luckier still, his home security camera caught both video and audio of the meteorite’s crash landing.

I am not sure what I expected a chunk of rock falling onto stone from space would sound like, but now I know.

We Do Not Need More Cynics joanwestenberg.com

Joan Westenberg:

Here’s a more charitable reading of cynicism: it’s not an intellectual position. It’s an emotional defense mechanism. If you expect the worst, you’ll never be disappointed. If you assume everything is corrupt, you can’t be betrayed.

But this protection comes at a terrible price. The cynic builds emotional armor that also functions as a prison, keeping out not just pain but also possibility, connection, and growth.

The whole piece is good, but this part in particular is going to stick with me.

The TikTok Saga Has Gotten Even Stupider torment-nexus.mathewingram.com

This week, the United States Supreme Court heard arguments about whether it is legal to require that TikTok be forced to divest from its parent company by January 19 or be banned. You may know this as the “TikTok ban” because that is how it has been reported basically everywhere. Seriously — I was going to list some examples, but if you visit your favourite news publication, you will almost certainly see it called the “TikTok ban”.

Pedants would be right to point out this is not technically a ban. All TikTok needs to do is become incorporated with entirely different ownership, with the word “all” doing most of the work in that phrase. Consider a hypothetical demand by a populous country that Meta divest Instagram to continue its operations locally. Not only is that not easy, I strongly suspect the U.S. government would intervene in that circumstance. No country wants another to take away their soft power.

Coverage of Supreme Court hearings is always a little funny to read because the justices are, ostensibly, impartial adjudicators of the law who are just asking questions of both sides, and are not supposed to tip their hand. That means reporters end up speculating about the vibes. Amy Howe, syndicated at SCOTUSblog,1 reports the justices were “skeptical” and “divided over the constitutionality” of the law. CNN’s reporters, meanwhile, wrote that they “appeared likely to uphold a controversial ban on TikTok”. While some justices were not persuaded by the potential for manipulation, they did seem to agree on the question of user data. I also think privacy is important, and perhaps for some intersecting reasons, but targeting a single app is the dumbest way to resolve that particular complaint.

Mathew Ingram wrote a great piece calling this week’s proceedings a slide into “even stupider” territory, which could refer to just about anything. How about NBC News’ reporting that the Biden Administration is looking into “ways to keep TikTok available in the United States if a ban that’s scheduled to go into effect Sunday proceeds”? Yes, apparently the government which signed this into law with bipartisan urgency is now undermining its own position.

Alas, Ingram’s article has nothing do to with that, but it is worth your time. I want to highlight one paragraph, though, which I believe is not as clear as it could be:

We’ve had decades of fear-mongering about both American and foreign companies manipulating people’s minds, including the Cambridge Analytica scandal, but there’s no evidence that any of it has actually changed people’s minds. All of the Russian manipulation of Facebook and other platforms that allegedly influenced the 2016 election amounted to not much of anything, according to social scientists. I would argue that Fox News is a far bigger problem than Russia ever was. And even if the Chinese government forces TikTok to block mentions of Tiananmen Square (as it has forced Google to), it’s a massive leap to assume that this would somehow affect the minds of gullible young TikTok users in any significant way. In my opinion, people should be a lot more concerned about how Apple — despite all of its bragging about protecting the privacy of its users — gave the Chinese government effective control over all of its data.

I get the feeling the discussions about manipulating users’ opinions will be never-ending, as have those about, say, the influence of violence in video games. Two recent articles I found persuasive are one by Henry Farrell, and another by Charlie Warzel and Mike Caulfield, in the Atlantic, calling the internet a “justification machine”.

But to Ingram’s argument about Apple, it should be noted that it gave over control of data about users in China, not “all of its data”. This is probably still a bad outcome for most of those users, yes, but the way Ingram wrote this makes it sound as though the Chinese government has control over my Apple-stored data. As far as I am aware, that is not true.


  1. The publisher of SCOTUSblog is facing charges today of tax evasion through fraudulent employment schemes. ↥︎

Changes to Notification Summaries in New iOS 18.3 Beta 9to5mac.com

Chance Miller, 9to5Mac:

Apple released iOS 18.3 beta 3 to developers this afternoon. The update includes a handful of changes to the notification summaries feature of Apple Intelligence.

Miller rounds up the key changes which, sadly, do not include an Apple logo beside the summary. This caught my eye:

Additionally, notification summaries have been temporarily disabled entirely for the News & Entertainment category of apps. Notification summaries will be re-enabled for this category with a future software update as Apple continues to refine the experience.

This is the first time I can remember where Apple uses an app’s App Store category to change its system behaviour. The closest equivalent I can think of is background downloads in Newsstand publications.

New Data Set Reveals 40,000 Apps Behind Location Tracking netzpolitik.org

Ingo Dachwitz and Sebastian Meineck, Netzpolitik:

A new data set obtained from a US data broker reveals for the first time about 40,000 apps from which users‘ data is being traded. The data set was obtained by a journalist from netzpolitik.org as a free preview sample for a paid subscription. It is dated to a single day in the summer of 2024.

Among other things, the data set contains 47 million “Mobile Advertising IDs”, to which 380 million location data from 137 countries are assigned. In addition, the data set contains information on devices, operating systems and telecommunication providers.

This is, somehow, different from the Gravy Analytics breach. The authors note this data set includes fairly precise location information about specific users, and they got all this in a free sample of one day of Real Time Bidding data. This is all legal — at least in the U.S.; German authorities are investigating and have threatened sanctions — able to be collected by anyone willing to either pay or become a participant in RTB themselves.

The Right’s Smear Campaign Against Wikipedia citationneeded.news

Molly White:

When Elon Musk launched his latest crusade against Wikipedia this Christmas Eve, it wasn’t just another of the billionaire’s frequent Twitter tantrums. His gripes about the community-written encyclopedia expose something far more significant: the growing efforts by America’s most powerful right-wing figures to rewrite and control the flow of information. While Musk’s involvement began with grievances about his own coverage on the website, his recent attacks reveal his growing role in this broader campaign to delegitimize Wikipedia, and the right’s frustration with platforms that remain resilient against such control.

I first noticed this campaign about three years ago when clips of Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger on Fox News began circulating among the more reactionary corners of the web. While he has disparaged the site regularly since his long-ago departure, Sanger stepped up his attacks a few years ago after professional contrarians like Tucker Carlson and Glenn Greenwald gave him an uncritical platform to do so.

As White writes, there is plenty to criticize about Wikipedia. But Sanger, Musk, and others are jamming this into the same narrative they apply to everything because they are all intellectually lazy. The bananas thing is that it is Wikipedia — the site where you can check just about every edit for yourself. But because few people are actually going to do that and it is possible to produce seemingly damning screenshots, you can see how this nonsense can take shape.

Mark Zuckerberg Is Not Done With Politics nytimes.com

Theodore Schleifer and Mike Isaac, New York Times:

Mark Zuckerberg, the Meta chief executive who has tried to keep a distance from politics, is warming to President-elect Donald J. Trump.

Mr. Zuckerberg is among several Big Tech executives who are expected to be front and center at Mr. Trump’s inauguration next week. He will be one of four hosts of a black-tie reception on Jan. 20, joining the longtime Republican donors Miriam Adelson and Todd Ricketts in hosting a party “celebrating the inauguration of President Donald J. Trump and Vice President JD Vance,” according to a copy of the invitation seen by The New York Times. The event was first reported by Puck.

In what way has Zuckerberg “tried to keep a distance from politics”? Some years ago, he was actively interested in issues of immigration, social justice, and inequality. His views were published in newspapers and magazines. He co-founded an organization advocating for better paths to citizenship.

I know all of these things because I read a different article by Schleifer and Isaac — one which carries a headline that is rapidly becoming infamous: “Mark Zuckerberg Is Done With Politics”. It is even linked in a subsequent paragraph:

But he has undergone something of a political reinvention over the last year. He traveled to Mr. Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort last week. And has announced a series of changes at Meta since the election in November that have delighted advisers to Mr. Trump.

Journalists do not write the headlines; I hope the editor responsible for this one is soaked with regret. Zuckerberg is not “done with politics”. He is very much playing politics. He supported some more liberal causes when it was both politically acceptable and financially beneficial, something he has continued to do today, albeit by having no discernible principles. Do not mistake this for savviness or diplomacy, either. It is political correctness for the billionaire class.

‘We Have a Chance to Do Something Different’ readtpa.com

Parker Molloy:

Look, I get it. We’ve all grown cynical about promises to “fix” social media. But this could be different. It’s not about creating a utopian new platform; it’s about building the infrastructure to ensure that no matter what platform you choose to use, it can’t be captured by billionaire interests.

Well said. I think it is important to be skeptical of efforts like Bluesky and Free Our Feeds — and I am. But we should avoid being so cynical when there are, at long last, exciting social media developments which do not benefit billionaires. Hope is not naïveté. Let us keep making things better, if not perfect.

Free Our Feeds freeourfeeds.com

Aisha Malik, TechCrunch:

The initiative, Free Our Feeds, aims to protect Bluesky’s underlying technology, the AT Protocol, and leverage it to create an open social media ecosystem that can’t be controlled by a single person or company, including Bluesky itself.

The goal of the initiative is to establish a public-interest foundation that would fund the creation of new interoperable social networks that can run on the AT Protocol, and build independent infrastructure to support these new platforms, even if Bluesky were to end up in the hands of billionaires.

From the Free Our Feeds website:

Bluesky is an opportunity to shake up the status quo. They have built scaffolding for a new kind of social web. One where we all have more say, choice and control.

But it will take independent funding and governance to turn Bluesky’s underlying tech — the AT Protocol — into something more powerful than a single app. We want to create an entire ecosystem of interconnected apps and different companies that have people’s interests at heart.

Signatories to this campaign include a mix of technologists, writers, business people, government officials, and celebrities. They have launched a $4 million GoFundMe campaign; among the top donors are Mutale Nkonde and Randy Ubillos.

People at Bluesky, like Paul Frazee, also seem enthusiastic:

📢 This is the big goal of Bluesky! 📢

Social networks should not be owned by own company! They should be a shared commons! Nobody should have sole power over them.

Bluesky itself is reportedly raising money right now, only a few months after a $15 million Series A. So much money so fast makes me worried about the company’s business long-term. But, while I admire the spirit of a crowd-funded alternative, I also question whether every contributor is fully aware of the risks. For its part, the organization says it will return pledges if it does not make its fundraising targets.

Will Oremus, Washington Post:

Mastodon’s [Eugen] Rochko told the Tech Brief on Monday that he was not consulted by the Free Our Feeds group and was not thrilled by its announcement.

“Personally, I think it’s a wasted opportunity to organize this huge effort with a $30 million fundraising goal just to rebuild … what already exists and flourishes today on ActivityPub,” the protocol that underlies Mastodon, Rochko said. He argued that Bluesky’s protocol, called AT Protocol, is designed in a way that gives Bluesky too much control over the system as a whole, meaning that “it will always be an uphill battle” to make it truly open.

Mind you, Mastodon instances are not invincible, either.

There is unlikely to be a singularly effective business model for these more distributed ideas about social networks. Some will likely become paid services; Bluesky is working on a subscription offering. Smaller Mastodon instances might survive on donations. Maybe there are simple ads on some others. The good news is that both AT Protocol and ActivityPub, as protocols, offer some degree of portability and self-sufficiency.

Bloomberg: ‘China Discusses Sale of TikTok U.S. To Musk’ bloomberg.com

Bloomberg News:

Beijing officials strongly prefer that TikTok remains under the ownership of parent ByteDance Ltd., the people say, and the company is contesting the impending ban with an appeal to the US Supreme Court. But the justices signaled during arguments on Jan. 10 that they are likely to uphold the law. Senior Chinese officials had already begun to debate contingency plans for TikTok as part of an expansive discussion on how to work with Donald Trump’s administration, one of which involves [Elon] Musk, said the people, asking not to be identified revealing confidential discussions.

There are some strange things about this report, like how it carries no byline, which means its credibility rests entirely on how much you trust anonymous sources giving Bloomberg information about government activities in China. Also, Todd Spangler, of Variety, has a quote from TikTok saying it is “pure fiction”.

Then there is this paragraph, later in the article, which does not make very much sense to me:

A majority of the Supreme Court justices suggested the security concerns take priority over free speech, although they have yet to issue a formal decision. President-elect Trump, who takes office Jan. 20, has sought to delay the TikTok ban — which takes effect Jan. 19 — so he can work on the negotiations. He has said he wants to “save” the app and there’s been speculation he could take last-minute action to sidestep the ban.

The obvious question — of how someone who does not yet have power is able to take “last-minute action” to avoid a ban — goes unanswered in this article. Maybe I am missing something. Or, maybe Trump’s golden toilet seat was borne of the fires of Mount Doom.

This whole idea — if it even exists — is dumb as rocks. If you believe social media platforms should not overtly support a particular candidate or ideology, too bad — that is precisely how Musk used X during the last U.S. presidential election. If you are of the opinion that TikTok could be too compromised by government influence, Musk is working directly with the incoming administration. If you think Chinese government influence is a specifically corrupting force for TikTok, they have leverage over Musk thanks to Tesla’s manufacturing plant and sales in China. Think Musk is going to stand up to quasi-authoritarian bullies at home and abroad? Doubtful. This solves basically none of the concerns raised by detractors.

This report sounds, at best, like wishcasting by people who stand to benefit from Musk paying too much for TikTok’s U.S. operations. Little wonder why nobody wanted to put their name on it.

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You Never Want to See This Road Sign theautopian.com

Lewin Day, the Autopian:

The Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD) is widely considered to be a dry and unemotional document. Published by the Department of Transportation, it outlines the basic specifications of all the street signs you could expect to see out on roads and highways across the United States. Most are familiar, but if you dive deeper into its pages, you can find some unsettling relics from darker times.

I wanted to see if there was anything similar in the Canadian equivalent of this manual, but it would cost me over $1,000 to find out. Disappointing.

Meta Reorientates Itself Around ‘Masculine Energy’ 404media.co

Jason Koebler, 404 Media:

Meta deleted nonbinary and trans themes for its Messenger app this week, around the same time that the company announced it would change its rules to allow users to declare that LGBTQ+ people are “mentally ill,” 404 Media has learned.

[…]

The Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine shows these posts [announcing the themes] were both still live as of September 2024, the last time the announcement posts were archived. The chat themes that they were announcing were deleted this week, according to internal information obtained by 404 Media. We also confirmed that the themes are no longer active on Messenger. A “Pride” rainbow theme is still active.

Mike Isaac, Sheera Frenkel, and Kate Conger, New York Times:

That same day at Meta’s offices in Silicon Valley, Texas and New York, facilities managers were instructed to remove tampons from men’s bathrooms, which the company had provided for nonbinary and transgender employees who use the men’s room and who may have required sanitary pads, two employees said.

If anybody is still committed to the idea that Meta changed its policies for principled speech reasons, this ought to shatter that belief. It created explicit carve-outs to permit discriminatory speech based on gender and sexual orientation, and Meta — as a company — is reinforcing that by reducing its public support for people who are transgender and non-binary, and making employees’ lives worse.

Riley Griffin, Bloomberg:

“Masculine energy I think is good, and obviously society has plenty of that, but I think that corporate culture was really trying to get away from it,” Zuckerberg said during a nearly 3-hour-long conversation with podcaster Joe Rogan, published on Friday.

“It’s like you want feminine energy, you want masculine energy,” Zuckerberg said during the episode of The Joe Rogan Experience. “I think that that’s all good. But I do think the corporate culture sort of had swung toward being this somewhat more neutered thing,” he added, before discussing his passions for mixed martial arts and hunting invasive pigs in Hawaii.

danah boyd:

This isn’t simply toxic masculinity. It’s also the toxicity of pursuing the latest variant of masculinity. To feel whole. To feel worthy. To feel powerful. To have a purpose. This doesn’t have to be toxic. But the problem with masculinity is that it’s socially constructed. […]

If there was any doubt about what he means by “masculine energy”, Zuckerberg goes on to say “I think having a culture [in martial arts] that celebrates the aggression a bit more has its own merits”, elaborating:

Rogan: I can see your point, though, about corporate culture. When do you think that happened? Was that a slow shift? Because I think it used to be very masculine. I think it was kind of hyper-aggressive at one point.

