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From $1,432 to $233/month With Zero Downtime

A real-world pro­duc­tion mi­gra­tion from DigitalOcean to Hetzner ded­i­cated, han­dling 248 GB of MySQL data across 30 data­bases, 34 Nginx sites, GitLab EE, Neo4j, and live mo­bile app traf­fic — with zero down­time.

Running a soft­ware com­pany in Turkey has be­come in­creas­ingly ex­pen­sive over the last few years. Skyrocketing in­fla­tion and a dra­mat­i­cally weak­en­ing Turkish Lira against the US dol­lar have turned dol­lar-de­nom­i­nated in­fra­struc­ture costs into a se­ri­ous bur­den. A bill that felt man­age­able two years ago now hits very dif­fer­ently when the ex­change rate has mul­ti­plied sev­eral times over.

Every month, we were pay­ing $1,432 to DigitalOcean for a droplet with 192GB RAM, 32 vC­PUs, 600GB SSD, two block vol­umes (1TB each), and back­ups en­abled. The server was fine — but the price-to-per­for­mance ra­tio had stopped mak­ing sense.

Then we dis­cov­ered the Hetzner AX162-R.

That’s $14,388 saved per year — for a server that’s ob­jec­tively more pow­er­ful in every di­men­sion. The de­ci­sion was easy.

I’ve been a DigitalOcean cus­tomer for nearly 8 years. They have a great prod­uct and I have no com­plaints about re­li­a­bil­ity or de­vel­oper ex­pe­ri­ence. But look­ing at those num­bers now, I can­not help feel­ing a bit sad about all the ex­tra money I left on the table over the years. If you are run­ning steady-state work­loads and not ac­tively us­ing DOs ecosys­tem fea­tures, do your­self a fa­vor and check ded­i­cated server pric­ing be­fore your next re­newal.

* Several live mo­bile apps serv­ing hun­dreds of thou­sands of users

Old server: CentOS 7 — long past its end-of-life, but still run­ning in pro­duc­tion. New server: AlmaLinux 9.7 — a RHEL 9 com­pat­i­ble dis­tri­b­u­tion and the nat­ural suc­ces­sor to CentOS. This mi­gra­tion was also an op­por­tu­nity to fi­nally es­cape an OS that had­n’t re­ceived se­cu­rity up­dates in years.

The naive ap­proach — change DNS, restart every­thing, hope for the best — was­n’t ac­cept­able. Instead, we de­signed a proper mi­gra­tion path with six phases:

Phase 1 — Full stack in­stal­la­tion on the new server

Nginx (compiled from source with iden­ti­cal flags), PHP (via Remi repo, with the same .ini con­fig files from the old server), MySQL 8.0, Neo4J Graph DB, GitLab EE, Node.js, Supervisor, and Gearman. Every ser­vice had to be con­fig­ured to match the old server’s be­hav­ior be­fore we touched a sin­gle DNS record.

SSL cer­tifi­cates were han­dled by rsync­ing the en­tire /etc/letsencrypt/ di­rec­tory from the old server to the new one. After the mi­gra­tion was com­plete and all traf­fic was flow­ing through the new server, we force-re­newed all cer­tifi­cates in one shot:

Phase 2 — Web files cloned with rsync

The en­tire /var/www/html di­rec­tory (~65 GB, 1.5 mil­lion files) was cloned to the new server us­ing rsync over SSH with the –checksum flag for in­tegrity ver­i­fi­ca­tion. We ran a fi­nal in­cre­men­tal sync right be­fore cu­tover to catch any files changed af­ter the ini­tial clone.

Phase 3 — MySQL mas­ter to slave repli­ca­tion

Rather than tak­ing the data­base of­fline for a dump-and-re­store, we set up live repli­ca­tion. The old server be­came mas­ter, the new server a read-only slave. We used my­dumper for the ini­tial bulk load, then started repli­ca­tion from the ex­act bin­log po­si­tion recorded in the dump meta­data. This kept both data­bases in real-time sync un­til the mo­ment of cu­tover.

Phase 4 — DNS TTL re­duc­tion

We scripted the DigitalOcean DNS API to lower all A and AAAA record TTLs from 3600 to 300 sec­onds — with­out touch­ing MX or TXT records (changing mail record TTLs can cause de­liv­er­abil­ity is­sues). After wait­ing one hour for old TTLs to ex­pire glob­ally, we were ready to cut over in un­der 5 min­utes.

Phase 5 — Old server ng­inx con­verted to re­verse proxy

We wrote a Python script that parsed every server {} block across all 34 Nginx site con­figs, backed up the orig­i­nals, and re­placed them with proxy con­fig­u­ra­tions point­ing to the new server. This meant that dur­ing DNS prop­a­ga­tion, any re­quest still hit­ting the old IP was silently for­warded. No user would see a dis­rup­tion.

Phase 6 — DNS cu­tover and de­com­mis­sion

A sin­gle Python script hit the DigitalOcean API and flipped all A records to the new server IP in sec­onds. The old server re­mained as a cold standby for one week, then was shut down.

The key in­sight: at no point did we have a win­dow where the ser­vice was un­avail­able. Traffic was al­ways be­ing served — ei­ther di­rectly or through the proxy.

This was the most com­plex part of the en­tire op­er­a­tion.

We used my­dumper in­stead of the stan­dard mysql­dump — and it made an enor­mous dif­fer­ence. By lever­ag­ing the new server’s 48 CPU cores for par­al­lel ex­port and im­port, what would have taken days with a tra­di­tional sin­gle-threaded mysql­dump was com­pleted in hours. If you’re mi­grat­ing a large MySQL data­base and you’re not us­ing my­dumper/​my­loader, you’re do­ing it the hard way.

The main dump’s meta­data file recorded the bin­log po­si­tion at the time of the snap­shot:

File: mysql-bin.000004

Position: 21834307

This would be our repli­ca­tion start­ing point.

Once the dump was com­plete, we trans­ferred it to the new server us­ing rsync over SSH. With 248 GB of com­pressed chunks, this was sig­nif­i­cantly faster than any other trans­fer method:

The –compress flag in my­dumper paid off here — com­pressed chunks trans­ferred much faster over the wire.

Being stuck on CentOS 7 meant we were also stuck on MySQL 5.7 — an out­dated ver­sion that had been run­ning in pro­duc­tion for years. Before the mi­gra­tion, we ran mysqlcheck –check-upgrade to ver­ify that our data was com­pat­i­ble with MySQL 8.0. It came back clean, so we in­stalled the lat­est MySQL 8.0 Community on the new server. The per­for­mance im­prove­ment across all our pro­jects was im­me­di­ately no­tice­able — query ex­e­cu­tion times dropped sig­nif­i­cantly thanks to MySQL 8.0’s im­proved op­ti­mizer and InnoDB en­hance­ments.

That said, the ver­sion jump did in­tro­duce one tricky prob­lem.

After im­port, the mysql.user table had the wrong col­umn struc­ture — 45 columns in­stead of the ex­pected 51. This caused mysql.in­fos­chema to be miss­ing, break­ing user au­then­ti­ca­tion.

But this failed the first time with:

ERROR: sys.innodb_buffer_stats_by_schema’ is not VIEW

The sys schema had been im­ported as reg­u­lar ta­bles in­stead of views. Solution:

With both dumps im­ported, we con­fig­ured the new server as a replica of the old one:

Almost im­me­di­ately, repli­ca­tion stopped with er­ror 1062 (Duplicate Key). This hap­pened be­cause our dump was taken in two passes — dur­ing the gap be­tween them, rows were writ­ten to cer­tain ta­bles, and now both the im­ported dump and the bin­log re­play were try­ing to in­sert the same rows.

IDEMPOTENT mode silently skips du­pli­cate key and miss­ing row er­rors. All crit­i­cal data­bases synced with­out a sin­gle er­ror. Within a few min­utes, Seconds_Behind_Master dropped to 0.

Before touch­ing a sin­gle DNS record, we needed to ver­ify that all ser­vices were work­ing cor­rectly on the new server. The trick: we tem­porar­ily edited the /etc/hosts file on our lo­cal ma­chine to point our do­main names to the new server’s IP.

# /etc/hosts (local ma­chine)

NEW_SERVER_IP your­do­main1.com

NEW_SERVER_IP your­do­main2.com

# … and so on for all your do­mains

With this in place, our browsers and Postman would hit the new server while the rest of the world was still go­ing to the old one. We ran through our API end­points, checked ad­min pan­els, and ver­i­fied that every ser­vice was re­spond­ing cor­rectly. Only af­ter this con­fir­ma­tion did we pro­ceed with the cu­tover.

Once mas­ter-slave repli­ca­tion was fully syn­chro­nized, we no­ticed that INSERT state­ments were suc­ceed­ing on the new server when they should­n’t have been — read­_only = 1 was set, but writes were go­ing through.

The rea­son: all PHP ap­pli­ca­tion users had been granted SUPER priv­i­lege. In MySQL, SUPER by­passes read­_only.

We re­voked it from all 24 ap­pli­ca­tion users:

After this, read­_only = 1 cor­rectly blocked all writes from ap­pli­ca­tion users while al­low­ing repli­ca­tion to con­tinue.

All do­mains were man­aged through DigitalOcean DNS (with name­servers pointed from GoDaddy). We scripted the TTL re­duc­tion against the DigitalOcean API, only touch­ing A and AAAA records — not MX or TXT records, since chang­ing mail record TTLs can cause de­liv­er­abil­ity is­sues with Google Workspace.

After wait­ing one hour for old TTLs to ex­pire, we were ready.

Rather than edit­ing 34 con­fig files by hand, we wrote a Python script that parsed every server {} block in every con­fig file, iden­ti­fied the main con­tent blocks, re­placed them with proxy con­figs, and backed up orig­i­nals as .backup files.

The key: prox­y_ss­l_ver­ify off — the new server’s SSL cert is valid for the do­main, not for the IP ad­dress. Disabling ver­i­fi­ca­tion here is fine be­cause we con­trol both ends.

With repli­ca­tion at Seconds_Behind_Master: 0 and the re­verse proxy ready, we ex­e­cuted the cu­tover in or­der:

1. New server: STOP SLAVE;

2. New server: SET GLOBAL read­_only = 0;

3. New server: RESET SLAVE ALL;

4. New server: su­per­vi­sor­ctl start all

5. Old server: ng­inx -t && sys­tem­ctl re­load ng­inx (proxy goes live)

6. Old server: su­per­vi­sor­ctl stop all

7. Mac: python3 do_­cu­tover.py (DNS: all A records to new server IP)

8. Wait: ~5 min­utes for prop­a­ga­tion

9. Old server: com­ment out all crontab en­tries

The DNS cu­tover script hit the DigitalOcean API and changed every A record to the new server IP — in about 10 sec­onds.

After mi­gra­tion, we dis­cov­ered many GitLab pro­ject web­hooks were still point­ing to the old server IP. We wrote a script to scan all pro­jects via the GitLab API and up­date them in bulk.

We went from $1,432/month down to $233/month — sav­ing $14,388 per year. And we ended up with a more pow­er­ful ma­chine:

The en­tire mi­gra­tion took roughly 24 hours. No users were af­fected.

MySQL repli­ca­tion is your best friend for zero-down­time mi­gra­tions. Set it up early, let it catch up, then cut over with con­fi­dence.

Check your MySQL user priv­i­leges be­fore mi­gra­tion. SUPER priv­i­lege by­passes read­_only — if your app users have it, your slave en­vi­ron­ment is­n’t ac­tu­ally read-only.

Script every­thing. DNS up­dates, ng­inx con­fig rewrites, web­hook up­dates — do­ing these by hand across 34+ sites would have taken hours and in­tro­duced er­rors.

my­dumper + my­loader dra­mat­i­cally out­per­forms mysql­dump for large datasets. Parallel dump/​re­store with 32 threads cut what would have been days of work down to hours.

Cloud providers are ex­pen­sive for steady-state work­loads. If you’re not us­ing au­toscal­ing or ephemeral in­fra­struc­ture, a ded­i­cated server of­ten de­liv­ers bet­ter per­for­mance at a frac­tion of the cost.

All Python scripts used in this mi­gra­tion are open-sourced and avail­able on GitHub:

* do_list_­do­main­s_ttl.py — List all DigitalOcean do­mains with their A records, IPs, and TTLs

* do_­to_het­zn­er_bulk_dns_record­s_im­port.py — Migrate all DNS zones from DigitalOcean to Hetzner DNS

* do_­cu­tover_­to_new_ip.py — Flip all A records from old server IP to new server IP

* mysql_­com­pare.py — Compare row counts across all ta­bles on two MySQL servers

* fi­nal_git­lab_web­hook_up­date.py — Update all GitLab pro­ject web­hooks to the new server IP

All scripts sup­port a DRY_RUN = True mode so you can safely pre­view changes be­fore ap­ply­ing them.

