Maronno Winchester 

@pierostrada@sociale.network
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He/Him, Woke, Zecca antifa, Culo, Ateo, Scomunicato Latæ Sententiæ, blasfemo praticante. Italia.
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https://bsky.app/profile/squo.bsky.social/post/3ltko53gf5k2c

09/07/1941 Il matematico inglese Alan Turing riesce a decodificare il codice Enigma,il dispositivo tedesco per la crittografia dei messaggi

Bluesky

Bluesky Social

Sui rider la battaglia dell’acqua, il giudice ordina a Glovo di tutelarne la salute. Assodelivery insiste con i “bonus caldo”

https://www.editorialedomani.it/economia/glovo-caldo-rider-sentenza-bonus-agrl3tf2

> Il tribunale di Milano impone a Glovo di riconoscere i rappresentanti per la sicurezza dei rider, equiparandoli a lavoratori dipendenti. A chi fa consegne sotto il sole cocente vanno date acqua e creme solari, senza affidarsi a rimborsi successivi. Il Pd propone un risarcimento per i rider fermati dalle ordinanze anti caldo

Caso Giuli, l’M5s annuncia un’interrogazione: «L’operazione di autofinanziamento del ministro? Un insulto»

https://www.editorialedomani.it/fatti/caso-giuli-lm5s-annuncia-uninterrogazione-loperazione-di-autofinanziamento-del-ministro-un-insulto-w942p3n9

> I pentastellati Caso e Pirondini chiederanno chiarimenti sulla vicenda. «L’autoreferenzialismo smaccato pagato con i soldi pubblici»

US sanctions UN expert Albanese over Israel criticism

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2025/7/9/us-sanctions-un-expert-albanese-over-israel-criticism?traffic_source=rss

> Trump administration says it is targeting Albanese for encouraging ICC war crime prosecution against Israel’s Netanyahu.

Grazie alla vita per la voce di Mercedes Sosa | il manifesto

https://ilmanifesto.it/grazie-alla-vita-per-la-voce-di-mercedes-sosa

> America latina (Commenti) Dalle montagne di Tucumán al porto di Buenos Aires, dalla Quebrada de Humahuaca alle pianure venezuelane e colombiane, dai ghiacciai della Patagonia alle cascate di Iguazú, dalle miniere boliviane di Potosí alla Pampa umida, dalla cordigliera delle Ande alle scogliere pacifiche e alle spiagge atlantiche, dal Santuario della farfalla monarca di Michoacán alla Terra del

License plate readers coming to West LA's Cheviot Hills amid privacy and immigration concerns | LAist

https://laist.com/news/transportation/license-plate-readers-coming-to-west-las-cheviot-hills-amid-privacy-and-immigration-concerns

> People living in the West L.A. community requested the cameras because of recent home burglaries and calls for more safety measures.

🚨Today #Google increases prices by ~20% 🚨

❤️ While we offer 50% discount. ❤️

✅ Check out Tuta Mail & Tuta Calendar: http://tuta.com/goeuropean

Salesforce, Microsoft, Google and Atlassian All Raise Prices Again in 2025. Hooray.

The major SaaS providers have announced another round of significant price increases for 2025, continuing a trend that’s putting pressure on enterprise software budgets across the board. Afte…

SaaStr
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As fascism burns across America, it's important to remember that Trump and his policies are *not popular*. Sure, the racism and cruelty excites a minority of (very broken) people, but every component of the Trump agenda is *extremely* unpopular with the American people, from tax cuts for billionaires to kidnapping our neighbors and shipping them to concentration camps.

1/

If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2025/07/03/states-rights-trumps-wrongs/#mamdani

2/

Pluralistic: Trump’s not gonna protect workers from forced labor (03 Jul 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Keeping this fact in mind is essential if we are to nurture hope's embers, and fan them into the flames of change. Trumpism is a coalition of people who hate each other, who agree on almost nothing, whose fracture lines are one deft tap away from shattering:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/07/14/fracture-lines/#disassembly-manual

The vast unpopularity of Trumpism presents endless opportunities for breaking off parts of his coalition.

3/

Pluralistic: The true, tactical significance of Project 2025 (14 Jul 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Take noncompete "agreements": contractual clauses that ban workers from taking a job with any of their employers' competitors for *years*. One in 18 Americans has been captured by a noncompete, and the median noncompete victim is a minimum-wage fast-food worker whose small business tyrant boss wants to be sure that she doesn't quit working the register at Wendy's and start making $0.25/hour more flipping burgers at McDonald's.

4/

The story of noncompetes is bullshit from top to bottom. The argument goes, "Your boss invests heavily in training you, and lets you in on all his valuable trade-secrets. When you walk out the door and go to work for a competitor, you're *stealing* all that training and knowledge. Without noncompetes, no boss will invest in the knowledge-intensive industries that are the future of our economy."

5/

Now, like I said, the *vast* majority of people under noncompetes are working low-waged, menial jobs with little to no training, and no proprietary trade secrets to speak of. Which makes sense: workers with less bargaining power end up signing worse contracts. That's half the case against noncompetes.

