MoreRSS

site icon404 MediaModify

A journalist-founded digital media company exploring the ways technology is shaping–and is shaped by–our world.
Please copy the RSS to your reader, or quickly subscribe to:

Inoreader Feedly Follow Feedbin Local Reader

Rss preview of Blog of 404 Media

Behind the Blog: The 'View From Nowhere'

2026-01-10 02:09:17

Behind the Blog: The 'View From Nowhere'

This is Behind the Blog, where we share our behind-the-scenes thoughts about how a few of our top stories of the week came together. This week, we discuss viewing terrible images online and giving out zines at a benefit show.

EMANUEL: I’ve seen a lot of terrible videos in my years online but by far the most upsetting type of video shows police using excessive force and especially videos of police killing people. There are more graphic videos from battlefields and other dark corners of the internet but what happened to Renee Nicole Good this week could happen to anyone living in America, and when I imagine the tragedy that has been visited on her loved ones I can’t help but imagine how easily I or anyone I care about can find ourselves in the same situation. 

I think everyone who sits down to watch these videos does this as well, but as reporters our job is often to go frame by frame and analyze what exactly happened, which only highlights how brutally, quickly, and unnecessarily law enforcement can kill someone. Bellingcat has a good video on that if you’re interested. Reporting on these videos fairly also requires us to look at the video and credulously see if and how it matches claims made by law enforcement, and in this case the White House as well, that the shooting was justified, that the officer was acting in self-defense, that despite the horror we all immediately feel because it is a normal human reaction to seeing someone die, that we entertain the idea that this was the best choice the officer could have made. 

There’s also a difference between what any reasonable human being would consider “justified,” and what law enforcement can legally qualify as justified in court. As I was telling Joe when he was writing his story about this shooting Wednesday, I 100 percent agree with him that the DHS is lying to us about what happened, and at the same time, given our legal system, the current administration, and our history with police shootings generally, I wouldn’t at all be surprised of those lies could be laundered in court and the officer will never pay a price. 

DHS Is Lying To You About ICE Shooting a Woman
At least four videos show what really happened when ICE shot a woman in Minneapolis on Wednesday. DHS has established itself as an agency that cannot be trusted to live in or present reality.
Behind the Blog: The 'View From Nowhere'

Which is why I appreciate him writing the story so much. The morning after the shooting I listened to NPR in the car and heard them frame what happened as an argument. The mayor claimed it was unnecessary, DHS claimed it was self-defense, and this was the framing across most of the big news publications. I completely understand that these publications want to seem impartial and strive for objectivity, which are totally good goals, but this is exactly what we mean when we talk about how the “view from nowhere” can actually undermine the truth. 

It’s our job to look at the details but it’s also important not to get lost in them. We can recognize that a situation is complicated, that videos can be deceiving, and that the law doesn’t always meet our expectations for justice, but we can also see what is painfully obvious: The administration has deployed masked, armed thugs to terrorize communities across the country with no accountability, and what happened to Good is an inevitable outcome of those policies. 

JOSEPH: I’ll preface straight away that this is just some off-the-top-of-my-head thoughts. I wouldn’t publish this to the wider internet, at least not yet and not before I’ve done some additional reporting and research. But I feel fine jotting it down for paid subscribers because I know people who read Behind the Blog engage with our articles more closely and carefully than randos on social media.

After we published Inside ICE’s Tool to Monitor Phones in Entire Neighborhoods, there were a lot of people in my Bluesky mentions telling one another how to thwart this sort of surveillance. Some information was fine. Other parts were flat out wrong. When I saw people in my mentions spreading straight up bullshit based on my article, I blocked them. I don’t want people reading (well, they’re not reading) my work then spreading dangerous misconceptions about it. Go away.

So I wanted to clarify some things, to correct some misunderstandings and provide more information about the topic and tool we covered.

Some people said this data came from telecoms. No, it doesn’t. As the article says, it most likely comes from ordinary apps installed on your phone selling this data to a location data broker or being co-opted by a company in the online ad business. It’s not from the telecoms like AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile. So, anything about ‘the tool is triangulating your position with celltowers’ is wrong. It is absolutely not rare for location data companies to get information from sources that aren’t the telecoms. In fact, it is the much, much more common route. It’s dizzying how many of these companies there are and how many feed into one another.