...

Read the original on isayeter.com »

2 520 shares, 23 trendiness

Anthropic Token Cost Calculator

Anonymous re­quest-to­ken com­par­isons from the com­mu­nity, show­ing how Opus 4.6 and Opus 4.7 dif­fer on real in­puts

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Read the original on tokens.billchambers.me »

3 414 shares, 19 trendiness

Why Japan has such good railways

Japan is the land of the train. 28 per­cent of pas­sen­ger kilo­me­ters in Japan are trav­elled by rail, more than any­where else in the de­vel­oped world. France achieves 10 per­cent, Germany 6.4 per­cent, and the United States just 0.25 per­cent. Travel in Japan is over a hun­dred times more likely to be by rail than travel in the United States.

Japan’s vast rail­way net­work is di­vided be­tween dozens of com­pa­nies, nearly all of them pri­vate. The largest of these, JR East, car­ries more pas­sen­gers than the en­tire rail­way sys­tem of every coun­try other than China and India. Each year, JR East car­ries four times as many pas­sen­gers as the whole British rail­way sys­tem, even though it has fewer kilo­me­ters of track, serves about ten mil­lion fewer peo­ple, and com­petes with eight other com­pa­nies. Japan’s rail­way sys­tem turns a large op­er­at­ing profit and re­ceives far less pub­lic sub­sidy than European and American rail­ways.

Subscribe for $100 to re­ceive six beau­ti­ful is­sues per year.

In most de­vel­oped coun­tries, the rail­ways have strug­gled since the rise of the au­to­mo­bile in the 1950s. From this point on, North America saw the near-to­tal re­place­ment of pas­sen­ger trains with cars and planes. In Europe, it meant vast gov­ern­ment fi­nan­cial sup­port to keep the lines open.

Japan’s dif­fer­ent tra­jec­tory is of­ten at­trib­uted to cul­ture: the Japanese are con­formists who are con­tent to take pub­lic trans­port, un­like free­dom-lov­ing Americans who pre­fer to drive every­where. Europeans are some­where in be­tween. Culture is also used to ex­plain the in­cred­i­ble punc­tu­al­ity of Japanese rail­ways.

These cul­tural ex­pla­na­tions are wrong. The Japanese love cars, but they take trains be­cause they have the best rail­way sys­tem in the world. And their sys­tem ex­cels be­cause of good pub­lic pol­icy: busi­ness struc­ture, land use rules, dri­ving rules, su­pe­rior mod­els for pri­va­ti­za­tion, and sound reg­u­la­tion have given Japan its out­stand­ing rail­ways.

This is good news for friends of rail. Culture is built over cen­turies, and repli­cat­ing it is hard. But suc­cess­ful pub­lic poli­cies can be em­u­lated by one good gov­ern­ment. Much about Japan’s rail­way sys­tem could be replic­a­ble around the world.

Today, the most strik­ing in­sti­tu­tional fea­ture of Japanese rail is that it is pri­vately owned by a throng of com­pet­ing com­pa­nies.

The rail­way ar­rived in Japan in 1872, dur­ing the Meiji Restoration, which opened the coun­try up to for­eign trade, ideas, and tech­nolo­gies. Like most Western coun­tries, Japan na­tion­al­ized its rail­ways in the early twen­ti­eth cen­tury, cre­at­ing what be­came known as Japanese National Railways (JNR). But it did not na­tion­al­ize all of the lines, fo­cus­ing only on main­line rail­ways of na­tional im­por­tance, and new pri­vate rail­ways were still per­mit­ted.

Between 1907 and World War II, Japan saw a boom in new pri­vate elec­tric rail­ways, co­in­cid­ing with rapid ur­ban­iza­tion. Technologically, most of these pri­vate rail­ways were sim­i­lar to the fa­mous in­terur­bans in the United States: they were ba­si­cally elec­tric trams, but run­ning be­tween cities as well as within them. The American net­work even­tu­ally with­ered, and al­most noth­ing of it sur­vives to­day. In Japan, how­ever, the net­work con­sol­i­dated, and the light tram­lines grad­u­ally evolved into heavy-rail in­ter­city con­nec­tions.

These com­pa­nies are to­day known as legacy pri­vate rail­ways’ on ac­count of their hav­ing been pri­vate since their in­cep­tion. There are eight legacy pri­vate rail­ways in the Tokyo met­ro­pol­i­tan area, five in the Osaka–Kobe–Kyoto mega­lopo­lis, two in Nagoya, and one in the fourth city of Fukuoka. There are also dozens of smaller ones else­where. In the three largest ur­ban ar­eas, these op­er­a­tors ac­count for nearly half of rail­way track and sta­tions, as well as a plu­ral­ity of rid­er­ship. The largest, Kintetsu, not only op­er­ates ur­ban ser­vices, but a whole in­ter­city net­work stretch­ing from Osaka to Nagoya.

These com­pa­nies of­ten com­pete head-to-head. At its most ex­treme, three sep­a­rate com­muter lines com­pete for the traf­fic be­tween Osaka and the port city of Kobe, run­ning in par­al­lel, some­times fewer than 500 meters apart.

Meanwhile, the na­tion­al­ized rail­ways were man­aged by JNR. In the post­war era, JNR was re­spon­si­ble for build­ing the fa­mous Shinkansen sys­tem, as well as run­ning com­muter and long-dis­tance lines through­out Japan. But in 1988, it was largely pri­va­tized, bro­ken into six re­gional mo­nop­o­lies for pas­sen­ger ser­vices to­gether with a sin­gle na­tional freight op­er­a­tor. These are col­lec­tively known as the Japan Railways Group (JR).

This means that Japan has ended up with six rail­way com­pa­nies that trace their de­scent to the na­tion­al­ized rail­ways, the six­teen big legacy com­pa­nies that have al­ways been pri­vate, and a host of mi­nor legacy rail­ways, as well as nu­mer­ous un­der­ground met­ros (some pri­vate, some mu­nic­i­pally owned), mono­rails, and tram sys­tems. This in­sti­tu­tional di­ver­sity is strik­ing enough. But equally strik­ing is the con­sis­tent busi­ness model that has evolved amidst this plu­ral­ism: the rail­way that builds a city.

If I take a train to go for a soli­tary walk in the coun­try­side, the rail­way com­pany can cap­ture some of the value it cre­ates by charg­ing me for the jour­ney, just as other com­pa­nies cap­ture the value of the goods and ser­vices they pro­vide by charg­ing for them. However, if I take a train to visit fam­ily, clients, a the­ater, or a shop, an im­por­tant dif­fer­ence ap­pears. The rail­way can cap­ture the value it cre­ates for me by charg­ing me a fare, but it can­not cap­ture the value it cre­ates for those at my des­ti­na­tion. As trans­port in­fra­struc­ture cre­ates ben­e­fits that pro­duce no rev­enue for providers, free mar­kets rarely build enough of it.

Japan has partly solved this prob­lem by en­abling rail­way com­pa­nies to do a great deal be­side run­ning rail­ways. Take the ex­am­ple of the Tokyu cor­po­ra­tion, one of the legacy pri­vate rail­ways in south­ern Tokyo. You can not only travel on its trains, but also ride a Tokyu bus, live in a Tokyu-built house, work in a Tokyu of­fice com­plex, see a doc­tor in a Tokyu hos­pi­tal, buy gro­ceries in a Tokyu su­per­mar­ket, spend an af­ter­noon at a Tokyu mu­seum-the­ater-cin­ema com­plex, take your chil­dren to their amuse­ment park, and even die in a Tokyu re­tire­ment home. The pos­i­tive spillover ef­fects of the rail­way on these things are cap­tured by Tokyu be­cause it owns them. The pres­i­dent of Tokyu has said:

I think that though we are a rail­way com­pany, we con­sider our­selves a city-shap­ing com­pany. In Europe for in­stance, rail­way com­pa­nies sim­ply con­nect cities through their ter­mi­nals. That is a pretty nor­mal way of op­er­at­ing in this in­dus­try, whereas what we do is com­pletely dif­fer­ent: we cre­ate cities and then, as a util­ity fa­cil­ity, we add the sta­tions and the rail­ways to con­nect them one with an­other.

This model was pi­o­neered in the 1950s by what be­came Hankyu Railways. Hankyu’s net­work con­nects cen­tral Osaka to its north­ern sub­urbs, as well as Kyoto and Kobe. Its in­no­v­a­tive founder Kobayashi Ichizo first built sub­ur­ban hous­ing, then a de­part­ment store at the ter­mi­nal sta­tion; he then cre­ated a hot spring re­sort, a zoo, and his own dis­tinc­tive brand of all-women mu­si­cal the­ater, the Takarazuka Revue. He also be­gan to run bus ser­vices to and from his sta­tions. Other com­pa­nies em­u­lated Hankyu’s ex­am­ple: Tokyo Disneyland is a col­lab­o­ra­tion be­tween Disney and the Keisei Railway, while Hanshin in Osaka owns the Hanshin Tigers base­ball team.

Core rail op­er­a­tions are prof­itable for every Japanese pri­vate rail­way com­pany, but they usu­ally only ac­count for a plu­ral­ity or a small ma­jor­ity of rev­enue. The rest is con­tributed by their port­fo­lio of side busi­nesses. There is a nat­ural fi­nan­cial syn­ergy be­tween the re­li­able but un­re­mark­able cash flow of train fares and the prof­itable but riskier real es­tate and com­mer­cial side of the busi­ness. Railway com­pa­nies’ side busi­nesses also at­tract peo­ple to live and work on their rail cor­ri­dor, re­in­forc­ing the cus­tomer base for the rail­way ser­vices them­selves.

This vir­tu­ous cir­cle is en­abled by tran­sit-ori­ented de­vel­op­ment. Japan’s lib­eral land use reg­u­la­tion makes it straight­for­ward to build new neigh­bor­hoods next to rail­way lines, giv­ing com­muters easy ac­cess to city cen­ters. It also en­ables the den­si­fi­ca­tion of these cen­ters, which means that com­muters have more places they want to go.

Railways cost a lot to build, but once they are built, they can move enor­mous num­bers of peo­ple, far more than a road of sim­i­lar size. This means that they work best in cities with a high den­sity of peo­ple, jobs, and other ac­tiv­i­ties. In 2019, New York City was the only American city where rail had a higher modal share than cars, in part be­cause Manhattan has 2.5 mil­lion jobs, two mil­lion res­i­dents, and 50 mil­lion tourist vis­its crammed into 59 square kilo­me­ters.

This does not mean that rail-ori­ented cities must be struc­tured like Chinese cities: is­lands of high-rise apart­ments con­nected by met­ros and sep­a­rated by mo­tor­ways. Japanese cities have the low­est res­i­den­tial den­sity in Asia, and a plu­ral­ity of the Japanese live in houses, usu­ally de­tached ones. The ur­ban area of Tokyo, the dens­est Japanese city, has a weighted pop­u­la­tion den­sity less than that of many European cities, in­clud­ing Paris, Madrid, or Athens. Japanese cities have vast low-rise, pre­dom­i­nantly res­i­den­tial sub­urbs, built at den­si­ties that might be higher than what is typ­i­cal in the United States, but that would be quite nor­mal in Northern Europe.

What makes Japan’s cities par­tic­u­larly suited to rail is thus not their res­i­den­tial dis­tricts, but their huge and hy­per­dense cen­ters. These re­ally are spe­cial: the cores of Tokyo or Osaka are un­like any­thing that ex­ists in Europe or North America. Many of their fea­tures are fa­mous world­wide: the ver­ti­cal street za­kkyo build­ings, un­der­ground streets, shop­ping streets un­der rail tracks, cov­ered ar­cades, el­e­vated sta­tion squares, and ver­ti­cal cities. Getting mil­lions of com­muters and shop­pers into these down­towns is where rail ex­cels be­cause its ex­treme spa­tial ef­fi­ciency means that in­fra­struc­ture with a rel­a­tively mod­est foot­print can trans­port vast num­bers of peo­ple into a small area.

None of this emerged from a co­her­ent mas­ter­plan of tran­sit-ori­ented de­vel­op­ment like Copenhagen’s Finger Plan or Curitiba’s Trinary System. Postwar Japanese opin­ion was com­mit­ted to de­cen­tral­iza­tion both to rural pe­riph­eries and to the sub­urbs through green­belts, mo­tor­ways, and new towns.

