Defending Trial by Jury

Dec. 10th, 2025 01:43 pm
[syndicated profile] openrightsgroup_feed

Posted by Sara Chitseko

Justice Secretary, David Lammy, has announced plans to drastically reduce the use of jury trials in England and Wales. Under these proposals, only the most serious offences such as murder, rape or manslaughter, will continue to be heard by a jury.

Lammy cites court backlogs as a justification. With a backlog of 78,000 Crown court cases, projected to rise to 100,000 by 2028, the judicial system in England and Wales is indeed on its knees and radical action is needed. But these proposals must also be understood in the context of a wider crackdown on our democratic freedoms.

From the normalisation of mass surveillance, such as facial recognition, to the crackdown on protest and free speech, successive governments have used the criminal legal system to suppress dissent and crackdown on crimes that would be better addressed through investment in community support, poverty alleviation and drug rehabilitation.

Jury trials are not just a procedural detail, they are the cornerstone of democracy. They enable the public to participate directly in legal proceedings and provide a crucial check on state power. This is particularly important in a context where the judiciary is one of the most elitest professions in Britain. 62% of senior judges were privately educated compared to just 7% of the general population. In this sense, juries bring a vital diversity of lived experience into the courtroom, making justice more representative and accountable.

Lammy, of all people, should know that jury trials must be protected at all costs. His 2017 review found that people from racialised backgrounds were more likely to trust a jury than a magistrate with some electing to be tried at a Crown Court rather than a Magistrate’s Court, despite the risk of higher sentences if found guilty. The Lammy review also noted that: “Successive studies have shown that juries deliver equitable results, regardless of the ethnic make-up of the jury, or of the defendant in question.” Juries protect against institutional failure. Judges form part of the legal system and state infrastructure, so are more likely to accept the police or Crown Prosecution Service narrative at face value. Removing juries removes one of the last public checks on state abuse of power.

Lammy’s proposal comes in a context of successive governments passing aggressive anti-protest legislation, including the Public Order Act; the Policing, Crime, Courts and Sentencing Act and expansions of terrorism law which is increasingly being used to criminalise those involved in protest and direct action.

When protest cases do reach trial, verdicts often hinge on how a jury interprets intention and political meaning. For example, in 2024, a jury acquitted Palestine Action activists for alleged criminal damage arising from a six-day rooftop occupation of Elbit UK, a subsidary of Israel’s largest arms company. The activists argued argued that their actions were justified on the basis of necessity, in order to save the lives of Palestinians, and in order to protect property at immediate risk of drone bombardment in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

Similarly, in 2022, a jury acquitted four individuals charged with criminal damage for toppling a statue of slave trader, Edward Colston, in Bristol, 2020. The defendants did not deny their involvement, but argued their actions were justified because the statue was a hateful symbol of oppression, and the city council had failed to remove it despite years of protest.

Under Lammy’s plan, many of these kinds of cases would no longer fall within jury jurisdiction. Protesters would face a single judge, at a time when the state is criminalising dissent on an extraordinary scale. Removing juries threatens to remove one of the few remaining checks on the criminalisation of political expression.

What makes this attack on juries even more concerning is that it coincides with the government’s increasing reliance on automated technologies, risk assessment tools and algorithmic decision-making in courts and across the wider criminal legal system.

For example, the Ministry of Justice ‘Offender Assessment System’ is a risk assessment tool which the MoJ claims can “predict” people’s risk of reoffending. These scores influence sentencing, rehabilitation access and custody decisions. This tool relies on flawed data which in practice, is used to target low-income and racialised communities who are already over-represented in criminal legal system data sets. This then creates a negative feedback loop, where these so-called “predictions” lead to further over-policing of certain groups and areas, thereby reinforcing and exacerbating the pre-existing discrimination as increasing amounts of data are collected.

This is automated injustice. While human oversight and community participation are rolled back, opaque and unaccountable systems are being expanded. The government and big tech companies market these products as “solutions” that will increase “efficiency” and “innovation.” But, “efficiency” without accuracy and accountability is simply injustice delivered faster and at scale. Wrongful detentions based on biased algorithms not only violate rights, but also waste public funds. Legislation that treats discrimination as an operational gain fundamentally misunderstands both human rights and public safety. Reducing the use of juries while increasing the use of flawed technologies isn’t about efficiency – it’s about control.