Zuckerberg: No, look — I think part of… the intent on all these things I think is good, right? Like, I do think that, if you’re a woman going into a company, it probably feels like it’s too masculine. It’s like there isn’t enough of the energy that you may naturally have, and it probably feels like there are all of these things that are set up that are biased against you. And that’s not good either, because you want women to be able to succeed and, like, have companies that can unlock all the value from having great people no matter what background or gender.

But I think these things can always go a little far, and I think it’s one thing to say “we want to be … welcoming and make a good environment for everyone”, and I think think it’s another to basically say that masculinity is bad. And I kind of think we swung culturally to that part [of the spectrum] where it’s like “masculinity is toxic, we have to get rid of it completely”. It’s like “no, both of these things are good”.

Ridiculous backlash like this happens every single time some group without much power gets a little bit more. Men remain overrepresented in the U.S. workforce generally, and earn far more. Women are discriminated against when doing paid work from hiring onward. Sexual harassment remains a problem. The literature on this in both popular culture and academic circles is vast. A good introduction to the “masculine energy” at tech companies, in particular, is Emily Chang’s “Brotopia”. The idea that corporate culture has swung too far feminine and is placating women too much is laughable, let alone one which is sufficiently welcoming to people who are transgender, non-binary, or genderfluid.

Lion’s Refined Clarity lmnt.me

Dan Counsell:

Can we please have the macOS X Lion UI back? 😍

Kyle Halevi (I trimmed the URL):

@realmacdan I redrew more than just Lion, see here:

https://www.sketch.com/s/…

Louie Mantia:

There’s a refined clarity to this version of Aqua. It evolved gracefully to this point, where every element was distinctly different and yet cohesive. Consider the search field alone. Now, search fields have the same appearance of every other field: squared. The pill shape distinguished itself. Removing that characteristic introduced a level of ambiguity that is unnecessary. The same can be said for so much in modern visual design (or lack thereof).

When Mac OS X Lion was released, John Siracusa wrote imagined “three dials labeled ‘color,’ ‘contrast,’ and ‘contour,'” saying “Apple has been turning them down slowly for years. Lion accelerates that process”. At the time, we had no idea how much closer to zero Apple would take those dials. Now, we know — and for the same apparent reason. Siracusa, again:

Apple says that its goal with the Lion user interface was to highlight content by de-emphasizing the surrounding user interface elements.

Alan Dye, introducing MacOS Big Sur:

We’ve reduced visual complexity to keep the focus on user’s content.

The thing about this explanation that frustrates most is that while we are sometimes merely viewing something, we are very often doing something with it. The reason there is a visual interface with controls and structure is because the computer is a tool.

You know how many stoves have implemented some form of touch-based controls which sometimes dim or recede? They always look more clever than they are to actually use. A physical knob is more utilitarian, and much better for its purpose. MacOS — and its users — would benefit from similar clarity and obvious controls, even if it comes at the cost of adding more shapes and colours.

The Verge: ‘Mark Zuckerberg Lies to Joe Rogan’s Face’ theverge.com

Elizabeth Lopatto, for the Verge, listened to Mark Zuckerberg’s appearance on Joe Rogan’s podcast so none of us need to. Lopatto does a good job in this article of walking through some of the claims made by Zuckerberg and the conspicuous things he omits. It is a good piece.

However, there is one paragraph for which I call for a correction. Zuckerberg spent considerable time complaining about Apple in ways well beyond the scope of his corporate interests. He whined about blue iMessage bubbles! But he does have more legitimate and relevant disputes, too.

Lopatto:

At least some of these Apple issues actually matter — there is a legitimate DOJ antitrust case against the company. But that isn’t what’s on Zuckerberg’s mind. The last point is the important one, from his perspective. He has a longstanding grudge against Apple after the company implemented anti-tracking features into its default browser, Safari. Facebook criticized those changes in newspaper ads, even. The policy cost social media companies almost $10 billion, according to The Financial Times; Facebook lost the most money “in absolute terms.” You see, it turns out if you ask people whether they want to be tracked, the answer is generally no — and that’s bad for Facebook’s business.

The 2018 Safari changes might have been what started Zuckerberg’s grudge, but they were not the trigger for Meta’s newspaper complaints or the multibillion-dollar cost to ad-supported social media companies. That was, of course, App Tracking Transparency, announced in 2020 and launched the following year.

Elon Musk Is Trying to Oust the British Prime Minister youtube.com

Anna Gross and Joe Miller, Financial Times:

Elon Musk has privately discussed with allies how Sir Keir Starmer could be removed as UK prime minister before the next general election, according to people briefed on the matter.

Musk, the world’s richest man and key confidant of US president-elect Donald Trump, is probing how he and his rightwing allies can destabilise the UK Labour government beyond the aggressive posts he has issued on his social media platform X, the people said.

Private Eye editor Ian Hislop appeared on Andrew Marr’s LBC show to discuss Musk’s absurd claims:

I mean, it is almost impossible to avoid him, and he has enormous power, because of a) his money, and b) his reach to people who have been persuaded over the last five years or so that the mainstream media hasn’t covered any stories.

Hislop says the award-winning story Musk is using to cause this frenzy was broken on the front page of the Times and has been covered for a decade or more. As Hank Green said, everything is a conspiracy theory when you do not trust anything and, as Mike Masnick said, when you do not bother to educate yourself.

I shudder to think what nonsense is coming for the Canadian election likely happening this year. It is going to be a nightmare.

Ads in Thousands of Apps Hijacked to Spy on Your Location 404media.co

Joseph Cox, 404 Media:

Hackers claim to have compromised Gravy Analytics, the parent company of Venntel which has sold masses of smartphone location data to the U.S. government. The hackers said they have stolen a massive amount of data, including customer lists, information on the broader industry, and even location data harvested from smartphones which show peoples’ precise movements, and they are threatening to publish the data publicly.

You remember Gravy Analytics, right? It is the one from the stories and the FTC settlements, though it should not be confused with all the other ones.

Cox, again, 404 Media:

Included in the hacked Gravy data are tens of millions of mobile phone coordinates of devices inside the US, Russia, and Europe. Some of those files also reference an app next to each piece of location data. 404 Media extracted the app names and built a list of mentioned apps.

The list includes dating sites Tinder and Grindr; massive games such as Candy Crush, Temple Run, Subway Surfers, and Harry Potter: Puzzles & Spells; transit app Moovit; My Period Calendar & Tracker, a period tracking app with more than 10 million downloads; popular fitness app MyFitnessPal; social network Tumblr; Yahoo’s email client; Microsoft’s 365 office app; and flight tracker Flightradar24. The list also mentions multiple religious-focused apps such as Muslim prayer and Christian Bible apps; various pregnancy trackers; and many VPN apps, which some users may download, ironically, in an attempt to protect their privacy.

This location data, some of it more granular than others, appears to be derived from real-time bidding on advertising, much like the Patternz case last year. In linking to — surprise — Cox’s reporting on Patternz, I also pointed to a slowly developing lawsuit against Google. In a filing (PDF) from the plaintiffs, so far untested in court, there are some passages that can help contextualize the scale and scope of real-time bidding data (emphasis mine):

As to the Court’s second concern about the representative nature of the RTB data produced for the plaintiffs (the “Plaintiff data”), following the Court’s Order, Google produced six ten-minute intervals of class-wide RTB bid data spread over a three-year period (2021-2023) (the “Class data”). Further Pritzker Decl., ¶ 17. Prof. Shafiq analyzed this production, encompassing over 120 terabytes of data and almost [redacted] billion RTB bid requests. His analysis directly answers the Court’s inquiry, affirming that the RTB data are uniformly personal information for the plaintiffs and the Class, and that the Plaintiff data is in fact representative of the Class as a whole.

[…]

[…] For the six ten-minute periods of Class data Google produced, Prof. Shafiq finds that there were at least [redacted] different companies receiving the bid data located in at least [redacted] countries, and that the companies included some of the largest technology companies in the world. […]

This is Google, not Gravy Analytics, but still — this entire industry is morally bankrupt. It should not be a radical position that using an app on your phone or browsing the web should not opt you into such egregious violations of basic elements of your privacy.

New Rules Allow More Slurs on Meta Platforms theintercept.com

Sam Biddle, the Intercept:

Meta is now granting its users new freedom to post a wide array of derogatory remarks about races, nationalities, ethnic groups, sexual orientations, and gender identities, training materials obtained by The Intercept reveal.

There are examples in this article and, separately, in Casey Newton’s reporting about dehumanizing speech toward people who are transgender, non-binary, or genderfluid. I cannot imagine working on these products and being proud to see such abusive language is allowed.

What ‘Free Speech’ Is

Four years ago this week, social media companies decided they would stop platforming then-outgoing president Donald Trump after he celebrated seditionists who had broken into the U.S. Capitol Building in a failed attempt to invalidate the election and allow Trump to stay in power. After two campaigns and a presidency in which he tested the limits of what those platforms would allow, enthusiasm for a violent attack on government was apparently one step too far. At the time, Mark Zuckerberg explained:

Over the last several years, we have allowed President Trump to use our platform consistent with our own rules, at times removing content or labeling his posts when they violate our policies. We did this because we believe that the public has a right to the broadest possible access to political speech, even controversial speech. But the current context is now fundamentally different, involving use of our platform to incite violent insurrection against a democratically elected government.

Zuckerberg, it would seem, now has regrets — not about doing too little over those and the subsequent years, but about doing too much. For Zuckerberg, the intervening four years have been stifled by “censorship” on Meta’s platforms; so, this week, he announced a series of sweeping changes to their governance. He posted a summary on Threads but the five-minute video is far more loaded, and it is what I will be referring to. If you do not want to watch it — and I do not blame you — the transcript at Tech Policy Press is useful. The key changes:

  1. Fact-checking is to be replaced with a Community Notes feature, similar to the one on X.

  2. Change the Hateful Conduct policies to be more permissive about language used in discussions about immigration and gender.

  3. Make automated violation detection tools more permissive and focus them on “high-severity” problems, relying on user reports for material the company thinks is of a lower concern.

  4. Roll back restrictions on the visibility and recommendation of posts related to politics.

  5. Relocate the people responsible for moderating Meta’s products from California to another location — Zuckerberg does not specify — and move the U.S.-focused team to Texas.

  6. Work with the incoming administration on concerns about governments outside the U.S. pressuring them to “censor more”.

Regardless of whether you feel each of these are good or bad ideas, I do not think you should take Zuckerberg’s word for why the company is making these changes. Meta’s decision to stop working directly with fact-checkers, for example, is just as likely a reaction to the demands of FCC commissioner Brendan Carr, who has a bananas view (PDF) of how the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution works. According to Carr, social media companies should be forbidden from contributing their own speech to users’ posts based on the rankings of organizations like NewsGuard. According both Carr and Zuckerberg, fact-checkers demand “censorship” in some way. This is nonsense: they were not responsible for the visibility of posts. I do not think much of this entire concept, but surely they only create more speech by adding context in a similar way as Meta hopes will still happen with Community Notes. Since Carr will likely be Trump’s nominee to run the FCC, it is important for Zuckerberg to get his company in line.

Meta’s overhaul of its Hateful Conduct policies also shows the disparity between what Zuckerberg says and the company’s actions. Removing rules that are “out of touch with mainstream discourse” sounds fair. What it means in practice, though, is to allow people to make COVID-19 more racist, demean women, and — of course — discriminate against LGBTQ people in more vicious ways. I understand the argument for why these things should be allowed by law, but there is no obligation for Meta to carry this speech. If Meta’s goal is to encourage a “friendly and positive” environment, why increase its platforms’ permissiveness to assholes? Perhaps the answer is in the visibility of these posts — maybe Meta is confident it can demote harmful posts while still technically allowing them. I am not.

We can go through each of these policy changes, dissect them, and consider the actual reasons for each, but I truly believe that is a waste of time compared to looking at the sum of what they accomplish. Conservatives, particularly in the U.S., have complained for years about bias against their views by technology companies, an updated version of similar claims about mass media. Despite no evidence for this systemic bias, the myth stubbornly persists. Political strategists even have a cute name for it: “working the refs”. Jeff Cohen and Norman Solomon, Creators Syndicate, August 1992:

But in a moment of candor, [Republican Party Chair Rich] Bond provided insight into the Republicans’ media-bashing: “There is some strategy to it,” he told the Washington Post. “I’m the coach of kids’ basketball and Little League teams. If you watch any great coach, what they try to do is ‘work the refs.’ Maybe the ref will cut you a little slack next time.”

Zuckerberg and Meta have been worked — heavily so. The playbook of changes outlined by Meta this week are a logical response in an attempt to court scorned users, and not just the policy changes here. On Monday, Meta announced Dana White, UFC president and thrice-endorser of Trump, would be joining its board. Last week, it promoted Joel Kaplan, a former Republican political operative, to run its global policy team. Last year, Meta hired Dustin Carmack who, according to his LinkedIn, directs the company’s policy and outreach for nineteen U.S. states, and previously worked for the Heritage Foundation, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and Ron DeSantis. These are among the people forming the kinds of policies Meta is now prescribing.

This is not a problem solved through logic. If it were, studies showing a lack of political bias in technology company policy would change more minds. My bet is that these changes will not have what I assume is the desired effect of improving the company’s standing with far-right conservatives or the incoming administration. If Meta becomes more permissive for bigots, it will encourage more of that behaviour. If Meta does not sufficiently suggest those kinds of posts because it wants “friendly and positive” platforms, the bigots will cry “shadowban”. Meta’s products will corrode. That does not mean they will no longer be influential or widely used, however; as with its forthcoming A.I. profiles, Meta is surely banking that its dominant position and a kneecapped TikTok will continue driving users and advertisers to its products, however frustratedly.

Zuckerberg appears to think little of those who reject the new policies:

[…] Some people may leave our platforms for virtue signaling, but I think the vast majority and many new users will find that these changes make the products better.

I am allergic to the phrase “virtue signalling” but I am willing to try getting through this anyway. This has been widely interpreted as because of their virtue signalling, but I think it is just as accurate if you think of it as because of our virtue signalling. Zuckerberg has complained about media and government “pressure” to more carefully moderate Meta’s platforms. But he cannot ignore how this week’s announcement also seems tied to implicit pressure. Trump is not yet the president, true, but Zuckerberg met with him shortly after the election and, apparently, the day before these changes were announced. This is just as much “virtue signalling” — particularly moving some operations to Texas for reasons even Zuckerberg says are about optics.

Perhaps you think I am overreading this, but Zuckerberg explicitly said in his video introducing the changes that “recent elections also feel like a cultural tipping point towards once again prioritizing speech”. If he means elections other than those which occurred in the U.S. in November, I am not sure which. These are changes made from a uniquely U.S. perspective. To wit, the final commitment in the list above as explained by Zuckerberg (via the Tech Policy Press transcript):

Finally, we’re going to work with President Trump to push back on governments around the world. They’re going after American companies and pushing to censor more. The US has the strongest constitutional protections for free expression in the world. Europe has an ever-increasing number of laws, institutionalizing censorship, and making it difficult to build anything innovative there. Latin American countries have secret courts that can order companies to quietly take things down. China has censored our apps from even working in the country. The only way that we can push back on this global trend is with the support of the US government, and that’s why it’s been so difficult over the past four years when even the US government has pushed for censorship.

For their part, the E.U. rejected Zuckerberg’s characterization of its policies, and Brazilian officials are not thrilled, either.

These changes — and particularly this last one — are illustrative of the devil’s bargain of large U.S.-based social media companies: they export their policies and values worldwide following whatever whims and trends are politically convenient at the time. Right now, it is important for Meta to avoid getting on the incoming Trump administration’s shit list, so they, like everyone, are grovelling. If the rest of the world is subjected to U.S.-style discussions, so be it. But so have we been for a long time. What is extraordinary about Meta’s changes is how many people will be impacted: billions, plural. Something like one-quarter the world’s population.

