31 July 2024

Interesting Point


Crashing a CNET event


This one is real life with penis drones crashing a Gary Kasperov speech.
One of the arguments made by cryptocurrency enthusiasts is that it is currency.

The thing is, it does not fit the most basic definition of currency, because it is not current.

If you want to buy something with Bitcoin, it takes hours, or days, or fees far higher than what it would cost to wire money to Guatemala.

In fact, Bitcoin is used less often to buy stuff, as opposed to things like paying a ransom, less than are Linden dollars.

I know what you are thinking, "What the f%$# are Linden dollars?"

They are the currency used in Second Life, an online game in which one participates in a virtual world.

You may not remember it, it began in 2003, and passed its zenith sometime around 2006, when corporate virtual events were ravaged by flying penises.  (As Anna Russel would say, "I'm not making this up, you know.")

I know what you are thinking now, "Oh, yes it it is still around."

No disrespect to people who are still participate in the environment, not that there's anything wrong with that, but the fact that there is still more commerce generated from a 2 decade old game than is generated by Bitcoin says something about how profoundly ill suited to, well, anything, Bitcoin is:

At a recent high tech conference (I forget which one, so let's just say SXSW), the topic of Bitcoin came up, with a very young developer enthusing to me how it was going to be The Next Big thing. I pointed out (as I often do) that Bitcoin still lacks the key thing a currency needs to be a currency -- that is to say, a mass group of people regularly using it to buy, you know, stuff.

But my new friend stood his ground. "Transactions have been growing like crazy since last year," he insisted, "they're over 100,000 a day now." I checked Bitcoin's daily transaction info, and that's indeed the case: Over 100K transactions a day, almost double what it was in the Summer of last year. Which is definitely solid growth of some kind, I'll give him that. 

But here's the thing, and it bears emphasis: At 100K transactions a day, Bitcoin is still less used than Linden Dollars.

 (emphasis original)

………

This isn't to say Linden Dollars are superior to Bitcoin -- which after all, are a virtual currency intrinsically tied to a social game MMO platform. However, after all that hype, you'd think Silicon Valley would be quick to have the same skepticism for Bitcoin as they did for Second Life after it failed to deliver on its promises in 2006-2008.

Indeed, but there is an important difference, the people running and participating in Second Life are not in this to scam people, while the people supporting Bitcoin, most notably Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz, are actively scamming people.

The big money and hype is in cryptocurrency is from investors who are pumping and dumping in the hope that the retail investors will make them profits, and take their losses.

Busy Past Few Days in the Middle East

So in the past few days, Israel has assassinated the Chairman of the Hamas Political Bureau Ismail Haniyeh while he was in Tehran for a meeting.

They also assassinated Hezbollah #2 Fuad Shukr in Beruit in response to the rocket attack on Majdal Shams that killed 12 children playing football. (Soccer)

While I believe that the exit of these two individuals in fact makes the world a better place, I do not think that the fact of they were assassinated will have the same effect.

The strike on Shukr is perhaps more justifiable, given that it is believed that he was directly involved in the strike.

I think that the assassination of Haniyeh is less justifiable, if just because he was deeply involved in negotiations to end the conflict and get the hostages still held in Gaza back.

I'm wondering if part of the motivation, in Netanyahu's part at least, was to extend the war.

Bibi has to know that once the war has ended, he will be turfed out of office, and then he will go to jail for corruption.

Unfortunately, I see nothing good coming from this.

I Believe that the Term for this is, "Illegal In-Kind Donation"

On Ecch (ex-Twitter) an account called, White Dudes for Harris raised more than $4,000,000.00 for the Kamala Harris Presidential campaign.

Ecch promptly shut down their account.

Once the inevitable sh%$ storm blew up, they backtracked.

It took about 4 hours.

Ecch management is claiming that it was an error.

Yeah, right:

Elon Musk’s social media platform X suspended “White Dudes for Harris” Monday night, shortly after a massive fundraising call where almost 200,000 people helped raise more than $4 million for the vice president and presumptive Democratic nominee.

The account, @dudes4harris, was reinstated Tuesday morning after it was blocked hours before because of “a user report” for “violating our rules against evading suspension,” according to a screenshot shared with The Washington Post. Organizer Ross Morales Rocketto said the group submitted a complaint to X, but had no other direct communication from the platform.

“We hosted the event, and it was wholesome and a bunch of dudes being earnest, getting inspired and excited,” Morales Rocketto said in an interview with The Post. “And suddenly we realized the [X] account had been suspended and we had no idea why.”

Of course you have no reason why. That's what happens with Ecch, or the criminal enterprise formerly known as Facebook™, or Google, or Amazon.

Of course, none of the other three are this f%$#ing stupid, but, you know, Elon.

………

The suspension on X occurred as the group and its allies were posting heavily about the event after it ended. While the exact reasons behind it are unclear, it reignited broader concerns among Democrats that the platform, which Musk bought in 2022, could be used to influence the online discourse in the months leading to the presidential election.

Musk endorsed former president Donald Trump on the platform this month and has been using it to stump for the GOP candidate. The billionaire has 192 million followers on the platform, giving him a far larger social media megaphone than most any other individual — even Biden, Harris or Trump.

Gee, you think?

Assuming that Elon did this on purpose, or let it happen on purpose, and my guess is that he did, this could be considered an illegal in-kind political donation.

Of course, it's unlikely to happen, campaign finance laws are not often enforced, but it's Elon, so I will assume malice.

30 July 2024

A War Criminal is Dead

William Calley, who was the platoon leader for Company C, 1st Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment on March 16, 1968, when he and his men massacred at least 347 civilians in the Vietnamese hamlet of My Lai, has died at the age of 80.

He was sentenced to life in prison for his crimes, but his sentence was commuted to 3 years under house arrest by Richard Nixon.

He was the only person prosecuted, and then only after Seymour Hersch dug up the story and made it public. 

Given what happened that day, and what higher ups knew before and after the massacre, the Pentagon's coverup largely worked.

Wear Your F%$#ing Mask

It turns out that Covid infects your central nervous system before it even reaches the blood.

Abstract

Neurological symptoms associated with COVID-19, acute and long term, suggest SARS-CoV-2 affects both the peripheral and central nervous systems (PNS/CNS). Although studies have shown olfactory and hematogenous invasion into the CNS, coinciding with neuroinflammation, little attention has been paid to susceptibility of the PNS to infection or to its contribution to CNS invasion. Here we show that sensory and autonomic neurons in the PNS are susceptible to productive infection with SARS-CoV-2 and outline physiological and molecular mechanisms mediating neuroinvasion. Our infection of K18-hACE2 mice, wild-type mice, and golden Syrian hamsters, as well as primary peripheral sensory and autonomic neuronal cultures, show viral RNA, proteins, and infectious virus in PNS neurons, satellite glial cells, and functionally connected CNS tissues. Additionally, we demonstrate, in vitro, that neuropilin-1 facilitates SARS-CoV-2 neuronal entry. SARS-CoV-2 rapidly invades the PNS prior to viremia, establishes a productive infection in peripheral neurons, and results in sensory symptoms often reported by COVID-19 patients.

Short version:  Covid can wreck your mind.

Wear a mask, or expect to start sounding like Donald Trump.

H/t ECop at the Stellar Parthenon BBS.

Elections Have Consequences

The Consumer Products Safety Commission has ruled that Amazon is a distributor for merchandise from its 3rd party sellers and so is responsible for the health and safety of those products.

This means that Amazon is required to make reasonable efforts to ensure that what it ships adheres to minimal safety standards, and that it must inform its customers when the crap it ships turns out to be dangerous:

Amazon failed to adequately alert more than 300,000 customers to serious risks—including death and electrocution—that US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) testing found with more than 400,000 products that third parties sold on its platform.

