* Posts by P. Lee

5267 publicly visible posts • joined 4 Dec 2007

$200bn? Make that $467bn: Trump threatens to balloon proposed bonus China tech tariffs

P. Lee

>One problem is that a huge number of US citizens do not understand that THEY (and US manufacturing, etc.) are the ones paying the tariffs.

"THEY" are the only ones who pay tax in any scenario.

As someone said, "The government doesn't have money of its own, it only has your money."

The real question is, "Who is affected and how?"

My personal thought is that being large enough to become a multinational should not allow you to gain either short or long-term tax benefits relative to domestic companies.

Boffins bash Google Translate for sexism

P. Lee
Trollface

"They then ran the sentences through Google Translate, via API, to see how Google's language model assigned gendered pronouns"

You'd think the university undergrads would be more tolerant of colour-diverse companies. Then I saw how these bigots only considered male, female and neuter options. Gender-fluids didn't get on a seat at the table and there was not a single two-spirit to be seen.

No need to call the new ghost-busters. The beams are already crossed.

Trend Micro tools tossed from Apple's Mac App Store after spewing fans' browser histories

P. Lee

Re: 1 - 2 - 3 - Not it!

>Not our fault. Your fault.

Correct. And that's not a lesson that's likely to be forgotten or which will engender gratitude from the learners.

Open source. No Cloud.

Grubby, tortuous, full of malware and deceit: Just call it Lionel because the internet is MESSY

P. Lee

re: the use of cannons

One man's troll is another man's satirist.

Are WWE performers trolling?

The cannon approach what they did to infowars last week, but unlike the real world, digital things can be infinitely cloned. Not only does it not really work (which is why I assume video-carrying social media acted as a cartel) but it brings the spotlight onto the problems of having morality police. I think that was probably a strategic mistake for both social media and the governments who push for viewpoint policing.

I have no love or interest in infowars, but I take a great interest in what government and corporations think they should be able to do and this is not it.

When's a backdoor not a backdoor? When the Oz government says it isn't

P. Lee

Re: Awesome

They know quite well what the decisions imply. They just choose to ignore it.

Hence skype is no longer p2p, Large corporates will always try to make money and they will comply with the law. Combine legal requirements with financial self interest and you have a winner.

The "you will not tell your tell anyone" provisions is for the corporate's benefit, not Australians.

There are still problems. Obviously on-prem kit has to go. We can't have that messing up our surveilance. Cloud it is, then.

Criminal justice software code could send you to jail and there’s nothing you can do about it

P. Lee

Re: what about the right to face your accuser?

>The isn't accusing anyone nor convicting them.

Not effectively quite true.

Parole is part of it so it is effectively judging the likelihood of a future transgression and altering the sentence based on that.

A longer non-parole period based on reoffending rates could be seen as effectively an extra conviction.

Moreover, a judge may be questioned over his reasoning. Not only is the software unquestioned, but the fewer humans making the decisions, the less training data is available which isn't creating a feedback loop.

This needs to stop.

Google keeps tracking you even when you specifically tell it not to: Maps, Search won't take no for an answer

P. Lee

Re: Google takes revenge

I set up postfix, dovecote on a core2 duo. Let's encrypt deals with the certificate issue.

No ads.

Surprisingly little spam too, even without any clever spam filtering.

Mostly I see smtp auth attempted on port 25, but no one seems to bother with 587.

I too got the blocked access message from google for another account. They wanted my telephone number. That behaviour just speeds my migration.

Microsoft's cheapo Surface: Like a netbook you can't upgrade

P. Lee

Here's why the industry is failing

The aim is market segmentation, not customer satisfaction.

When the question is, "what can we produce which will be cheap but not destroy our more expensive products' market share" your corporate culture is going to kill your business.

Actually, I don't think MS could win here anyway. They have built such a strong Windows-PC-for-Business-and-Gaming brand that anything which doesn't meet that expectation of performance will cause the product to fail.

If I were them, I'd leverage the xbox brand for consumers. "Xbox-Tablet" and hide all the Windows branding and styling. Windows is toxic for a home brand. That's a "work" system with associated with 9-5 work, corporate control (no screensaver changes for you and you will have the corporate logo on the desktop - in case you don't know who you work for), A/V software run amok and arcane system controls.

UK 'fake news' inquiry calls for end to tech middleman excuses, election law overhaul

P. Lee

Re: 'Fake news'

>Why not treat it a such?

