Stephen Colbert Taunts Giuliani With ‘Most Chilling Phrase In The English Language’
Posted in: Today's ChiliThe “Late Show” host shared a different theory on the reported “Masked Singer” appearance.
The “Late Show” host shared a different theory on the reported “Masked Singer” appearance.
The world is changing, and oh, how the tables have turned. On Thursday, Snap showed up behemoth-sized rival Meta, formerly known as Facebook, by reporting a profit for the first time as a public company. Meta, on the other hand, experienced the worst crash in stock market history, losing $251 billion in value in one…
A group of Republican Senators led by Mike Crapo of Idaho has sent the Internal Revenue Service a letter expressing concerns about the agency’s partnership with facial recognition service ID.me. Starting this summer, taxpayers will have to register for an ID.me account to be able to access the online services IRS offers, including the ability to file taxes through its website. To be able to sign up, they have to send ID.me a copy of their government ID, a utility bill and a video selfie of themselves. The Senators called the last one the “most intrusive verification item,” since it’s more than just submitting a picture of one’s face and can’t be easily replaced like a password.
In the letter, the group said that it’s “deeply concerned for many reasons,” starting with the government’s “unfortunate history of data breaches.” It mentioned the attacks on the Office of Personnel Management back in 2015 as an example. If you’ll recall, two separate attacks on the agency compromised the information of millions of then-current and former federal employees and led to the theft of 21.5 million Social Security Numbers.
The group also cited an IRS report in 2019, wherein it estimated that it faces 1.4 billion cyberattacks a year. “It is highly likely, with personal information on a reported 70 million individuals, including biometric data, ID.me could be a top target for cyber-criminals, rogue employees, and espionage,” the Senators wrote. They’ve asked the agency a series of questions meant to shed light on the partnership in the letter. The Senators want to know if the IRS did due diligence to ensure taxpayers’ information would be protected before it approved the partnership and what kind of oversight the agency has over the company. they also asked IRS if it made sure ID.me’s system had gone through an independent cybersecurity audit, among many other things.
The CEO of ID.me recently admitted that the system uses a more powerful method of facial recognition than previously claimed. In a statement, he said ID.me employes a 1:many approach, which means it matches images against those in a database. He previously said it only uses a 1:1 approach that compares one’s face to a photo on their government ID. A Bloomberg report published after that said the Treasury Department is reconsidering the IRS’s partnership with the company and is now looking for alternatives to its facial recognition software.
Giuliani’s controversial reality TV turn got the spoof treatment from Trevor Noah’s team.
Just one change in the rules is all it would take.
<img width="1280" height="720" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/earthtrojan-1280×720.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Earth Trojan illustration" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="710382" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/a-new-earth-trojan-asteroid-was-spotted-thats-a-huge-opportunity-03710381/earthtrojan/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/earthtrojan.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,810" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="earthtrojan" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="
NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/J. da Silva/Spaceengine
” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/earthtrojan-1280×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/earthtrojan-1280×720.jpg” />Astronomers have discovered a new Trojan asteroid that follows the same path around the Sun as Earth. Dubbed 2020 XL5, the newly discovered Trojan is the second such asteroid that has been discovered, with both discoveries occurring over the past ten years. The asteroid is shadowing Earth and as it is in the same general orbit, there is no danger … Continue reading
Workers at LDJ5, an Amazon warehouse facility on New York’s Staten Island, have filed a petition to unionize with the National Labor Relations Board. It’s the second facility Staten Island to make an attempt at forming a union after JFK8, and it’s also seeking to be represented by the Amazon Labor Union, an independent group comprised of current and former company employees. According to CNBC, the ALU filed the petition on Wednesday.
The ALU originally filed to form a union last year for JFK8 and three other nearby facilities, but it had to withdraw its petition after it failed to gather enough votes to proceed. It refiled its application in December, however, and focused only on JFK8. Former Amazon employee and ALU leader Christian Smalls said back then that the group was “taking a different approach” and hoping that it has “more than enough” support from employees in the facility. Smalls led a walkout at JFK8 over the e-commerce giant’s handling of COVID safety at the warehouse. Amazon said he was fired after “multiple warnings for violating social distancing guidelines.”
