[Plura-list] Poesy the Monster Slayer; Atlas of Surveillance; Catalan politician hacked with NSO Group malware; Artists vs tax havens

Cory Doctorow doctorow at craphound.com
Tue Jul 14 12:44:09 EDT 2020


Today's links

* Poesy the Monster Slayer: My first picture book is out today!

* Atlas of Surveillance: How are your local cops spying on you?

* Catalan politician hacked with NSO Group malware: Generalissimo
Francisco Franco is still dead.

* Artists vs tax havens: A report from Tax Havens: Normalized Grand Theft.

* Free "extended preview" of my next book: "Attack Surface" AKA "Little
Brother III."

* Target workers strike over chickenization: Working for a chickenshipt
outfit.

* Big Oil can have you locked up: Chevron's old legal firm have the oil
company's most effective critic under house arrest.

* California goes antitrust on Google: Xavier Becerra rides again!

* 2019's highest-paid execs: I'm sure they earned every dime.

* This day in history: None

* Colophon: Recent publications, upcoming appearances, current writing
projects, current reading

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🥊 Poesy the Monster Slayer

Wahoo! Today is the day my first-ever picture book comes out: it's POESY
THE MONSTER SLAYER, illustrated by Matt Rockefeller and published by
Firstsecond. It's an epic tale of toy-hacking, bedtime-avoidance and
monster-slaying.

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781626723627

The book's birthday is attended by a superb and glowing review from Kirkus:

"The lights are out, and the battle begins. She knows the monsters are
coming, and she has a plan. First, the werewolf appears. No problem.
Poesy knows the tools to get rid of him: silver (her tiara) and light.
She wins, of course, but the ruckus causes a 'cross' Daddy to appear at
her door, telling her to stop playing with toys and go back to bed. She
dutifully lets him tuck her back in. But on the next page, her eyes are
open. 'Daddy was scared of monsters. Let DADDY stay in bed.' Poesy keeps
fighting the monsters that keep appearing out of the shadows, fearlessly
and with all the right tools, to the growing consternation of her
parents, a Black-appearing woman and a White-appearing man, who are
oblivious to the monsters and clearly fed up and exhausted but used to
this routine. Poesy is irresistible with her brave, two-sided
personality. Her foes don’t stand a chance (and neither do her parents).
Rockefeller’s gently colored cartoon art enhances her bravery with
creepily drawn night creatures and lively, expressive faces.

"This nighttime mischief is not for the faint of heart. (Picture book. 5-8)"

Kirkus joins Publishers Weekly in its praise: "Strikes a gently edgy
tone, and his blow-by-blow account races to its closing spread: of two
tired parents who resemble yet another monster."

https://pluralistic.net/2020/06/04/cross-burnings/#PW

Last Sun, my daughter Poesy - the protagonist's namesake - and I went to
our local indie Dark Delicacies to sign 100+ pre-orders; there are a few
left in inventory, and we're planning on another round in the coming
weeks if you'd like a signed copy.

https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1562/_July%3A_Poesy_the_Monster_Slayer.html

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🥊 Atlas of Surveillance

With the Atlas of Surveillance, EFF aggregates 5300 datapoints about US
police forces' use of surveillance technology and maps them, providing
an at-a-glance/searchable data on everything from Ring partnerships to
shotspotters to fusion centers to drones.

https://atlasofsurveillance.org/

Hundreds of community groups, university labs and other institutions
contributed to the database:

https://atlasofsurveillance.org/about

If your region is blank, that means no one has done the work to figure
out how your local law enforcement is spying on you. You can fill that
gap! Here's how:

https://atlasofsurveillance.org/collaborate

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🥊 Catalan politician hacked with NSO Group malware

NSO Group is an Israeli cyber-arms dealer owned by Novalpina Capital, a
British private equity fund. They claim they sell military-grade hacking
tools to help law enforcement catch serious criminals and terrorists.

Actually, they're indiscriminate and sell to brutal despots, corporate
lobbyists, and petty, thin-skinned rich sociopaths bent on destroying
their critics. Their tools are routinely used against activists,
journalists, even schoolchildren.

They were just outed for helping someone - almost certainly the Spanish
national government - spy on the the speaker of the Catalan parliament.
That is to say, they allowed a government to spy on its legitimate
political opposition party.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/13/phone-of-top-catalan-politician-targeted-by-government-grade-spyware

Speaker Roger Torrent is one of the most senior politicians in
Catalonia; he is one of at least three pro-independence figures whose
phones were infected with NSO's Pegasus malware (a tool also implicated
in the brutal murder of Jamal Khashoggi by Mohammed Bin Salman).

