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Monthly Archives: June 2017
Fox guest says gay people at Pulse vigil "probably don’t know what the Second Amendment is" – Media Matters for America
Posted: June 14, 2017 at 3:55 am
Media Matters for America | Fox guest says gay people at Pulse vigil "probably don't know what the Second Amendment is" Media Matters for America Most gay people aren't political. Most gay people, you know, they care about pop music and going to the beach. They probably don't know what the Second Amendment is. And so they show up to be together, to celebrate the community, to mourn together and ... |
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Fox guest says gay people at Pulse vigil "probably don't know what the Second Amendment is" - Media Matters for America
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LOIS HENRY: Use of Juneteenth as marketing ploy to sell guns doesn’t go over well – The Bakersfield Californian
Posted: at 3:55 am
In the world of boneheaded marketing ploys, this has to rank as one of the boneheadedest.
Kendall Jenner and that dumb Pepsi ad? Move over.
Fliers from Second Amendment Sports, a local gun shop and shooting range, started showing up in mailboxes late last week.
Im just going to describe it verbatim.
The front has large, bold lettering announcing Juneteenth.
Above it is a drawing of an, apparently, African-American man with his arms raised overhead breaking a chain.
A photo of a white mans face has been imposed onto the drawing.
To the side, the flier states, Juneteenth, Dads & Grads Sale June 15th & 17th.
On the back (between clip art of shackled wrists breaking chains) it says:
Celebrate Juneteenth Dads & Grads.
Emancipate yourselves from the oppression of the man.
From your chores, from your school Buy a gun!
Take that boot off your neck and enjoy some great deals!
I found an explainer, sort of, about Juneteenth saying it is recognized mostly by black Americans and commemorates the end of the Civil War and the final Southern state of Texas announcing the emancipation of slaves. (I would argue with that interpretation, which Ill get to.)
It goes on to say that Second Amendment Sports is celebrating the date to remind people that all races at one time in history were enslaved and that freedom comes at a cost.
Buy a firearm and some ammunition and take your power back from a government that would prefer you to be a slave again! says the explainer.
Then theres a convoluted line about states' rights and keeping the Union together, presumably about the Civil War.
Remember Juneteenth, it ends. Know that it has relevance to all men.
So, that cleared up nothing about this ill-conceived ad campaign.
Just as a start, I wondered if Second Amendment had used Juneteenth as a sale-a-bration marketing concept before?
What was the response? Whats the response now?
Who's face is that photoshopped onto the drawing?
I did eventually get an email from Second Amendment Sports owner Matt Janes, who defended the fliers as opening a dialogue about the fragility of freedom for everyone.
He said this is the second year Second Amendment Sports has used the Juneteenth ad campaign and reaction has been "mixed."
"Some people choose to be offended," Janes wrote. "They do not feel it is our place to bring up U.S. history when it pertains to certain subjects. Like it is taboo or exclusive to only some. Others totally understand the meaning behind our advertisement. Others are 'Hunh? What's Juneteenth?'"
As to the face imposed on the drawing: "It is immaterial and largely the point of the image. It could be an ancestor, you, me, our children...that is the importance."
If nothing else, he wrote, he hopes the flier gets people talking.
The entire thing is disrespectful, said Jason Phillips. And to turn it (Juneteenth) into a political message to fan up emotion, which leads directly to more gun sales for them, is sickening.
Reactions on Facebook and elsewhere were similar, a mixture of outrage and derision.
I'm all for standing firm on civil liberties and slapping back government overreach. But I don't think coopting Juneteenth is the way to go.
To me, the flier and tortured explainer are boorish and just plain weird.
I mean, why not hawk high-caliber rifles on Holocaust Remembrance Day as "yellow badge repellant?"
Im not going to argue whether the fliers are also racist.
Anyone who doesnt find them racially offensive will get defensive and claim the other side is overly sensitive.
Thats a spin cycle that never ends.
Instead, hey, what exactly is Juneteenth?
I will admit that I didn't know until I covered the Bill Pickett Invitational Rodeo, an all black rodeo, which happened to be touring in Bakersfield on Juneteenth some years back.
To me, Juneteenth is bittersweet in a lot of ways.
It recognizes the end of slavery, yes.
