Category Archives: Security

Bill Gates’ Daughter Raises $185m for Surveillance and Says Don’t Thank Her Dad

The daughter of Bill Gates doesn’t want you to think about her father. That’s why she’s always referred to as the daughter of Bill Gates. And now she has announced she thought of a way to use AI to bully stores into charging her less for fancy clothing.

I wish I was making this up.

I’m not.

Her product, if you can even call digital racketeering that, is a horrible looking margin compression engine. The name “Phia” is a portmanteau of “Phoebe” and “Sophia”. I mention that because she literally embedded her own name into her product while claiming to build something independent of her name.

I’m only getting started.

The Phia injects itself like digital muscle between retailer and consumer, scraping prices across thousands of sites to route buyers to the cheapest option. It’s the kind of thing we’ve seen on the web since 1994. It’s like Sharepoint saying the web is now proprietary and you have to pay. It’s like Internet Explorer saying the web is now proprietary and… the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

Phia is the opposite of innovation. It’s parasitic intermediation most reminiscent of Leland Stanford himself. Notably, both founders went to Stanford. Their first product idea was a Bluetooth tampon and from there they pivoted to surveillance of retail shoppers.

The Extraction Racket

I’m not an economist but when I went to LSE I learned a thing or two about financial risk models. The Phia theory is retailers will eat the cost of inventory, merchandising, photography, returns infrastructure, and brand building, and then an AI agent will show up to undercut them by redirecting the sale elsewhere. Phia even takes an affiliate commission from the retailer whose sale it just cannibalized. That’s cruel on top of being criminal. The consumer pays with their data. The only people who would get nothing in this transaction are the ones who actually make things. The value capture flows to the “platform” flexing huge “investor” muscle.

Why would anyone who actually makes or sells things sign up? Market capture. It’s the Walmart playbook automated and celebrated as “empowerment.” Well, even that’s being generous. In Somalia this was pushed by billionaire Arab investors into Red Sea traffic and called… piracy.

If the web business model sounds familiar, it should. Phia is structurally identical to PayPal’s disgraced Honey browser extension, which is currently facing over 25 class action lawsuits for replacing creators’ affiliate links with its own at checkout.

Cookie stuffing is fraud.

One of Phia’s early investors, Joanne Bradford, was the former president of Honey. Her legacy is that Google updated Chrome Web Store policies in March 2025 specifically to crack down on extensions claiming affiliate commissions without providing discounts. Somehow, who can guess why, Phia was pushed into launch one month later.

Climate Activism Meets Fast Fashion

Maybe the buried lede is the cofounder Sophia Kianni, whose climate activism credentials seem to exist. She founded Climate Cardinals and served on the UN Secretary-General’s Youth Advisory Group on climate change. However, Phia’s retail partners include Abercrombie alongside secondhand platforms, and the tool actively redirects consumers to cheaper new items from discount brands, not just resale. Routing people to the cheapest fast fashion option is a strange expression of environmental values. It’s maybe like everything else in this story, a huge disappointment in the standards of education at Stanford.

The entire “shops like a genius” framing by Phia is an insult to the English language. Shopping “like a genius” apparently means paying the least possible while someone else absorbs all the risk and cost. That’s a race to the bottom dressed up in girl-boss language. It’s like saying “cooks like a top chef” for someone who ordered a pizza delivered.

Why are rich people so obsessed with being lazy yet taking credit for hard work that others do? Pick a lane.

The Name Game

And why doesn’t Gates use a pseudonym, if she wants to escape her name, instead of showing up everywhere as the daughter of the Epstein guy? Every single headline I see says “Bill Gates’ daughter.” The $35 million raise, the $185 million valuation, the Kleiner Perkins and Khosla participation. Need I go on? None of that happens for a 23-year-old Stanford grad with a browser extension if her last name is Mohammed.

Her claimed desire for independence from privilege while trading on it in every single sentence is the kind of cognitive dissonance that works only when nobody has any incentive to point it out. The investors don’t care about her name in the pitch deck; they care about it in the press releases.

She clearly knows how to obscure a connection. Just look at how she allegedly didn’t take money from her parents. She took a $250,000 grant from Stanford’s social entrepreneurship program that is funded by the kind of endowment her parents’ circles built. The celebrity investor list definitely says she’s someone who is “independent”: Kris Jenner, Hailey Bieber, Sheryl Sandberg, Sara Blakely. Kim Kardashian filmed a launch teaser. This is the diametric opposite to bootstrapping. Privilege laundering through one degree of separation is proof she can launder, so why not come up with a stage name?

