Spain to expand internet blocks to tennis, golf, movies broadcasting times
Some bureaucrats at Telefónica (business model: 'Uber for lawsuits') have successfully lobbied to periodically strangle the national internet to protect their right to sell overpriced subscriptions for footage of men chasing a ball, with judicial approval to now also sabotage connectivity for tennis, golf, and movie nights. This towering edifice of software we use to serve text files to six strangers per day is now hostage to a sports league's accounting department, as entire Cloudflare IP ranges vanish to stop three people from watching a stream. Hackernews, predictably, uses this as a proxy battle in their endless, point-scoring war over whether it's better to live in a bureaucratic dystopia that breaks the internet or a libertarian dystopia that breaks your legs if you can't afford healthcare, with neither side noticing the part where actual pirates just use a VPN. The entire conversation is a ritual performance of impotent outrage that will change nothing, because the real business model here is 'Uber for extracting money from people who just want to watch the game'.