The CPSC unanimously voted to hold Amazon legally responsible for third-party sellers' defective products. Now, Amazon must make a CPSC-approved plan to properly recall the dangerous products—including highly flammable children's pajamas, faulty carbon monoxide detectors, and unsafe hair dryers that could cause electrocution—which the CPSC fears may still be widely used in homes across America.

While Amazon scrambles to devise a plan, the CPSC summarized the ongoing risks to consumers:

If the [products] remain in consumers’ possession, children will continue to wear sleepwear garments that could ignite and result in injury or death; consumers will unwittingly rely on defective [carbon monoxide] detectors that will never alert them to the presence of deadly carbon monoxide in their homes; and consumers will use the hair dryers they purchased, which lack immersion protection, in the bathroom near water, leaving them vulnerable to electrocution.
Instead of recalling the products, which were sold between 2018 and 2021, Amazon sent messages to customers that the CPSC said "downplayed the severity" of hazards.

In these messages—"despite conclusive testing that the products were hazardous" by the CPSC—Amazon only warned customers that the products "may fail" to meet federal safety standards and only "potentially" posed risks of "burn injuries to children," "electric shock," or "exposure to potentially dangerous levels of carbon monoxide."

Typically, a distributor would be required to specifically use the word "recall" in the subject line of these kinds of messages, but Amazon dodged using that language entirely. Instead, Amazon opted to use much less alarming subject lines that said, "Attention: Important safety notice about your past Amazon order" or "Important safety notice about your past Amazon order."

Amazon then left it up to customers to destroy products and explicitly discouraged them from making returns. The e-commerce giant also gave every affected customer a gift card without requiring proof of destruction or adequately providing public notice or informing customers of actual hazards, as can be required by law to ensure public safety.

If a company treats their employees like sh%$, they will treat their customers like sh%$.

Don't buy Amazon.

Chaos is Job Won

Washington Post CEO Will Lewis is now being sued by Prince Harry and numerous UK MPs for his role in the phone hacking scandal.

They are alleging that he lied to police to justify deleting millions of emails that would have implicated him and his bosses in directing the the hacking the voice mails of politicians, celebrities, and a murdered little girl:

Attorneys for Prince Harry and prominent U.K. politicians Monday accused Washington Post chief executive and publisher Will Lewis of concocting a story 13 years ago to shield evidence from police of possible crimes at Rupert Murdoch’s British tabloids.

In court, the lawyers submitted a statement arguing that Lewis “fabricated a fake security threat” in January 2011 to justify the deletion of millions of emails dating from the start of 2008 through the end of 2010 — an act that those suing the company suggest is part of a wider coverup.

The Murdoch newspaper company, now called News UK, denies those claims. Lewis has broadly denied any wrongdoing but declined to comment to NPR Monday.

The Murdochs have paid more than $1.5 billion to settle scores of lawsuits since a simmering scandal over phone hacking erupted into a full-fledged crisis in the summer of 2011.

The people targeted by the tabloids include crime victims, sports figures, celebrities, royals and politicians — some of whom are now alleging the Murdoch enterprise invaded their privacy not only in pursuit of headlines, but as part of corporate espionage. News UK denies this, noting it is an allegation made in pursuit of their lawsuits against the company. Lewis is not a defendant in the cases.

………

In July 2011, when police first learned of the deleted emails, Lewis explained that Murdoch’s company was compelled to get rid of them because of a tip that he and a senior executive received nearly six months earlier: an “outside source” told them that former British Prime Minister Gordon Brown was conspiring with a News UK employee and another person to steal the emails of the CEO. That unnamed person was said to be Tom Watson, then a leading member of parliament and critic of the Murdochs. The IT person was later alleged to have been a former News UK staffer. 

………

Lewis joined News UK in September 2010. Early the next year, he became one of a few company executives charged with handling the escalating scandal over its tabloids’ breaking into mobile voicemails and otherwise illegally acquiring the confidential records of the subjects of their reporting.

As the investigative journalist Nick Davies has written, Murdoch met with Brooks in London during the day of Jan. 24. That evening, News UK’s chief tech officer, Paul Cheesbrough, sent the email to Brooks saying that he and Lewis had just been told of the ostensible scheme involving Brown that very day. Lewis was copied on the email, which was presented in court Monday.

He's dirty as hell, and he is still running, and running into the ground, the Washington Post, because Jeff Bezos, wants a corporate criminal minion to do his bidding. 

Here's hoping that Lewis ends up frog marched out of his offices in handcuffs.

Snark of the Day

This psycho JD Vance, my God!  This guy is like six Sarah Palin's standing on each other's shoulders wearing a Dan Quayle disguise!

Keith Olbermann

This is wonderfully lyrical, and you can hear the whole thing starting at about 13:20 on the link.

29 July 2024

A Convincing Argument

The invaluable Maureen Tkacik does a deep dive into the CrowdStrike disaster, and comes to an interesting conclusion, that it was a failure of antitrust enforcement that led to the shutdown of hundreds of thousands of computers for days.

Specifically, it appears that CrowdStrike and other software vendors colluded to shut out 3rd party security test firms that found exploits in their software.

So, monopolistic and oligopolistic behavior doesn't just harm consumers, it harms the national defense: 

………

More notably, CrowdStrike had just been accused in court of orchestrating a conspiracy linked to the DNC cyber attack, though it didn’t involve any murders. According to the plaintiff, an independent cybersecurity software testing service called NSS Labs, the hack had exposed the incompetence of CrowdStrike, which the DNC had hired to stop the breach in May 2016 but which “missed a spot” that enabled hackers to hang out undetected in the servers for another five months afterward.

According to the lawsuit, in a pique of damage control, CrowdStrike allegedly colluded with some competing software developers and a nonprofit standards organization whose leadership they controlled to blackball a group of independent third-party software testing outfits that specialized in testing and identifying defects in so-called “endpoint protection” software, a variety of cybersecurity software CrowdStrike pioneered. The complaint says that, through the nonprofit Anti-Malware Testing Standards Organization (AMTSO), the companies had promulgated a bogus new set of narrow parameters by which third-party testing shops were allowed to test their products—essentially, a Mutual Enshittification Pact—and promised to boycott and/or sue any third-party testing shops that lobbied for more expansive or rigorous testing standards.

I will add an aside here, the anti-circumvention sections of the DMCA actually make testing the software in a way that is not approved by the vendor a crime.

Yet another bad consequence of listening to the copyright maximalists.

By all appearances, the scheme worked: By the end of 2020, the testing shop that brought the case had shut down, CrowdStrike was a $50 billion company—and nightmarishly disruptive ransomware attacks had become a near-daily occurrence.

“The fact is that there is very little empirical evidence that any endpoint detection software does anything approaching what the marketing claims that it does, much less prevent any of the catastrophic security breaches” that have become so increasingly commonplace, says an attorney and cybersecurity consultant who tweets under the moniker Brian in Pittsburgh and asked the Prospect not to use his full name for professional reasons. “Some large companies hire consultants to test-drive software packages against one another, but the results of those sorts of tests are almost never made public.”

The result, he says, is an information vacuum that combined with the software industry’s historical exemption from product liability laws and “enormous investor pressure to generate constant earnings growth,” inevitably resulting in the corrupted software update that canceled and delayed thousands of flights, surgeries, and electronic transactions last Friday. 

………

But if the conspiracy NSS Labs described in its complaint holds even a kernel of truth, it sheds a lot of light on how CrowdStrike emerged in less than a decade as a company big and powerful enough to mint two multibillionaires and bring the world to its knees, despite a flagship product that almost no one understands, which demonstrably failed at its highest-profile assignment, and whose recent flub suggests practices so sloppy they call to mind much older, more corrupted enterprises like Boeing, or Abbott’s contaminated baby formula factory. Two cybersecurity experts told the Prospect that their industry was even worse. “This industry is pervaded by an incredible degree of secrecy and rot,” says Brian in Pittsburgh, “and that will persist until we create a neutral, adequately funded body … to investigate these disruptions.”

