Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Musk’s Hall of X Mirrors

Over on X it turns out most of that ecosystem is based in Russia, Nigeria, Bangladesh
If you're still using X, the Nazi, porn addict, and spam app, why are you still using

Musk is adored...by bots 😂

New location feature on Elon Musk's X 'weaponised' to spread misinformation

 

Krasnov Cult: Musk Accidentally Proves Most MAGA Accounts On Twitter Live In Russia


Elon Musk’s Worthless, Poisoned Hall of Mirrors

By CHARLIE WARZEL

Charlie Warzel is a staff writer at The Atlantic and the author of its newsletter Galaxy Brain, about technology, media, and big ideas. He can be reached via email.
 He is a co-author of Out of Office: The Big Problem and Bigger Promise of Working From Home. Previously he was a writer at large for The New York Times’ Opinion section and a senior writer at BuzzFeed News






How X blew up its own platform with a new location feature

Over the weekend, Elon Musk’s X rolled out a feature that had the immediate result of sowing maximum chaos. 

The update, called “About This Account,” allows people to click on the profile of an X user and see such information as: which country the account was created in, where its user is currently based, and how many times the username has been changed. Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, said the feature was “an important first step to securing the integrity of the global town square.” Roughly four hours later, with the update in the wild, Bier sent another post: “I need a drink.”



Almost immediately, “About This Account” stated that many prominent and prolific pro-MAGA accounts, which signaled that they were run by “patriotic” Americans, were based in countries such as Nigeria, Russia, India, and Thailand. @MAGANationX, an account with almost 400,000 followers and whose bio says it is a “Patriot Voice for We The People,” is based in “Eastern Europe (Non-EU),” according to the feature, and has changed its username five times since the account was made, last year. 

On X and Bluesky, users dredged up countless examples of fake or misleading rage-baiting accounts posting aggressive culture-war takes to large audiences. An account called “Maga Nadine” claims to be living in and posting from the United States but is, according to X, based in Morocco. An “America First” account with 67,000 followers is apparently based in Bangladesh. Poetically, the X handle @American is based in Pakistan, according to the feature.


At first glance, these revelations appear to confirm what researchers and close observers have long known: that foreign actors (whether bots or humans) are posing as Americans and piping political-engagement bait, mis- and disinformation, and spam into people’s timeline. (X and Musk did not respond to my requests for comment.)


X’s decision to show where accounts are based is, theoretically, a positive step in the direction of transparency for the platform, which has let troll and spam accounts proliferate since Musk’s purchase, in late 2022. And yet the scale of the deception—as revealed by the “About” feature—suggests that in his haste to turn X into a political weapon for the far right, Musk may have revealed that the platform he’s long called “the number 1 source of news on Earth” is really just a worthless, poisoned hall of mirrors.

Read: Elon Musk is trying to rewrite history


If only it were that simple. Adding to the confusion of the feature’s rollout are multiple claims from users that the “About” function has incorrectly labeled some accounts. The X account of Hank Green, a popular YouTuber, says his account is based in Japan; Green told me Sunday that he’d never been to Japan. Bier posted on X that there were “a few rough edges that will be resolved by Tuesday,” referring to potentially incorrect account information.

 (On some accounts, a note is appended pointing out that the user may be operating X through a proxy connection, such as a VPN, which would produce misleading information.) For now, the notion that there might be false labels could give any bad actor the ability to claim they’ve been mislabeled.


This is the final post-truthification of a platform that long ago pivoted toward a maxim used by the journalist Peter Pomerantsev to refer to post-Soviet Russia: Nothing is true and everything is possible. This is how you get people apparently faking that the Department of Homeland Security’s account was created in Israel (a claim that has 2 million views and counting); both DHS and Bier had to intervene and assure users that the government’s account was not a foreign actor. 

High-profile right-wing accounts that previously served as yes-men for Musk—such as Ian Miles Cheong, a Malaysian who purportedly lives in the United Arab Emirates and posts incessant, racist drivel about American politics—have melted down over the platform’s decision to dox users.