Instead, this va­ri­ety and adapt­abil­ity around rail­ways is pos­si­ble be­cause of the way Japanese ur­ban plan­ning works. Since 1919, Japan has had a stan­dard­ized na­tional zon­ing sys­tem, but it is much more lib­eral than de­vel­op­ment con­trol sys­tems in Western coun­tries. The Japanese au­thor­i­ties did not in­tend or even de­sire dense ur­ban cen­ters, but they did not pre­vent them, rather like nine­teenth-cen­tury gov­ern­ments in the West.

This lib­eral zon­ing sys­tem is re­in­forced by pri­vate ac­cess to city plan­ning pow­ers. Thirty per­cent of Japan’s ur­ban land has been sub­ject to land read­just­ment, where agree­ment among two thirds of res­i­dents and landown­ers in an area is enough to al­low its re­plan­ning, in­clud­ing com­pul­so­rily tak­ing and de­mol­ish­ing land for ameni­ties and in­fra­struc­ture. Initially land read­just­ment was used only to as­sem­ble rural land for ur­ban­iza­tion, but over time it was in­creas­ingly used to re­de­velop al­ready ur­ban­ized ar­eas, and new vari­ants were cre­ated to build the sky­scrap­ers that sur­round the ma­jor sta­tions of cen­tral Tokyo.

The his­tory of the pri­vate rail­way com­pa­nies could be writ­ten as a story of land read­just­ment pro­jects: the ini­tial build­ing of the lines in the in­ter­war years pro­ceeded through one land read­just­ment pro­ject af­ter an­other. Postwar im­prove­ments such as dou­ble-track­ing, plat­form length­en­ing, and con­stant re­de­vel­op­ment of sta­tions and their im­me­di­ate thresh­olds were only pos­si­ble be­cause the rail­ways could se­cure land tak­ings co­op­er­a­tively with lo­cal busi­nesses and landown­ers.

Perhaps the great­est ex­am­ple of this phe­nom­e­non in­volved Tokyu. In 1953 the com­pany de­cided to build the Den’en Toshi Line, or Garden City Line, to serve a rural area south­west of Tokyo. This would be en­abled by a se­ries of land read­just­ment pro­jects col­lec­tively among the largest in Japanese his­tory.

Over 30 years, 3,100 hectares were cov­ered, of which only 36 per­cent was de­voted to res­i­den­tial and com­mer­cial de­vel­op­ment, with 20 per­cent for for­est and parks, 17 per­cent for roads, and much of the rest for wa­ter­courses. The pop­u­la­tion of the land read­just­ment zone would rise from 42,000 in 1954 to over 500,000 in 2003.

By con­nect­ing the af­flu­ent south­west­ern sub­urbs to Tokyu’s main real es­tate hub next to Shibuya sta­tion, now the sec­ond busiest in the world, the Den’en Toshi Line al­lowed Tokyu to be­come the largest pri­vate rail­way by rev­enue and rid­er­ship. The Japanese gov­ern­ment and aca­d­e­mics gen­er­ally con­sider the Den’en Toshi Line to be the best cor­ri­dor of tran­sit–ori­ented de­vel­op­ment in Japan.

But the rail­way-as-city-builder model is not the only rea­son Japanese rail­ways have been able to thrive. European coun­tries usu­ally pro­hib­ited rail­ways from run­ning real es­tate side busi­nesses, but in the United States and Canada the prac­tice was ex­tremely wide­spread in the nine­teenth and early twen­ti­eth cen­turies, and many fa­mous rail­way sub­urbs were de­vel­oped this way. Despite this, pas­sen­ger rail in these coun­tries col­lapsed in the mid-twen­ti­eth cen­tury. Part of the dif­fer­ence was that Japan did not ex­tend the same im­plicit sub­si­dies to cars as Western gov­ern­ments did.

The land of Toyota, Nissan, and Honda is not an anti-car nir­vana. In fact, Japan has ex­cel­lent mo­tor­ways, and across the coun­try as a whole a small ma­jor­ity of jour­neys are made by car. But Japan is a place where cars and car-ori­ented lifestyles com­pete on a level play­ing field.

Japan is one of the only coun­tries to have pri­va­tized park­ing. In Europe and North America, vast quan­ti­ties of park­ing space is so­cial­ized: mu­nic­i­pal­i­ties own the streets and al­low peo­ple to park on them at low or zero cost. Initially with the in­ten­tion of en­cour­ag­ing the pro­vi­sion of more park­ing spaces, Japan made it il­le­gal to park on pub­lic roads or pave­ments with­out spe­cial per­mis­sion. Before some­one buys a car, they must prove that they have a re­served night-time space on pri­vate land, ei­ther owned or leased.

Since park­ing on pub­lic land is banned, mu­nic­i­pal­i­ties are not wor­ried about over­spill park­ing from de­vel­op­ments with in­ad­e­quate pri­vate park­ing. They there­fore have no rea­son to im­pose park­ing min­i­mums on de­vel­op­ments: the mar­ket is left to de­cide whether park­ing is the most valu­able use of pri­vate land. Where land is abun­dant, as in rural ar­eas, sub­urbs, or small towns, pri­vate park­ing is plen­ti­ful. But in city cen­ters, it is out­com­peted by other land uses. According to the late Donald Shoup, cen­tral Tokyo has 23 park­ing spaces per hectare and 0.04 park­ing spaces per job, com­pared with 263 and 0.52 for Los Angeles. Even Manhattan, the dens­est ur­ban area in North America with the low­est lev­els of car own­er­ship, has about 60 park­ing spaces per hectare.

Japanese roads are ex­pected to be self-fi­nanc­ing. Motorways are run by self-con­tained pub­lic co­op­er­a­tives, very sim­i­lar to the statu­tory au­thor­i­ties that ran English roads and canals be­tween 1660 and the late 1800s, and funded by tolls on their users. Vehicle reg­is­tra­tion taxes, which are al­lo­cated to lo­cal­i­ties for road con­struc­tion and main­te­nance, are worth three per­cent of the Japanese gov­ern­ment bud­get.

These mea­sures, adopted in the 1950s, were not in­tended to sup­press car use — the point was to fund a mas­sive road ex­pan­sion — but they have forced pri­vate ve­hi­cles to in­ter­nal­ize many of their hid­den costs. In the Tokyo ur­ban area, the av­er­age house­hold spends 71,000 yen ($450) each year on pub­lic trans­port fares and 210,000 yen ($1,350) on car pur­chase and main­te­nance costs.

But the pri­vate car was not the only com­peti­tor faced by the pri­vate rail­ways. For eight decades in the twen­ti­eth cen­tury, they also had to face the jug­ger­naut of Japanese National Railways. Its pri­va­ti­za­tion in 1988 re­moved the fi­nal ob­sta­cle to cre­at­ing the world’s best rail­way sys­tem.

Railway pri­va­ti­za­tion in Britain, New Zealand, Argentina, and Sweden has had a mixed re­cep­tion, and all of those coun­tries, apart from Sweden, have taken steps to re­verse it. In Japan, it has been so suc­cess­ful that the gov­ern­ment sub­se­quently pri­va­tized the metro sys­tems in Tokyo and Osaka.

In the post­war pe­riod, JNR en­joyed real suc­cesses. It built the rev­o­lu­tion­ary Shinkansen, the first high-speed rail­way in the world. It also ag­gres­sively elec­tri­fied and dou­ble-tracked ma­jor trunk lines, quadru­ple-tracked lines into and out of ma­jor cities, and added city-cen­ter loops and freight by­passes. But these achieve­ments were over­shad­owed by two prob­lems.

The first was pol­i­tics. Many coun­tries adapted to the rise of the car by clos­ing the least prof­itable parts of their pas­sen­ger rail net­work, like the con­sol­i­da­tion of American freight rail into the Class I op­er­a­tors or the Beeching Axe in Britain. In Japan, how­ever, the rul­ing Liberal Democratic Party drew its sup­port from rural con­stituen­cies, whose sup­port it re­tained with pork–bar­rel pol­i­tics. Its rail tribe’ group, led by rural MPs, pre­vented JNR from adapt­ing it­self to mass mo­tor­iza­tion.

JNR there­fore did not am­pu­tate gan­grenous rural and freight ser­vices that im­posed heavy costs with few ben­e­fits. Worse, it con­tin­ued to build new loss-mak­ing rural rail­way lines, known in Japanese as Gaden-intetsu, or rail­ways pulled into the rice field.

The sec­ond prob­lem was or­ga­nized la­bor. In gen­eral, Japanese trade unions are known for their mod­er­a­tion and re­spon­si­bil­ity, a gen­er­al­i­sa­tion that also held true for the unions at the legacy pri­vate rail­ways. The JNR unions, how­ever, be­came highly mil­i­tant, se­cure in the knowl­edge that their na­tion­al­ized em­ploy­ers could never go bank­rupt. Their largest se­ries of strikes in 1973 pro­voked ri­ots from com­muters.

The rail­way unions im­posed over­staffing on rev­enue-gen­er­at­ing ur­ban ser­vices, at a time when both in­ter­na­tional and pri­vate do­mes­tic op­er­a­tors were re­duc­ing staffing re­quire­ments against a back­drop of higher wages and the grow­ing au­toma­tion of sig­nal­ing and tick­et­ing. As a re­sult, 78 per­cent of JNRs costs were re­lated to la­bor, com­pared to 40 per­cent for other Japanese rail­ways. The av­er­age worker at a pri­vate rail­way was 121 per­cent more pro­duc­tive than their JNR coun­ter­part.

By the early 1980s, only seven out of 200 JNR lines made a profit. Successive gov­ern­ments de­ferred se­ri­ous re­form, run­ning up debt, cut­ting down in­vest­ments in new ur­ban lines, rais­ing ticket prices to twice those of com­pa­ra­ble pri­vate rail­ways, and in­creas­ing sub­si­dies — which rose un­til an­nual sub­si­dies equaled the to­tal cost of the Shinkansen.

In 1982, Prime Minister Yasuhiro Nakasone started to pri­va­tize the rail­ways. Unlike other coun­tries, Japan sim­ply re­turned to the tra­di­tional pri­vate rail­way model of the nine­teenth and early twen­ti­eth cen­turies: tracks, trains, sta­tions, and yards were owned by ver­ti­cally in­te­grated re­gional con­glom­er­ates.

There are sub­stan­tial ad­van­tages to ver­ti­cal in­te­gra­tion. Railways are a closed sys­tem that has to be planned as a sin­gle unit. Changing the timetable at sta­tion A can af­fect the timetable at sta­tion Z; buy­ing new trains that can travel faster might re­quire changes to the in­fra­struc­ture so they can reach their top speed, which in turn re­quires rewrit­ing the timeta­bles. This be­comes es­pe­cially com­pli­cated if dif­fer­ent ser­vices share tracks. To pre­vent de­lays from prop­a­gat­ing from one ser­vice to an­other, the timetable needs to be care­fully de­signed to make best use of the avail­able in­fra­struc­ture.

The stark­est ef­fect of pri­va­ti­za­tion was a mas­sive and im­me­di­ate in­crease in la­bor pro­duc­tiv­ity and prof­itabil­ity rel­a­tive to the legacy pri­vate rail­ways. In fact, this be­gan be­fore pri­va­ti­za­tion: its mere threat strength­ened the gov­ern­men­t’s hand when bar­gain­ing with the unions and forced JNR to be­gin clos­ing rural lines.

Privatization saw a gen­eral trend of pro­duc­tiv­ity im­prove­ments, fol­low­ing a big one-time im­prove­ment be­tween 1982 and 1990, when the work­force was cut by more than half, 83 loss-mak­ing lines were re­moved, and JNRs debts were trans­ferred to a hold­ing com­pany.

The sec­ond great ad­van­tage of pri­va­ti­za­tion was to al­low the JR com­pa­nies to em­u­late the rail­way-as-city-builder model of the legacy pri­vate rail­ways: for in­stance, JR East owns two shop­ping cen­ter brands, a ski re­sort, a cof­fee chain, and even a vend­ing ma­chine drink com­pany. The JR com­pa­nies have not ig­nored their rail busi­ness: they have con­tin­ued to build new high-speed lines and ur­ban tun­nels, up­grade sta­tions, and im­ple­ment a host of other im­prove­ments such as the in­tro­duc­tion in the 1990s of smart cards that al­low pas­sen­gers to pay their fare with a tap.

This does not mean that the Japanese rail­way in­dus­try is a pure crea­ture of free en­ter­prise. No rail­way sys­tem ever has been. The Japanese sys­tem has found an equi­lib­rium that makes rail pol­icy ex­plicit and lim­ited. Leaving aside rail­way safety and busi­ness reg­u­la­tion, there are two main pol­icy levers: fare max­i­mums and cap­i­tal ex­pan­sion sub­si­dies.

