April’s Fools…

…and this coming out of the White House, albeit from an unnamed source!

“It really is a president unhinged.”

[Source: Washington Post – paywall]
…and what about the lack of adults in the room signaling all bets are off?

Foolish president*, don’t you think?

[Source: New York Times – paywall]
…and what about the laughably specious claim Ingraham’s hastily-announced vacation was, in fact, planned.

Foolish explanation, don’t you think?

[Source: Washington Post – paywall]
…and what about Pruitt’s fishy flophouse rate of $50 a night for digs in D.C.?

Foolish idea, don’t you think?

[Source: Wall Street Journal – paywall]
…and what about Cap’n Crazy™ fretting over idiotic blunders committed by surviving members of the Cabinet?

Foolish behavior, don’t you think?

[Source: New York Times – paywall]
…and what about the the proposed citizenship question slated to reappear on the census after a 70 year absence?

Foolish justification, don’t you think?

Ah, right, well it is April 1st, isn’t it? :-)

#deleteDucey

In March 2017, I encouraged everyone to #deleteUBER.

…and I still think you should, like yesterday.

Earlier today, the Guardian (looming paywall) published an article exposing the cozy relationship between Arizona Governor Doug Ducey and UBER. Oh, right, let’s not forget UBER’s technology killed a pedestrian in Arizona last week!

According to the New York Times, Uber’s human drivers had to intervene far more frequently than those working for its rivals. It reported that Waymo, Google’s self-driving car spinoff, said that in tests on roads in California last year, its cars went an average of nearly 5,600 miles before the driver had to seize control of its vehicles. As of March, Uber was struggling to meet its target of 13 miles per “intervention” in Arizona, according to the Times.

I dug up the New York Times article (paywall) referenced by the Guardian, and learned:

Uber has been testing its self-driving cars in a regulatory vacuum in Arizona.

Well, that was the case until Monday, when the New York Times (paywall) reported the beleaguered Republican governor of Arizona grew a spine and issued a state-wide suspension on UBER’s, (but not Waymo’s or GM’s), autonomous car program, because, after all, “…Arizona is open for business.”

Hey cowboys and cowgirls, how ’bout ginnin’ up a recall out there, huh? ;-)

A .PDF version of today’s poster is available here.

Update: Hmmmm… Was the collision-avoidance technology simply turned off?

Never. Again.

While the Thief-in-Chief™ continued sulking in Florida on Saturday, protesters from across the nation took part in what the New York Times (paywall) described as huge rallies sparked by the mass shooting in Florida last month:

Hundreds of thousands of protesters, outraged by a recent massacre at a South Florida school and energized by the students who survived, thronged in streets across the globe in protests on Saturday, demanding action against gun violence in their most ambitious show of strength yet.

New York Times (paywall) columnist Steve Israel’s opinion piece begins:

It has been 38 days since the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.; 174 days since the shooting at a concert in Las Vegas; 1,011 days since the killings at a church in Charleston, S.C.; and 1,926 since the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

…and yet, lawmakers continue to equivocate. The young people spearheading this nationwide outcry against gun violence are correct when they chant, “…enough is enough…”. If our elected officials are unwilling to refuse NRA contributions and shudder at the thought of NRA-sponsored smear campaigns targeting their fragile egos, then those elected officials need to be replaced with individuals committed to exposing the NRA as the fraudulent non-profit it is, gleefully trading on the fears of ignorant Americans and intent on promoting a xenophobic, nationalist agenda.

Link to .PDF version of today’s poster here.

American Deficit Disorder

Early Friday morning, Congress approved a spending bill the New York Times (paywall) quoted one Republican senator describing as “…a wildly irresponsible use of the taxpayers’ money…”. Of course, that didn’t stop the Thief-in-Chief™ from signing the bill, though not before holding an impromptu – and nationally-televised – temper tantrum!

A .PDF version available here.

All Zucked Up!

First, let’s dispense with the legalistic equivocating

The claim that this is a data breach is completely false…no systems were infiltrated, and no passwords or sensitive pieces of information were stolen or hacked.

Yup, that little gem was extracted straight from Facebook’s news page on March 17th.

I beg to differ with the technocratic brain trust hunkered down in Menlo Park – splitting hairs over the definition of “breach” was a complete waste of time. However, I do like Merriam-Webster’s definition, particularly the first usage example, “a breach of trust”, because it sums up the situation perfectly.

C’mon, you do know Facebook has consistently exhibited a complete and utter disdain for the so-called “dumb f*cks”, (Mr. Zuckerberg’s words, not mine), who have chosen to surrender their digital lives to his stupid company, right?

As reported in the Guardian on Saturday, the Observer disclosed what whistleblower, Christopher Wylie, described as a concerted effort to harvest millions of Facebook profiles and then build psycho-graphic models of those people targeting what Wylie referred to as “…their inner demons.”

In the past several days, we’ve seen undercover footage of Alexander Nix, the now-suspended CEO of Cambridge Analytica, bragging about the absurd amount of influence his company had with the Trump campaign, claiming:

“We did all the research, all the data, all the analytics, all the targeting. We ran all the digital campaign, the television campaign and our data informed all the strategy.”

Sure, this sociopath from England can’t speak proper English, but setting that aside, the implications of what he was caught on camera/tape saying are chilling, to say the least.

OK, so let’s recap: heartless technologists – 1, crusading politicians – 0… :-(

Sticking with what’s being reported by the Guardian, let’s now turn to the Chief-Executive-Apologizer’s™ tardy, non-committal, half-baked attempt at accepting responsibility for the entire company being asleep at the wheel:

“I’m really sorry that this happened.”

Yeah, definitely fell on his sword with that one, huh? Oh, did I mention he apologized for the “breach of trust”? Yeah, said that too… So Facebook attorneys, security geeks and public relations ‘droids chafe at the use of “breach”, but a handful of days later, ole’ Marky-Mark says he’s sorry for said breach [of trust]. And according to the same Guardian article:

Facebook’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, shared Zuckerberg’s post and added her own comment: “We know that this was a major violation of people’s trust, and I deeply regret that we didn’t do enough to deal with it.”

Oooh, impressive – way to lean in Sheryl, way to lean in…

E.J. Dionne Jr., Washington Post, (paywall), opinion writer, thinks we should be outraged about the Facebook/Cambridge Analytica scandal, noting:

Zuckerberg’s statement Wednesday afternoon acknowledging “mistakes” and pledging to “work through this” largely repeated what we already know. He’ll have to do much more.

Agreed. Much more… Much, much more…

I’ll leave you with what New York Times, (paywall), technology writer, Nellie Bowles, quoted in a story about a former colleague of mine who, on Wednesday, suggested it might be time to #deletefacebook:

Employees may feel the freedom to rebel because of Silicon Valley’s success, both technologically and financially. The technology platforms have become more powerful — and the fortunes much bigger — than the programmers ever expected. So while the industry’s power disturbs them, the wealth allows them to speak out without fear of retribution…

True, but let’s not overlook the simple fact these rather public displays of righteous indignation are invariably launched after the check clears! Said differently, while you’re shoveling billions into your pockets, you’ll put up with just about anything…