The Surveillance Product

All that being said, this is really a story about a recent college grad tricking people into giving up their privacy for nothing gained. What are they teaching at Stanford?

The real buried lede is the data collection story from November 2025. Four security researchers reported that Phia’s browser extension contained a hidden function called logCompleteHTMLtoGCS that captured full HTML snapshots of every webpage users visited.

Full. As in FULL.

Banking sites, private emails? Everything. It compressed them, and uploaded them to Phia’s servers. Not just shopping sites. Every page. Security researcher Charlie Eriksen from Aikido Security called it “among some of the crazier things” he’d seen in his career.

Phia removed the feature only after a researcher contacted them. They never disclosed the violation to users. They claimed they “never stored this data.” Then they raised $35 million.

A price comparison tool that watches everything you browse and buy isn’t an assistant. It’s a spy. This is a billionaire-backed surveillance operation under a very thin shopping skin. The phia.com website itself is essentially empty, showing only a title tag and a Facebook tracking pixel. That’s the $185 million celebrity promoted valuation, staring back at you.

Leland Stanford, what a guy.

Mingus, Faubus, and the Old Drum-Beat of Trump Fascism

In 1959, Charles Mingus boldly wrote a song that spoke truth to power.

Fables of Faubus” called out Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus directly. The sitting governor had ordered the National Guard to block nine Black teenagers from entering Little Rock Central High School. Faubus weaponized American protections to attack the most vulnerable.

Mingus didn’t deal in abstraction. He pointed at the man and showed everyone how to laugh.

1940s-era advice from Walt Disney on the appropriate reaction to an Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and their puppet Donald Trump

Columbia Records recorded the song. Then they strategically stripped out the lyrics and released only the instrumental version. The music was deemed fine as culturally prestigious, commercially viable, safely ambiguous. The words were called a problem. Mingus himself said it plainly:

Columbia wouldn’t let them record the lyrics.

The motive was protecting Columbia revenue in Southern markets. A corporation understood exactly what the song meant, wanted to profit from its reputation as protest art, while it surgically removed the part that actually protested.

The vocal version came out a year later on Candid Records, produced by Nat Hentoff, who remembered the lyrics as “natural as sunlight.” The controversy never was in the content. The distribution system manufactured the crisis.

Name Me Someone Ridiculous

The Candid recording is a call-and-response between Mingus and drummer Dannie Richmond. Mingus calls and Richmond responds with names.

Oh Lord, no more swastikas!
Oh Lord, no more Ku Klux Klan!

Name me someone ridiculous, Dannie.
Governor Faubus.
Why is he sick and ridiculous?
He won’t permit integrated schools.
Then he’s a fool.

Boo! Nazi fascist supremacists. Boo Ku Klux Klan!

Mingus drew an obvious fascism parallel explicitly.

This was 1959. This was not retrospective analysis, not as rhetorical flourish. This was a man at the top of his game, a world famous musician, calling out real-time pattern recognition. Swastikas and Klan hoods in the same breath, because he understood they are the same operation switching between different uniforms.

Louis Armstrong already broke this ground two years earlier. He had told a reporter that Eisenhower was “two faced” with “no guts,” and described Faubus with an expletive too strong to print. The reporter and Armstrong negotiated a sanitized version of “uneducated plow boy”, which became a phrase the reporter later admitted was more his than Armstrong’s.

Even the act of speaking a truth in America required editorial negotiation about how much truth the weak white nationalist infrastructure could bear.

Mingus took it further. The system pushed back harder.

Arkansas to This Day

The thing about Arkansas is they still haven’t dismantled what Faubus stood for and built. The KKK has continued to be coated and rebranded, the Nazis embraced and extended. The state that deployed National Guard troops to stop kids going to school now deploys its legislature against the same populations with the same confidence that institutions will protect the operation.

Nazis and Klan freely roam without a care. It’s less that they had to seize power of state institutions, and more that they know government institutions reward their predatory incompetence. Arkansas isn’t about an extremism problem, when it runs a governance model for national socialism to be the product.