Price con­trols are of­ten cited as a clas­sic ex­am­ple of mis­guided gov­ern­ment in­ter­ven­tion, whether through rent con­trols, caps on the price of gaso­line, wage freezes, or min­i­mum agri­cul­tural prices. Tokyo’s in­fa­mously crammed trains are a symp­tom of un­der­priced rush hour traf­fic.

Railways have mar­ket power be­cause the sub­sti­tutes for rail­way trips – coaches, cars and planes – are quite a dif­fer­ent prod­uct. This mo­nop­o­lis­tic po­si­tion has his­tor­i­cally meant trou­ble: mo­nop­oly sys­tems, whether pri­vate or pub­lic, have a ten­dency to abuse their po­si­tion to charge higher prices and run bad ser­vices. For this rea­son, the pri­vate mo­nop­o­lies that were com­mon in the Western world be­fore World War I of­ten had price con­trols im­posed on them. For ex­am­ple, most of the American street­car net­works were op­er­ated as long-term, price-con­trolled fran­chises granted by the city.

Price max­i­mums, if set too low, could have ru­ined Japan’s rail­ways. This is ex­actly what hap­pened to many Western tran­sit ser­vices af­ter the First World War. But the post­war Japanese prac­tice has capped fares gen­er­ously. The sys­tem is ex­plic­itly de­signed to main­tain prof­itabil­ity per rider, which in turn in­cen­tivizes the com­pa­nies to max­i­mize rid­er­ship. That buys po­lit­i­cal le­git­i­macy for the pri­va­tized sys­tem, which is nec­es­sary for the con­tin­ued pro­vi­sion of cap­i­tal ex­pan­sion sub­si­dies. Indeed, dur­ing the long de­fla­tion era be­tween 1992 and 2022, it was com­mon for op­er­a­tors to charge be­low the max­i­mum, and the real value of rail­way fares con­tin­ued to rise. Fare max­i­mums are set on the ba­sis of the av­er­age cost struc­tures of all rail­way op­er­a­tors in a re­gion, so com­pa­nies with be­low-av­er­age costs like Tokyu would of­ten charge be­low the cap to main­tain a com­pet­i­tive edge, pre­vent pub­lic back­lash, and max­i­mize traf­fic to their side-busi­nesses.

Other than the fare max­i­mums, the rail­ways are free to make their own de­ci­sions about timeta­bles, ser­vice pat­terns and day-to-day op­er­a­tions, a highly spe­cial­ized and tech­ni­cal task which re­quires deep ex­per­tise. This con­trasts with the gov­ern­ment med­dling with, say, Amtrak’s routes.

Carefully de­signed pub­lic sub­si­dies also play a use­ful role. Although Japanese rail­ways do not re­ceive sub­si­dies for day-to-day op­er­a­tions, they do re­ceive gov­ern­ment loans and grants for cap­i­tal in­vest­ments. These are typ­i­cally tied to pub­lic pri­or­i­ties, such as dis­abil­ity ac­cess or earth­quake-proof­ing, or to pro­jects that have large spillovers that the rail­way com­pany would be un­able to in­ter­nal­ize, like re­mov­ing level cross­ings, or el­e­vat­ing at-grade rail­ways or trams in or­der to re­duce road con­ges­tion and ac­ci­dent risk. Generally, the lo­cal pre­fec­tural gov­ern­ment will match the con­tri­bu­tion of the na­tional gov­ern­ment. Larger new build pro­jects are sub­ject to lease back or debt-pay­ment con­di­tions that fare rev­enue is ex­pected to pay back.

Railway com­pa­nies in­vested heav­ily in real es­tate busi­nesses, of­ten fund­ing lines through sell­ing land for hous­ing around new sta­tions. Liberal spa­tial pol­icy meant that such de­vel­op­ment hap­pened eas­ily, even as it en­abled dense de­vel­op­ment in ur­ban cores where ra­dial rail lines con­verged. Rail com­pa­nies were gen­er­ally ver­ti­cally in­te­grated re­gional mo­nop­o­lies, own­ing the land, track, and rolling stock, set­ting their own timeta­bles, and em­ploy­ing their staff. The state im­posed con­trols to stop them ex­ploit­ing their mo­nop­oly po­si­tion, but it did so cau­tiously, al­low­ing them to make suf­fi­cient profit that in­cen­tives to in­vest were pre­served. Capital sub­si­dies were tar­geted at pro­vid­ing spe­cific pub­lic goods that nor­mal com­mer­cial op­er­a­tions over­looked.

The above para­graph could be writ­ten by a his­to­rian of the fu­ture about con­tem­po­rary Japan. But every word in it could also be writ­ten by a his­to­rian to­day about the United States in the nine­teenth cen­tury — usu­ally seen as the epit­ome of cap­i­tal­ist in­di­vid­u­al­ism. This strik­ing fact con­tra­dicts the idea that America’s sup­posed in­di­vid­u­al­ism fore­or­dains it to be the land of the car, or that Japan’s sup­posed com­mu­ni­tar­i­an­ism fore­or­dained it to be the land of rail.

It also puts pres­sure on the idea that the demise of rail is the in­evitable con­se­quence of cars. All coun­tries saw some shift to cars in the twen­ti­eth cen­tury, and all rail in­dus­tries had to re­spond to that. But pub­lic pol­icy had an enor­mous ef­fect on how suc­cess­fully they did so. The rise of zon­ing re­stric­tions on den­sity, ex­ces­sive price con­trols, na­tion­al­iza­tion, and ver­ti­cally dis­in­te­grated pri­va­ti­za­tion have ham­pered Western rail in re­main­ing com­pet­i­tive against cars since the 1920s. By main­tain­ing and restor­ing the in­sti­tu­tions that built the first rail­way sys­tems in the nine­teenth cen­tury, the Japanese have cre­ated the might­i­est rail­way sys­tem of the twenty-first.

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State of Kdenlive

In 2025, the Kdenlive team con­tin­ued grind­ing to push the pro­ject for­ward through steady de­vel­op­ment, col­lab­o­ra­tion, and com­mu­nity sup­port. Over the past year we’ve found a nice bal­ance be­tween adding new fea­tures, bug fix­ing, pol­ish­ing the user in­ter­face, and im­prov­ing per­for­mance and work­flow, with sta­bil­ity tak­ing pri­or­ity over fea­ture creep. We re­launched the web­site with a new con­tent man­age­ment sys­tem, re­freshed some con­tent and the de­sign, and re­stored his­toric con­tent dat­ing back to 2002. We also strength­ened up­stream col­lab­o­ra­tion with the MLT de­vel­op­ers and con­tributed sev­eral im­prove­ments to OpenTimelineIO.Here’s a look at what we’ve been up to and what is ahead.As part of KDE Apps, we fol­low the KDE Gear re­lease cy­cle, with three ma­jor re­leases each year—in April, August, and December—each fol­lowed by three point main­te­nance re­leases.This re­lease added a pow­er­ful au­to­matic mask­ing tool and brought the last batch of fea­tures from our last fundraiser.The new Object Segmentation plu­gin based on the [SAM2][4] model al­lows to re­move any se­lected ob­ject from the back­ground.We rewrote our OpenTimelineIO im­port and ex­port func­tion us­ing the C++ li­brary. Now you can ex­change pro­jects with other edit­ing ap­pli­ca­tions that sup­port this open source file for­mat.Au­dio wave­form gen­er­a­tion got a 300% per­for­mance boost, along with a refac­tored sam­pling method that ac­cu­rately ren­ders the au­dio sig­nal and higher-res­o­lu­tion wave­forms for greater pre­ci­sion.This re­lease fo­cused heav­ily on sta­bi­liza­tion, bring­ing over 300 com­mits and fix­ing more than 15 crashes. Instead of ma­jor new fea­tures, the ef­fort went into pol­ish­ing and bug fix­ing.We re­designed the au­dio mixer bring­ing lev­els with clearer vi­su­als and thresh­olds. We also did some code refac­tor­ing and cleanup. This change fixes is­sues with HiDPI dis­plays with frac­tional scal­ing.Guides and Markers got a ma­jor over­haul this re­lease to im­prove the pro­ject or­ga­ni­za­tion.This re­lease the ti­tler re­ceived some much needed love like im­proved SVG and im­age sup­port with abil­ity to move and re­size items, added cen­ter re­size with Shift + Drag, and re­named the Pattern tab to Templates and moved the tem­plates drop­down to it­The fo­cus of this re­lease cy­cle was on im­prov­ing the user ex­pe­ri­ence and pol­ish­ing the user in­ter­face.We added a new first-run launch screen for first time users as well as added a Welcome Screen al­low­ing to eas­ily launch re­cent pro­jects.We added a new, more flex­i­ble dock­ing sys­tem that lets you group wid­gets, show or hide them on de­mand, and save lay­outs as sep­a­rate files that can be shared or stored within pro­jects.The au­dio wave­form in the Project Monitor got a re­vamped in­ter­face with an added min­imap.This next re­lease is just around the cor­ner and brings a nice batch of nifty new fea­tures like mon­i­tor mir­ror­ing and an­i­mated tran­si­tion pre­views, mak­ing it much eas­ier to vi­su­al­ize how they will look be­fore ap­ply­ing them. Additionally, drop­ping a tran­si­tion onto the time­line can now au­to­mat­i­cally ad­just its du­ra­tion to match the clips above and be­low, sav­ing time and re­duc­ing man­ual tweak­ing.This fea­ture al­lows you to mir­ror any mon­i­tor while work­ing in fullscreen mode. It’s es­pe­cially use­ful when work­ing with mul­ti­ple dis­plays or col­lab­o­rat­ing with oth­ers in the edit­ing room.Change the play­back speed of mul­ti­ple clips at on­ceIm­port a clip di­rectly from the time­line con­text menu and in­sert it at the click po­si­tionOp­tion to al­ways zoom to­ward the mouse po­si­tion in­stead of the time­line play­head­Our roadmap is con­stantly be­ing re­viewed and up­dated, and some of the up­com­ing high­lights in­clude im­ple­ment­ing the new fea­tures in MLT, the mul­ti­me­dia frame­work which pow­ers Kdenlive. Some ex­cit­ing up­com­ing fea­tures in­clude 10/12 bit color sup­port, play­back op­ti­miza­tions (decoding), and OpenFX sup­port. (Shoutout to a Kdenlive com­mu­nity mem­ber for lead­ing this ef­fort). Also ex­pected is a refac­tor­ing of the sub­ti­tle sys­tem as well as con­tin­u­ing to de­velop the Advanced Trimming Tools.We are cur­rently work­ing on refac­tor­ing the keyfram­ing sys­tem and im­ple­ment­ing a Dopesheet, ba­si­cally it is a ded­i­cated time­line for man­ag­ing and view­ing keyframes from mul­ti­ple ef­fects si­mul­ta­ne­ously. This work will also in­tro­duce per-pa­ra­me­ter keyfram­ing (currently, once you add a keyframe to an ef­fect, it is ap­plied to all pa­ra­me­ters by de­fault). More info can be found in the last sta­tus re­port. This work is made pos­si­ble through an NGI Zero Commons grant via NLnet.We have been work­ing on en­abling and fix­ing mul­ti­ple mod­ules in MLT to com­pile with MSVC al­low­ing us to ship Kdenlive in the Microsoft Store soon. Another ad­van­tage is that it will al­low to run unit tests on our CI for Windows.Currently, the Kdenlive core team is made up of 8 ac­tive mem­bers, in­clud­ing 2 de­vel­op­ers.In 2025, 38 peo­ple con­tributed code to Kdenlive (including the core dev team and other KDE devs), a truly im­pres­sive num­ber! Even more ex­cit­ing, about half of them were first-time con­trib­u­tors, which is al­ways great. We hope to see many of them con­tinue con­tribut­ing in the fu­ture. On be­half of the Kdenlive team, we salute you all!Note that these num­bers re­fer specif­i­cally to con­tri­bu­tions to the Kdenlive ap­pli­ca­tion. Other pro­jects such as the test suite and web­site are hosted in sep­a­rate repos­i­to­ries and are not in­cluded in these fig­ures.In February, part of the Kdenlive core team met in Amsterdam for a short sprint, high­lighted by a visit to the Blender Foundation, where we met with Francesco Siddi and he shared valu­able in­sights into Blender’s his­tory and of­fered ad­vice on prod­uct man­age­ment for Kdenlive. We also at­tended their weekly open ses­sion, where artists and de­vel­op­ers pre­sent progress on on­go­ing pro­jects. During the sprint, we dis­cussed and ad­vanced sev­eral tech­ni­cal top­ics, some high­lights in­clude:Fin­ish­ing an MLT Framework patch to en­able ren­der­ing with­out a dis­play server (needed for Flatpak test­ing)The Berlin sprint was one of our most pro­duc­tive gath­er­ings to date. Most of the team was there in per­son, and we also con­nected on­line with those who could­n’t make it. We dis­cussed just about every as­pect of the pro­ject, from roadmap plan­ning to up­com­ing fea­tures and work­flow im­prove­ments. Some of the high­lights in­clude:Eval­u­ated the cur­rent state of the Titler and dis­cussed pos­si­ble in­te­gra­tion with GlaxnimateDeveloped a proof of con­cept for us­ing KDDockWidgetsRedesigned and started de­vel­op­ment of the au­dio clip view in the Clip MonitorThanks to the nice folks at c-base who kindly hosted us.Akademy is al­ways a great op­por­tu­nity to ex­change ideas with the broader KDE and Qt com­mu­ni­ties. One of the high­lights was meet­ing the main­tainer of Glaxnimate, where we dis­cussed com­mon goals and ways to col­lab­o­rate. This year, Akademy will be in Graz on the 19-24 of September, and we hope to see you there.We’re very happy to see more YouTube chan­nels talk­ing about Kdenlive. Here are some ex­am­ples of what the com­mu­nity has been cre­at­ing.We’d love to see what you’ve been work­ing on in the past year. Share your videos pro­duc­tions in the com­ments!Help us grow the com­mu­nity by or­ga­niz­ing mee­tups, talks, or work­shops in your lo­cal area. Don’t hes­i­tate to con­tact us if you need guid­ance, ma­te­ri­als, or sup­port to get started.Be­low are pho­tos from a work­shop with in­dige­nous com­mu­ni­ties in Paraguay.Kdenlive was down­loaded 11,500,714 times from our down­load page in 2025. Do note that many ad­di­tional in­stalls hap­pen through Linux dis­tri­b­u­tion pack­age man­agers, the Snap Store, Flathub, and other third-party servers, where sta­tis­tics are not al­ways avail­able or re­li­ably mea­sur­able.The Flatpak pack­age from Flathub gets 41,499 down­loads per month.25.04.2 got the most num­ber of down­loads.Files With Most Code ChangesTo the 5 of you in Antarctica, let us know what you are edit­ing. ;)Ever since our last, and very suc­cess­ful, fundraiser in 2022, we haven’t ac­tively asked for do­na­tions, yet the com­mu­nity has con­tin­ued to sup­port us. We are very grate­ful for that.In 2025, we re­ceived a to­tal of €9,344.80 from do­na­tions (down from €11,526.61 in 2024). Around 30% of the amount was given by donors who kindly set up a re­cur­ring plan. The av­er­age do­na­tion was about €25, with the low­est amount be­ing €10 and the high­est €500.We al­lo­cate 20% of our bud­get to KDE e.V. to sup­port in­fra­struc­ture costs (servers and re­lated ex­penses), as well as ad­min­is­tra­tion, le­gal sup­port, and travel. As in pre­vi­ous years, your con­tri­bu­tions en­able us to con­tinue sup­port­ing Jean-Baptiste (Kdenlive’s main­tainer), al­low­ing him to ded­i­cate sev­eral days each month to Kdenlive in ad­di­tion to his vol­un­teer work.WE NEED YOUR SUPPORTKdenlive needs your sup­port to keep grow­ing and im­prov­ing. If just a quar­ter of the peo­ple who down­loaded Kdenlive in 2025 con­tributed €5, our main­tain­ers would be able to ded­i­cate more time to the pro­ject, and it would even al­low us to hire more de­velpers to speed up de­vel­op­ment and im­prove sta­bil­ity. Small amounts can make a big dif­fer­ence, please con­sider mak­ing a do­na­tion.You may also con­tribute by get­ting in­volved and help­ing in:

