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A viral blog post from a bureaucrat exposes why tech billionaires fear Biden — 
and fund Trump

Silicon Valley increasingly depends on scammy products, and no one is 
friendlier to grifters than Trump

By AMANDA MARCOTTE Senior Writer  PUBLISHED JUNE 24, 2024 6:00AM
https://www.salon.com/2024/06/24/a-viral-blog-post-from-a-bureaucrat-exposes-why-tech-billionaires-fear-biden-and-fund/


The drastic rightward lurch of Silicon Valley's executive class has been swift 
and mysterious — but now the key to unlocking the mystery may lie in a cheeky 
blog post written by a regulator from the Federal Trade Commission.

Advisories from federal regulators instructing businesses to follow the law 
aren't typically known for being funny, but Michael Atleson, an attorney for 
the agency's advertising division, went viral this month with a public memo 
warning tech companies to stop falsely advertising their chatbots.

"Your therapy bots aren’t licensed psychologists, your AI girlfriends are 
neither girls nor friends, your griefbots have no soul, and your AI copilots 
are not gods," Atleson wrote in a post titled "Succor borne every minute."

Comparing so-called "artificial intelligence" to a Magic 8 Ball, the federal 
regulator chastised tech marketers who "compare their products to magic (they 
aren’t)" and "talk about the products having feelings (they don’t)." Atleson 
even joked that his Magic 8 Ball replied, "Outlook not so good," when he asked 
if he can expect companies to advertise chatbots "in ways that merit no FTC 
attention."

Will Oremus of the Washington Post posted on Bluesky, "The Federal Trade 
Commission, of all entities, is out here writing absolute bangers about AI 
snake oil." It was both funny and a relief to read someone cutting through all 
the hype to remind everyone that AI is not "intelligent."

Turns out that Atleson has a rich body of pun-heavy work threatening companies 
that misuse AI to steal, mislead or defraud. Delightful stuff, but also a 
telling indicator of why we're seeing a stampede of tech billionaires throwing 
money and assistance to Donald Trump's campaign.

The tech industry is getting increasingly scammy.

True innovation has slowed down drastically in recent years, threatening to 
shrink the staggering profits from the earlier parts of the century. To replace 
that income, tech leaders have increasingly turned to overhyped products or 
even outright fraud, as evidenced by the collapse of the FTX cryptocurrency 
exchange and imprisonment of its founder.

Joe Biden's administration has made shutting down consumer fraud a majority 
priority. Rather than dial back the shady behavior, the tech industry is 
turning to Donald Trump, a man whose entire business career was built on fraud, 
to save them.

It's alarming how many tech leaders have thrown their weight behind ending Joe 
Biden's presidency.

The liberalism of the tech investor class has always been overrated. Yes, the 
industry overall tends to be more Democratic, but that's due to the workers 
more than the people in the C-suites. Still, it's alarming how many tech 
leaders have thrown their weight behind ending Joe Biden's presidency.

As Theodore Schleifer reported in the New York Times, Trump, who used to avoid 
Silicon Valley, has now been regularly rubbing shoulders with its elite class. 
This month, he visited San Francisco for the first time since before his first 
presidential run, for a fundraiser that raised $12 million.

In a publicity stunt donation, the Winklevoss twins of Facebook infamy, now big 
cryptocurrency celebrities, donated $2 million in Bitcoin to Trump.

Before this, perhaps in a pathetic bid to pretend they are still "liberal," 
many of these same folks were propping of the candidacy of Robert F. Kennedy 
Jr., an anti-vaxx crank who many Trump supporters hoped could use his famous 
name to siphon votes off Biden.

Kennedy is so wound up in Silicon Valley that his running mate, tech lawyer 
Nicole Shanahan, is the ex-wife of one Google executive and close friend of 
Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

But as polls are starting to suggest Kennedy might be pulling support away from 
Trump as much as Biden, the Silicon Valley enthusiasm for the anti-vaccine 
activist has dimmed. They're moving to just supporting Trump directly.

