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How Political Campaigns Use Your Phone’s Location to Target You

“Political operators have reportedly used these capabilities to target people based on church attendance, visits to specific government buildings, and as they attend political rallies. One firm even claims to have repeatedly signed up prominent campaigns wanting to target the “captive audience” in line to vote on election day, though it says it discontinued that product.”

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I'm really loving working for a newsroom on election day. I voted, and I feel like I've been helping (in a supporting role) get people the information they need to make sound democratic choices, from an underreported perspective. It's very fulfilling, can recommend.

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Illustration.lol - Editorial illustrations from around the world

A really nice visual database of journalism illustration. Beautiful and inspiring.

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Every single time I pick my baby off the changing pad, Siri on my Apple Watch thinks I'm trying to activate her. Today she helpfully gave me the address and opening hours of a deli in rural Vermont. I assume baby thinks a talking wrist is normal.

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I accidentally threw away my "I voted" sticker, but I voted, and I'd like you to please imagine the really cute picture I was going to take of my baby wearing it. Also, please vote. Go do it. Go go go.

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It's time to be heard

Alright, America. All eyes are on us.

There’s a lot of propaganda out there asking us not to vote. “It doesn’t make a difference,” they’ll say. Or: “the lines are really long.” Or they’ll talk down the whole process, as if democracy isn’t cool, or participating in it is some kind of affront to a higher cause. Or they’ll suggest - wrongly and maliciously - that the whole thing is rigged.

Bullshit. Vote. This is the bare minimum table stakes for living in a democracy. Picking our elected representatives matters. Voting on ballot initiatives matters. This is the way we get to have a say.

There are a lot of politicians who think not every eligible citizen should vote. Paul Weyrich, a conservative political activist, memorably said in a speech:

"I don't want everybody to vote. […] As a matter of fact, our leverage in the elections quite candidly goes up as the voting populace goes down."

More recently, poll workers have left their positions after threats and harrasment. And the Brennan Center for Justice reports that “at least seven states enacted 10 laws that make voting more difficult — of these, 5 laws in five states are in place for the midterms. […] Since the beginning of 2021, lawmakers have passed at least 42 restrictive voting laws in 21 states.”.

Meanwhile, the neoreactionary movement, which wants to replace American elected government with a CEO-like monarchy, has found deep pockets in billionaire former Facebook board-member Peter Thiel and at least two Senatorial candidates.

For better or worse, America has an outsized influence on the world. Our votes help shape not just our communities, but communities everywhere. The representatives we pick shape our local culture and global economies; they can be the difference between war and peace, collaboration and colonization, poverty and living well. It’s not an idea to take lightly.

Democracy is precious. Our voices matter. We’ve been given a Constitutional right, and we need to use it. As a citizen, you have the right to use it. Today is the day.

If you need help, here’s how.

 

Photo by Element5 Digital on Unsplash

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Senator Wyden Asks State Dept. To Explain Why It’s Handing Out ‘Unfettered’ Access To Americans’ Passport Data

“The Department’s mission does include providing dozens of other government agencies with self-service access to 145 million American’s personal data. The Department has voluntarily taken on this role, and in doing so, prioritized the interests of other agencies over those of law-abiding Americans.”

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How I turned $15,000 into $1.2m during the pandemic – then lost it all

““It’s about detachment,” my parents said in the end. “All the things in your life … you have to also be prepared to live without them.””

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Planning to stay up and watch the election, mostly to make sure our site stays up and performant. Which election snacks should I have to hand? Bear in mind I might need extreme comfort food.

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Signal Stories are now available on iOS and Android

“Stories are now available to everyone on Signal, allowing users of the encrypted instant messaging service to create and share images, videos, and texts that automatically expire after 24 hours.” But why?

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Subscribing to news with a different lens

I’m the CTO for The 19th, a women-led newsroom reporting on politics and policy with a gender lens. I’m super-proud to be here: it’s the most empathetic team I’ve ever worked on, and the journalism it produces is vital in the current moment.

There are a few ways you can keep on top of it:

The daily newsletter is produced by Annelise McGough. It’s intelligent, concise, and will make you smarter.

There’s also a weekly newsletter, which contains a weekly column and a deeper dive. The two newsletters are complementary.

There’s an RSS feed, of course! The 19th produces a handful of high-quality stories every day that won’t overwhelm your feed.