Across the site, people are using the feature to try to score political points. Prominent posters have argued that the mainstream media have quoted mislabeled accounts without “minimum due diligence.” This nightmare is not limited to trolls or influencers. On Sunday, the Israel Foreign Ministry posted a screenshot of an account that purported to be reporting news from Gaza, next to a screenshot saying it was based in Poland.
 “Reporting from Gaza is fake & not reliable. Makes you wonder how many more fake reports have you read?” In response, the person in question posted a video on X on Sunday evening insisting he was in Gaza, living in a tent after military strikes killed his wife and three children. “I’ve been living in Gaza, I am living now in Gaza, and I will continue living in Gaza until I die.”
Watching all of this unfold has been dizzying. On Sunday, I encountered a post claiming that, according to the “About” feature, a popular and verified Islamophobic, pro-Israel account (that posts aggressively about American politics, including calling for Zohran Mamdani’s deportation) was based in “South Asia” and had changed its username 15 times. 
When I went to X to verify, I noticed that this same account had spent Saturday posting screenshots of other political accounts, accusing them of being fake “Pakistani Garbage.” This is X in 2025: Potentially fake accounts crying at other potentially fake accounts that they aren’t real, all while refusing to acknowledge that they themselves aren’t who they say they are—a Russian nesting doll of bullshit.
There are a few ways to interpret all of this. First is that this is a story about incentives. Platforms not only goad users into posting more and more extreme and provocative content by rewarding them with attention; they also help people monetize that attention. Just before the 2016 election, BuzzFeed’s Craig Silverman and Lawrence Alexander uncovered a network of Macedonian teens who recognized that America’s deep political divisions were a lucrative vein to exploit and pumped out bogus news articles that were designed to go viral on Facebook, which they then put advertisements on. 
Today it’s likely that at least some of these bogus MAGA accounts make pennies on the dollar via X’s Creator program, which rewards engaging accounts with a cut of advertising revenue; many of them have the telltale blue check mark.
As Bellingcat’s Eliot Higgins noted on Bluesky, X’s architecture turns what should be an information ecosystem into a performative one. “Actors aren’t communicating; they’re staging provocations for yield,” he wrote. “The result is disordered discourse: signals detached from truth, identity shaped by escalation, and a feedback loop where the performance eclipses reality itself.” Beyond the attentional and financial rewards, platforms such as X have gutted their trust-and-safety or moderation teams in service of a bastardized notion of free-speech maximalism—creating the conditions for this informational nightmare.
The second lesson here is that X appears to be inflating the culture wars in ultimately unknowable but certainly important ways. On X this weekend, I watched one (seemingly real) person coming to terms with this fact. “Fascinating to look through every account I’ve disagreed with and find out they’re all fake,” they posted on Saturday. 
To be certain, X is not the main cause for American political division or arguing online, but it is arguably one of its greatest amplifiers. X is still a place where many journalists and editors in newsrooms across America share and consume political news. Political influencers, media personalities, and even politicians will take posts from supposed ordinary accounts and hold them up as examples of their ideological opponents’ dysfunction, corruption, or depravity.
How many of these accounts, arguments, or news cycles were a product of empty rage bait, proffered by foreign or just fake actors? Recent examples suggest the system is easily gamed: 32 to 37 percent of the online activity around Cracker Barrel’s controversial logo change this summer was driven by fake accounts, according to consultants hired by the restaurant chain. 
It’s impossible to know the extent of this manufactured outrage, but it doesn’t necessarily matter—the presence of so much fakery makes it possible to cast aspersions on any piece of information, any actor, or any conversation to the point that the truth is effectively meaningless.
It’s worth stepping back to see this for what it is: the complete perversion of the actual premise of not just social media but the internet. Although this crisis centers on X, most major social-media networks have fallen victim to variants of this problem. Fakery and manipulation are inevitable for platforms at this scale. Even when Twitter and Facebook were more committed to battling outside influence or enforcing platform rules, they were playing whack-a-mole. 
The idealism that these companies were founded with—Mark Zuckerberg wanted to connect the world, and Musk has said he wants to maximize free speech (Twitter’s original founders used similar language)—has decayed as they steered their products toward maximizing profits and playing politics. The self-proclaimed techno-utopians in Silicon Valley who have helped build, invest in, or cheerlead for these companies have enabled this ruin. They’ve traded reality for profit and prioritized technologies that aren’t just soulless and amoral, but inhuman in the most literal sense of the word.
A rational response to all of this would be for people to log off. Indeed, that now seems like the least likely, but most optimistic, conclusion—that a group of people who realize they’re being goaded into participation in an algorithmic fun house decide to opt out of a psychologically painful discourse trap altogether. We should all be so lucky.

