Why ed(1)?
Dec. 4th, 2025 09:07 pm- 2025‑12‑04 - Why ed(1)?
- https://blog.thechases.com/posts/cli/why-ed1/
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New Anonymous Phone Service
Dec. 5th, 2025 08:08 amA new anonymous phone service allows you to sign up with just a zip code.
- New report finds that the Home Office’s digital-only immigration status system is leaving migrants in the UK stressed, confused and fearful.
- Digital status does not affect all migrants equally: those with limited digital literacy, language barriers, disabilities or a lack of access to the internet experience more exclusion.
- One interview raised concerns about ‘mission creep’ where migrants could be asked to share immigration status beyond legal requirements.
Report: exclusion by design
Digital Identification and the Hostile Environment for Migrants.
Read the reportNew research warns that the digitalisation of immigration status system is causing stress, confusion, and exclusion and placing an unfair burden on migrants to navigate a complex system and resolve errors and glitches that are beyond their control.
Exclusion by Design, Digital Identification and the Hostile Environment for Migrants was produced by Derya Ozkul (University of Warwick) and Marie Godin (University of Leicester/Oxford) in collaboration with Nazek Ramadan and Anne Stoltenberg (Migrant Voice) and Sara Alsherif (Open Rights Group).
The digitalisation of immigration status began in 2018 and is now mandatory for the majority of migrants. It affects their daily lives, including their ability to work, rent or buy a house, travel, study and access public services. Most migrants involved in the study had negative experiences of digitalisation.
Key findings from the research
- Participants reported high levels of stress, fear and exhaustion as they attempted to navigate unclear guidance, shifting deadlines and frequent technical problems. This was made worse by inadequate support from the Home Office.
- Many expressed deep anxiety about making minor mistakes, fearing it could jeopardise their rights. This sense of vulnerability is heightened by the wider hostile environment.
- A recurrent theme was exhaustion with the Home Office’s policies and processes. Participants described having to navigate both the complex process of digitalisation and then having to work out how to use their digital status in their daily lives.
- The digital platform’s design flaws, including technical glitches, data errors and unreliable share codes, were a major source of harm. Some participants reported losing access to employment; others had problems traveling to the UK.
- Migrants with limited digital literacy, language barriers, disabilities and caring responsibilities were most harmed.
- Migrants relied heavily on personal networks, community groups, and migrant-led online platforms to navigate the system due to inadequate official support.
- Migrants frequently encountered employers, landlords, airline carriers, and border officials who lacked understanding of share codes or digital immigration processes. Some reported having to explain the system to employers and landlords themselves, revealing significant gaps in official communication and training.
Unintended mission creep
One participant revealed that a supermarket worker asked them for a share code to prove their age even though they had already presented another form of ID. While this was only one case among 40 interviews, it raises concerns that as there is growing public awareness of E-visas and share codes, migrants will be asked to prove their right to be in the UK in situations where this is not necessary. This could be an unintended consequence of expecting employers, landlords and others to act as an arm of the state. In addition, digital ID is being proposed for everyone in the UK expressly to cut down on ‘illegal migrants’. Against this hostile political and media environment, it is foreseeable that migrants could be racially profiled on a daily basis and expected to prove their right to be in their UK by members of the public who have no right to make such a demand.
Quotes from research participants
‘I think with the Home Office it feels like, “oh, the digital is done and our job is done”. No, your job is not done if it is not working properly.’
‘When I gave them a new share code, they told me that it still said I could just work for only 20 hours a week. So I don’t know what exactly was wrong, but it shouldn’t have said that because I was eligible to work full-time. So I couldn’t get that job.’
Quotes from report authors
Dr Derya Ozkul from the University of Warwick said:
“In our research, we heard from individuals losing employment opportunities, missing flights, having their personal information shared with others, struggling to complete processes due to technical issues, and worrying that they had lost their legal status. We also heard from people being questioned and asked to provide their share code in situations where it was not required. This report should serve as a warning to everyone about what can go wrong when systems are made compulsory and digital-only, without offering any alternatives.”
Nazek Ramadan, Director of Migrant Voice said:
“The findings of this report clearly show how the design and implementation of digital only status are preventing migrants from demonstrating and accessing the rights they already have. This is why the whole system needs to be reformed to enable migrants to access their rights, rather than creating structural barriers which lock us out, and lead to discrimination; stop outsourcing immigration checks to third parties, and shift the narrative from surveillance and enforcement to inclusion and service delivery.”