The U.S. is no stranger to throwing around its political and corporate power in a way few other nations can. Meta’s changes are another entry into that canon. There are people in some countries who will benefit from having more U.S.-centric policies, but most everyone elsewhere will find them discordant with more local expectations. These new policies are not satisfying for people everywhere around the world, but the old ones were not, either.

It is unfair to expect any platform operator to get things right for every audience, especially not at Meta’s scale. The options created by less centralized protocols like ActivityPub and AT Protocol are much more welcome. We should be able to have more control over our experience than we are trusted with.

Zuckerberg begins his video introduction by referencing a 2019 speech he gave at Georgetown University. In it, he speaks of the internet creating “significantly broader power to call out things we feel are unjust”. “[G]iving people a voice and broader inclusion go hand in hand,” he said, “and the trend has been towards greater voice over time”. Zuckerberg naturally centred his company’s products. But you know what is even more powerful than one company at massive scale? It is when no company needs to act as the world’s communications hub. The internet is the infrastructure for that, and we would be better off if we rejected attempts to build moats.

Apple Says It Will More Clearly Label A.I.-generated Summaries bbc.com

Zoe Kleinman, Liv McMahon, and Natalie Sherman, BBC News:

“Apple Intelligence features are in beta and we are continuously making improvements with the help of user feedback,” the company said in a statement on Monday, adding that receiving the summaries is optional.

“A software update in the coming weeks will further clarify when the text being displayed is summarization provided by Apple Intelligence. We encourage users to report a concern if they view an unexpected notification summary.”

I object to the “beta” excuse. Would Apple not be “continuously making improvements with the help of user feedback” if it was not a “beta” product? Of course it would make changes.

Jason Snell, Six Colors:

We shouldn’t be. Apple’s shipping a feature that frequently rewrites headlines to be wrong. That’s a failure, and it shouldn’t be shrugged off as being the nature of OS features in the 2020s.

Steve Troughton-Smith:

The Apple Intelligence vs BBC story is a microcosm of the developer story for the feature. We’re soon expected to vend up all the actions and intents in our apps to Siri, with no knowledge of the context (or accuracy) in which it will be presented to the user. Apple gets to launder the features and content of your apps and wrap it up in their UI as ‘Siri’ — that’s the developer proposition Apple has presented us. They get to market it as Apple Intelligence, you get the blame if it goes awry.

Guy English:

I agree with Jason. I’ll maybe go further—If Apple Intelligence summarizes your notifications then Apple *should* badge it with *their* Apple logo. Not some weird cog or brain or some other such icon. Put your name on it! […]

I agree. Apple should not be putting its name or logo on something it does not stand behind, and it should stand behind everything it ships. It supposedly cannot “ship junk”, but it is obviously not yet proud of the way these notifications were summarized — it is making changes, after all. But will it be courageous enough to attach its valuable brand to the output of its own large language model? I would bet against it, but it should.

A Prorogued Parliament Punts Privacy Policy policyalternatives.ca

Jon Milton, Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives:

He also announced that Parliament — which has been consumed for months in Conservative-led procedural squabbling — would be prorogued until March 24. Prorogation is a type of temporary suspension of parliamentary activities. It is distinct from dissolution, which would trigger an election.

Prorogation is more like hitting the reset button on all legislation. All bills that haven’t yet been passed are now dead and would have to start from scratch. Importantly this includes both the spring budget and the fall economic statement, along with all other outstanding house business.

Among the bills killed is a package of privacy legislation contemplated since 2022. The Conservatives have voted unanimously against these laws so, if they win the next federal election — and they are heavily favoured to do so — expect to see this whole process beginning from scratch.

Google Pays Its Online News Act Tithe thecanadianpressnews.ca

Tara Deschamps, Canadian Press:

The Online News Act aims to level the playing field by extracting compensation from search engine and social media companies with a total annual global revenue of $1 billion or more and 20 million or more Canadian average monthly unique visitors or average monthly active users. Google, along with Facebook and Instagram-owner Meta, are the only tech firms that currently meet these criteria.

Google secured a five-year exemption from the act by agreeing to pay $100 million a year to media organizations. Meta has avoided having to make any payments by blocking access to Canadian news on its platforms.

The way Google is “exempt” is a little odd. Instead of negotiating with individual publishers, Google is submitting a lump sum to be divided by the Canadian Journalism Collective, the government entity responsible for administering the Online News Act.

This is a significant discount from the $172 million Google was expected to pay annually. You can tell it had the upper hand in these negotiations, at least compared with Meta. Canadian publications do not want to lose whatever is left of Google’s precious referrals before that dries up and is replaced with A.I. zero-click summaries.

Dell Rebrands Its Products, Loses None of Its Unique ‘Dell’ Charm theverge.com

Antonio G. Di Benedetto, the Verge:

The tech industry’s relentless march toward labeling everything “plus,” “pro,” and “max” soldiers on, with Dell now taking the naming scheme to baffling new levels of confusion. The PC maker announced at CES 2025 that it’s cutting names like XPS, Inspiron, Latitude, Precision, and OptiPlex from its new laptops, desktops, and monitors and replacing them with three main product lines: Dell (yes, just Dell), Dell Pro, and Dell Pro Max.

If you think that sounds a bit Apple-y and bland, you’re right. But Dell is taking it further by also adding a bit of auto industry parlance with three sub-tiers: Base, Plus, and Premium.

Di Benedetto knocks Dell for “stripping itself of some of its identity” but I disagree: this is exactly what I expect to see from Dell’s naming conventions. I attempted to configure a model of its new Dell Pro Premium laptop. Upon selecting a brighter and nicer display, I received an error message reading “Composite Rule Error: Invalid selection in Processor Branding”. Upon closing the error and returning to the configurator, I was told:

The Chassis Option requires the matching Memory size. The 16gb Memory is only available with the Ultra 5 236V/226V and Ultra 7 266V. The 32gb Memory is only available with the Ultra 5 238V and Ultra 7 268V.

This is almost nostalgic for me. Before I owned a Mac, I recall trying to shop Dell’s website and encountering gibberish like this all the time. That is the Dell charm I so vividly remember, no matter what combination of “premium”, “pro”, “max”, and “plus” they use.

Waymo Cars Usually Fail to Yield to Pedestrians at a Crosswalk washingtonpost.com

Geoffrey A. Fowler, Washington Post:

When I try to cross my street at a marked crosswalk, the Waymo robotaxis often wouldn’t yield to me. I would step out into the white-striped pavement, look at the Waymo, wait to see whether it’s going to stop — and the car would zip right past.

It cut me off again and again on the path I use to get to work and take my kids to the park. It happened even when I was stuck in a small median halfway across the road. So I began using my phone to film myself crossing. I documented more than a dozen Waymo cars failing to yield in the span of a week. (You can watch some of my recordings below.)

The crosswalk in the video looks terrifying. On a road with a speed limit of 35 miles per hour (56 kilometres per hour), it seems many human drivers happily barrelled through that crosswalk, too. But, as Fowler writes, a key argument for automated cars is supposed to be safety. That cannot be only for people in big metal boxes easy for a Waymo to spot. It must also — especially — be true for pedestrians.

The ads for Apple Intelligence have mostly been noted for what they show, but there is also something missing: in the fine print and in its operating systems, Apple still calls it a “beta” release, but not in its ads. Given the exuberance with which Apple is marketing these features, that label seems less like a way to inform users the software is unpolished, and more like an excuse for why it does not work as well as one might expect of a headlining feature from the world’s most valuable company.

“Beta” is a funny word when it comes to Apple’s software. It often makes available preview builds of upcoming O.S. releases to users and developers for feedback, testing software compatibility, and to build with new APIs. This is voluntary and done with the understanding that the software is unfinished, and bugs — even serious ones — can be expected.

Apple has also, rarely, applied the “beta” label to features in regular releases which are distributed to all users, not just those who signed up. This type of “beta” seems less honest. Instead of communicating this feature is a work in progress, it seems to say we are releasing this before it is done. Maybe that is a subtle distinction, but it is there. One type of beta is testing; the other type asks users to disregard their expectations of polish, quality, and functionality so that a feature can be pushed out earlier than it should.

We have seen this on rare occasions: once with Portrait mode; more notably, with Siri. Mat Honan, writing for Gizmodo in December 2011:

Check out any of Apple’s ads for the iPhone 4S. They’re promoting Siri so hard you’d be forgiven for thinking Siri is the new CEO of Apple. And it’s not just that first wave of TV ads, a recent email Apple sent out urges you to “Give the phone that everyone’s talking about. And talking to.” It promises “Siri: The intelligent assistant you can ask to make calls, send texts, set reminders, and more.”

What those Apple ads fail to report — at all — is that Siri is very much a half-baked product. Siri is officially in beta. Go to Siri’s homepage on Apple.com, and you’ll even notice a little beta tag by the name.

This is familiar.

The ads for Siri gave the impression of great capability. It seemed like you could ask it how to tie a bowtie, what events were occurring in a town or city, and more. The response was not shown for these queries, but the implication was that Siri could respond. What became obvious to anyone who actually used Siri is that it would show web search results instead. But, hey, it was a “beta” — for two years.

The ads for Apple Intelligence do one better and show features still unreleased. The fine print does mention “some features and languages will be coming over the next year”, without acknowledging the very feature in this ad is one of them. And, when it does actually come out, it is still officially in “beta”, so I guess you should not expect it to work properly.

This all seems like a convoluted way to evade full responsibility of the Apple Intelligence experience which, so far, has been middling for me. Genmoji is kind of fun, but Notification Summaries are routinely wrong. Priority messages in Mail is helpful when it correctly surfaces an important email, and annoying when it highlights spam. My favourite feature — in theory — is the Reduce Interruptions Focus mode, which is supposed to only show notifications when they are urgent or important. It is the kind of thing I have been begging for to deal with the overburdened notifications system. But, while it works pretty well sometimes, it is not dependable enough to rely on. It will sometimes prioritize scam messages written with a sense of urgency, but fail to notify me when my wife messages me a question. It still necessitates I occasionally review the notifications suppressed by this Focus mode. It is helpful, but not consistently enough to be confidence-inspiring.

Will users frustrated by the questionable reliability of Apple Intelligence routinely return to try again? If my own experience with Siri is any guidance — and I am not sure it is, but it is all I have — I doubt it. If these features did not work on the first dozen attempts, why would they work any time after? This strategy, I think, teaches people to set their expectations low.

This beta-tinged rollout is not entirely without its merits. Apple is passively soliciting feedback within many of its Apple Intelligence features, at a scale far greater than it could by restricting testing to only its own staff and contractors. But it also means the public becomes unwitting testers. As with Siri before, Apple heavily markets this set of features as the defining characteristic of this generation of iPhones, yet we are all supposed to approach this as though we are helping Apple make sure its products are ready? Sorry, it does not work like that. Either something is shipping or it is not, and if it does not work properly, users will quickly learn not to trust it.

Aqua Turns Twenty-Five on January 5 tla.systems

Jason Snell, in the March 2000 issue of Macworld:

Suddenly, the future is now. Shortly after the calendar clicked over to 2000, Apple unveiled Mac OS X’s brand-new interface—named Aqua—giving the world its first glimpse of how we’ll all interact with our Macs for years to come. […]

[…]

Perhaps the most radical addition to the Mac OS interface in Mac OS X is the Dock, a strip that lives at the bottom of your screen and displays the contents of open windows (you can even opt to have it appear only when you move the cursor to the bottom of the screen, like the Windows task bar).

James Thomson:

The version he [Steve Jobs] showed was quite different to what actually ended up shipping, with square boxes around the icons, and an actual “Dock” folder in your user’s home folder that contained aliases to the items stored.

I should know – I had spent the previous 18 months or so as the main engineer working away on it. At that very moment, I was watching from a cubicle in Apple Cork, in Ireland. For the second time in my short Apple career, I said a quiet prayer to the gods of demos, hoping that things didn’t break. For context, I was in my twenties at this point and scared witless.

I was not using a Mac until after Mac OS X 10.2 was released, so I am by no means a good barometer for the Mac-iness of early releases. One thing I remember clearly, though, is being smitten with it from my earliest use; I was among many who downloaded Aqua Dock to get a taste of the experience on my Windows computer.

I still cannot believe it took until perhaps five years ago for me to become a Dock-on-the-side person, however.

‘Why I Am Quitting the Washington Post’ anntelnaes.substack.com

Ann Telnaes:

I’ve worked for the Washington Post since 2008 as an editorial cartoonist. I have had editorial feedback and productive conversations — and some differences — about cartoons I have submitted for publication, but in all that time I’ve never had a cartoon killed because of who or what I chose to aim my pen at. Until now.

We can keep an open mind and accept the editor rejected this cartoon for any number of reasons, while also considering the most obvious reason: the editor acknowledges the owner of the Post is aligning himself with the incoming administration. Perhaps a more generous reading is that Jeff Bezos is directing the Post to be less adversarial than it was from 2016–2020. Either way, the effect is the same.

Tim Cook Becomes the Newest Big Donor to the Trump Inaugural Fund axios.com

In the United States, donations to the extravagant presidential inauguration ceremony by U.S. citizens and corporations are unlimited. As a result, it is the perfect vehicle with which to get comfortable with the incoming administration. It is not a bribe, though. Money or goods given to holders of public office with the implication of favours is almost never bribery. If you call it a bribe, everyone involved seems to get mad. So do not call it a bribe.

Kathryn Watson and Libby Cathey, CBS News:

Amazon, run by billionaire Jeff Bezos, intends to donate $1 million to the president-elect’s inaugural fund and will stream the ceremony on Prime, amounting to another $1 million in-kind donation, according to a source familiar with the donations. The Wall Street Journal first reported Amazon’s plans.

Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, also plans to send $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman plans to make a $1 million personal donation to Trump’s inaugural fund, according to an OpenAI spokesperson. Fox News Digital first reported Altman’s intended donation.

That makes three-for-three on billionaires who see nothing but good news in getting cozy with Trump administration figures.

Edward Helmore, the Guardian:

US business leaders are spending big on Donald Trump’s second inaugural fund, which is predicted to exceed even the record-setting $107m raised in 2017.

[…]

“EVERYBODY WANTS TO BE MY FRIEND!!!” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social on Thursday.

I had blessedly forgotten what this seventy-eight year old sounds like.

Mike Allen, Axios:

Apple CEO Tim Cook will personally donate $1 million to President-elect Trump’s inaugural committee, sources with knowledge of the donation tell Axios.

[…]

Cook, a proud Alabama native, believes the inauguration is a great American tradition, and is donating to the inauguration in the spirit of unity, the sources said. The company is not expected to give.

The sources’ names? Cim Took and Ptim Kooc.

Call this what you want: bipartisanship, diplomacy, pragmatic, outright support, or “the spirit of unity”. But one thing you cannot call it is principled. We have become accustomed to business leaders sacrificing some of their personal principles to support their company in some way — for some reason, it is just business is a universal excuse for terrible behaviour — but all of these figures have already seen what the incoming administration does with power and they want to support it. For anyone who claims to support laws or customs, this is not principled behaviour.

Or, I guess, bribery.

Tesla Can Remotely Unlock and Monitor Vehicles 404media.co

Jason Koebler, 404 Media:

After the Cybertruck explosion outside of the Trump International Hotel in Vegas on Wednesday, Elon Musk remotely unlocked the Cybertruck for law enforcement and provided video from charging stations that the truck had visited to track the vehicle’s location, according to information released by law enforcement.

This comes just days after a Volkswagen subsidiary left vehicle tracking data exposed on an Amazon server.

While Clark County Police gave explicit credit to Musk, it is unclear what role he played. Even so, this demonstrates the power Tesla has over vehicles in owners’ hands. It can remotely interact with them and, because Telsa also provides the charging infrastructure, it can track vehicle use to a greater extent than its competitors.

Software is eating the world continues to sound as much like a threat as it does inspiration.

Pornhub Is Now Blocked in Almost All of the U.S. South 404media.co

Samantha Cole, 404 Media:

That law, passed as Act 440, was introduced by “sex addiction” counselor and state representative Laurie Schegel and quickly copied across the country. The exact phrasing varies, but in most states, the details of the law are the same: Any “commercial entity” that publishes “material harmful to minors” online can be held liable—meaning, tens of thousands of dollars in fines and/or private lawsuits—if it doesn’t “perform reasonable age verification methods to verify the age of individuals attempting to access the material.”