In late January, the ALU collected enough signatures to proceed with a union election vote at JFK8, a feat the e-commerce giant doubts. Reaching the threshold means the ALU was able to secure the support of 30 percent of the warehouse’s workforce. Amazon told Engadget in a statement when the news broke that it’s “skeptical that there are a sufficient number of legitimate signatures” and that it’s “seeking to understand how these signatures were verified.” An election has been set for JFK8 on February 16th. As for LDJ5, the ALU still will have to collect enough signatures from its 1,500 workers for an election to be able to proceed.
We have officially filed a petition for election at a second warehouse, LDJ5 in Staten Island.
This is an amazing moment in history, seeing amazon workers finally taking the brave steps to make their voices heard. ❤️#amazon#UnionizeAmazonhttps://t.co/9IUZkoYqcs
— Amazon Labor Union (@amazonlabor) February 2, 2022
<img width="1200" height="800" src="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/18892-FuoriserieOrangeZestLevanteV8Trofeo-1200×800.jpg" class="webfeedsFeaturedVisual wp-post-image" alt="Maserati Fuoriserie" loading="lazy" style="margin: auto;margin-bottom: 5px;max-width: 100%" data-attachment-id="710369" data-permalink="https://www.slashgear.com/maserati-fuoriserie-program-launches-with-three-custom-built-trofeos-03710368/18892-fuoriserieorangezestlevantev8trofeo/" data-orig-file="https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/18892-FuoriserieOrangeZestLevanteV8Trofeo.jpg" data-orig-size="1440,960" data-comments-opened="0" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="18892-FuoriserieOrangeZestLevanteV8Trofeo" data-image-description="" data-image-caption="
Maserati S.p.A
” data-medium-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/18892-FuoriserieOrangeZestLevanteV8Trofeo-1080×720.jpg” data-large-file=”https://cdn.slashgear.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/18892-FuoriserieOrangeZestLevanteV8Trofeo-1200×800.jpg” />Italian automaker Maserati (now under the helm of Stellantis) has launched its Fuoriserie customization program for 2022 Levante, Ghibli, and Quattroporte variants. The brand’s updated Fuoriserie styling collection offers new colors and materials than ever before, enabling owners to create their one-of-kind Maserati vehicle – including the all-new MC20 V6 supercar. Celebrating the launch of 2022 Fuoriserie are three custom-built … Continue reading
The EARN IT Act is a piece of legislation, first introduced in 2020 by Republican Senator Lindsay Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal. Its sponsors, of which there are many, say that the bill will tackle the proliferation of Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) posted online. Its critics say that the bill uses an emotive subject as cover to force tech companies to further erode online privacy protections and curtail freedom of speech. Much like FOSTA/SESTA before it, the bill’s key target is further weakening the legal protections of Section 230 Communications Decency Act, better known as the “26 words that created the internet.”
Originally tabled March 5th, 2020, the bill received plenty of bipartisan support in the Senate and was passed to committee soon after. It did not, however, receive a full vote at the time, likely due to the fact that COVID-19 massively disrupted the legislative process. It has now been reintroduced in largely the same form as before, and is being discussed by the Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday, February 3rd, 2022.
Broadly speaking, the bill seeks to launch a new national commission, led by a committee of senior law enforcement officials. This body would develop a series of so-called best practices to prevent online platforms distributing CSAM. Any platform that did not adopt these best practices would subsequently lose their immunity provided to them by Section 230. It also places a lot of power to regulate internet providers directly in the hands of state legislatures.
As Engadget explained at the start of 2020, Section 230 gives internet infrastructure providers broad legal immunity from the actions of their users. If you write something that is defamatory on your Facebook page, it’ll be you, not Mark Zuckerberg, who has to answer for it. It’s this protection from liability that has allowed a wide variety of internet businesses to flourish.