Faubus stood as a proof of concept. The template he established was the use of existing state infrastructure to enforce exclusion, force the federal government to either intervene or be complicit, and face no personal consequences either way. It remains the operating manual.

The man served six terms as governor. Six. After deploying the military against children. The system didn’t punish him. It promoted him.

If he were alive today he’d be the guy who denies the request for American hero Jesse Jackson to lie in honor in the Capitol.

The Competent Complicity of Curation

Columbia’s editorial operation on “Fables” is a precision instrument worth examining. Rather than silence Mingus, which would generate more protest material, they curated him into erasure. They kept his music to signal cultural seriousness and sold records, offering fans the bones while removing all the meat. The instrumental version let white liberal audiences feel something without the urge to do anything. It was consumption without reality of confrontation.

This editorial selection is competent complicity. The people making final cut decisions understood music, understood politics, understood exactly what they were doing. They weren’t accidental. They were serving a role in protecting, enabling and extending the white nationalist dominated market.

Hentoff’s Candid Records operated differently. It was total creative freedom, no editorial interference. The result was a recording where the lyrics landed with their full weight. Two labels, two systems, two outcomes from the same source material based on which one practiced integrity instead of complicity.

Rotary Perception

Mingus had a concept he called “rotary perception”. He said musical beats exist inside a circle, like target practice using birdshot, rather than on a line, giving musicians freedom to place notes anywhere inside that space without losing the underlying pulse.

Mingus described a centroid with acceptable variance. The beat is the mean, the circle is the confidence interval, and the notes are data points that can land anywhere within the distribution without losing the underlying signal. That’s a scatter plot with a cluster around a central tendency.

He developed it partly in response to critics who claimed younger musicians were more innovative than him. His counter argument was the “avant garde” already was audible in Charlie Parker and Duke Ellington, when you really were paying attention.

The concept applies well beyond music. What gets marketed as unprecedented almost never is. The patterns repeat. The refusal to recognize them is the product, not the problem. Mingus was saying in 1959 what the historical record has been saying for centuries. The thing you’re watching happen also happened before, that someone documented it, and that the failure to learn from it serves specific interests.

He was a historian’s musician.

Arkansas deploying state power against Black schoolchildren in 1957? It was a rotation. Trump loyalists protecting and rewarding that deployment in 2026 aren’t new either. It’s the same beat, played at a different point in the same racist circle.

Mingus saw it. He named it. And then Columbia cut the meat off and sold the bones anyway.

Some things rotate. Some things don’t change at all.

Quakertown Chief of Police in Plain Clothes Assaults, Chokes Teen Girls Protesting Fascism

Video evidence is being circulated of a plain clothes man who charged into a group of teenage girls to assault them and put one in a chokehold. The teenagers who tried to help victims of the man were then assaulted by uniformed officers who claimed the unidentified assailant was their Chief of Police.

Quakertown Borough Police Chief Scott McElree, in plain clothes, choking a teenage girl after he violently charged her for protesting fascism.

Suddenly, a man in a tan shirt, since identified as McElree, appears to charge into the group of kids and grab one who had been backing away, holding a phone.

[…]

In the chaos, some people had no idea who the man was, the student said, and started defending themselves against the unknown attacker.

[…]

One of the students who appeared to jump in to defend a classmate against the tan shirted man was then thrown to the ground by a uniformed officer. The officer can be heard on video telling the kid that the man he went after is the chief of police — Scott McElree.

“He didn’t even announce he was chief of police. We were confused,” the student said.

Students were put in detention overnight at the Bucks County Youth Center for defending themselves against an unidentified man who physically attacked them. A person wearing a vest with the word “police” on the back is seen running toward the frame and then out of the frame as the man in tan continues to hold a teen girl in a chokehold.

So uniformed officers were present, saw their chief battering and choking a teen girl, and their response was just to let it continue while they tackled the kids around her trying to help?

Fascism protest indeed.

These kids deserve a medal for exposing McElree.

A quiet consolidation of power is the institutional design that made this possible, with a single man holding police chief, borough manager, and records officer. McElree unilaterally controls the police, the administration, and the records about both. It’s highly unusual.

And the way McElree seized this power is notable.

He has been Quakertown’s police chief two decades, since 2004. In 2007 he grabbed the borough manager job after the previous manager’s “sudden departure”, initially claiming approval for the dual role would only be temporary. The council instead pivoted and approved him as permanent replacement within a month. He’s now 72 years old, sitting on a contract clause that protects him from “any adverse employment action” by council if he resigns from either position.