These and other worries about minors’ access to technology increasingly convinces me a device-level age verification standard is around the corner. A requirement for Apple and Google to age-restrict their app stores was proposed by U.S. legislators in November, but this would not affect users’ access to the web. I bet something changes on this front — and soon.

Apple Files to Settle Siri Privacy Lawsuit reuters.com

Jonathan Stempel, Reuters:

Apple agreed to pay $95 million in cash to settle a proposed class action lawsuit claiming that its voice-activated Siri assistant violated users’ privacy.

A preliminary settlement was filed on Tuesday night in the Oakland, California federal court, and requires approval by U.S. District Judge Jeffrey White.

Alex Hern, who wrote the 2019 Guardian story forming the basis of many complaints in the lawsuit, today on Bluesky:

There’s two claims in one case and one of them Apple is bang to rights on (“Siri records accidental interactions”) and the other is worth far far more than $95m to disprove (“those recordings are shared with advertisers”)

The original complaint (PDF), filed just a couple of weeks after Hern’s story broke, does not once mention advertising. A revised complaint (PDF), filed a few months later, mentions it once and only in passing (emphasis mine):

Apple’s actions were at all relevant times knowing, willful, and intentional as evidenced by Apple’s admission that a significant portion of the recordings it shares with its contractors are made without use of a hot word and its use of the information to, among other things, improve the functionality of Siri for Apple’s own financial benefit, to target personalized advertising to users, and to generate significant profits. Apple’s actions were done in reckless disregard for Plaintiffs’ and Class Members’ privacy rights.

This is the sole mention in the entire complaint, and there is no citation or evidence for it. However, a further revision (PDF), filed in 2021, contains plenty of anecdotes:

Several times, obscure topics of Plaintiff Lopez’s and Plaintiff A.L.’s private conversations were used by Apple and its partners to target advertisements to them. For example, during different private conversations, Plaintiff Lopez and Plaintiff A.L. mentioned brand names including “Olive Garden,” “Easton bats,” “Pit Viper sunglasses,” and “Air Jordans.” These advertisements were targeted to Plaintiffs Lopez and A.L. Subsequent to these private conversations, Plaintiff Lopez and Plaintiff A.L., these products began to populate Apple search results and Plaintiffs also received targeted advertisements for these products in Apple’s Safari browser and in third party applications. Plaintiffs Lopez and A.L. had not previously searched for these items prior to the targeted advertisements. Because the intercepted conversations took place in private to the exclusion of others, only through Apple’s surreptitious recording could these specific advertisements be pinpointed to Plaintiffs Lopez and A.L.

I am filing this in the needs supporting evidence column alongside other claims of microphones being used to target advertising. I sympathize with the plaintiffs in this case, but nothing about their anecdotes — more detail on pages 8 and 10 of the complaint — is compelling, as alternative explanations are possible.

For example, one plaintiff discussed a particular type of surgery with his doctor, and then saw ads on his iPhone related to the condition it treats. While it seems possible Siri was erroneously activated, Apple received a copy of the recording, and then it automatically transcribed and sold its contents to data brokers, this is massively speculative compared to what we know ad tech companies do. Perhaps the doctor’s office was part of a geofenced ad campaign. Or, perhaps the doctor was searching related keywords and then, because the plaintiff’s phone was in the proximity of the doctor’s devices, some cross-device targeting became confused. Neither of these explanations involve microphones, let alone Siri.

Yet, because Apple settled this lawsuit, it looks like it is not interested in fighting these claims. It creates another piece of pseudo-evidence for people who believe microphone-equipped devices are transforming idle conversations into perfectly targeted ads.

None of these stories have so far been proven, and there is not a shred of direct evidence it is occurring — but I can understand why people are paranoid. While businesses have exploited private data to sell ads for decades, we have dramatically increased the amount of devices we have and the time we spend with them with few meaningful steps taken toward user privacy. We are feeding every part of this nauseating industry more data with, in many countries, about the same regulatory oversight.

I could be entirely wrong. Apple could have settled this case because it is, indeed, doing more-or-less what the plaintiffs say. To that possibility, I say: show me real evidence. I have no problem admitting I got something wrong.

Update: Apple has issued a statement in which it says it has “never used Siri data to build marketing profiles, never made it available for advertising, and never sold it to anyone for any purpose”.

Meta Envisages Social Media Filled With A.I.-Generated Users ft.com

Cristina Criddle and Hannah Murphy, Financial Times:

Meta is betting that characters generated by artificial intelligence will fill its social media platforms in the next few years as it looks to the fast-developing technology to drive engagement with its 3bn users.

[…]

“They’ll have bios and profile pictures and be able to generate and share content powered by AI on the platform … that’s where we see all of this going,” he [Meta’s Connor Hayes] added.

Imagine opening any of Meta’s products after this has taken over. Imagine how little you will see from the friends and family members you actually care about. Imagine how much slop you will be greeted with — a feed alternating between slop, suggested posts, and ads, with just enough of what you actually opened the app to see. Now consider how this will affect people who are more committed to Meta’s products, whether for economic reasons or social cohesion.

A big problem for Meta is that it is institutionally very dumb. I do not want to oversell this too much, but I truly believe this is the case. There are lots of smart people working there and its leadership clearly understands something about how people use social media.

But there is a vast sense of dumb in its attempts to deliver the next generation of its products. Its social media products are dependent on “engagement”, which is sometimes a product of users’ actual interest and, at other times, an artifact of Meta’s success or failure in controlling what they see. Maybe its “metaverse” will be interesting one day, but it seems deeply embarrassing so far.

Volkswagen Subsidiary Left Vehicle Location Data Unprotected in Amazon Storage spiegel.de

Patrick Beuth et al., in a German-language report in Der Spiegel, as translated by Apple’s built-in translator:

Because many of the vehicle data could be linked to the names and contact details of the drivers, owners or fleet managers. Precise location data could be viewed on 460,000 vehicles, which allowed conclusions to be drawn about the lives of the people behind the steering wheels – just like the two politicians.

[…]

It is a more than embarrassing breakdown for the already struggling group. It’s a shame. Especially in the software, where VW lags behind the competition anyway. Of all things, the security of private data, which the Germans like to cite as a location advantage over the much more lax USA.

Linus Neumann, of the Chaos Computer Club, also German-language, also translated by Safari:

The information collected by VW subsidiary Cariad contains precise information on the location and time of the ignition. The movement data is linked to other personal data. In this way, they also allow conclusions to be drawn about suppliers, service providers, employees or camouflage organizations of the security authorities.

Anthony Alaniz, Motor1:

The hacker group, the Chaos Computer Club, informed Cariad about the vulnerability, which quickly patched the issue. Cariad told Spiegel that the vulnerability was a “misconfiguration” and that the company doesn’t merge data that would allow someone to create a profile about a person. According to the company, the researchers had to combine different data sets by “bypassing several security mechanisms.” It also said it’s unaware of anyone accessing the data other than CCC.

Cariad has a lot of gall to issue a statement redirecting blame to someone defeating “security mechanisms” instead of the possibility all this stored data could be re-identified in the first place.

Apple Photos’ ‘Enhanced Visual Search’ Matches Possible Landmarks Remotely lapcatsoftware.com

Matthew Green on Bluesky:

I love that Apple is trying to do privacy-related services, but this [“Enhanced Visual Search” setting] just appeared at the bottom of my Settings screen over the holiday break when I wasn’t paying attention. It sends data about my private photos to Apple.

The first mention of this preference I can find is a Reddit thread from August.

Apple says it is an entirely private process:

Enhanced Visual Search in Photos allows you to search for photos using landmarks or points of interest. Your device privately matches places in your photos to a global index Apple maintains on our servers. We apply homomorphic encryption and differential privacy, and use an OHTTP relay that hides IP address. This prevents Apple from learning about the information in your photos. […]

The company goes into more technical detail in a Machine Learning blog post. What I am confused about is what this feature actually does. It sounds like it compares landmarks identified locally against a database too vast to store locally, thus enabling more accurate lookups. It also sounds like matching is done with entirely visual data, and it does not rely on photo metadata. But because Apple did not announce this feature and poorly documents it, we simply do not know. One document says trust us to analyze your photos remotely; another says here are all the technical reasons you can trust us. Nowhere does Apple plainly say what is going on.

Jeff Johnson:

Of course, this user never requested that my on-device experiences be “enriched” by phoning home to Cupertino. This choice was made by Apple, silently, without my consent.

From my own perspective, computing privacy is simple: if something happens entirely on my computer, then it’s private, whereas if my computer sends data to the manufacturer of the computer, then it’s not private, or at least not entirely private. Thus, the only way to guarantee computing privacy is to not send data off the device.

I see this feature implemented with responsibility and privacy in nearly every way, but, because it is poorly explained and enabled by default, it is difficult to trust. Photo libraries are inherently sensitive. It is completely fair for users to be suspicious of this feature.

Merry Christmas, Your New Air Fryer Is Spying on You gizmodo.com

A press release from U.K. consumer advocacy group Which?:

The consumer champion rated products across four categories and gave them overall privacy scores for factors including consent and what data access they want. Researchers found data collection often went well beyond what was necessary for the functionality of the product – suggesting data could, in some cases, be being shared with third parties for marketing purposes. Which? is calling for firms to prioritise privacy over profits.

This includes products as pedestrian as air fryers, which apparently wanted the precise location of users and permission to record audio. There could be a valid reason for these permissions — for example, perhaps the app allows you to automate the air fryer to preheat when you return home; or, perhaps there is voice control functionality which, for understandable reasons, is not delineated in a permissions request for “recording” one’s voice.

I downloaded the Xiaomi app to look into these possibilities, but I was unable to proceed unless I created an account and connected a relevant product. I also looked at manuals for different smart air fryers from these brands, but that did not clear anything up because — wisely — these manufacturers do not include app-related information in their printed documentation.

Even if these permissions requests are perfectly innocent and were correctly documented — according to Which?, they are not — it is ridiculous that buyers need to consider all this just to use some appliance.

Matthew Gault, Gizmodo:

But it shouldn’t be this way. Every piece of tech shouldn’t be a devil’s bargain where we allow a tech company to read through our phone’s contact list so we can remotely shut off an oven. More people are pissed about this issue and complaining to their government. Watchdog groups in the U.K. and the U.S. are paying attention.

We can do something about this. We can have comprehensive privacy laws with the backing of well-funded regulators. But until that happens, everything “smart” is capable of lucrative contributions to the broader data broker and surveillance advertising markets, just because people want to use the product’s features.

Kevin O’Leary Is Playing Alberta for a $70 Billion Fool nationalobserver.com

Emily Rae Pasiuk, CBC News:

Celebrity investor Kevin O’Leary says he is planning to bankroll and build what he says will be the world’s largest artificial intelligence data centre.

The proposal — named Wonder Valley — is slated to be built in the District of Greenview, near Grande Prairie, Alta.

If you believe this pitch for a seventy billion dollar A.I. data centre campus, you are a mark. A sucker. You have been duped. Bamboozled. Hoodwinked.

Our premier is very excited.

Max Fawcett, the National Observer:

The website in question features a video that has to be seen to be believed — and even then, only as a punchline. The imagined bucolic landscape of rolling hills, gentle streams and friendly wildlife feels like a Disney-fied version of northern California rather than northern Alberta. The campus itself is straight out of Silicon Valley.

The narration is even more hilariously unrealistic, if that’s even possible. “There’s a valley,” we’re told, “where technology and nature will come together in perfect harmony. Where the future will pulse at every turn. Bursting with nature and wildlife, nurturing the present as it embraces the future. The valley where the brightest minds unite, where electrons, machines and data come together in an algorithmic dance.”

If moneyed knuckleheads want to try building this thing, that should be between them and the people of the Municipal District of Greenview — but leave the rest of us out of this. The province should not subsidize or contribute to it, but they are obviously enamoured by the new natural gas power plants to be constructed (emphasis mine):

“The GIG’s ideal cold-weather climate, a highly skilled labor force, Alberta’s pro-business policies and attractive tax regime make the GIG the perfect site for this project. We want to deliver transformative economic impact and the lowest possible carbon emissions afforded to us by the quality of gas in the area, our efficient design and the potential to add Geothermal power as well. Together, these factors create a blueprint for sustainability and success that can be recognized worldwide. This is the Greenview Model” said Mr. O’Leary.

Transparently dishonest.

The Generative A.I. Grouch

Wired has been publishing a series of predictions about the coming state of the world. Unsurprisingly, most concern artificial intelligence — how it might impact health, music, our choices, the climate, and more. It is an issue of the magazine Wired describes as its “annual trends briefing”, but it also kind of like a hundred-page op-ed section. It is a mixed bag.

A.I. critic Gary Marcus contributed a short piece about what he sees as the pointlessness of generative A.I. — and it is weak. That is not necessarily because of any specific argument, but because of how unfocused it is despite its brevity. It opens with a short history of OpenAI’s models, with Marcus writing “Generative A.I. doesn’t actually work that well, and maybe it never will”. Thesis established, he begins building the case:

Fundamentally, the engine of generative AI is fill-in-the-blanks, or what I like to call “autocomplete on steroids.” Such systems are great at predicting what might sound good or plausible in a given context, but not at understanding at a deeper level what they are saying; an AI is constitutionally incapable of fact-checking its own work. This has led to massive problems with “hallucination,” in which the system asserts, without qualification, things that aren’t true, while inserting boneheaded errors on everything from arithmetic to science. As they say in the military: “frequently wrong, never in doubt.”

Systems that are frequently wrong and never in doubt make for fabulous demos, but are often lousy products in themselves. If 2023 was the year of AI hype, 2024 has been the year of AI disillusionment. Something that I argued in August 2023, to initial skepticism, has been felt more frequently: generative AI might turn out to be a dud. The profits aren’t there — estimates suggest that OpenAI’s 2024 operating loss may be $5 billion — and the valuation of more than $80 billion doesn’t line up with the lack of profits. Meanwhile, many customers seem disappointed with what they can actually do with ChatGPT, relative to the extraordinarily high initial expectations that had become commonplace.

Marcus’ financial figures here are bizarre and incorrect. He quotes a Yahoo News-syndicated copy of a PC Gamer article, which references a Windows Central repackaging of a paywalled report by the Information — a wholly unnecessary game of telephone when the New York Times obtained financial documents with the same conclusion, and which were confirmed by CNBC. The summary of that Information article — that OpenAI “may run out of cash in 12 months, unless they raise more [money]”, as Marcus wrote on X — is somewhat irrelevant now after OpenAI proceeded to raise $6.6 billion at a staggering valuation of $157 billion.

I will leave analysis of these financials to MBA types. Maybe OpenAI is like Amazon, which took eight years to turn its first profit, or Uber, which took fourteen years. Maybe it is unlike either and there is no way to make this enterprise profitable.

None of that actually matters, though, when considering Marcus’ actual argument. He posits that OpenAI is financially unsound as-is, and that Meta’s language models are free. Unless OpenAI “come outs [sic] with some major advance worthy of the name of GPT-5 before the end of 2025″, the company will be in a perilous state and, “since it is the poster child for the whole field, the entire thing may well soon go bust”. But hold on: we have gone from ChatGPT is disappointing “many customers” — no citation provided — to the entire concept of generative A.I. being a dead end. None of this adds up.

The most obvious problem is that generative A.I. is not just ChatGPT or other similar chat bots; it is an entire genre of features. I wrote earlier this month about some of the features I use regularly, like Generative Remove in Adobe Lightroom Classic. As far as I know, this is no different than something like OpenAI’s Dall‍-‍E in concept: it has been trained on a large library of images to generate something new. Instead of responding to a text-based prompt, it predicts how it should replicate textures and objects in an arbitrary image. It is far from perfect, but it is dramatically better than the healing brush tool before it, and clone stamping before that.

There are other examples of generative A.I. as features of creative tools. It can extend images and replace backgrounds pretty well. The technology may be mediocre at making video on its own terms, but it is capable of improving the quality of interpolated slow motion. In the technology industry, it is good at helping developers debug their work and generate new code.

