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Silicon Valley got what it wanted

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Well shit. A day or two before the election I wrote a post titled “How bad will it get?” with regard to the union of Elon Musk, X, Silicon Valley, and Trump, and now I guess we will find out.

I—many of us—were waiting for Musk’s social media platform to be weaponized, flooded with scaremongering, threats, AI slop, and bad information, and it was, but not at any level that could be considered abnormal by its own toxic standards. Most of the AI stuff I saw was relegated to dumb memes. And frankly, little Election Day weaponizing needed to be done. The Democrats were crushed handily as it was.

Gage Skidmore, Flickr. 2024/

Apart from Trump himself, there are few more obvious victors than Elon Musk; for $100 million or so and a few months’ display of unrestrained fealty, he just bought himself some real estate in the inner sanctum of Trumpworld. It may be the most fruitful investment he ever made, a bargain really. Some are taking solace in the notion that given Trump’s—and Elon’s—volatility, their relationship will be headed for a spectacular implosion sooner rather than later, as so many of Trump’s previous partners did (remember Rex Tillerson, Secretary of State, anyone?) but I’m not as confident. These two men are pretty in tune, and are more similar—each constantly embattled and aggrieved, insecure and never satisfied, incapable of any sustained level of happiness, constantly trying to build bigger monuments to their own egos but always doomed to come up short—than not. And their opportunities to mutually benefit are considerable.

I digress. Suffice to say that Elon Musk is the closest that a Silicon Valley tech titan has been to the White House, in a position of overt and direct power. There is of course a long lineage of the Valley linking up with Washington for defense contracts, help in avoiding regulations, and other forms of material support—see: Malcolm Harris’s Palo Alto—but this is the next level. It could even, perhaps, be considered a logical culmination.

And it is not limited to Musk. Silicon Valley’s approach to Trump in general has been much more conciliatory in the run-up to the election. The CEOs of Google, Meta, and Apple all apparently called Trump in recent months, and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos now-infamously spiked his newspaper’s endorsement of Kamala Harris—which, again, if you are looking at things from a perspective of cold business calculus, will likely turn out to be a materially valuable decision. Trump is famously spiteful and grudge-holding, and will remember a hedge like that—not to mention the fact that Bezos is already out the gate with a message congratulating Trump on his victory.

Four and eight years ago, the tech companies and their CEOs made a big show of promising to uphold democracy and support our civic institutions—they banned or suspended Trump when he used their platforms to help incite an insurrection at the capital, Facebook went on a mea culpa tour over Cambridge Analytica and formed internal watchdog groups, Google co-founder Sergey Brin attended a protest after Trump’s Muslim ban, Jeff Bezos and Trump were at loggerheads, and so on. The bulk of this stuff was of course superficial at best, but it’s hard, even impossible, to imagine any of those things happening again.

Part of all this is the direct result of the industry’s monopolization—eight years ago, there was at least the concern that users would abandon a platform if a company threw in with an authoritarian with views half the country found repugnant. Now, a) Trump won by a wide enough margin, and b) the companies have locked us all into their services that big tech isn’t remotely concerned about such blowback. (Worth noting, perhaps, that when the Bezos intervention came down, a lot of people were willing to cancel their Washington Post subscriptions but not Prime.)

It’s time to face facts. In Trump, Silicon Valley got what it wanted: A president that will kneecap antitrust efforts, embrace deregulation, and defang labor laws.

(Yes, I am perhaps being a little glib here—by “Silicon Valley” I mean its executives, managers, and VC class; there are many, many rank and file tech workers who I know abhor the election result.)

I am already hearing rumblings that Lina Khan, who led the FTC in an invigorated push to take big tech monopolies to task, is going to be out. The rule prohibiting NDAs is DOA. The National Labor Relations Board, more assertive under Biden than any president of the last three decades, will be quieted—tech (and all) organizing becomes again an uphill climb. Elon Musk’s Tesla is currently arguing that the NLRB itself is unconstitutional, and while that will have to go through the courts, the political climate for such a radical and once-unthinkable decision just got a lot friendlier. Any meaningful federal AI regulations are almost certainly out the window. Unless these companies personally insult Trump, it’s going to be pedal down, guardrails off for the Valley—and the dawning of a supercharged era of surveillance capitalism, attempts to automate labor with AI, and algorithmic discrimination.