The skills tax professionals need in today’s landscape

 


       Booker inspirations

       At The Guardian the authors shortlisted for this year's Booker Prize -- whose winner is to be announced tomorrow -- explain: ‘I had a year to write it from scratch’: the 2025 Booker finalists on the stories behind their novels


Good news on the AI slop front in Social Media

The Indicator: “Two platform updates this week gave me a rare feeling of hope about AI slop. On Wednesday, TikTok announced it would pilot new controls to let users filter how much AI-generated content they see on their For You feeds. The platform already allows users to dial up and down certain topics like current affairs, dance, or fitness. It’s now promising to test letting people decide how much synthetic video they want to see. The move follows Pinterest’s lead; Bluesky users can also filter out AI content by subscribing to a third-party labeler. I would bet that more platforms will follow. (Our guide to AI labelsoutlines down how different platforms handle AI content, and gets continuously updated.)…”

See also CNET – AI Slop Has Turned Social Media Into an Antisocial Wasteland. Commentary: Platforms that once helped us stay in touch have become fractured and impersonal — and AI slop and deepfakes are making it so much worse.


Drone Resources 2025 – This article by Marcus P. Zillman includes links to a range of guides for drone pilots interested in photography, medicine, civil security, real estate, e-commerce, as well as product reviews and buying guides.


Will you still be paying off a home loan in retirement?


 Thinking about retiring soon? Here’s where to start


The UK is outlawing ticket scalping?


How the internet made the far right


NYT on Solvej Balle.  And from The New Yorker


Claims about risk and prediction markets



The Librarians – documentary film on censorship

Via Kottke –  The Librarians – As part of the fascist war on “woke”, tens of thousands of books have been pulled from the shelves of libraries around the country over the past few years. On the front line are the nation’s librarians, “first responders in the fight for democracy and our First Amendment rights”. The Librarians is a documentary film about this latest wave of censorship & persecution of librarians; here’s the trailer. From a review on RogerEbert.com


 · Education & Academia · Slogans & Quotations · UK affairs

We’re told that students perform better when exposed to “different formats”. This is fair enough in principle, though the guidelines decline to specify what these formats might be, beyond implying there will be an impressive number of them. One can already picture the future: a single course requiring essays, posters, podcasts, puppet shows and a short stop-motion film made from Play-Doh – each designed to develop the student’s confidence, creativity and capacity to perform self-expression in increasingly unhinged ways.

Next, the document warns that “Standard Academic English” (once known as “English”) is an oppressive tool that advantages “already privileged students”. The implication, apparently, is that requiring coherent writing is a form of violence.

This is the educational equivalent of a gym announcing that push-ups are discriminatory because they favour those with upper-body strength.

– Michael Rainsborough


Don’t argue with strangers… and 11 more rules to survive the information crisis

The Guardian: “Feeling overwhelmed by divisive opinions, endless rows and unreliable facts?…sadly we can expect this to get worse before it gets better. But there are tools and techniques we can use in the current information crisis. There are ways we can be better equipped to deal with the era we find ourselves in…Here’s how to weather the data storm..”

  • 1 Find a fact-checker you trust – Just as after the print revolution in early modern Europe, it is now massively easier to access scientific information. In a few seconds I can find a video clearly explaining particle physics, chemical bonds or how vaccines work. And at the same time, it is also extremely easy to find very plausible-looking information that is completely false about how vaccines are actually terrible and suggesting solutions that I really don’t even want to write down here. But unlike people living through the print revolution, we have sophisticated and trusted information-dispersal networks that are still fairly robust. The BBC has a good fact-checking service. Snopes and PolitiFact are good. There are others, and it’s worth getting familiar with them. Fact-checking is a specialised skill, though, and it is becoming more challenging as the fakes get ever more convincing…”

Inside the old church where one trillion webpages are being saved

CNN via MSN: “Just blocks from the Presidio of San Francisco, the national park at the base of the Golden Gate Bridge, stands a gleaming white building, its façade adorned with eight striking gothic columns. But what was once the home of a Christian Scientist church, is now the holy grail of Internet history — the Internet Archive, a non-profit library run by a group of software engineers and librarians, who for nearly 30 years have been saving the web one page at a time. Inside the stained-glass-adorned sanctuary, the sounds of church sermons have been replaced by the hum of servers, where the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine preserves web pages. The Wayback Machine, a tool used by millions every day, has proven critical for academics and journalists searching for historical information on what corporations, people and governments have published online in the past, long after their websites have been updated or changed. For many, the Wayback Machine is like a living history of the internet, and it just logged its trillionth page last month. Archiving the web is more important and more challenging than ever before. The White House in January ordered vast amounts of government webpages to be taken down. Meanwhile, artificial intelligence is blurring the line between what’s real and what’s artificially generated — in some ways replacing the need to visit websites entirely. And more of the internet is now hidden behind paywalls or tucked in conversations with AI chatbots. It’s the Internet Archive’s job to figure out how to preserve it all…