Shock horror! People on the internet don't always tell the truth!

From what I can tell it is basically FB's self-promotion. "Look at us, we can fix elections. Sorry about the last one, we'll try to make sure the other party wins next time."

El Reg's own look at the "Russian meddling" showed it to be quite inconsequential.

The looks more like a power-grap by politicians rather than anything which could ever hope to be either desirable or workable.

LabCorp ransomed, 18k routers rooted, a new EXIF menace, and more

P. Lee

Re: Dark hole in home IT security.

I also went the BSD/Opnsense route (r), ditching the telstra thingy.

The thing is, for most of these rubbish things, they aren't modified once installed, so why not put a separate admin port in which doesn't forward traffic? Then the attack surface and bad press is vastly reduced.

Engineers, coders – it's down to you to prevent AI being weaponised

P. Lee

Re: If you wish to be martyred, stand and fight like a conventional army.

I have to agree with you here.

The US military hegemony is so large, expecting a 19th century meeting on a battlefield is ridiculous. The only way to win is to make the cost of war unacceptable to your opponents. In the case of the US, that means ensuring that the true (or exaggerated) civilian cost is publicised to the US voters.

The US strategy is to minimise the loss of US life with overwhelming firepower. Their opponents strategy is to make every US strike an expensive one. I'm sure Sun Tzu would have something to say about using your enemy's strength against them.

Perhaps, rather than debating military strategy, we should be examining the civilian political decisions which lead to fighting.

I predict a riot: Amazon UK chief foresees 'civil unrest' for no-deal Brexit

P. Lee

Re: Vogon

What makes you think compromise is possible?

I don't see how the eu could compromise. If they did, everyone would vote to leave to get a better deal.

The EU doesn't want to be an association of nations, it wants to be one nation. It's in the eu charter - "ever closer union." A successful brexit will be a political disaster for them - something along the lines of Texas seceding from the US, except that the eu is far shakier. Most of the countries have fought each other for many hundreds of years. No one thinks of themselves as European first and Greek or Spanish second and they have no real interest in helping each other.

I don't think either side should expect a deal that goes beyond an agreed transition to WTO rules.

And "Brexit means Nothing" May needs to go if we aren't going to spend tmore ime messing around.

Microsoft still longs to be a 'lifestyle' brand, but the cupboard looks bare

P. Lee

Re: Huh!

>"Software and subscription access."

>Not for me.

Indeed. A Netflix sub might have something new in the future that I want. I have no interest in a new version of MSOffice. If Netflix just keeps churning out Oceans remakes, no-one will keep paying. And quite right too.

The whole reason for these subs is that people saw no value in upgrades - at least, not enough value to spend the cash.

New stuff used to be better stuff for the user. Not anymore. Now its just, "keep ms in business" stuff.

Two-factor auth totally locks down Office 365? You may want to check all your services...

P. Lee

Re:Digital illiteracy and plain stupidity.

Actually if you use proper 2fa like securid with physical tokens and you run a proper vpn, then most of these problems evaporate.

Ah, you don't want to spend on security? It's slightly inconvenient? Well now we know how much your company values the services it exposes.

P. Lee

Re: Wow. Click bait.

IMAP is legacy? Ok you should run it over tls but that would seem to be a disingenuous distinction.

Maybe legacy=non-proprietary?

It walks, it talks, it falls over a bit. Windows 10 is three years old

P. Lee

Re: "the Windows 7 hold-outs should finally feel able to make the upgrade"

I have noticed recently that start menu searching for "update" gets you nothing, but searching for "windows update" finds the "are we up to date" control. They seem to be progressively hiding more stuff.

I know people who love onedrive but I hate it. Isn't it supposed to be a local cache? Why is it always so much slower than a normal file system for reading even when fully synced?

Linux services for windows? Who will that please? Someone with an irrational fear of vmplayer?

Win10 may be used for work, but at home I fire it up every few months to run windows update and the odd game of defense grid awakening which was sadly never ported.

It's 2018 so, of course, climate.news is sold to climate change deniers

P. Lee

Fake news?

Then you should be banned from the internet. We should be able to trust all things which have "news" in the name!

I'm sure that will fix everything.

US Declaration of Independence labeled hate speech by Facebook bots

P. Lee

Re: Book burning Nazis

>"Try The Sermon on the Mount next. It will be *correctly identified* as communist propaganda by nearly any ML system trained to identify one."

