Joseph Jerome
@joejerome.com
2.3K followers 480 following 670 posts
Public Policy at DuckDuckGo. Here to post about tech, privacy, and the law. 🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦 www.joejerome.com
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joejerome.com
Jon Sallet from the Colorado AG discussing Google’s search dominance flywheel at an excellent lunch put on by @knightgtown.bsky.social
joejerome.com
“[Artificial intelligence] was promised as a magical solution to all sorts of things. In practice, it’s not ready for that,” said Gabriel Weinberg, CEO of DuckDuckGo. www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2...
Analysis | Americans have become more pessimistic about AI. Why?
Four theories to explain the surveys that keep showing sour public opinion about AI.
www.washingtonpost.com
joejerome.com
Overheard in a TSA line:

Agent to kid: How old are you? Are you twelve?

Kid to agent, merrily: No, I’m thirteen!

Agent to kid: Got clothes on under that hoody?

Kid to agent, confused: Yes?

Agent to kid: Take it off! Welcome to adulthood.

Everyone laughs. I cry.
a man in a knight 's helmet says take it off or i will
ALT: a man in a knight 's helmet says take it off or i will
media.tenor.com
joejerome.com
It’s become a personal peeve of mine that we still call any of these content farms “social.”
Reposted by Joseph Jerome
Reposted by Joseph Jerome
merriam-webster.com
We are thrilled to announce that our NEW Large Language Model will be released on 11.18.25.
joejerome.com
As U.S. policymakers continue to discuss AI regulation, DuckDuckGo’s CEO proposes a federal baseline that:

(1) Brings out the ban hammer for harmful practices.
(2) Imposes safeguards for risky practices with an opt-in consent for consumer AI.
(3) Transparency and optionality for everything else.
What banning AI surveillance should look like, at a minimum
Prohibited practices, others that face higher scrutiny, and the rest at least transparent and optional
gabrielweinberg.com
joejerome.com
This year's lineup of amazing orgs supported by DuckDuckGo has just been announced!

From courtroom advocates to encryption specialists and digital markets experts, all contribute to raising the standard of trust online. Discover their work⬇️

spreadprivacy.com/2025-duckduc...
2025 DuckDuckGo Charitable Donations
DuckDuckGo is donating $1.1 million in 2025 to support organizations that share our vision of raising the standard of trust online.
spreadprivacy.com
joejerome.com
This seems correct on so many levels. I think it would apply to our tech overlords, as well. Zuckerberg is a great example: started “social media” as a college student and now thinks we need AI friends as he crosses 40, with a promise of another half-century as absolute monarch of Meta.
chronotope.aramzs.xyz
... increasingly American op-ed writers appear--as they stay in these positions as sinecures for longer and longer--to essentially be constructing parallel realities in their head and then self-selecting lives to live as close to them as they can so they never have to confront that they can be wrong
joejerome.com
This is generic advice, but I think providing more context into a query helps. Additionally, I’ve become a big user of bangs! But it’s a good idea for us to have some more tips beyond our help pages.
joejerome.com
If “caution” means allowing a defendant’s illegal behavior to persist, it defeats the purpose of finding liability in the first place and undermines the law enforcement function of antitrust law.

www.promarket.org/2025/09/23/a...
Appraising the Google Search Antitrust Remedies - ProMarket
Erik Hovenkamp and A. Douglas Melamed discuss what Judge Amit Mehta got right and wrong in his remedy decision in the Google Search antitrust case.
www.promarket.org
Reposted by Joseph Jerome
normative.bsky.social
Lot of annoyed Transparency/Security geeks today, NYT.
New York Times Spelling Bee puzzle showing “Glomar” is not a word
joejerome.com
Alas news isn’t free.
conradhackett.bsky.social
83% of US adults haven't paid for news in the last year.

About half (49%) say their main reason is they can find plenty of free news elsewhere.
www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/...
Chart showing among the 83% of U.S. adults who have not paid for news in the past year, the most common reason they cite is that they can find plenty of other news articles for free. About half of those who don’t pay for news (49%) say this is the main reason.

Indeed, many news websites do not have paywalls. Others have recently loosened paywalls or removed them for certain content like public emergencies or public interest stories.

Another common reason people don’t pay for news is that they are not interested enough (32%). Smaller shares of Americans who don’t pay for news say the main reason is that it’s too expensive (10%) or that the news provided isn’t good enough to pay for (8%).
joejerome.com
Looking forward to your oversight hearings one day!
joejerome.com
Doing some cost-cutting. No reason.
joejerome.com
It’s not accurate at all. Right up there with the gig economy “democratizing employment.” Companies seize on appealing metaphors to pursue strategies that are anathema to the initial concept.
joejerome.com
Exactly. Town squares aren’t opened by billionaires.
Reposted by Joseph Jerome
parismarx.com
countries outside the US should start seeing social media companies like they see propagandistic state media.

the fact average people can post doesn’t negate how the platform owner shapes what information we see, the power that gives them, and how little regard they have for social consequences.
joejerome.com
Google keeps chipping away at a nothingburger.
joejerome.com
Stayed up late to learn that Google and the DOJ are still not in agreement on how to turn Judge Mehta’s remedies into a coherent order.
antitrust.bots.law
New filing: "U.S. v. Google LLC (Dep't of Justice Search Monopoly)"
Doc #1442: Memorandum

Download PDF | View Full Case

#CL18552824