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What Are You Playing Wednesday Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 09:58 pm
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Stock: Butterfly Wings Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 09:53 pm
[personal profile] lumiosecity



Lake Lewisia #1407 Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 05:19 pm
It was a tiny hitchhiker, making its way to a safer place, one it had gotten glimpses of in others, like the host who carried it now. It had been pure chance that the hitchhiker had been picked up, the happy meeting of two strangers with a shared town in their family history, one close and one far removed. It wasn't easy being a virus meant to infect the telepathic, out in a world where people barely heard their own thoughts, let alone those of others, but in Lewisia, it too would belong.

---

LL#1407

Daily Check-In Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 06:03 pm
[personal profile] starwatcher
 
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Wednesday June 10, to midnight on Thursday, June 11. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #34719 Daily Check-in
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 20

How are you doing?

I am OK.
13 (65.0%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
7 (35.0%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
8 (40.0%)

One other person.
5 (25.0%)

More than one other person.
7 (35.0%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
 
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第五年第一百五十一天 Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 07:50 pm
[personal profile] nnozomi
部首
邑/阝 part 1 yì
那, that; 邦, country; 邪, evil pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=163

语法
4.12 全 vs 全部, whole
https://www.digmandarin.com/hsk-4-grammar

词汇
粗, coarse/rough/thick; 粗心, careless (pinyin in tags)
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

Guardian:
我还得跟他保持一个良好的邦交呢, I have to preserve good diplomatic relations with him
我把全部都给你了, I gave you everything
我是一个粗人, I'm a peasant type

Me:
他叫吴邪。
你再不要那么粗心。

Congress Just Rushed Through a Disastrous Copyright Office Overhaul Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 10:54 pm

Posted by Joe Mullin

In a voice vote earlier this week, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 6028, the “Legislative Branch Agencies Clarification Act.” The legislation is presented as a technical reorganization of some government agencies, but it’s much more than that. 

H.R. 6028 would fundamentally change the U.S. Copyright Office, and not in a good way. The bill removes the Library of Congress’ current supervisory role over the Copyright Office, transfers several powers directly to the Register of Copyrights, and makes the Register a presidential appointee, confirmed by the Senate. 

These changes would make an office that’s already hugely influential in copyright and tech policy much more political. EFF first explained why that’s a terrible idea when it came up nearly a decade ago. This bill, like the older one, weakens the few public-interest checks and balances that do exist.  We hope the Senate promptly rejects this bill. 

The Copyright Office Doesn’t Need More Politics—Or More Power

The Copyright Office's main responsibilities are administrative and advisory. It registers copyrights, maintains records, grows the Library of Congress’s collections, and provides expertise to Congress on copyright law. But over the past two decades, the Office has also become increasingly influential in copyright policy debates that affect free expression, libraries, educators, competition—and everyday internet users. Unfortunately, it has not been a neutral advocate. The office’s recent report on the role of AI severely bungled the issue of fair use, prioritizing private licensing market “solutions” over user rights. 

Going further back, the Copyright Office supported one of the most infamous anti-internet proposals of all time—the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), a disastrous internet censorship proposal that sparked one of the largest online protests in history. The Office has repeatedly advanced positions that favored large entertainment-industry interests over the public interest.

The Office also plays a major role in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) Section 1201 rulemaking process, which determines when the public may lawfully bypass digital locks for activities such as security research, repair, preservation, or accessibility. EFF has used this process repeatedly to mitigate some of the worst harms of the DMCA. H.R. 6028 would move rulemaking authority over 1201 from the Librarian of Congress to the Register of Copyrights, further consolidating power within the Copyright Office itself.

The bill also makes the Register of Copyrights a presidential appointee confirmed by the Senate. Each administration will be pressured to pick nominees aligned with their own policy preferences, and the powerful copyright owning industries will invest even more heavily in lobbying to get their way, and influence the selection. This position should be focused on administrative ability and actual expertise, not lobbying and politics. 

The Copyright Office Should Stay Connected To The Library of Congress

H.R. 6028 would do more than change who appoints the Register of Copyrights. It would sever the Copyright Office from Library of Congress supervision and transfer many Librarian powers directly to the Register. 