Here's the other half: the *most* IP-intensive, profitable, knowledge-based industries in America operate without *any* noncompetes.

6/

California's state constitution *bans* noncompetes, which means that every worker in Hollywood *and* Silicon Valley is free to quit their job and walk across the street and join a rival.

If Hollywood and tech are examples of industries that "can't attract investment," then we should be shooting for every sector of the American economy to be so starved for capital.

7/

Silicon Valley's origin story is based on the ability of key workers at knowledge-intensive firms to quit their jobs and go to work for a direct competitor: the first Silicon Valley company was Shockley Semiconductors, founded by William Shockley, who won the Nobel Prize for inventing silicon transistors.

7/

Shockley literally put the "silicon" in Silicon Valley, but he never shipped a working chip, because he was a deranged, paranoid eugenicist who ran such a dysfunctional company that eight of his top engineers quit to found a rival company, Fairchild Semiconductor. Then two of the "Traitorous Eight" quit the Fairchild to start Intel, and the year after, another Fairchild employee quit to start AMD:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/10/24/the-traitorous-eight-and-the-battle-of-germanium-valley/

9/

The Traitorous Eight and the Battle of Germanium Valley – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

This never stopped. Woz quit HP and Jobs quit Atari to start Apple and the tradition of extremely well-capitalized companies being founded by key employees who quit market-leading firms to compete with their old bosses continues to this day. There are many things we can say about AI, but *no one* will claim that AI companies - especially not those in California, where noncompetes are banned - have trouble attracting investment.

10/

Half of the leading AI companies were founded by people who couldn't stand working for Sam Altman at Openai and quit to found a competitor. Just last week, Altman flipped out because Mark Zuckerberg poached his key scientists to work on competing products at Meta:

https://fortune.com/2025/06/28/meta-four-openai-researchers-superintelligence-team-ai-talent-competition/

Knowledge-intensive industries are provably compatible with a system of free labor where workers can work for anyone they want.

11/

Meta taps four OpenAI researchers for Superintelligence team

The company on Friday signed on Jiahui Yu, Shuchao Bi, Shengjia Zhao and Hongyu Ren, according to people with knowledge of the matter.

Fortune

You know who understands this? The lawyers who draw up employment contracts with noncompete clauses in them: the American Bar Association bans noncompetes for lawyers! *Every law firm in America operates without noncompetes!*

Everyone hates noncompetes. They are *bullshit*, and only get worse with time, as the largest companies in America metastasize into sprawling conglomerates, they compete with *everyone*. Who isn't a competitor of Amazon's?

https://pluralistic.net/2022/02/02/its-the-economy-stupid/#neofeudal

12/

Pluralistic: 02 Feb 2022 – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Biden's antitrust enforcers hated noncompetes, too. Former FTC chair Lina Khan held listening tours and solicited comments to hear workers stories about noncompetes, developing a record that she used to create a rule that banned noncompetes nationwide:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/25/capri-v-tapestry/#aiming-at-dollars-not-men

13/

Pluralistic: Antitrust is a labor issue (25 Apr 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

America's oligarchs weren't happy. They sued to overturn the rule, and got a nationwide injunction (you know, those things that Trump's illegitimate Supreme Court claims are unenforceable) that suspended the FTC rule pending a full hearing.

It's clear that Trump's FTC is going to walk away from this fight and let the rule die. Trumpism is wildly unpopular, and this is no exception.

14/

Americans overwhelmingly support banning noncompetes, but Trump's richest donors are terrified of another Great Resignation and want to keep us indentured to their shitty companies, so Trump's FTC will sell us all out.

But that's not the end of things. As David Dayen writes for *The American Prospect*, states and local governments can pass their own noncompete bans, and they are:

https://prospect.org/labor/2025-07-02-ftc-noncompete-state-regulation-workers-wages/

15/

States Take the Lead on Banning Noncompete Agreements

The FTC will probably stop defending its proposed worker protection on July 10. But action in both red and blue states is heating up.

The American Prospect

Take NYC mayor-in-waiting Zohran Mamdani: unlike Trump (and the Democratic Party's billionaire wing), Mamdani campaigned by offering to create policies that are *popular*, including a ban on noncompetes. New York City has two distinct groups of workers who are screwed over by noncompetes.

16/

One of those groups is Wall Street finance bros, who work for some of the most legendarily toxic assholes to ever draw breath, and are overwhelming bound by noncompetes that will all become null and void the day Mamdani dons his sash.

17/

The other group of workers Mamdani will liberate are those at the very bottom of the income distribution, from fast food workers to gig workers to doormen, who are victims of some of the dirtiest noncompete clauses in America, including "bondage fees":

https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/21/bondage-fees/#doorman-building

Big cities are filled with workers who are getting screwed by noncompetes and every city government has it in their power to liberate every one of those workers (who are also voters).

18/

Pluralistic: How workers get trapped by “bondage fees”; Red Team Blues Chapter One, part five (21 Apr 2023) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

States can do even better. There are already four states that ban noncompetes, two of them blood red: California, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Oklahoma. Other states place significant restrictions on noncompetes, including Washington, Colorado, Illinois, Virginia, Maryland, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, and Maine.