I visited Moscow in 1981 and went to a Christian church there. The whole service was recorded by the State for monitoring. (Oh, hello Facebook, Siri, Google...) because there were restrictions on free speech and what could be said in the sermon. Afterwards, church leaders suddenly surrounded us and wouldn't let anyone near us. The "secret" police (they were pretty obvious in following us around while we were there) had arrived and anyone seen talking to us would be visited that evening. The leaders were used to it, but they didn't want random congregation members to have to go through that process.

I'm generally not a fan of argument by "lived experience" so I'll also recommend people who think Christianity is close to socialism, national socialism, or nationalism read some history and literature.

I noted the story above because one of the problems with centralised systems is that they prove irresistible to those wishing to to play with the levers of power. I have to disagree with El Reg. The problem is not that Facebook has some way to go in fine-tuning its hate-speech take-down algorithms. The problem is much bigger and illustrates fundamental flaws at many levels:

Hate-speech is subjective and ill-defined. How could you imagine that you could code an algorithm for a task when you have no idea what the data looks like or quantify the results if the results are feelings?

Even if we could define hate-speech, we would need algorithms which could understand human language (or in a multi-national context, multiple languages). Star Trek isn't real, so that isn't a thing we have the technical capability of doing. Pretending we can do it, like all lies, will have a bad outcome.

Why do we allow Facebook (and the other tech giants) to have the ability to take down business? There seems to be far too much willingness to allow this to continue. If the content is so bad, why doesn't FB just automatically remove it, rather than putting the onus back on the content owner, and then taking down all of their content if they don't comply? This seems like FB trying to manipulate content producers rather than FB's professed motives of "protecting the targets of hate-speech."

I'm somewhat disappointed that El Reg has joined the ranks of think stuff on a computer screen causes riots in India, Sri Lanka or anywhere else. It does not. We should not be complicit in pressuring social media to accept responsibility for this stuff. After I read something on a computer screen, no matter what it is, I have a choice about whether or not I go out and burn a random car, or loot a shop. No-one forces me to go out and do that, in fact force is applied in the opposite direction. What makes me choose a path of action is my value system. That is what needs examination.

That brings me to my final point: We need to talk about values. This also applies to "religion." At its basic functional level, religion is what you hold to be the highest good which drives your behaviour. It could be the Bible, Koran, Das Kapital, Mein Kampf, or the writings of Voltaire, Germaine Greer, Plato, Hitchens or Dawkins. The ideas contained in these writings are mutually exclusive and trying to pretend they are all the same is ignorance of the data. The books are just the recorded speech communicating ideas. We need to stop saying "religion" (someone-else's belief) is bad in order to shut down the debate. We need to be precise and identify the (religious/driving) belief which is causing the bad behaviour. If you think Christianity is bad, identify the value it promotes which you disagree with. Which one of Jesus' assertions on the sermon on the mount do you think is evil and why? What Islamic or Buddhist ideas do you disagree with? If we are to be able to co-exist with people we disagree with, we need to ensure that our understanding of them is correct and we need to be able to identify concrete issues about which we can argue merits. Assertions that "you value system is rubbish" cannot convince the holder of that value system of where they might be wrong because it is so vague there is no logic which can be applied and both sides are likely to try to fall back on coercion as the behaviour modifier. That is not a good outcome. As the world shrinks, culture and beliefs need to be up for debate. If we are unable or unwilling to identify good things and bad things, how can we improve the world?

Git365. Git for Teams. Quatermass and the Git Pit. GitHub simply won't do now Microsoft has it

P. Lee

Re: Trolling for comments

Then I name the next version of linux, "hedgehog".

Oh wait, there's that init replacement thingy...

I name the next version of BSD, "hedgehog".

Microsoft Edge bug odyssey shows why we can't have nice things

P. Lee

Re: Content Length != Range?

I think Range headers can have multiple parameters - you can ask for Range P1-P2, P3-P4, P5-P6 parts of a document.

I seem to think this caused security problems some time ago when bounds checking was poor and a single request could be used to amplify the reply by requesting the same thing multiple times, use negative ranges (give me a range backwards) etc.

We can have nice things. Just not from MS. They are too busy working on locking in all authentication - internal and SaaS/business-to-business with AzureAD - browser issues are nothing compared to that horrific idea.