The supervisory relationship exists for good reason, as the nation’s libraries have pointed out for years. The Library, while far from perfect, at least has the mission of preserving and providing access to knowledge. That should be an important public-interest counterweight in copyright debates. Congress has not explained how weakening the ties between the Library and the Copyright Office would serve the public better, or even seriously inquired about it. 

This Bill Was Rushed Through

Back in March, EFF joined Public Knowledge, the Center for Democracy and Technology, library organizations and tech groups, urging Congress not to fast-track this legislation. We told them changes to the Copyright Office will have major consequences for the “speech rights, educational opportunities, and creative freedoms of all Americans.” 

Yet Congress moved forward without any hearings on the bill, and without meaningful examination. H.R. 6028 creates a years-long separation of the Copyright Office from the Library of Congress, transfers significant legal authority, and restructures the appointment process for the nation’s top copyright official. Changes like that deserve hearings, debate, and public scrutiny. H.R. 6028 got none of that. 

The Senate Should Stop This Bill

Copyright law exists to serve the public and “promote the progress” of science and learning. The institutions that administer copyright law should do the same. 

H.R. 6028 would move the Copyright Office further away from that goal. Congress should be strengthening public-interest oversight of copyright policymaking, not looking for ways to concentrate more authority in a single presidentially appointed official. 

The Senate should reject H.R. 6028. The Copyright Office should serve the public—not presidential administrations, and not industry lobbyists. 



Reading Wednesday Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 07:06 pm
In Guys and Dolls and Other Writings, the Damon Runyon collection that I started back in January, I've finally read all of Runyon's "Broadway Stories" of dim-witted gangsters, which are usually funny, occasionally maudlin (or sentimental: there is one Christmas episode, as it were, playing off the joke of "wise men" vs. "wise guys"), and then out of left field the last one ("A Light in France", 1944) was set in occupied France and involved setting a Nazi on fire. Have also read one stand-alone short story ("A Call on the President") that for some reason is classified separately under "The Turps" - after its central bickering married couple - rather than with the rest of "Other Fiction," presumably because of its distinct narrative voice:
The fellow in the striped pants ses what do you want to see the President of the United States about? I ses look Mister, we came all the way from Brooklyn to see the President of the United States and I have got to be back to work on my job tomorrow and if I stop and tell everybody what I want to see him about I won't have no time left. I ses Mister, what is so tough about seeing the President of the United States? When he was after his job he was glad to see anybody. I ses is he like those politicians in Brooklyn now or what?

(At one point Ethel Turp gets distracted "making snoots" out the window of the Oval Office at someone who had been rude to them and my brain immediately cast Myrna Loy, although - after going down a short Wikipedia rabbit hole - in fact Ann Sothern got the role when it was made into a movie in 1939.)

Have also been reading Madly, Deeply, the diaries of Alan Rickman, 1993-2015; now on 1995 and the filming of Sense & Sensibility and (back-to-back? simultaneously? unclear) Michael Collins, which I hadn't heard of and caused a little confusion (for a minute I was like, huh, I didn't know Sense & Sensibility filmed in Dublin!) but has been particularly interesting in terms of thoughts on playing a character based on a historical figure.

Current Music: Charlie Sheen Reaches Out to the Feds - the Mountain Goats


[ SECRET POST #7096 ] Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 06:56 pm
[personal profile] case

⌈ Secret Post #7096 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.



More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 12 secrets from Secret Submission Post #1013.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

wednesday reads and things Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 04:28 pm
A lot shorter this time 😁

What I've recently finished reading:

In eyeball, Echo of Worlds by M. R. Carey, the second book of the Pandominion duology. I liked it and thought it was a good conclusion to the set-up of the first book. Also, I just realized it's basically Mass Effect 3 with the Synthesis ending, which I guess makes Paz Female Shepard...okay, not really. But the theme of organic intelligence and machine intelligence coming to terms with each other is a relevant theme in these days of "AI" growth.