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The electromechanical angle computer inside the B-52 bomber's star tracker

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6 311 shares, 24 trendiness

NIST Scientists Create ‘Any Wavelength’ Lasers in Tiny Circuits for Light

Computer chips that cram bil­lions of elec­tronic de­vices into a few square inches have pow­ered the dig­i­tal econ­omy and trans­formed the world. Scientists may be on the cusp of launch­ing a sim­i­lar tech­no­log­i­cal rev­o­lu­tion — this time us­ing light.

In a sig­nif­i­cant ad­vance to­ward that goal, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) sci­en­tists and col­lab­o­ra­tors have pi­o­neered a way to make in­te­grated cir­cuits for light by de­posit­ing com­plex pat­terns of spe­cial­ized ma­te­ri­als onto sil­i­con wafers. These so-called pho­ton­ics chips use op­ti­cal de­vices such as lasers, wave­guides, fil­ters and switches to shut­tle light around and process in­for­ma­tion. The new ad­vance could pro­vide a big boost for emerg­ing tech­nolo­gies such as ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence, quan­tum com­put­ers and op­ti­cal atomic clocks.

Making cir­cuitry for light as pow­er­ful and ubiq­ui­tous as cir­cuitry for elec­trons is one of to­day’s tech­no­log­i­cal fron­tiers, says Scott Papp, a NIST physi­cist whose group led the re­search, pub­lished this week in Nature. We’re learn­ing to make com­plex cir­cuits with many func­tions, cut­ting across many ap­pli­ca­tion ar­eas.”

When it comes to in­for­ma­tion trans­fer and pro­cess­ing, light can do things that elec­tric­ity can’t. Photons — par­ti­cles of light — are far zip­pier than elec­trons at work­ing their way through cir­cuits.

Laser light is also es­sen­tial for con­trol­ling pow­er­ful, emerg­ing quan­tum tech­nolo­gies such as op­ti­cal atomic clocks and quan­tum com­put­ers.

But sev­eral hur­dles re­main be­fore in­te­grated pho­ton­ics can truly hit its stride. One in­volves lasers. High-quality, com­pact and ef­fi­cient lasers ex­ist in only a few wave­lengths, or col­ors, of light. For ex­am­ple, semi­con­duc­tor lasers are very good at gen­er­at­ing in­frared light with a wave­length of 980 nanome­ters, or bil­lionths of a me­ter — a color just out­side the range of hu­man vi­sion.

Emerging tech­nolo­gies such as op­ti­cal atomic clocks and quan­tum com­put­ers need laser light in many other col­ors as well. The lasers that pro­duce those col­ors are big, costly and power-hun­gry, ef­fec­tively con­fin­ing these quan­tum tech­nolo­gies to a hand­ful of spe­cial-pur­pose labs.

By in­te­grat­ing lasers into cir­cuits on chips, sci­en­tists hope to help quan­tum tech­nolo­gies be­come cheaper and more portable, so they can start to ful­fill their vast promise.

The new NIST pho­ton­ics chip is a bit like a layer cake. NIST physi­cists Papp and Grant Brodnik, along with col­leagues, started with a stan­dard wafer of sil­i­con coated with sil­i­con diox­ide (glass) and lithium nio­bate, a so-called non­lin­ear ma­te­r­ial that can change the color of light com­ing into it.

The re­searchers then added pieces of metal to elec­tri­cally con­trol how the cir­cuits con­vert one color of light to oth­ers. The sci­en­tists also cre­ated other metal-lithium nio­bate in­ter­faces that al­lowed them to rapidly turn light on and off within the cir­cuits — a cru­cial abil­ity for data pro­cess­ing and high-speed rout­ing.

The ic­ing on the cake, so to speak, was a sec­ond non­lin­ear ma­te­r­ial called tan­ta­lum pen­tox­ide, or tan­tala. Tantala can trans­form light in ways that feel like magic, tak­ing in a sin­gle laser color and putting out the full rain­bow of vis­i­ble light col­ors plus a wide range of in­frared wave­lengths. Papp and col­leagues have spent years de­vel­op­ing tech­niques to fab­ri­cate cir­cuits out of tan­tala with­out heat­ing it up, al­low­ing the ma­te­r­ial to be de­posited onto other ma­te­ri­als with­out dam­ag­ing them.

By pat­tern­ing the dif­fer­ent ma­te­ri­als on top of each other in a three-di­men­sional stack, the re­searchers pro­duced a sin­gle chip that ef­fi­ciently routes light be­tween lay­ers. That al­lowed them to merge the light-ma­nip­u­lat­ing wiz­ardry of tan­tala with the con­trol­la­bil­ity of lithium nio­bate. The new tech­nique allows seam­less in­te­gra­tion,” says Brodnik. The real power is that tan­tala can be added to ex­ist­ing cir­cuitry.”

Ultimately, the re­searchers were able to fit roughly 50 fin­ger­nail-sized chips con­tain­ing 10,000 pho­tonic cir­cuits, each out­putting a unique color, onto a wafer roughly the size of a beer coaster. We can cre­ate all these dif­fer­ent col­ors, just by de­sign­ing cir­cuits,” says Papp.

Quantum tech­nolo­gies such as clocks and com­put­ers could be among the biggest ben­e­fi­cia­ries of in­te­grated pho­ton­ics. These de­vices of­ten use ar­rays of atoms to store and process in­for­ma­tion. For each type of atom, physi­cists need lasers tai­lored to the atom’s in­ter­nal quan­tum en­ergy lev­els. For ex­am­ple, ru­bid­ium atoms, com­monly used in quan­tum com­put­ers and clocks, re­spond to red light with a wave­length of 780 nanome­ters. Strontium atoms, an­other pop­u­lar choice, see” blue light at 461 nanome­ters. Shine other col­ors on the atoms and noth­ing hap­pens.

The bulky, costly and com­pli­cated lasers needed to pro­duce these be­spoke col­ors have been a ma­jor hin­drance to get­ting quan­tum com­put­ers and op­ti­cal clocks out of the lab and into the field, where they could have big im­pacts. Cheap, low-power, portable op­ti­cal clocks, for ex­am­ple, could help pre­dict vol­canic erup­tions and earth­quakes, of­fer an al­ter­na­tive to GPS for po­si­tion­ing and nav­i­ga­tion, and help sci­en­tists in­ves­ti­gate sci­en­tific mys­ter­ies such as the na­ture of dark mat­ter. Quantum com­put­ers could of­fer new ways to study the physics and chem­istry of drugs and ma­te­ri­als.

Integrated pho­tonic cir­cuits aren’t just for quan­tum. Papp be­lieves NISTs pho­ton­ics chips could help ef­fi­ciently shut­tle sig­nals be­tween the spe­cial­ized chips used by tech firms, po­ten­tially mak­ing AI-based tools more pow­er­ful and ef­fi­cient. Tech com­pa­nies are also in­ter­ested in us­ing pho­ton­ics to im­prove vir­tual re­al­ity dis­plays.

While NISTs chips aren’t yet ready for mass pro­duc­tion, the tech­nique used to cre­ate them pro­vides a path for­ward, Papp and Brodnik say. The NIST sci­en­tists col­lab­o­rated with ex­perts at Octave Photonics, a Louisville, Colorado-based startup com­pany founded by for­mer NIST re­searchers that’s now work­ing to scale up the tech­nol­ogy.

When you see the chip glow­ing in the lab, tak­ing in in­vis­i­ble light and mak­ing all this vis­i­ble light in one in­te­grated chip — it’s ob­vi­ous how many po­ten­tial ap­pli­ca­tions there could be,” says Papp.

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Thoughts and Feelings around Claude Design · Sam Henri Gold

I tried Claude Design yes­ter­day and I have a the­ory for how this whole thing shakes out.

As prod­uct teams scaled and de­sign needed to jus­tify it­self in­side en­gi­neer­ing orgs, it was pushed to­ward sys­tem­ati­za­tion — and Figma in­vented its own prim­i­tives to make that work: com­po­nents, styles, vari­ables, props, and so on. Some con­cepts are bor­rowed from pro­gram­ming, some aren’t, and the whole thing does­n’t neatly map onto any­thing. Guidance evolves, mi­gra­tions pile up, and if you want to au­to­mate any of it you’re stuck with a hand­ful of shoddy plu­g­ins. The beast is hairy enough that en­tire de­sign roles now spe­cial­ize in wran­gling the sys­tem it­self.

There’s al­ways been a tense push-pull be­tween Figma and code over what the source of truth should be. Figma won over Sketch par­tially by stak­ing its claim there — their tool­ing would be canon­i­cal.

