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Your Digital Footprint Reveals More Than You Think | KQED

kqed.org · Jan 22

How easy is it to find someone from a single video posted online? To find out, Morgan put her own privacy to the test. She asked TikTok creator JoseMonkey, who’s famous for geolocating people who send him videos asking to be found, to track her down. JoseMonkey started as a geolocation hobbyist...

Shared by @TechDesk and 31 others.
hypebot (@hypebot) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

soup (@hotsoup) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

Trending Bot (@trending) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

ICYMI (Law) (@icymi_law) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

Cat 🐈🥗 (D.Burch) :paw:⁠:paw: (@catsalad) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

Lars (@lxrs) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

Andrew (@dcbikeguy) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

your auntifa liza 🇵🇷 🦛 🦦 (@blogdiva) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

Cainmark Does Not Comply 🚲 (@cainmark) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

trending_bot (@trending_bot) · Jan 22
🔁 @evacide:

Trying to protect everything from everyone all the time will drive you crazy. Here is what you should do about your digital privacy and security instead. I talked to KQED's Close All Tabs about threat modeling: kqed.org/news/12070531/your-di

The Rupture

broligarchy.substack.com · Jan 21

Mark Carney nails it. We have to "stop pretending"

Shared by @Andreas__Nagel and 39 others.
ℵancym (@nm) · Jan 21
🔁 @janhoglund:

” Mark Carney nails it. We have to "stop pretending" … We can’t respond and act to this hugely consequential geopolitical moment if we are complicit in the denial of our leaders and media. This is a week in which the world we have known has swung on its axis. We cannot simply carry on as if it’s business and normal.  …not speaking the truth, now, is deeply corrosive. That is the subtext of Carney’s speech.”
—Carole Cadwalladr
broligarchy.substack.com/p/the
#markcarney #carney #worldeconomicforum #davos

Ben (@TheBreadmonkey) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

Ray Gulick, he/him/wtf 🇺🇦 ❌👑 (@rgulick) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

G. Gibson (@mistergibson) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

Hank G ☑️ (@hankg) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

Christine Burns MBE 🏳️‍⚧️📚⧖ (@christineburns) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

Lenz Grimmer (@lenzgr) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

Zhi Zhu 🕸️ (@ZhiZhu) · Jan 22
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"Mark Carney’s speech at Davos yesterday really is worth your time. It made some of the front pages today but the news cycle moves so fast that it’s already yesterday’s news. Part of the challenge of this moment - and I believe the job of journalists - is to focus on the signal, not the noise. And if you have time to take in one thing properly, this week, I’d suggest it’s this."

~ Carole Cadwalladr

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/1

broligarchy.substack.com/p/the

The powerful have their power. We have the capacity to stop pretending, to name reality, to act together | Mark Carney

theguardian.com · Jan 21

In a speech to Davos, Canadian prime minister Mark Carney lays out the case for unity in the face of Donald Trump’s new world order

Shared by @rpardee and 23 others.
TinJar (@TinJar) · Jan 21

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

"We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. Nostalgia is not a strategy, but we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just."

Dear Mark Carney - now accept the responsibility of causing #climatechange - invite 300M #climate #refugees and counter the #US bullying in the language that it will understand. You have the land and resources!

#Canada #oil #gas #migration #adaptation #justice #humanrights

Glenn Fleishman (@glennf) · Jan 21
🔁 @GeraldKutney:

Mark Carney: "That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us."

His Davos speech will go down as one of the greatest in Cdn. history.

Here is the entire presentation:

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

Roy #EatTheRich Pardee 🇺🇸 (@rpardee) · Jan 22
🔁 @DataKnightmare:

The Post-American Era has started. Time to get to work. Humility, this time, would be a good stating point.

> This fiction was useful, and American hegemony, in particular, helped provide public goods, open sea lanes, a stable financial system, collective security and support for frameworks for resolving disputes. So we placed the sign in the window. We participated in the rituals, and we largely avoided calling out the gaps between rhetoric and reality.

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

Fan of Shared Truth & Empathy (@JohnSullivan) · Jan 21
🔁 @deborahh:

PM Carney: "… We know the old order is not coming back. We shouldn’t mourn it. … we believe that from the fracture, we can build something bigger, better, stronger, more just. This is the task of the middle powers, the countries that have the most to lose from a world of fortresses and most to gain from genuine cooperation.

… That is Canada’s path. … and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us."

The entire speech, in The Guardian:
theguardian.com/commentisfree/

Jay Drake 🇨🇦 ≠51 (@rozcakj) · Jan 21
🔁 @GeraldKutney:

Mark Carney: "That is Canada’s path. We choose it openly and confidently, and it is a path wide open to any country willing to take it with us."

His Davos speech will go down as one of the greatest in Cdn. history.