He’s structurally insulated from consequences, which could explain why he wore plain clothes to charge into a group of teens to grab, shove, batter and choke them while his officers protected him instead of the public.

How did he end up seizing control over Quakertown? I’m glad you asked. He left a 29-year career at a department mid-scandal. That’s the fact. McElree left a Whitemarsh Township police department during a racial profiling case involving a fellow sergeant, a DA criminal investigation, a federal probe, and federal civil rights lawsuits. He was just a SWAT team lead who suddenly landed this police chief’s job within months of the huge racism controversy. The new town “vetted” him unilaterally saying “we investigated”. And where does the SWAT turned Chief live to this day? Not Quakertown, still in Whitemarsh.

As a historian, I noticed a curious footnote to his name from an infamous lynching. About 40 miles west of Whitemarsh in 1911 a violent white mob battered, tortured and publicly burned alive Black steelworker Zachariah Walker. The leading defense attorney for Walker’s suspected killers was Wilmer W. MacElree, referred to then as “the legal sage of Chester County.”

[White violent mobs claimed that Walker] fell from a tree and suffered severe head wounds. After being transported to the Coatesville Hospital and treated for head wounds and a broken jaw while shackled to his bed, a crowd estimated at 2,000 later marched on the hospital and seized Walker, carrying him on the bed from the hospital to Strode Avenue and preparing a large bonfire.

Walker was thrown into the fire three times but managed to escape. On the mob’s last attempt, they cut Walker’s foot off and tied a rope around him and held him in the inferno until he died.

“Don’t give me no crooked death because I’m not white,” Walker told the mob.

As he was burnt to death, a crowd estimated at several thousand looked on and some in the crowd collected his bones as souvenirs. Later that year, Coatesville Police Chief Charles Umsted was indicted for involuntary manslaughter for his failure to the stop the lynching.

The death certificate of Walker states: “Burnt to death in E. Fallowfield Twp by persons unknown to the Jury of Inquisition”. Persons unknown. A mob of thousands watched Walker being tortured and burned alive in broad daylight, yet bureaucracy records the perpetrators as “unknown”. Source: Chester County Recorder, Harrisburg, PA.

Umsted wasn’t merely indicted for failure to stop the lynching; he actively helped provoke it. A police chief who incites mob violence rather than preventing it. This led to passage of the Pennsylvania Anti-Lynching law in 1923, and yet by 1938 Black residents of Coatesville were organizing armed militias to prevent another lynching.

Wrongfully Detained British Tourist Says Trump Concentration Camps are No Vacation

In 1937, the Soviet NKVD issued Order No. 00447, allowing them to arrest anyone, with quotas by region. Officers received two categories of targets:

Exceeding them brought rewards. The system’s defining feature was not cruelty for its own sake but bureaucratic incentivisation of detention. The machinery needed throughput to justify its budget. It found throughput.

In January 2025, the Trump administration set ICE detention targets at 1,200-1,500 per day. ICE’s budget stands at $85 billion, up from $6 billion a decade ago. New recruits receive signing bonuses of $50,000. Multiple guards at the Northwest ICE Processing Center in Tacoma independently told a detained British tourist that agents receive per-head bonuses for every person they bring in.

The NKVD didn’t publish its incentive structures either. ICE doesn’t either.

The British tourist was Karen Newton, 65, retired school administrator from Hertfordshire, no criminal record, travelling on a valid B2 visa. She was detained for 42 days. The stated justification: she was “guilty by association” with her husband, whose visa had expired. Her specific offence? ICE said helping him pack his suitcase was grounds for jail, which they officially called a detention to strip her rights away along with all her clothing.

Guilt by Association as Legal Doctrine

Soviet law formalised this as ChSIR — Член Семьи Изменника Родины, “Family Member of a Traitor to the Motherland.” Under Article 58 of the Penal Code, wives of accused enemies were automatically sentenced to five to eight years. The ALZHIR camp outside Astana was purpose-built for them. The principle was explicit: kinship itself constituted complicity. It was infamously echoed in American “Red Scare” McCarthyism, which led to outrage and protest.

A US border agent used the English equivalent of this doctrine of “guilty by association” for a woman whose husband’s paperwork had lapsed. The Soviets at least had an acronym.

