This week, both our winners on the insightful side come in response to our post about Google blocking news sites in California because of bad link tax laws, and specifically in reply to a commenter who suggested the link tax would just be “Google giving back” money. In first place, it’s an anonymous reply:
What. Any money google earns through ads on their own products is purely from value of googles services. The links the the news sites do not contain the news itself. That’s like saying the yellow pages is pizza. And Chinese food. And Mexican.
In case this is not blindly obvious: that’s bat shit crazy.
The news sites have their content. And google is only making it easy for people to get to it. If the news sites can’t make any money off it: That’s like Restaurants blaming the yellow pages for them going out of business.
And in second place, it’s Stephen T. Stone making a different version of the point:
Irrelevant. To charge for links is to undercut the basic functionality of the Internet for the sake of profit. Google, Twitter, Facebook, or any other interactive web service or website should have no obligation to pay for the right to link to a newspaper’s website.
For editor’s choice on the insightful side, we start out with one more comment on that post, this time from another anonymous commenter making a very simple and important point:
Taxes disincentivize the taxed behavior. If you tax links, you’re disincentivizing linking. This is not rocket surgery.
Next, it’s still another anonymous commenter, this time on our post about the possibility of a TikTok ban, in reply to a commenter trying to shift the burden of proof and demand a “debunking” of fears about TikTok:
You can’t “debunk a concern”. People will have a moral panic over whatever they like in service of any number of agendas.
The actual problem, though, is that’s all you have: Concern, and claims. Bring evidence of privacy issues unique to TikTok, and/or influence issues caused by TikTok (while not ignoring the First Amendment). Then others can support or debunk your evidence with additional evidence. That’s how this works. Make a testable claim, then test it, then show your work and the evidence produced by testing. It is no one else’s job to counter things that don’t exist, but lucky you, articles like the one above are already doing just that.
Over on the funny side, our first place winner is NotTheMomma with a comment about other child safety laws that would block sites:
Come on now, Mike, this will work, look at how prohibition went? Most of these people pushing for this were alive then.
In second place, it’s bonk with another comment about TikTok panic, and people comparing it to fentanyl:
I heard from a friend’s friend that they had a brother that was so addicted to social media he died. It took the paramedics ten minutes to dislodge the smartphone he had snorted, but he had already perished at that point.
For editor’s choice on the funny side, we’ve got two more anonymous comments. The first is another response to “TikTok as fentanyl”:
Projection?
… I’m starting to think that the folks in charge are just projecting their own insecurities brought on by years of just believing whatever entity was waving money in their face.
Finally, it’s a comment about the rise of “chemtrail” legislation:
WHEREAS, it is documented, among those within the pseudoscience of bullshitery, that the Earth is flat, and that the Earth is at the center of the universe.
WHEREAS, the constant Pi is commonly referred to as an irrational number, it will from now on be known as 3.
We have the best science, no one has better science than we do. Did you land on the moon? No? Hahaha
That’s all for this week, folks!
Not in general! We do plan to run a few promos on episodes of the Techdirt podcast, and maybe put some teaser excerpts from this podcast into the Techdirt feed between regular episodes - plus at some point Ben will be joining Mike on the Techdirt Podcast to talk about the launch of Ctrl-Alt-Speech. But other than that additional stuff, the Techdirt Podcast will be proceeding as normal!
I dunno, I think it lacks a certain je ne sais quoi unique to his particular personality disorder.
lol this comment is like an unholy hybrid of a Linda Yaccarino tweet and a Donald Trump tweet
yeah, my bad! Sorry - fixed now
whoops, my bad! I messed up in my copy-pasting! Afraid it was Rhizome's comment that won - fixing it now
I'm fond of this boss music from Pikmin too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cXUkxWx40H8
I'm not personally the type to download and listen to an album of retro chiptunes themselves, but there are indeed a lot of bangers in the world of nintendo music: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hASvFH3w1Ik
Very little of the content in the game even has anything to do with political viewpoints because, contrary to what you might believe, political speech is only a small slice of the content that moderators deal with.
whoops! fixed, thanks
Could definitely package it up as a PC game. Mobile is a lot tougher - the interface doesn't currently support screens below a certain size, and it also relies on mouseover tooltips for conveying important (if technically not 100% critical) information.
Yeah - we certainly investigated engines (Twine and Inkle were our top contenders) but ultimately it seemed easier to get the functionality we wanted by building it ourselves
Nope, not Twine! No engine really - it's built in HTML/Javascript using the Vue.js framework, utilizing a little bit of the engine Randy Lubin (our game-making partner) built for his project StorySynth but mostly built from scratch.
whoops my bad, fixed!
Indeed. At some point that sentence was going to be "the one that won first place" and I guess the wrong word survived :) fixing!
whoops - fixed!
Unfortunately it was issues with the recording itself - not sure if it was the mic or the connection, but that audio is all we got. The only other real option was scrapping it entirely, and I figured the conversation was still worth putting out.
Sometimes, the ability to theoretically handle anything makes it labor-intensive to handle each specific thing :) There definitely is some stuff that seems like it should be easier - but so far, it's capable of doing everything, with effort. And of course, the data migration needs were a big part of the challenge: it wasn't just a matter of building these features, but building them in a way that allowed us to map everything from the old Techdirt onto the new one, with minimal disruption in the continuity of everything functioning, and the goal of a quick migration with up-to-the-minute data that wouldn't require a lengthy shutdown of the site. If we were building from the ground up for a new site, some things would have been easier - but we were also building for compatibility with the data (and just our user habits) from over 20 years of development on a entirely custom CMS with lots of idiosyncrasies and patchwork workarounds.
We'll definitely give consideration to A through D as we make changes. One thing I can answer now, which is E: it's named the Comment Scrubber after the tools used in audio/video software that show you a condensed waveform/thumbnail timeline and let you quickly shift to that point in the file by clicking. Those are called "scrubbers"! But - it is perhaps true that this terminology isn't clear to a lot of people.
WordPress customer service is definitely not lacking! You would not believe how much work they have done for us for two straight years to make this possible. I know Techdirt might seem "relatively simple" but the truth is, as blogs go, it's really not. We had added a lot of custom features over the years. Our comment voting/badges system is unlike any out-of-the-box solutions, the membership system is entirely custom tracking multiple different subscription tiers via integration with both Foxycart (for our direct purchase store) and Patreon, lots of our little features our non-standard on blogs these days (user preferences for site display, markdown in comments, the post expander) and some break common rules of modern CMS systems (infinitely-deep comment reply threads). And that's not even getting into some of our non-standard back-end features that we've developed for our editorial flow over the years. It required a lot of custom work to rebuild it all as a WordPress theme, and then there's the other huge issue: the data migration. Our entire data structure was non-standard, and not easily mapped to WordPress - it required development of a custom, multi-stage process to move over 75,000 posts and a couple million comments and reformat/retabulate everything in a new structure. The bugs we're seeing now are what remains after making so, so many difficult things work properly. And they certainly do have solutions for everything we're seeing, but some require special work due to all the aforementioned customization. All we can do now is continue to work steadily through them as best we can!