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U.S. lawmakers demand answers after Canadian man says border officers made him give DNA sample | CBC News

American lawmakers are demanding answers from the Trump administration after a Canadian man says U.S. customs officers held him for three hours and forced him to provide a DNA sample before sending him home.

CBC

An anti-ICE app that installs from a web page and can't be removed from any app store because it's not on an app store.

Now with EFF legal support, a warrant canary, a backup domain in Iceland, and more!

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2026/3/26/2374832/-Update-ICE-Tracking-App-AntiFreeze-Is-Becoming-Harder-to-Censor-Here-s-How?utm_campaign=trending

https://antifreeze.app
https://antifreeze.is

#NoIce #NoKings #ProtectOurCommunities #ProtectImmigrants

Update: ICE Tracking App AntiFreeze Is Becoming Harder to Censor. Here's How.

One week. That's all it took. Seven days ago, AntiFreeze was a side project sitting on a server with 194 users. Then this community got ahold of it. Two front-page diaries, hundreds of comments, ...

Daily Kos

The targeting for Operation Epic Fury ran on a system called Maven.

Nobody was arguing about Maven.

Eight years ago, Maven was the most contested project in Silicon Valley.

In 2018, more than 4,000 Google employees signed a letter opposing the company’s contract to build artificial intelligence for the Pentagon’s targeting systems.

Workers organised a walk out.
Engineers quit.
And Google ultimately abandoned the contract.

Palantir Technologies,
a data analytics company and defence contractor co-founded by Peter Thiel,
took it over
and spent the next six years building Maven into a targeting infrastructure that pulls together satellite imagery, signals intelligence and sensor data
to identify targets and carry them through every step from first detection to the order to strike....

The building in Minab had been classified as a military facility in a Defense Intelligence Agency database that,
according to CNN,
had not been updated to reflect that the building had been separated from the adjacent Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps compound
and converted into a school
-- a change that satellite imagery shows had occurred by 2016 at the latest.

A chatbot did not kill those children.

People failed to update a database, and other people built a system fast enough to make that failure lethal.

By the start of the Iran war, Maven
– the system that had enabled that speed
– had sunk into the plumbing

It had become part of the military’s infrastructure,
-- and the argument was all about Claude.

This obsession with Claude is a kind of AI psychosis,
though not of the kind we normally talk about,
and it afflicts critics and opponents of the technology as fiercely as it does its boosters.

You do not have to use a language model to have it organise your attention or distort your thinking.

https://www.theguardian.com/news/2026/mar/26/ai-got-the-blame-for-the-iran-school-bombing-the-truth-is-far-more-worrying?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

AI got the blame for the Iran school bombing. The truth is far more worrying

LLMs-gone-rogue dominated coverage, but had nothing to do with the targeting. Instead, it was choices made by human beings, over many years, that gave us this atrocity

The Guardian
Nick Cave - The Red Hand Files - Issue #316 - My best friend recently said something that felt really spiteful to me. It was so unnecessary and mean and I feel just so wounded. I am furious at my friend. How do I forgive her? What do I even do?

Dear Beatriz and Brendan, About twenty-five years ago, I made an offhand and  somewhat uncharitable remark about the Red Hot Chili Peppers...

The Red Hand Files

The things about being an AI “skeptic” is that
well
shouldn’t everyone be a skeptic? The entire AI pitch is “here’s a magic black box that will solve all your problems and don’t worry if it loses money and wastes resources today because any second now it will make you immortal.”

Yeah, that sounds like something you *should* be skeptical about.

https://www.wheresyoured.at/why-are-we-still-doing-this/

Why Are We Still Doing This?

Hi! If you like this piece and want to support my work, please subscribe to my premium newsletter. It’s $70 a year, or $7 a month, and in return you get a weekly newsletter that’s usually anywhere from 5000 to 185,000 words, including vast, extremely detailed analyses

Ed Zitron's Where's Your Ed At

On my flight back to the U.S. this week, I wrote some words about why age verification laws threaten the security and privacy of everyone on the internet. By requiring people to upload their IDs, governments are sleepwalking the world into an inevitable data disaster.