Yet, if you take Marcus at his word, these things and everything else generative A.I. “might turn out to be a dud”. Why? Marcus does not say. He does, however, keep underscoring how shaky he finds OpenAI’s business situation. But this Wired article is ostensibly about generative A.I.’s usefulness — or, in Marcus’ framing, its lack thereof — which is completely irrelevant to this one company’s financials. Unless, that is, you believe the reason OpenAI will lose five billion dollars this year is because people are unhappy with it, which is not the case. It simply costs a fortune to train and run.

The one thing Marcus keeps coming back to is the lack of a “moat” around generative A.I., which is not an original position. Even if this is true, I do not see this as evidence of a generative A.I. bubble bursting — at least, not in the sense of how many products it is included in or what capabilities it will be trained on.

What this looks like, to me, is commoditization. If there is a financial bubble, this might mean it bursts, but it does not mean the field is wiped out. Adobe is not disappearing; neither are Google or Meta or Microsoft. While I have doubts about whether chat-like interfaces will continue to be a way we interact with generative A.I., it continues to find relevance in things many of us do every day.

Powering an E-Bike From Tossed Vape Batteries youtube.com

Chris Doel in a video on YouTube:

The rechargeable cells in disposable vapes are so valuable, why are they thrown away after one use?!

In this video I extract 130 disposable vape batteries and convert it into a 1500W ebike battery.

There are probably some money-minded people who are impressed by how commoditized lithium-ion batteries have become. But this seems to me like obvious waste. For one thing, it is a bad idea to throw lithium-ion batteries in the garbage, let alone litter with them. For another, this is a terribly inefficient use of resources, and the manufacturers must be aware of that. One of them writes, in its FAQ, that its disposable vape model “is a rechargeable device containing a non-replaceable lithium-ion battery”, but because it is not refillable, it cannot be re-used. It seems impossible to me to write a sentence like that without realizing its absurdity.

(Via Ian Betteridge, who had a great point about this but is currently doing a website migration and I am unable to find the post.)

The Promise of Duolingo thedial.world

Imogen West-Knights, the Dial:

I guess it depends on what you think learning a language means or should mean. When we say that we are “learning a language,” the assumption is that the goal is to reach conversational fluency. To speak to other speakers. When I was doing Duolingo Irish, I did not learn Irish, but I did learn a fair bit about Irish: how to pronounce Irish words, the way syntax works in the language, and so on. I do read French reasonably well. Even when I was barely able to speak a sentence in Swedish, it was still better to be able to understand what was being said around me than not to understand at all. But was I learning a language or was I learning translation? What is the difference?

I am approaching a year-long Duolingo streak, and this piece spoke to me in its criticisms of Duolingo and its appreciation of it. I am not bilingual and, though that would be a nice thing to achieve, I am fully aware I cannot achieve that through a few minutes per day in an app. But learning a little bit every day has — equally slowly — given me a glimpse into how to begin learning more. It opens the door to a different language for me in a way other techniques have not resonated.

U.S. Judge Rules NSO Group Is Liable for Spyware Delivered via WhatsApp therecord.media

Suzanne Smalley, the Record:

The developer of the powerful Pegasus spyware was found liable on Friday for its role in the infection of devices belonging to 1,400 WhatsApp users.

The precedent-setting ruling from a Northern California federal judge could lead to massive damages against NSO Group, whose notorious spyware has been reportedly used, and often abused, by a roster of anonymous government clients worldwide.

Apple dropped its similar suit against NSO Group in September on the grounds it believed it would be unable to compel the production of evidence. But the judge in WhatsApp’s case, Phyllis J. Hamilton, was correctly furious (PDF) about NSO Group’s behaviour:

Overall, the court concludes that defendants have repeatedly failed to produce relevant discovery and failed to obey court orders regarding such discovery. Most significant is the Pegasus source code, and defendants’ position that their production obligations were limited to only the code on the AWS server is a position that the court cannot see as reasonable given the history and context of the case. Moreover, defendants’ limitation of its production such that it is viewable only by Israeli citizens present in Israel is simply impracticable for a lawsuit that is to be litigated in this district.

Accordingly, the court concludes that plaintiffs’ motion for sanctions must be GRANTED. […]

I am not a lawyer, and it seems Apple’s — presumably, very expensive — representation had good reason to worry about this case. But I wish they would have pursued it. It would have been nice to see NSO Group on the receiving end of two of these rulings instead of just one.

‘Ghosts’ of Spotify harpers.org

Liz Pelly, Harpers:

According to a source close to the company, Spotify’s own internal research showed that many users were not coming to the platform to listen to specific artists or albums; they just needed something to serve as a soundtrack for their days, like a study playlist or maybe a dinner soundtrack. In the lean-back listening environment that streaming had helped champion, listeners often weren’t even aware of what song or artist they were hearing. As a result, the thinking seemed to be: Why pay full-price royalties if users were only half listening? It was likely from this reasoning that the Perfect Fit Content program was created.

After at least a year of piloting, PFC was presented to Spotify editors in 2017 as one of the company’s new bets to achieve profitability. According to a former employee, just a few months later, a new column appeared on the dashboard editors used to monitor internal playlists. The dashboard was where editors could view various stats: plays, likes, skip rates, saves. And now, right at the top of the page, editors could see how successfully each playlist embraced “music commissioned to fit a certain playlist/mood with improved margins,” as PFC was described internally.

Reading this article made me feel quite sad. The musicians responsible for tracks like these seem quite talented. Browsing the roster of Epidemic Sound — one of the production companies cited in Pelly’s story — indicates many of them are working in multiple genres. I did not hear anything particularly interesting or notable, but I do not want to suggest this is bad; there is a valid place for stock tracks. And, though this article focuses on Spotify, there is no shortage of Epidemic’s music and that of similar production companies in Apple Music playlists, either.

Despite their skill, none of these musicians make very much money from Epidemic Sound, according to Pelly, or in payouts from streaming companies. That is not a unique situation — streaming notoriously pays nearly all artists poorly — though it seems like an ongoing part of the devaluation of music. Filler tracks have long been commonplace, but they used to be confined to production libraries, not placed side-by-side with recognizable artists. For many musicians to earn enough, they become contributors to their own downfall.

(Via Jason Tate.)

Never Forgive Them wheresyoured.at

Ed Zitron:

The tools we use in our daily lives outside of our devices have mostly stayed the same. While buttons on our cars might have moved around — and I’m not even getting into Tesla’s designs right now — we generally have a brake, an accelerator, a wheel, and a turn signal. Boarding an airplane has worked mostly the same way since I started flying, other than moving from physical tickets to digital ones. We’re not expected to work out “the new way to use a toilet” every few months because somebody decided we were finishing too quickly.

Yet our apps and the platforms we use every day operate by a totally different moral and intellectual compass. While the idea of an update is fairly noble (and not always negative) — that something you’ve bought can be maintained and improved over time is a good thing — many tech platforms see it as a means to further extract and exploit, to push users into doing things that either keep them on the app longer or take more-profitable actions.

A barn-burner of an essay, and a perfect way to summarize this year — this decade, just about — in technology. One may quibble with individual examples — I, for one, cannot remotely co-sign “[t]he destruction of Google Search […] should be written about like a war crime” — but the industry-wide trend leads directly to Zitron’s deserved and palpable frustration.

With my limited understanding of economics terms, I think of this in the context of reducing consumer surplus. A straightforward example is to increase prices — smartphone makers, for example, recognized years ago they were leaving money on the table and would have no problem selling phones for well over a thousand dollars.

Some of these software companies have figured out they are also charging less than they could. Microsoft Office used to cost $200 in the United States for an indefinite license. It is now $70 per year which means, after three years, users are paying more than the previous one-time fee. Adobe’s Creative Suite used to cost a whopping $2,600; the current pricing for Creative Cloud is $660 per year. But after four years, Creative Cloud costs more. There are advantages to subscription pricing, like ongoing updates; there are also disadvantages, like being required to pay indefinitely to continue using their features. Depending on how often one upgrades, they might find subscription pricing less expensive in the long run, but the choice is no longer theirs.

Remarkably, the consumer surplus is not closed solely through increased dollar amounts. There are, as Zitron ably documents, plenty of non-financial costs, too. I expect this to some extent in free-to-use products, but it infects everything. I am, in the long term, paying more to be annoyed more often — to the huge benefit of these corporations.

Music Year-End Lists albumoftheyear.org

The end of the year is an exciting time because, try as I might, I cannot possibly listen to all the records released in a year. That means I miss a whole bunch of terrific albums until they are mentioned in some year-end roundup. These are some of my favourites:

  • The main link on this post goes to Album of the Year and its aggregate roundup of critics’ picks. You already know which album is number one.

  • The Quietus published its quirky-as-usual list earlier this month. There are also several genre-specific lists. Their picks are sometimes hard to like, but never boring.

  • Gramophone last week posted its picks for the best classical albums of the year. It is a big list and, even skimming it, I think there is something in there for just about everyone.

  • Anthony Fantano has begun List Week with some honourable mentions and his favourite EPs of the year. New videos daily with the best — and worst — the year had to offer.

I am sure there are terrific records that do not appear on any of these lists, just as I am sure there are album rankings you reference instead. If there is one you think I would like, please let me know. So far, these are the lists I prefer to help me find great albums I missed in 2024.

Mark Zuckerberg Says Threads Has 100 Million Daily Active Users threads.net

Mark Zuckerberg:

Threads strong momentum continues — now 300M+ monthly actives and 100M+ daily actives 💪

It looks like I was right to be skeptical of data from Similarweb which, a few weeks ago, said Threads’ daily user count in the U.K. and U.S. was only one-and-a-half times larger than Bluesky’s 3.5 million. Maybe there really are only 5.25 million Threads users in the U.S. and the other 95 million daily active users are elsewhere, but I doubt it.

Then again, who says Meta and Similarweb are measuring daily users in the same way? Meta is incentivized to inflate its figures to the maximum extent legally allowable. Does this count the number of people who viewed a Threads post as suggested in Instagram? I doubt it. I would like to see both companies show their work, however.

The Verge’s Tom Warren on Threads:

[A]pparently there are 100 million daily active users of Threads. I wonder how this is counted, and how many actually engage with Threads content every day. I wonder because Bluesky still feels a lot more alive than Threads, despite having a lot less users.

Bluesky, at the very least, does not feel like it is full of people trying to replace a lack of personality with Facebook-grade memes and a business consulting side hustle.

Telegram Publishes a Dashboard of Daily Moderation Actions techcrunch.com

Charles Rollet, TechCrunch:

After announcing a crackdown in September, Telegram now says it has removed 15.4 million groups and channels related to harmful content like fraud and terrorism in 2024, noting this effort was “enhanced with cutting-edge AI moderation tools.”

This makes more sense to me if “A.I.” stands for “arrested and indicted”.

Telegram launched a new moderation dashboard. The charts are all shown with daily granularity and you can adjust the date range, but it is hard to get a clear sense of a trend. Rollet reports “there’s a noticeable increase in enforcement after Durov’s arrest in August”, but I am not sure that is so clear. I wanted to find out.

Happily, the chart source data is exposed in the page’s markup. A little copying-and-pasting and a little cleaning up yielded a Numbers document you can download with figures from December 2023 up to yesterday.1 The trend line shows a modest increase in total moderation actions and banned terrorism communities. CSAM bans are, however, slightly declining.


  1. The site shows zero bans for CSAM and terrorism-related groups for today, but no other day has anything close to zero, so I assume this is an issue of incomplete data. I removed them. ↥︎

WP Engine Wins Preliminary Injunction in Fight With Automattic tedium.co

Thomas Claburn, the Register:

WordPress hosting firm Automattic and its CEO Matthew Mullenweg have been ordered to stop interfering with the business of rival WP Engine.

California District Court judge Araceli Martínez-Olguín on Tuesday issued a preliminary injunction [PDF] against Automattic and Mullenweg, finding that plaintiff WP Engine is likely to prevail in its claims.

Ernie Smith, Tedium:

Mullenweg’s anger about this situation, well-documented at this point, is rooted in the private equity ownership of WP Engine and how he felt it would threaten to damage the open-source community his company had built. And to be clear, the people who own the platforms we rely on? That is a real issue. The idea that a large company can undermine an open-source project? Point to Mullenweg. He has reasons to be nervous.

But I don’t think that’s really what’s been happening here. I think the concern, if we’re really being honest, reflects frustration that Mullenweg has struggled to make Automattic into the firm that WP Engine has become — the first choice for businesses and agencies looking to get a site online. His actions since September — which, mind you, included building a website promoting the number of WP Engine users that had left that platform — have only come to underline that. And despite his claims otherwise, his actions have clearly spoken in the other direction.

To wit, Samantha Cole, 404 Media:

WordPress co-founder and CEO of Automattic Matt Mullenweg is trolling contributors and users of the WordPress open-source project by requiring them to check a box that says “Pineapple is delicious on pizza.”

The change was spotted by WordPress contributors late Sunday, and is still up as of Monday morning. Trying to log in or create a new account without checking the box returns a “please try again” error.

It is still there now.

Nobody seems to know why this checkbox was changed rather than being removed, but this change was not Mullenweg’s doing — at least, not directly. No reason was provided by the responsible contributor. And this is the CMS upon which over 40% of the web is built, in the hands of these clowns?

Canadian Addresses Are Being Used by Fraudulent Companies to Launder Cryptocurrency theijf.org

Zak Vescera and Adrian Ghobrial, Investigative Journalism Foundation:

An IJF and CTV National News investigation has found 422 Richards St. is one of dozens of cases across Canada where multiple money services businesses (MSBs) are incorporated at the same address, sometimes without the knowledge or consent of the location’s actual occupant. 

Financial crime experts say it goes against the spirit of Canada’s registration requirements for such businesses, which are considered high-risk for money laundering and terrorist financing.

Brian Krebs:

According to [Richard] Sanders, all 122 of the services he tested are processing transactions through a company called Cryptomus, which says it is a cryptocurrency payments platform based in Vancouver, British Columbia. Cryptomus’ website says its parent firm — Xeltox Enterprises Ltd. (formerly certa-pay[.]com) — is registered as a money service business (MSB) with the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (FINTRAC).

Sanders said the payment data he gathered also shows that at least 56 cryptocurrency exchanges are currently using Cryptomus to process transactions, including financial entities with names like casher[.]su, grumbot[.]com, flymoney[.]biz, obama[.]ru and swop[.]is.

Between this and TD Bank laundering drug money, Canada sure is making a name for itself as a great place for financial crime. We are not yet the United Kingdom but it is good to have aspirations I suppose.

Labellers Training A.I. Say They Are Overworked, Underpaid, and Exploited cbsnews.com

The U.S. newsmagazine 60 Minutes recently broadcast a short segment about the silent human toll borne as a result of outsourced labelling for A.I. systems. I do not think it is as comprehensive to, for example, Josh Dzieza’s reporting last year — previously linked — but it is worth your time.

Fellow foreigners: I found yt-dlp quite useful.

Nerima Wako-Ojiwa, executive director of Siasa Place, interviewed by Lesley Stahl:

Our labor law is about 20 years old, it doesn’t touch on digital labor. I do think that our labor laws need to recognize it — but not just in Kenya alone. Because what happens is when we start to push back, in terms of protections of workers, a lot of these companies, they shut down and they move to a neighboring country.

These workers are essential for making these systems function, but are treated as far more disposable by both their immediate employers and their clients: big, rich technology companies. They can and should do better for the people they depend on.

‘Do Not Track’ Removed From Firefox arstechnica.com

Kevin Purdy, Ars Technica:

It might not ever be fully dead, but Firefox calling it quits on Do Not Track (DNT) is a strong indication that an idealistic movement born more than 13 years ago has truly reached the end of its viable life.

[…]

Besides lacking regulatory teeth, DNT was also generally overcome by advancements in tracking. All the signals put out by a browser — plug-ins, time zone, monitor resolution, even the DNT option itself — could be used to effectively track a user, even across browsers. Apple dropped DNT from Safari in 2019, citing both its ineffectiveness and fingerprinting.

Unfortunately, the replacement for Do Not Track — the Global Privacy Control — is not quickly catching on despite claiming to have “broad industry support” and legal might.

