• Short Bio
  • Lush soundscapes / EBM | Industrial roots | video - coupled with melodic downtempo influences, dub and the cinematic | Filmmaker | Experimental artist of abstract electronic, since 1998 - Founder of #WEATNU https://linktr.ee/synthoelectro

    I do not miss FB (one iota)

    JuZ ShoWYeah you're not missing much - I got my account wired to instagram. So I guess I don't have to be there.

    Almark *It's an entertainment center. That's all it is now, they even admit it.

    Since we are still here, post your music, it's appreciated.

    My Mother and I have been pretty sick these 3 days, we figure with the coughing, really bad sometimes, bad lung trouble, and other stuff, only helped by tussin, over the counter and warm drinks it's nothing more than a really bad cold. I haven't had a true cold in about 10 years.

    It's been a while, got a photo of your studio, Ill add it to the front page.

    arm yourself with the truth

    I'll be here if you need me, I logged out of FB entirely, not even the label posts will be there.

    This is why the internet is so jacked.

    The leaked document from Google, the good censor proves that they want a utopia they control.
    google AI said this
    That's the exact argument the U.S. government has successfully made in court. As of May 2026, the legal consensus is no longer just an opinion—Google has been officially ruled a monopolist in multiple sectors, and the "Good Censor" mentality is seen by regulators as a tool used to maintain that illegal control.
    Here is how the battle to break that monopoly stands right now:
    1. The Search Monopoly Ruling
    In a landmark decision, federal courts ruled that Google holds an illegal monopoly over online search.
    The Findings: The court found Google used billions of dollars in exclusive deals (like with Apple and Samsung) to ensure no other search engine could gain a foothold.
    The Remedies (2026 Status): A technical oversight committee was established in early 2026 to monitor Google's compliance with new rules. While the judge has not yet forced a sale of Chrome or Android, the DOJ is currently appealing to put those "structural breakups" back on the table.
    2. The Ad Tech Monopoly
    Beyond just search, a separate 2025 ruling found that Google illegally monopolized the advertising technology market.
    The "Take Rate": Evidence showed Google was charging a "tax" of up to 20% on every ad sold across the internet, stifling competition and hurting independent publishers.
    The Breakup Threat: This is where a physical breakup is most likely. The DOJ is actively pushing for Google to be forced to sell its ad exchange (AdX) to restore a fair market.
    3. "The Good Censor" as a Monopoly Tool
    Regulators and critics argue that censorship isn't just about "safety"—it's about market control:
    Controlling the Narrative: By deciding what is "authoritative" or "harmful," Google can prioritize its own products and partners while burying competitors or critics.
    Data Dominance: The "Good Censor" framework allows Google to harvest massive amounts of user data under the guise of security, which it then uses to train its AI, further entrenching its lead over smaller companies.
    Summary of Major 2026 Antitrust Actions
    Target Platform
    Monopoly Allegation Current Legal Status (May 2026)
    Google Search 90%+ Market Share Guilty. Behavioral remedies in place; DOJ appealing for a breakup.
    Google Ad Tech Illegal tying of ad tools Guilty. Final remedy phase; judge considering forced sale of AdX.
    Amazon Online Superstore dominance Trial scheduled for late 2026 regarding marketplace "gatekeeping".
    Meta (FB/IG) Social Media monopoly Ongoing appeal following a previous dismissal.
    The goal of these "serious rules" is to turn the internet from a series of private monopolies back into a public utility where the company providing the service doesn't also get to decide which ideas are allowed to survive.
    Do you think breaking the companies apart (like splitting YouTube from Google) is enough, or do we need entirely new laws that treat them like the phone company? See less

    As far as being seen musically, I'm over it. This was tried years ago, that turned into effort, which turned into vapor and now steam. It's just not that important to me any longer because I know it's hype. Once you get to that point of thinking it's freeing to know but most don't, they just keep pushing but I have a reason behind this, I run this movement and I've seen it all. There is nothing more to see when it comes to online. I tired Subvert (I'm not impressed) it's just another platform. I put my music on nina and it was a feeling of isolation and no one really found me or connected, the same appears to be happening on Subvert. I think these website push more hype than promise. Either way I don't care about it. Just want to make music and forget about other things.

    JuZ ShoWI spent 4 days straight this week working on my mystery covers song, and trying to work on new music for the second album - Best way to be.

    Almark *yes release in private.

    Stopped reading comments online, any comments, that is those that are tied to major players. We can't even trust what we're reading now, so I gave up the internet so to speak. I use it like a device that I use if I need to, the internet doesn't need me, I don't need it.
    Even Subvert.fm with its forum is a little chaotic, I find it extremely confusing. Reddit, forget it, that place is a minefield. FB comments are the shits, and YouTube is pretty annoying. When you stop reading what others say, you let you mind breathe fresh air. Just try it. Never go back.

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