There was already a backlog of 40,000 Crown Court cases prior to the pandemic. The root causes of this backlog were long-term political decisions, including the closure of half and sale of one third of courts in England and Wales between 2010-2020, as part of the then Conservative government’s programme of austerity. In addition, we’ve seen cuts to legal aid, resulting in the decline in numbers of criminal barristers and solicitors and the expansion of criminalisation as a way of addressing often complex social problems.

Lammy has justified his decision to scrap juries by the long wait for trial of up to three or four years that rape survivors currently face. But the solution to this is not fewer rights. Trials could be expedited for particularly traumatic cases and there could be investment in targeted interventions and community based support.

Lammy’s justification also leans on a highly misleading statistic, by claiming that 60% of rape survivors drop out because of trial delays. In reality, most withdrawals happen before a case ever reaches court, often due to policing failures and a system that routinely retraumatises survivors. The true withdrawal rate once a case is charged is closer to 8%. Using distorted figures to argue for scrapping juries only obscures the real crisis of a system that often fails survivors of sexual violence, compounded by lacking political vigour in addressing the conditions that produce harm in the first place.

If the government are serious about justice, rather than removing juries, they should focus on expanding legal aid, banning “crime-predicting” technologies that funnel people into the legal system and investing in trauma-informed community services, stable housing, youth clubs and mental health services. Research by the Ministry of Justice themselves found that these kinds of investments are more successful in reducing crime and reoffending. Real democracy lies in empowering communities, not stripping us of our voice in the courtroom.

End Pre-Crime

FBI Warns of Fake Video Scams

Dec. 10th, 2025 12:05 pm
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

The FBI is warning of AI-assisted fake kidnapping scams:

Criminal actors typically will contact their victims through text message claiming they have kidnapped their loved one and demand a ransom be paid for their release. Oftentimes, the criminal actor will express significant claims of violence towards the loved one if the ransom is not paid immediately. The criminal actor will then send what appears to be a genuine photo or video of the victim’s loved one, which upon close inspection often reveals inaccuracies when compared to confirmed photos of the loved one. Examples of these inaccuracies include missing tattoos or scars and inaccurate body proportions. Criminal actors will sometimes purposefully send these photos using timed message features to limit the amount of time victims have to analyze the images.

Images, videos, audio: It can all be faked with AI. My guess is that this scam has a low probability of success, so criminals will be figuring out how to automate it.

[syndicated profile] forget_what_did_feed

Posted by John Finnemore

Alt Text: A cheery red monster with one eye, two horns and no tail.

 

The same monster, now with plenty of tails, most in places tails rarely sprout. (We play a non-blindfolded version of the game, which is more about providing a tail where you think it might do most good than where it might be expected to go.)




[syndicated profile] wondermark_feed

Posted by David Malki !

The Kickstarter campaign for my card game Bolted! is chugging along nicely! We were recently named a Kickstarter “Project We Love,” which is lovely. Thank you, Kickstarter, for loving this project.

There are 11 days left. I’m so excited to get this game into your hands soon!

One of the special tiers I’m offering is a custom collage made out of the prototype game cards. Since that’s a bit hard to visualize, I made a little video demonstrating the process:

Each collage will be unique — assembled from whatever frame and cards I have on hand. I think they’ll turn out pretty cool!

Bonus Cards

I also want to share a little about the 3 bonus cards that are available to backers.

While the game will presumably be available in my online store* next year, these bonus cards won’t be — they’re exclusive to the launch (and subsequent pledge manager).

[*Holiday shipping deadlines are near, please browse the store for fine gift items]

These are all “Patron” cards, meaning, they’re objectives you can meet in the game to earn points. Each Patron has a “pattern” they’re looking for, and they’ll pay you if you can fulfill their request with the creature you’re building.