But it came to 250,000 slaves in Texas on June 19, 1865, two months after the official end of the Civil War.
And 2 1/2 years after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued by President Abraham Lincoln in January 1863.
And the state of Texas certainly did not announce it, as implied by Second Amendment Sports' explainer.
Union Gen. Gordon Granger landed in Galveston with 2,000 troops to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation.
Granger made it his first order of business to stand on a balcony and read aloud:
The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor.
Today, Juneteenth is typically marked with gatherings of family and friends, food, remembrances and prayer.
Its a recognition, a friend told me.
That sounds right. A recognition. Not a door buster.
Opinions expressed in this column are those of Lois Henry. Her column runs Wednesdays and Sundays. Comment at http://www.bakersfield.com, call her at 661-395-7373 or emaillhenry@bakersfield.comfollow her on Twitter @loishenry or on Facebook at Lois Henry.
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Violating the First Amendment, High School Punishes Student for Satirical Campaign Speech – National Review
Posted: at 3:55 am
Honors student J.P. Krause won the election for senior class president at Vero Beach High School in Vero Beach, Fla. And then, all of a sudden, his victory was stripped from him.
Summarily, the high schools administrators stripped him of his new position, and, to add insult to injury, gave him detention. Why? Because Krause delivered a satirical campaign speech that channeled Donald Trumps presidential campaign rhetoric and, in jest, claimed his opponent was a Communist. It was harassment, the principal concluded.
After Krauses classmates chanted speech, speech, he gave an impromptu speech that kept his fellow classmates laughing for well over a minute. I am for freedom, equality, and liberty, he said. His opponent? Well, she wants to advance Communist ideals, he smirked. She will raise taxes to 80 percent!
Krause also suggested in jest that his opponent supports their rivals at the nearby high school, whereas he would build a wall between the two schools and make their rival pay for it.
No one thought Krause was serious. The room, full of honors students in U.S. History, seemed to be well aware of the parallels Krause was making between his campaign speech and Donald Trumps presidential campaign speeches. The teacher allowed the off-the-cuff speech to continue, and there wasnt any reaction by students inside the classroom but laughter.
Nevertheless, the speech not only disqualified Krause from taking up the reins as class president, it also added harassment to his school record. The administration took my speech out of context and said I was harassing a student, Krause tells National Review.
It was a joke the whole way through.
Pacific Legal Foundation, a conservative public-interest law firm, is representing Krause in an attempt to remove the harassment claims from his school record. It also seeks to reinstate Krause as class president. It was pure political speech and obviously humorous, explains Mark Miller, Krauses attorney at Pacific Legal Foundation, to National Review. Its clearly protected in First Amendment speech.
In a letter sent to Mark Rendell, the superintendent of the school district, Miller argued that if a student gives a speech that is lewd, vulgar, or profane, then the school can sanction him.
But that is not remotely the case here, Miller retorted. Satirically claiming that an opponent in a class election wants to raise taxes, advance Communism, and implement a dress code is certainly not lewd, vulgar, or profane its a joke.
Because the high school applied the same speech code that it would use to punish students who say lewd, vulgar, or profane comments to that of a satirical speech, Miller contests that it is violating the First Amendment. J.P.s speech in no way singled out his fellow student candidate for her appearance, abilities, gender, race, creed, religious beliefs, or sexual orientation, Miller wrote. Nor was it deeply offensive.
Schools such as Vero Beach High School are sending the message to students that only some political statements are tolerable. Thats exactly the wrong message to tell a young man like J.P, Miller says.
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Ken White: Actually, hate speech is protected by First Amendment … – Allentown Morning Call
Posted: at 3:54 am
Free speech and its limitations are on Americans' minds. In the past year we've seen Nazis and white supremacists rally in our cities, angry protesters chase provocateurs off of college campuses, a comedian wield a bloody effigy of the president's severed head, and slurs and overt racial animus made a staple of political discourse. Controversial speech has people talking about what restrictions, if any, society can enforce on words we despise.
That inquiry isn't inherently bad. It's good for citizens to want to learn more about the contours of our constitutional rights. The dilemma is that the public debate about free speech relies on useless cliches, not on accurate information about the law.
Here are some of the most popular misleading slogans:
"Not all speech is protected. There are limits to free speech."