Marie Godin, from the University of Leicester said:
“Our report highlights the experiences of migrants across the UK – of different nationalities, legal statuses, and family situations – who were forced to adapt to the new system with little time or support. Many described confusion and anxiety as they navigated a complex, glitch-prone platform, fearing that even small mistakes could cost them the right to work, rent, or travel. The constant pressure to manage their digital status and fix technical issues left many exhausted, reinforcing migrants’ perceptions that the shift to digitalisation prioritised control over fairness, efficiency and accessibility.”
Sara Alsherif, Migrants Digital Justice Programme Manager at Open Rights Group said:
“A year after it was supposed to come into effect, the eVisa system is still beset with problems. This research highlights the human cost of these hostile digital systems that are flawed by design.
“The Home Office can take immediate steps to reduce the anxiety that migrants are experiencing by giving them the safety of a physical or digital back up that will allow them to prove their status in any circumstances.
“However, root and branch of reform of this system is also needed and lessons must be learnt, especially as the government intends to roll digital ID out to everyone in the UK.”
About the research
The research was carried out by Derya Ozkul (University of Warwick) and Marie Godin University of Leicester/Oxford) in collaboration with Nazek Ramadan and Anne Stoltenberg (Migrant Voice) and Sara Alsherif (Open Rights Group). The researchers used various methods including FOI requests, roundtables and in-depth interviews with 40 migrants from across the UK.
The research was carried out before June 2025 when physical documents could still be used. With full digitalisation now in effect, the report warns that harmful consequences are likely to intensify. The experiences of migrants also forewarn of some of the problems that will occur when the Government rolls out plans for digital ID to all UK citizens.
Exclusion by Design: Digital Identification and the Hostile Environment for Migrants
Dec. 4th, 2025 11:27 amThe debate over digital ID systems has recently intensified in the UK, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer framing digital IDs as a mechanism to curb ‘illegal working’. What these debates often overlook is that the UK has already introduced a ‘digital immigration status’ – first via the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) and then the eVisa – which requires migrants to prove their legal status through digital means only.
From 1 June 2025, nearly all migrants entering or legally residing in the UK must obtain an eVisa to prove their rights. This makes migrants the first group to experience a mandatory digital-only identification system, effectively positioning them as a testing ground for broader national digital ID ambitions.
READ THE Full report
Exclusion by Design: Digital Identification and the Hostile Environment for Migrants.
Ozkul, D. & Godin, M. (2025). In collaboration with Nazek Ramadan and Anne Stoltenberg (Migrant Voice) and Sara Alsherif (Open Rights Group).
About Digital immigration status
The UK’s transition to a digital immigration status began with the EUSS in 2018. The rollout of digital-only status faced criticism due to issues such as digital exclusion, accessibility barriers, and frequent technical failures that hindered migrants’ ability to work, rent, travel, and access public services.
Despite these concerns, the Home Office continued with the full digitalisation of its system. The eVisa rollout for non-EUSS migrants started in late 2023. However, due to inadequate preparation, the transition deadline was postponed twice. Initially set for December 31, 2024, it was first extended to April 1, 2025, and later moved to June 1, 2025, with physical documents, such as Biometric Residence Permits (BRPs), no longer valid for travel.
As digital status has become mandatory for most migrants, it is important to understand its implications for their lives. It’s equally important to examine how this digital system influences the broader population, especially those tasked with verifying migrants’ statuses through right to work, rent, travel checks, as well as access to public services and educational institutions. This report addresses this gap by examining the experiences of migrants of diverse nationalities, legal statuses, family situations, and migration trajectories across the UK. It investigates digital immigration status as a wider ‘digital identity platform’ that reshapes the UK’s border regime and produces new forms of ‘everyday bordering’. The analysis explores how migrants understand, access, and navigate their digital status; how reliably they can generate proof of their rights; and how the transition to a digital immigration status impacts their everyday lives, their socio-economic conditions and well-being.
The central research question in this report is the following:
How has the digitalisation of immigration status, particularly the implementation of the eVisa system, affected migrants in the UK?
This report is the result of more than a year-long collaborative effort between academic researchers, Migrant Voice and the Open Rights Group, employing various methods (FOI requests, roundtables and semi-structured interviews) to explore migrants’ experiences with digital immigration status.