Here is the entire presentation:

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

Odd reverberations (@radicalfaery) · Jan 21
🔁 @wdlindsy:

"We cannot simply carry on as if it’s business and normal. ...

We’ve been lucky through a golden age of peace and prosperity but as he so clearly articulates, that age is gone. Ahead lies [sic] dragons."

Cadwalladr's posting has the full text of Carney's speech. It's also at the Guardian link below.

#MarkCarney #Davos #GlobalOrder #power #NATO
/3

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

Glyn Moody (@glynmoody) · Jan 22
🔁 @DataKnightmare:

The Post-American Era has started. Time to get to work. Humility, this time, would be a good stating point.

> This fiction was useful, and American hegemony, in particular, helped provide public goods, open sea lanes, a stable financial system, collective security and support for frameworks for resolving disputes. So we placed the sign in the window. We participated in the rituals, and we largely avoided calling out the gaps between rhetoric and reality.

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

Patrick Hadfield (@patrickhadfield) · Jan 22
🔁 @Nigel_Purchase:

The powerful have their power. We have the capacity to stop pretending’: the Canadian PM’s call to action at Davos

theguardian.com/commentisfree/

A very powerful speech. This is the way to go. Don't kowtow to Trump OR Xi. Diversify your allies. Fight for decency.

Email from Family in Minnesota

inessential.com · Jan 21

Our family in Minnesota knows that we all worry about them, and so yesterday they sent an email to everyone.

Shared by @EclecticLexicon and 25 others.
Stefan Grund :eay: (@eay) · Jan 22

Email from Family in Minnesota → inessential.com/2026/01/21/ema

Brent Simmons (of NetNewsWire (Btw: Nach all den Jahren immer noch mein Desktop-Feedreader der Wahl.) ) hat eine E-Mail von Familienangehörigen aus Minnesota geteilt, wo Trumps ICE-Agenten nach dem Mord der 37-jährigen, 3-fachen Mutter Renée Good weiterhin ihr Unwesen treiben.

Ein paar unkommentierte Auszüge:

People are carrying their passports…

eay.li/3yp #blog

1993: Web Browsers Add Multimedia and MTV.com Goes Online

cybercultural.com · Jan 21

Mosaic adds an image tag for HTML and becomes the first modern web browser in 1993. Soon after, MTV VJ Adam Curry builds one of the world's first commercial websites — not that his bosses care.

Shared by @adam and 12 others.
Flippin' 'eck, Tucker! (@losttourist) · Jan 21
🔁 @ricmac:

In 1993, web design didn't really exist — you couldn't even change the background color of your web page from grey. But Mosaic launched the first era of visual web design with the IMG tag, and soon after an MTV VJ (@adam) improbably created one of the first commercial websites. cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i #WebDesignHistory

Adam Curry :pci: :pc2blue: (@adam) · Jan 22
🔁 @ricmac:

In 1993, web design didn't really exist — you couldn't even change the background color of your web page from grey. But Mosaic launched the first era of visual web design with the IMG tag, and soon after an MTV VJ (@adam) improbably created one of the first commercial websites. cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i #WebDesignHistory

Mike Fraser (@mike) · Jan 21
🔁 @ricmac:

In 1993, web design didn't really exist — you couldn't even change the background color of your web page from grey. But Mosaic launched the first era of visual web design with the IMG tag, and soon after an MTV VJ (@adam) improbably created one of the first commercial websites. cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i #WebDesignHistory

Jon Henshaw (@jon) · Jan 21
🔁 @ricmac:

In 1993, web design didn't really exist — you couldn't even change the background color of your web page from grey. But Mosaic launched the first era of visual web design with the IMG tag, and soon after an MTV VJ (@adam) improbably created one of the first commercial websites. cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i #WebDesignHistory

Jake in the desert (@jake4480) · Jan 21
🔁 @ricmac:

In 1993, web design didn't really exist — you couldn't even change the background color of your web page from grey. But Mosaic launched the first era of visual web design with the IMG tag, and soon after an MTV VJ (@adam) improbably created one of the first commercial websites. cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i #WebDesignHistory

Tim Chambers (@tchambers) · Jan 22
🔁 @js:

‘As for Adam Curry, even though he was no web designer and was just as interested in Gopher as the web, in hindsight it's remarkable that he managed to set up a website at all in 1993 — given the technical expertise required and the very limited bandwidth available. By the end of 1993, there were only about 620 web servers in the world; and one of them hosted MTV.com, thanks to Curry.’

cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i

Richard MacManus (@ricmac) · Jan 21
🔁 @js:

‘As for Adam Curry, even though he was no web designer and was just as interested in Gopher as the web, in hindsight it's remarkable that he managed to set up a website at all in 1993 — given the technical expertise required and the very limited bandwidth available. By the end of 1993, there were only about 620 web servers in the world; and one of them hosted MTV.com, thanks to Curry.’

cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i

Benjamin Bellamy (@benjaminbellamy) · Jan 21
🔁 @js:

‘As for Adam Curry, even though he was no web designer and was just as interested in Gopher as the web, in hindsight it's remarkable that he managed to set up a website at all in 1993 — given the technical expertise required and the very limited bandwidth available. By the end of 1993, there were only about 620 web servers in the world; and one of them hosted MTV.com, thanks to Curry.’

cybercultural.com/p/1993-mtv-i

‘She looks like a baby’: Why do kids as young as 5 or 6 still get arrested at schools? – Center for Public Integrity

publicintegrity.org · Jan 22

This story was produced as part of a collaboration with the Center for Public Integrity and USA TODAY. ORLANDO — The preschoolers filed offstage in royal blue caps and gowns, hugging their parents and ready for treats to celebrate their 2018 graduation from Trinity Learning Academy. All but one...

Shared by @courtcan and 39 others.
Tricia Wood (@Pkbwood) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

tools for commensality 🧿 (@inquiline) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Herr Mama Hörnchen to you! (@mamsell) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Andrew (@dcbikeguy) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

GhostOnTheHalfShell (@GhostOnTheHalfShell) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Danette 🐬 (@Danetteb) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Gaurav Vaidya (@gaurav) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Katrina Katrinka :donor: (@katrinakatrinka) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Erika Ensign (@HollyGoDarkly) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Bean 🇺🇸🇻🇪 (@TechBean) · Jan 22
🔁 @mekkaokereke:

There's a photo going around of ICE arresting a 5-year-old boy, and shipping him to a facility in another state.

This is horrific! It's absolutely inexcusable to arrest a 5-year-old child!

🤔I just have a few questions... what if the child is Black though? Is it still cruel?

Is it also cruel to send Black kids as young as 7 to juvenile detention facilities in other states, so that their moms can't even visit?

publicintegrity.org/education/

Let this build empathy inside you.

Recognize that this situation is horrific when ICE does it to immigrant children, and when cops do it to Black children.

Recognize that ICE agents doing these acts to make MAGA happy is bad. Cops doing this to make Dem voters happy, is also bad.

When I say that we don't need School Resource Officers in elementary schools arresting 5-year-old Black boys, understand what that means in practice.

This isn't sadder when it happens to kids that aren't Black.

Naked Power - Infrequently Noted

infrequently.org · Jan 20

Alex Russell on browsers, standards, and the process of progress.

Shared by @josemurilo and 28 others.
Fynn Ellie Be (@mvsde) · Jan 21
🔁 @slightlyoff:

Apple and Google's quisling era unearths the lies they've told to justify monopoly power over software for the most consequential computing platforms of our lives. If the app stores can't move against Musk/Grok, they should not be trusted with any of the powers they demand:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

Johan Halse (@hejsna) · Jan 21
🔁 @slightlyoff:

Apple and Google's quisling era unearths the lies they've told to justify monopoly power over software for the most consequential computing platforms of our lives. If the app stores can't move against Musk/Grok, they should not be trusted with any of the powers they demand:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

Ecologia Digital (@josemurilo) · Jan 22
🔁 @slightlyoff:

The Grok/Musk AI undressing scandal teaches us that Apple and Google's shameful app stores stand for nothing but profit, invalidating one of the 5 arguments they make to retain monopoly power to tax all software. But the other four arguments are bullshit, too. The iceberg of deception is larger than the tip of content moderation:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

Retrograde (@Retrograde) · Jan 22
🔁 @slightlyoff:

The Grok/Musk AI undressing scandal teaches us that Apple and Google's shameful app stores stand for nothing but profit, invalidating one of the 5 arguments they make to retain monopoly power to tax all software. But the other four arguments are bullshit, too. The iceberg of deception is larger than the tip of content moderation:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

tante (@tante) · Jan 22
🔁 @slightlyoff:

The Grok/Musk AI undressing scandal teaches us that Apple and Google's shameful app stores stand for nothing but profit, invalidating one of the 5 arguments they make to retain monopoly power to tax all software. But the other four arguments are bullshit, too. The iceberg of deception is larger than the tip of content moderation:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

Donnie (@macbraughton) · Jan 20
🔁 @slightlyoff:

Apple and Google's quisling era unearths the lies they've told to justify monopoly power over software for the most consequential computing platforms of our lives. If the app stores can't move against Musk/Grok, they should not be trusted with any of the powers they demand:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

Rizaldi (@jal) · Jan 22
🔁 @slightlyoff:

The Grok/Musk AI undressing scandal teaches us that Apple and Google's shameful app stores stand for nothing but profit, invalidating one of the 5 arguments they make to retain monopoly power to tax all software. But the other four arguments are bullshit, too. The iceberg of deception is larger than the tip of content moderation:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

tylerhall (@tylerhall) · Jan 21
🔁 @slightlyoff:

Apple and Google's quisling era unearths the lies they've told to justify monopoly power over the most consequential computing platforms of our lives. If the app stores can't move against Musk/Grok, they should not be trusted with any of the powers they demand:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

Evil Jim O’Donnell (@eatyourgreens) · Jan 21
🔁 @slightlyoff:

Apple and Google's quisling era unearths the lies they've told to justify monopoly power over the most consequential computing platforms of our lives. If the app stores can't move against Musk/Grok, they should not be trusted with any of the powers they demand:

infrequently.org/2026/01/naked

‘The most dangerous man in America’: how Paul Robeson went from Hollywood to blacklist

theguardian.com · Jan 21

The groundbreaking singer, actor and athlete became a victim of McCarthyism and saw his shining career destroyed and his legacy tarnished

Shared by @SteveBellovin and 21 others.
Cainmark Does Not Comply 🚲 (@cainmark) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Trending Bot (@trending) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Kevin Russell (@kevinrns) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

AJ Sadauskas (@aj) · Jan 22

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Pauline von Hellermann (@pvonhellermannn) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Steve Bellovin (@SteveBellovin) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Roy #EatTheRich Pardee 🇺🇸 (@rpardee) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Karl Auerbach (@karlauerbach) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Miro Collas (@Miro_Collas) · Jan 22
🔁 @aj:

The Guardian has the heartbreaking story of the near-total erasure of Black singer, actor and athlete Paul Robeson.

Despite achieving greatness across multiple fields, Robeson was blacklisted for being politically incorrect during the McCarthy witch-hunts, by failing to denounce the USSR sufficiently.

Y'know, because American conservatives love free speech...

"His talent was prodigious. Robeson integrated Broadway in 1943, the first Black man to play Othello in the United States. Previous productions of Shakespeare’s jealous Moor casted white actors in blackface, and Robeson’s Othello run of 296 performances remains a Broadway record for a Shakespeare production. A two-time All-American at Rutgers, he was one of the greatest college football players in history. He graduated from Columbia Law, and, before becoming world renowned as a concert singer, stage and Hollywood actor, Robeson even played defensive end for two years in the National Football League. The Robeson legacy spawned a staggering list of Black stage performers, from Lena Horne to Harry Belafonte, James Earl Jones, Andre Braugher, Keith David and Denzel Washington. At his peak, Paul Robeson was the most famous Black American in the world.

"And yet for his refusal to denounce the Soviet Union as cold war tensions increased, Robeson was isolated by both the white mainstream and by the respectable pillars of the Black establishment – the NAACP, the Urban League and many leading Black political and cultural voices who feared being branded communist by the rising conservative tide.
...
"This week marks 50 years since Robeson’s death and the silence remains. His erasure from the lineage over the decades shows that what Robeson’s political opponents did not take from him, the years have most certainly. Robeson’s decoupling from the story of African American culture has been so complete that in the half-century since his death, even generations of Black Americans have never heard of him."

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jan/21/paul-robeson-hollywood-blacklist-mccarthyism

#Politics #uspol

Worth reading

Generative AI is an expensive edging machine

garbageday.email · Jan 21

Read to the end for insider trading and money laundering

Shared by @josemurilo and 13 others.
Liam Proven (@lproven) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"[AI] is not a revolution in computing, but a revolution in accepting lower standards."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine garbageday.email/p/generative-

Mario Munoz (@pythonbynight) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"If AI succeeds, we will have to live in a world where the joy of making something has turned into something you have to pay for. And if it really succeeds, you won’t even care that what you’re using an AI to make is total dog shit."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine

garbageday.email/p/generative-

Tofu Musubi (@Hawaii) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"[AI] is not a revolution in computing, but a revolution in accepting lower standards."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine garbageday.email/p/generative-

DoomsdaysCW (@DoomsdaysCW) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"[AI] is not a revolution in computing, but a revolution in accepting lower standards."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine garbageday.email/p/generative-

Mike Pirnat (@mpirnat) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"[AI] is not a revolution in computing, but a revolution in accepting lower standards."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine garbageday.email/p/generative-

peelinggecko (@peelinggecko) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"[AI] is not a revolution in computing, but a revolution in accepting lower standards."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine garbageday.email/p/generative-

Roy #EatTheRich Pardee 🇺🇸 (@rpardee) · Jan 21
🔁 @pluralistic:

"[AI] is not a revolution in computing, but a revolution in accepting lower standards."

-Ryan Broderick, Generative AI is an expensive edging machine garbageday.email/p/generative-

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