………

CrowdStrike had retained NSS in April 2016—the month before the DNC hired CrowdStrike—to submit the Falcon modules to a battery of private tests to determine their vulnerabilities. The results of those tests aren’t known, but one can probably extrapolate from what happened in 2017 after NSS informed CrowdStrike that its public group testing division—which claimed to aspire to become the Consumer Reports of security software, and was strictly forbidden from sharing software or data with its private testing division—had independently purchased some Falcon modules and submitted them to a battery of standardized tests alongside some competing products, the results of which it planned on releasing at the annual RSA security conference.

CrowdStrike immediately sued NSS, demanding a temporary restraining order to enjoin the lab from releasing the results. The company claimed that the test amounted to a theft of trade secrets, and that a public release would result in “irreparable harm” to its business. A federal judge disagreed and dismissed the TRO the day before the conference was scheduled to begin.

But CrowdStrike had another trick up its sleeve, according to the antitrust complaint NSS would file the following year. At a trade organization conference in Poland the year of the DNC hack, an amended version of the complaint claims, CrowdStrike co-founder Dimitri Alperovitch hosted a meeting with fellow security software vendors “with the express intent, purpose and effect of obtaining agreement among the competitors to refuse to do business with companies [that] attempt to perform public tests of their products using testing methodologies other than those agreed to by the EPP Vendor Conspirators.”

Together, the companies formulated a new set of rules the testing agencies were required to follow if they wanted to test their software, including a minimum advance notice of five business days before tests commenced, a requirement that testing agencies allow software vendors to do certain tests over before the results were publicized so long as they insisted the malfunction was “anomalous,” and strict parameters on what kind of tests they were allowed to administer. CrowdStrike and its allies further agreed to “refuse to deal with any cybersecurity testing service that did not adhere” to their new “standards.” As a Symantec executive argued in an email to fellow AMTSO members urging them to vote in favor of the new standards, “If you want the money Symantec will pay for those tests, you will have to follow the standards. If a tester doesn’t like that, too bad. We will find one of their competitors who will.”

But CrowdStrike had another trick up its sleeve, according to the antitrust complaint NSS would file the following year. At a trade organization conference in Poland the year of the DNC hack, an amended version of the complaint claims, CrowdStrike co-founder Dimitri Alperovitch hosted a meeting with fellow security software vendors “with the express intent, purpose and effect of obtaining agreement among the competitors to refuse to do business with companies [that] attempt to perform public tests of their products using testing methodologies other than those agreed to by the EPP Vendor Conspirators.”

Together, the companies formulated a new set of rules the testing agencies were required to follow if they wanted to test their software, including a minimum advance notice of five business days before tests commenced, a requirement that testing agencies allow software vendors to do certain tests over before the results were publicized so long as they insisted the malfunction was “anomalous,” and strict parameters on what kind of tests they were allowed to administer. CrowdStrike and its allies further agreed to “refuse to deal with any cybersecurity testing service that did not adhere” to their new “standards.” As a Symantec executive argued in an email to fellow AMTSO members urging them to vote in favor of the new standards, “If you want the money Symantec will pay for those tests, you will have to follow the standards. If a tester doesn’t like that, too bad. We will find one of their competitors who will.”

I would note that the behavior that CrowdStrike and other vendors engaged in is a crime/.  It's not just a crime, it's a, "If you are convicted, go to jail," crime, or at least it was until some point around the mid 1970s.

We need to start doing this again.


28 July 2024

It Will Also Kill You

It looks like Bitcoin is not just a way for people to defraud each other or collect ransoms, it also can make you very very sick, even if you have never worked with it.

A town in Texas (because, of course Texas) is experience multiple health complications from the noise created by Bitcoin mining, such as hearing loss, heart damage, vertigo, etc..

Seriously, just ban this sh%$:

On an evening in December 2023, 43-year-old small business owner Sarah Rosenkranz collapsed in her home in Granbury, Texas and was rushed to the emergency room. Her heart pounded 200 beats per minute; her blood pressure spiked into hypertensive crisis; her skull throbbed. “It felt like my head was in a pressure vise being crushed,” she says. “That pain was worse than childbirth.”

Rosenkranz’s migraine lasted for five days. Doctors gave her several rounds of IV medication and painkiller shots, but nothing seemed to knock down the pain, she says. This was odd, especially because local doctors were similarly vexed when Indigo, Rosenkranz’s 5-year-old daughter, was taken to urgent care earlier that year, screaming that she felt a “red beam behind her eardrums.”

It didn’t occur to Sarah that these symptoms could be linked. But in January 2024, she walked into a town hall in Granbury and found a room full of people worn thin from strange, debilitating illnesses. A mother said her 8-year-old daughter was losing her hearing and fluids were leaking from her ears. Several women said they experienced fainting spells, including while driving on the highway. Others said they were wracked by debilitating vertigo and nausea, waking up in the middle of the night mid-vomit.

None of them knew what, exactly, was causing these symptoms. But they all shared a singular grievance: a dull aural hum had crept into their lives, which growled or roared depending on the time of day, rattling their windows and rendering them unable to sleep. The hum, local law enforcement had learned, was emanating from a Bitcoin mining facility that had recently moved into the area—and was exceeding legal noise ordinances on a daily basis.

………

Much of the American Bitcoin mining industry can now be found in Texas, [because, of course Texas] home to giant power plants, lax regulation, and crypto-friendly politicians. In October 2021, Governor Greg Abbott hosted the lobbying group Texas Blockchain Council at the governor’s mansion. The group insisted that their industry would help the state’s overtaxed energy grid; that during energy crises, miners would be one of the few energy customers able to shut off upon request, provided that they were paid in exchange. After meeting with the lobbyists, Abbott tweeted that Texas would soon be the “#1 [state] for blockchain & cryptocurrency.” The following month, the Commissioners Court of Hood County approved the development of a cryptocurrency operation at Wolf Hollow. The owners promised local jobs and said that they would mostly use “stranded energy” that would otherwise go unused. 

………

Some nearby residents say they haven’t been affected. But the number of strange medical emergencies in the area have piled up. In addition to Potts’ discharge papers, TIME reviewed medical records provided by several Granbury residents. Hospital notes from 72-year-old Geraldine Lathers’ three-day stay document new prescriptions for high blood pressure and vertigo. Jenna Hornbuckle, 38, lost hearing in her right ear and was diagnosed with heart failure; ear exams document her hearing loss along with that of her 8-year-old daughter Victoria, who contracted ear infections that forced doctors to place a tube in her ear. And Avari Burns, a 19-year-old cancer patient, says she suffered from crippling migraines at home—but whenever she went to a Fort Worth hospital for chemotherapy, the migraines subsided.

………

The level of noise is appalling to Dr. Thomas Münzel, a German cardiologist who is a leader in the growing field of scientific researchers measuring the impact of urban and industrial noise on humans. For the last 15 years, Münzel has studied how transportation and urban noise, especially at night, can be debilitating stressors on the heart, brain, and cardiovascular systems. In one study, he exposed young, healthy students to noise events up to 63 decibels, and found that their vascular function diminished after just a single night. In other studies, he’s found that nighttime noise pollution directly leads to heart failure and molecular changes in the brain, which may lead to impaired cognitive development of children and make some people more prone to developing dementia.

“The European Environmental Agency tells us that everything above 55 decibels is making us sick,” he says. The fact that the Granbury Bitcoin mine is emitting 70 or even 90 decibels on a nightly basis is “like torture,” he says. “The most spectacular cardiovascular diseases will develop. They have to stop the machines.”

Can we give Texas back to Mexico?

H/t Atrios

"Thus, the Tipping Time Is Estimated to Be in the Year 2057"


See the blue spot south of Greenland and Iceland
In the journal Nature Communications, Peter & Susanne Ditlevsen did an analysis of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), the ocean current responsible for warming Europe significantly  and have predicted that there is a 95% probabability of this current shutting down between 2025 and 2095, with the most likely time for this event being 2057.