And we haven’t even talked about the crypto industry, arguably the third-biggest winner of the night. Trump rebranded himself a crypto champion, of course, and Fairshake PAC, a pro-crypto lobbying firm, used tens of millions of dollars in its war chest to successfully swamp candidates in races across the country deemed unfriendly to the industry. There can be no surer prediction than Chris Gensler, the SEC chief who has successfully prosecuted the historic levels of fraud in the crypto world, will be given the boot. Bitcoin soared to an all-time high upon Trump’s election, and it looks like we’re going to do this thing all over again.

There’s something darkly fitting about these two forces, Silicon Valley and Trump, conjoining so amicably right now. The tech industry has never been bigger, or richer, or piloted by wealthier or more influential billionaires. Crypto, as close to a purely speculative instrument of capital as exists, is being hyper-charged. Trump, of course, has no regard for rules or standards; he respects only the accrual of power and wealth. The digital casino is open, there are no house rules apart from ‘don't insult the boss’, and there are certainly no guarantees. Anyone who gets screwed is either a loser or a sucker or shouldn’t have been there in the first place.

Like a lot of you, I imagine, I have been thinking about how we got here. I was thinking about it late last night, where I was punishing myself by staying up until the early hours to watch North Carolina then Georgia then Pennsylvania get called for Trump, watching Trump supporters celebrate with terrible AI memes. I was thinking about Silicon Valley.

There is a lot, of course, of blame to pass around—voters were angry about inflation and the incumbent, Joe Biden and elite Dems helped tank the campaign by concealing his senility, Kamala Harris was in a difficult situation, yet chose the Cheneys over an animated progressive base, there is a lot of sexism in this country, and fascism is genuinely appealing to some percentage of voters. Other writers have made such arguments more convincingly than me. But I would add the Valley to the list of scapegoats, and not just Musk for literally buying him votes. (Many scoffed at Musk’s naked and ham-fisted effort to turn X into a propaganda platform for Trump—it’s hard to say it was not successful. I hope to see more careful inquiry into the influence of X on these fronts, and I imagine there will be. To that end, another writer pointed out that the three top podcasts hosted on Spotify—Joe Rogan, Theo Von, and Tucker Carlson—all vouched for Trump.)

But no, the problem extends even beyond particular platforms and their capacity to serve as conduits for propaganda. As it stands, the vast majority of our digital infrastructure is now owned by tech billionaires, who are at least open to participating in an authoritarian project; some, of course, are enthusiastic about it.

Our public and shared spaces, online and off, have been thoroughly privatized and commodified, in ways that we are still only beginning to fully grapple with. Disaffection, alienation, and isolation are rampant, and all are byproducts of the hyper-capitalized digital world that Silicon Valley has constructed for us to inhabit. A world where we are encouraged to build community and seek engagement on social media platforms owned by billionaires, to disparage the other for clout, vie to strike it rich with the right crypto trade, or outsource our thinking and creativity to generative AI. It is a brittle, hollow world that fosters animosity and resentment, where we have long known rage is promoted above empathy, where transforming the human experience into a march through a casino is the goal. A world obsessed with score-settling, with outsourcing, with gambling. It’s no wonder, ultimately, that Trump embraced Silicon Valley, and it embraced Trump.


There is a new and ascendent nexus of power emerging to span Silicon Valley and Trumpworld—as long as I’m writing this newsletter, I will aim to keep tabs on it. If you’re interested in backing such a project, please do subscribe, and consider lending some material support if you’re in a position to do so; if I’m going to keep up this work, I’m going to need some help here.

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Hang in there everyone. Spend some time with each other in offline spaces. And now more than ever, keep those hammers up.