If the collection is via SDK, that’s going to mean it’s about what apps are installed on your phone. It’s going to be about that weird ass storm following app you downloaded five years ago and never opened again.

Inside ICE’s Tool to Monitor Phones in Entire Neighborhoods
404 Media has obtained material that explains how Tangles and Webloc, two surveillance systems ICE recently purchased, work. Webloc can track phones without a warrant and follow their owners home or to their employer.
Behind the Blog: The 'View From Nowhere'

If the collection is via RTB, it’s going to be the advertising process inside the apps on your phone, and that means it’s likely not just obscure apps, but some massively popular ones. When Gravy Analytics got hacked (Gravy is the parent company of Venntel, which used to sell location data to ICE), we built a list of apps that were linked to coordinates of phones inside the U.S. and around the world. At the time I wrote this:

The list includes dating sites Tinder and Grindr; massive games such as Candy Crush, Temple Run, Subway Surfers, and Harry Potter: Puzzles & Spells; transit app Moovit; My Period Calendar & Tracker, a period tracking app with more than 10 million downloads; popular fitness app MyFitnessPal; social network Tumblr; Yahoo’s email client; Microsoft’s 365 office app; and flight tracker Flightradar24. The list also mentions multiple religious-focused apps such as Muslim prayer and Christian Bible apps; various pregnancy trackers; and many VPN apps, which some users may download, ironically, in an attempt to protect their privacy.

We uploaded the list here.

I think it’s more likely Webloc is getting its data from RTB than SDK. It’s been a while since I’ve seen a location data company connected to government contractors or agencies using an SDK. When we covered Patternz it was explicitly collecting data through RTB

Now, would an adblocker at the browser level, or a virtual private network that blocks connections to ad networks, stop this sort of data being collected? Maybe, I don’t know 100%.

What likely would stop both is turning off location services on your phone at the operating system level. Unless the app is doing some insane fuckery—and that would be a huge story in itself, meaning the app was able to somehow exploit a vulnerability and get around Apple’s and Google’s protections—turning off location services entirely probably stops this. I would say sometimes these location data companies also sell data derived from IP addresses, which can give a broad sense of where someone might be located. So that’s in addition.

Someone flagged to me that Penlink has an opt-out process. It requires physically mailing a letter or calling them! California now has DROP, which “allows consumers to request the deletion of their data from over 500 data brokers—all in one request,” according to the state’s website. Deletion requests will actually start in August, it says.

It doesn’t look like Penlink or Cobwebs (the tool’s previous owner) is registered as a data broker in California. I’ll email Penlink now and ask why. If anyone goes through any of these opt-out processes with Penlink, please let me know.

Side note: I didn’t mention this in the piece because it was focused on Penlinks and Webloc, but the FTC actually enforced against Venntel back in 2024

SAM: My BTB is incredibly short this week because I'm behind schedule due to rage-blogging about Grok, the coverage of Grok from my esteemed colleagues in the journalism profession, and general first week of the year sleepiness.

But here is a very academic and illuminating peek behind the blogging process: When I worked for my college newspaper, our advisor, the very wise and calm Kirsten Beachy (who also just published a new book, which I haven't gotten my hands on yet but I'm sure is a delight) told us, the newspaper leadership – a group of 18-20 years olds with varying degrees of drinking problems, anger management problems, and authority problems – that the best way to come up with new story ideas is to think about what pissed us off that week, and why. This was an incredible way to harness our energies away from defacing school property and into typing furiously. The things we were pissed off about included the administration trying to shut down our underground theater productions for being too lewd, the college's refusal to divest from Israel, Republicans killing the DREAM Act, the overuse of sprinklers on the lawns, and a variety of other issues ranging from serious to petty.

Whenever I blog angry I think about that advice. I think about it when I'm out of ideas, too. I thought about it a lot this week.