In audio, Heaven's River by Dennis E. Taylor, the fourth Bobiverse book. I really loved this one, even though there was a bit of idiot-balling at the climax - why would you go through the town to get to the transit station, instead of going around it and coming in from the other side, when you know your opponents are looking for you?!?! But otherwise it was a well-assembled story, another "first contact with an alien race" narrative with some interesting twists. The bits and pieces of the separate storylines come together in some surprising ways at the end. And heh, it's the same theme in a way, machine intelligence and human intelligence and human-mapped-into-machine intelligence. I'm looking forward to the fifth book!

What I'm playing (again):

No, not replaying, I never do that 😁 but I had not started up Ghost of Tsushima since before my first bit of spring travel back in late March, so even though I was just about to do the final quest of the second part of the game, I noodled around with some random sidequests (freeing fishing villages from their evil Mongol overlords) for a few sessions, until I felt ready to free Castle Shimura. Now I'm out the other side and ready to complete the last act of the game!
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Another Fantasy Bundle - Dungeonomicon Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 11:18 pm
This is an all-new offer of generic material for fantasy RPGs which can be adapted to the GM's needs, published by Raging Swan Press

https://bundleofholding.com/presents/Dungeononomicon

  

I'm a bit puzzled by this one because I could have sworn that I'd seen something very similar in a previous bundle, but I may be remembering it wrong. This isn't really something I'm likely to need, since I don't play pure fantasy RPGs these days, but if you have a use for it it's reasonably cheap and may be easier than designing your game setting from scratch.

Apologies - the link was originally going to an older offer, now fixed.
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The 702 Ultimatum: Warrant Requirement or Bust Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 07:25 pm

Posted by Matthew Guariglia

For months now, Congress has been kicking the ball down the road—temporarily postponing the expiration of the mass surveillance authority Section 702 of FISA in hopes that some consensus could be reached. Now, with the deadline looming, the stakes have never been higher. Nearly every time the statute has come up for renewal, the people demanding privacy and civil liberties have had to compromise, but with current negotiations seemingly at  an impasse, it’s time for surveillance maximalist lawmakers to come to the table. 

We say to the Intelligence Community crowd: Section 702 should require a warrant before the Federal Bureau of Investigation can look at digital communications collected from Americans. If not, we should let the whole thing expire.

This is a serious proposition. The intelligence community can keep a useful national security surveillance tool if and only if they make FBI agents get a warrant signed by a judge before they sift through and read out private communications. A warrant requirement is not the only demand EFF has been making for changing Section 702, but it is the most important reform and it should happen before there is any more reauthorization of the policy. 

For too long, the FBI has been able to piggyback on a major national security tool as an unconstitutional backdoor way of reading Americans’ communications. 702 collects communications going to, from, or between people in other countries—including when they are contacted by people in the United States. Mass surveillance is just that—mass. It’s lacking any of the individualized suspicion that our legal system is based on. 

Take action

TELL congress: 702 Needs Reform

So, what’s been happening?

On one side are surveillance hawks and intelligence community-devotees who think the mass surveillance of Americans is an acceptable, even valuable, product of this authority. This bipartisan coalition of privacy deniers think that 702 should be extended without any change, and they seem to be willing to let the authority expire rather than compromise with the lawmakers and public that are demanding common-sense reforms. They’ve been given a number of chances to pass bills that would implement some key incremental reforms, but those opportunities have not moved the needle. 

On the other side of the debate is a bipartisan coalition of people who understand that this authority can no longer operate as is. Section 702 is rife with problems, loopholes, and compliance issues that need fixing. The National Security Agency collects full conversations being conducted by and with overseas targets—including conversations by and with Americans in the U.S.—and stores them in massive databases. The NSA then allows other agencies, specifically the FBI, to access untold amounts of that information. In turn, the FBI takes a “finders keepers” approach to this data: they reason that since it's already collected under one law, it’s OK for them to see it. If the FBI wanted to get that data on their own, it would require them to get a warrant signed by a judge certifying that there is probable cause. Instead, under current practice, the FBI can query and even read the U.S. side of that communication without a warrant. What’s more, victims of this surveillance won’t know and have very few ways of finding out that their communications have been surveilled.