The hacks were traced by the University of Toronto's Citizen Lab, who
were themselves targeted by surveillance contractors working for NSO
Group (NSO hires the same ex-Mossad spooks as Harvey Weinstein!).

https://apnews.com/9f31fa2aa72946c694555a5074fc9f42

The Madrid government told El Pais that the activists' phones probably
weren't even hacked. Then they added that if the government HAD hacked
their phone, they didn't break any laws in doing so.

¿Como se dice 'That's not how glomar works, dumbass'?

NSO Group said Citizen Lab was just making it up and they love
terrorists: "Once again speculative comments from CitizenLab only serve
to highlight its continued, naive and ulterior agenda which fails to
competently address the challenges faced by law enforcement agencies."

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🥊 Artists vs tax havens

Moneylab is an annual Dutch conference; as Regine Debatty summarizes, it
"gives the stage to critical thinkers, artists, researchers, activists
and tech-enthusiasts in search of other economies and financial
discourses for a fair society."

https://we-make-money-not-art.com/tax-havens-normalized-grand-theft/

This year's event featured a satellite stage in Ljubljana, Slovenia,
where investigative journalist Anuška Delić hosted a collection of
artists, researchers, scholars and activists for a stunning, two-hour
seminar on tax havens.

https://aksioma.org/moneylab8/session/panel-3-tax-havens-normalized-grand-theft/

Two groups of artists presented. First there was the Demystification
Committee, who presented the "Offshore Investigation Vehicle," a project
through which they incorporated an UK company owned by a Seychelles
company with its banking in Puerto Rico.

https://demystification.co/mmittee/projects/offshore-investigation-vehicle/

OIV showed how farcically easy it was to use multiple financial secrecy
jurisdictions to create these corporate structures, abetted by networks
of low-priced enablers who went the extra mile to help with obfuscation.

They did almost all the work DIY by following online recipes in forums
for tax cheaters, and spent about €2000 in professional services from
enablers who enthusiastically helped them violate disclosure laws.

And while this fits a technical definition of a "sophisticated tax
fraud," OIV showed just how stupid and unsophisticated each layer of the
rotten onion is. Tax-dodging corps, plutes and crims aren't masterminds
- this is kid's stuff.

Next was RYBN, whose "Great Offshore" project is an "open source
situationist" map of notorious tax havens, an app that lets visitors to
London or Zurich go straight to the sites of criminals identified in
giant leaks like the Panama Papers.

http://rybn.org/thegreatoffshore/

They also maintain an encylopedia of "the singular manifestation of
offshore banking. Its folklore, narratives, figures, companies, icons, etc."

http://rybn.org/thegreatoffshore/encyclopedia.php

Other aspects of the project: rebranded cryptocurrency ("Virtual
Financial Assets"), seasteading, freeports, golden passports, and all
the guillotine-ready trappings of our current moment.

Both RYBN and the OIV highlight how ubiquitous, how stupid, and how
near-to-hand the world of financial secrecy its - and how banal its
workings, aesthetics and practitioners are.

The Q&A; was especially fascinating as Delić - who has unpicked so many
webs of criminal financial secrecy as a journalist - marveled at how
idiotic and crayon-scrawled it all was from the other side.

Debatty's summary is very good - she takes great notes and annotated
them with lots of links; the video itself is also worth watching.

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🥊 Free "extended preview" of my next book

In October, the third Little Brother novel, ATTACK SURFACE, drops. It's,
uh, weirdly timely. It's a standalone novel for adults.

It's about Masha, the ex-DHS security contractor from the beginning and
end of the first two books, grappling with her conscience after a career
spent supplying cyberweapons to despots.

She moves from an ex-Soviet failed state back to Oakland, where her best
friend is a BLM leader who's been targeted by the same malware she
developed for use on Iraqi militias and Eastern European color democracy
activists.

It's a book about predictive policing, surveillance through IoT and
mobile devices, and the projection of white supremacy through farcically
profitable tech contractors. It's a book about political change and what
role tech has to play in it.

It's a book about confronting the compromises you've made on the way to
adulthood, and reorienting your life towards a better future.

The book comes out in Oct, but on August 4, my publisher Tor ooks is
publishing a free "sneak peek" DRM-free ebook that you can pre-order now.

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250802521

I hope you'll snag a copy. This book means a lot to me.

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🥊 Target workers strike over chickenization

Target's app-driven delivery service is the notorious Shipt, a company
with a history of exploitative labor practices, including retaliation
against those who dare to complain.

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/dygxzw/target-shipt-delivery-app-workers-retaliation

Shipt's workers have announced a strike on Jul 15, over a new
"algorithmic pay model" that uses a black-box calculation to determine
how much workers will receive for their labor, cutting their pay by 30-50%.