Masterful Gambit: Musk Attempts to Monetize Grok’s Wave of Sexual Abuse Imagery
In an attempt to push more people toward a paying subscription, Grok now refuses to generate images in replies. The paywall is pretty leaky, though.
Behind the Blog: The 'View From Nowhere'

JASON: A couple months ago, we got asked if we wanted to participate in a concert in Los Angeles, which was surprising because despite all of our group photos looking like we’re an early 90s band, we don’t play music. The concert was called LA Fights Back, and it was a benefit concert for CHIRLA, an immigrant rights groups helping people in California that has had a specific focus on families torn apart by ICE in recent months. 

We got invited to do it because we had an event over the summer where we talked about some of our reporting on the surveillance tools used by ICE, and people really seemed to like it. Our podcast producer and editor is also a musician who goes by the name Primer, and she was invited to play the concert. She told the promoter that we do good reporting on ICE, and we were asked to do something at the concert.

We decided to make a print zine of our work on the issue, which set into motion the actual creation of the zine which you have surely heard about by now. We donated a bunch of them at the show to people who were interested. The concert was this past Sunday, and I am pleased to say that it was incredibly fun, and, more importantly, it raised $52,688 for CHIRLA. The show was sold out or was close to sold out and took place at a real, very cool concert venue in LA called the Regent Theater, where I once saw the death metal band Blood Incantation and the emo band Say Anything (separately). 

404 Media Is Making a Zine
We are publishing a risograph-printed zine about the surveillance technologies used by ICE.
Behind the Blog: The 'View From Nowhere'

The concert was kind of a whoa dude experience, because I have always been a big concert guy, and it gave me the opportunity to see at least a little bit about how a professional concert goes. I didn’t have a lot of glamor—I mostly sat at the merch booth where we had zines set up in between bands, and watched the bands like everyone else during their sets. But it was still a fun behind-the-scenes experience, getting there way before the show started, watching people set up, vaguely pretending I was a rockstar. Things feel very bleak right now, but it was heartening to see so many people show up to support CHIRLA, and it was good to feel like we were doing something. But most of all, it was clear that very few people there had ever heard of 404 Media and were not familiar with our work, or ICE’s surveillance tactics, or that sort of thing. But they did care about what was happening, and were generally aware of the things that ICE is doing all over the country. So it was a chance to give our reporting to mostly a younger crowd of people who care, and that felt incredibly empowering. This was before ICE killed a woman in Minneapolis, but that made the work feel more important than ever. Hoping we can do more stuff like this this year. 

An update on the zine, for those of you who have ordered: We got far more orders than we were expecting. Like, many, many more than we were expecting, and more than we originally asked our printer to make. Because of the way the zine is being made (riso printed, hand assembled), it’s a huge lift for the print shop to put everything together. We wanted more people to have the zine, obviously, so we asked them to print as many as they could. A small batch of zines were finished for this event, but the rest are still being assembled. I’m expecting to have them in the next ~10 days or so and then will start shipping them out. Over the break, I started printing and labeling envelopes with postage, so I’m hoping once we get the copies we’ll get them out to y’all in very short order. We’ve mentioned this before, but this first print run is a bit of an experiment. I think it’s going smoothly so far, but we are a bit delightfully overwhelmed with how many people have been interested, so fulfillment is a bit slower going than I was expecting. We’re excited for everyone to get their copies and excited to see what you think. Once we have copies in hand, we’ll make the zine available online as a PDF both in English and Spanish for our subscribers. We also are technically sold out at the moment but I’m looking for ways to print more in a timely fashion. 

Here’s some pictures!

 

Masterful Gambit: Musk Attempts to Monetize Grok's Wave of Sexual Abuse Imagery

2026-01-09 23:21:08

Masterful Gambit: Musk Attempts to Monetize Grok's Wave of Sexual Abuse Imagery

Elon Musk, owner of the former social media network turned deepfake porn site X, is pushing people to pay for its nonconsensual intimate image generator Grok, meaning some of the app’s tens of millions of users are being hit with a paywall when they try to create nude images of random women doing sexually explicit things within seconds. 

Some users trying to generate images on X using Grok receive a reply from the chatbot pushing them toward subscriptions: “Image generation and editing are currently limited to paying subscribers. You can subscribe to unlock these features.” 