This slogan is true, but rarely helpful. The Supreme Court has called the few exceptions to the First Amendment "well-defined and narrowly limited." They include obscenity, defamation, fraud, incitement, true threats and speech integral to already criminal conduct. First Amendment exceptions are not an open-ended category, and the Supreme Court has repeatedly declined to add to them, especially in the last generation. Merely observing that some exceptions exist does not help anyone determine whether particular speech falls into one of those exceptions. It's a non sequitur.
Imagine you're bitten by a snake on a hike, and you want to know rather urgently whether the snake is venomous. You describe the snake to your doctor. "Well, not all snakes are venomous," your doctor responds. Not very helpful, is it?
"You can't shout 'fire' in a crowded theater."
Almost 100 years ago, Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendel Holmes Jr. coined a version of this now-familiar metaphor. Holmes used it to explain why the Supreme Court was upholding the criminal conviction of Charles Schenck, who was jailed merely for distributing materials urging peaceful resistance to the draft in World War I. Fortunately, the Supreme Court often led by Holmes himself retreated from this terrible precedent, eventually ruling that speech can't be punished as "incitement" unless it is intended and likely to provoke imminent lawless action. In other words, this favorite rhetorical apologia for censorship was used in the course of a decision now universally recognized as bad law.
Holmes' usually misquoted slogan (he said that the law allows us to punish someone for falsely shouting fire in a crowded theater) is really just another way to observe that not all speech is protected and there are limits to First Amendment protections. As I said before, that's not in dispute, but invoking the truism does nothing to resolve whether any particular speech falls within the well-defined and narrow exceptions to the First Amendment.
"Hate speech is not free speech."
This popular saying reflects our contempt for bigotry, but it's not a correct statement of law. There is no general First Amendment exception allowing the government to punish "hate speech" that denigrates people based on their identity. Things we call "hate speech" might occasionally fall into an existing First Amendment exception: A racist speech might seek to incite imminent violence against a group, or might be reasonably interpreted as an immediate threat to do harm. But "hate speech," like other ugly types of speech we despise, is broadly protected.
"We must balance free speech and other interests."
Censorship advocates often tell us we need to balance the freedom to speak with the harm that speech does. This is arguable philosophically, but it is wrong legally. American courts don't decide whether to protect speech by balancing its harm against its benefit; they ask only if it falls into a specific First Amendment exception. As the Supreme Court recently put it, "the First Amendment's guarantee of free speech does not extend only to categories of speech that survive an ad hoc balancing of relative social costs and benefits. The First Amendment itself reflects a judgment by the American people that the benefits of its restrictions on the Government outweigh the costs."
"'Fighting words' are not protected under the First Amendment."
Years ago the Supreme Court recognized a very narrow First Amendment exception for "fighting words." If the exception still survives, it's limited to in-person face-to-face insults directed at a particular person and likely to provoke a violent response from that person. It doesn't apply broadly to offensive speech, even though it's often invoked to justify censoring such speech.
"Maybe this speech is protected now, but the law is always changing."
The Supreme Court's approach to constitutional rights can change very quickly. For instance, it took less than a generation for the court to reverse course on whether the government could punish gay sex. But for decades the court has been moving toward more vigorous protection of free speech, not less. Some of the most controversial and unpopular speech to come before the court like videos of animals being tortured, or incendiary Westboro Baptist Church protests at funerals have yielded solid 8-to-1 majorities in favor of protecting speech. There's no sign of a growing appetite for censorship on the court.
Even as a free speech advocate and critic of censorship, I'm happy to see a public debate about the limits of free speech. Any debate that raises consciousness about our rights can be productive. But the free speech debate should proceed based on facts and well-established law, not empty rhetoric. Familiarity with our rights and how they work is a civic obligation.
Ken White is a First Amendment litigator and criminal defense attorney at Brown White & Osborn LLP in Los Angeles. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.
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Is It Unconstitutional for Trump to Block Twitter Users? – National Review
Posted: at 3:54 am
Lawyers from Columbia Universitys Knight First Amendment Institute sent a letter last weekarguing that President Trumps blocking users on Twitter runs afoul of the First Amendment.
