Jan 31, 2022

Today's Weak Tea


If you sell products and services that facilitate people getting hurt or killed, then you own some of the responsibility.

You can't duck that responsibility simply by intoning some magic phrase like, "Well gee, we didn't know some asshole was going to use it that way."

OK, you didn't know. But now you do know, and now you have to step up and do something.

Content platforms have enormous power, and power has to be closely monitored and counterbalanced.

I don't know how to do that with Spotify and Facebook et al, and nobody wants a new era of Hayes Office or Catholic League bullshit, and we sure as hell don't want official government censorship. But waiting for "the free market to fix it" is inadequate because it's totally retrospective, having always resulted in unnecessary immiseration while we diddle around fretting about the delicate sensibilities of corporations who seem incapable of understanding that killing the customers is a really bad idea.

So anyway, here's a WaPo piece (pay wall)

Spotify responds after Joni Mitchell and others join Neil Young and demand the platform remove their content

Spotify broke its silence on Sunday and announced slight changes to its policies around content concerning covid-19, after facing a week of criticism for allowing its creators — particularly podcaster Joe Rogan — to spread misinformation about the pandemic.

“You’ve had a lot of questions over the last few days about our platform policies and the lines we have drawn between what is acceptable and what is not,” Spotify CEO Daniel Ek wrote in a news release. “We have had rules in place for many years but admittedly, we haven’t been transparent around the policies that guide our content more broadly.”

That last sentence is perfect CorpSpeak
24 words that say exactly nothing.


The new changes include publicly publishing the company’s internal rules for what is allowed on the platform, “testing ways to highlight” those rules to its creators and “working to add a content advisory to any podcast episode that includes a discussion about COVID-19.”

“We know we have a critical role to play in supporting creator expression while balancing it with the safety of our users,” Ek wrote. “In that role, it is important to me that we don’t take on the position of being content censor while also making sure that there are rules in place and consequences for those who violate them.”

The controversy began last week, when rocker Neil Young posted a letter on his website demanding that his music be removed from Spotify in response to “fake information about vaccines” on the platform. He singled out Rogan, who hosts “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast, as part of his issue with Spotify, writing: “They can have Rogan or Young. Not both.”

Two days later, Spotify began the process of pulling Young’s music, saying in a statement that they “regret” Young’s decision “but hope to welcome him back soon.”

Days later, others began joining Young. “I’ve decided to remove all my music from Spotify,” eight-time Grammy-winning songwriter Joni Mitchell wrote in a statement on her website on Friday. “Irresponsible people are spreading lies that are costing people their lives. I stand in solidarity with Neil Young and the global scientific and medical communities on this issue.”

Nils Lofgren, the frontman of rock band Grin and a member of both Crazy Horse and Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, wrote in a statement on Young’s website that he would “cut ties with Spotify” and urged “all musicians, artists and music lovers everywhere” to do the same. Brené Brown, a research professor at the University of Houston who hosts the “Unlocking Us” and “Dare to Lead” podcasts on Spotify, tweeted Saturday that she “will not be releasing any podcasts until further notice,” though she did not say why. Britain’s Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, who have a deal to host and produce Spotify podcasts, expressed “concerns” in a statement released Sunday.

Folk rocker David Crosby, a former bandmate of Young’s, tweeted that he would remove his music from the service, but “I no longer control it or I would in support of Neil.” That’s true for many rock stars lately, who could deal a blow to the streaming service if they hadn’t sold their entire catalogues already for large sums.

Others, including Howard Stern and “The View” host Joy Behar, have argued that while they don’t agree with Rogan, they don’t think the platform should remove his podcast, equating such a move to censorship.

The resulting fallout, according to Variety, found Spotify’s market capitalization falling more than $2 billion last week.