BBC Complains to Apple Over Misleading Shooting Headline bbc.com

Graham Fraser, BBC News:

Apple Intelligence, launched in the UK earlier this week, uses artificial intelligence (AI) to summarise and group together notifications.

This week, the AI-powered summary falsely made it appear BBC News had published an article claiming Luigi Mangione, the man arrested following the murder of healthcare insurance CEO Brian Thompson in New York, had shot himself. He has not.

Fraser also points to an inaccurate summary attributed to the New York Times. Even scrolling through my notifications right now, I can see misleading summaries. One, interpreted by Apple Intelligence as a story about a “vaccine lawyer helps pick health officials”, actually refers to an anti-vaccine lawyer who thinks immunizing against polio is dangerous. I have seen far dumber examples since this feature became part of beta builds over the past months.

I am not opposed to the concept of summarized text. It can, in theory, be helpful to glance at my phone and know whether I need to respond to something sooner rather than later. But every error chips away at a user’s trust, to the point where they need to double-check for accuracy — at which point, the summary is creating additional work.

I can see why the BBC is upset about this, particularly after years of declining trust in media. I had notification summaries switched on for only select few apps. I have now ensured they are turned off for news apps.

Update: Markus Müller-Simhofer:

If you are using macOS 15.2, please be careful with those priority alerts. It listed a fraud email as priority for me.

This is not just a one-off. I have also seen this in my own use. Mail also repeatedly decided to prioritize “guest contributor” spam emails over genuinely useful messages like shipping notifications. Sometimes, it works as expected and is useful; sometimes, the priority message feature simply does not show up. It is bizarre.

Sora’s U.I. System manton.org

Manton Reece:

Trying Sora. It’s extraordinary that this works at all, and it’s even faster than I was expecting. OpenAI seems to have built a whole UI system around this app too.

Something I neglected to mention in my thoughts about Sora from earlier this week — which spiralled into something else entirely — is this U.I. which, though new to OpenAI, feels familiar. In screen recordings, it looks strikingly like Apple’s Photos app for Mac and at iCloud on the web, right down to the way an item’s metadata is displayed. I am sure there are other applications that have a similar layout and appearance, but that was my immediate impression.

TCL Is Going to Generate and Stream A.I. Movies to Its Televisions for Targeted Advertising 404media.co

Jason Koebler, 404 Media:

TCL said it expects to sell 43 million televisions this year. To augment the revenue from its TV sales, it has created a free TV service called TCL+, which is supported by targeted advertising. A few months ago, TCL announced the creation of the TCL Film Machine, which is a studio that is creating AI-generated films that will run on TCL+. TCL invited me to the TCL Chinese Theater, which it now owns, to watch the first five AI-generated films that will air on TCL+ starting this week.

What an extraordinary paragraph. Tired of movies feeling increasingly derivative? Too bad; here are some that literally — by definition — are entirely so. You can watch all five on YouTube if you really want.

They are, with the exception of the visuals, short movies like any other. They were apparently written, directed, voice acted, and edited by real people. How long do you think TCL will maintain that level of investment?

Joe Rosensteel:

As for the obviously terrible quality, Jason brings up the ol’ “this is the worst it will ever be” chestnut, and [TCL’s] Chris agrees, and elaborates. What’s left unsaid with TCL’s approach is that this is the best the TCL Channel will ever be, because it’s optimizing for this quality level. They’re setting this as the bar. If Chris is to be believed, and that TCL will always employ roughly this same number of people to make something, then that would indicate to me that they’ll simply be able to make more videos of this quality, not the same number of videos at a higher quality.

In a world of slop and content, these truly seem like both. I feel a little uncomfortable writing that because people worked on them, but that is how they come across. All programming on broadcast television is, to some extent, the thing luring you in so you will also watch some ads. These movies are not that. Regardless of the technology behind them, they are simply poor movies. They are not much fun to watch and I am not sure why I would sit through ad breaks to see anything like these shorts.

In some sense, they function in basically the same way as A.I. TikTok spam. They can be produced at volume as TCL inevitably relies less on the human involvement in these examples. But would you rather watch Letterman re-runs instead?

Similarweb: U.S. Traffic to Bluesky and Threads Increases as X Slides theguardian.com

Hannah Murphy and John Burn-Murdoch, Financial Times:

Since election day, app usage of Bluesky in the US and UK skyrocketed by almost 300 per cent to 3.5mn daily users, according to data from research group Similarweb. The site was boosted as academics, journalists and left-leaning politicians abandoned X, whose billionaire owner is a prominent supporter of the president-elect.

Prior to November 5, Threads had five times more daily active users in the US than Bluesky, which has just 20 full-time staff and was initially funded by Twitter when Jack Dorsey was its chief executive. Now, Threads is only 1.5 times larger than its rival, Similarweb said.

Raphael Boyd, the Guardian:

A mass departure from Elon Musk’s X has led to the site losing about 2.7 million active Apple and Android users in the US in two months, with its rival social media platform Bluesky gaining nearly 2.5 million over the same period.

[…]

According to the digital market intelligence company Similarweb, the number of daily active US users on X has dropped by 8.4% since early October, from 32.3 million to 29.6 million.

These are interesting numbers from a questionable source. I wanted to check the work of Similarweb against user numbers reported by any tech company but, unsurprisingly, I could not find any overlap. Such figures would be both redundant if they were accurate and embarrassing if they were not.

Twitter stopped reporting monthly active users in early 2019 owing to steady declining numbers. In its then-most-recent figures, Twitter claimed between 66 and 69 million monthly active U.S. users — over twice as many as Similarweb reports X having now. However, despite their superficial similarity, the methodologies of these companies are likely very different; I could not find any pre-Musk monthly active user statistics for Twitter as reported by Similarweb for comparison. Also, do note the numbers in the first article — the one from the Times — are daily active users, not monthly.

These figures are clearly derived from something and not just made up. Even so, I would not read into them too much. But here is a bizarre possibility: perhaps all these traffic stats really are comparable. Maybe X has lost half its U.S. user base in the past five years, and services which did not exist then are growing fast. And even if Bluesky and Threads do not have as large a user base as X, it does not necessarily mean they are not meaningful. A perfect case study is Twitter itself, which has never had a user base like Facebook or Instagram. Even so, Twitter punched above its weight and swayed public conversation in a way Facebook rarely has, for better and worse.

The Generation Generation

A little over two years after OpenAI released ChatGPT upon the world, and about four years since Dall-E, the company’s toolset now — “finally” — makes it possible to generate video. Sora, as it is called, is not the first generative video tool to be released to the public; there are already offerings from Hotshot, Luma, Runway, and Tencent. OpenAI’s is the highest-profile so far, though: the one many people will use, and the products of which we will likely all be exposed to.

A generator of video is naturally best seen demonstrated in that format, and I think Marques Brownlee’s preview is a good place to start. The results are, as I wrote in February when Sora was first shown, undeniably impressive. No matter how complicated my views about generative A.I. — and I will get there — it is bewildering that a computer can, in a matter of seconds, transform noise into a convincing ten-second clip depicting whatever was typed into a text box. It can transform still images into video, too.

It is hard to see this as anything other than extraordinary. Enough has been written by now about “any sufficiently advanced technology [being] indistinguishable from magic” to bore, but this truly captures it in a Penn & Teller kind of way: knowing how it works only makes it somehow more incredible. Feed computers on a vast scale video which has been labelled — partly by people, and partly by automated means which are reliant on this exact same training process — and it can average that into entirely new video that often appears plausible.1 I am basing my assessment on the results generated by others because Sora requires a paid OpenAI account, and because there is currently a waiting list.

There are, of course, limitations of both technology and policy. Sora has problems with physics, the placement of objects in space, and consistency between and within shots. Sora does not generate audio, even though OpenAI has the capability. Prompts in text and images are checked for copyright violations, public figures’ likenesses, criminal usage, and so forth. But there is no meaningful restrictions on the video itself. This is not how things must be; this is a design decision.

I keep thinking about the differences between A.I. features and A.I. products. I use very few A.I. products; an open-ended image generator, for example, is technically interesting but not very useful to me. Unlike a crop of Substack writers, I do not think pretending to have commissioned art lends me any credibility. But I now use A.I. features on a regular basis, in part because so many things are now “A.I. features” in name and by seemingly no other quality. Generative Remove in Adobe Lightroom Classic, for example, has become a terrific part of my creative workflow. There are edits I sometimes want to make which, if not for this feature, would require vastly more time which, depending on the job, I may not have. It is an image generator just like Dall-E or Stable Diffusion, but it is limited by design.

Adobe is not taking a principled stance; Photoshop contains a text-based image generator which, I think, does not benefit from being so open-ended. It would, for me, be improved if its functionality were integrated into more specific tools; for example, the crop tool could also allow generative reframing.

Sora, like ChatGPT and Dall-E, is an A.I. product. But I would find its capabilities more useful and compelling if they were a feature within a broader video editing environment. Its existence implies a set of tools which could benefit a video editor’s workflow. For example, the object removal and tracking features in Premiere Pro feel more useful to me than its ability to generate b-roll, which just seems like a crappy excuse to avoid buying stock footage or paying for a second unit.

Limiting generative A.I. in this manner would also make its products more grounded in reality and less likely to be abused. It would also mean withholding capabilities. Clearly, there are some people who see a demonstration of the power of generative A.I. as a worthwhile endeavour unto itself. As a science experiment, I get it, but I do not think these open-ended tools should be publicly available. Alas, that is not the future venture capitalists, and shareholders, and — I guess — the creators of these products have decided is best for us.

We are now living in a world of slop, and we have been for some time. It began as infinite reams of text-based slop intended to be surfaced in search results. It became image-based slop which paired perfectly with Facebook’s pivot to TikTok-like recommendations. Image slop and audio slop came together to produce image slideshow slop dumped into the pipelines of Instagram Reels, TikTok, YouTube Shorts. Brace yourselves for a torrent of video slop about pyramids and the Bermuda triangle and pyramids. None of these were made using Sora, as far as I know; at least some were generated by Hailuo from Minimax. I had to dig a little bit for these examples, but not too much, and it is only going to get worse.

Much has been written about how all this generative stuff has the capability of manipulating reality — and rightfully so. It lends credence to lies, and its mere existence can cause unwarranted doubt. But there is another problem: all of this makes our world a little bit worse because it is cheap to produce in volume. We are on the receiving end of a bullshit industry, and the toolmakers see no reason to slow it down. Every big platform — including the web itself — is full of this stuff, and it is worse for all of us. Cynicism aside, I cannot imagine the leadership at Google or Meta actually enjoys using their own products as they wade through generated garbage.

This is hitting each of us in similar ways. If you use a computer that is connected to the internet, you are likely running into A.I.-generated stuff all the time, perhaps without being fully aware of it. The recipe you followed, the repair guide you found, the code you copy-and-pasted, and the images in the video you watched? Any of them could have been generated in a data farm somewhere. I do not think that is inherently bad, though it is an uncertain feeling.

I am part of the millennial generation. I grew up at a time in which we were told we were experiencing something brand new in world history. The internet allowed anyone to publish anything, and it was impossible to verify this new flood of information. We were taught to think critically and be cautious, since we never knew who created anything. Now we have a different problem: we are unsure what created anything.


  1. Without thinking about why it is the case, it is interesting how generative A.I. has no problem creating realistic-seeming text as text, but it struggles when it is an image containing text. But with a little knowledge about how these things work, that makes sense. ↥︎

I Goobered Up the RSS Feed Last Month, but I Think I Fixed It pxlnv.com

The RSS feed for this website runs through Feedpress and, at some point in November, I must have done something to cause it to behave unreliably. It took me a while to track down in part because I have the JSON feed in NetNewsWire, but not the RSS feed. A silly oversight, I admit.

I think it is fixed, but please let me know if I have still made a mess of things. I recommend subscribing to the JSON feed anyhow if that is an option for you.

TikTok Loses U.S. Divest-or-Ban Appeal bbc.com

Liv McMahon and Lily Jamali, BBC News:

TikTok’s bid to overturn a law which would see it banned or sold in the US from early 2025 has been rejected.

[…]

TikTok says it will now take its fight to the US Supreme Court, the country’s highest legal authority.

The court’s opinion (PDF) is not particularly long. As this is framed as a question of national security, the court gives substantial deference to the government’s assessment of TikTok’s threat. It also views the legislation passed earlier this year to limit data brokers as a complementary component of this TikTok divest-or-ban law.

I still do not find this argument particularly compelling. There is still too much dependence on classified information and too little public evidence. A generous interpretation of this is the court knows something I do not, and perhaps this is completely justified. But who knows? The paranoia over this app is leaking but the proof is not.

Donald Trump’s victory in the 2024 US Presidential Election may also present a lifeline for the app.

Despite unsuccessfully attempting to ban TikTok during his first term in 2020, he said in the run-up to the November elections he would not allow the ban on TikTok to take effect.

I would be shocked if the incoming administration remains committed to overturning this ban, and not just because of its historically flaky reputation. This very decision references the actions of the first Trump presidency, though it owes more to the more tailored policies of the Biden administration.

If the U.S. Supreme Court does not stay this order and TikTok’s U.S. operations are not jettisoned from its global business, the ban will go into effect the day before Trump’s inauguration.

Brazilian Court Overturns App Store Injunction 9to5mac.com

Last month, Brazilian competition authorities ruled against Apple, finding in an increasingly familiar pattern that its anti-steering App Store rules are illegal. It imposed a twenty-day deadline for compliance.

Filipe Espósito, 9to5Mac:

According to a new Valor Econômico report, a Brazilian Federal Court judge has ruled that the decision by Cade, the Brazilian regulator, is “disproportionate and unnecessary.” The judge understood that the measures imposed by the regulator “change, in a sensitive and structural way” Apple’s business operation.

Cade ruled on November 26 that Apple would have 20 days to comply with antitrust legislation, otherwise it would be fined R$250,000 (US$42,000) per day. Apple had previously appealed on the grounds that the changes requested were too complex and would take too long to be made, so the company wouldn’t be able to meet the 20-day deadline.

Twenty days does seem like a tight turnaround. I have obviously no idea what it would take to copy-and-paste the same policies it uses in Japan, Korea, and the United States, but perhaps it would be easier to rip off the bandage and do so worldwide.

The Finder Column Width Bug Is Still There eclecticlight.co

Howard Oakley:

Over those 11 years, governments have come and gone, my grandchildren have grown up and one is now at university, we survived Covid, lost QuickTime and 32-bit code, and now use Apple silicon Macs. But one thing has remained unchanged through all of that, the Finder column width bug.

Maybe this is the year this bug will bubble up to the top of an intern’s to-fix list. As a dedicated user of the column view, I would not miss it.

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Siri Invented a Calendar Event and Then Hallucinated a Helpful Suggestion c.im

Go figure — just one day after writing about how Apple’s ambiguous descriptions of supposedly clever features has the potential to rob trust, my phone has become haunted.

I saw a suggestion from Siri that I turn on Do Not Disturb until the end of an event in my calendar — a reservation at a restaurant from 8:30 until 10:00 this morning. No such matching event was in Fantastical. It was, however, shown in the Calendar app as a Siri Suggestion.

What I think happened is that I was looking at that restaurant on OpenTable at perhaps 8:00 this morning. I was doing so in my web browser on my Mac, and I was not logged into OpenTable. My Mac and iPhone are both running operating system beta builds with Apple Intelligence enabled. Siri must have interpreted this mere browsing as me making a reservation, and then added it to my calendar without my asking, and then made a suggestion based on that fictional event.

This was not helpful. It was, in fact, perplexing and creepy. I do not know how all of these things were able to work together to produce this result, but I do not like it at all. It is obvious how this would make anyone question whether they can trust Apple Intelligence, A.I. systems generally, Siri, and their personal privacy. Truly bizarre.

Ambiguity and Trust in Apple Intelligence

Spencer Ackerman has been a national security reporter for over twenty years, and was partially responsible for the Guardian’s coverage of NSA documents leaked by Edward Snowden. He has good reason to be skeptical of privacy claims in general, and his experience updating his iPhone made him worried:

Recently, I installed Apple’s iOS 18.1 update. Shame on me for not realizing sooner that I should be checking app permissions for Siri — which I had thought I disabled as soon as I bought my device — but after installing it, I noticed this update appeared to change Siri’s defaults.