The presidents account recently blocked the two Twitter users being represented after they posted critical tweets in response to a couple of the presidents tweets.
Their lawyers argument is that the presidents blocking these users from seeing or responding to his tweets on Twitter impinges on their free-speech rights under the First Amendment; the idea is that Trump, in his capacity as a state actor, has violated the Constitution by blocking access to information in what should be considered a public forum.
Yet they fail to consider that (1) these citizens have other means of accessing his tweets, and (2) Trumps account (@real DonaldTrump) is hosted by a private company, which is free to set its own policies for how its users interact.
To the first point, the two people that were blocked can still access these tweets not only from the thousands of retweets they receive from countless other accounts or news publications, but by simply creating another account from which to follow Trump.
Secondly, Trumps Twitter account is not federally owned or operated and therefore should not be treated as a government-created forum obliged to provide access to all comers.
It should be obvious that, though blocking people on Twitter may seem beneath the presidents office or pointless considering the thousands of other tweets that are critical of him from accounts he didnt bother to block, it isnt unconstitutional. Whether a judge might hold otherwise in the current climate is less clear.
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Is It Unconstitutional for Trump to Block Twitter Users? - National Review
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Democrats beat back Republicans’ anti-First Amendment crackdown on press interviews in the Capitol – Daily Kos
Posted: at 3:54 am
Rightthe GOPs been working to ensure the safety of reporters and constituentsas they travel through the halls of Congress. Is he for real? After incoming GOP Rep. Greg Gianforte clocked a reporter the night before gettingelected two weeks ago, barely a single Republican called him on it. Now Shelbysconcerned about people navigatingthe treacherous halls of Congress?
Shelby appearsto be hiding behind the cloak of existing rules versus the long-standing practice of reporter access.
Ranking Democratic Sen. Amy Klobuchar confirmed that Shelby told her nochanges to press access would made without her input.
She also put out a statement making clear the momentary change announced this morning amid the news flurry ofJeff Sessions major public hearing and the GOPs health care machinations was the result of Republicans arbitrary enforcement of an existingrulethat conflictswithcommon practice on the Hill.
Just another day in thesoap opera of totalRepublican rule in Washington.
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Jitsi – PediaView.com
Posted: at 3:54 am
Jitsi Original author(s) Emil Ivov Developer(s) Jitsi Team and Contributors Initial release 2003; 14years ago Stable release 2.10 (build.5550) (February5, 2017; 3 months ago) Preview release 2.11 (nightly) Development status Active Written in Java Operating system Linux, Mac OS X, Windows (all Java supported) Size 52.4 MB Windows (bundles its own private JRE)[1] 78.8MB Mac OS X (includes private JRE)[2] 22MB Linux 65MB source code[3] Available in Asturian, English, French, German, Bulgarian, Japanese, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, Greek and 25 more Type Voice over Internet Protocol / instant messaging / videoconferencing License Apache 2.0[4] Website jitsi.org
Jitsi (formerly SIP Communicator) is a free and open source multiplatform[5]voice (VoIP), videoconferencing and instant messaging application for Windows, Linux, Mac OS X and Android. It supports several popular instant-messaging and telephony protocols, including open recognised encryption protocols for chat (OTR) and voice/video/streaming and voice/video conferencing (SIP/RTP/SRTP/ZRTP), as well as built-in IPv6, NAT traversal and DNSSEC. Jitsi and its source code are released under the terms of the Apache Software Licence.[6]
Work on Jitsi (then SIP Communicator) started in 2003 in the context of a student project by Emil Ivov at the University of Strasbourg.[7] It was originally released as an example video phone in the JAIN-SIP stack and later spun off as a standalone project.[8]
Originally the project was mostly used as an experimentation tool because of its support for IPv6.[9][10] Through the years, as the project gathered members, it also added support for protocols other than SIP.
Jitsi has received support from various institutions such as the NLnet Foundation,[11][12] the University of Strasbourg and the Region of Alsace[13] and it has also had multiple participations in the Google Summer of Code program.[14][15]
In 2009, Emil Ivov founded the BlueJimp company which has employed some of Jitsis main contributors[16][17] in order to offer professional support and development services[18] related to the project.