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tante
1 day ago
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"There’s something darkly fitting about these two forces, Silicon Valley and Trump, conjoining so amicably right now. The tech industry has never been bigger, or richer, or piloted by wealthier or more influential billionaires. Crypto, as close to a purely speculative instrument of capital as exists, is being hyper-charged. Trump, of course, has no regard for rules or standards; he respects only the accrual of power and wealth. The digital casino is open, there are no house rules apart from ‘don't insult the boss’, and there are certainly no guarantees. Anyone who gets screwed is either a loser or a sucker or shouldn’t have been there in the first place. "
Berlin/Germany
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Microsoft is bundling its AI-powered Office features into Microsoft 365 subscriptions

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Illustration of Microsoft’s AI Copilot
Image: Microsoft

Microsoft appears to be stepping back from charging Microsoft 365 Personal and Home subscribers another $20 per month to get access to AI-powered Office features. The software giant quietly announced it’s making Copilot Pro features part of its Microsoft 365 Personal and Family subscriptions last week, but only in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, and Thailand for now.

“It’s been nine months since we introduced consumers to Copilot in our Microsoft 365 apps via Copilot Pro. We’ve spent that time adding new features, improving performance, and listening carefully to customer feedback,” says Microsoft in a press release spotted by ZDNet. “Based on that feedback, we’re making Copilot part of our Microsoft 365 Personal and...

Continue reading…

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tante
1 day ago
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Since nobody wanted to pay for Copilot Pro, Microsoft is now leveraging their Office365 monopoly, adding it to the service and raising prices there.

Luckily Nadella did bend the knee to Trump so there won't be any repercussions.

(More importantly: We see again that #AI isn't economically sustainable)
Berlin/Germany
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Podcast: “Digital Infrastructure and Why Open Source Is Not Enough Anymore”

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So Hagen Terschüren, a German journalist who does a lot of work on tech- and internet related topics has his own new podcast that he invited me to.

The episode is titled “Digital Infrastructure and Why Open Source Is Not Enough Anymore” an can be downloaded or listened to on Hagen’s website.

We talked about the recent WordPress chaos (or to be more precise the way an unstable individual in control of an open source project can shake it to its core) and about open source digital infrastructures as a whole.

I have been arguing that “Open Source” just isn’t enough – which the recent OSAID bullshit showed – this episode gave me an opportunity to expand on that.

Because for projects that have an infrastructural quality and relevance the code being open source isn’t sufficient: Those projects also need governance structures and democratic participation of developers as well as users. I also got to outline how I think governments with a will to actually help the digital commons should act.

It was a great conversation and I appreciate Hagen inviting me. Check it out on his site.

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tante
1 day ago
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I guested on a podcast and we talked about why "Open Source" no longer cuts it for our digital infrastructures.
Berlin/Germany
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Hundreds of code libraries posted to NPM try to install malware on dev machines

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An ongoing attack is uploading hundreds of malicious packages to the open source node package manager (NPM) repository in an attempt to infect the devices of developers who rely on code libraries there, researchers said.

The malicious packages have names that are similar to legitimate ones for the Puppeteer and Bignum.js code libraries and for various libraries for working with cryptocurrency. The campaign, which was active at the time this post was going live on Ars, was reported by researchers from the security firm Phylum. The discovery comes on the heels of a similar campaign a few weeks ago targeting developers using forks of the Ethers.js library.

Beware of the supply chain attack

“Out of necessity, malware authors have had to endeavor to find more novel ways to hide intent and to obfuscate remote servers under their control,” Phylum researchers wrote. “This is, once again, a persistent reminder that supply chain attacks are alive and well.”

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tante
3 days ago
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It's cute that this software supply chain attack on NPM directly targets Ethereum users who are supposed to check every smart contract they want to interact with to protect themselves but don't seem to use the same rigour when checking code they include.
Berlin/Germany
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Guy makes “dodgy e-bike” from 130 used vapes to make point about e-waste

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Disposable vapes are indefensible. Many, or maybe most, of them contain rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, but manufacturers prefer to sell new ones. More than 260 million vape batteries are estimated to enter the trash stream every year in the UK alone. Vapers and vape makers are simply leaving an e-waste epidemic to the planet's future residents to sort out.

