“Why Google search sucks now”
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“Why Google search sucks now”
https://linktr.ee/ecomic

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Howdy, web hosting industry pro here!
Any of y’all with ecommerce stores under your own domains: block the user agent Amazonbot ASAP. You need to do this at the server (Nginx, Plesk, Tomcat, etc) or WAF level. Do not rely on robots.txt for this; robots.txt is nothing but a wish list. If your web host won’t let you block user agents at the server level and won’t do it for you, get a WAF or a better host.
Why: For the past 2 years, Amazonbot has been randomly targeting SMB websites and assaulting them with such depraved, unhinged deluges of spam that it destabilizes the server itself. That’s bad enough on its own, but they finally showed their hand as to why they’re doing it: they’ve debuted an “”AI shopper,”” in which they use Amazonbot to scrape a website and then set up a fraudulent, unauthorized retail shop with that store’s products without the business owner’s knowledge, consent, input, or control, using plagiarized product info at a markup that Amazon pockets. Not only is this blatant, mass copyright infringement, it also exposes the business owner to risks of overselling and other forms of fraud. This can be opted out of, but best to head them off at the pass if Amazonbot hasn’t already attacked your store.
Our children are not under-educated. They are mis-educated.
Why did I learn about rivers I’ve never seen… but not global trade routes that shape economies?
Why are our children memorising… instead of understanding power, money, and the future?
Our education system isn’t failing. It’s outdated. It's keeping us ignorant 😒
And our children are paying the price.
Tell me — what do wish you had been taught and what do we need to be teaching! Today!
"The Strait of Hormuz is a waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman. On the north coast lies Iran, and on the south coast lies the Musandam Peninsula, shared by the United Arab Emirates and the Musandam Governorate, an exclave of Oman"
Here’s the secret most ecommerce platforms don’t want you to find out: with most of them, you don’t actually own your store. They own it – along with your data. WE KNOW. Kinda backwards, right? Instead of renting your store, own your future. Make it yours with WooCommerce and start selling online today.
Surveillance pricing
THIS WEEKEND (June 7–9), I'm in AMHERST, NEW YORK to keynote the 25th Annual Media Ecology Association Convention and accept the Neil Postman Award for Career Achievement in Public Intellectual Activity.
Correction, 7 June 2024: The initial version of this article erroneously described Jeffrey Roper as the founder of ATPCO. He benefited from ATPCO, but did not co-found it. The initial version of this article called ATPCO "an illegal airline price-fixing service"; while ATPCO provides information that the airlines use to set prices, it does not set prices itself, and while the DOJ investigated the company, they did not pursue a judgment declaring the service to be illegal. I regret the error.
Noted anti-capitalist agitator Adam Smith had it right: "People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices."
Despite being a raving commie loon, Smith's observation was so undeniably true that regulators, policymakers, and economists couldn't help but acknowledge that it was true. The trustbusting era was defined by this idea: if we let the number of companies in a sector get too small, or if we let one or a few companies get too big, they'll eventually start to rig prices.
What's more, once an industry contracts corporate gigantism, it will become too big to jail, able to outspend and overpower the regulators charged with reining in its cheating. Anyone who believes Smith's self-evident maxim had to accept its conclusion: that companies had to be kept smaller than the state that regulated them. This wasn't about "punishing bigness" – it was the necessary precondition for a functioning market economy.
We kept companies small for the same reason that we limited the height of skyscrapers: not because we opposed height, or failed to appreciate the value of a really good penthouse view – rather, to keep the building from falling over and wrecking all the adjacent buildings and the lives of the people inside them.
Starting in the neoliberal era – Carter, then Reagan – we changed our tune. We liked big business. A business that got big was doing something right. It was perverse to shut down our best companies. Instead, we'd simply ban big companies from rigging prices. This was called the "consumer welfare" theory of antitrust. It was a total failure.
