Wednesday, July 08, 2026

Trump Wants YOUR Medical Data for His Drug War

 

Apple ‘Hide My Email’ Vulnerability Reveals Peoples’ Real Email Addresses

404 Media: “…Hide My Email is part of Apple’s paid iCloud+ product. It lets users generate an anonymous email address which they can then use to sign up to services or email people with instead of their personal email. These email addresses are often two random words and a number ending in the @icloud.com domain. 




This can be useful for all sorts of reasons: to reduce spam; to create an account you may not want linked to your personal address and identity; and to not have your personal information held by a site that may later suffer a data breach. I personally have generated more than 400 email addresses with Hide My Email, for example. To test the issue I generated a new Hide My Email address and provided it to Murphy. 

Around five minutes later, he replied with my real email address linked to my Apple account which was supposed to be hidden. “We don’t know the full scope of the issue, but in our limited tests with volunteers, 100% of Hide My Email addresses were exploitable,” Murphy said…”


Trump Wants YOUR Medical Data for His Drug War

Zeteo: “The Trump administration’s new drug strategy does more than escalate the war on fentanyl.



DOJ Tax is Hiring

Trevor Sikes, “DOJ Seeks More Tax Attorneys as Caseload Increases” (Tax Notes, June 29, 2026):

The Justice Department’s Tax Litigation Branch of the Civil Division is looking to bolster its workforce following a significant exodus of attorneys and an increased caseload, according to a government official.

“During the last couple of years, we’ve lost some significant amount of staff,” Joshua Wu, deputy assistant attorney general for the Tax Litigation Branch, said June 26 at a conference sponsored by the New York University School of Professional Studies.

Staffing has decreased about 30 to 40 percent since last year, while the Tax Litigation Branch caseload has continued to increase, according to Wu. The Civil Division has 4,413 pending tax trial matters — an increase of 138 from last year — and 373 appellate tax cases, which is 56 more than last year, he said.

The Analog Life: 50 Ways to Unplug and Feel Human Again

Inside Hook: “…I’ve put together a list of ways to live a more analog lifestyle. As I make the rules here, I’ve stretched the definition of “analog” a bit to accommodate a reasonably modern lifestyle. I’m not suggesting you cancel your wifi. This is more about adopting sustained, analog-adjacent routines — and while there are 50 here, I certainly wouldn’t recommend adopting all of them. Just cling to the ones that ring true. Perhaps they’re something to aspire to, or something you usedto do, before we got into this mess of an era. 

These ideas are meant to create friction — to slow you down, interrupt default behaviors and make digital life feel a little less automatic. More than nostalgia, the analog life is about resistance. From old-school rituals, to single-use devices, to website blockers, these small interventions will help you live like a person again — instead of a user…”



The cost of being American

Brookings Institute:

  • As the country heads into its 250th birthday this weekend, more than 40% of American households are struggling to make ends meet, and the reasons why look different depending on where you live, what you drive, and how you get to work. To understand why, Brookings researchers delved into the details—how the rising costs of housing, energy, and transportation are driving the affordability crisis. Here’s what they found. The price of getting around—and everything else.
  • Congress is about to spend five years and untold billions on roads. Is it spending wisely? Millions of us will be driving a lot this weekend. So it makes sense to begin with roads: The House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee’s BUILD America 250 Act would set the terms for federal transportation funding for the next half-decade. Adie Tomer and Ben Swedberg explainwhat the bill gets right (it gives states flexibility with what to spend on), where it falls short (it charges electric car owners too much in registration fees), and how Congress can fix these flaws. Tomer also recently led a related discussion with government leaders and industry experts on another transportation topic: why American transit buses cost so much more than they should, and how to fix that.
  • Gas prices are up. EV policy is a patchwork. Fluctuating oil prices driven by the Iran war have sparked renewed interest in electric vehicles. But federal support for EV adoption has weakened, leaving a patchwork of state programs in its place. Shriya Methkupally and Mark Muro examine EV policy across all 50 states, finding that leaders like California and Massachusetts are doing more, while many other states continue to lag on charging infrastructure and purchase incentives


Telling Problem about Telstra

"Whatever brings you down will eventually make you stronger." ?
 ~ Alex Morgan

 

Telstra investigating widespread network outage

By Jack Gramenz and David Swan

Telstra customers may be unable to reach Triple Zero, police in two states have warned, as a nationwide Telstra outage left thousands of customers across every mainland capital unable to make calls or use mobile data.

NSW Police said Triple Zero systems were not affected, but it warned that some customers calling from Telstra devices may experience difficulties reaching emergency services.