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/v7gzd8/targets-gig-workers-will-strike-to-protest-switch-to-algorithmic-pay-model

Previously, Shipt workers got a flat $5 plus 7.5% of the order total;
under the new algorithmic system, workers' pay will be determined by a
secret mix of "variables including high store traffic times, street
traffic, and estimated store-to-door travel time."

This was nonconsensually trialled on Shipt workers in several cities who
saw their pay fall by 30-50% (Target blamed some of this wage-theft on a
"glitch"). Shipt workers literally risk their lives in the pandemic to
keep our goods moving.

There were 100k Shipt workers before the pandemic; now there are at
least 110k.

There's a name for the labor practices here: it's called chickenization.

The name comes from what happened to the poultry industry, which is
larger and more profitable than at any time in US history, but which is
also dominated by 3 giant monopolists who have placed poultry farmers in
dire, lethal economic straits.

Chickenized workers don't get to determine how they work; they are not
told how much they'll get paid; they don't know how much the people whom
they serve pay for their work; they have no job security and no benefits.

Chicken farmers are required to buy feed, medicine, and chicks from the
monopolist. They are required to build their chicken coops to
monopolists' specs, taking out $1mm+ mortgages to do so. The monopolists
control the lighting, scheduling, and all other aspects of the work.

The monopolists are the only entities that the farmers can sell their
birds to. When that day comes, monopolists get to name a price and
farmers have to take it, even if it means they lose money in the bargain.

Any complaint results in being shut out of the monopolist's system,
which means you lose your farm and livelihood, and go bankrupt. Suicides
among chicken farmers are sky-high. It's a much more lethally dangerous
job than, say, being a cop.

Farmers who've complained to regulators or lawmakers faced even worse
retaliation - one went into the chicken-coop-maintenance business and
the monopolist barred any farmer from hiring him, depriving him of any
chance of making a living.

Chickenization is the essence of the gig economy: an app tells you
precisely what to do; you have to supply the capital to do the app
company's business, you don't know what you'll earn, you don't know what
your customer pays. You can be fired at any time, for no reason.

People who complain (like Uber drivers who call the cops to report
assaults) get fired and barred for life, stuck with expensive capital
investments that they can't make payments on.

I learned the term "chickenization" last night when reading an advance
copy of Zephyr Teachout's forthcoming and excellent "Break 'Em Up:
Recovering Our Freedom from Big Ag, Big Tech, and Big Money.

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250200891

As Teachout describes, chickenization is coming to every sector of the
economy, and the "innovation" behind app-based gig work is not
technological, it's figuring out how to chickenize another sector of
workers.

From Postmates' chickenization of the entire restaurant sector to
Monsanto's chickenization of the grain market to Shipt's chickenization
of Target's 110,000-person army of delivery people.

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🥊 Big Oil can have you locked up

In 2011, activist Steven Donziger worked with Ecuadoran indigenous
people to secure a $9.5B judgment against Chevron (then Texaco) for
Amazon rainforest pollution. Chevron didn't pay that judgment.

Instead, it embarked upon a campaign of legal-system terrorism that's
seen Donziger under house arrest for a year. The story is incredible,
and it illustrates how US courts have been corrupted to serve
corporations rather than hold them to account.

https://www.jacobinmag.com/2020/07/steven-donziger-chevron

Here's how Chevron converted the US judiciary into a system of literal
private law: first, they countersued Donziger in the court of the SNDY's
Lewis A Kaplan, a judge with a long history of corporate-friendly
activity, who had a sizable investment in Chevron through a fund.

Kaplan suggested the Chevron swear out a racketeering complaint against
Donziger, which they did. But prosectors refused to take up the case.
Then Kaplan invoked an obscure rule that allowed him to appoint a
private firm to serve as public, criminal prosecutors.

The firm Kaplan hired to prosecute Donziger is Seward & Kissel, who were
Chevron's lawyers as recently as 2018, and represents many companies in
Chevron's supply chain.

These white-shoe prosecutors claim that Donziger paid a judge in Ecuador
to write the judgment against Chevron, even though that same judge
(who's been paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by Chevron) later
recanted key elements of his testimony at a World Bank hearing.

Kaplan ordered Donziger to surrender his phone and laptop to the court.
Donziger refused, citing the confidentiality of his clients' private
communications. Kaplan hit him with a $3.4m sanction - the largest in
the history of New York's courts.

Donziger has been under house arrest for a year. He's seeking to have
Chevron's (former) lawyers removed as special prosecutors in his case,
and has been backed by an open letter signed by 29 Nobel laureates and a
coalition of human rights activists.

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🥊 California goes antitrust on Google

(Nearly) every US state is currently investigating Google for antitrust
violations, with two exceptions: Alabama and California.

Now it's just Alabama.

https://www.politico.com/news/2020/07/09/california-google-anti-trust-investigation-355710

California AG Xavier Becerra has announced his own antitrust probe,
separate from all the other states' joint action.