Complicating this matter more is that the Trump administration has announced Bill Pulte as the new Director of National Intelligence, whose job it will be to oversee and direct U.S. intelligence agencies. This is particularly concerning because of Pulte’s history of using private information held by the government as a political weapon. In his FHFA role, he has accused several of the President’s political foes and targets—including New York State Attorney General Letitia James, U.S. Sen. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., and Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook—of mortgage fraud based on private data held by his agency. Because of his looming appointment, many Democrats have vowed not to reauthorize Section 702 unless he is removed from the position. They shouldn’t stop there—they should use that leverage to demand a warrant requirement. The integrity of the people in charge of a program should not be the only thing that stands between Americans and violations of their civil liberties. 

What happens if 702 expires? 

As the New York Times reports, “The law, however, has a built-in safety net for a temporary lapse that allows the surveillance program to endure until annual certifications issued by the nation’s intelligence court expire, though such a scenario could invite legal challenges. The court recertified the program in March, meaning the N.S.A. could continue to operate the program through March 2027 even if the statute were to expire.” 

If Section 702 does stay expired past March 2027, the United States government will likely revert to using other programs and authorities to justify the surveillance of overseas national security targets, namely 12333, a shadowy executive order from the 1980s that gives the U.S. government nearly unlimited power to spy on people overseas.  Even if this does come to pass, standing our ground on warrant requirements and allowing Section 702 to expire  is important for several reasons. First, just because the government continues surveillance under a different authority does not mean it is legally justified in doing so—this was the lesson of the post 9/11 Presidential Surveillance Program, which was only retroactively immunized by Congress. Second, seeing how the government responds to the end of Section 702 might give us opportunities to push for transparency in other parts of information collection and better understand how the inner workings of the intelligence apparatus pivot and adapt as new legal authorities take precedence. 

Where do we go from here? 

Every few years, for almost two decades now, we’ve been fighting to reform Section 702 so that it will no longer enable the warrantless mass surveillance of Americans. A bipartisan coalition in Congress supports this goal, but the White House and Congressional leadership won’t listen. It’s past time we make at least one serious reform to a mass surveillance law that has been abused for decades. Tell your elected official: Put a warrant requirement in Section 702 or let it expire.

Take action

TELL congress: 702 Needs Reform



Forward Into Foreignness Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 07:30 pm

Posted by languagehat

As soon as I started reading Joseph O’Neill’s “Forward Into Foreignness” (called “Polyglotism” in the paper version of the issue of the New Yorker I was reading; archived), I knew I was going to post it:

In the nineteen-sixties, my father, a Corkman, was employed by Chicago Bridge & Iron, an American corporation that built industrial plants worldwide. He worked in hardhat management positions. An early project took him to Mersin, in Turkey. There, he met my mother. She had just spent a year at Langham Secretarial College, in London. They courted in English, then married at Mersin’s Church of St. Anthony of Padua, the patron saint of lost things.

My mother belonged to Mersin’s well-off Christian community, which was mainly of Syrian origin. This Levantine subculture socialized in French, voiced endearments in Arabic, communicated with functionaries in Turkish. Polyglotism was prized. My mother’s father spoke French, Arabic, Turkish, German, English, Italian, and Ladino. He sent my mother to French-language boarding schools in Lyon and Aleppo. She used French with her four children. We called her Maman and my father Papa. My first word was “attends,” because “attends” was my mother’s invariable response to my cries from the crib.

That was in Neuchâtel, in Switzerland. We kept moving—to Tripoli, in Lebanon; to Amanzimtoti, in South Africa; and to Matola, in colonial Mozambique. Our nanny there, Victoria, chatted to us in the language of Lisbon, and my first ironic remark was made in Portuguese. I was four years old. The remark came in response to my parents turning off my bedroom light. “Muito obrigado,” I said. I added, translating, “Thank you very much.”