Spotify’s newly published platform rules shed light on why Rogan — who has suggested healthy, young people shouldn’t get vaccinated; praised ivermectin, a medicine used to kill parasites in animals and humans that has no proven anti-covid benefits; and invited prominent conspiracy theorists onto his show — has not been heavily penalized.

The rules include disallowing “content that promotes dangerous false or dangerous deceptive medical information that may cause offline harm or poses a direct threat to public health,” such as asserting that covid-19 is a hoax or “promoting or suggesting that vaccines approved by local health authorities are designed to cause death.”

Rogan doesn’t quite do any of that. He often argues that he’s merely asking questions and has insisted that he’s “not anti-vax.” And he’s particularly skilled at insulating himself from criticism by arguing that he knows nothing, so he can’t tell anyone anything. “I’m not a respected source of information, even for me,” he said.

And then finally, we get Rogan's attempt to cop out completely - "Who am I? I'm nobody. People shouldn't make decisions based on anything they hear from me."

And my favorite - the classic DumFux News Defense: "I'm just asking questions - I'm not telling anyone what to do or not do - they're all free to draw their own conclusions and make their own decisions and blah blah blah."

And ultimately, of course, they're right. No one should listen to them. At all. Ever.

But people do listen, and they do make decisions according to what they've heard.

When those decisions are based on bullshit being spouted by some asshole making bank on the ignorance and gullibility of his audience, that asshole has to be held to account. Which must then lead us to devise ways of prospectively mitigating the harm done by those assholes - and their asshole audience.

eVilleMike has spoken. So let it be written. So let it be done.

Jan 30, 2022

Today's Tweet


He's feeling the heat in a very big way now. And notice how he wants the attention focused on NYC, DC and Atlanta - places where law enforcement may soon finally take him down completely.

COVID-19 Update


And something of a new phase begins - finally - a deeper involvement of popular culture. A phenomenon I think is pretty interesting, because it could be a signal that the tide is turning back in favor of reason.

There's been a weird "fashionability" about Radical Skepticism as practiced by pseudo-intellectuals like Joe Rogan - the belief that being contrarian can substitute for brains - that notoriety is the same as talent - that opinion carries the same weight as fact.

And course that's all just wrong, but that's what's been pounded into our collective psyche for more than a generation with the manufactured drama of Reality TV and Professional Wrestling and DumFux News and and and.

What we see and hear every day becomes our truth. And once fantasy overtakes even what we've always known to be dead-solid true, then reality can be dictated to us.

A long time ago, we listened to people like Neil Young and Joni Mitchell - we listened to Art - and with what we learned, we changed things for the better.

WaPo: (pay wall)

More musicians join Neil Young in demanding Spotify remove their content over covid misinformation

A controversy over coronavirus misinformation on Spotify is heating up, with a handful of musicians this weekend joining Neil Young in saying they want their music off the streaming platform as it continues to host provocative podcaster Joe Rogan.

Rock musician Nils Lofgren, best known as a member of Crazy Horse and Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, on Saturday became the latest artist to join a protest kicked off by Young, saying in a statement that he, too, would “cut ties with Spotify” and urged “all musicians, artists and music lovers everywhere” to do the same. Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell also said she plans to remove her music from Spotify in solidarity with Young “and the global scientific and medical communities.”

Separately, Brene Brown, a research professor at the University of Houston who hosts the popular podcasts “Unlocking Us” and “Dare to Lead” on Spotify, tweeted Saturday that she “will not be releasing any podcasts until further notice” but did not list a specific reason or whether the announcement was linked to the broader uproar. The Post could not immediately reach Brown for comment.

The latest developments are escalating pressure on Spotify to weigh in further on how it will weigh promoting the free speech of its content creators against the impact that some can have on public health during the pandemic. The company is seeking to dominate the podcast space and faces growing scrutiny as the medium attracts more anti-vaccine activists who run afoul of misinformation policies on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

And competitors appear to be seeking to take advantage of the brouhaha: Apple Music on Friday called itself the “the home of Neil Young” in a tweet promoting his catalogue.