40 years later, nearly every industry is dominated by a handful of companies, and these companies price-gouge us with abandon. Worse, they use their gigantic ripoff winnings to fill war-chests that fund the corruption of democracy, capturing regulators so that they can rip us off even more, while ignoring labor, privacy and environmental law and ducking taxes.
It turns out that keeping gigantic, opaque, complex corporations honest is really hard. They have so many ways to shuffle money around that it's nearly impossible to figure out what they're doing. Digitalization makes things a million times worse, because computers allow businesses to alter their processes so they operate differently for every customer, and even for every interaction.
This is Dieselgate times a billion: VW rigged its cars to detect when they were undergoing emissions testing and switch to a less polluting, more compliant mode. But when they were on the open road, they spewed lethal quantities of toxic gas, killing people by the thousands. Computers don't make corporate leaders more evil, but they let evil corporate leaders execute far more complex and nefarious plans. Digitalization is a corporate moral hazard, making it just too easy and tempting to rig the game.
That's why Toyota, the largest car-maker in the world, just did Dieselgate again, more than a decade later. Digitalization is a temptation no giant company can resist:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1wwj1p2wdyo
For forty years, pro-monopoly cheerleaders insisted that we could allow companies to grow to unimaginable scale and still prevent cheating. They passed rules banning companies from explicitly forming agreements to rig prices. About ten seconds later, new middlemen popped up offering "information brokerages" that helped companies rig prices without talking to one another.
Take Agri Stats: the country's hyperconcentrated meatpacking industry pays Agri Stats to "consult on prices." They provide Agri Stats with a list of their prices, and then Agri Stats suggests changes based on its analysis. What does that analysis consist of? Comparing the company's prices to its competitors, who are also Agri Stats customers:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/04/dont-let-your-meat-loaf/#meaty-beaty-big-and-bouncy
In other words, Agri Stats finds the highest price for each product in the sector, then "advises" all the companies with lower prices to raise their prices to the "competitive" level, creating a one-way ratchet that sends the price of food higher and higher.
More and more sectors have an Agri Stats, and digitalization has made this price-gouging system faster, more efficient, and accessible to sectors with less concentration. Landlords, for example, have tapped into Realpage, a "data broker" that the same thing to your rent that Agri Stats does to meat prices. Realpage requires the landlords who sign up for its service to accept its "recommendations" on minimum rents, ensuring that prices only go up:
https://popular.info/p/feds-raid-corporate-landlord-escalating

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I found this podcast while I was looking up information about Etsy's decision to ban all fur sales on their platform by the end of this year:
Listen to The Outdoor Life Podcast - The Animal-Rights Movement Is Getting Weirder by Outdoor Life on Podcast Addict. There is some really s
Fascinating deconstruction of the modern radical vegan animal rights movement.
The guest speaker does an excellent job of explaining how a lot of the more extremist views on animal "rights" are fundamentally anti-nature. The political leaders of the movement are proselytizing about a sci-fi future (in a similarly fanatical tone to the way radical ai evangelists talk about Roko's Basilisk) in which animal predation will not exist, where even predators like wolves and bears and sharks will have new rules imposed upon their behavior and/or genetics by human technology to prevent them from causing or experiencing suffering.
The speaker also does a beautiful job of explaining just how much the modern urban lifestyle of the average radical vegan animal rights activist is dependent on the animal control practices they want to ban. It is objectively impossible for a big city to function without pest and vermin control. They also ignore the logistical practicality that if fur trappers can no longer trap the animals on their land to survive, they will have no choice but to convert their land into farmland to survive, thereby destroying the ecosystem of the animals whose fur they used to trap.
TL&DR if these people actually cared in any practical sense about ecology and sustainability they'd be trying to pass laws targeting Big Oil/Plastic, not trying to pass laws targeting destitute rural trappers. They'd be pressuring online marketplaces to ban dropshippers, not vintage fur sellers.
I do think it would be sort of morbidly funny if this ban started a new counterfeiting boom.
Imagine if charlatans started trying to pass off real fur as fake fur, instead of the reverse.