During my father’s next assignment, in Ras Lanuf, Libya, mother and children stayed in Mersin. At preschool, I rapidly acquired fluent preschool Turkish. My teacher selected me to recite a Mother’s Day poem. I wore a navy-blue velvet suit handmade by my grandmother (her languages: French, Arabic, Turkish, and Greek). The poem began, “Annecim, dünyanın en iyi sin.” My maman, you are best in the world.

My father was posted to Iran. I didn’t want to go. After a family friend procured the airplane tickets, I cursed him: “Allah belanı versin, Georges Chalfoun!” We moved to Kermanshah, in the Zagros Mountains. There I lost almost all my Turkish.

A year later, in 1970, we moved to Den Haag. I learned Dutch. My mother, too, learned Dutch, well enough to attend Leiden University and teach French at the Eerste Vrijzinnig-Christelijk Lyceum. Near the V.C.L. was the Lycée Français de la Haye, at the front gate of which I was deposited, without my consent, aged ten. I’d been happy at the English School of The Hague. Now I faced two years in the French education system. I had learned an important Gallic concept: the fait accompli.

When I was eleven, my mother signed me up for private German lessons with an enigmatic German lady. With her, I reluctantly studied a book called “Die Drei Schwarze Katzen.” Later, I studied German more systematically. I can still affirm the dative prepositions: aus, bei, mit, nach, seit, von, zu, and gegenüber. And außer.

That’s how we did things in my family. You went forward into foreignness. Tabbouleh, hurling, helva, “Inshallah,” “godverdomme,” Georges Brassens, George Best, the Dubliners, Kaptan Swing, Sinterklaas, “Shoot!,” Johan Cruyff, “çok güzel,” “ya’aburnee shuhelwa,” Louis de Funès, “à table,” “Le Trésor de Rackham le Rouge,” “Revolver,” Roger Casement, “Guerilla Days in Ireland”—all of it was our culture.

Click through for the rest. A good deal of it resonates with me, even though my own collection of foreign locales was different; I recognize most of his list of cultural items from my vast reading (though Louis de Funès was barely a name to me — apparently “he remains a household name throughout most of continental Europe including the former Eastern Bloc, the former Soviet Union, as well as Iran, Turkey, and Israel”), but does anyone know what “Shoot!” refers to?

Oh, and Amanzimtoti has an interesting onomastic story:

According to local legend, when the Zulu king Shaka led his army down the south coast on a raid against the Pondos in 1828, he rested on the banks of a river. When drinking the water, he exclaimed “Kanti amanzi amtoti” (isiZulu: “So the water is sweet”). The river came to be known as Amanzimtoti (“Sweet Waters”). The Zulu word for “sweet” is actually mnandi, but, as Shaka’s mother had the name Nandi, he invented the word mtoti to replace mnandi out of respect not to wear out her name. Locals frequently refer to the town as “Toti”. In 2009 the KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Geographical Names Committee recommended changing the town’s name to aManzamtoti/eManzamtoti.

Frankly, “he invented the word” sounds like hokum, but I leave it to others to provide whatever fact-checking might be available.



Storm Damage Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 01:12 pm
Severe storms down trees, knock out power to thousands across Minnesota

A line of severe thunderstorms raced across Minnesota overnight, bringing wind gusts of more than 80 mph, downing trees and knocking out power to thousands of homes and businesses.


As climate change progresses, violent storms occur more often and do more damage. This is only going to keep getting worse.

If you are able-bodied, I recommend getting a chainsaw and learning how to use it. For less-able folks, a hand saw, or even a chainsaw that you could loan out, may make sense. Reason being, few people want to do blue-collar work nowadays, so any tree services in a given area tend to run months behind on work. When a storm hits, they get a huge surge in demand, but there is no surge capacity to absorb the demand. That means there's nobody to clean up the fallen limbs and trees promptly. Ordinary residents need to pick up the slack to clear debris from their yards, the streets, for less-able neighbors, etc. to restore road access and remove tree parts from places they don't belong. If you have a broken roof, punctured septic tank, or smashed car then by all means try to get the attention of overworked professionals. Otherwise you are probably on your own. Look out for each other. Form neighborhood storm response teams if possible. Here are some resources...