Drawing on in-depth interviews with 40 migrants in the UK, this report examines digital immigration status from the perspective of those directly affected. It explores how migrants, third-party actors, and the technical design of the system, conceptualised as a ‘digital identity platform’, interact to shape migrants’ experiences and shifting positionalities. Our findings show that the digitalisation of immigration status has had predominantly negative impacts on participants, though the nature and consequences of these effects vary across individuals and contexts.
A systematic and inductive analysis of interviews revealed a set of recurring themes. These insights were organised into three overarching categories:
- Emotional and affective experiences;
- Practical experiences, including both positive and negative elements, as well as key obstacles and challenges encountered; and
- Coping strategies employed by migrants to navigate and mitigate these difficulties.
Emotional and affective experiences
Many participants reported experiencing high levels of stress, fear, and exhaustion while attempting to digitalise their immigration status within short and shifting deadlines. Changes to timelines and limited guidance intensified uncertainty, contributing to widespread anxiety. In contrast, migrants who had more positive practical experiences of digitalising and using their status reported lower stress levels and greater confidence. This report demonstrates that system design and access to resources, as well as an element of ‘luck’ in not encountering technical glitches, play a crucial role in shapin overall perceptions.
A general sense of confusion was evident among many migrants who were unaware that they would need to navigate this process on their own and lacked a clear understanding of how the system operates. These emotional responses were closely tied to practical barriers, including unclear instructions, system errors, difficulty accessing accounts, and the complexity of managing the digital platform across multiple family members.
Worries of being unable to prove legal status – within a hostile environment that emphasises enforcement, detention, and deportation – were pervasive. As a result, the inability to quickly and easily prove legal status causes significant harm.
A deep fear of losing their rights if they made mistakes within the digital portal was shared among our participants. Because the system requires migrants to regularly update their information, even minor or inadvertent errors were perceived as potentially jeopardising their status. This created a persistent sense of vulnerability. Moreover, the burden of managing these risks and the anxiety associated with them falls entirely on migrants.
A profound sense of exhaustion with the Home Office and its immigration policies was shared. Migrants were required to navigate multiple components of the immigration system, digitalise thei status, and use it in various aspects of daily life, while some also faced the challenge of resolving technical issues – all of which contributed to this pervasive sense of fatigue.
A deep sense of mistrust toward the Home Office shaped migrants’ experiences, especially those with negative encounters, who therefore often avoided engaging with official updates in order to protect their well-being. At the same time, many felt that the shift to digital status served primarily to increase control rather than improve fairness and efficiency. The absence of meaningful consultation or accessible information sessions reinforced the perception that migrants’ needs and perspectives were overlooked.
Practical experiences
A closer look at participants’ accounts about their use of the system reveals that problems can be clustered around three primary sources: (1) flaws in the design of the system itself, (2) difficulties rooted in individual circumstances and resources, and (3) the lack of knowledge by third-party actors who need to comply with the new system. Importantly, these categories often intersected, meaning that migrants with fewer resources were hit hardest when design flaws occurred.
Flaws in the design of the system itself
A key finding of our study is that many of the challenges faced by migrants were directly linked toflaws in the design of the digital immigration system. Participants reported difficulties arising from overly complex processes, technical glitches, incorrect or entangled data, and challenges related to generating share codes. Additional barriers included device-specific limitations, unclear or inconsistent communication from the Home Office, reliance on specific documents, and problems associated with legacy documents. These design-related issues significantly impacted migrants’ ability to navigate the system, contributing to stress, confusion, and delays.
Difficulties rooted in individual circumstances and resources
The data shows that the system was particularly difficult to use for migrants with limited access to resources and challenging individual circumstances. Key factors included varying levels of digital and English literacy, limited access to devices and reliable internet, caring responsibilities and associated time pressures, disabilities or age-related limitations, and complex legal trajectories in the UK. These personal and contextual conditions significantly affected participants’ experiences and their ability to navigate the system.
The role of third party actors
A further set of challenges emerged from migrants’ interactions with third-party actors who play a critical role in implementing and enforcing the digital immigration system. Participants reported numerous difficulties when digitalising their status and generating share codes, which had direct consequences for their right-to-work checks, right-to-rent checks, and travel to the UK. Those who relied on the system most frequently, such as individuals applying for multiple short-term jobs or seeking housing due to frequent relocations, were disproportionately affected.
Third-party actors, including employers, landlords, airline carriers, and border officers, displayed varying levels of awareness and understanding of the system, creating uncertainty and additional. burdens for migrants.