That vic­tory had a hid­den cost. By na­ture of hav­ing a locked-down, largely-un­doc­u­mented for­mat that’s painful to work with pro­gram­mat­i­cally, Figma ac­ci­den­tally ex­cluded them­selves from the train­ing data that would have made them rel­e­vant in the agen­tic era. LLMs were trained on code, not Figma prim­i­tives, so mod­els never learned them. As code be­comes eas­ier for de­sign­ers to write and agents keep im­prov­ing, the source of truth will nat­u­rally mi­grate back to code. And all the baroque in­fra­struc­ture Figma had to in­tro­duce over the past decade will look nuts by com­par­i­son. Why fuss around in a lossy ap­prox­i­ma­tion of the thing when you can work di­rectly in the medium where it will ac­tu­ally live? If we want to make pot­tery, why are we paint­ing wa­ter­col­ors of the pot in­stead of just throw­ing the clay?

At work, we’ve spent quite a bit of time back-port­ing de­sign changes made di­rectly in code back to Figma and it is not fun. I can’t share that file, but for a fair com­par­i­son, this is Figma’s own de­sign sys­tem file for their prod­uct. I have to as­sume it was built by the most com­pe­tent de­sign sys­tem team you can find. And yet…

These are Figma’s own files. Built by their own team. This is the gold stan­dard.

Imagine de­bug­ging a color that looks wrong. You check the com­po­nent. The com­po­nent uses a vari­able. The vari­able is aliased to an­other vari­able. That vari­able ref­er­ences a mode. The mode is over­rid­den at the in­stance level. The in­stance lives in­side a nested com­po­nent with a li­brary swap ap­plied. At this point, you’re ei­ther con­sid­er­ing pick­ing up code or mov­ing to the coun­try­side and be­com­ing a sheep farmer be­cause one more minute of this will make you lose your god­damn mind.

So as the source of truth shifts back to code, Figma is left in an odd spot: hold­ing a largely man­ual, pre-agen­tic sys­tem that no­body in their right mind would de­sign from scratch to­day.

I think de­sign tool­ing forks into two dis­tinct shapes from here — and there’s al­most a clock re­set­ting be­tween Figma and every other tool com­pet­ing to an­swer the same ques­tion they an­swered in 2016: who can help me, a de­signer, get my ideas out fastest?

Spoiler: it’s not Figma Make. Figma Make feels like it pri­mar­ily ben­e­fits peo­ple who have al­ready drunk the Kool-Aid — it reads from Figma styles, com­po­nent li­braries, and pro­pri­etary props (or, as I like to call them, Prop Props), and it’s the only tool in this new land­scape still pre­tend­ing the de­sign file is canon­i­cal. It’s the tool for peo­ple who want to (or have no choice but to) stay in­side the sys­tem.

Claude Design is the first of those two tools, and takes the op­po­site bet. There’s an Arts and Crafts prin­ci­ple called truth to ma­te­ri­als” — the idea that a thing should be hon­est about what it is and how it’s made, rather than mas­querad­ing as some­thing else. Figma ended up be­ing the op­po­site of this: a set of ex­tremely rigid schemas with a free-form just vibes, man” cos­tume over the top. Like a Type-A per­son­al­ity phys­i­cally in­ca­pable of re­lax­ing, forced to per­form chill while in­ter­nally scream­ing that your frames aren’t nested and your to­kens are de­tached and noth­ing is on the grid. Claude Design, for all its rough­ness, is at least hon­est about what it is: HTML and JS all the way down.

And it has a mas­sive struc­tural ad­van­tage: its sib­ling is Claude Code. Eventually, I can see Claude Design just dump­ing things di­rectly into Claude Code and vice versa. Claude Design’s on­board­ing al­ready lets you im­port your re­pos. The feed­back loop be­tween de­sign and im­ple­men­ta­tion — which has been a source of fric­tion since the be­gin­ning of time — be­comes a sin­gle con­ver­sa­tion.

The other tool that emerges from this mo­ment will have no ex­pec­ta­tion of code at all. It’ll be a pure ex­plo­ration en­vi­ron­ment — some­where to drop rec­tan­gles, stack layer styles, fuss with blend modes and gra­di­ents, and go com­pletely nuts, un­con­strained by sys­tems or prompt­ing con­ven­tions. Maybe it’s an iPad app with Pencil sup­port where you just quickly sketch a bunch of rec­tan­gles. 37signals could do some­thing re­ally funny right now. Or maybe it goes in the op­po­site di­rec­tion — some­thing more like Photoshop that goes all-in on high-fi­delity com­posit­ing and lets our imag­i­na­tions run wild, now that we’re no longer be­holden to the ceil­ing of what you can do with CSS ef­fects. Doesn’t it seem kinda weird how for 90% of its life, Figma’s only layer ef­fect was a drop shadow or a blur?

Figma’s Sketch mo­ment is rapidly ap­proach­ing. And if you said that sen­tence to a Victorian child, they would prob­a­bly have a stroke.

The fol­low­ing are mes­sages meant only for the teams be­hind Sketch and Figma. If nei­ther ap­ply to you, you can skedad­dle.

To Figma: I can see a world where this post does num­bers in the Figma in­ter­nal Slack. If that’s the case and you’re read­ing this from Figma: this would­n’t have hap­pened if you hired me last year when I was in­ter­view­ing. Your loss, big dawg.

To Sketch: GET YOUR HEADS OUTTA YOUR ASSES AND GIVE EM HELL. ADD PARTICLE EFFECTS. ADD DEBOSSING EFFECTS. MESH TRANSFORMS. FUCK IT, ADD METAL SHADERS. GO NUTS. STOP COASTING OFF OF BEING MAC NATIVE. QUIT DRINKING COCOA AND GET THIRSTY FOR BLOOD.

To mom: Sorry for curs­ing.

@jonnyburch on Twitter shared a link to their blog post with sim­i­lar thoughts, it’s quite good if you wanna go deeper.

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Traders placed over $1bn in perfectly timed bets on the Iran war. What is going on?

Sixteen bets made $100,000 each ac­cu­rately pre­dict­ing the tim­ing of the US airstrikes against Iran on 27 February. Later, a sin­gle user would make over $550,000 af­ter bet­ting that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei would top­ple, just mo­ments be­fore his as­sas­si­na­tion by Israeli forces. On 7 April, right be­fore Donald Trump an­nounced a tem­po­rary cease­fire with Iran, traders bet $950m that oil prices would come down. They did.

These bets and other well-timed wa­gers ac­cu­rately pre­dicted the pre­cise tim­ing of ma­jor de­vel­op­ments in the US-Israel war with Iran, cre­at­ing huge wind­falls and rais­ing con­cerns among law­mak­ers and ex­perts over po­ten­tial in­sider trad­ing.

Betting — once largely siloed to sport­ing events — has now spread to in­clude con­tracts on news events where in­sider in­for­ma­tion could give some traders an ad­van­tage.

The pro­lif­er­a­tion of on­line bet­ting mar­kets like Polymarket and Kalshi has al­lowed bets on vir­tu­ally any news event. It’s also eas­ier than ever to buy com­mod­ity de­riv­a­tives like oil fu­tures, where traders gam­ble on what the price of oil will be in the fu­ture.

Leaders of some US fed­eral agen­cies and some mem­bers of Congress said they want to crack down on sus­pi­cious trad­ing tak­ing place across dif­fer­ent mar­ket­places, but it’s un­clear how much head­way reg­u­la­tors will make.

Is the prob­lem that we don’t have leg­is­la­tion or that we don’t have en­force­ment ca­pa­bil­i­ties?” said Joshua Mitts, a law pro­fes­sor at Columbia University. To have a law that can’t re­ally be en­forced ef­fec­tively given the tech­no­log­i­cal lim­i­ta­tions, it’s sort of putting the cart be­fore the horse.”

On the night of 27 February, the day be­fore the US and Israel would carry out strikes on Iran, an un­usual in­flux of about 150 ac­counts on Polymarket placed bets that the US would strike Iran the next day. A New York Times analy­sis found the bets to­taled $855,000, with 16 ac­counts pock­et­ing more than $100,000 each.

Soon af­ter, a sin­gle anony­mous Polymarket user, un­der an ac­count named Magamyman”, made over $553,000 af­ter bet­ting that Khamenei would be removed” from power just mo­ments be­fore he was killed by an Israeli airstrike, ac­cord­ing to a com­plaint filed to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the fed­eral agency that reg­u­lates fu­tures mar­kets, by Public Citizen, a con­sumer ad­vo­cacy group. The com­plaint also cites a crypto-an­a­lyt­ics firm that iden­ti­fied six suspected in­sid­ers” who made a to­tal of $1.2m on Polymarket af­ter Khamenei was killed.

The well-timed surge of wa­gers were seen again on 7 April, when at least 50 Polymarket ac­counts placed bets that the US and Iran would reach a cease­fire hours be­fore Trump would an­nounce it in a Truth Social post. Earlier, the pres­i­dent had said a whole civ­i­liza­tion will die tonight” if Iran did not open the strait of Hormuz.

But traders weren’t just ac­tive on Polymarket: there were sim­i­lar surges of oil fu­tures trad­ing ac­tiv­ity just hours be­fore Trump an­nounced up­dates to the con­flict that would lower oil prices.

On 23 March, traders placed $580m in bets on the oil fu­tures mar­ket just 15 min­utes be­fore Trump said on so­cial me­dia that the US was hav­ing productive” talks with Iran, ac­cord­ing to the Financial Times. The traders made a wind­fall af­ter Trump’s com­ments trig­gered a sell-off in the oil mar­kets that made oil prices plum­met.

The same thing hap­pened again on 7 April, this time when traders spent $950m on oil fu­tures, bet­ting that the price of oil would fall just hours be­fore the cease­fire with Iran was an­nounced.

We can’t say from the out­set whether any of these trades were il­le­gal. Any one of them could be lucky, and any one of them could be based on law­ful in­for­ma­tion,” said Andrew Verstein, a law pro­fes­sor at the University of California at Los Angeles. But many of them bear the hall­marks of sus­pi­cious trades that would nat­u­rally war­rant in­ves­ti­ga­tion.”

For those who closely fol­low trad­ing pat­terns, the rush of ac­tiv­ity that hap­pened be­fore these events seem too big to sim­ply be bets hedg­ing on luck.

Not only the tim­ing, but the amount of these bets makes it look very likely that some­one had in­sider knowl­edge … and placed very, very sub­stan­tial bets on it,” said Craig Holman, a gov­ern­ment af­fairs lob­by­ist for Public Citizen who filed the group’s com­plaint to the CFTC.

Holman said he is skep­ti­cal about how bold the CFTC will be in its in­ves­ti­ga­tions given its cur­rent struc­ture un­der the Trump ad­min­is­tra­tion. The com­mis­sion typ­i­cally has five bi­par­ti­san mem­bers that are ap­pointed by the pres­i­dent. Now, the CFTC has only one com­mis­sioner: Michael Selig, whom Trump ap­pointed at the end of 2025 and who has po­si­tioned him­self as friendly to­ward pre­dic­tion mar­kets.

Over the last few months, the CFTC has been roiled in fights with state leg­is­la­tures who ar­gue that reg­u­la­tion of these on­line bet­ting mar­ket­places be­longs to the states.

Kalshi, Polymarket’s com­peti­tor, was tem­porar­ily banned in Nevada af­ter the state sued the com­pany for of­fer­ing con­tacts in the state with­out a gam­bling li­cense. Arizona mean­while filed crim­i­nal charges against the com­pany for al­low­ing peo­ple to place bets on elec­tions. In both cases, Kalshi de­nied any wrong­do­ing and has ar­gued that the CFTC has ex­clu­sive ju­ris­dic­tion over on­line pre­dic­tion mar­kets.

It’s a wild west phase, when we’re talk­ing about the pre­dic­tion mar­ket in­dus­try, and now it’s spilled over into the stock mar­ket as well,” Holman said.

Anonymous sources told Reuters and Bloomberg that the CFTC launched an in­ves­ti­ga­tion into the oil fu­tures trades that were placed on 27 March and 7 April, though the agency has not pub­licly an­nounced it is con­duct­ing an in­ves­ti­ga­tion.

Speaking to Congress this week, Selig said that the agency is pre­pared to go af­ter those who are sus­pected of in­sider trad­ing, warn­ing we will find you and you will face the full force of the law”, but said that the com­mis­sion would not is­sue any new reg­u­la­tions un­til it had five seated com­mis­sion­ers.

Polymarket did not re­spond to re­quest for com­ment. In a state­ment, White House spokesper­son Davis Ingle said federal em­ploy­ees are sub­ject to gov­ern­ment ethics guide­lines that pro­hibit the use of non­pub­lic in­for­ma­tion for fi­nan­cial ben­e­fit”.

Any im­pli­ca­tion that ad­min­is­tra­tion of­fi­cials are en­gaged in such ac­tiv­ity with­out ev­i­dence is base­less and ir­re­spon­si­ble re­port­ing,” Ingle said. The CFTC will al­ways up­hold its duty to mon­i­tor fraud, ma­nip­u­la­tion and il­licit ac­tiv­ity daily.”