Masterful Gambit: Musk Attempts to Monetize Grok's Wave of Sexual Abuse Imagery

Users who fork over $8 a month can still reply to random images of random women and girls directly on X and tag in Grok with things like “make her wear clear tapes with tiny black censor bar covering her private part protecting her privacy and make her chest and hips grow largee[sic] as she squatting with leg open widely facing back, while head turn back looking to camera.” These images are still visible in everyone’s X feed, subscribers or not. 

On the Grok app, a subscription to SuperGrok ($29.99/month) or SuperGrok Heavy ($299.99/month) allow users to generate images even faster. On Thursday, I received messages in the Grok app several times warning me that usage rates for the app were higher than normal and that I could pay to skip the wait. 

As the Verge reported this morning, this paywall is very leaky. It’s still possible to generate images using Grok in a variety of ways, but replying directly to someone’s post by tagging @grok returns the “limited to subscribers” message.

Grok’s AI Sexual Abuse Didn’t Come Out of Nowhere
With xAI’s Grok generating endless semi-nude images of women and girls without their consent, it follows a years-long legacy of rampant abuse on the platform.
Masterful Gambit: Musk Attempts to Monetize Grok's Wave of Sexual Abuse Imagery

As many legacy news outlets have already reported, Musk improved the subscription revenue funnel on his money-burning app following an outcry against these extremely popular uses of the app. “X Limits Grok Image Tool To Subscribers After Deepfake Outcry,” Deadline reported. “Grok turns off image generator for most users after outcry over sexualised AI imagery,” wrote the Guardian. “Elon Musk restricts Grok’s image tools following a wave of non-consensual deepfakes of women and children,” Fortune wrote.

Based on these headlines, you may be thinking, This is an uncharacteristic show of accountability and perhaps even self reflection from the billionaire technocrat white supremacist sympathizer who owns X.com, wow! But as with all things Musk does, this is a business move to monetize the long-established harassment factory he’s owned for five years and has yet to figure out how to make profitable. After years of attempting to push users toward a subscription model by placing meaningless status signifiers behind a paywall and making the site so toxic it bleeds users by the millions, he might have found a way to do it: by monetizing abuse at the source. Several other AI industry giants have already figured out that sexual content is where the money’s at, and Musk appears to be catching up. Putting the nonconsensual sexual images behind a paywall is also what every “nudify” and “undress” app and image generator platform on the market already does.

On Thursday, in the middle of Grok’s CSAM shitstorm, Bloomberg reported that xAI is looking at “a net loss of $1.46 billion for the September quarter, up from $1 billion in the first quarter,” according to internal documents obtained by Bloomberg. “In the first nine months of the year, it spent $7.8 billion in cash.” It’s too early to speculate, but making the people who are tagging @grok under the posts of women they don’t know and writing prompts like “make her bend over on all fours doggy style” multiple times a second pay for the privilege could be a play to get the company back in the black. 

In addition to using Grok on X.com on desktop, It’s also still easy to generate images and videos in the Grok app without a subscription, which is still available on the Apple and Google app stores, despite blatantly breaking their rules against non-consensual material and pornography. The app and underground Telegram groups are where the really bad stuff is, anyway. Apple and Google have not replied to my request for comment about why the app is still available.

Signing up for X Premium or SuperGrok requires handing over your payment information, name associated with your credit card, and phone number. It also comes with the risk of having all of that hacked, stolen, and released to the dark web in the next big data breach of the platform. 

Grok's AI Sexual Abuse Didn't Come Out of Nowhere

2026-01-08 23:44:35

Grok's AI Sexual Abuse Didn't Come Out of Nowhere

The biggest AI story of the first week of 2026 involves Elon Musk’s Grok chatbot turning the social media platform into an AI child sexual imagery factory, seemingly overnight.

I’ve said several times on the 404 Media podcast and elsewhere that we could devote an entire beat to “loser shit.” What’s happening this week with Grok—designed to be the horny edgelord AI companion counterpart to the more vanilla ChatGPT or Claude—definitely falls into that category. People are endlessly prompting Grok to make nude and semi-nude images of women and girls, without their consent, directly on their X feeds and in their replies. 