Apple has a history with changing preferences and dark patterns. This is particularly relevant in the case of the iOS 18.1 update because it was the one with Apple Intelligence, which creates new ambiguity between what is happening on-device and what goes to a server farm somewhere.

Allen Pike:

While easy tasks are handled by their on-device models, Apple’s cloud is used for what I’d call moderate-difficulty work: summarizing long emails, generating patches for Photos’ Clean Up feature, or refining prose in response to a prompt in Writing Tools. In my testing, Clean Up works quite well, while the other server-driven features are what you’d expect from a medium-sized model: nothing impressive.

Users shouldn’t need to care whether a task is completed locally or not, so each feature just quietly uses the backend that Apple feels is appropriate. The relative performance of these two systems over time will probably lead to some features being moved from cloud to device, or vice versa.

It would be nice if it truly did not matter — and, for many users, the blurry line between the two is probably fine. Private Cloud Compute seems to be trustworthy. But I fully appreciate Ackerman’s worries. Someone in his position necessarily must understand what is being stored and processed in which context.

However, Ackerman appears to have interpreted this setting change incorrectly:

I was alarmed to see that even my secure communications apps, like Proton and Signal, were toggled by default to “Learn from this App” and enable some subsidiary functions. I had to swipe them all off.

This setting was, to Ackerman, evidence of Apple “uploading your data to its new cloud-based AI project”, which is a reasonable assumption at a glance. Apple, like every technology company in the past two years, has decided to loudly market everything as being connected to its broader A.I. strategy. In launching these features in a piecemeal manner, though, it is not clear to a layperson which parts of iOS are related to Apple Intelligence, let alone where those interactions are taking place.

However, this particular setting is nearly three years old and unrelated to Apple Intelligence. This is related to Siri Suggestions which appear throughout the system. For example, the widget stack on my home screen suggests my alarm clock app when I charge my iPhone at night. It suggests I open the Microsoft Authenticator app on weekday mornings. When I do not answer the phone for what is clearly a scammer, it suggests I return the missed call. It is not all going to be gold.

Even at the time of its launch, its wording had the potential for confusion — something Apple has not clarified within the Settings app in the intervening years — and it seems to have been enabled by default. While this data may play a role in establishing the “personal context” Apple talks about — both are part of the App Intents framework — I do not believe it is used to train off-device Apple Intelligence models. However, Apple says this data may leave the device:

Your personal information — which is encrypted and remains private — stays up to date across all your devices where you’re signed in to the same Apple Account. As Siri learns about you on one device, your experience with Siri is improved on your other devices. If you don’t want Siri personalization to update across your devices, you can disable Siri in iCloud settings. See Keep what Siri knows about you up to date on your Apple devices.

While I believe Ackerman is incorrect about the setting’s function and how Apple handles its data, I can see how he interpreted it that way. The company is aggressively marketing Apple Intelligence, even though it is entirely unclear which parts of it are available, how it is integrated throughout the company’s operating systems, and which parts are dependent on off-site processing. There are people who really care about these details, and they should be able to get answers to these questions.

All of this stuff may seem wonderful and novel to Apple and, likely, many millions of users. But there are others who have reasonable concerns. Like any new technology, there are questions which can only be answered by those who created it. Only Apple is able to clear up the uncertainty around Apple Intelligence, and I believe it should. A cynical explanation is that this ambiguity is all deliberate because Apple’s A.I. approach is so much slower than its competitors and, so, it is disincentivized from setting clear boundaries. That is possible, but there is plenty of trust to be gained by being upfront now. Americans polled by Pew Research and Gallup have concerns about these technologies. Apple has repeatedly emphasized its privacy bonafides. But these features remain mysterious and suspicious for many people regardless of how much a giant corporation swears it delivers “stateless computation, enforceable guarantees, no privileged access, non-targetability, and verifiable transparency”.

All of that is nice, I am sure. Perhaps someone at Apple can start the trust-building by clarifying what the Siri switch does in the Settings app, though.

Billionaire Bozos or Begrovellers nytimes.com

Cade Metz, New York Times:

Mr. [Sam] Altman said he was “tremendously sad” about the rising tensions between the two one-time collaborators.

“I grew up with Elon as like a mega hero,” he said.

But he rejected suggestions that Mr. Musk could use his increasingly close relationship with President-elect Trump to harm OpenAI.

“I believe pretty strongly that Elon will do the right thing and that it would be profoundly un-American to use political power to the degree that Elon would hurt competitors and advantage his own businesses,” he said.

Alex Heath, the Verge:

Jeff Bezos and President-elect Donald Trump famously didn’t get along the last time Trump was in the White House. This time, Bezos says he’s “very optimistic” and even wants to help out.

“I’m actually very optimistic this time around,” Bezos said of Trump during a rare public appearance at The New York Times DealBook Summit on Wednesday. “He seems to have a lot of energy around reducing regulation. If I can help him do that, I’m going to help him.”

Emily Swanson, the Guardian:

“Mark Zuckerberg has been very clear about his desire to be a supporter of and a participant in this change that we’re seeing all around America,” Stephen Miller, a top Trump deputy, told Fox.

Meta’s president of global affairs, Nick Clegg, agreed with Miller. Clegg said in a recent press call that Zuckerberg wanted to play an “active role” in the administration’s tech policy decisions and wanted to participate in “the debate that any administration needs to have about maintaining America’s leadership in the technological sphere,” particularly on artificial intelligence. Meta declined to provide further comment.

There are two possibilities. The first is that these CEOs are all dummies with memory no more capacious than that of an earthworm. The second is that these people all recognize the transactional and mercurial nature of the incoming administration, and they have begun their ritualistic grovelling. Even though I do not think money and success is evidence of genius, I do not think these CEOs are so dumb they actually believe in the moral fortitude of these goons.

A Lot of People Apparently Watch Podcasts on YouTube Now nymag.com

Ben Cohen, Wall Street Journal:

Only four years ago, when it was less popular for podcasts than both Spotify and Apple, YouTube becoming a podcasting colossus sounded about as realistic as Martin Scorsese releasing his next movie on TikTok.

But this year, YouTube passed the competition and became the most popular service for podcasts in the U.S., with 31% of weekly podcast listeners saying it’s now the platform they use the most, according to Edison Research.

This is notable, but Cohen omits key context for why YouTube is suddenly a key podcast platform: Google Podcasts was shut down this year with users and podcasters alike instructed to move to YouTube. According to Buzzsprout’s 2023 analytics, Google Podcasts was used by only 2.5% of global listeners. YouTube is not listed in their report, perhaps because it exists in its own bubble instead of being part of the broader RSS-feed-reading podcast client ecosystem.

But where Google was previously bifurcating its market share, it aligned its users behind a single client. And, it would seem, that audience responded favourably.

John Herrman, New York magazine:

Then, just as the 2010s podcasting bubble was about to peak, TikTok arrived. Here was a video-first platform that was basically only a recommendation engine, minus the pretense and/or burden of sociality — a machine for automating and allocating virality. Its rapid growth drove older, less vibrant social-media platforms wild with envy and/or panic. They all immediately copied it, refashioning themselves as algorithmic short-video apps almost overnight. Suddenly, on every social-media platform — including YouTube, which plugged vertical video “Shorts” into its interface and rewarded creators who published them with followers, attention, and money — there was a major new opportunity for rapid, viral growth. TikTok’s success (and imitation by existing megaplatforms) triggered a formal explosion in video content as millions of users figured out what sorts of short videos worked in this new context: Vine-like comedy sketches; dances; product recommendations; rapid-fire confessionals. The list expanded quickly and widely, but one surprising category broke through: podcast clips.

Of the top twenty podcasts according to Edison Research, fifteen have what I would deem meaningful and regular video components. I excluded those with either a still piece of artwork or illustrated talking heads, and those which only occasionally have video.

Dave Winer:

[…] We’re losing the word “podcast” very quickly. It’s coming to mean video interviews on YouTube mostly. Our only hope is upgrading the open platform in a way that stimulates the imagination of creators, and there’s no time to waste. If you make a podcast client, it’s time to start collaborating with competitors and people who create RSS-based podcasts to take advantage of the open platforms, otherwise having a podcast will mean getting approved by Google, Apple, Spotify, Amazon etc. […]

I hope this is not the case. Luckily, YouTube seems to be an additional place for podcasters so far. I found every show in the top twenty available for download through Overcast in an audio-only format. Also, YouTube channels have RSS feeds, though that is not very useful in an audio-only client like Overcast. Also, Google’s commitment to RSS is about as good as the company’s commitment to anything.

U.S. Regulators Propose Reigning in Data Brokers consumerfinance.gov

Out of the U.S. today comes a slew of new proposed restrictions against data brokers and their creepy practices.

The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau:

[…] The proposed rule would limit the sale of personal identifiers like Social Security Numbers and phone numbers collected by certain companies and make sure that people’s financial data such as income is only shared for legitimate purposes, like facilitating a mortgage approval, and not sold to scammers targeting those in financial distress. The proposal would make clear that when data brokers sell certain sensitive consumer information they are “consumer reporting agencies” under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), requiring them to comply with accuracy requirements, provide consumers access to their information, and maintain safeguards against misuse.

The Federal Trade Commission:

The Federal Trade Commission will prohibit data broker Mobilewalla, Inc. from selling sensitive location data, including data that reveals the identity of an individual’s private home, to settle allegations the data broker sold such information without taking reasonable steps to verify consumers’ consent.

And also the Federal Trade Commission:

The Federal Trade Commission is taking action against Gravy Analytics Inc. and its subsidiary Venntel Inc. for unlawfully tracking and selling sensitive location data from users, including selling data about consumers’ visits to health-related locations and places of worship.

Both of the proposed FTC orders require these businesses to “maintain a sensitive location data program designed to develop a list of sensitive locations and prevent the use, sale, license, transfer, sharing, or disclosure of consumers’ visits to those locations”. These include, for example and in addition to those in the above quotes, shelters, labour union offices, correctional facilities, and military installations. This order was previewed last month in Wired.

As usual, I am conflicted about these policies. While they are yet another example of Lina Khan’s FTC and other government bureaucrats cracking down on individually threatening data brokers, it would be far better for everyone if this were not handled on a case-by-case basis. These brokers have already caused a wealth of damage around the world, and only they are being required to stop. Other players in the rest of the data broker industry will either self-govern or hope they do not fall into the FTC’s crosshairs, and if you believe the former is more likely, you have far greater faith in already-shady businesses than I do.

There is another wrench in these proposals: we are less than two months away from a second Trump presidency, and the forecast for the CFPB looks unfriendly. It was kneecapped during the first administration and it is on the chopping block for those overseeing a advisory committee masquerading as a government agency. The future of the FTC is more murky, with some indicators it will continue its current path — albeit from a Republican-skewed perspective — while others suggest a reversal.

The centring of the U.S. in the digital activity of a vast majority of us gives it unique power on privacy — power it has, so far, used in only very small doses. The future of regulatory agencies like these has relevance to all of us.

Enrons of 2024 enroncorp.com

Enron is not really back. Someone managed to grab the Enron.com URL and put up an inspirational faux corporate video and a Shopify merch store. It is all very funny.

What is more amusing to me is stumbling across a preserved-in-amber Enron website. There is an earnings press release from July 2001, mere months before the whole thing went to hell in public. There are descriptions of the company’s vast products.

But this, too, is unofficial. It was created by Facundo Pignanelli to preserve this noteworthy chapter in corporate fraud. There is even an Instagram account. This is all very strange.

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Delicious Wabi-Sabi

Brendan Nystedt, reporting for Wired on a new generation of admirers of crappy digital cameras from the early 2000s:

For those seeking to experiment with their photography, there’s an appeal to using a cheap, old digital model they can shoot with until it stops working. The results are often imperfect, but since the camera is digital, a photographer can mess around and get instant gratification. And for everyone in the vintage digital movement, the fact that the images from these old digicams are worse than those from a smartphone is a feature, not a bug.

Om Malik attributes it to wabi-sabi:

Retromania? Not really. It feels more like a backlash against the excessive perfection of modern cameras, algorithms, and homogenized modern image-making. I don’t disagree — you don’t have to do much to come up with a great-looking photo these days. It seems we all want to rebel against the artistic choices of algorithms and machines — whether it is photos or Spotify’s algorithmic playlists versus manually crafted mixtapes.

I agree, though I do not see why we need to find just one cause — an artistic decision, a retro quality, an aesthetic trend, a rejection of perfection — when it could be driven by any number of these factors. Nailing down exactly which of these is the most important factor is not of particular interest to me; certainly, not nearly as much as understanding that people, as a general rule, value feeling.

I have written about this before and it is something I wish to emphasize repeatedly: efficiency and clarity are necessary elements, but are not the goal. There needs to be space for how things feel. I wrote this as it relates to cooking and cars and onscreen buttons, and it is still something worth pursuing each and every time we create anything.

I thought about this with these two articles, but first last week when Wil Shipley announced the end of Delicious Library:

Amazon has shut off the feed that allowed Delicious Library to look up items, unfortunately limiting the app to what users already have (or enter manually).

I wasn’t contacted about this.

I’ve pulled it from the Mac App Store and shut down the website so nobody accidentally buys a non-functional app.

Delicious Library was many things: physical and digital asset management software, a kind of personal library, and a wish list. But it was also — improbably — fun. Little about cataloguing your CDs and books sounds like it ought to be enjoyable, but Shipley and Mike Matas made it feel like something you wanted to do. You wanted to scan items with your Mac’s webcam just because it felt neat. You wanted to see all your media on a digital wooden shelf, if for no other reason than it made those items feel as real onscreen as they are in your hands.

Delicious Library became known as the progenitor of the “delicious generation” of applications, which prioritized visual appeal as much as utility. It was not enough for an app to be functional; it needed to look and feel special. The Human Interface Guidelines were just that: guidelines. One quality of this era was the apparently fastidious approach to every pixel. Another quality is that these applications often had limited features, but were so much fun to use that it was possible to overlook their restrictions.

I do not need to relitigate the subsequent years of visual interfaces going too far, then being reeled in, and then settling in an odd middle ground where I am now staring at an application window with monochrome line-based toolbar icons, deadpan typography, and glassy textures, throwing a heavy drop shadow. None of the specifics matter much. All I care about is how these things feel to look at and to use, something which can be achieved regardless of how attached you are to complex illustrations or simple line work. Like many people, I spend hours a day staring at pixels. Which parts of that are making my heart as happy as my brain? Which mundane tasks are made joyful?

This is not solely a question of software; it has relevance in our physical environment, too, especially as seemingly every little thing in our world is becoming a computer. But it can start with pixels on a screen. We can draw anything on them; why not draw something with feeling? I am not sure we achieve that through strict adherence to perfection in design systems and structures.

I am reluctant to place too much trust in my incomplete understanding of a foreign-to-me concept rooted in another country’s very particular culture, but perhaps the sabi is speaking loudest to me. Our digital interfaces never achieve a patina; in fact, the opposite is more often true: updates seem to erase the passage of time. It is all perpetually new. Is it any wonder so many of us ache for things which seem to freeze the passage of time in a slightly hazier form?

I am not sure how anyone would go about making software feel broken-in, like a well-worn pair of jeans or a lounge chair. Perhaps that is an unattainable goal for something on a screen; perhaps we never really get comfortable with even our most favourite applications. I hope not. It would be a shame if we lose that quality as software eats our world.

Bluesky Changes How Replies Are Sorted by Default bsky.app

From the official Bluesky account:

With this release, you can now display replies by “hotness,” which weights liked replies that are more recent more heavily.

I believe this replaced the past reply sorting of oldest to newest. People seem worried this can be gamed, but there is good news: you can just change it. There are options for oldest replies, newest replies, most-liked, and one that is completely randomized. Also, you can still set it to prioritize people you follow.

Imagine that: options for viewing social media that give control back to users. Threads is experimenting, but Meta still fundamentally distrusts users to make decisions like these.