19/

Nevada bans noncompetes for hourly workers, Idaho only allows them for "key employees"; Louisiana limits noncompetes to two years, and NJ bans noncompetes for domestic workers.

Up and down the country, in states blue and red, noncompetes are unpopular, and banning noncompetes is popular:

https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/majority-americans-support-ftc-ruling-would-ban-non-compete-agreements

20/

Oregon just banned noncompetes for doctors and other health workers, as part of a sweeping, bipartisan law that banned the "corporate practice of medicine":

https://pluralistic.net/2025/06/20/the-doctor-will-gouge-you-now/#states-rights

Oregon's in good company: noncompetes are banned in the health sector in 32 states, including Arkansas, Indiana and Colorado.

21/

Pluralistic: Oregon bans the corporate practice of medicine (20 Jun 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

@pluralistic "Your boss invests heavily in training you" 🤣
The boss: "Spend 2 days watching these poorly made training videos even if you don't learn that way. You'll be expected to memorize everything you see and practically apply it on day one"

What a fucking joke, burn down the American plantation.

That being said, I'm in MO and they did pass a noncompete ban here too, but it doesn't apply to nonprofits. We have several large hospital systems here that probably half the city is employed by, including myself. They're all classified as a nonprofit, even if technically the private clinics and urgent cares function as for-profit entities in order to fund the hospital portions of the company. It still protects the whole system. As noncompete bans become more widespread, companies will get more creative with circumventing them.

@Nightmancore @pluralistic presumably the answer they give you for why a non-profit wants you to sign a non-compete agreement contains the words "we're not really non-profit"
@pluralistic I got screwed by a Non-compete, so as a form of catharsis, I made a fum music video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BuRjFjZcbmI
Soup is good food

YouTube
@pluralistic interestingly, in Germany non-competes are totally legal. But with a simple change: the employers needs to pay for the time of the non-compete (at least 50% of the pay). This makes them much less interesting, but still available
@pluralistic Hitler made the trains run on time, so the Germans never felt motivated to rise up. As long as Americans have eggs, cheap gas, and Netflix they won't feel motivated either.
@pluralistic So, why the vote for Trumpism?
@pluralistic But do the fashes care if we like them? We can be as mad as we want, but they're running shit. The US democracy has collapsed, so voting these people out probably isn't going to work.

@pluralistic

IF THE MAGA POLICIES ARE NOT POPULAR WHY ARE AMERICANS QUIET.

STAND UP AND FIGHT FOR THE CONSTITUTION, FOR THE LAND OF THE FREE, FOR HUMAN RIGHTS.

@pluralistic How did you vote *extremely unpopular* Trump back into office then? How did he get 50%+ of votes in general election? How are his approval rates *extremely low* when they dropped from 52% to say around 47%? How is 47% *extremely unpopular* ?
@ati1 @pluralistic Trump got less than 50% of the vote. For those who do not live in the U.S., presidents in the U.S. are not elected based on the popular vote. Instead, it is based on the electoral vote, where the number of electors for each state is equal to the sum of its representatives and senators. Most states have a "winner take all" policy, so that if a candidate gets 50.00001% of the popular vote in a state, all of that state's electors vote for that candidate.
@bzdev @pluralistic Ok, I've heard / am aware of that although don't know the details. Anyways if he got 49% or 45% or even 40% of votes countrywide .... how is that meant to be "extremely unpopular"? It's nuts someone like Trump can run USA. TWICE. It's game over. EU is far from perfect but it is really the last stronghold of civilisation in this new dark ages era. Sorry.
@ati1 @pluralistic You asked how he got over 50% of the vote. I merely explained how he could get elected with less than 50% of the vote. Also, Trump's popularity has been dropping like a rock, unfortunately after the election. Part of the problem is the U.S. Supreme Court's "Citizens United" decision, which enabled a few billionaires to spend a fortune to get Trump elected via heavy, last-minute advertising in "swing states".
@bzdev @pluralistic It doesn't really matter to me if it was 51% or 48%. It's irrelevant. He owns USA again. "Well estabilished democracy" turned out to be smokes and mirrors. His approval rates dropped even worse in 1st cadence and that didn't stop him from winning again. Sorry. Picking details like no it wasn't 50,13% it actually was 49,375% changes nothing.
@ati1 @pluralistic Dude, you asked how a candidate could win a U.S. presidential election with less than 50% of the vote & I explained how it works. That's useful information: you can be pretty sure that some really wealthy guys would try something similar in Europe based on what worked in the U.S if they can get away with it,. and you just might want to make sure that you can prevent that from happening to you.

@pluralistic I believe there is a difference between polling and voting.

During a poll (talking to a human being), people pretend to a better version of themselves. You know, the version who isn’t a racist?

When they secretly vote, they let their true feelings out.

So 45’s policies are more popular than a lot of people admit. Of the 77 million who voted for this, how many did NOT see the “Mass Deportation” signs?

I guess we will find out in 2026 how many of the people being polled now are lying.