"And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name." - Rev 13:17

Wires, chips, and LEDs: US trade bigwigs detail Chinese kit that's going to cost a lot more

P. Lee

Re: wireless cables?

>you plug it into the USB port ...and the laptop runs forever

You bought one of those silly new MacBooks?

nbn™ CEO didn't mean to offend gamers, just brand them unwelcome bandwidth-hogs

P. Lee

>The demand for 100Mbps has been falling since day 1 and since 2014 hasn't been above 15%.

Speed != bandwidth

Selling speed tiers is stupid. Get the bits off the nbn network and onto the users’ networks as fast as possible. Even streaming video doesn’t take that much. Sell the data cap instead. That provides the cash for total capacity.

You blithering Ajit! Huawei burns Pai for FCC sh*tlist proposal

P. Lee

Re: I never thought I'd say this but...

I think Huawei is talking about carrier class kit, not phones.

In which case, yes, the allegations don’t appear substantiated.

All android phones snitch - that is their purpose. Carrier kit, not so much. Even so, if you aren’t securing your data from your carrier, you aren’t doing it right.

It’s just protectionism. It breeds inefficiency and increased costs for the protected side. You’re welcome to your Cisco sfp and ram prices.

nbn™ ponders a gamers' gate to throttle heavy wireless users

P. Lee

Re: Bandwidth vs latency

>Morrow doesn't understand gamers don't use the bandwidth, video streaming does.

Unless the Steam sale is on...

P. Lee

Re: So let me get this straight

Did they build much, or did they just buy and try to integrate?

They should have gone with gigabit fibre and sold data volumes.

Stingray phone stalker tech used near White House, SS7 abused to steal US citizens' data – just Friday things

P. Lee

DRS?

Trump Derangement Syndrome?

Maybe there are lots of other people worth snooping on in the Whitehouse vicinity.

Most of the honey is close to the queen bee. Only bee-keepers are interested in the queen herself.

Australia’s SigInt spooks may be turned inwards after all

P. Lee

A few questions:

1. Why would a national security agency be dealing with child abuse? That seems like using the army for police work. Shouldn't they just provide training, rather than change the law?

2. Why would they be dealing with child abuse in someone else's jurisdiction? Shouldn't they pass the data to the relevant authorities rather than going all vigilante?

3. What is the limiting principle? Child abuse? Spouse abuse? 50 Shades re-enactments? Bullying? Kids calling each other mean names?

4. Is the course of action in using the ASD proportional to the stated problem? How many incidents of child abuse where the asd helped using a cyber-attack, occurred last year?

5. Can they explain how taking out a media server mitigates the stated problem of child abuse? Even if it was a live event, even if the ddos was successful, how is the child rescued from harm?

Preliminary analysis: Liars.

And when we are talking about the State, dangerous liars.

Epyc fail? We can defeat AMD's virtual machine encryption, say boffins

P. Lee

Re: Here we go again

>Hello? Hardware? Built into the chip??

It would have been prudent to put the code out there in an emulator format before they baked it in.

But regardless, put your $%^#^ VM on-prem, not under someone-else's kit.

It is far cheaper and far safer than everything you need to do to mitigate the stupid cloud decision.

Facebook's democracy salvage effort tilts scale in Mississippi primary

P. Lee

>I've never understood how Facebook is anything but a publisher.

I think the commenter meant "editor" rather than "publisher."

If they curate content beyond what is required by law, safe-harbour should not apply and they should be liable for the content under their curator-ship.

America's comms watchdog takes on the internet era's real criminals: Pirate pastors

P. Lee

Whooosh!

I think the point of the article was that causing a controversy over something irrelevant is a time-honoured way of distracting people from your actual, significant mistakes.

Also, seems to be trying to restore favour with (American-definition) liberals after destroying net neutrality.

Seriously, Cisco? Another hard-coded password? Sheesh

P. Lee

Re: Unmentionable

>GRAMMAR-IFIC!

More proof of the generation-skipping matriarchy.

I feel oppressed. Who wants to grab their colouring book and form a safe-space with me?

Hey cool, you went serverless. Now you just have to worry about all those stale functions

P. Lee

Shock Revelation

Unmanaged infrastructures are unmanaged!

But cloud is so cheap and firewalls so difficult to manage!

Don't look at the CASB behind the curtain...