Voluntary Confession, American Edition

On day three of detention, Karen signed a “voluntary self-removal” agreement waiving her right to see a judge and accepting a ten-year US entry ban. The agent told her it was the fastest route home. She then spent 39 more days in detention.

The Soviet “voluntary confession” operated identically: sign, and your sentence will be lighter. Cooperate, and this ends sooner. Both mechanisms use indefinite detention to manufacture consent to punishment, then continue the punishment regardless. The confession is a trick to increase funding for an additional length of control.

The Trump administration’s version adds a cash incentive. Project Homecoming offers detainees an “exit bonus”, $1,000 raised in January 2026 to $2,600 to “celebrate one year of Trump”, funded by redirecting $250 million from refugee aid. This is, structurally, a bounty system operating in both directions: agents are incentivised to detain, detainees are incentivised to waive their rights and be detained longer while convinced it would help them leave.

The Private Surplus

The Gulag extracted labour. Prisoners built canals, railways, and timber infrastructure the Soviet state couldn’t afford to pay free workers to construct. The economics were integral to the system’s persistence.

The American pivot is to extract profit from detention itself. Corruption of taxpayer money is how Trump is lining the pockets of an incarceration system bigger than North Korea. Kim Jong Un’s political prison camps hold an estimated 80,000-120,000. Trump already detained nearly 80,000 and has announced ICE plans to increase over 100,000. In the shadow of Amazon shipping warehouses and logistics processing boxes, ICE is telling Wall Street the movement of wrongfully detained humans will be an investor gold mine.

Got ICE?

The Northwest ICE Processing Center is operated by GEO Group, a private company paid a daily federal rate per detainee. More bodies, more revenue. The stock price tracks detention policy. This eliminates the need for ideology altogether. The market provides sufficient motive. You can build a Trumpistan gulag on quarterly earnings alone, taking over warehouses to fill with humans.

ICE expects to spend $38.3 billion on acquiring warehouses nationwide and retrofitting them into detention centers holding tens of thousands of people. The plan includes eight “mega centers,” 16 processing centers, and 10 additional facilities, with total planned capacity reaching 100,000 indefinitely detained.

Two warehouse purchases alone cost $172 million, with one in El Paso to hold 8,500 beds. It’s among the largest jails of any kind in the world.

Outside Phoenix, ICE paid $70 million cash for a building the size of seven football fields in an industrial park. City officials said they weren’t aware of the purchase and hadn’t been contacted by DHS.

Warehouses are set up as logistics hubs near airports as a “feeder system” where detainees are briefly processed then sent to massive warehouses. They’re literally using Amazon-era supply chain infrastructure for human processing. The next obvious step will be what to do about all the deaths. And on that note, Trump literally just invoked the war powers act to enable dangerous pesticide use on domestic populations.

Auschwitz II was literally named “Mexiko” by Nazis as a nod to Texas officials who doused immigrants from Mexico in chemicals. A Nazi doctor in 1937 published his report about the El Paso, Texas “Disinfection Plant” in a German pest science journal advocating for use of pesticide Zyklon B (same as Texas) in concentration camps. Over a million were murdered in Auschwitz alone, as that doctor was paid by the pesticide company. Source: USHMM
Nazi Doctor Peters carefully documented and reported President Wilson’s El Paso facility as a template for Auschwitz. The Nazi pesticide chambers were even built with observation ports. German officials in Berlin were known to regularly visit to observe the efficiency of genocide for the “Mexiko” people. Source: The Texas Observer

What the Pattern Predicts

Historically, quota-driven detention systems follow a consistent trajectory. They begin with a target population of limited public sympathy (undocumented migrants, political dissidents, class enemies). Then it expands because the institutional incentives demand expansion. Officers who need 1,500 detentions per day will eventually exhaust the supply of people who fit the original category and begin processing people who don’t. A retired British grandmother detained for packing a suitcase is not an aberration. She is the predictable output of a system that has begun to outrun its stated rationale.

The United States lost 4.5 million international visitors in 2025. The market is pricing in the risk faster than the political system is willing to name it.

Karen Newton’s advice to prospective travellers to America is wise:

DO NOT GO.”

The Gulag’s survivors said the same thing about the Soviet Union for decades. This warning comes from a retired British woman who simply went on holiday to Trumpistan.