Telstra is investigating a widespread network outage on Wednesday.SAM MOOY

Victoria Police said it was aware of disruptions affecting some mobile and landline services, but there was no evidence that the outage had affected frontline responses.

More Futbol - What Planantir CEO Told CNBC and Why Law Firms Should Listen

 "Some people think futbol is a matter of life and death. I assure you, it's much more serious than that." 

— Bill Shankly


Argentina 🇦🇷 beats Egypt 🇪🇬 3:2 even though Egypt was winning for a long time 2:0 …

Swiss 🇨🇭 won on penalties 4:3 against Colombia 🇨🇴 


Not to brag or anything, but my Bluesky bunch have supported lucky 🍀 teams … so far 

Let’s hope these predictions come true …

So many are rooting for Belgium to go all the way so they can do the two-handed jackoff dance when they get the trophy.


Quarterfinal prediction France 2–1 Morocco Spain 2–1 Belgium England 2–1 Norway (AET) Argentina 2–1 Switzerland Predicted semifinals 🇫🇷 France vs 🇪🇸 Spain → France advances 🏴 England vs 🇦🇷 Argentina → Argentina advances Predicted Final France vs Argentina Predicted Champion 🏆 France (3–1 vs Argentina)

I don't know how France received three yellows and Paraguay none when the Paraguay side was acting like old-school NHL goons. But yeah, look into that ref and see if he's into sportsbooks or "prediction markets."


What Planantir CEO Told CNBC and Why Law Firms Should Listen

Brainyacts: What Karp Told CNBC and Why Law Firms Should ListenPalantir’s CEO went on CNBC and bluntly described on live TV the exact trap your firm is walking into with AI. Not “AI is scary.” Sharper: you can pay a fortune, get modest value back, and quietly hand a vendor the three things that make your firm your firm: your client data, your work product, and your method.



The Declaration of Independence, America at 250 and Past Centennials

Internet Archive Blogs: “As America celebrates its Semiquincentennial (250th anniversary) this year, explore a curated list of materials preserved at the Internet Archive documenting the nation’s founding, the Declaration of Independence, past ephemera created for the nation’s anniversaries, and new efforts to capture and preserve the materials published by democracies.

  • Democracy’s Library – The Internet Archive’s Democracy’s Library project helps preserve critical information and publications produced by federal, state, provincial, and municipal governments, and makes them available for users to access and to anyone wanting to build new services on these public documents. Learn more about Democracy’s Library.
  • Declaration of Independence – The National Archives of the United States lists three documents as the “Founding Documents”: the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the Bill of Rights.

Don’t Let Trump’s Lawyers Bury Jack Smith’s Report

Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University via LinkedIn – “Three years ago this month, the Justice Department indicted Donald Trump under the Espionage Act for concealing and refusing to return classified documents—the first time a president had been charged with a crime, let alone one so grave. But President Trump hasn’t had to face trial, and he hasn’t had to fully account to the public for his actions, either.  

There are a few reasons for this. The Justice Department abandoned the criminal case against Trump after he returned to the White House in 2025, citing a long-standing policy against the prosecution of sitting presidents. Trump’s personal lawyers have worked closely with the Justice Department, now staffed by Trump’s former personal lawyers, to bury the official report about the criminal investigation into Trump’s conduct. 

Meanwhile, Judge Aileen Cannon in Florida has effectively prohibited Jack Smith, the special counsel who wrote the report, from talking about the report or even testifying about it to Congress. In The New York Times this morning, I explain why the suppression of Smith’s report is so disturbing and why the report’s disclosure is so essential:

[I]f presidents are to be immune from prosecution while in office, it’s all the more important that Congress and the public have access to the information that would empower them to hold the president accountable in other ways…

Mr. Smith investigated Mr. Trump for conduct that appears to have entailed an astonishing betrayal of the public’s trust as well as the nation’s security. Legislators and ordinary citizens should have the opportunity to read the report for themselves. It is incoherent to immunize the president from prosecution on the theory that he can be held accountable through the political process—and then to deny Congress and the public information that would help them do so.

As I explain in the essay, which you can read here [Note – beSpacific provided free access], the Knight Institute is suing for the release of Smith’s report, asserting that the public has a right of access to the report under the First Amendment and the common law. Judge Cannon rejected our arguments, but we’ve challenged her ruling and a federal appeals court in Miami will hear oral argument in the case in the 



Wikipedia Is Battling for the Soul of the Internet

The New York Times Gift article : “The internet’s largest stockpile of free knowledge is under threat from MAGA, A.I. and foreign autocrats. A bibliophile ex-ambassador is here to help. Wikipedia is in peril. In a world where trust in truth is crumbling, the grande dame of collective online fact-gathering is under threat on every front. 