Or those fat comms links, or the very large firewalls we now need. Or the multi-10G routers. Or...

OpenWrt forums lost as hardware failure again crocks open Wi-Fi router

P. Lee

Nothing to do with open source

A full ms share point/ exchange stack would make no difference.

This this "small volunteer organisation" behaviour. I would have hoped, however, that IT people would know better than to trust IT.

Engineer crashed mega-corp's electricity billing portal, was promoted

P. Lee

Multi-tenant

That seems like a bit of a euphemism - tenants are usually separated from each other by walls.

Virtue singing – Spotify to pull hateful songs and artists

P. Lee

>content that expressly and principally promotes, advocates, or incites hatred or violence against a group or individual based on characteristics...

Part of me says, "at last, a statement so wide it doesn't create discrimination" and another little part of me dies knowing "incites hatred or violence" is, these days, interpreted as, "someone disagreed with me."

I guess Spotify is going instrumental.

You love Systemd – you just don't know it yet, wink Red Hat bods

P. Lee

Re: Ahhh SystemD

>A solution that no one wants for problems no one has.

Hmmm. I think we should be a little more accurate. There are real problems which it solves. It just appears to have used the worst possible method of solving them.

Time to ditch the Facebook login: If customers' data should be protected, why hand it over to Zuckerberg?

P. Lee

Re: Corporations promote their Facebook-URL way above links to their own websites

We needs a new presence protocol so that users can maintain identities separate from applications. We need to be able to create SAML logins and then have them hosted with arbitrary providers, such as ISP or facebook, but without them being linked to any particular application.

Then facebook depends on your identity and not the other way around.

GoDaddy exiles altright.com after civil rights group complaint

P. Lee

>Free speech means we have the right to not promote those views.

I absolutely agree. We do need to understand that the legal system is downstream of politics, which is downstream of culture, which is downstream from morality.

The question is, does providing DNS mean you support the altright values?

- if you answer "yes" to this question, and you think GoDaddy has the right to not promote the altright based on terms of service, then logical consistency at the morality level says that providing a cake for a gay wedding is also promotion of gay values and the bakers have the right to refuse service.

- if you answer "no", do you still think GoDaddy has the right to determine who provides service to? Should they be forced against their will to provide service to altright organisations which do not align to GoDaddy's beliefs because GoDaddy is offering a commercial service to the public and should not discriminate? Essentially, does the State have the right to take GoDaddy's labour and resources and appropriate it as the State sees fit, to make them serve the altright?

The free speech arguments are not about freedom of expression. The free speech argument controls the outcome of arguments about freedom of thought, conscience and action, which control the outcome of the argument over freedom from State-imposed morality. This is why free speech is such an important issue and why free speech advocates are willing to defend the rights of those expressing the most vile views. If those people are kept safe, then everyone is kept safe. Once you abrogate the principle, no-one is safe (in the long run) and we might see the State and the Church Of The Left combine to force bakers into slavery through State-backed morality laws.

Microsoft's latest Windows 10 update downs Chrome, Cortana

P. Lee

>trying the Windows logo key + Ctrl + Shift + B

*MS tips hat to Spectrum*

Blighty: If EU won't let us play at Galileo, we're going home and taking encryption tech with us

P. Lee

Re: Fucking Brexit

I'd like to see more citations to go with "Britain has warned..." phrases. With such vagueness, I assume journalistic bias. The withdrawal of encryption tech might have been a reply to a query about what we would do if excluded from Galileo when that isn't really on the cards. In which case, there is no sulking - you don't give your tech if there is no agreement to share. Oooooh Brexit leads to bad stuff. Or not. This looks a lot like a lot of opinion with very little basis other than, "what are the options for involvement with Galileo?" Which are

(1) stay involved like other states or

(2) don't be involved.

(1) seems better and since it doesn't appear to involve sovereignty issues, would be expected to be supported by all sides. The only issues in principle would be if there are unprincipled (given existing non eu state participation) eu bureaucrats.

So please, provide sources- and it shouldn't be buzzfeed or any other media outlet.

Press F to pay respects to the Windows 10 April Update casualties

P. Lee

Re: Homegroups

Isn't SMB1 turned off by default?

Samba appears to have had SMBv3 since 2015, so no real FLOSS requirement there.

P. Lee

Re: Windows

>Please explain how I get through a working day doing that on a Linux desktop.