- Right-to-work checks: Participants encountered outdated or incorrect share code information, lacked clear guidance for themselves and employers, faced requests for share codes early in the hiring process, and experienced having to repeatedly explain the system to employers. Technical issues and concerns about triggering immigration enforcement added further anxiety, sometimes leading migrants to avoid salary increases or contract changes.
- Right-to-rent checks: Landlords’ limited awareness of share codes and inconsistent government communication, coupled with system failures during code verification, created stress and delays for migrants seeking housing.
- Travel to the UK: Many participants reported difficulties and fears when using share codes for travel. Challenges included some airline and border staff’s unfamiliarity with eVisas, repeated requests for new share codes, poor internet connectivity, and system errors. Additional issues included linking digital status to passports and the fear of being denied re-entry, both of which discouraged travel altogether.
Our study shows that many third-party actors lack a sufficient understanding of the share code system, leading, in some cases, to outright refusal to engage and to the effective exclusion of migrants. Migrants frequently relied on the goodwill of third-party actors to resolve technical problems. When third-party actors lacked adequate knowledge about the digital immigration status, migrants had to explain the process, creating an additional and often uncertain burden.
We also identified instances of unlawful or unintended uses of the system, which can be seen as emerging forms of ‘casual surveillance.’ For example, supermarket staff requested share codes as proof of identity – assumedly, well beyond the Home Office’s intended purposes. Such practices expose migrants to more everyday racism and social exclusion, limiting access to everyday goods and services, and demonstrating that the risks of digital status extend far beyond official enforcement contexts.
Coping strategies
Migrants employ a variety of strategies to mitigate the challenges and potential harms caused by the new digital immigration system. These strategies operate across multiple levels – individual, social, and institutional – and reflect both practical and creative responses to a system that many experience as complex, stressful, and exclusionary. At the individual level, migrants develop contingency measures, such as maintaining a portfolio of digital and physical proofs of legal status, to avoid errors that could jeopardise their rights. These practices demonstrate resourcefulness and a proactive approach to navigating systemic risks. At the community level, migrants rely heavily on informal networks, including friends, family, and community WhatsApp groups, to share guidance, clarify complex rules, and collectively try to resolve problems. Social media platforms such as Instagram, YouTube, and Reddit – often run by migrants themselves – have become critical resources for support, and peer-to-peer information sharing. At the institutional level, strategies range from attempting to use official Home Office channels, sometimes with limited success, to reaching out to migrants’ rights networks, legal aid organisations, and other migrant support groups to address the shortcomings of official guidance.
Despite these adaptive strategies, the system continues to generate stress, uncertainty, and mistrust. Migrants’ reliance on personal and community resources highlights both the resilience of migrant networks and the systemic shortcomings of the digital immigration status system. Overall, these strategies reveal how migrants actively navigate the digitalisation of immigration status, often shouldering a disproportionate burden in managing their own legal security.
Last but not least, it is important to highlight that this research was conducted during the transition phase when the Home Office had announced grace periods, with migrants still being able to use their physical documents until 1 June 2025. The full consequences of digitalisation and its impact on migrants’ lives are only beginning to emerge. Based on the problems reported, the implications are likely to get worse. This misuse of the ‘share code’ system by individuals who are not entitled to access it, including, for example, shop workers, is hugely worrying, particularly in an environment already marked by hostility toward migrants. When such practices occur in a politically divisive context where migrants are routinely scapegoated for broader social and economic issues, the consequences can be severe, with migrants at even greater risk of racism, criminalisation and discrimination.
Policy Recommendations for the Home Office
The transition to a fully digital immigration status system marks a significant shift in how migrants interact with the UK’s immigration infrastructure. While digitalisation is being presented as a modernisation effort aimed at improving efficiency and security, our research demonstrates that its current implementation has created substantial barriers for many migrants. These include individuals with limited digital literacy, language proficiency, or access to technology, those navigating complex legal trajectories, as well as many others who faced various types of technical glitches and errors.
These challenges have resulted in legal uncertainty, emotional distress, and social exclusion from essential aspects of daily life, including employment, housing, access to public services and travel.
The following recommendations aim to address these systemic shortcomings and ensure that the digital immigration status system operates fairly and in a manner that safeguards the rights and dignity of all migrants. The recommendations are organised into three categories: Immediate Actions, Short-Term System Changes, and Long-Term Reforms, reflecting both urgent priorities and structural changes required for sustainable improvement.