Federal law pro­hibits gov­ern­ment em­ploy­ees, in­clud­ing those work­ing for Congress or the White House, from us­ing non-pub­lic in­for­ma­tion for per­sonal profit.

In late March, a bi­par­ti­san group of rep­re­sen­ta­tives in­tro­duced a bill that would ban mem­bers of Congress and se­nior staff within the fed­eral gov­ern­ment from par­tic­i­pat­ing in pre­dic­tion mar­ket con­tracts re­lated to po­lit­i­cal events or pol­icy de­ci­sions.

But ex­perts warn that in­sider trad­ing law is com­pli­cated, and the new tech­nol­ogy that makes it eas­ier to place bets on­line leaves a com­pli­cated pa­per trail that can be hard to fol­low.

Historically, in­sider trad­ing takes place when a per­son uses ex­clu­sive in­for­ma­tion about a com­pany to buy or sell stocks right be­fore in­for­ma­tion be­comes pub­lic. These types of il­le­gal trades are reg­u­lated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which reg­u­lates the stock ex­changes.

Insider fu­tures trad­ing could be seen as a sub­set of this typ­i­cal in­sider trad­ing, but the ter­ri­tory is new.

The trick is that there are es­sen­tially no clean cases of peo­ple get­ting in trou­ble for com­mod­ity fu­tures in­sider trad­ing,” Verstein said. The law there is just not well-de­vel­oped.”

In a pa­per pub­lished last month, Mitts, the Columbia law pro­fes­sor, and other re­searchers screened more than 200,000 suspicious wal­let-mar­ket pairs” from February 2024 to February 2026 and found that traders in this group achieved a nearly 70% win rate, mak­ing $143m in well-timed bets tied to every­thing from the cap­ture of for­mer Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro to Taylor Swift’s en­gage­ment to Travis Kelce. The pa­per notes that in­formed traders face fewer le­gal con­straints by trad­ing on plat­forms like Polymarket or Kalshi be­cause these mar­kets still op­er­ate in a le­gal gray area.

The chal­lenge here is that this trad­ing is oc­cur­ring through the blockchain or other anonymized means, so it is go­ing to be quite dif­fi­cult for a reg­u­la­tor en­force­ment au­thor­ity or pros­e­cu­tor to de­ter­mine the iden­tity of the trader,” Mitts said. They would also have to prove the trader traded on the ba­sis of in­for­ma­tion that had been wrongly mis­ap­pro­pri­ated.”

But the stakes are high. Insider trad­ing in­volv­ing clas­si­fied mil­i­tary in­for­ma­tion can lead to dis­trust of both mar­kets and gov­ern­ments.

Unlike cor­po­rate in­sider trad­ing, there’s a lot of ways for the gov­ern­ment to make it­self be cor­rect. You can just make the war that would oc­cur, and that’s con­cern­ing be­cause then the real econ­omy is be­ing dis­torted,” Verstein said. Real de­ci­sions, in­clud­ing per­haps fi­nan­cial de­ci­sions, are be­ing dis­torted by fi­nan­cial bets.”

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9 285 shares, 19 trendiness

A college instructor turns to typewriters to curb AI-written work and teach life lessons

The scene is right out of the 1950s with stu­dents peck­ing away at man­ual type­writ­ers, the ma­chines ding­ing at the end of each line.

Once each se­mes­ter, Grit Matthias Phelps, a German lan­guage in­struc­tor at Cornell University, in­tro­duces her stu­dents to the raw feel­ing of typ­ing with­out on­line as­sis­tance. No screens, on­line dic­tio­nar­ies, spellcheck­ers or delete keys.

The ex­er­cise started in spring 2023 as Phelps grew frus­trated with the re­al­ity that stu­dents were us­ing gen­er­a­tive AI and on­line trans­la­tion plat­forms to churn out gram­mat­i­cally per­fect as­sign­ments.

What’s the point of me read­ing it if it’s al­ready cor­rect any­way, and you did­n’t write it your­self? Could you pro­duce it with­out your com­puter?” said Phelps.

She wanted stu­dents to un­der­stand what writ­ing, think­ing and class­rooms were like be­fore every­thing turned dig­i­tal. So, she found a few dozen old man­ual type­writ­ers in thrift shops and on­line mar­ket­places, and cre­ated what her syl­labus calls an analog” as­sign­ment.

It might be pre­ma­ture to say that type­writ­ers are mak­ing a come­back be­yond Cornell’s cam­pus. But the re­vival is part of a na­tional trend to­ward old-school test­ing meth­ods like in-class pen-and-pa­per ex­ams and oral tests to pre­vent AI use for as­sign­ments on lap­tops.

Typewriters bring old days’ taste of do­ing one thing at a time

Students ar­rived for class on a re­cent ana­log day to find type­writ­ers at the desks, some with German and some with QWERTY key­boards.

I was so con­fused. I had no idea what was hap­pen­ing. I’d seen type­writ­ers in movies, but they don’t tell you how a type­writer works,” said Catherine Mong, 19, a fresh­man in Phelps’ Intro to German class. I did­n’t know there was a whole sci­ence to us­ing a type­writer.”

Like a ro­tary phone, the man­ual type­writer ap­pears sim­ple but is not in­tu­itive to the smart­phone gen­er­a­tion. Phelps demon­strated how to feed the pa­per man­u­ally, strik­ing the keys with force but not so hard the let­ters would smudge. She ex­plained that the ding­ing bell sig­ni­fies the end of a line and the need to man­u­ally re­turn the car­riage to start the next line. (“Oh,” said one stu­dent, that’s why it’s called return.’”)

Everything slows down. It’s like back in the old days when you re­ally did one thing at a time. And there was joy in do­ing it,” said Phelps, who brings in her two chil­dren, aged 7 and 9, to serve as tech sup­port” and en­sure no one has their phones out.

The as­sign­ment car­ries lessons be­yond sim­ply how to use a type­writer, which is the whole point.

It dawned on me that the dif­fer­ence with typ­ing on a type­writer is not just how you in­ter­act with the type­writer, but how you in­ter­act with the world around you,” said com­puter sci­ence ma­jor Ratchaphon Lertdamrongwong, a sopho­more, whose class had to write a cri­tique of a German movie they’d watched.

In the ab­sence of screens, there are no no­ti­fi­ca­tions to dis­tract you as you write. Without every an­swer read­ily avail­able at his fin­ger­tips, he asked his class­mates for help, which Phelps heartily en­cour­aged.

While writ­ing the es­say, I had to talk a lot more, so­cial­ize a lot more, which I guess was nor­mal back then,” Lertdamrongwong said, re­fer­ring to the type­writer era. But it’s dras­ti­cally dif­fer­ent from how we in­ter­act within the class­room in mod­ern times. People are al­ways on a lap­top, al­ways on the phone.”

Without a delete key and the abil­ity to cor­rect every mis­take, he paused to think more in­ten­tion­ally about his writ­ing.

This might sound bad, but I was forced to ac­tu­ally think about the prob­lem on my own in­stead of del­e­gat­ing to AI or Google search,” he said.

Most stu­dents found their pinkies weren’t strong enough to touch-type, so they typed more slowly, peck­ing at the key­board with their in­dex fin­gers.

Mong, the fresh­man, faced the added chal­lenge of a re­cently bro­ken wrist, re­quir­ing her to use just one hand. The self-de­scribed per­fec­tion­ist was ini­tially frus­trated with how messy her page looked with odd spac­ing be­tween cer­tain let­ters and mis­spellings. (Phelps told stu­dents to back­space and type X’s over er­rors.)

This thing I handed in had pen­cil marks all over it and def­i­nitely did not look clean or fin­ished. But it’s part of the process of learn­ing that you’re go­ing to make mis­takes,” said Mong, who found the as­sign­ment of typ­ing a poem fun and chal­leng­ing.”

She em­braced the odd spac­ing and played with the vi­sual bound­aries of the page to in­dent and frag­ment lines in the style of poet E. E. Cummings. It took sev­eral sheets of pa­per and many mis­takes, all of which Mong saved.

I’m prob­a­bly go­ing to hang them on my wall,” Mong said. I’m kind of fas­ci­nated by type­writ­ers. I told all my friends, I did a German test on a type­writer!”

The Associated Press’ ed­u­ca­tion cov­er­age re­ceives fi­nan­cial sup­port from mul­ti­ple pri­vate foun­da­tions. AP is solely re­spon­si­ble for all con­tent. Find APs stan­dards for work­ing with phil­an­thropies, a list of sup­port­ers and funded cov­er­age ar­eas at AP.org.

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The quiet disappearance of the free-range childhood

Christopher Pleasants, noth­ing felt revolutionary” about the way they were rais­ing their two kids. Then a stranger called child pro­tec­tive ser­vices.

It started last November in Atlanta. With school closed on Election Day, the cou­ple’s 6-year-old son, Jake (not his real name), wanted to ride his scooter by him­self to a nearby play­ground while Mallerie and Christopher worked their tech jobs from home. They had re­cently be­gun al­low­ing Jake to play out­side alone, and other kids and a group of par­ents work­ing a char­ity drive would be wait­ing for him at the park.

Permission granted. Jake strapped on his hel­met, got on his scooter, and rode one-third of a mile on a paved recre­ational path to the play­ground. On his way back, a woman stopped him. She asked for his name, age, and where he lived. He felt like the woman was just de­mand­ing an­swers,” Mallerie says. And then when she started fol­low­ing him, it scared him.”

Two days later, a case­worker from Georgia’s Division of Family and Children Services (DFCS) rang their door­bell.

The case­worker said Jake was too young to be on the path un­su­per­vised. How old does he need to be?” Christopher asked. Like, 13,” she replied. He asked where that num­ber came from. I’ll have to look it up,” Christopher re­calls her say­ing. When he pressed fur­ther, she opined that things aren’t like they used to be. People are weirder now.”

Then she in­formed me that she was go­ing to go in­ter­view the kids at their schools — that she would come back later to look in­side the house, make sure we had food, run­ning wa­ter,” Christopher says.

The fam­ily did­n’t lack ba­sic ne­ces­si­ties. But weeks later, they re­ceived a let­ter from the agency stat­ing it had substantiated” a find­ing of ne­glect against Mallerie. It was a let­ter they had long dreaded.

My fear has never been that Jake will be un­safe be­ing out there by him­self,” Mallerie says. My fear has al­ways been that the state will in­ter­vene.”

The case was­n’t a bu­reau­cratic fluke. It re­flects a broader pat­tern: Vague child-ne­glect laws, com­bined with a cul­ture that in­creas­ingly be­lieves chil­dren need con­stant su­per­vi­sion, have ex­panded the gov­ern­men­t’s reach into once-or­di­nary par­ent­ing de­ci­sions, re­shap­ing the bound­aries of American child­hood in the process.

That ex­panded reach some­times ends in hand­cuffs. In 2024, a Georgia mother named Brittany Patterson was ar­rested af­ter her then-10-year-old son walked a mile into town by him­self. A sher­if­f’s deputy drove him home. Brittany chas­tised him — not for walk­ing alone, but for not telling any­one where he was go­ing. She thought that was the end of it, but later that night, deputies jailed her for reck­less en­dan­ger­ment.

The case helped per­suade Georgia leg­is­la­tors to pass a so-called reasonable child­hood in­de­pen­dence” (RCI) law, en­acted last sum­mer. These laws are part of a na­tional move­ment to tighten vague lan­guage in states’ ne­glect laws. Georgia’s old law, for in­stance, de­fined ne­glect as the fail­ure to pro­vide proper” parental care. The new law re­places that with necessary” care and sets a higher bar for ne­glect: Parents must demon­strate blatant dis­re­gard” for their child’s safety — putting them in im­mi­nent, ob­vi­ous dan­ger. The law also ex­plic­itly states that al­low­ing a rea­son­ably ca­pa­ble child to walk to school or travel to a nearby park un­su­per­vised does not, by it­self, con­sti­tute ne­glect.

Since 2018, 11 states have passed some form of RCI leg­is­la­tion. The move­ment gen­er­ally has bi­par­ti­san sup­port, though it trav­els dif­fer­ently de­pend­ing on the au­di­ence. Diane Redleaf, a fam­ily de­fense at­tor­ney, notes that in red states, ar­gu­ments fo­cused on gov­ern­ment over­reach tend to land best, while in blue states, the more per­sua­sive case cen­ters on eq­uity — who can af­ford a babysit­ter, and whether ne­glect in­ves­ti­ga­tions fall dis­pro­por­tion­ately on fam­i­lies of color.