The MAGA right, with Elon Musk at the fore, is slinging accusations of political bias and antisemitism and has even questioned the site’s nonprofit status. Artificial intelligence is raiding the encyclopedia’s resources and draining attention. Repressive governments have hauled its volunteer editors into penal colonies. In Wikipedia’s 25-year history, it has never had to fight this hard. 

The organization that supports the site, the Wikimedia Foundation, is increasing its lobbying budget and advertising in Times Square. It is charging companies like Google and Meta that gobble up the encyclopedia’s 65 million articles, and throttling access for certain scrapers. 

And it is expanding its human rights team to better protect volunteers against rising harassment, surveillance and retaliation. For an organization that holds neutrality as a cardinal rule, it is a lot of conflict, requiring Wikimedia to go on the offensive — diplomatically, of course…”

Tuesday, July 07, 2026

Forget Flock. Now The Cameras Can Read Your Pockets Too.

 What they hate in you is missing in them.


The Musicians (Les Musiciens) is a 2025 French comedy-drama directed by Grégory Magne. It follows a wealthy heiress who unites four virtuosos to play priceless Stradivarius instruments in the Champagne region to honor her late father. The musicians clash until they bring in the reclusive composer to save the performance.


Musicians, The 

The enchanting new comedy of manners from acclaimed writer/director Grégory Magne (Perfumes), THE MUSICIANS stars Valérie Donzelli as a wealthy heiress whose plan to stage a landmark concert is derailed by the clashing egos of the virtuosos recruited for the performance.

Astrid Thompson (Donzelli) is determined to honour her late industrialist father’s final wish: unite four priceless Stradivarius-stringed instruments for the premiere recital of a new composition by his favourite artist, to be live-streamed for music lovers globally. With just six days to rehearse, a quartet is assembled, but the dream quickly unravels: the musicians, blinded by their differences, are seemingly incapable of working together. With the deadline fast approaching, Astrid tries to coax the reclusive composer of the score, Charlie Beaumont (Frédéric Pierrot), out from creative seclusion in the desperate hope of salvaging the event.

French language, English subtitles.

An impromptu jam is the best scene in “The Musicians,” an offhand, fireside performance of a classic American folk lament made famous by Bill Monroe, Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton, Robert Plant and Allison Krause, Nirvana and Lead Belly

“In the Pines” is a tune every “musician” should and would know, plucked and bowed and sung with geniune soul here by musicians who know “classical music” didn’t end with Beethoven or Tchaikovsky.

In the Pines


Forget Flock. Now The Cameras Can Read Your Pockets Too.

The Leonardo Patent That Turns Your Devices Into a Location Fingerprint and Forecasts Where You’ll Go Next – The patent is US 12,236,780 B2, “Systems and Methods for Electronic Signature Tracking and Analysis.” It was granted on February 25, 2025, to Leonardo US Cyber and Security Solutions — the American arm of Leonardo, the Italian defense conglomerate. 




It is the second patent in a family behind a product called ELSAG SignalTrace. And the specification describes, in the company’s own filing, two striking capabilities. The first: once the system has watched you a few times, it no longer needs the camera. In the patent’s words, it “will be able to detect the likely presence of a vehicle and its associated license plate without visual information, e.g., without the use of a camera.” 

The license-plate reader is the training wheel. Once the model learns you, the reader can come off. The second is the one that moves this out of surveillance and into something closer to prophecy. The system, the patent says, “allows an investigator to forecast the presence of a violation type, vehicle, or group of vehicles across time and location.” Not where you were. Where you will be. Nobody reported this patent. The story that ran last month — and it was a good one — was about the first patent, and the product it powers. This is the part that came after…

Here is what that brochure says, in Leonardo’s own words. SignalTrace builds what it calls a “unique, trackable ‘electronic fingerprint’” from the devices you carry. Its list of “Tracked Device Types” is not vague. It names key cards. Wearables — “watches, fitness trackers.” Wireless headphones. Your car’s tire-pressure sensors and infotainment system. And, in a detail that reads like satire until you sit with it, your pet’s microchip…”

See also Proton – Forget Flock. Now The Cameras Can Read Your Pockets Too. A defence contractor called Leonardo has decided that reading your plate is no longer enough. Their new system, ELSAG SignalTrace, reads everything else you’re carrying. You drive past a sensor, and it doesn’t just photograph the car. 

Instead, it grabs the wireless signals leaking out of every device inside it: your phone, your smartwatch, your earbuds, your fitness tracker, the car’s own Bluetooth, tyre pressure sensors, the key fob, and in some cases, even your pet’s microchip. 