That's in my potential lifetime. (I would be 95, so not so likely).

Basically they look at physics and statistics as well as the temperature drop in an area known as the Irminger Sea, and determine when the flow is likely to stop.

This is difficult to predict.  While it would start as a gradual change in flows, at some point, it would abruptly stop, resulting in a temperature drop on the order of 5-15°C (9-27°F) in a matter of a year or so.

We are unbelievably screwed.

Go to the link for pictures and lots of complex equations.

Just Great


Map of the Region

There has been a missile strike in the Golan Heights killing 12 children playing football (Soccer) in the town of Majdal Shams.

Israel has accused Hamas of launching the rocket, allegedly an Iranian built Falaq 1 unguided artillery rocket, that caused the deaths, and Hamas has denied any involvement in the strike. 

The Falaq 1 is basically an Iranian version of the Soviet BM-24 rocket, a successor to the WWII era Katyusha rocket, first produced in 1947, with a range of about 10km.

As can be seen from the map, this rocket could reach Majdal Shams from either Lebanon or Syria.  (Crowded neighborhood)

Hezbollah could have launched the rocket and missed their intended target, or someone else could have launched the rocket, which is rather simple to operate, just set azimuth and elevation, and then shoot.

While I think that it is unlikely that Hamas would deliberately strike Majdal Shams, it is overwhelmingly Druze, and doing so would cause trouble with Lebanese Druze, who constitute about 5% of Lebanon's population.

If someone deliberately targeted the town, my money would be groups affiliated with, or derived from, either Daesh or al Qaeda, as both groups have exhibited extreme hostility towards non-Sunni Muslim communities.

I don't know what is going to happen as a result, but I am pretty certain that it will not be good.

27 July 2024

Gee, You Think?

The US Secret Service has asked (begged) the Trump campaign to stop holding outdoor rallies because of the difficulties in securing a venue.

I don't think that they will stop holding outside rallies though, they are a lot cheaper, and Trump is cheap: 

Secret Service officials encouraged Donald Trump’s campaign to stop scheduling large outdoor rallies and other outdoor events with big crowds after the assassination attempt on the former president in Butler, Pa., according to people familiar with the matter.

In the aftermath of the shooting, agents from the Secret Service communicated their concerns about large outdoor rallies going forward to Trump campaign advisers, three people familiar with the matter said.

The people familiar with the matter spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private discussions.

………

Trump has held hundreds of outdoor rallies since launching his first presidential bid, often bragging about — and sometimes falsely inflating — his large crowds. They have become something of a cult favorite among his most passionate fans, with tailgate parties in parking lots, vendors lining open areas near the rally and large parades of traffic, often with gargantuan pickup trucks.

They usually include large rosters of speakers before Trump takes the stage, with crowds sometimes enduring the heat or the cold for many hours. The crowd sometimes departs before Trump, who is regularly late, finishes speaking.

The rallies are often held at airports but are also held at fairgrounds, football stadiums or other large outdoor venues.

………

Indoor rallies are more expensive, campaign advisers said. But one campaign official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe private plans said the indoor events are inherently safer because it is easier to control who comes through a finite number of doors, and there are fewer line-of-sight issues. 

This sh%$ is security 101, but the Trump campaign wants the optics and the lower cost of outdoor events.

Not bright.

Not a Good Look


Bummer of a birthmark, Adobe
I have previously written about the Federal Trade Commission's investigation into the "Roach Motel" business practices of Adobe.

It looks like the process of discovery has revealed a rather damning communication between Adobe executives, where they likened the specifics of their subscription model to heroin.

This constitutes an admission by Photoshop publisher that they knew that their subscription model was deceptive, abusive, and exploitative.

Maybe the FTC should bring in the DoJ now, for some criminal prosecution:

Adobe's controversial billing practices and punitive fees for those terminating their subscriptions early follow from the software titan's addiction to revenue, the FTC has said.

In a newly unredacted [PDF] filing by the US watchdog in its lawsuit against the Photoshop maker, the FTC claims Adobe executives know its "inadequate ... disclosures" about its annual paid-monthly plans "harm and mislead consumers" but yet those execs "continue to engage in these unlawful practices because better disclosures would hurt Adobe's bottom line by reducing subscription revenues."

In other words, if Adobe was more upfront and clear about how its subscription plans truly worked, people would put away their wallets, and the biz would make less money, the FTC posits. One sticking point is the Illustrator giant's ETFs or early termination fees – what you have to pay to end an annual subscription before the year is out.

"As one Adobe executive admitted, the hidden ETF is 'a bit like heroin for Adobe' and 'there is absolutely no way to kill off ETF or talk about it more obviously [without] taking a big business hit,'" the regulator's complaint reveals.

Your honor, we find the defendants incredibly guilty.

………

In June, the FTC sued Adobe alleging that the biz failed to adequately inform creative types about its subscription billing rules and the penalties charged for subscription cancellation during the signup process. The software house may disclose these details on its site, but they aren't made clear when being entered into, it is claimed.

The initial complaint [PDF] was substantially redacted.

But on Tuesday, the judge overseeing the case denied Adobe's July 3 motion to keep portions of the complaint sealed – a request subsequently trimmed to cover just some financial information and executive address information (which was ultimately expunged).

Adobe's attorneys explained its reduced secrecy demand thus: "Adobe is not seeking to seal the vast majority of information redacted in plaintiff's complaint because that information is false and therefore does not require sealing under this court's precedent."

Even Adobe's diminished redaction request was met with skepticism by the government attorneys handling the FTC case. In their objection [PDF], the feds argued that the financial information Adobe sought to withhold is general, would not present any competitive harm if disclosed, and is less telling than the developer's own public financial reports.

Paragraph 30 in the FTC complaint – which Adobe had sought to conceal – reveals that the annual paid-monthly (APM) "plan accounts for most of Adobe's subscription revenues."

The FTC argues that Adobe's subscription practices violated the Restore Online Shoppers' Confidence Act (ROSCA), a US e-commerce law enacted in late 2010. ROSCA requires clear disclosure of terms and disallows, among other things, certain "negative option features" – such as treating consumer inaction as a sign of consent.

………

While the APM plan would seem to offer a monthly saving of $27.50 compared to the monthly plan, the fee for canceling the APM plan – potentially hundreds of dollars – would change that calculation. The fee is 50 percent of the remaining balance, so if you cancel with six months remaining, you would have to pay a penalty covering three months.

According to the FTC, Adobe designed its services to maximize those fees through interface design and other means.

………

The crux of the case is that Adobe allegedly fails to properly explain to those purchasing annual software subscriptions, paid monthly, that customers will be charged a significant fee to terminate the subscription prematurely. 
Why yes, you should make a federal case out of this.

Headline of the Day

J.D. Vance Has a Burnt Monkey Testicle Problem
Rolling Stone, in October of 2022, describing how both personally and through his investment firm, J.D. Vance invested heavily in a Biotech firm which has long history of abusing animals.

So the article is almost 2 years old, but it's new to me, and I find it profoundly worrying.

Let me be clear here, this article does not make me worry any more about what Vance would do if he takes the reins of power, it's already pretty clear that he is perhaps an even bigger horror show than Donald Trump.

The article details the extent that Vance's investment firm has invested millions in ethically dubious companies, such as the macaque testicle burning AmplifyBio, the prayer app Hallow (which resells intimate religious data to advertisers), and (of course) Rumble.

What worries me is that I saw this headline, and this article, and my reaction was basically, "So nu?" which in this case, context means a lot in Yiddish, means, "So tell me something that was not already blatantly obvious?

I am concerned that there is something is wrong with me.  I should react, but there is nothing.

I feel like Bart Simpson in the episode Bart Sells his Soul: (Best Simpsons episode ever)

It seems to me that my lack of reaction indicates that over the past few years, probably starting with the GW Bush administration, has been burnt out in me.

It seems that basic humanity would require a reaction of revulsion and disgust, but all that I feel is, "Of course."