The rise of artificial intelligence and AI chatbots means the Internet Archive is changing how it records the history of the internet. In addition to web pages, the Internet Archive now captures AI-generated content, like ChatGPT answers and those summaries that appear at the top of Google search results. The Internet Archive team, which is made up of librarians and software engineers, are experimenting with ways to preserve how people get their news from chatbots by coming up with hundreds of questions and prompts each day based on the news, and recording both the queries and outputs, [says Wayback Machine Director Mark Graham]…Archivists use bespoke machines to digitize books page by page, livestreamingtheir work on YouTube for all to see (alongside some lo-fi music). Record players churn out vintage tunes from 1920s and 1940s, and the building houses every type of media console for any type of content imaginable, from microfilm, to CDs and satellite television. (The Internet Archive preserves music, television, books and video games, too)… “There are a lot of people that are just passionate about the cause. There’s a cyberpunk atmosphere,” Annie Rauwerda, a Wikipedia editor and social media influencer, said at a party thrown at the Internet Archive’s headquarters to celebrate reaching a trillion pages “The internet (feels) quite corporate when I use it a lot these days, but you wouldn’t know from the people here.”


The skills tax professionals need in today’s landscape

The second commissioner of taxation has outlined the necessary and crucial skills tax professionals, advisers, agents, policymakers and administrators need in today’s landscape.

24 November 2025 • By Imogen Wilson 
Share this article on:

Earlier this year at the ATAX International Conference on Tax Administration, Kirsten Fish, second commissioner of taxation, shared why tax professionals must remain ahead of the curve while keeping their core skills intact.

Despite a focus on change and the future of technology within the tax space, Fish made clear that tax professionals would always need law, regulation and technical tax knowledge, communication and negotiation skills, attention to detail, as well as ethics and public interest.

“In 2025, globalisation has transformed the size, scale, and nature of transactions and business operations. Technology has enabled new industries to emerge, large businesses have complex and sophisticated supply chains, and even small businesses can operate globally, selling products and services through online digital platforms,” she said.

“Individuals are deriving income and gains and trading new digital assets and high frequency through new types of legal transactions. Technological developments, such as automation and AI, have changed the way tax professionals work. Traditional manual tasks are being replaced by automated processes and AI tools.”

It was noted that technology had also changed the way professionals engaged with tax authorities, yet confirmed the evolution would not replace tax professionals and their knowledge, skills and attributes, but merely changed how they worked.

It went without saying that tax professionals would always require a deep understanding and grasp of tax law and regulations, Fish said.

“Tax professionals must understand that the tax law exists and applies in the context of the operation of the general law and have a current working knowledge of contract law, corporations law, the law of trusts and partnerships, real property and intellectual property law, aspects of international law and more,” she said.

“The general law that tax practitioners must maintain currency will itself continue to evolve and develop.”

“As globalisation and technology drive changes in business structures, operations, transactions and even the nature of assets and payments, these will necessarily drive changes in the regulatory landscape and general law that tax practitioners must understand beyond those traditional areas and into the realms of smart contracts, digital assets, payment regulation, automated decision making and privacy.”

In terms of new skills, Fish said it was imperative that tax professionals questioned and tested the outputs produced by automated processes, software, AI and other technology were correct.

Tax professionals should now have the skills and knowledge to identify irregularities and exercise judgement based on their human experience and broader knowledge of the circumstances in which they operate, therefore should never assume or accept the outputs produced by something automated as correct.

Based on their strategic role, Fish said tax professionals needed to have a broad understanding of business operations, strategy, financial management and industry-specific information and challenges so they could effectively and efficiently provide “holistic advice”.

“In this, top tax professionals are able to adequately and appropriately assess tax risk and provide solutions to address it within the risk appetite of their client or organisation,” Fish said.

“In doing so, they do not look merely at the technical issues and consider whether an interpretation or position is ‘available’. Top tax professionals consider matters holistically, in the commercial context, with an understanding of the consequences of the position adopted for the business, the tax system, and the likely attitudes of the administrator.”

Attributes were also highlighted as increasingly important for top tax professionals, with ethics and integrity being named as the most fundamental.

Australia needed tax professionals who were trusted and trustworthy, given the nation's reliance on tax to fund government services and the tax system's reliance on the existence of tax professionals.

According to Fish and the ATO, tax professionals had the highest possible standards of personal and professional ethics and integrity as they had to stand by their convictions, even in challenging situations.

“With the many and varied skills that a tax expert is expected to have today, you might think they are a unicorn. But I would argue that actually what we're really looking for in a tax expert is someone that is human,” Fish said.

“As technology advances, it is our humanness and human skills become even more essential and valuable for tax professionals. With curiosity, judgment, integrity, and influence, today's tax professionals are well-placed to adapt to future changes.”