Mallerie and Christopher say they felt em­pow­ered” by Georgia’s new law, which took ef­fect four months be­fore the scooter in­ci­dent. The prob­lem: DFCS did­n’t seem to know the law ex­isted when they be­gan in­ves­ti­gat­ing Mallerie’s fam­ily, even though it was de­signed to pre­vent re­ports like the one against them from be­ing in­ves­ti­gated in the first place.

When Mallerie raised the law with a DFCS su­per­vi­sor, the re­sponse felt per­sonal: Regardless of any law, how could you, as a mother, let your baby” do that?

Common sense has just gone out the win­dow.”

Redleaf has spent years try­ing to fix the un­der­ly­ing sys­tem that makes such re­sponses pos­si­ble. We’re not say­ing [concerned cit­i­zens should­n’t] make the call,” says Redleaf, who works as a le­gal con­sul­tant for Let Grow, a non­profit that sup­ports child­hood in­de­pen­dence and helped draft Georgia’s law. We are say­ing: Don’t go and in­ves­ti­gate some­thing that’s not ne­glect.”

Child wel­fare agen­cies field more than 4 mil­lion abuse and ne­glect re­ports each year — a num­ber that has bal­looned since 1974, when the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act made cer­tain fed­eral fund­ing con­tin­gent on states es­tab­lish­ing re­port­ing sys­tems. The re­sult has been state-run sys­tems that ab­sorb many re­ports but gen­er­ally lack a mech­a­nism to sep­a­rate se­ri­ous cases from those like Jake’s.

Common sense has just gone out the win­dow,” says David DeLugas, at­tor­ney for Mallerie and Christopher, and ex­ec­u­tive di­rec­tor of ParentsUSA, which ad­vo­cates for par­ents’ rights. DeLugas sug­gests the screen­ing process for child wel­fare agen­cies should func­tion like triage in an emer­gency room. Let’s first elim­i­nate the ones that are un­de­serv­ing of any at­ten­tion,” he says. And then for the ones left, let’s pri­or­i­tize in terms of the im­mi­nency of the dan­ger.”

The stakes for get­ting that triage right are real. About 2,000 chil­dren in the U. S. die each year from abuse or ne­glect. But the dan­gers that drive many par­ents to keep their kids in­doors, and that prompt strangers to call in re­ports like Jake’s, are a dif­fer­ent story.

If you search for sta­tis­tics on miss­ing chil­dren in the U. S., you’ll find the claim that 800,000 kids go miss­ing each year: more than 1% of America’s 72 mil­lion chil­dren. It’s an old and mis­lead­ing sta­tis­tic. The num­ber comes from a 1999 Department of Justice re­port that used sur­veys to es­ti­mate miss­ing chil­dren cases na­tion­wide un­der broad de­f­i­n­i­tions, in­clud­ing every­thing from ab­duc­tions to run­aways to brief scares where a kid gets lost for a cou­ple of hours.

Current FBI data shows about 350,000 ju­ve­nile miss­ing per­son re­ports per year, most of which are re­solved quickly and do not in­volve ab­duc­tion. Of cases that do in­volve ab­duc­tion, the vast ma­jor­ity are com­mit­ted by some­one the child knows — of­ten a par­ent in a cus­tody dis­pute — rather than a stranger.

Stranger kid­nap­pings are ex­cep­tion­ally rare. They oc­cur roughly 100 times per year, which works out to a 1-in-720,000 an­nual risk of a child be­ing kid­napped — less likely than be­ing struck by light­ning at some point in their life. Couple these odds with de­creas­ing vi­o­lent crime rates over the past sev­eral decades in the U. S., and you might think to­day’s par­ents would be gen­er­ally com­fort­able let­ting kids be out­side on their own.

Maybe not. A Pew Research Center sur­vey from 2022 found that about 60% of U. S. par­ents were very” or somewhat” con­cerned about their chil­dren be­ing kid­napped, while a 2025 Harris Poll of kids ages 8 to 12 in the U.S. found that about two-thirds had never walked or biked to a nearby place with­out their par­ents. A sim­i­lar por­tion said they wanted to spend more time play­ing with friends out­side of adult su­per­vi­sion.

The risks of let­ting kids do things by them­selves are real and easy to imag­ine. But keep­ing kids un­der con­stant su­per­vi­sion car­ries its own risks — ones that are sub­tler but per­haps no less con­se­quen­tial. As Mallerie puts it: The risks of not trust­ing my child, not train­ing them to be a re­spon­si­ble, ac­count­able hu­man be­ing, far out­weigh the risks of some­one ab­duct­ing them from the play­ground.”

Christopher frames it as a ques­tion of odds. He notes that dri­ving a child to school car­ries its own dan­gers — car ac­ci­dents kill far more chil­dren each year than stranger kid­nap­pings — but no­body ques­tions whether dri­ving is worth it. Nobody seems to be con­vinced by that ar­gu­ment be­cause dri­ving is a nec­es­sary part of life,” he says. And I al­ways tell peo­ple in­de­pen­dence is a nec­es­sary part of life.”

The de­bates of­ten boil down to a sim­ple ques­tion: How old is old enough? Parents prob­a­bly know their kids bet­ter than any­body,” one self-de­scribed helicopter grand­par­ent” told Georgia’s 13WMAZ. But I don’t be­lieve that there’s a 7-year-old that’s ma­ture enough to make a de­ci­sion to walk to a store.”

As a kid in the early 1990s, Mallerie roamed Chicago with a level of free­dom that would be unthinkable” for chil­dren to­day. At 7, she was rid­ing the train to school with­out her par­ents. She and her friends would bike the city streets, mak­ing a game out of get­ting lost in strange neigh­bor­hoods and find­ing their way back home.

Nobody called this a free-range child­hood” back then. It was just how every­one grew up, say Mallerie and Christopher. At least, it’s how the two of them grew up, and it’s how they’ve de­cided to raise Jake and their 4-year-old daugh­ter. The aim is­n’t to shoo the kids out­side un­til din­ner­time, but to raise resilient, in­de­pen­dent, ca­pa­ble chil­dren,” Mallerie says. At the end of the day, we are rais­ing peo­ple who are go­ing to grow up, leave the nest, and we won’t be there every day to guide them.”

They started early. When Jake was 12 months old, Mallerie and Christopher taught him to clean up af­ter him­self by turn­ing it into a game: dump Legos on the floor, then have him put them back in the box. Today, Jake folds his own laun­dry. At six?” other par­ents some­times ask. I’m like, Yes, it’s safe — he has hands,’” Mallerie says.

We have been very in­ten­tional about, Okay, what can we teach you? How can you show us that you’re ready? And then what in­de­pen­dence can we give you that you de­serve?’” says Mallerie, who holds a mas­ter’s in so­cial work and has worked for child pro­tec­tive ser­vices.

It feels like we are un­der more pres­sure as par­ents.”

The cou­ple’s phi­los­o­phy was shaped in part by two books. One was Free-Range Kids, a sort of man­i­festo against helicopter par­ent­ing” and for age-ap­pro­pri­ate child­hood in­de­pen­dence, by Lenore Skenazy, pres­i­dent of Let Grow. (Skenazy broke the story of Mallerie’s case for Reason.) If you read the head­lines in 2008, you might re­mem­ber Skenazy be­ing dubbed America’s worst mom” af­ter she wrote about let­ting her 9-year-old ride the New York City sub­way by him­self.

The cou­ple was also reinvigorated” af­ter read­ing The Anxious Generation by so­cial psy­chol­o­gist Jonathan Haidt — it claims that the rise of smart­phones and so­cial me­dia in the 2010s has dri­ven a great rewiring of child­hood,” fu­el­ing record rates of anx­i­ety, de­pres­sion, and other men­tal health prob­lems among young peo­ple. Mallerie and Christopher al­ready had clear views on that part. We work in tech,” she says. Our kids [aren’t] get­ting any cell phones, no smart­phones, no Instagrams. I write the al­go­rithms. I don’t want my kids to touch those al­go­rithms.”

But what re­ally spoke to them were Haidt’s views on the de­cline of child­hood in­de­pen­dence. He ar­gues that chil­dren born since about 1995 have suf­fered from overprotection in the real world and un­der­pro­tec­tion in the vir­tual world” as American child­hood shifted from un­struc­tured time out­side to un­struc­tured time on­line.

Mallerie likens the cul­tural pres­sure mod­ern par­ents face to a kind of panic. It feels like we are un­der more pres­sure as par­ents,” she says. Our kids have to be per­fect. They’ve got to be well-spo­ken, well-dressed, clean, po­lite. But they can’t do any of the things that they need to do to get those skills. So they can’t be out­side. They can’t ex­pe­ri­ence con­flicts with kids and kind of fight and fig­ure it out amongst them­selves. They can’t walk to school.”

For nearly all of hu­man his­tory, un­su­per­vised child­hood was not a par­ent­ing phi­los­o­phy. It was child­hood. Peter Gray, a psy­chol­o­gist and re­searcher on child play, has de­scribed this shift bluntly: Children to­day are less free” than at any point in hu­man his­tory, ex­cept for pe­ri­ods of child­hood slav­ery or sweat­shop la­bor.

In the U. S., the first half of the 20th cen­tury was the golden age of un­struc­tured play,” wrote the his­to­rian Howard Chudacoff. Child la­bor laws gave kids less work and more free time. Schools as­signed less home­work and did­n’t take up as much of the year. And par­ents were gen­er­ally more will­ing to let kids do things by them­selves, not only play out­side but also help out in the com­mu­nity.

Those back-in-my-day clichés about grow­ing up in mid­cen­tury America — walk­ing a mile to school, work­ing a pa­per route, play­ing out­side un­til the street­lights clicked on — paint a fairly ac­cu­rate pic­ture of a kind of American child­hood that’s all but van­ished.

Every adult is like a lit­tle sen­tinel.”

What changed? In a 2023 ar­ti­cle for Psychology Today, Gray pro­posed some fac­tors that be­gan re­shap­ing par­ents’ at­ti­tudes and chil­dren’s be­hav­ior around the mid­dle of the cen­tury: the ar­rival of tele­vi­sion, the rise of adult-di­rected kids’ sports, the grad­ual ex­clu­sion of kids from pub­lic spaces, the de­clin­ing op­por­tu­ni­ties for gain­ful em­ploy­ment or mean­ing­ful con­tri­bu­tions to the fam­ily econ­omy, and, fi­nally, the in­creased man­date that kids must be con­stantly mon­i­tored and pro­tected.”

This shift may have had ma­jor con­se­quences. In a 2023 pa­per pub­lished in the Journal of Pediatrics, Gray and his coau­thors ar­gued that the de­cline of chil­dren’s in­de­pen­dent ac­tiv­ity in re­cent decades is not only cor­re­lated with the con­cur­rent rise of men­tal health prob­lems among kids — it prob­a­bly played a causal role, too. The au­thors wrote that al­low­ing kids to play and do other self-di­rected ac­tiv­i­ties builds mental char­ac­ter­is­tics that pro­vide a foun­da­tion for deal­ing ef­fec­tively with the stresses of life.”

Mallerie says she can al­ready see the con­se­quences of the op­po­site ap­proach in the gen­er­a­tion com­ing of age around her. We’ve got this new group of adults who are com­ing of age who have never been on a date, still live at home with their par­ents, [have] high sui­cide rates, high de­pres­sion and anx­i­ety rates,” she says. That wor­ries me more than the chance that my kids can be­come vic­tims of crime ever could.”

In February, Mallerie and Christopher re­ceived a mes­sage from DFCS say­ing it had re­versed its find­ing of ne­glect. The agency did­n’t of­fer a rea­son but said it was work­ing to ed­u­cate its staff on Georgia’s RCI law. Mallerie asked DFCS whether it would ex­punge her record. In an email, an agency di­rec­tor said records are not able to be expunged,’” but that Mallerie could chal­lenge the find­ing through an ad­min­is­tra­tive re­view process. The case could still sur­face on cer­tain back­ground checks.

Mallerie de­scribed the in­ves­ti­ga­tion as one of the worst ex­pe­ri­ences of her life. Before the find­ing was re­versed, she and Christopher stopped let­ting Jake play out­side for about a month, fear­ing an­other re­port to DFCS could land Mallerie in jail. Maybe our cul­ture is go­ing to get even more risk-averse,” she says. I just feel like every adult is like a lit­tle sen­tinel. Like they’re go­ing to spot us, and they’re go­ing to re­port us if they see any­thing that they don’t agree with.”

This ar­ti­cle is part of Big Think’s monthly is­sue The Roots of Resilience.

Editor’s note: This ar­ti­cle was up­dated on April 2, 2026, to re­flect that Lenore Skenazy broke the story of Mallerie’s case for Reason.

...

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