Becerra was last seen intervening in the sale of the .ORG domain to a
rapacious, secretive cabal of private equity looters:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/05/01/icann-can-and-did/#we-won

Google, of course, is a California company, which made both California's
prior absence from the antitrust action, and its entry into the fray,
highly significant.

California's state antitrust standards are much more robust than the
neutered federal rules, which have been gutted by every president since
Reagan.

As James Arkin writes for Politico: "Unlike federal antitrust law,
California’s laws do allow government enforcers to seek restitution or
civil penalties for violations...

"The state also has a history of aggressively pursuing antitrust cases
and has among the largest staffs of any attorneys general devoted to
antitrust and competition issues."

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🥊 2019's highest-paid execs

One thing about the pandemic...we're all in it together. Rich or poor,
they're just no escaping its impact.

jk

Here is how much America's top-paid execs made in 2019.

https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2020-highest-paid-ceos/

* Elon Musk, Tesla: $595.3m

* Tim Cook, Apple: $133.7m

* Tom Rutledge, Charter: $116.9m

* Joseph Ianniello, CBS: $116.6m

* Sumit Singh, Chewy: $108.1m

* Jonathan Gray, Blackstone: $107.6

* Robert Swan, Intel: $99m

* Sundar Pichai, Alphabet: $86.1m

* Satya Nadella, Microsoft: $77.2m

* Douglas Ingram, Sarepta: $70.2m

"Wages as a share of the U.S. economy are near their lowest level since
the Federal Reserve began collecting such data in the 1940s....CEO
compensation has grown more than 900% over the past four decades,
compared with just 12% for the typical worker." -Bloomberg

Also: the highest paid women make a lot less than the highest-paid men:

* Lisa Su, AMD: $55.8m

* Safra Catz, Oracle: $43.4m

* Marillyn Hewson, Lockheed: $32.8m

* Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook: $31.9m

But men or women, $595m or $55.8m, I think we can all agree they've
earned every penny.


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🥊 This day in history

#15yrsago White Wolf kills its pay-for-play policy
https://boingboing.net/2005/07/14/white-wolf-kills-its.html

#15yrsago
http://mapageweb.umontreal.ca/cousined/lego/5-Machines/Turing/Turing.html

#10yrsago Warhammer 40K Potato Head
http://www.irondogstudios.com/images/tater/mek_tater.html

#10yrsago ACTA leaks -- again
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2010/07/acta-so-transparent-the-text-still-has-to-be-leaked/

#10yrsago Mountains of putrid fat scraped off the sewer-walls beneath
Leicester Square
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/walls-of-fat-removed-from-londons-sewers-2025528.html

#5yrsago Laura Poitras sues the US Government to find out why she was
repeatedly detained in airports
https://boingboing.net/2015/07/14/laura-poitras-sues-the-us-gove.html

#5yrsago Database: Old newspaper ads searching for loved ones lost to
slavery https://www.hnoc.org/database/lost-friends/index.html

#1yrago Florida DMV makes millions selling Floridians' data...for
pennies (and you can't opt out)
https://www.wxyz.com/news/national/florida-is-selling-drivers-personal-information-to-private-companies-and-marketing-firms

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🥊 Colophon

Today's top sources: Slashdot (https://slashdot.org/), Naked Capitalism
(https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/).

Currently writing:

* My next novel, "The Lost Cause," a post-GND novel about truth and
reconciliation. Today's progress: 529 words (37636 total).

Currently reading: Anger Is a Gift by Mark Oshiro

Latest podcast: Full Employment:
https://craphound.com/podcast/2020/07/13/full-employment-2/

Upcoming appearances:

"Working as Intended: Surveillance Capitalism is not a Rogue
Capitalism," Jul 21,
https://stanford.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_9AwAiQSmTj2ZjaIsIoTr5A

Latest book:

* "Little Brother/Homeland": A reissue omnibus edition with a new
introduction by Edward Snowden:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250774583; personalized/signed copies
here:
https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1750/July%3A__Little_Brother_%26_Homeland.html

Upcoming books:

* "Poesy the Monster Slayer" (Jul 2020), a picture book about monsters,
bedtime, gender, and kicking ass. Pre-order here:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781626723627. Get a personalized, signed
copy here:
https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1562/_Poesy_the_Monster_Slayer.html.

* "Attack Surface": The third Little Brother book, Oct 20, 2020.
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250757531

This work licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 license.
That means you can use it any way you like, including commerically,
provided that you attribute it to me, Cory Doctorow, and include a link
to pluralistic.net.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Quotations and images are not included in this license; they are
included either under a limitation or exception to copyright, or on the
basis of a separate license. Please exercise caution.

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*When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla* -Joey "Accordion Guy"
DeVilla


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