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by Mike Masnick on (#6FZV6)
I have no idea how the current Google antitrust trial will turn out, and frankly, I'm not sure it much matters. I mean, I'm sure it matters for Google, but I don't see how either outcome will change all that much for anyone else. I have noted, repeatedly, that I'm much more interested in a [...]
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Techdirt
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Updated | 2025-04-21 01:32 |
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FZV7)
Google is an internet powerhouse. It's home to the most-used search engine in the world. It has its own operating system and its own line of cell phones. It also has its own cell phone service. It has ad services, a suite of web-based productivity apps that are (somewhat compatible) with a bunch of Microsoft [...]
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by Gretchen Heckmann on (#6FZV8)
The ChatGPT Artificial Intelligence Open AI Training Bundle has four courses to help you get up to speed. In the first two courses, you will learn the fundamentals of working with ChatGPT, a state-of-the-art language model developed by OpenAI. You will gain hands-on experience using ChatGPT to generate text that is coherent and natural, and [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FZQJ)
Yes, I'm well are of Betteridge's Law, and yes, this headline is designed to deliberately obey it. It's no surprise that Elon's grand vision for exTwitter was to try to turn it into a financial services everything app. He's been talking about such an app for years. It's what he wanted his original X.com to [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FZGP)
We've long noted how absurd it is that scammers, debt collectors, and greedy telemarketers have ruined our voice communications networks. We've also noted how a big reason our robocall problem never gets fixed is because the regulator in charge of it (the FCC) routinely fixates on scammers and not the legit" companies that use the [...]
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by Leigh Beadon on (#6FZ2M)
This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is an anonymous comment about one detail in Google's push for anti-open-internet regulation: Goody. Mandating porn ID and, by association, tying porn use with that ID. Sounds like Google is advocating for, among other things, government mandated collection of adults' fetishes tied to their names. [...]
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by Leigh Beadon on (#6FYFW)
Five Years Ago This week in 2018, the broadband industry sued Vermont over consumer protections and net neutrality, while a few states got into the broadband fight on the side of the FCC, and we noted how perfect the coordination was between the agency and telecom lobbyists. Another report showed that FOSTA increased sex trafficking, [...]
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by Dark Helmet on (#6FY46)
There's a lot to get to in this post, so we're going to dive right in. Shawn Layden is a former CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment America, otherwise known as essentially the boss of Playstation. He has made several appearances as of late, both in a keynote speech for a video game industry summit and [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FY0S)
Losing must be the new winning. With a single exception (and that was only a public college), every state (or city) that has passed an anti-drag show law has seen it blocked by a federal court. And yet, this string of losses doesn't seem to be deterring performative legislators from trying to violate the First [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FXYQ)
While recent evolutions in AI" have netted some profoundly interesting advancements in creativity and productivity, its early implementation in journalism has been a comically sloppy mess thanks to some decidedly human problems: namely greed, incompetence, and laziness. If you remember, the cheapskates over at Red Ventures implemented AI over at CNET without telling anybody. The [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FXVT)
Last year, we wrote about the really bizarre case of a website called Business Casual" that filed a couple of copyright infringement lawsuits. One was against TV-Novosti, the Russian state-owned news organization that runs RT (formerly Russia Today). While there was a brief period of time in which RT pretended that it wanted to be [...]
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by Gretchen Heckmann on (#6FXVV)
Headway is the revolutionary app designed to help you turn personal growth into a habit. With this deal, you get unlimited access to a huge number of non-fiction bestsellers, summarized into 15-minute reads. Be it personal development, business strategies, or health insights, Headway has you covered. It's on sale for $49.97. Note: The Techdirt Deals [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FXRQ)
Law enforcement agencies aren't used to oversight or accountability. That's something that has rarely been deemed essential to the act of policing. After all, if the Supreme Court can create qualified immunity" out of thin air to protect (most) cops from the consequences of their unconstitutional actions, surely podunk locals shouldn't assume they're more qualified [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FXNG)
Today is the official one year anniversary of Elon getting control over what used to be called Twitter, and now is simply exTwitter. It was supposed to be tomorrow, but in a sign of what was to come, Elon and his buddies maneuvered to close the deal in the afternoon a day early, just to [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FXFA)
Now that growth is saturated in the streaming sector, companies are increasingly behaving like the cable TV giants they once disrupted in a bid to deliver Wall Street improved quarterly returns at any cost. Even if it means annoying consumers and damaging the company's long-term brand. Netflix now wants to harass you for doing something [...]
