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Trump administration 2024-2028

False claim that she reasonably could have known was false.

Michael Schellenberger on X summarizes.
Friend that’s a mighty thin blanket you pulled back.
First, did Publix or DeSantis sue 60 Minutes for their story?
Second, ‘the person’ at the White House, lol, like that has a lot of credibility. This ‘person’ could been a washroom attendant for all we know.
Your comments/opinion making rational on this is might thin, given your background I’d except a lot more empirical evidence before jumping to this conclusion.
 
I think he was referring to more significant NATO partners dragging their heels. I'm looking at Turkey, Greece and Spain... Basically all of Southern Europe minus Italy.
I’ve never expected them to do much over the last 50yrs.
Sadly they are like those distant relatives that your parents insist on having to invite to your wedding with you knowing full well that they won’t attend, even though they reside a block away from the reception hall.
 
A Wikipedia snapshot of her credentials for those who want to make up their own minds.
Not a peep about arguably her most controversial mistake, if not deliberate misrepresentation. Wikipedia at its gate-kept best.
 
Friend that’s a mighty thin blanket you pulled back.
First, did Publix or DeSantis sue 60 Minutes for their story?
Second, ‘the person’ at the White House, lol, like that has a lot of credibility. This ‘person’ could been a washroom attendant for all we know.
Your comments/opinion making rational on this is might thin, given your background I’d except a lot more empirical evidence before jumping to this conclusion.
The truth or falsity doesn't hinge on whether anyone sued. What matters is the claim was false, and it had been earlier openly stated to be false. If it matters, you'll notice Moskowitz is a Democrat.

The most charitable explanation is no-one doing that story knew about the prior Miami Herald story and resultant counter-claim. Otherwise in increasingly discreditable order, someone at the time knew and didn't mention it, or it was mentioned and they decided to ignore it.

When sub-par work has been produced in the past, it's reasonable to take safeguards against sub-par work in the present. It's well-known (at least among US media and a lot of the related commentariat) that Weiss's hiring and appointment is controversial among staff. It's not hard to figure out that the "controversy" is that she proposes to tighten up standards. It's harder to slide out misleading narratives in that kind of environment.

What the WH does or doesn't say in response to questioning is irrelevant to my point. The essential facts of the reported story can be as the segment alleges and the claims about Weiss and her motives can be entirely wrong.
 
Second, ‘the person’ at the White House, lol, like that has a lot of credibility. This ‘person’ could been a washroom attendant for all we know.
Of course. File that one away for the next time "anonymous" sources are cited by anyone.
 
False claim that she reasonably could have known was false.

Michael Schellenberger on X summarizes.
This Michael Schellenberger?


Michael Shellenberger is far better known today as a right-wing political influencer than he ever was during the period we worked together. . . . Like Michael, I long ago left the progressive environmental echo chamber. But Michael has gone through a MAGA-tinted looking glass and now trafficks in deep state conspiracies about UFOs, January 6th, and social media censorship far nuttier and more extreme than anything that his former progressive allies could ever have conjured up.

Let he who is without sin . . .

:unsure:
 
So I am seeing that certain files that were released can actually be unredacted if you download them and use a simple python script, due to how those PDF's were created.

I am going to refrain from linking anything just to be safe, but they're in the wild now for the curious.
 
This Michael Schellenberger?
Yes, that Schellenberger.

Supposing Nordhaus's opinions of Schellenberger having odd beliefs about UFOs and J6 and censorship (Schellenberger co-investigated the "Twitter Files" with Matt Taibbi) to be true and not inflected by Nordhaus's own politics, they are irrelevant to the facts. I put up a link to Schellenberg's X post because it was a convenient summary of facts I already knew from other reading.

Moskowitz on X

Also Moskowitz

The second post is particularly interesting. "We didn't get an interview" is not the same as "we didn't get a response".
 
So I am seeing that certain files that were released can actually be unredacted if you download them and use a simple python script, due to how those PDF's were created.