Immediate Actions to Improve the Digital Immigration Status System
Provide accessible support services
Establish support services for migrants experiencing difficulties with digital immigration status, including freely available interpretation. These services should be accessible through direct Home Office channels, such as a 24/7 helpline staffed by fully trained officers, and through nongovernmental organisations, supported by a clear and sustainable funding model beyond current short-term arrangements.
Provide multilingual guidance
Ensure all guidance materials, including UKVI account instructions and website content, are available at least in the most spoken languages among migrant communities in the UK.
Inform those responsible for status checks
Employers, landlords, educational and banking institutions, government agencies, airline carriers, and UK and overseas border authorities must be fully informed about the digital immigration status system and provided with appropriate support. This should include a 24/7 helpline to resolve system errors in real time.
Provide rapid remedies for technical glitches and errors
Implement fast and effective procedures to correct inaccurate data, ensuring individuals do not lose access to employment, education, housing, services or travel due to system failures.
Short-Term System Changes
Standardise share code
Eliminate the use of multiple share codes for different purposes, as this creates confusion and complicates practical application.
Ensure inclusivity in system design
Redesign the digital immigration system to remove practical and structural barriers, enabling migrants to view, verify, and update their status without needing advanced digital skills. The system must be accessible to individuals with disabilities, including those who are visually impaired.
Provide non-digital alternatives
Recognise that digital systems cannot be fully inclusive due to factors such as digital literacy, lack of connectivity, or technical failures. The Home Office should provide robust non-digital alternatives for registration, application, and status verification through freely available in-person appointments. Physical proof of immigration status should be available alongside digital options, ensuring individuals can demonstrate their rights even when offline. Maintaining non-digital alternatives is crucial to safeguarding access to rights and essential services. A hybrid system that combines digital and physical proof should be available to all.
Protect privacy through data minimisation
Restrict the sharing of personal information with third parties to what is strictly necessary (e.g. confirmation of right to work, rent, or travel). Sensitive details, such as visa category or refugee status, should not be disclosed to prevent discrimination. The right to privacy is a fundamental human right and must be upheld.
Ensure transparency
Publish clear and accessible information for migrants on what data is stored, how it is managed, and which government agencies and external parties have access to it. The Home Office should also publish unredacted, regularly updated Data Protection Impact Assessments (DPIAs) and Equality Impact Assessments (EIAs) for the digital immigration system (including both eVisa and the EUSS). Additionally, statistics on reported technical issues and remedial actions should be made public.
Create appeal and redress mechanisms
Establish accessible and robust procedures for migrants to challenge harms caused by technical error or system inaccessibility. The Home Office should take full responsibility for losses arising from system failures and amend the ‘UKVI Account Terms and Conditions’ to remove the current exclusion of liability clause.
Long-Term Reforms
Transform the transactional nature of status generation
Currently, migrants must generate temporary share codes to verify their legal status requiring repeated actions throughout their residency. The system should be reformed so that status remains fixed and stable for the duration of granted rights, eliminating the need for continuous code generation and providing security and certainty for migrants.
Establish meaningful two-way communication with civil society organisations
Ensure that engagement with civil society organisations is not limited to one-way information sharing but fosters genuine dialogue. The Home Office should actively listen and respond to concerns raised by these organisations, including calls for formal investigations into GDPR compliance and the equality implications of the digital immigration status system.
End the digital hostile environment
Terminate policies that outsource immigration checks to third parties such as employers, landlords, local authorities and educational institutions.
Prevent unlawful status checks and casual surveillance
Introduce clear legal safeguards to prevent individuals or organisations, such as shop staff or political activists, from demanding proof of digital immigration status without lawful authority. Those engaging in such practices should face appropriate penalties. The Home Office should provide clear guidance on unlawful checks.
Stop experimental technology use on migrants
Migrants have a particularly vulnerable position, often without clear appeal mechanisms. Immigration systems should not serve as testing grounds for unproven technologies.
Reframe the narrative and practice of technology use
Shift the narrative and use of technology in immigration from enforcement and surveillance toward enabling efficient access to essential services. Digital tools should be designed to facilitate inclusion and service delivery, not to monitor or penalise individuals.
Implementing these recommendations would significantly reduce the risks and inequities created by the current digital immigration system. By prioritising accessibility, transparency, and accountability, the Home Office can ensure that the digitalisation of public services does not compromise migrants’ rights. Failure to act will perpetuate systemic exclusion, deepen inequalities, and erode trust in public authorities.
Join the Digital Rights Movement.