The Gax card is a bit of a tricky one to claim because there are only 12 blank parts in the entire game (blank parts are customizable parts that can become heads, hands, feet, etc.). For this reason, I downgraded the requirement from 4 parts to 3 after the last round of playtesting.

But Gax, as longtime readers know, is a shapeshifter — so it seems appropriate that he’s most interested in parts that can change their form and type.

The Gax card was a free bonus for the very earliest backers of the first campaign! For everyone else, it’s available à la carte (as an add-on) for a nominal fee.

The Piranhamoose card is the only card that actually changes the shape of your creature when you claim it — because the Piranhamoose actually eats the parts! (As it is well-known to do.)

The Piranhamoose card is a free bonus for all repeat backers — i.e., you’ve backed any of my previous projects on Kickstarter or BackerKit. Just DM me on Kickstarter and say “Hey, it’s me again!” and I’ll add it to your order! (OG repeat backers who backed the spring campaign are already logged.)

If you aren’t a repeat backer, no worries, this card is also available as an add-on. (And you’ll be a repeat backer on the next project!)

The Norbert card also has some unique qualities. Norbert, of course, is from the classic “sick elephant” saga.

As you know if you’ve read that storyline, Norbert is not obscenely wealthy. So his reward can be as little as 1 single point. He also does not carry one of the Royal Keys that bring you closer to the end of the game.

But he allows for big bonuses because his condition has no upper limit. You can bankrupt that elephant!

The Norbert card is available free to everyone on any paid Patreon tier. You still have to DM me (either Kickstarter or Patreon works) to claim it. This card is not available as an add-on — only via Patreon. Whether you backed the game on BackerKit or now on Kickstarter, if you’re also on Patreon, I’d like to send you this free card!

Note: This card is also available to people on Patreon who don’t even back the game. Why would you want just one card but no game? That is a question for you to contemplate on your own.

Once this game project is done, I’m anticipating a big refocus on new comics and more Patreon bonuses next year, so consider this a nudge to join at any paid tier! (Patreon members already get to see every new comic early.)

[ Here’s another link to the Kickstarter for your convenience]

Updated livestream schedule

One of the MOST fun things I’ve been doing with this game is streaming the game live with my friends! Such as this session with Sara McHenry, Tom McHenry, Jess Fink, and Eric Colossal:

Here is an updated schedule of more upcoming streams:

  • Tue Dec 9 • 6pm Pacific • Audio Heroes Block
    🪕 Molly Lewis (Mollylele)
    🎹 Seth Boyer (Skulltenders)
    🎤 Jordan Morris (Jordan Jesse Go, Youth Group)
     
  • Wed Dec 10 • 1:15pm Pacific • Atlantic Coast Block 
    🤖 Jeph Jacques (Questionable Content)
    🦒 Colleen AF Venable (Kiss Number 8, Katie the Catsitter)
    🐐 Jon Rosenberg (Goats, Scenes From a Multiverse)
     
  • Thu Dec 11 • 12:15pm Pacific • Super Stylish Block
    👑 Dylan Meconis (Queen of the Sea)
    👻 Kaylee Rowena (Haunts)
    🏞 Kendra P. (Fairmeadow)
     
  • Fri Dec 12 • 1:15pm Pacific • Rad Artists Block
    🤼 Scott C. (Great Showdowns, Cabin Head and Tree Head)
    🪓 Shing Yin Khor (The Legend of Auntie Po)
    🐻 Cat Farris (My Boyfriend is a Bear)
     
  • Sun Dec 14 • 4:15pm Pacific • Autodidact Block
    🥣 Zach Weinersmith (SMBC)
    🦾 Senna Diaz (Dresden Codak)
    🦜 Kevin McShane (Kevin Comics, Buzzfeed)
     
  • Mon Dec 15 • 2pm Pacific • Creator Plays Solo Mode
    🎩 David Malki ! (The creator of this game)
    Assisted & observed by 🐾 Sam Logan (Sam & Fuzzy)

All livestreams will be at: twitch.tv/davidmalki

Thanks friends!!

kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

Item the first: the 1972 Harvard University Press Treatise of Man, translated by Thomas Steele Hall. This translation is quoted by two of the other books I'm working with, Pain: the science of suffering by Patrick Wall (1999), and The Painful Truth by Monty Lyman (2021). It is also an edition that, as I understand it, contains a facsimile of the first French edition (1664, itself a translation of the Latin published in 1662). My French is not up to reading actual seventeenth-century philosophy, but being able to spot-check a couple of paragraphs will be Useful For My Argument.