Have I become that jaded and that callous?

26 July 2024

OK, Sounds Like a Tipping Point

Not withstanding my criticisms of Amazon, it is probably not the most evil tech company out there.

It's probably Oracle, and that's not even considering the wide spread rumors about former CEO Larry Ellison's sexual harassment.

So, Sun created the Java programming language, released it as open source, and then Oracle bought Sun, and promptly tried to extract money from users who had adopted it on the basis of it being FOSS.

As any Oracle user can tell you, their business model is very much like that of a hostage taker, and they use audits, and the threats of audits to extract more money from their customers than had previously agreed to.

Well, it appears that Oracle's terms for Java have gotten so egregiously unfair that a majority of their customers have decided to shoot the hostage.

They changed the licensing terms for their development environment, which is not FOSS, just the Java language is, and almost ¾ of their existing customers are heading for the exits:

Only 14 percent of Oracle Java subscribers plan to stay on Big Red's runtime environment, according to a study following the introduction of an employee-based subscription model.

At the same time, 36 percent of the 663 Java users questioned said they had already moved to the employee-based pricing model introduced in January 2023. Shortly after the new model was implemented, experts warned that it would create a significant price hike for users adopting it. By July, global tech research company Gartner was forecasting that those on the new subscription package would face between two and five times the costs compared with the previous usage-based model.

As such, among the 86 percent of respondents using Oracle Java SE who are currently moving or plan to move all or some of their Java applications off Oracle environments, 53 percent said the Oracle environment was too expensive, according to the study carried out by independent market research firm Dimensional Research. Forty-seven percent said the reason for moving was a preference for open source, and 38 percent said it was because of uncertainty created by ongoing changes in pricing, licensing, and support.

………

The survey found three-quarters of Java migrations were completed within a year, 23 percent within three months.

I've never understood the success of Oracle.

It's always seemed to me that dealing with was akin to hiring a rabid wolverine as a babysitter.

This is My Shocked Face

It appears that a study has done on the effects of LLM "Artificial Intelligence" and the result is that workers are both less productive and miserable.

In the 1980s, the paperless office was supposed to be the next big thing, and we saw an explosion in the demand for paper as people printed reams of paper for this mythical goal.

Do not implement AI in your business, for it makes them soggy and hard to light:

Bosses expect artificial intelligence software to improve productivity, but workers say the tool does the opposite, according to a survey by find-a-workplace research org the Upwork Research Institute, a limb of talent-finding platform Upwork.

The survey elicited responses from 2,500 workers across the US, UK, Australia, and Canada. Half of respondents were C-suite execs, a quarter worked full time and the remained were freelancers. Respondents represent different age groups and genders, but all were required to have completed high school and to use a computer for their work at least “sometimes.”

Findings include that C-suite executives are asking more of workers – 81 percent of 1,250 executive respondents acknowledge as much, according to the survey.

………

The managerial productivity push has left workers feeling unable to cope and burned out.

"Seventy-one percent are burned out and nearly two-thirds (65 percent) report struggling with increasing employer demands," according to the survey. "Alarmingly, one in three employees say they will likely quit their jobs in the next six months because they are burned out or overworked."

Employees appear to share management’s optimism for AI, with 65 percent predicting machine learning will make them more productive. But there's a gap between belief and reality.

………

Tellingly, while 96 percent of execs said they see AI tools improving productivity, only 26 percent operate workplace AI training programs, and only 13 percent reported "a well-implemented AI strategy." In the boardroom, AI seems to encourage magical thinking.

There is nothing but magical thinking coming from the board room.  

It's the only way that they can justify and protect their phony baloney jobs.

If this sounds familiar, it's probably you can remember the endless possibilities of blockchain, or Web 3.0, or Web 2.0, or the Metaverse, or humanoid robots, or grid computing, augmented reality, or autonomous vehicles, or virtual assistants (Clippy with a hard on), etc.

Note that these are all post the dotcom bubble popping.

I guess that there still way too many people who refuse to learn from the past, and end up with cider in their ear.

25 July 2024

There Is Evil, There Is Horrific, There Is Demonic, and Then There Is ………

Amazon

Jeff Bezos' den of evil is so evil that they have been forced to account for the fact that will have injured, killed or otherwise driven off so many workers that they will be short on staff in their warehouses.

Seriously, they are running out employees because they are breaking too many of them.

Whiskey tango foxtrot?  (Yeah, I know, it's from 2022, but it's new to me)

Amazon is facing a looming crisis: It could run out of people to hire in its US warehouses by 2024, according to leaked Amazon internal research from mid-2021 that Recode reviewed. If that happens, the online retailer’s service quality and growth plans could be at risk, and its e-commerce dominance along with it.

Raising wages and increasing warehouse automation are two of the six “levers” Amazon could pull to delay this labor crisis by a few years, but only a series of sweeping changes to how the company does business and manages its employees will significantly alter the timeline, Amazon staff predicted.

“If we continue business as usual, Amazon will deplete the available labor supply in the US network by 2024,” the research, which hasn’t previously been reported, says.

The report warned that Amazon’s labor crisis was especially imminent in a few locales, with internal models showing that the company was expected to exhaust its entire available labor pool in the Phoenix, Arizona, metro area by the end of 2021, and in the Inland Empire region of California, roughly 60 miles east of Los Angeles, by the end of 2022. Amazon’s internal report calculated the available pool of workers based on characteristics like income levels and a household’s proximity to current or planned Amazon facilities; the pool does not include the entire US adult population.

Amazon spokesperson Rena Lunak didn’t refute the contents of the internal report Recode obtained but declined to comment on it.

………

The internal research also identified the regions surrounding Memphis, Tennessee, and Wilmington, Delaware, as areas where Amazon was on the cusp of exhausting local warehouse labor availability. Amazon’s models used for this internal research were 94 percent accurate in predicting the US geographies where Amazon was significantly understaffed in the lead-up to the Amazon Prime Day shopping event in June 2021, the report noted, which contributed to delivery delays for customers in those markets. The warnings about Amazon’s labor supply shortages indicate that in at least some markets, Amazon shipments could face more severe delays in the future.

Amazon's turnover rate is well over 100% a year, (!) more than double that of similar companies in the same industries.

The attrition is so high because Amazon believes that its "Partners" are disposable are easily replaced, and so treat their employees like sh%$.

Just don't buy Amazon.  They are evil.

Ecch (Tweet) of the Day

This, of course a parody account, and it's incredibly dark, and incredibly hilarious, or at least it is for me.

This is dark though.

Time to Sister Souljah a Fat-Ass White Billionaire


Bernie wants a word

OK, I am making a culture reference that is 32 f%$#ing years  old, so for any reader(s) who are too young to remember, I am referring to a, "Sister Souljah moment," which was Bill Clinton attacked  at a speech that he delivered at a Rainbow Coalition which attacked her when she made some rather inflammatory comments in the context of the Rodney King riots.

This was a conscious decision by the Bill Clinton campaign, which had decided to pick a fight with some (ANY!) African American figure in an appeal to centrists.  (Actually an appeal to racists)

Sister Souljah is an African American rapper, Author, activist, producer and poet.

So, on to the fat-ass white billionaire, Reid Hoffman, founder of LinkedIn, who has donated $10 million to the Harris campaign and then demanded that Lina Khan be fired.

So, what can be done about this nakedly corrupt self-absorbed mother f%$#er beyond calling him a self-absorbed mother f%$#er?

Well, I'm kind of a glass half full guy on this, and I would say that were Harris and surrogates to condemn him by name, this would be a good thing.

If they were to do so, they would be signaling to their base that they are not beholden to the Silly Con Valley tech bros, whose reputation has lost much of its luster lately. 

One of the concerns about Harris is that she is too deferential to the Tech Bros, and going after one of them by name would both good policy and good politics for Harris.

By way context, Reid Hoffman, while arguably the least awful human being in the PayPal Mafia, (Low f%$#ing bar) is a contemptible human being.