I am going to refrain from linking anything just to be safe, but they're in the wild now for the curious.

Poor quality redaction by adding layers to a PDF is a tale as old as time.

(Or at least as old as the PDF standard)
 
they are irrelevant to the facts
There's the point.

You decided to discredit Alfonsi's credibility by a post from Schellenberger who himself is problematic. But we don't know the actual facts in the Publix matter because it was never addressed in depth because before the report his people ran for cover. The fact that Publix and various Florida Republican shills objected after the fact is par for the course.

The actual point here is that Alfonsi does have a solid reputation as an investigative reporter covering decades. Schellenberger is irrelevant. You're trying to deflect from the factual situation behind the 60 minutes story by an oblique ad hominin attack on Alfonsi. That's typical MAGA strategy.

🍻
 
The ineptitude is amazing.
I don't know about the police field but in the law one, two and a bit decades ago the search for a software solution that would really, really redact an electronic document permanently was a major issue. At the time there were several solutions that did redaction but could still be compromised.

I would have thought that by this time that there would be a foolproof tool and that DoJ would have it widely deployed.

:unsure:
 
I don't know about the police field but in the law one, two and a bit decades ago the search for a software solution that would really, really redact an electronic document permanently was a major issue. At the time there were several solutions that did redaction but could still be compromised.

I would have thought that by this time that there would be a foolproof tool and that DoJ would have it widely deployed.

:unsure:
Redact the document with whatever tool you chose, then take a screen capture of the image of the redacted document. How is it that complicated?
 
I don't know about the police field but in the law one, two and a bit decades ago the search for a software solution that would really, really redact an electronic document permanently was a major issue. At the time there were several solutions that did redaction but could still be compromised.

I would have thought that by this time that there would be a foolproof tool and that DoJ would have it widely deployed.

:unsure:
Acrobat Pro does it easily and reliably. My best guess is they never got rid of the Optical Character Recognition layer after they blacked out using whatever tool they used.

The most hilarious case would be if someone just highlighted the text and gave it a black background to match the characters.

Either way, no excuse for failing something this spectacularly.
 
Redact the document with whatever tool you chose, then take a screen capture of the image of the redacted document. How is it that complicated?
It's not. It's time consuming and somewhat impractical from a business point of view where larger numbers of documents need to be dealt with especially if many of them are paper and need digitizing and Batesing in the first place.

🍻
 
Is that an opinion, or do you have sources?
Opinion. There is no authoritative source for credibility of journalists. Either you read them, or you don't.

Weiss is one of the handful of prominent people in media pressured by peers to either conform to their political preferences or move on, in this case at the NYT. The incident reflects badly on them, not her. I can guess that her subsequent financial success at Substack, her departure from leftist hive mind conformance, and particularly her new job have all antagonized the politically active left in US media. (I'm only guessing about the first; the latter two have been openly expressed by people who don't like her.) Leftists like to control institutions; they've gotten used to controlling institutions; they object to change.

I expect people who object to her and what they figure will be shakeups at CBS to fight back. Fighting back includes creating controversy where they can. The controversy they're trying to gin up here is that she's somehow in the pockets of the Trump administration.

If Moskowitz told his story straight, he dead-ended the juiciest angle of a story ("pay-to-play") people had undoubtedly been working on for a while and for which the frame had already been decided. Denied an opportunity to interview him and thus edit/splice a version of his story to suit themselves, they went ahead anyways. People should worry more about the credibility of anyone involved in that, particularly the senior-most.
 
Acrobat Pro does it easily and reliably. My best guess is they never got rid of the Optical Character Recognition layer after they blacked out using whatever tool they used.

The most hilarious case would be if someone just highlighted the text and gave it a black background to match the characters.

Either way, no excuse for failing something this spectacularly.

I looked into it further, the python script was just to automate the process (because there are thousands of files). You can manually highlight the redacted text and paste it into a new document and if it's one of the effected ones, voila. Trump's name appears over 600 times now.
 
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