Read more... )

Current Mood: busy


Enshittification Merch That Actually Fights Enshittification  Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 05:34 pm

Posted by Cory Doctorow

Enshittification isn't just a sweary word to describe the accelerating decay of the online platforms, apps, and services that we rely on.  

It's a framework for understanding the structural incentives that make tech companies enemies of their own users over time—the surveillance business model, the erosion of privacy, the monopoly power that eliminates alternatives, the regulatory capture that prevents accountability.  

SUPPORT EFF

GET LimITED EDITION MERCH + FIGHT ENSHITTIFICATION

These are some of EFF's core fights and have been for over 35 years. EFF sues. EFF advocates. EFF codes. And EFF wins. EFF is the most profound and powerful disenshittifying force on the planet Earth, and I’ve been proud to fight alongside them for nearly 25 of those years.  

One of the lessons you learn in battles with very long timelines against very powerful actors is that these battles are deeply serious, and because of that they must also be fun. “Enshittification” took off as a shorthand in part because of the minor license to vulgarity it confers. It's slightly crass for a reason: getting people to engage with the abstract issues of tech policy can be hard at the best of times. No one knows this better than my colleagues at EFF, who consistently surprise me with their ability to make complex, technical concepts concrete, memorable, and sometimes even joyful. 

Words matter, but so do visuals. For the cover of the U.S. edition of my book, Enshittification, designer Devin Washburn of No Ideas studio created an iconic variation of the "pile of poo" emoji, with angry eyebrows and a grawlix-scrawled censor bar over its mouth. It instantly became the symbol of enshittification I’d been looking for. 

A digital illustration of an angry poop emoji holding a black sign reading "&!#%", set against a blue and gray background tiled with oversized "& !#%" characters.

I liked it so much I ordered a couple hundred enamel pins and a couple thousand vinyl stickers and handed them out to people I met on my 33-city book tour. Even when giving them away, I was inundated with requests to buy more of them.  

I've since bought out Devin's rights to the image and released it under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license—free for anyone to use, remix, or build on, including commercially, with attribution. The high-resolution files are on Wikimedia CommonsFlickr, and the Internet Archive (including a PSD with an ink-density adjustment layer). It belongs to the commons now. 

But I made sure EFF had first crack at the design for their “official merch,” and they've done right by it. There are two items available now in the EFF shop, and all proceeds go directly to EFF's work defending digital rights. I’ve spent years admiring EFF’s merch and consistent, creative visual identity, so it fills me with pride to see this more-than-a-mere-poop-emoji in their shop.  

A recognizable visual shorthand is a genuine organizing tool. When someone sees the enshittification emoji, they know what the conversation is about. When you wear the pin or slap the sticker on your laptop, you're signaling that you understand what's happening to the internet, and that you know we can do better.  

You can get a $5 sticker:

An angry poop emoji sticker affixed to the coiled spring mechanism inside a vending machine. The sticker depicts a scowling poop emoji holding a black sign reading "&$!#%".

A hand with black nail polish and a gold ring holds an angry poop emoji sticker against a white door. The sticker shows a scowling poop emoji holding a black sign reading "&$!#%".

Or a $10 pin:

A close-up of an enamel pin on the lapel of a tan jacket. The pin depicts an angry poop emoji holding a black banner reading "&$!#%".

An enamel pin clipped to the nose bridge of black-framed sunglasses resting on a wooden surface. The pin depicts a scowling poop emoji holding a black banner reading "&$!#%". 

 Because the design is CC-licensed, you don't have to buy one. You can make your own merch, your own swag, your own illustrations. I made a lawn flag for my front garden.

A  small white garden flag on a metal stake, planted among cacti and succulents in a sunny yard. The flag depicts an angry poop emoji holding a sign reading "&$!#%". 