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by Dark Helmet on (#6FX6B)
For nearly a decade now, we've discussed Nintendo's oddly combative relationship with the eSports community, specifically as it revolves around Super Smash Bros. tournaments. Whereas other game publishers have fully embraced these tournaments and the attention they bring to their games, Nintendo does what Nintendo always does instead: exert more and more control, pissing everyone [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FX3N)
Eager to maintain a lucrative repair monopoly over its products, Apple has had a long history ofbullying independent repair shops. Apple lobbyists have also falsely claimed that making its products easier and less expensive to repair would result in vast untold consumer privacy and security nightmares, turning states that consider right to reform" legislation intolawless [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FWZ7)
Walled Culture recently wrote about anunrealistic French legislative proposalthat would require the listing of all the authors of material used for training generative AI systems. Unfortunately, the European Parliament has inserted a similarly impossible idea in its text for the upcomingArtificial Intelligence (AI) Act. The DisCo blog explains thatMEPs added new copyright requirementsto the Commission's [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FWWD)
The EU Commission has been pushing client-side scanning for well over a year. This new intrusion into private communications has been pitched as perhaps the only way to prevent the sharing of child sexual abuse material (CSAM). Mandates proposed by the EU government would have forced communication services to engage in client-side scanning of content. [...]
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by Gretchen Heckmann on (#6FWWE)
The Complete PHP & MySQL Web Development Bundle has 7 courses teach you about web development. PHP and MySQL are two important tools used in web development, allowing you to create interactive content that integrates with databases to manage large amounts of data. Learning both will help you create login pages, check details from a [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FWS3)
We've been covering, at great length, the moral panic around the claims that social media is what's making kids depressed. The problem with this narrative is that there's basically no real evidence to support it. As the American Psychological Association found when it reviewed all the literature, despite many, many dozens of studies done on [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FWFD)
Earlier this year a new journalism outlet named The Messenger" launched to great fanfare. The brainchild of former The Hill owner Jimmy Finkelstein, the new news empire launched with $50 million in backing and a lot of chatter about how it was going to do things differently, with Finkelstein claiming he wanted to build an [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FW7P)
The Intercept has an interesting article that revealsanother reasonwhy some newspaper publishers are not great fans of the site: The New York Times tried to block a web crawler that was affiliated with the famous Internet Archive, a project whose easy-to-use comparisons of article versions has sometimes led to embarrassment for the newspaper. As the [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FW2V)
Last week in our Error 402 series on the history of web monetization, we talked about the earliest secure monetary transactions on the web, soon after the National Science Foundation opened up the early internet for commercialization. There were electronic transactions over networks that pre-dated this (such as on proprietary online services like CompuServe, but [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FW08)
It's always been easy for cops to take stuff from people. Civil asset forfeiture allows law enforcement to bypass most of the Constitution so long as they imply things about the supposedly illegal source of the property they've taken from citizens. The Fourth Amendment is almost worthless in these cases. Since there are no criminal [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FVWV)
A few people have been asking me about last week's release of something called the Westminster Declaration," which is a high and mighty sounding declaration" about freedom of speech, signed by a bunch of journalists, academics, advocates and more. It reminded me a lot of the infamous Harper's Letter" from a few years ago that [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FVWW)
The TSA was imposed on us following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. Supposedly necessitated by this new" terrorist threat, the TSA shrugged into action, becoming another layer of irritating bureaucracy standing between benign travelers and their freedom of movement. Since then, it has gotten worse. The TSA has spent billions on tech, training, [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FVS8)
I really wish we could fast forward a few decades to the point where we look back on the moral panic over kids and social media and laugh about it, the same way we now laugh about similar moral panics regarding television, Dungeons & Dragons, rock & roll music, comic books, pinball, chess, novels, and [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FVJE)
So we've been talking a lot about how as the streaming video market matures, it's increasingly behaving a lot like the old, shitty cable companies the sector once disrupted. Instead of innovation and risk taking, we're seeing endless price hikes, lower quality catalogs, strange new catalog gaps, labor issues, ethically flimsier policy positions, annoying new [...]
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by Dark Helmet on (#6FV7P)
The tradition of game developers trolling those who pirate or otherwise use their games rather than immediately going the legal route has a long history. There are lots of ways to do this, most of which involve either breaking the game in certain ways, or inputting Easter eggs into games that cause those pirating it [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FV4R)
This blog has written a number of times about the reaction of creators togenerative AI. Legal academic and copyright expertAndres Guadamuzhas spotted what may be the first attempt to draw upa new law to regulate generative AI. It comes from French politicians, who have developed something of a habit of bringing in new laws attempting [...]
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by Leigh Beadon on (#6FV29)
We've written plenty about facial recognition here on Techdirt, and especially the infamous Clearview AI. Now, journalist Kashmir Hill, who wrote the original New York Times story that brought the company to the public's attention, has written a new book all about the subject: Your Face Belongs To Us. This week, she joins us on [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FTWB)
I am so frequently confused by companies that sue other companies for making their own sites and services more useful. It happens quite often. And quite often, the lawsuits are questionable CFAA claims against websites that scrape data to provide a better consumer experience, but one that still ultimately benefits the originating site. Over the [...]