Cautionary Tales – The Disappearance of Grace Oakeshott
Dec. 5th, 2025 05:01 amAt the start of the 20th century, Britain was slowly becoming a freer place for women. Young Grace Oakeshott seized every opportunity to learn and improve the world around her – though she found those opportunities frustratingly narrow. One day, she vanished suddenly, leaving behind only a pile of clothes on a beach. A hundred years later, the truth about Grace’s disappearance has finally come to light.
For bonus episodes, ad-free listening, our monthly newsletter and behind-the-scenes conversations with members of the Cautionary Tales production team, consider joining the Cautionary Club.
Further reading
The key source for this episode of Cautionary Tales is Radical Reformers and Respectable Rebels: How The Two Lives of Grace Oakeshott Defined an Era (2016) by Jocelyn Robson
We also drew on:
“Shooting Affair at Parakae”, Poverty Bay Herald, 10 June 1908.
Breton Folk: An Artistic Tour in Brittany (1881) by Henry Blackburn
And my own book The Logic of Life (2008) .
The following websites were useful:
Lefse is Beautiful
Dec. 4th, 2025 10:01 pmHaving determined that I'll need to buy my own lefse-making stuff, I finally remembered today to start my usual process of purchasing anything: asking V to do it for me, heh.
I sent them a list -- rolling pin, ricer, flat griddle, and what we call a lefse spatula the internet seems to call a lefse stick or lefse turner; I included a photo of one to make it clear -- and they did a great job; almost everything is on the way already. But it meant an afternoon looking at and thinking about the kinds of things I haven't in a while -- krumkake! which my grandma made when I was very little before declaring it too much work, which is fair enough but that means it took on near-mythical status in my mind; the other Minnesota Culture asserting itself stuff you find when you search for this because lefse has become a symbol of white Midwestern heritage. You can buy t-shirts that say "lefse ladym" modeled by someone holding a lefse spatula, but they don't sell the spatula, it's just a prop. There's shirts that say
Lefse&
Hotdish&
Pop&
Lutefisk
All these cultural markers lined up in a row. It's all both compelling and repulsive to me.
I've inherited a little money from the sale of Grandma's house -- despite all my attempts to refuse it, Mom insists that I buy something for myself with it. I'm going to make sure that she knows a bit of it is going on inferior versions of stuff that she never considered collecting for me because she refused to have anything to do with the house clearance, to make some point to her sisters that neither they nor I understand. An English friend perceptively pointed out "I'm guessing that sort of 'I'm having to buy a thing that you already had and (effectively) threw out' inflicts a very specific kind of midwestern sting." I could hardly have put it better myself. I'm not doing it to be passive-aggressive, though I imagine it'll be perceived that way.
Thinking about this all afternoon has led to feeling so immersed in things I miss so much. It's been kinda sad and tiring.
foreign-dlopen: load dynamic libraries into a statically-linked executable.
Dec. 4th, 2025 01:50 pm- 2025‑12‑04 - foreign-dlopen: load dynamic libraries into a statically-linked executable.
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head down antlers on
Dec. 4th, 2025 06:48 pmAnyway. On Saturday I used 7 onions, 2 aubergines, 4 peppers, 6 courgettes, a little under 1.5kg pasta, 3.5 jars of pesto, and 2 bags of cheese and made just about enough packed meals to get me through to the end of next week. On Sunday A came over and we put up my tree and made disappointing experimental maple and pecan cookies (edible, but weirdly cake-like and not particularly good). I am more-or-less up-to-date on laundry and washing up and the like, and have started my Christmas cards.
I am in the office tomorrow as usual and then every working day through to 15 December inclusive, and am also out every single one of those seven nights. Then the week after I have choir four days in a row. Then I get a whole one day off between finishing work and Christmas Eve, for which I shall be duly grateful.
I think I am sufficiently prepared to make it that far, although there's going to be a lot of things waiting for me! But I've got most of my Christmas shopping sorted, I'm OK for food, and I don't think I should run out of clothes. Anything above and beyond that is a bonus!
Also this evening I made a little graph of how many books I finished per month and the point where I stopped intensively playing computer games is extremely visible. I knew all the hand-wringing about my reading decline was futile anyway, but also it turns out that the cause is almost entirely Bioware. Spoiler: if I'm playing ten or fifteen hours of a computer game, I do not read as much, who could have predicted.