But if you do want to buy a sticker or pin, you can do so while supporting the most profound and powerful disenshittifying force on the planet Earth—the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

SUPPORT EFF

GET LimITED EDITION MERCH + FIGHT ENSHITTIFICATION

 



🔊 Mass Surveillance for… Loud Music? | EFFector 38.11 Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 05:29 pm

Posted by Hudson Hongo

Across the country, surveillance companies have spun a vast web of tens of thousands of license plate cameras. The people selling this tech want you to believe that it's for your safety, but how are authorities really using automated license plate readers (ALPR)? In this week's EFFector newsletter, we're looking at how these powerful surveillance networks have become universal people-trackers used for noise complaints and other low-level investigations.

JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER

For over 35 years, EFFector has been your guide to understanding the intersection of technology, civil liberties, and the law. This week's issue covers a victory for facial privacy, EFF's testimony to Congress about AI and surveillance, and troubling new examples of ALPR mission creep.

Prefer to listen in? EFFector is now available on all major podcast platforms. This week, we're chatting with EFF Associate Director of State Affairs Rindala Alajaji about what she uncovered about police use of ALPR. And don't miss the EFFector news quiz. You can find the episode and subscribe on your podcast platform of choice:

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Want to stay in the fight for privacy and free speech online? Sign up for EFF's EFFector newsletter for updates, ways to take action, and new merch drops. You can also fuel the fight against online surveillance when you support EFF today!



Oh, Look... a Wednesday Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 12:45 pm
It's been months since I last posted, but I thought I'd better let all of you know that I'm still alive and kicking.

My days have been busy. The way my schedule works at Anoka County, I basically work every other day. This feels especially true on a week like this last one, when I worked both Saturday and Sunday. The job continues to be FINE. It's not terribly much more than that? But, it's also decidedly not awful. I like books and libraries? Since all I do is shelve books, I have leaned into that and just spend my shift rather idly straightening shelves, double-checking my work (aka light shelf reading), and browsing. Alas, Northtown is small enough that there's not a lot that catches my attention, but, again, it doesn't suck. I've learned to do a couple of other bits of work, like a thing they call "wanding" (which is basically a fancier way to shelf read) and so it's not ENTIRELY boring.

But, it's pretty boring.

Still, it could be worse and I'm grateful for the work.

I'm also slightly busier in my off time than I usually am because I'm once again rehearsing for a show. Remember that gig I had last November where I read a story that was then set to a kind of musical accompaniment? Well, I'm doing that again, with the same organizer (Cole Sarar) but with  a new musician, Caly McMorrow, in the Space Lounge at Convergence! As much as I love my super villian adopts a cat story, I decided to better match Cole's missive style story and will be reading "Sincerely, Yours" a short story of mine that appeared in The Reinvented Heart. If you're going to be at Convergence: the performance will be on Friday, July 4, at 12:30 pm in the Space Lounge. (Convergence runs from July 2-5, 2026 and will be at the Hyatt Regency, Minneapolis, MN (1300 Nicollet Mall.)  This story routinely makes me cry when I read it out loud, but so far I've been able to recover enough to get through to the end. Practice does seem to be helping. 

I've read a couple of things since the last time I've posted on a Wednesday, including a book that should be coming out soon which I was able to get an advanced copy of--Daggerbound by T. Kingfisher, which I whole-heartedly recommend. I have not caught up on all the clockwork/swordheart books and I can tell you that doesn't matter one whit. I mean, maybe it's not the best jumping in point? But, it worked okay for me! Pre-order it now? I would for the pillbug alone! (And yes, I said what I said.) I'm also finally reading Witch Hat Atelier. Don't hate me because it's popular. I can still happily say that I bounced out of Demon Slayer, Fieren, and Solo Leveling. So, I'm still the same complete loser you once knew. 

Work has definitely slowed my ability to get much writing done. When I sit down at the end of the day, I really don't want to do anything hard. I really don't know how I managed to write so many books while working full-time. All I can say is that I was younger then. Much younger. 

I have been drawn back into some fic writing, but I don't know what that means. I might be gearing up into figuring out how to do this while working a Real Job (tm) or it's just a sign that I was not lying when I said that I will never NOT write. 