Sometimes I feel like I’ve said absolutely everything there is to say about this topic. I’ve been writing about nonconsensual synthetic imagery before we had half a dozen different acronyms for it, before people called it “deepfakes” and way before “cheapfakes” and “shallowfakes” were coined, too. Almost nothing about the way society views this material has changed in the seven years since it’s come about, because fundamentally—once it’s left the camera and made its way to millions of people’s screens—the behavior behind sharing it is not very different from images made with a camera or stolen from someone’s Google Drive or private OnlyFans account. We all agreed in 2017 that making nonconsensual nudes of people is gross and weird, and today, occasionally, someone goes to jail for it, but otherwise the industry is bigger than ever. What’s happening on X right now is an escalation of the way it’s always been, and almost everywhere on the internet.

💡
Do you know anything else about what's going on inside X? Or are you someone who's been targeted by abusive AI imagery? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at sam.404. Otherwise, send me an email at [email protected].

Texans Are Fighting a 6,000 Acre Nuclear-Powered Datacenter

2026-01-08 22:49:12

Texans Are Fighting a 6,000 Acre Nuclear-Powered Datacenter

Billionaire Toby Neugebauer laughed when the Amarillo City Council asked him how he planned to handle the waste his planned datacenter would produce. 

“I’m not laughing in disrespect to your question,” Neugebauer said. He explained that he’d just met with Texas Governor Greg Abbott, who had made it clear that any nuclear waste Neugebauer’s datacenter generated needed to go to Nevada, a state that’s not taking nuclear waste at the moment. “The answer is we don't have a great long term solution for how we’re doing nuclear waste.

The meeting happened on October 28, 2025 and was one of a series of appearances Neugebauer has put in before Amarillo’s leaders as he attempts to realize Project Matador: a massive 5,769 acre datacenter being built in the Texas Panhandle and constructed by Fermi America, a company he founded with former Secretary of Energy Rick Perry.

Inside ICE’s Tool to Monitor Phones in Entire Neighborhoods

2026-01-08 22:00:08

Inside ICE’s Tool to Monitor Phones in Entire Neighborhoods

A social media and phone surveillance system ICE bought access to is designed to monitor a city neighborhood or block for mobile phones, track the movements of those devices and their owners over time, and follow them from their places of work to home or other locations, according to material that describes how the system works obtained by 404 Media. 

Commercial location data, in this case acquired from hundreds of millions of phones via a company called Penlink, can be queried without a warrant, according to an internal ICE legal analysis shared with 404 Media. The purchase comes squarely during ICE’s mass deportation effort and continued crackdown on protected speech, alarming civil liberties experts and raising questions on what exactly ICE will use the surveillance system for. 

💡
Do you know anything else about this tool? Do you work for ICE, CBP, or another agency? I would love to hear from you. Using a non-work device, you can message me securely on Signal at joseph.404 or send me an email at [email protected].

“This is a very dangerous tool in the hands of an out-of-control agency. This granular location information paints a detailed picture of who we are, where we go, and who we spend time with,” Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy project director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s (ACLU) Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, told 404 Media.

DHS Is Lying To You

2026-01-08 06:25:03

DHS Is Lying To You

A maroon Honda Pilot SUV sits perpendicular across a residential road in Minneapolis. At the time, federal authorities were in the neighborhood as part of the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) recently announced surge of thousands of officials. A silver Nissan Titan drives up the road and stops because the Honda is blocking its path. Two officers dressed in body armor, pouches, and badges saying “police” exit the Nissan.

The two people walk towards the Honda. Someone can be heard saying “get out of the fucking car.” One of them tries to open the driver’s door and reach through the open window. The driver of the Honda reverses and turns, getting straighter with the road. The driver then slowly accelerates and starts to turn to the right, leveling the car out with its front pointing away from the two officers.

A third officer, who has been standing on the other side of the road, pulls out a firearm while the car is turning away from him and fires into the car three times. The officer fires two of the shots when the vehicle is already well past him. He is not in front of the car, but to the side. The officer calmly holsters his weapon.