For my newsletter and blog ~ this week in security ~

Read online: https://this.weekinsecurity.com/papers-please-age-verification-laws-threaten-everyones-online-security-and-privacy/

Sign up for my weekly newsletter: https://this.weekinsecurity.com

Papers, please: Age verification laws threaten everyone's online security and privacy

Laws that require adults to upload their driver's licenses or passports to access apps, websites, and VPNs will make the entire web less safe.

~this week in security~

Have a Fucking Website

https://www.otherstrangeness.com/2026/03/14/have-a-fucking-website/

«
If you’re a hair salon, or a tattoo artist, or a restaurant, or whatever, please just have a fucking website where I can go and see your rates and hours. Not all of your potential clients are on these platforms, and I suspect that even many of the ones who are appreciate a simple, unadorned site that tells them what they need to know at a glance.
»

Have a Fucking Website - Other Strangeness — merritt k

For fuck's sake

Other Strangeness — merritt k
Turns Out The DOGE Bros Who Killed Humanities Grants Are Kinda Sensitive About It - https://www.techdirt.com/2026/03/16/turns-out-the-doge-bros-who-killed-humanities-grants-are-kinda-sensitive-about-it/ "He said this while sitting in a deposition about his time holding multiple senior government positions for which he had no qualifications whatsoever. The lack of self-awareness is genuinely staggering."
Turns Out The DOGE Bros Who Killed Humanities Grants Are Kinda Sensitive About It

Much of last week I had been working on a different article than the one this became. The American Historical Association, the Modern Language Association, and the American Council of Learned Socie


Techdirt

Palantir CEO Alex Karp thinks his AI technology will lessen the power of “highly educated, often female voters, who vote mostly Democrat” while increasing the power of working-class men.
“This technology disrupts humanities-trained—largely Democratic—voters, and makes their economic power less. And increases the economic power of vocationally trained, working-class, often male, working-class voters,” Karp said in a CNBC interview Thursday.
“And so these disruptions are gonna disrupt every aspect of our society. And to make this work, we have to come to an agreement of what it is we’re going to do with the technology; how are we gonna explain to people who are likely gonna have less good, and less interesting jobs.”

This sounds like a direct, long-term pitch to the GOP from a CEO whose tech firm already has numerous government contracts and is deeply embedded in the Pentagon.
Karp’s message is loud and clear:
My technology will take political capital away from one of your greatest enemies—liberal women with degrees—and give one of your favorite demographics to patronize—working-class men—more political power to transfer to you.
He’s aligning his technology with both GOP political strategy and the larger male-centered culture war that the right has been waging for the better part of a decade now.
And how exactly would his technology only hurt Democrat women?
Karp also made a Patriot Act–era argument, justifying his admittedly “dangerous” technology by claiming that Palantir will allow us to “be American” in the future.
“These technologies are dangerous societally,” Karp continued.
“The only justification you could possibly have would be that if we don’t do it, our adversaries will do it. And we will be subject to their rule of law.

Why is it that we’re absorbing the risk of disrupting the very fabric of our society, including the most powerful parts of our society, if it’s not because it’s about maintaining our ability to be American in the near term and long term?”
https://newrepublic.com/post/207693/palantir-ceo-karp-disrupting-democratic-power

Palantir CEO Makes Shocking Confession on Disrupting Democratic Power

They’re saying the quiet part out loud now.

The New Republic
‘Serious threat to the First Amendment’ as Trump admin wins first Antifa terror charge

The government has largely won its first case, bringing material-support-for-terrorism charges against protesters alleged to belong to “antifa,” which President Donald Trump designated as a domestic terror group in 2025, despite the fact that no such organized group exists, and the president has no ...

Raw Story