Lofgren and Mitchell in their statements said they stood in solidarity with Young, who collaborated with Crazy Horse to produce many well-known albums. Young who had demanded his music be taken off the streaming platform in response to the presence of “fake information about vaccines” in some of the content it hosts.

The letter, which was posted to his website and has since been removed, cited Joe Rogan, who hosts “The Joe Rogan Experience,” as part of Young’s issue with Spotify. “They can have Rogan or Young,” the legendary musician reportedly wrote. “Not both.”

Spotify soon began removing Young’s music from its catalogue, including his best-known hits such as “Heart of Gold,” “Harvest Moon” and “Rockin’ in the Free World.”

Mitchell, whose renowned album “Blue” just turned 50, wrote in a statement on her website on Friday that she “decided to remove all” her music from Spotify because “irresponsible people are spreading lies that are costing people their lives.”

Joni Mitchell pulls music from Spotify in stand with Neil Young against covid misinformation

Spotify, in a statement previously provided to The Washington Post acknowledged the balancing act. “We want all the world’s music and audio content to be available to Spotify users. With that comes great responsibility in balancing both safety for listeners and freedom for creators,” a Spotify spokesperson said.

“We have detailed content policies in place and we’ve removed over 20,000 podcast episodes related to covid-19 since the start of the pandemic," the statement continued. "We regret Neil’s decision to remove his music from Spotify, but hope to welcome him back soon.”

Rogan, whose immensely popular podcast Spotify exclusively acquired in 2020, has questioned the need for young, healthy people to get vaccinated against the coronavirus, and hosted guests who have promoted conspiracy theories about the pandemic.

Earlier this month, 270 experts called on Spotify in an open letter to “immediately establish a clear and public policy to moderate misinformation on its platform.”

The experts particularly criticized an episode of “The Joe Rogan Experience” in which Rogan interviewed Robert Malone, a doctor and prominent skeptic of the coronavirus vaccines, as an example of the podcast’s “concerning history of broadcasting misinformation, particularly regarding” the pandemic.

A vaccine scientist’s discredited claims have bolstered a movement of misinformation

The episode “is not the only transgression to occur on the Spotify platform, but a relevant example of the platform’s failure to mitigate the damage it is causing,” the experts wrote.

Young in a statement posted to his website on Wednesday said he “first learned” of the prevalence of misinformation around the pandemic on Spotify “by reading that 200 plus doctors had joined forces, taking on the dangerous life-threatening COVID falsehoods found in SPOTIFY programming,”

“I am happy and proud to stand in solidarity with the front line health care workers who risk their lives every day to help others,” he wrote on Friday.



Jan 29, 2022

Today's Tweet



Up around Boston.

It's A Federal Rap

In a system that can't operate unless people behave honorably, betrayal of the public trust has to be regarded as one of the worst things ever. It should be treated like any of the big felonies like murder or rape, and perpetrators - if proved guilty - should suffer some very severe consequences.



Long Island pediatric nurse charged in $900K fake vaccine card scheme, NYPD husband being investigated

A pediatric nurse practitioner has been arrested for selling phony COVID-19 vaccine cards on Long Island — and her NYPD officer husband faces a departmental probe over his possible involvement in the scam, prosecutors and sources said.

As part of the alleged scheme, Julie DeVuono, 49, is accused of using her Amityville, L.I. practice, Wild Child Pediatric Healthcare, to obtain blank vaccine cards from the state Department of Health, the Suffolk County District Attorney’s office said.

She also obtained vaccine doses and syringes through the department, purportedly to administer to patients, prosecutors said.


Police seized $900,000 in cash from
Julie Duvuono's home in Amityville

DeVuono, along with Marissa Urraro, 44, a licensed practical nurse employed at the practice, allegedly charged adults $220 and children $85 for the cards and entered fabricated information into the New York State Immunization Information System, prosecutors said.