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by Gretchen Heckmann on (#6FTWC)
The Complete 2023 Microsoft Power BI Super Bundle has 9 courses to teach you all about Power BI. Power BI allows the everyday Excel user to become a Business Intelligence Analyst. This hands-on course will prepare you to start your data analytics career and prepare you to implement Power BI in your organization successfully. Create [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FTRN)
Perception matters more than reality, especially when your budget is on the line. Law enforcement agencies like to portray criminal activity as constantly rising, especially now that they're facing additional scrutiny and the occasional so-called defunding" effort. It's a weird way to handle (government) business. On one hand, the cops claim rising crime necessitates more [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FTJR)
Last week, the New York Times reported that Apple had cancelled The Problem With Jon Stewart." More importantly, the Times noted that Apple executives, clearly not at all worried about the need for a healthy editorial firewall, had grown uncomfortable with the way that the program was planning to cover issues such as China and [...]
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by Dark Helmet on (#6FTD0)
In the middle of last year, we talked about an odd lawsuit between two bakeries, Crumbl and Dirty Dough. Crumbl's suit against Dirty Dough claimed both theft of trade secrets and trademark infringement, the latter of which revolved around two major claims. First, the owner of Dirty Dough used to work for Crumbl. That obviously [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FT6K)
Here's how things went for the world's most infamous purveyor of facial recognition tech when it came to its dealings with the United Kingdom. In a word: not great. In addition to supplying its scraped data to known human rights abusers, Clearview was found to have supplied access to a multitude of UK and US [...]
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by Glyn Moody on (#6FT3Y)
The fog of war" is a phrase that has been used for over a hundred years to describe the profound uncertainty that envelops armed conflicts while they are happening. Today, the uncertainty for non-combatants is exacerbated by the rapid-fire nature of social media, where people often like or re-post dubious war-related material without scrutinizing it [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FT0P)
You'd think this legal question would be settled by now. Smartphones have been in everyday use for more than a decade. Citizen journalists have been part of our daily life ever since the advent of affordable portable cameras. The internet has democratized publication, lowering the barrier between observation and accountability. Cops hate this. But the [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FT0Q)
It's pretty much the way of the world: beyond the basic enshittification story that has been so well told over the past year or so about how companies get worse and worse as they get more and more powerful, there's also the well known concept of successful innovative companies pulling up the ladder" behind them, [...]
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by Gretchen Heckmann on (#6FT0R)
Lean Six Sigma is one of the most popular business strategies for reducing waste, accelerating product delivery, and ultimately driving profit. With 4 courses, this bundle will help you learn lean project management principles and implement them with your organization's overall business process. This will contribute to making data-driven decisions, saving more time, and improving [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FSX8)
In the annals of law enforcement's neglect - if not actual disdain - for its alleged desire to serve and protect," this is surely on of the weirdest and most specific episodes in its ongoing infamy. It hearkens back to a simpler time when smartphones were mere extensions of people's desire to catch digital creatures [...]
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by Karl Bode on (#6FSQ3)
Cleveland has spent years being dubbed the worst connected city in the U.S." thanks to expensive, patchy, and slow broadband. Why Cleveland broadband sucks so badly isn't really a mystery: consolidated monopoly/duopoly power has resulted in a broken market where local giants like AT&T and Charter don't have to compete on price, speeds, availability, customer [...]
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by Leigh Beadon on (#6FS88)
This week, our first place winner on the insightful side is Stephen T. Stone with a comment about Clarence Thomas using an originalism argument against the actual malice standard: I once again note that if Clarence Thomas truly believed in constitutional originalism-i.e., the notion that the ghosts of the Founding Fathers and the original form [...]
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by Leigh Beadon on (#6FRQQ)
Five Years Ago This week in 2018, we featured a pair of posts examining the recent court ruling in the copyright lawsuit over Stairway to Heaven. A new study on the FCC public comment fiasco showed that 99.7% of the real, original comments opposed the net neutrality repeal, while the New York AG was trying [...]
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by Tim Cushing on (#6FRB3)
Excited delirium is a very unique medical condition. It almost always kills its victims. The victims of this apparent sudden cause of death are almost always in the presence of police officers when they die. And the victims are almost always of a certain... type. A 2021 data analysis found that at least 56% of [...]
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by Mike Masnick on (#6FR82)
We've been following the bizarre and frequently problematic case initially brought by Louisiana and Missouri against the Biden administration, claiming that the administration's coordination with researchers and pressure on social media companies regarding how they moderate content violates the first amendment. As we've said for quite some time, there are legitimate and important questions about [...]
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by Leigh Beadon on (#6FR6C)
As you hopefully know by now, earlier this week we launched our new game, Trust & Safety Tycoon. It's a free, browser-based game (playable on desktop or mobile, though we recommend desktop for the best experience) that puts you in the shoes of the head of trust and safety at a rapidly growing social media [...]
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by Dark Helmet on (#6FR40)
We have long detailed through a series of posts, most of them based on fantastic reporting from Pro Publica, Intuit's shady bullshit when it comes to its supposed Free to File" program offered through a longstanding deal with the IRS. The summary is: massive tax prep companies cut a deal with the IRS so that [...]
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