A kidney could be the perfect Christmas gift
Dec. 4th, 2025 04:07 pmChristmas now is drawing near at hand, and your favourite undercover economist has been observed performing some most uncharacteristic acts. My father used to make amazing Christmas puddings and distribute them to his children. Now that he’s dead, I have the recipe and the solemn duty falls to me. Any economics textbook could explain that I am undervaluing my time. I could buy a hundred good puddings with the money I could have earned, had I not been making half a dozen.
Then there is the Harford-Monks Christmas card, designed using a still life created by my wife. And the Harford-Monks Christmas mixtape. (This used to be a true labour of love, requiring dozens of CDs to be burned. Spotify makes life easier, although that somewhat cheapens the ritual.)
No such shortcuts for the Christmas Game, an all-day role-playing game in which, since time immemorial, my friends and I have gathered and pretended to be wizards — often in some seasonally inflected adventure, and always created by one of the group rather than bought off the shelf in a gaming store. This is the way.
I’ve devoted many columns over the years to the “deadweight loss of Christmas” — the grotesque waste involved in buying badly chosen gifts. I remain convinced this loss is quite real, and that if you are choosing a gift for your grandchild or niece, picking from a wishlist or sending cash are underrated choices. Face facts, you’re not demonstrating that you’re down with Gen Alpha, you’re transferring purchasing power.
But there is a different kind of gift-giving going on in homespun rituals. Lewis Hyde’s much-loved book, The Gift, recently gave me a new perspective on the matter. Hyde looks upon creative acts as gifts, and gifts as creative acts. One gift inspires another, he argues, retelling fairy tales to underline the common motif of a small act of generosity which begets a larger one, and a larger one. One story begins with a mother giving a small loaf and a blessing to her daughter; the daughter gives the bread to some birds; a virtuous spiral begins and before the end of the story, she has been gifted with a flask of cordial that can raise the dead. The gift grows as it is passed along.
Hyde devotes a chapter to the way gifts establish bonds between people. This is certainly true of my Christmas game, and is the impulse behind those handcrafted cards, the family pudding recipe and even the endless burning of CDs. One friend insists that the spell of Christmas can only be woven on Christmas Eve by the playing of the Harford-Monks Christmas album with a glass of champagne in hand. Flattery perhaps, but the idea of connecting with that friend compensates for the knowledge that many others will quite reasonably shrug and listen to their own music instead.
Bonds of friendship are all very well, but sometimes bonds can be graver. Consider the connection between kidney donor and kidney recipient: the recipient is literally walking around with part of the donor’s body inside them. (Few gifts, incidentally, create more value than a live kidney donation, where the recipient has their health transformed while the donor usually suffers no more than temporary discomfort. It is the deadweight loss of Christmas in reverse.)
It is easy to romanticise such gifts, but they can be socially complicated. In 2006, the writer Virginia Postrel donated her kidney to Sally Satel — a friend, but “no one would have called us close”. Postrel argued for a legal market in kidneys, and once told me that Satel “would really have liked to do an arms-length transaction with a stranger, where she paid somebody she didn’t know, because there can be a great deal of emotional entanglement when there is a gift”.
Lewis Hyde describes the flip side: a daughter who offered to donate a kidney to her mother, in exchange for a fur coat. “It really shook me up,” said the mother, who agreed to the terms but came to view her own daughter with something close to contempt. Hyde writes, “the gift did not render the mother subservient to the daughter. And for a good reason: it wasn’t a gift.” The daughter turned it into a barter, and in doing so surrendered her moral authority. Evidently, she preferred the coat.
The gift is neither superior nor inferior to a market transaction; it’s different. Sometimes we want those bonds with others, and use gifts to strengthen them. Sometimes we want to be cut free, and then cash is king.
Cash for kidneys remains frowned upon, but one intriguing development has been the emergence of kidney exchanges. Cruelly, it’s quite common for people who’ve had children together not to be compatible for transplants, but two couples can pair up and donate to each other. Such exchanges have to be simultaneous, because of the risk that one couple gets the kidney they want and then backs out on the (legally unenforceable) deal.
But much more can be done if someone volunteers to donate a kidney, no strings attached, to any stranger who needs one. That donation can trigger a series of sequential kidney exchanges — in 2015, an altruistic donor, Kathy Hart, started a record-breaking chain of 35 transplants, each one involving a pair of people who received a kidney, then donated one to keep the chain going. That’s a more complicated affair than simply paying cash for a kidney, but everyone seems to feel a lot better about it. One gift inspires another — and the gift grows as it is passed along.
Written for and first published in the Financial Times on 13 December 2024.
