@bobbyd0g
also the lesson of the no-fly list &c. isn't that the state is omniscient, it's that it can make a thousand people ruin your life because a computer told them to with very little regard for why your name is in the computer
@bobbyd0g
also the assumption that you have to do stuff to get in trouble
like, cops shot that protestor in january and now they're trying to charge everyone else who was there with his death
@saddestrobots The way people who've done literally nothing but mind their own business found themselves treading on the wrong toes. The way individuals today with no life enough to drag them elsewhere will seek to abuse and even frame you for crimes to see if the police will obligingly and deniably murder you on their behalf. The way somebody can just call a "mental health crisis" on you and if you decline to admit state agents into your home, you're "barricaded"
@saddestrobots I hardly need to point out the irony that this person is criticizing activists while not only not having done the thing they demand others do, but not even reading about how those efforts have already forever been frustrated. Maybe they caught a glimpse of "the point of COINTELPRO was to convince you all your friends are feds" and saw fresh open revelation rather than a narrow and somewhat stale perspective on an ongoing dialectic.
These ideas are ludicrously out of date. The idea that "somebody" needs to do any "sifting" for our world's near-inescapable new mass surveillance regime to be effective is total nonsense, especially in the face of new AI technologies that will allow the unskilled (e.g. even individual shitty cops) to make use of huge search & stat engines on multiple dragnet information sources. No mention of private communications here, just blaming activists for what is really a software vacuum. A real shame.
Alaska Says It’s Now Legal “in Some Instances” to Discriminate Against LGBTQ Individuals
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On the advice of the state’s attorney general, Alaska’s civil rights agency quietly deleted language promising equal protections for LGBTQ Alaskans against most categories of discrimination, and it began refusing to investigate complaints.
Are there ANY car manufacturers NOT selling data about you / your car?
Reading @pluralistic 's Feb 28 piece about VW tracking cars (and not providing the info unless you pay): https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/28/kinderwagen/
Cory Doctorow writes:
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> And yet, here we are. Like most (all?) major car makers, Volkswagen has filled its vehicles with surveillance gear, and has a hot side-hustle as a funnel for the data-brokerage industry.
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Is anyone keeping a list of car manufacturers who are NOT doing this?
this is sort of the fate of every conceptual framework: the useful concepts gets lifted into some other, subsequent frameworks, but the language — particularly category labels — can easily survive in this unmoored state, now colloquially popular but signifying nothing
and so 15 years later you're shaking your head because you read a whole paragraph about how "Narrativism" is when fictional positioning doesn't matter
in a moment of lovely synchronicity i rediscovered this David Byrne quote today.
"It can often seem that those in power don’t want us to enjoy making things for ourselves—they’d prefer to establish a cultural hierarchy that devalues our amateur efforts and encourages consumption rather than creation."
Years ago elementary was approached by Canonical to become an official Ubuntu flavor. “All” we had to do was offer Snap out of the box. We debated it—being able to offload some additional infrastructure concerns was attractive—but we realized it helped Canonical more than it helped us, and we had chosen Flatpak for all of its benefits as covered here:
This is something you see over and over when you study co-op history: This stuff works. Really well, if there is real money behind it. But it doesn't facilitate stealing. So the rich people who get to decide what gets done in the world don't decide to do this. That's the problem.
But there's another problem...
Police arrested a man for making fun of police, SCOTUS approves.
Where's the "free speech" brigade when the state is actually censoring speech? https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/supreme-court/supreme-court-rejects-ohio-mans-bid-sue-police-arrest-facebook-parody-rcna70435 #FreeSpeech #SCOTUS
A reminder that the New York Times coverage of Section 230 has been dishonest for a long time.
The "paper of record" relentlessly frames this a Congressional favor for tech giants. In fact, the law protects freedom of expression -- yours and mine -- on the sites where we share, and the ones we own. It also protects our right to edit.
This is about money, and control. Traditional media have less of both due to the Internet. They want it back.
Scrappy queer