In 2011, after successfully adding support for audio/video communication over XMPPs Jingle extensions, the project was renamed to Jitsi since it was no longer a SIP only Communicator.[19][20] This name originates from the Bulgarian (wires).[21]
On November 4, 2014, Jitsi + Ostel scored 6 out of 7 points on the Electronic Frontier Foundations secure messaging scorecard. They lost a point because there has not been a recent independent code audit.[22]
On February 1, 2015, Hristo Terezov, Ingo Bauersachs and the rest of the team released[23] version 2.6 from their stand at the Free and Open Source Software Developers European Meeting 2015 event in Brussels. This release includes security fixes, removes support of the deprecated MSN protocol, along with SSLv3 in XMPP. Among other notable improvements, the OS X version bundles a Java 8 runtime, enables echo cancelling by default, and uses the CoreAudio subsystem. The Linux build addresses font issues with the GTK+ native LookAndFeel, and fixes some long standing issues about microphone level on call setup when using the PulseAudio sound system. This release also adds the embedded Java database Hyper SQL Database to improve performance for users with huge configuration files, a feature which is disabled by default. A full list of changes is[24] available on the project web site.
Jitsis conference call window on Mac OS X
Jitsi supports multiple operating systems, including Windows as well as Unix-like systems such as Linux, Mac OS X and BSD. Beta packages built for Android are available[25] but the projects roadmap describes the porting to Android as on hold.[26] It also includes:[27]
The following protocols are currently supported by Jitsi:[5]
Jitsi is mostly written in Java[32] which helps reuse most of the same code over the various operating systems it works on. Its GUI is based upon Swing. The project also uses native code for the implementation of platform specific tasks such as audio/video capture and rendering, IP address selection, and access to native popup notification systems such as Growl.
The project uses the Apache Felix OSGi implementation[33] for modularity.
Among others Jitsi uses the JAIN-SIP protocol stack for SIP support and the Jive Software Smack library[34] for XMPP.[35]
As Jitsi can handle IPv6 it is especially interesting for direct PC-to-PC (peer-to-peer) communication, for instance, if both sides were trapped behind NAT routers, but could obtain a reachable IPv6 address via a tunnel-broker.
The Jitsi community has also completed an ICE implementation called ice4j.org, which it uses to provide NAT traversal capabilities, and assist IPv4 to IPv6 transition.[36]
Audio systems supported are PortAudio, PulseAudio and WASAPI (Windows Audio Session API).
Content is authored by an open community of volunteers and is not produced by or in any way affiliated with or reviewed by PediaView.com. Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, using material from the Wikipedia article Jitsi, which is available in its original form here:
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Tails OS hits version 3.0, matches Debian’s pace but bins 32-bit systems – The Register
Posted: at 3:53 am
The developers of privacy-protecting Linux distribution Tails have decided to get closer to Debian with the project's 3.0 release.
Tails - aka The Amnesic Incognito Live System - is designed to boot and run from removable storage and not to leave any trace of what you did while running it.
Users booting into version 3.0 will first see a more polished UI based on the GNOME default black theme. Next, Tails' developers hope, they'll notice fixes to the startup (quicker and easier to configure) and shutdown routine (to kill some persistent crashes).
At shutdown, Tails 3.0 also uses the Linux freed memory poisoning to overwrite system RAM, so an attacker or spook can't get at user data.
As first advised in January, old processors are farewelled, for security reasons, 32 bit machines are no longer supported. This lets the developers make NX bit support compulsory (this marks memory as non-executable, making it harder to exploit attacks like buffer overruns).
Getting rid of 32 bit support also lets Tails take advantage of address space layout randomisation (ASLR).
Tails 3.0 includes the Firefox 52 ESR-based Tor Browser 7.0, and the latest versions of other key bundled packages like KeePassX, LibreOffice, Inkscape, Audacity, Enigmail, MAT, Dasher and Git.
Other changes are listed at the changelog, and Tails 3.0 is available for download here.
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A cryptocurrency for weed is sending Dennis Rodman back to North Korea – The Verge
Posted: at 3:53 am
Dennis Rodman is back in North Korea, the former NBA star announced this week, with help from a marijuana cryptocurrency startup. Rodman, who has made several controversial visits to North Korea, tweeted a photo of himself holding an airline ticket for the state-owned Air Koryo on Tuesday. In a subsequent tweet, he thanked PotCoin, a digital currency for buying and selling weed, for sponsoring my mission.