Some people are just born unlucky. ;)

Linux is great for custom data processing typical in IT, server systems and for scaling out. If you need a windows app, use windows. If you need both, use virtualisation or two boxes. No-one is going to hunt you down because you use windows. Not even MS does that - they just turn your stuff off. Maybe they'll slurp it first.

P. Lee
Linux

>"The Windows 10 April Update has begun seeping out from beneath the Redmond bathroom door"

Its Red[mond] and its seeping out from under the bathroom door?

Is it a blood-bath or just washing over a single corpse?

It was Tux, on my desktop, with a lead-pipe an unused activation code.

P. Lee

Re: Sadly

>Flat monochrome not needed since upgraded from mono CGA/Hercules to EGA

Flat and square is very fast and has very low resource requirements. If everything is doing that, your system will be more battery efficient than using texture maps.

That's the only reason I can think of to do such a horrid gui.

if dev == woman then dont_be(asshole): Stack Overflow tries again to be more friendly to non-male non-pasty coders

P. Lee

If dev == woman then...

Would that be someone asking for special privileges based on gender? It looks like it.

I can support "if dev then dontbe()" but why would you restrict it to women? That seems a bit spiteful or uncaring.

Apple grounds AirPort once and for all. It has departed. Not gonna fly any more. The baggage is dropped off...

P. Lee
Facepalm

Re: There may be some good out of it

While it would be far too smug of me to point out tm running fine on my linux server, I will pause to consider whether Apple's complete lack of on-prem backup means for non-iphoney hardware.

In my estimation, you roll out the better solution before you kill the old one, just in case.

Not only does it seem like a gaping hole in the product solution, it also seems like a really stupid waste of an on-prem presence, even if you have no current plans for it.

I'm sure it is possible to sync the 256G iphone to the cloud... but does it make sense?

Facebook can't admit the truth, says data-slurp boffin Kogan

P. Lee

Re: "I was just the unlucky person that ended up somehow linked to the Trump campaign"

>If the CA/Facebook slurpfest hadn't been tied to Trump in some way none of this would be in the news whatsoever.

Well, the slurping of FB data by the Obama campaign was news. It was just that the media liked Obama and therefore praised him for it and moved on.

"Ex-Obama Campaign Official: Here's How We Were Able To Mine So Much Facebook Data"

https://www.dailywire.com/news/28424/ex-obama-campaign-official-heres-how-we-were-able-james-barrett

Microsoft Lean's in: Slimmed-down Windows 10 OS option spotted

P. Lee

Re: The funny thing is that...

I appear to have a fat cat but quite frankly, slimming down OS downloads mostly benefits MS.

I care far less about how much RAM the OS is using than the fact that Word frequently locks up completely, Excel frequently goes AWOL for 10-30 seconds (all white white window, lots of <ctrl> marks) as if its gone off searching for some stuff on the internet and is timing out. With 16G RAM and working off a local SSD, this should not be a thing.

Did I mention how much I hate the "send this document to someone via email" in Office 2016 takes both extra clicks compared to Office 2010 and *still* locks up Outlook while you're doing it? Everything appears to be getting worse, not better.

I don't need UWP and I don't need MS to censor profanity from my documents online - I need applications which don't induce profanity generation.

P. Lee

Re: Old and Bloated...

It isn't an OS, its an ecosystem.

Sadly, when you can saturate the ecosystem with your product as fast as MS can, there's nowhere left to go to "grow" so you start eating the small fry that live in your ecosystem and you grow. Then you eat the larger fish and you keep growing. Finally you are a huge fish in a relatively small pond and there is nothing left to eat.

If you're willing to pay for software and/or you want something crossplatform look at WPS Office and Edraw Max. I'm not associated with either company - I'm just impressed.

UK consumer help bloke Martin Lewis is suing Facebook over fake ads

P. Lee

>>"We're not a publisher we're a platform so we're not responsible for anything we do la la la"

>It's wearing a little thin.

A recent 9th circuit court judgement held that YouTube's and Google's assertions of neutrality were "pure puffery" so maybe we'll see a little traction where editorial control is effected - which includes friendface.

http://tushnet.blogspot.com.au/2018/03/youtubes-claims-about-allowing-free.html

If they can't take down these pics, so much for their "send us your nudie pics" gambit.

It's just a large corporate doing what large corporates do: externalise all possible costs.