AI's verdict on Donald Trump: He'll win! He'll lose! He'll go to jail! Shrug 
emoji!

The direct fundraising is just the tip of the iceberg. Big names in tech are 
also steering the larger media environment in a more Trump-friendly direction. 
Musk famously bought Twitter and has been steadily turning the now-named X into 
a dumping ground for odious right-wing propaganda, much of it overtly neo-Nazi 
in nature.

Musk himself tweets a steady stream of "just asking questions"-style 
provocations about race and intelligence.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, who promised the values of the Washington Post "do not 
need changing" when he bought it in 2013, has made a series of controversial 
changes in management recently, hiring multiple people who cut their teeth 
working for right-wing propagandist Rupert Murdoch.

Both the newly hired publisher and editor, Will Lewis and Robert Winnett, were 
swiftly exposed for having ties to a criminal phone hacking scandal that roiled 
the British publishing world years ago. Winnett resigned before even starting 
at the Post.

The Bezos decision has been spun as merely a business move. But the Post could 
make money without embracing sleazy characters. (The New York Times does it 
with their games and their food coverage.) So I'll note that the Biden 
administration has sued Bezos, accusing Amazon of an illegal monopoly.

It's this monopoly that has turned Amazon's once-fantastic product search 
engine into a wasteland of junk. It's impossible to search for anything, from 
socks to computers, without being overwhelmed with shoddy knockoffs. But going 
elsewhere to buy stuff is hard as Amazon has run competitors out of business.

It's a process we see time and again: Tech companies that once made genuinely 
good and helpful products are becoming increasingly useless, overwhelmed by 
spam, scammy gimmicks, and other efforts to snake a few extra pennies from 
consumers without producing any value for their money.

Google searches are wastelands of ads and AI-generated "answers" that rarely 
answer your question. Social media is full of snake oil salesmen. Instead of 
the next cool product that will improve everyone's lives, we first got 
cryptocurrency, which was tulip trading at best and, as FTX showed, outright 
theft in many cases. Then NFTs, which pretended easily screenshot pictures on 
the internet could be worth more than diamonds and gold.

Now we have "artificial intelligence," in which we're falsely told we can 
replace human intelligence with machines that mimic language but have no actual 
thoughts of their own.

Because it's wonky and mostly boring — except for the occasional funny blog 
post — Biden's war on corporate fraud, including forcing airlines to refund 
customers for canceled flights, rarely gets the attention it deserves.

Just this week, for example, Biden's FTC sued Adobe for making it impossible to 
cancel subscriptions.

But, as Schleifer notes, the private jet class of Silicon Valley sure noticed. 
Lina Khan, the chair of the Federal Trade Commission, "has ascended to Darth 
Vader-like status in some corners of the technology industry," Schleifer 
reports.

Turns out the meanie bears in the Biden administration don't like it when you 
tell lonely men a computer screen can replace a girlfriend. They correctly see 
that as a lie, just like the fake cancer cures and get-rich-quick schemes that 
have been used to defraud so many people before.

Trump, however, will never get between a con artist and his victim.

Project 2025, which functions as the policy arm of the Trump campaign, has 
openly promised to clean house at federal agencies, replacing competent 
bureaucrats with Trump stooges.

When it comes to agencies like the FTC, this plan is often downplayed as 
"business-friendly" in the press, but that is a misnomer. It's scam-friendly. 
Trump is ready to empower every multi-level marketer, fake "cure" hawker, and 
investment fraudster in the business.

The category increasingly encompasses much of the tech world.



By AMANDA MARCOTTE  Amanda Marcotte is a senior politics writer at Salon and 
the author of "Troll Nation: How The Right Became Trump-Worshipping Monsters 
Set On Rat-F*cking Liberals, America, and Truth Itself." Follow her on Twitter 
@AmandaMarcotte and sign up for her biweekly politics newsletter, Standing Room 
Only.

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