Margrethe Vestager Is the Dam Breaker nytimes.com

Adam Satarino, New York Times:

But as Ms. [Margrethe] Vestager closes out her era in Brussels, regulating the tech industry has become more mainstream around the world. Thanks to her, Europe is now widely seen as the pioneer of the toughest laws against tech. U.S. regulators have in recent years followed Europe by bringing antitrust lawsuits against Google, Apple, Meta and Amazon. Regulators in South Korea, Australia, Brazil, Canada and elsewhere are also taking on the tech giants.

Vestager’s term has been defined by patience. Owing to both the rapid growth in size and complexity of technology firms, and tedious legal processes, these cases have taken considerable time. Some of the earliest cases Vestager brought have just been settled. It is still too early to tell whether the many changes resulting from these cases will have a radical effect on the technology landscape.

However, as Satarino writes, her approach has been influential worldwide. The technology in seemingly every country outside authoritarian states like China and Russia has been under the thumb of big companies most often based in the United States. Sometimes, those products and services clash with local expectations and values, or consume business viability. Not all of these corporations got where they are by illegitimate means, or are unanimously behaving in illegally anticompetitive ways. But it is sensible to investigate and become a correcting force.

For too long, regulators were too hesitant to question tech companies. These businesses were perpetually too new and too complicated. Vestager broke the dam.

Competition Bureau Sues Google for Anti-Competitive Conduct canada.ca

Competition Bureau Canada:

The Competition Bureau is taking legal action against Google for anti-competitive conduct in online advertising technology services in Canada. Following a thorough investigation, the Bureau has filed an application with the Competition Tribunal that seeks to remedy the conduct for the benefit of Canadians.

This has become a familiar announcement: a consumer protection agency, somewhere in the world, is questioning whether a giant technology conglomerate has abused its power. A dam has burst.

U.S. Federal Trade Commission Launches Broad Microsoft Investigation bloomberg.com

Leah Nylen, Josh Sisco, and Dina Bass, Bloomberg:

The US Federal Trade Commission has opened an antitrust investigation of Microsoft Corp., drilling into everything from the company’s cloud computing and software licensing businesses to cybersecurity offerings and artificial intelligence products.

Seems like a lot of people who thought Microsoft would escape antitrust investigations in the U.S. might have been a little too eager.

This kind of scrutiny is a good thing, and long overdue. Yet one of the unavoidable problems of reducing the influence of these giant corporations now is the pain it is going to cause — almost by definition. If a corporation is abusing its power and scale to such a degree the FTC initiates an investigation, unwinding that will have — to put it mildly — an effect. We are seeing this in the Google case. This is true for any situation where a business or a group of people with too much influence needs correcting. That does not mean it should not happen.

It is true that Microsoft’s products and services are the backbone of businesses and governments the world over. These are delivered through tight integrations, all of which encourages further fealty to this singular solution. For example, it used its dominant position with Office 365 to distribute Teams for free, thereby making it even harder for other businesses to compete. It then leveraged Outlook and Teams to boost its web browser, after doing the same with Windows. If it charged for Teams out of the gate, this would be having a different discussion.

Obviously, the FTC’s concerns with Microsoft’s business practices stretch well beyond bundling Teams. According to this Bloomberg report, the Commission is interested in cloud and identity tying, too. On the one hand, it is enormously useful to businesses to have a suite of products with a single point of management and shared credentials. On the other hand, it is a monolithic system that is a non-starter for potential competitors.

The government is understandably worried about the security and stability risks of global dependence on Microsoft, too, but this is odd:

The CrowdStrike crash that affected millions of devices operating on Microsoft Windows systems earlier this year was itself a testament to the widespread use of the company’s products and how it directly affects the global economy.

This might just be Bloomberg’s contextualizing more than it is relevant to the government’s position. But, still, it seems wrong to me to isolate Windows as the problem instead of Crowdstrike itself, especially with better examples to be found in the SolarWinds breach and its track record with first-party security.

‘Surveilled’ Documents Ronan Farrow’s Reporting on Spyware newyorker.com

Ronan Farrow, the New Yorker:

Decisions by the White House and by Republican lawmakers about spyware will have implications across a variety of policy areas that Trump and his associates are upending and that reach far beyond Washington. In recent years, an array of states, including Texas, Florida, and California have reportedly purchased spyware and other surveillance technologies; legislators and regulators will dictate whether that trend continues. Since the fall of Roe v. Wade, at least two states have already used private personal data to prosecute people for getting abortions. That practice could expand with more widespread and affordable access to this technology.

This article appears to have been timed to coincide with the release of a new documentary on HBO, showing Farrow reporting out stories on NSO Group and other commercial spyware makers. It is not the most substantive piece and I think that plus the headline — “The Technology the Trump Administration Could Use to Hack Your Phone” — is more distracting than it is illuminating. U.S. administrations have, since George W. Bush, used terrorism as a means of hand-waving away civil liberties protections, including domestic spying. Barack Obama’s administration famously killed U.S. citizens without trial, an action which remains shocking to me to this day regardless of who carried it out. In his first administration, Donald Trump compromised the legitimacy of all manner of domestic and foreign politics.

So, to the question of whether the U.S. would begin using fancy spyware on citizens’ phones under any administration, the answer seems more like a question of when and not if. It is just one more tool of a long series of violations. The next Trump administration seems unlikely to be more restrained than the first but, when this happens, I bet it becomes part of the churn-and-burn media cycle. It will barely register except to those who already find this sort of stuff disturbing.

By the way, the documentary itself is fine. It is only about an hour long and is mostly a behind-the-scenes look at the reporting. I am not sure that there is anything new-for-2024 within. Farrow’s New Yorker articles about the subject are far more illuminating.

Mozilla Is Worried About the Proposed Fixes for Google’s Search Monopoly pcmag.com

Michael Kan, PC Magazine:

Mozilla points to a key but less eye-catching proposal from the DOJ to regulate Google’s search business, which a judge ruled as a monopoly in August. In their recommendations, federal prosecutors urged the court to ban Google from offering “something of value” to third-party companies to make Google the default search engine over their software or devices. 

“The proposed remedies are designed to end Google’s unlawful practices and open up the market for rivals and new entrants to emerge,” the DOJ told the court. The problem is that Mozilla earns most of its revenue from royalty deals — nearly 86% in 2022 — making Google the default Firefox browser search engine.

This is probably another reason why U.S. prosecutors want to jettison Chrome from Google: they want to reduce any benefit it may accrue from trying to fix its illegal search monopoly. But it seems Google’s position in the industry is so entrenched that correcting it will hurt lots of other businesses, too. That does not mean it should not be broken up or that the DOJ’s proposed remedies are wrong, however.

Google’s Speculation on Apple’s Advertising Ambitions businessinsider.com

Peter Kafka, Business Insider:

Titled “Operation Black Walnut,” the 2022 report appears to have been assembled by Google strategists to try to imagine what kind of ad business Apple might eventually build out one day.

Apple’s current ad business is mostly confined to selling ads on its App Store search results page. But the report’s authors speculate that Apple could eventually start selling ads that run on other people’s apps and eventually on the web via its Safari browser. It might eventually become a $30 billion business, they guesstimate.

The iPhone continues to be Apple’s big moneymaker but, right after it is a big bucket labelled “Services”. Some of that is thanks to monthly recurring charges for iCloud, media streaming, video games, news, and fitness stuff. That is what probably comes to mind when you head “Apple Services”. But there are a few more things in that bucket: AppleCare, payments, advertising, and the App Store. Those last two categories are looking less solid than they once did.

Included in “advertising” is the revenue sharing agreement between Apple and Google, which is probably going to take a $20 billion per year haircut. That is about 20% of Apple’s entire annual “Services” revenue, and 16% of its total profits for 2024. Also, regulators are chipping away at the company’s lock on its cut of in-app payments.

The Google document is speculative and external to Apple, so it does not represent Apple’s actual strategy. This is what Google, an advertising company, thinks Apple could do if it wanted to really commit to selling ads. Does losing its Google revenue share tip Apple’s hand? I sure hope not, but I am not the person trying to figure out whether to take a massive financial hit for users’ trust and enjoyment. If Apple has good taste, I hope it will make the right call.

Brazil Antitrust Body Rules Apple Must Permit External Payment Methods in iOS Apps reuters.com

Andre Romani and Alberto Alerigi Jr., Reuters:

Brazilian antitrust regulator Cade said on Monday that Apple must lift restrictions on payment methods for in-app purchases, among other things, as the watchdog moved to proceed with an investigation into a complaint filed by Latin America e-commerce giant MercadoLibre.

It would look very silly to me if Apple continues to deal with these consistent findings in country after country after country after country in individualized ways instead of updating its rules globally. Very silly, indeed.

How Sports Betting Has Changed the U.S. rollingstone.com

David Hill, Rolling Stone:

PASPA, which stands for the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, was a law in the U.S. that prohibited sports betting, except in a few states, like Nevada. It was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2018, and ever since, sports gambling has exploded into the American zeitgeist. Ads for sportsbooks have dominated televised events, made their way into the stadiums and arenas of professional and collegiate sports alike, and even onto the jerseys of the athletes themselves. Talk of point spreads and totals, once taboo over the airwaves, are now not only common topics among the sports commentariat, but also displayed in the chyron scoreboards right on the screen. It seems like everyone who isn’t betting on sports likely has someone in their life who is. Revenues for sports-betting companies reached nearly $11 billion in 2023, up 44.5 percent from the year before.

[…]

According to NCPG, 16 percent of sports bettors meet the criteria for clinical gambling disorder. Men between the ages of 18 and 24 are particularly at risk, creating what [NCPG executive director Keith] Whyte calls a “ticking time bomb” of young people growing up not knowing what it’s like to not have a sportsbook in their pocket at all times.

Drew Gooden made a video about the same subject and, last year, the Fifth Estate investigated sports betting in Canada after it was legalized here in 2021.

It is strange to me how the world of sports gambling is now just an open business like any other. It makes sense to me that it is legal, but to integrate it so tightly with every aspect of a competition is something I admit to being confused about and a little troubled by. I do not mean to be squeamish about adults having a little fun. But it seems to now be just part of how sports are discussed: not about athletics or strategy, but about all the money you could make. Or, probably, lose.

If one downloads Apple’s Sports app, for example, betting odds are displayed near the top of the screen for every game, just below the current score. This is on by default; it is up to users to turn it off. While a user cannot make a bet from within the app, it seems to treat this vice with uncharacteristic casualness.

Chrome and Competition

Michael Liedtke, Associated Press:

The proposed breakup floated in a 23-page document filed late Wednesday by the U.S. Department of Justice calls for sweeping punishments that would include a sale of Google’s industry-leading Chrome web browser and impose restrictions to prevent Android from favoring its own search engine.

[…]

Although regulators stopped short of demanding Google sell Android too, they asserted the judge should make it clear the company could still be required to divest its smartphone operating system if its oversight committee continues to see evidence of misconduct.

Casey Newton:

In addition to requiring that Chrome be divested, the proposal calls for several other major changes that would be enforced over a 10-year period. They include:

  • Blocking Google from making deals like the one it has with Apple to be its default search engine.

  • Requiring it to let device manufacturers show users a “choice screen” with multiple search engine options on it.

  • Licensing data about search queries, results, and what users click on to rivals.

  • Blocking Google from buying or investing in advertising or search companies, including makers of AI chatbots. (Google agreed to invest up to $2 billion into Anthropic last year.)

The full proposal (PDF) is a pretty easy read. One of the weirder ideas pitched by the Colorado side is to have Google “fund a nationwide advertising and education program” which may, among other things, “include reasonable, short-term incentive payments to users” who pick a non-Google search engine from the choice screen.

I am guessing that is not going to happen, and not just because “Plaintiff United States and its Co-Plaintiff States do not join in proposing these remedies”. In fact, much of this wish list seems unlikely to be part of the final judgement expected next summer — in part because it is extensive, in part because of politics, and also because it seems unrelated.

Deborah Mary Sophia, Akash Sriram, and Kenrick Cai, Reuters:

“DOJ will face substantial headwinds with this remedy,” because Chrome can run search engines other than Google, said Gus Hurwitz, senior fellow and academic director at University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School. “Courts expect any remedy to have a causal connection to the underlying antitrust concern. Divesting Chrome does absolutely nothing to address this concern.”

I — an effectively random Canadian with no expertise in this and, so, you should take my perspective with appropriate caveats — disagree.

The objective of disentangling Chrome from Google’s ownership, according to the executive summary (PDF) produced by the Department of Justice, is to remove “a significant challenge to effectuate a remedy that aims to ‘unfetter [these] market[s] from anticompetitive conduct'”:

A successful remedy requires that Google: stop third-party payments that exclude rivals by advantaging Google and discouraging procompetitive partnerships that would offer entrants access to efficient and effective distribution; disclose data sufficient to level the scale-based playing field it has illegally slanted, including, at the outset, licensing syndicated search results that provide potential competitors a chance to offer greater innovation and more effective competition; and reduce Google’s ability to control incentives across the broader ecosystem via ownership and control of products and data complementary to search.

The DOJ’s theory of growth reinforcing quality and market dominance is sound, from what I understand, and Google does advantage Chrome in some key ways. Most directly related to this case is whether Chrome activity is connected to Google Search. Despite company executives explicitly denying using Chrome browsing data for ranking, a leak earlier this year confirmed Google does, indeed, consider Chrome views in its rankings.

There is also a setting labelled “Make searches and browsing better”, which automatically “sends URLs of the pages you visit” to Google for users of Chromium-based browsers. Google says this allows the company to “predict what sites you might visit next and to show you additional info about the page you’re visiting” which allows users to “browse faster because content is proactively loaded”.

There is a good question as to how much Google Search would be impacted if Google could not own Chrome or operate its own browser for five years, as the remedy proposes. How much weight these features have in Google’s ranking system is something only Google knows. And the DOJ does not propose that Google Search cannot be preloaded in browsers whatsoever. Many users would probably still select Google as their browser’s search engine, too. But Google Search does benefit from Google’s ownership of Chrome itself, so perhaps it is worth putting barriers between the two.

I do not think Chrome can exist as a standalone company. I also do not think it makes sense for another company to own it, since any of those big enough to do so either have their own browsers — Apple’s Safari, Microsoft’s Edge — or would have the potential to create new anticompetitive problems, like if it were acquired by Meta.

What if the solution looks more like prohibiting Google from uniquely leveraging Chrome to benefit its other products? I do not know how that could be written in legal terms, but it appears to me this is one of the DOJ’s goals for separating Chrome and Google.

‘Opinion: Bluesky Is a Dangerous Echo Chamber Because No One Wants to Hear From Me, Specifically’ thebeaverton.com

Sam Adams, on Bluesky [sic]:

funny how all the “Bluesky is an echo chamber” opeds sound exactly the same

Mary Gillis, the Beaverton:

So imagine my surprise when instead of welcoming me with open arms and the thousands of new followers I was expecting, Bluesky shunned me.

Why? Because I have some opinions they disagree with. And instead of respecting my inalienable right to be debated, they just… blocked me. Like I’m some kind of annoyance, rather than the iconoclastic and fascinating truth-teller which I know myself to be.

Quality satire.

Every arena of discussion has boundaries for what is acceptable. But only some viewpoints are considered part of an “echo chamber”, and the people who espouse them ought to be subjected, I guess, to abuse and intolerance. I wonder why that is.

Sill Collates Top Links From Your Accounts on Bluesky and Mastodon sill.social

Sill allows you to connect your Bluesky and Mastodon accounts — one of each — and see what links are popular among the accounts you follow. As Andy Baio says, it is “like Nuzzel was for Twitter”.

Tyler Fisher:

As decentralized social media continues to grow, I believe it is important to build a strong ecosystem of third party tools that support these networks and embellish their functionality. Sill adds an important piece of that puzzle, a way to get the biggest stories from your networks without remaining glued to your feeds. Above all, Sill promotes a healthier way to use social media.

I have been using Sill for about a week. If it feels familiar, that could be because I posted about it last week before Fisher was ready for broader adoption. I took down my link, but I kept using it because it is fantastic. If you want a high-level overview of what people are linking to, you should check out Sill.