Among other things he has extolled monopoly power, he calls it, "Dominance," because once they have crushed all the competition by hook and crook, they can do good things.

Here's a clue for everyone, if a company breaks the law and discriminates as a start up, they will do so as a unicorn, and as a monopoly.  Evil gets baked in, and the formation of a monopoly or an oligopoly demands evil people with contempt for the law.

Matt Stoller has his number.  (At link above)

As I’ve written, for the last few weeks, there has been a campaign among big business advocates to eliminate the new trade, antitrust, and labor policies put in place over the last five years or so. When Kamala Harris took over the Democratic nomination from Joe Biden, that campaign ramped up.

A few days ago, billionaire LinkedIn founder Reid Hoffman gave $10 million to the Kamala Harris effort, and promised a lot more. Hoffman is a Silicon Valley titan, part of the “PayPal mafia” that includes Peter Thiel and Elon Musk, though Hoffman sits on the Democratic side of the aisle. This morning, Hoffman went on CNN and issued demands. Harris must end Biden’s tariff and antitrust regimes, he said, and fire Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan.………

The FTC is investigating Microsoft.  Hoffman is a member of Microsoft's board of directors.

Hmmm.

………

………

Very few people in official Washington have even noticed, beyond the usual suspects of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren:

………

So far, Hoffman’s demand has been met with disinterest from the political press and a muted response from labor and progressive groups, who have mostly endorsed Harris and are enthusiastically celebrating her candidacy. There are a few exceptions. Senator Bernie Sanders chimed in angrily about Hoffman’s demand, and Senator Elizabeth Warren offered an endorsement of Khan. A pharmacist group also weighed in, and there will likely be more statements as the news filters through a very confused media environment, as Khan has a lot of fans (including in tech, she’s speaking at YCombinator today to a packed room).

Also, Hoffman has written about the juxtaposition of business and politics, where he shows himself to be the glioblastoma of the body politic:

………

Hoffman laid out his political philosophy in 2018 in what seems like a business book, one titled Blitzscaling: The Lightning-Fast Path to Building Massively Valuable Companies. In it, Hoffman analyzed the rise of companies like Uber, Google, Microsoft, AirBNB, Amazon, Apple, and so forth, argued that monopolization through cheap capital and lawbreaking is socially beneficial, and that such firms should be admired for their mergers and acquisitions strategies and network effects that thwart rivals. When looking at which firms to laud, Hoffman knew to avoid using the term ‘monopoly,’ substituting the word ‘dominant,’ which he puts in his book 29 times as a positive affirmation.

Hoffman might seem to be simply expounding about commerce, but in fact he is oriented around politics. Hoffman believes the goal of any entrepreneur is to ignore everything except growing so quickly that a business elevates itself to sovereign levels of global power. He even uses the terms “Nation” and “City” to describe such a corporation. Once there, they must become good corporate citizens. “If you previously ignored issues such as diversity, legal compliance, or social justice,” he writes, “you need to understand that all eyes are now on you, and you'll be expected to behave as a responsible citizen and role model.”

Such a statement is a rebuke of some basic elements of our social order. After all, what does it mean to ignore issues such as “legal compliance” until you’ve built dominant market power? Well, that’s as close as you can get to saying that breaking the law to form a dominant corporation is virtuous. There’s an expression that behind every great fortune is a crime and Hoffman is basically saying that yes, that’s true, except such crimes are good if they are paired with diversity mandates, statements about social justice, and legal compliance regimes.

………

The only upside here is that Hoffman is being very public, aggressive, and explicit about his demands. And he’s going to corner Harris until she kisses the ring, or refuses to do so. From his perspective, he’s not donating $10 million, he’s making a purchase. Or so he thinks. Now it’s up to Harris to make the choice. Does she have Silicon Valley donors, or Silicon Valley owners?

Seriously, going after Hoffman is a no lose proposition, so do it.

Thursday ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

This weeks economic data is better, though a bit confusing.

On the unemployment claims front, the news is OK, 235,000 claims, about 2,000 better than estimates, with continuing claims flat.

Meanwhile, GDP growth beat estimates, with a 2.8% annual rate, well above the 2.0% predictions, driven largely by increases in the orders of big ticket items.

Still, the job market seems to be weakening.

¯\_(ツ)_/¯

24 July 2024

Forget It Jake, It’s Texas

One might think that after a number of very public sexual harrassment cases popping up in the Texas state senate, that reforms to prevent this have been put in place.

You could think that, but you would be wrong:

Lila had been working late again. Her ballet flats pattered on the terrazzo floors of the Texas Capitol as she walked through the bowels of the building, up the stairs, and out its heavy, carved oak doors. Across the expansive south lawn, a few blocks away, she joined some fellow Senate interns who were enjoying the evening at a bustling rooftop bar. She looked forward to relaxing with Moscow mules and tacos under the glow of the string lights overhead. It was a beautiful March evening—until it wasn’t. 

A 21-year-old college senior, Lila worked for state senator José Menéndez, a San Antonio Democrat. Soon after sitting down with her friends, she started venting about the months of touching, after-hours texts, and questions about her dating life that she had been facing from the lawmaker’s 52-year-old chief of staff, Thomas “Tomas” Larralde. As she talked, her phone buzzed on the sticky high-top table. Larralde had sent an incoherent message to the office group chat—which included the district director and the senator. It appeared that Larralde, a brash and divisive figure, was drunk. If he’d spoken the jumbled words, Lila imagined they would’ve been slurred.

Someone else in the chat responded to ask if he was okay. Larralde didn’t reply, but five minutes later he sent a private message to Lila (who asked that we not use her real name, out of fear of retaliation). “How’s your night,” he texted. 

“Pretty good! Nothing too crazy, yours?” Lila responded.

“I’ve been drinking,” he said. “So on a scale of 1 to 10. It’s a 5.”

As her phone lit up, the other interns looked on in horror at the behavior they were witnessing in real time. “I remember showing my friends,” Lila told Texas Monthly. “I was like, ‘This is exactly what I was talking about!’ ” 

………

Menéndez decided to fire his chief of staff. “I was like, ‘Okay, this guy’s gone,’ ” he said. “It took less than twenty-four hours to get rid of him.”

Others in the Capitol, however, told Texas Monthly that he had known of Larralde’s misconduct for more than five years. By the time Lila came forward, three current and former statehouse employees had reported to Menéndez what they described as Larralde’s demeaning and sexist behavior, during incidents starting in 2015, Texas Monthly found. One former staffer said she repeatedly told the senator that she saw Larralde touch female colleagues inappropriately and also complained to Menéndez about the chief of staff’s lewd jokes. Another former staffer said she described Larralde’s conduct to Menéndez as flirtatious, creepy, and belittling. One former lawmaker told reporters she’d called out Larralde’s use of sexist language, and Menéndez had apologized for it. 

………

The complaints Menéndez received were about behavior consistent with the examples of sexual harassment detailed in the Senate’s policy, including “sexually oriented comments, jokes, or gestures,” “messages that are sexually suggestive, or in any manner demeaning, intimidating, or insulting,” “unwelcome physical contact,” and “repeatedly asking a person to socialize during off-duty hours when the person has said no or has indicated that he or she is not interested.” Other staffers said they left Menéndez’s office in part because they didn’t feel comfortable working with a man they described as misogynistic.

………

Menéndez’s failure to view these complaints as reports of sexual harassment is emblematic of breakdowns in the enforcement of the Senate’s sexual harassment policy, which was updated in 2018 and trumpeted as a deterrent to misconduct in the Capitol. In practice, the new policy has functioned to protect individual senators accused of misbehavior and the reputation of the institution rather than the women who work there.