Item the second: Descartes: Key Philosophical Writings, translated by Elizabeth S. Haldane and G.R.T. Ross (1997). This doesn't contain Treatise on Man, but it's the translation of Meditations on First Philosophy that's quoted in The Story of Pain by Joanna Bourke (2014).

Meanwhile the Descartes essay, thus far composed primarily but not solely of quotations from other works, has somehow made it north of 4500 words. I think it might even be starting to make an argument.

Read more... )

I am resisting the urge to try to turn this into a Proper Survey Of Popular Books On Pain, because that sounds like a lot of work that will probably involve reading a bunch of philosophers I find profoundly irritating, and also THIS IS A TOTAL DISTRACTION from the ACTUAL WORK I AM TRYING TO DO. But it's a distraction that is getting me writing, so I'll take it.

[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
We just have to get locked into the Federation and then we can run back to the basement.


Today's News:

late in time behold him come

Dec. 9th, 2025 02:04 pm
wychwood: Rodney was very nearly impressed (SGA - Rodney impressed)
[personal profile] wychwood
I made an automation flow that actually works!! I did realise afterwards that I need to add more error handling into it, but I am fully into celebrating the initial success right now.

Particularly because work is otherwise not as rich in successes as I would like. My inbox is a disaster area (everything in there requires action; I aim to keep it under 100 items and right now I'm running at 125 on a good day), the last report I actually completed in full was for July and I have a cumulative 2800 items to review in case they need moving, 900 duplicate records that need cleaning up, three test plans to write, an entire component that is supposed to go live before Christmas but which isn't with me for testing yet... and none of those things are even on the action tracker Boss Lady and I go through in my weekly 121.

But I did cross off one of my ten KANBAN items this morning and deleted two or three to-do list items. I'm hoping that tonight I will sleep instead of going for a series of one-hour naps all night, and maybe tomorrow I'll have the energy to tackle Power Automate...

AI vs. Human Drivers

Dec. 9th, 2025 12:07 pm
[syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed

Posted by Bruce Schneier

Two competing arguments are making the rounds. The first is by a neurosurgeon in the New York Times. In an op-ed that honestly sounds like it was paid for by Waymo, the author calls driverless cars a “public health breakthrough”:

In medical research, there’s a practice of ending a study early when the results are too striking to ignore. We stop when there is unexpected harm. We also stop for overwhelming benefit, when a treatment is working so well that it would be unethical to continue giving anyone a placebo. When an intervention works this clearly, you change what you do.

There’s a public health imperative to quickly expand the adoption of autonomous vehicles. More than 39,000 Americans died in motor vehicle crashes last year, more than homicide, plane crashes and natural disasters combined. Crashes are the No. 2 cause of death for children and young adults. But death is only part of the story. These crashes are also the leading cause of spinal cord injury. We surgeons see the aftermath of the 10,000 crash victims who come to emergency rooms every day.

The other is a soon-to-be-published book: Driving Intelligence: The Green Book. The authors, a computer scientist and a management consultant with experience in the industry, make the opposite argument. Here’s one of the authors:

There is something very disturbing going on around trials with autonomous vehicles worldwide, where, sadly, there have now been many deaths and injuries both to other road users and pedestrians. Although I am well aware that there is not, senso stricto, a legal and functional parallel between a “drug trial” and “AV testing,” it seems odd to me that if a trial of a new drug had resulted in so many deaths, it would surely have been halted and major forensic investigations carried out and yet, AV manufacturers continue to test their products on public roads unabated.

I am not convinced that it is good enough to argue from statistics that, to a greater or lesser degree, fatalities and injuries would have occurred anyway had the AVs had been replaced by human-driven cars: a pharmaceutical company, following death or injury, cannot simply sidestep regulations around the trial of, say, a new cancer drug, by arguing that, whilst the trial is underway, people would die from cancer anyway….