Now imagine what would happen if every online platform was on the hook for everything its users wrote. The ability to write pretty much anything online would disappear within weeks, with only the wealthiest platforms (Facebook) able to survive. Everything that wasn’t instantly shut down would be subject to even more overzealous moderation than what’s currently in use.
Think about it this way: Imagine if Yelp was itself legally liable to every restaurant which received a bad review on its service. It would either have to shut down, purge every bad review in its database, rendering it useless, or get sued into oblivion in very short order.
One of the bill’s more troubling moves is to outsource the key decision-making power to a politically-chosen body. The committee would involve the Attorney General, Secretary of Homeland Security and appointees with a background in law enforcement. There is an understandable concern that such a group would be unrepresentative in terms of the broader debate around this issue, and unaccountable for the decisions that it reaches.
This lack of accountability and the fact that the bill repeats many of the same mistakes that marked the passage of FOSTA/SESTA, advocacy groups are worried. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), for instance, believe that the law’s broad scope could be used to erode basic online freedoms at the whims of politicians. At the time the bill was initially introduced, the Attorney General was William Barr, a prominent critic of encryption. Barr said, many times, that tech companies “can” and “must” put back doors into their products. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) said that such a move would enable “law enforcement agencies, from the FBI down to the local police, to scan every message sent online.” The fact that the new text explicitly nods that the use of encryption could be a reason to lose liability protection makes this even more troubling. And even if that clause is watered-down, the broad-brush power handed to the committee overall means it just takes a change in leadership and encryption is gone for good.
Part of the broader context around Section 230 is the myth, intentionally propagated by some lawmakers and journalists, that online platforms are censoring conservative voices. Time and again, prominent figures on the right decry outfits like Facebook when it takes down content that violates its terms of service. They say that it’s partisan censorship, despite the fact that Facebook has in fact bent overbackwards to accommodate and keep prominent right-wing figures on its site. The attacks on S230 are to be seen as both a political cudgel to ensure major platforms continue to carve out exceptions for prominent Republicans, and as a way of censoring huge swathes of internet speech.
More than HALF A MILLION people signed this petition to lawmakers opposing the EARN IT Act last Congress https://t.co/ugZHxEINIk
Why would you reintroduce this bill without fixing any of the glaring problems that have been pointed out by human rights and security experts?
— Evan Greer (@evan_greer) February 1, 2022
No discussion of Section 230 can exist without talking about the harms created by the passing of FOSTA/SESTA. That bill had a similar aim of weakening the protections of Section 230, passed under the aegis of preventing sex trafficking. Once signed into law in 2018, a number of websites dealing with sex, sex work and sexual education were forced offline. Democrats in 2019 were sufficiently concerned by the fallout from the bill that they unsuccessfully attempted to pass a bill that would study the impact of FOSTA/SESTA on vulnerable individuals.
Freedom Network, a body that works to prevent trafficking, and provide support to its victims, spoke out against EARN IT at the end of 2020. It, along with a number of other groups, backed a letter (.PDF) saying that the bill was flawed and wouldn’t succeed in its supposed aims. It said that the bill would repeat the mistakes of FOSTA/SESTA, explaining that “instead of narrowly targeting sex trafficking which used digital platforms, the law de-platformed and erased the existence of many, including sex workers, harm reduction workers and sex educators.” It added that the bill could cause disproportionate harm to LGBTQ communities who would be starved of vital educational material and access to a broader community.
Human Rights Watch, meanwhile, wrote to Graham and Dianne Feinstein in June 2020 to lodge its own opposition to the bill. It said that “the EARN IT Act not only jeopardizes privacy and threatens the right to free expression but also fails to effectively protect children from online exploitation.”
Since the bill has reemerged, these same criticisms have been leveled against it, given that little has changed about its construction. The Center for Democracy and Technology said on Tuesday that its changes “in some cases, makes things worse.” It remains to be seen, however, if these criticisms will get through to the politicians who will begin debating the bill in earnest later today.