Then it ties all of that to your numberplate and stores these data for later. It is, as far as branding goes, refreshingly honest. The product page’s own subheading is “Identify Suspects by the Electronic Devices They Use.”…he system works because almost every device you own is shouting a more-or-less stable identifier into the air whether you asked it to or not. 

As we have covered partially in a video before, these come in the form of Bluetooth, Wi-Fi requests, RFID, and the radios baked into your car. SignalTrace doesn’t have to break into any of it; it’s not hacking anything, just listening and storing…”




The Brand Ledger

Worse on Purpose: Tracking the brands that got worse on purpose — and the ones that didn’t. The Brand Ledger tracks 215 brands across tools, bags, apparel, eyewear, and footwear. Who owns them, what they used to be, whether they’re still worth buying. Updated as things change.

Search the Brand Ledger

55 - The Onion Rolls Out New InfoWars Website After Taking Over Alex Jones’ Platform

 A day peppered with dinner Spain 🇪🇸 beating Portugal 🇵🇹 1:0 Belgium 🇧🇪 beating America 🇺🇸  4:1 



And special birthday punj punj - 55 Birthday 🎊


Part of it depends on whether they believe personality is fixed or constantly changing.

TIGTA: The IRS Provided Addresses for Nearly 47,000 Persons to ICE

 The £17 billion of tax HMRC is choosing not to collect



In early June, the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration released a lightly redacted report on the IRS’s implementation of its April 2025 data-sharing agreement with the Department of Homeland Security and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The report focuses on the IRS’s processes and controls for responding to ICE requests for taxpayer address information, rather than the legality of the information-sharing agreement itself.

Below the fold, links, excerpts, and further coverage from Politico on DHS and ICE’s efforts to acquire Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers—which can be issued by the IRS to undocumented persons—from private providers through procurement contracts. These private-sector vectors, of course, have been criticized as an end run around court orders blocking IRS information-sharing with DHS and ICE.

Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, The IRS Provided Addresses for Nearly 47,000 Persons to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Report No. 2026-IE-R010 (June 4, 2026):

Our evaluation found that, before releasing address information on individual taxpayers, the IRS developed an automated process to match ICE data to IRS records. However, the criteria were unable to identify and match the records accurately and consistently. . . .

We also found that ICE did not meet [redacted] safeguarding standards prior to signing the data-sharing agreement. The IRS performs a safeguard review of an agency receiving federal tax information. This review evaluates an agency’s compliance with the safeguard requirements. The IRS then issues a Safeguard Review Report with findings to the agency. Our review of the report for ICE found that [redacted] findings remained open at the time of the data transfer. . . .

No recommendations were made in this report. We plan to share our concerns regarding the security findings with the DHS Office of Inspector General.

Bernie Becker, DHS’s ID Collection Efforts, Politico Weekly Tax (June 22, 2026):

Immigration and Customs Enforcement agreed to a new data subscription contract this month for Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers, to help assist Homeland Security investigators in fraud investigations . . . .

Related TaxProf Blog coverage:

Monday, July 06, 2026

Australia warns of fake crypto trading platforms and apps; commonly red used in crypto romance frauds

 San Diego: Man from China gets 12.5 years prison; ran a ring of couriers who collected $27 million from victims of tech support, government impersonation and refund frauds; changed money into crypto and sent it to India, keeping 18%

 
Rhode Island: Two executives of company that provided telco services to businesses in India they knew were tech support frauds plead guilty
 
Elderly California couple dead after wife sent large sums to fraudster pretending to be Tom Selleck; apparently husband killed her and then himself
 
Is that “local” business really where it says it is?  In the last issue I covered the FTC’s recent case against Premium Home Services, which ran google ads and offered plumbing, electrical, and other home repair services with “local” addresses and phones along with great (fake) reviews. But at least 10,000 victims found that calls really went to overseas call centers, who collected money and then tried, often unsuccessfully, to find someone who could appear and do the work. It is troubling that anyone would be able to game the online system this way, thought I fear that (at least) fake florists and locksmiths use the same tactics.  More law enforcement here – not to mention better work by Google – might be a real benefit to consumers
 
Review and Recommendation: I heartily recommend a series of fiction books by CJ Box that all involve Wyoming Fish and Game agent Joe Pickett.  They each have some sort of crime involving the state -- though these are not typical mystery novels. And I think they are great for any sort of audience.
 

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraudromance fraud; BEC fraudsweepstakes/lottery fraud,  tech support fraudromance fraud money mulescrooked movers, government impostersonline vehicle sale scamsrental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the worldHumorFTC and CFPBBenefit TheftScam CompoundsBusiness Email compromise fraud Bitcoin and Crypto FraudRansomware and data breachesATM Skimming                                                       Jamaica and Lottery FraudRomance Fraud and Sextortion