Both arguments are compelling, and it’s going to be hard to figure out what public policy should be.

This paper, from 2016, argues that we’re going to need other metrics than side-by-side comparisons: Driving to safety: How many miles of driving would it take to demonstrate autonomous vehicle reliability?“:

Abstract: How safe are autonomous vehicles? The answer is critical for determining how autonomous vehicles may shape motor vehicle safety and public health, and for developing sound policies to govern their deployment. One proposed way to assess safety is to test drive autonomous vehicles in real traffic, observe their performance, and make statistical comparisons to human driver performance. This approach is logical, but it is practical? In this paper, we calculate the number of miles of driving that would be needed to provide clear statistical evidence of autonomous vehicle safety. Given that current traffic fatalities and injuries are rare events compared to vehicle miles traveled, we show that fully autonomous vehicles would have to be driven hundreds of millions of miles and sometimes hundreds of billions of miles to demonstrate their reliability in terms of fatalities and injuries. Under even aggressive testing assumptions, existing fleets would take tens and sometimes hundreds of years to drive these miles—­an impossible proposition if the aim is to demonstrate their performance prior to releasing them on the roads for consumer use. These findings demonstrate that developers of this technology and third-party testers cannot simply drive their way to safety. Instead, they will need to develop innovative methods of demonstrating safety and reliability. And yet, the possibility remains that it will not be possible to establish with certainty the safety of autonomous vehicles. Uncertainty will remain. Therefore, it is imperative that autonomous vehicle regulations are adaptive­—designed from the outset to evolve with the technology so that society can better harness the benefits and manage the risks of these rapidly evolving and potentially transformative technologies.

One problem, of course, is that we treat death by human driver differently than we do death by autonomous computer driver. This is likely to change as we get more experience with AI accidents—and AI-caused deaths.

[syndicated profile] tim_harford_feed

Posted by Tim Harford

Windscale is supposed to be Britain’s big leap into the nuclear Age, bringing science fiction to life in 1950s Northern England. But in the race to catch up with America’s nuclear program, scientists are tinkering with forces they don’t fully understand. When the reactor catches fire, no-one knows how bad it could be, or how to put it out. As the reactor workers scramble to save lives, other eyes on Windscale are much more concerned with containing the political fallout and burying the truth.  

This episode is available exclusively to members of the Cautionary Club, and Pushkin+ subscribers.

[Apple] [Spotify] [Stitcher]

Further Reading

This script relied on two books by Lorna Arnold – Windscale 1957: Anatomy of a Nuclear Accident, and her autobiography, My Short Century. The BBC’s 2007 documentary, Windscale – Britain’s Biggest Nuclear Disaster, can be found on YouTube. In the same year, Richard Wakeford published The Windscale reactor accident—50 years on in the Journal of Radiological Protection. Bill Penney is remembered in obituaries by The Royal Society and New Scientist.  

Good things about my train journey

Dec. 8th, 2025 09:13 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I had a lot of them today and they were mostly exhausting, but

  1. The train manager on the train to Euston told us what platform we'd come in to (making it clear that there might be a last-minute change!), what side the doors would open on, how to get to the Underground and even buses and taxis. Since it's a station I know well, I could verify that everything he was saying was the right amount and kind of information that would've helped me if I hadn't known that and needed to.

  2. I'm not sure this is what was going on because it might not have been working that way but... I think that there was a new feature over the two accessible toilet doors in Euston: there were big lights over the doors, one was red and one was green, so I assumed this meant one was locked and one is open. Like I said my experience made this kinda confusing but it at least made me think it'd be a really good idea! At the moment I have to look for a teeny circle near the lock/handle of the door and determine whether it's white or red. Which, in dim locations like you get at Euston, can be surprisingly difficult! And I feel like an idiot trying my key in a locked door and I don't like to stress out the occupant -- I at least find it stressful when I'm in there and hear someone trying the door, suddenly unsure that I locked it or that it has stayed locked. If a big red or green light over the door could be relied on and rolled out, that'd be great.

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