Loyal readers might enjoy the book that started it all, The Undercover Economist.
I’ve set up a storefront on Bookshop in the United States and the United Kingdom. Links to Bookshop and Amazon may generate referral fees.
Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - On the Edge
Dec. 4th, 2025 11:20 am
Click here to go see the bonus panel!
Hovertext:
The only down side is that in the bio pic there's a 45 minute musical montage as he prepares to battle the aliens.
Today's News:
Make invalid laziness unrepresentable in Haskell.
Dec. 3rd, 2025 07:59 pm- 2025‑12‑03 - Make invalid laziness unrepresentable in Haskell.
- https://h2.jaguarpaw.co.uk/posts/make-invalid-laziness-unrepresentable/
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/82CUT
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/82CUT.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/82CUT.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
Lazier binary decision diagrams (BDDs) for set-theoretic types.
Dec. 2nd, 2025 11:07 pm- 2025‑12‑02 - Lazier binary decision diagrams (BDDs) for set-theoretic types.
- https://elixir-lang.org/blog/2025/12/02/lazier-bdds-for-set-theoretic-types/
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/FG0AE
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/FG0AE.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/FG0AE.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
Dr Crab Robot Reaches the Exit
Dec. 4th, 2025 11:54 amPlay online at the link: https://cartesiandaemon.github.io/rusttilegame/programming_release.html
It's clunky in several places but you can successfully play! Drag the instructions onto the flowchart. Press space to start the crab robot moving. Get them to the exit.
Leave the tab open, there's not yet any save :)
It's currently best played in a browser on a PC. (It works on mobile except that you need a spacebar. You can also build an exe for windows or Linux if you want, repo https://github.com/CartesianDaemon/rusttilegame)

Interesting Links for 04-12-2025
Dec. 4th, 2025 12:00 pm- 1. Abolishing trial by jury: why is the government overlooking the obvious?
- (tags:law UK )
- 2. Drunk raccoon found passed out on liquor store floor after breaking in
- (tags:alcohol animals )
- 3. Arguments about simulated universes
- (tags:simulation philosophy argument funny comic )
- 4. Americans being ignorant about other countries
- (tags:countries USA ignorance funny )
- 5. Sasha the Christmas tiger
- (tags:tiger Christmas )
It's not always icache: performance of inline functions.
Dec. 3rd, 2025 02:11 pm- 2025‑12‑03 - It's not always icache: performance of inline functions.
- https://matklad.github.io/2021/07/10/its-not-always-icache.html
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/A49M9
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/A49M9.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/A49M9.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
Life with two kids: Christmas monitoring
Dec. 4th, 2025 07:31 am(Sophia is on her own account, but for technical reasons Gideon can't be yet.)
the inexorable passage of time and end of all things
Dec. 3rd, 2025 10:49 pmFor lo these many years (i.e. basically since I got a smartphone) I've been using Swype as an onscreen keyboard. Some time ago it was announced that it had reached end-of-life-and-support, but it wasn't until I went looking earlier today that I realised that happened in 2018, that being when I posted asking for suggestions for replacements.
And then I didn't think about it again for, apparently, approximately eight years, through several new phones and quite a lot of new major versions of Android... and then a few-ish weeks ago Fairphone rolled out Android 15 to the Fairphone 4 and alas That Was The End Of That.
Recommendations back in 2018 were for Gboard and Swiftkey; a question posted to reddit in 2022 garnered similar responses.
Since the Abrupt Keyboard Failure I've swapped to Gboard more or less by default. I don't hate the bit where language switching is now automatic (for the purposes of language learning apps, at any rate), but good grief I am missing the ability to e.g. type < or | without needing to go like three clicks deep in menus. Yes, when I have "Touch and hold keys for symbols" enabled -- as far as I can tell that only gives me one symbol per key, not "now select from a variety of them" as with the much-lamented Swype. I'm also missing the gestures I know for "yes, that word, but change the capitalisation", and still grumpily adjusting to the shift key mode cycle being in a different order to what I'm used to.
I've experimented briefly with AnySoftKey but rapidly got annoyed by the total lack of any Irish language pack (and how difficult it is to navigate the app listings to establish this fact). I'm trying to persuade myself that it's worth giving SwiftKey a try even though it (1) is now Microsoft, (2) has gone all-in on Bundling With Copilot, and (3) apparently "contains ads".
Eheu, alas, etc; all is woe; ... unless anyone knows of any other Android keyboards that provide ready access to All the punctuation...?