To make a point about how wasteful this practice is—and to also make a pretty rad project and video—Chris Doel took 130 disposable vape batteries (the bigger "3,500 puff" types with model 20400 cells) found littered at a music festival and converted them into a 48-volt, 1,500-watt e-bike battery, one that powered an e-bike with almost no pedaling more than 20 miles. You can see the whole build and watch Doel zoom along trails on his YouTube video.

A pile of empty aluminum vape shells, and the juice and batteries that came out of them, on Chris Doel's workstation. Credit: A pile of empty aluminum
Vape batteries, put into group cases, wired together in batches, and then wired in serial into two stacks, next to a multimeter. Credit: Chris Doel
How the battery fits onto the bike that Chris Doel powers with vape batteries: a big bag, ratchet straps, and wiring to a rear hub motor. Just, one more time, folks: do not do this at home. Credit: Chris Doel

To be clear: Do not do this. Do not put disposable vape cartridges in a vise clamp to "pop out" their components. Do not desolder them from vape cartridges that have a surprising amount of concentration still in them. Do not wire them together using a balance board, group them using 3D-printed cell holders, and then wire them in series. Heck, do not put that much power into a rear hub on a standard bike frame, at least more than once. Doel has a fire extinguisher present and visible on his workbench, and he shows you what happens when two of the wrong batteries happen to make momentary contact—smoke, coughing, and strong warnings.

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tante
4 days ago
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"Disposable vapes are indefensible. Many, or maybe most, of them contain rechargeable lithium-ion batteries, but manufacturers prefer to sell new ones. More than 260 million vape batteries are estimated to enter the trash stream every year in the UK alone. Vapers and vape makers are simply leaving an e-waste epidemic to the planet's future residents to sort out."
Berlin/Germany
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Perplexity AI Offers to Help New York Times With Tech Union Strike

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On Monday and a day before Election Day, tech workers for the New York Times went on strike seeking to secure a contract with fairer pay and just cause job protections. In response Aravind Srinivas, the CEO of AI search engine Perplexity, tweeted that the chairman of the New York Times company AG Sulzberger should contact him for assistance during the strike. It's unclear exactly what services Srinivas is offering Sulzberger, but it appears that the CEO of an AI company is trying to help the Times bypass its human workers who are currently in the middle of an authorized labor strike.

The offer is especially ironic given Perplexity’s repeated cases of lifting and regurgitating human journalists’ work without credit. Earlier this year Forbes found that the AI service was using much of its original investigative reporting without credit. And last month Dow Jones and the New York Post sued Perplexity, alleging “massive” copyright infringement.

“Hey AG Sulzberger @nytimes - sorry to see this,” Srinivas tweeted in response to a Sulzberger email saying the strike would likely continue through the election. “Perplexity is on standby to help ensure your essential coverage is available to all through the election. DM me anytime here.”

Perplexity offers an AI-powered search engine which, like many others, is built in part by scraping information and material from the web. WIRED previously found that Perplexity was scraping sites without permission, and plagiarizing multiple articles

In a statement published on Monday, the NewsGuild of NY and the Times Tech Guild said that the latter “has walked off the job in a ULP strike that threatens Election Day.” The Times Tech Guild is the union “that powers the technology behind election coverage at The New York Times,” the statement added.

Throughout Monday, members have been picketing outside The New York Times building. The statement asked New York Times readers to honor the digital picket line and not play New York Times’ owned games such as Wordle.

“Throughout the bargaining process, Times management has engaged in numerous labor law violations, including implementing return-to-office mandates without bargaining and attempting to intimidate members through interrogations about their strike intentions,” the statement continued. “The NewsGuild of NY has filed unfair labor practice charges against The Times on these tactics as well as numerous other violations of labor law.”

On Monday, The New York Times announced it had passed 11 million subscribers.

Perplexity did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Neither did the NewsGuild of NY.



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tante
4 days ago
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Perplexity are not just pushing their stochastic parrots into newsrooms, they are scabs helping publishers to disenfranchise their workers.

If you are not a multi-millionaire, they are not on your side and you are a sucker for using their product and paying for it.
Berlin/Germany
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