Undercover detectives told prosecutors they were given vaccine cards at the pediatric office “on one or more occasions,” but a vaccine was never administered.

DeVuono’s husband, NYPD officer Derin DeVuono, is being investigated by the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau for any involvement he might have had funneling business his wife’s way, sources said.

Derin DeVuono lost five vacation days in 2020 after he was accused of piloting a NYPD spy plane on a penis-shaped flight path in 2017 when he was a member of the department’s Aviation Unit.

DeVuono was assigned to Brooklyn’s 60th Precinct after he was accused of misusing the federally-funded $4 million Cessna plane, making improper entries in a flight log and not conducting flight surveys.

During a search of the DeVuonos’ Amityville home Thursday night, cops found $900,000 in cash and a ledger indicating the scheme has racked up over $1.5 million since November, prosecutors said.

Some of the cash was found in NYPD-issued helmet bags, sources said.

Julie DeVuono and Urrero were charged with forgery. DeVuono was also hit with a charge of offering a false instrument for filing.

Urrero is “a respected license practical nurse who has lead an exemplary career,” her lawyer, Michael Alber, told the Daily News. She pleaded not guilty at arraignment Friday in a Suffolk County court, Alber said.

“From our preliminary investigation, there are defects in the [prosecutors’] investigation and legal impediments to how the case came about.”

Both women were released without bail.

“As nurses, these two individuals should understand the importance of legitimate vaccination cards as we all work together to protect public health,” Suffolk County Police Commissioner Rodney K. Harrison said in a statement.

Last month, Gov. Hochul signed a bill criminalizing the production or use of fake vaccination cards.

Reasons To Be Atheist, # ∞


cuz god says I have to love these
fuckin' idiot "conservatives"
who're telling me Neil Young
is trying to censor them.

COVID-19 Update



WaPo: (freebie)

Most Americans say pandemic will be over when virus becomes comparable to seasonal flu

As the coronavirus pandemic enters its third year, a new poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research indicates that only a small minority of Americans need covid-19 to be largely eliminated before they will regard the health emergency as over.

By contrast, 83 percent of the 1,161 respondents said they would see the pandemic as a thing of the past once the virus evolves into a less severe, occasional presence in life — not unlike the seasonal flu. That’s a view taken by many public health experts and the countries that are pushing for “living with covid” policies once the virus becomes endemic, or at “a point at which the infection is no longer unpredictably disruptive.” (The World Health Organization in January warned against currently treating covid as an endemic disease.)

Seventy-three percent of respondents said getting vaccinated was important to ending the pandemic. Democrats were almost three times more likely than Republicans to believe that widespread immunization is essential.

Here’s what to know
  • The U.S. economy grew a blockbuster 6.9 percent in the last three months of 2021. While the first of quarter of 2022 may be weakened by omicron, economists forecast a rosier picture for the second half of this year.
  • The Department of Health and Human Services repeatedly ignored recommendations to improve its pandemic response and is at “high risk” of mismanaging a future crisis, according to a government watchdog.
  • Beijing put more neighborhoods on lockdown and ramped up mass testing to prevent further spread of the virus, with just a week to go before the 2022 Winter Games. Sixty-plus symptomatic cases have been reported in the Chinese capital since mid-January.

Overheard


We're supposed to get ready for blizzard conditions
and extreme cold temperatures
just because Big Snow Shovel
pays a few "weather experts",
and the librul media recites it like it's the Gospels,
and then they censor anybody
who dares to step up
and predict sunny and 70 degrees?
I say don't be a sheep -
do your own meteorology.

Are You Fit?

Charlie Berens - How To Train For Winter

"...until late April or early May - sometimes June."

Today's Beau

Justin King - Beau Of The Fifth Column

He's describing "the good Germans" - who just happen to be indigenous to places like Tennessee and Virginia this time.

"...and remember - banned books are the best books."