Lila had made a verbal complaint to a supervisor, as instructed in the policy, but there are no public records of her complaint or of any investigation into allegations of sexual harassment by Larralde, according to Spaw, who serves as the custodian of all Senate records. Menéndez confirmed to Texas Monthly that at his direction Larralde signed a nondisclosure agreement barring him from discussing the circumstances of his termination. Then, days after Larralde was fired, Lila’s internship coordinator called her and asked her to sign a document that Lila understood would have given the internship program “cover” by outlining steps it had taken to handle the situation. Lila never signed anything. “I kept saying, ‘No, I don’t want to sign it, I don’t feel comfortable signing it,’ ” Lila told Texas Monthly. “I felt very alone and taken advantage of. I don’t have an attorney.” 

………

It would be easy to see Larralde’s case as an isolated incident—and one that was eventually solved with his firing. Most Texas lawmakers and their staffers have never been publicly accused of sexual harassment. But in the macho culture of the Capitol, where some legislators have famously watched porn on iPads on the Senate floor and forcibly kissed journalists, Lila’s experience is hardly unique, and harassment remains widespread. During nearly twelve months of reporting and more than a hundred hours of interviews with current and former elected officials, legislative staffers, interns, and lobbyists, Texas Monthly reporters learned about new sexual-misconduct allegations against Senator Borris Miles, a Democrat from Houston; Senator Charles Schwertner, a Republican from Georgetown; and former senator Carlos Uresti, a Democrat from San Antonio. (None of the three responded to multiple interview requests or to specific questions we sent them about the allegations.) We also spoke with the woman at the center of a headline-grabbing 2018 Title IX complaint against Schwertner. She agreed to her first-ever interview about a lewd photo and text messages she says she received from the senator (which he has denied sending), in part because of lingering frustrations she felt over the investigation he thwarted by refusing to cooperate.

 ………

The Senate’s revised policy removed a clear instruction that anyone with knowledge of sexual harassment should report it directly to human resources and the secretary of the Senate. It now says employees may report misconduct to their supervisor or chief of staff or submit an internal complaint to the HR director or the Senate secretary. In practice, Texas Monthly has found, only reports made to the latter two individuals are treated as “official complaints” that trigger an immediate investigation, with the probe to be handled by the director of human resources and impartial attorneys. The 31 senators are given leeway to handle sexual harassment complaints reported to supervisors within their offices as they see fit. The policy does not require that senators keep any record of complaints, investigate those complaints, report those complaints to any central office in the Senate, or hold anyone accountable for misconduct.

………

When asked why his office didn’t turn over records of complaints, Patrick’s press secretary, Steven Aranyi, wrote, “Our office released no records because there are no records to release, as no complaints of sexual harassment have been filed with Lt. Gov. Patrick’s office.” In a statement to Texas Monthly, Spaw, who did not respond to multiple interview requests but answered some written questions, acknowledged that she knew about Lila’s case. She wrote that she never “received and neither has Senate Human Resources received an official complaint regarding Senator Menendez’s office. It is my understanding that, as provided in the Senate policy, a matter was reported to and handled and resolved by the Senator, both expeditiously and appropriately.”

Spaw added that “no official sexual harassment complaints have been filed in the Senate since 2001,” an idea that Lisa Banks, an employment attorney and founding partner at D.C.-based law firm Katz Banks Kumin, called “utterly preposterous.” Banks represented Christine Blasey Ford when she testified to the U.S. Senate judiciary committee that Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her when they were high school students.

“The fact that they say that shows they have a problem,” she said. “The clear inference is they’re making an effort to not have anything in writing, to cover themselves.”

Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

In the case of the Texas state senate, the answer would be no one at all.

We Are F%$#ed

Here is an interesting anthropogenic climate change data point, July 21, this Sunday, was the hottest day ever recorded on the planet Earth.

Admittedly, records only go back a few hundred years, but it isn't even August:

On Sunday, the Earth sizzled to the hottest day ever measured by humans, yet another heat record shattered in the past couple of years, according to the European climate service Copernicus on Tuesday.

Copernicus’ preliminary data shows that the global average temperature Sunday was 17.09 degrees Celsius (62.76 degrees Fahrenheit), beating the record set just last year on July 6, 2023 by .01 degrees Celsius (.02 degrees Fahrenheit). Both Sunday’s mark and last year’s record obliterate the previous record of 16.8 degrees Celsius (62.24 degrees Fahrenheit), which itself was only a few years old, set in 2016.

………

“What is truly staggering is how large the difference is between the temperature of the last 13 months and the previous temperature records,” Copernius Director Carlo Buontempo said in a statement. “We are now in truly uncharted territory and as the climate keeps warming, we are bound to see new records being broken in future months and years.”

While 2024 has been extremely warm, what kicked Sunday into new territory was a way toastier than usual Antarctic winter, according to Copernicus. The same thing was happening on the southern continent last year when the record was set in early July.

But it wasn’t just a warmer Antarctica on Sunday. Interior California baked with triple digit heat Fahrenheit, complicating more than two dozen fires in the U.S. West. At the same time, Europe sweltered through its own deadly heat wave.

“It’s certainly a worrying sign coming on the heels of 13 straight record-setting months,” said Berkeley Earth climate scientist Zeke Hausfather, who now estimates there’s a 92% chance that 2024 will beat 2023 as the warmest year on record.

While 2024 has been extremely warm, what kicked Sunday into new territory was a way toastier than usual Antarctic winter, according to Copernicus. The same thing was happening on the southern continent last year when the record was set in early July.

But it wasn’t just a warmer Antarctica on Sunday. Interior California baked with triple digit heat Fahrenheit, complicating more than two dozen fires in the U.S. West. At the same time, Europe sweltered through its own deadly heat wave.

“It’s certainly a worrying sign coming on the heels of 13 straight record-setting months,” said Berkeley Earth climate scientist Zeke Hausfather, who now estimates there’s a 92% chance that 2024 will beat 2023 as the warmest year on record.

This is real end of the world stuff.

I may not see that, I'm old, but my kids almost certainly will.

All because we cannot push back against the belief that, "The most wickedest of men will do the most wickedest of things for the greatest good of everyone," to quote (Not) John Maynard Keynes.

I'll Have What She's Having


I'll Have What She's Having

As a part of its investigation of sofware driven price gouging, the FTC has announced that they are opening up an investigation of McKinsey and Company.

My first reaction when I heard that McKinsey was going to get the Lina Khan treatment was akin to Meg Ryan's reaction in When Harry Met Sally.

McKinsey's consulting work has always been deeply corrupt and deeply corrupting, and an investigation is long overdue:
The Federal Trade Commission issued orders to eight companies offering surveillance pricing products and services that incorporate data about consumers’ characteristics and behavior. The orders seek information about the potential impact these practices have on privacy, competition, and consumer protection.

The orders are aimed at helping the FTC better understand the opaque market for products by third-party intermediaries that claim to use advanced algorithms, artificial intelligence and other technologies, along with personal information about consumers—such as their location, demographics, credit history, and browsing or shopping history—to categorize individuals and set a targeted price for a product or service. The study is aimed at helping the FTC better understand how surveillance pricing is affecting consumers, especially when the pricing is based on surveillance of an individual’s personal characteristics and behavior.

“Firms that harvest Americans’ personal data can put people’s privacy at risk. Now firms could be exploiting this vast trove of personal information to charge people higher prices,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “Americans deserve to know whether businesses are using detailed consumer data to deploy surveillance pricing, and the FTC’s inquiry will shed light on this shadowy ecosystem of pricing middlemen.”

The FTC is using its 6(b) authority, which authorizes the Commission to conduct wide-ranging studies that do not have a specific law enforcement purpose, to obtain information from eight firms that advertise their use of AI and other technologies along with historical and real-time customer information to target prices for individual consumers. The orders were sent to: Mastercard, Revionics, Bloomreach, JPMorgan Chase, Task Software, PROS, Accenture, and McKinsey & Co.

(emphasis mine)

The FTC has long been on the front lines of documenting and investigating the hidden ecosystem of data brokers, digital platforms, and other intermediaries that specialize in monitoring and selling user data. The FTC’s 6(b) orders aim to shed light on how the current data ecosystem may facilitate the ability to target consumers with individual prices.