Gaming persists. I'm trying to find a good date that will work for people to do a one-shot in D&D. And, god help me, I'm still running a Thirsty Sword Lesbians campaign on Tuesday nights, which probably means that one of those Tuesdays is coming up again soon. Tuesdays are a day that I always work, so I have come screeching home, jump out of the car, slam food into my mouth, and basically start running a game.  (We game at 7 pm; I arrive home from my commute at 6:30 pm.) Luckily, with TSL I have fully become a GM who is like, "Notes? Who needs notes? I run on VIBES."

There's probably a bunch more I could catch you up on, but this is what I know at the moment. I mostly just wanted to post so that you all knew that both myself (and my computer) are alive and well.


Upcycling Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 12:55 pm
Rescuing London’s Precious Building Materials Diverting Them from Dumps for Reuse

A salvage and reuse operation in London is ensuring that every charming bit of wood, brick, glass, porcelain, and steel that has made the city beautiful can continue to do so with a second life in the circular economy.

Started through an epiphany of “street logic” by a man frustrated by red tape, Yes Make is making things all over London out of what the city might otherwise throw out.

“We’re creating a regenerative supply chain for the city we love,” says Joel De Mowbray, founder of Yes Make, to the Guardian. “Turning things that would otherwise go to waste into objects that have cultural potential.”



This kind of salvage operation is replicable anywhere, since towns generally have a cycle of demolition, renovation, and construction that generates considerable materials typically thought of as "waste" which are still useful. If you're looking for a cheap startup business, and you're at least a little crafty, then upcycling is an excellent bet because its raw materials tend to be free or cheap. The more we can keep out of landfills, and the less new material we consume, the better.

Current Mood: busy


Arcane AU Zine | Promotional Artist Application Open Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 12:44 pm
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Birdfeeding Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 12:23 pm
Today is sunny, humid, and hot. A beautiful day to stay indoors and write! Yesterday it rained off and on during the afternoon. The patio was still wet this morning, so we likely got more last night too.

I fed the birds. I haven't seen much activity yet.

I put out water for the birds.

Morning glories are blooming. :D

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I took some pictures around the house and yard. I have a nice tall stand of milkweed blooming in the prairie garden, taller than me. :D

I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches at the hopper feeder.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I started trimming grass around the Asiatic lily patch by the telephone pole.

The first of the recently sown seeds are already sprouting! :D Charleston Food Forest and 'State Fair' zinnias are up, though not the developing 'Shirley' landrace rows.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I trimmed more grass around the Asiatic lily patch by the telephone pole.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I did more work around the patio.

I planted 5 'Yelloween' lilies in the telephone pole garden. That's the end of the hummingbird garden sack that I got from Costco.

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I spread potting soil and mulch over the newly planted lilies.

It's not even dark yet, but already swarms of fireflies are rising up from the grass. :D Fly, my pretties, fly!

EDIT 6/10/26 -- I watered the telephone pole garden including the new lilies.

Lots more fireflies are out now. The evening is very sparkly! I've seen at least one bat too.

As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.

Current Mood: busy


Miscarriage of justice against UK subjects in the UK, on behalf of Israeli genocide of Palestinians Jun. 10th, 2026 @ 06:09 pm
I suggest reading both articles. In summary, four protestors were acquitted of criminal actions in a proper jury trial so the UK tried them again with more unjust restrictions (many kept secret) imposed on the jury, the defendants, their lawyers, and all media reporting. The result was that the four previously innocent defendants were convicted of minor criminal charges for damage to property but then sentenced as if they'd been convicted of major terrorist charges (and one of their lawyers is being persecuted and criminalised for representing his defendants by quoting UK law in a UK court). All done for the benefit of the genocidal nation state of Israel and their continued genocide of Palestinians in Palestine (including at least 20,000 murdered children).

Palestine Action Activists to Be Sentenced As Terrorists in Move Kept Secret From Jury and Public.
Full text of article for archiving purposes (1) )

Judge in Palestine Action Case Refuses to Recuse Himself Over Bias Claims.
He is due to sentence four activists as terrorists in a move kept secret from jury.
Full text of article for archiving purposes (2) )
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