I was a subscriber long before I worked here, and I applied because I love the journalism. I say this as a fan more than a staff member: you should check it out.

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Worried about Federated Learning of Cohorts (FLoC) particularly wrt topics that might be actionable. Will there be a cohort that incorporates people who visit abortion websites, for example? How actionable might that data be in an adverse regime?

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Vote. Vote vote vote vote vote. Vote. Vote vote. Please please please. Here's a choose-your-own-adventure Twitter thread taking you through how, if you need it: https://twitter.com/19thnews/status/1587861871536656384

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My colleague Errin Haines interviewed VP Harris for a show on BET tonight at 9pm ET. You should tune in - and learn more over at The 19th: https://19thnews.org/2022/11/kamala-harris-midterms-bet/

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The really fun thing about the fediverse will be when hundreds of new platforms start spinning up, each with their own focus and interaction model. Some of these already exist, of course, but there are many more, just waiting to bloom. That's what a commons can be.

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Why is everyone leaving Twitter for Mastodon?

“Mastodon feels like 2007. It’s rough around the edges, but does the job. It doesn’t work the same as Twitter. There’s no algorithm and no slick social media marketing teams targeting you. It’s a little harder to find your friends and nothing quite does what you think it will do. And I’m convinced that’s why everyone is loving it.”

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I sing the same song to my baby that my mother memorably used to sing to me. It’s meaningful to me, and it also breaks my heart.

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Hope for a post-Musk net

“What institutions need we create now, in this new reality? Note that I did not say what new technologies. We have lots of technologies; more than enough, thank you. What we need are human standards, norms, and means to discover and support quality and credibility, talent and utility.”

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Mastodon's Founder Has a Vision to Democratize Social Media

“The recent influx from Twitter, Rochko says, has been a vindication. “It is a very positive thing to find that your work is finally being appreciated and respected and more widely known,” he says. “I have been working very, very hard to push the idea that there is a better way to do social media than what the commercial companies like Twitter and Facebook allow.””

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Twitter Now Asks Some Fired Workers to Please Come Back

“Some of those who are being asked to return were laid off by mistake, according to two people familiar with the moves. Others were let go before management realized that their work and experience may be necessary to build the new features Musk envisions, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private information.”

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What to blog

A while back I wrote a single-page site, Get Blogging, that’s designed to be a guide to which blogging platform to pick. It doesn’t actually tell you how to blog - and perhaps inevitably, I’ve started receiving lots of emails asking how to do just that.

There isn’t really a one-size-fits-all answer to this question, but here’s how I’ve answered it in the past:

A blog post is not the same as an essay or article. It’s simply an update to the log of information you’re writing on your website. That stream of posts, together, makes up your blog. So a post can be as short or as long as you like. It’s your voice, so they can also be as formal or informal as you like. I use a pretty informal voice in my blogging because that’s what comes naturally to me. You don’t need to do the same thing as me, or as anyone else.

Some examples:

Eventually, it becomes second nature: jot down some thoughts and hit publish. Until then, think of it like starting a running habit. The first few days you run, it’s awful and you think it’ll never feel any better. But after a few weeks, you start getting antsy if you don’t run. If you’re not used to writing, it can feel like a slog, but it’s worth getting over that hump.

I once gave someone the advice to write something interesting to them on their blog every weekday for a month - and then to comment on someone else’s blog. Those comments are important: blogs are a community spread across thousands of sites, and it’s a good idea to join in and add value where you can. Don’t comment to self-promote; comment to share and uplift.

And then how do you gain an audience? First: don’t think of it as an audience. It’s a community, and you’re joining it, not gaining it.

There are plenty of sites out there that purport to tell you how to get 100,000 readers and a bunch of money really quickly. They’re all grifters, trying to (you’ve guessed it) gain a ton of readers and a bunch of money really quickly. You can try and hustle people out of cash, but I’d argue that this isn’t really blogging. Blogging is putting your earnest self on the page, one way or another, so that other people who feel or think the same way can find and connect with you.

To build an enduring community of readers you need to be authentically yourself, post about what you’re really interested in, share regularly, interact with other peoples’ blogs, and more than anything, keep it up. Good luck.

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Getting a surprising number of emails off of getblogging.org asking me how to blog. Considering what to do about it. Guessing “just start writing about stuff that interests you” isn’t an adequate answer, but that’s kind of what you have to do.

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Sadly, babies do not observe time changes.

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