The Commission voted 5-0 to issue the 6(b) orders to the eight companies. Commissioners Melissa Holyoak and Andrew N. Ferguson issued concurring statements.

If large companies or governments are doing evil things, McKinsey and Company is there to show them how to do evil better.

When large companies or governments are trying to do good things, McKinsey and Company is advising them and the evil doers that they are fighting at the same time.

In a just world, McKinsey and company would be ahead of the Public Relations Department of the Sirius Cybernetics Corporation to go up against the wall when the revolution comes,

When the Cops are Crooks

In Missouri, judge just ruled that a man whose conviction was overturned and directed that he be releases, but the state attorney general has ignored the order, because he doesn't want to.

This is not an an injunction pending an appeal, it's just the AG refusing a judge's order.

Maybe the judge should frog march Attorney General Andrew Bailey out of his office in handcuffs.

That should get his attention:

For the second time in weeks, a Missouri prison has ignored a court order to release an inmate whose murder conviction was overturned. Just as in the case of Sandra Hemme, actions by the state’s attorney general are keeping Christopher Dunn locked up.

St. Louis Circuit Judge Jason Sengheiser on Monday tossed out Dunn’s conviction for a 1990 killing. Dunn, 52, has spent 33 years behind bars, and he remained Tuesday at the state prison in Licking. “The State of Missouri shall immediately discharge Christopher Dunn from its custody,” Sengheiser’s ruling states.

Dunn wasn’t released after his conviction was overturned because Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey appealed the judge’s ruling, “and we’re awaiting the outcome of that legal action,” Missouri Department of Corrections spokeswoman Karen Pojmann said in an email Tuesday.

The decision to keep Dunn incarcerated puzzled St. Louis Circuit Attorney Gabe Gore, whose office investigated his case and determined he was wrongfully convicted, prompting a May hearing before Sengheiser.

………

Dunn’s situation is similar to what happened to Hemme, 64, who spent 43 years in prison for the fatal stabbing of a woman in St. Joseph in 1980. A judge on June 14 cited evidence of “actual innocence” and overturned her conviction. She had been the longest-held wrongly incarcerated woman known in the U.S., according to the Midwest Innocence Project, which worked to free Hemme and Dunn.

But appeals by Bailey — all the way up to the Missouri Supreme Court — kept Hemme imprisoned at the Chillicothe Correctional Center. During a court hearing Friday, Judge Ryan Horsman said that if Hemme wasn’t released within hours, Bailey himself would have to appear in court with contempt of court on the table. She was released later that day.

(emphasis mine)

The judge also scolded Bailey’s office for calling the Chillicothe warden and telling prison officials not to release Hemme after he ordered her to be freed on her own recognizance. It wasn’t clear if the attorney general’s office similarly called prison officials at the prison where Dunn is housed.

(emphasis mine)
………

A Missouri law adopted in 2021 lets prosecutors request hearings when they see evidence of a wrongful conviction. Although Bailey’s office is not required to oppose such efforts, he also did so at a hearing for Lamar Johnson, who spent 28 years in prison for murder. Another St. Louis judge ruled in February 2023 that Johnson was wrongfully convicted, and he was freed.

Another hearing begins Aug. 21 for death row inmate Marcellus Williams. Bailey’s office is opposing the challenge to Williams’ conviction, too.

This is is just political posturing, and it should be criminal.

Baily is a Republican, of course, so keeping innocent people in jail so that he can run for Governor is par for the course.

My First (and Last) Post on the Veepstakes


The usual suspects

We are seeing dozens of reports of different people being vetted as a potential VP for likely Democratic Party Presidential nominee Kamala Harris.

But for the fact that Alexandria Ocasio Cortez turns 35 in October, and so could be Harris' running mate, (not gonna happen) none of the usual suspects inspire me one way or the other on an ideological level.

My guess is that she and the Democratic Party establishment (There is no Democratic Party establishment) will go with an "safe" choice who will turn out to be a net liability.  (Think Tim Kaine or Joe Lieberman)

I don't expect to be pleased by her choice, and I sure that once they are announced, I will complain. 

It's in my nature.


23 July 2024

Billionaire Benighted Blustering Blueprint Blocked

Remember when a bunch of tech bros bought up thousands of acres in rural California with the idea of creating a modern, "Galt's Gulch," where it would just be them and the hired help?

Not gonna happen.   It has permanently been put on hold, because it will actually cost the surrounding county millions and threaten the water supply.

I'm sure that the tech billionaires are shocked.  Normally, they get subsidies for this sort of crap, but it appears that the government in Solano County is more sensible than I would have anticipated:

Days after a Solano County report slammed a plan backed by Silicon Valley billionaires to build a utopian new city from scratch near Fairfield, the company behind the “California Forever” project has scrapped the ballot initiative it was to put to county voters in November.

The report released late last week by Solano County said the proposed new city of 50,000 — possibly up to 400,000 decades from now — would likely cost the county billions of dollars and create substantial annual financial deficits, while slashing agricultural production, damaging climate-change resilience and potentially threatening local water supplies. The project, according to the report, “may not be financially feasible.”

It also did not help that the organizers of this concept sued farmers who refused to sell out, alleging collusion, for having the temerity of not giving the Silly Con Valley bros what they wanted.

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County supervisors on Tuesday were set to consider the report, then vote on whether to approve California Forever’s contentious plan to rezone 17,500 acres of farmland for the city or let voters decide in November.

Instead, California Forever, led by CEO Jan Sramek, will withdraw the ballot measure — approved last month for the November election — and seek approval to amend the county’s general plan and zoning through typical county processes, California Forever said in a website update Monday morning.

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California Forever, which spent more than $800 million buying more than 60,000 acres of mostly agricultural land near Fairfield, earlier last week issued its own study claiming the new city would create billions of dollars in economic activity and tens of thousands of jobs for the county. Marketing materials have depicted utopian scenes of a Mediterranean-style community, with walkable neighborhoods and a mix of businesses from retail shops to technology company offices.

The proposal is funded by billionaire venture capitalists Marc Andreessen and Michael Moritz, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman and businesswoman Laurene Powell Jobs. It’s been embroiled in controversy since its real estate arm, Flannery Associates, sued holdout landowners for $510 million, claiming they conspired out of “endless greed” to inflate prices.

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The county’s report, issued July 18, said infrastructure such as roads for the project and public facilities like schools and parks, plus related expenses, would cost an estimated $6.4 billion for the first phase of development and nearly $50 billion to complete the new city.

The report said costs to the county and the local fire-protection district would outstrip revenues, leading to millions of dollars in deficits every year. The now-withdrawn California initiative gave no clear indication of where the money would come from.

Spoiler, the money would come from the ordinary tax payers, you know the peons who the titans of bullsh%$ expect to support them, because they managed to scam their way into wealth.

They sound an awful lot like sports team owners promising that the subsidies would pay for themselves.

Actually, this sounds EXACTLY like sports team owners promising that the subsidies would pay for themselves.

BTW, just in case you are wondering, the tech bros were also selling this as a way to avoid the inconvenience of democracy:

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Yet there’s potentially a more sinister angle. California Forever aligns suspiciously with a cultish dystopian movement to build so-called “network statesprivate zones where tech zillionaires can abandon democratic society to live under the rule of their own private micro governments. The secret plot to assemble vast swaths of land and build a new city fits a pattern of wealthy Silicon Valley types attempting to construct similar enclaves around the globe. San Francisco billionaire Michael Moritz, a driving force behind California Forever, appeared to hint at the idea in his pitch to potential investors back in 2017.

“He painted a kind of urban blank slate where everything from design to construction methods and new forms of governance could be rethought,” reported The New York Times, which first revealed the billionaires’ plan.

Cue the blond kid singing "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" in a brown shirt. 

We really need to start enforcing existing laws against these folks.  They are a menace to society.