The purpose of Rodmans visit remains unclear, though it comes amid heightened tensions between the US and North Korea over Pyongyangs nuclear program. Four Americans are also currently detained in North Korea.
In a press release announcing the visit, PotCoin said Rodman will provide more details about his historic trip upon returning to the US. The weed startup also described him as having long-time friendships with both President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un, the autocratic leader of North Korea. Rodman has previously appeared on the Trump-hosted reality show The Apprentice, and endorsed Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign. He also described Kim as a friend for life after visiting North Korea in 2013, and has drawn criticism for his public appearances alongside the dictator.
Speaking to CNN before boarding his flight, Rodman said hopes to do something that's pretty positive during his trip, though he said he did not intend to bring up the detained Americans during any discussions with North Korean leaders. Well that's not my purpose right now... My purpose is to go over there and try to see if I can keep bringing sports to North Korea," the former Chicago Bulls forward told CNN.
Rodman, wearing a PotCoin-branded t-shirt and baseball cap, said in a short video released Tuesday that the trip is all about peace. One of Rodmans previous trips to North Korea was sponsored by an Irish betting company. The value of PotCoin surged following Rodmans announcement early Tuesday.
Speaking to reporters in Tokyo, Under Secretary of State Thomas Shannon said that the US was aware of Rodmans visit, and that he is traveling as a private citizen. We are aware of his visit. We wish him well, Shannon said, as reported by Reuters. But we have issued travel warnings to Americans and suggested they not travel to North Korea for their own safety.
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Google Adsense Drops Cryptocurrency Faucet Operators – The Merkle
Posted: at 3:53 am
Some interesting things are happening in the world of cryptocurrency faucets. Up until a few weeks ago, anyone running a faucet could earn a lot of money by showing Google Adsense advertisements on the website. If the traffic is high enough, this could have been quite a lucrative business. However, it appears Google has made some drastic changes, which makes faucet owners earn a lot less money.
Over the past few years, many people have opted to run a Bitcoin faucet website in the hopes of making some good money for displaying banner advertisements. Since faucets are visited by thousands of people every day, there is a good chance to make decent money from a faucet website. Unfortunately, that is no longer the case, as Googles Adsense program has undergone some big changes regarding what types of sites can display advertisements in the first place.
To be more specific, the Google Adsense program now prevents faucet websites and other platforms not focusing on unique content from showing advertisements. Even if people do so, they will earn a lot less money from doing so. In a way, this chance was only a matter of time. Faucet sites present nothing unique in the world, as they all revolve around letting users click a few buttons to collect small amounts of Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies.
Any website displaying advertisements without providing quality content should not make as much money from Google Adsense as people who work hard to make their site stand out. That is only the normal way of doing business. Faucets get a lot of visitors, but the traffic itself is quantity-oriented, rather than focusing on quality. Anyone clicking ads on faucet websites has no real interest in the advertisement itself but mainly do so due to a misclick.
It is only normal faucet operators will see their Google Adsense earnings go down dramatically. Google Adsense is a tool designed for content creators and not people who copy-paste an existing faucet script linked to a cheap domain name. Making money with online advertisements requires time, dedication, and effort. None of those traits can be associated with cryptocurrency faucets, even though some operators put a fair amount of work into designing a unique layout.
The bigger question is whether or not there is any intrinsic value to cryptocurrency faucets these days. These platforms used to be quite valuable in the early days of Bitcoin, but their success has tapered off in recent years. Moreover, faucet operators will only pay out small amounts of Bitcoin due to their site earnings being even lower. It is evident something will need to change, and faucet operators will need to start looking for alternative solutions to make money. Adding a news section with unique content to a faucet, for example, could do wonders.
It appears to be only a matter of time until faucet operators will be put out of business entirely. That is, unless their business models evolve accordingly. There are no easy ways to make money these days, and cryptocurrency faucets are slowly losing their appeal. It is good to see Google take such an aggressive measure where their Adsense program is concerned, that much is certain. Rest assured a lot of faucet operators will not be too happy about this decision.
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Google Adsense Drops Cryptocurrency Faucet Operators - The Merkle
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