Spyke
lemmy.world

Alright you’ve been on a roll lately Swifty, but imma call you out; transponders are public information.

558
lemmy.world

Yeah, she's generally a decent person, but she's just in the wrong here.

148
jmcsreply
discuss.tchncs.de

She's generally good at managing her public persona, except when it comes to her pollute more than a small city machine private jet addiction. When people show you who they really are, believe them.

186
lemmy.world

She also showed who she really was during the SAG-AFTRA and WGA strikes: someone who agrees to union demands, which was why she was allowed to release the best-selling concert movie of all time during the middle of the strikes.

On top of that, she got thousands of her fans registered to vote.

People are complicated.

165
lemmy.zip

Not to take away from one of the most powerful people on the planet*, but a decent number of companies did that. I want to say A24 almost immediately agreed and that is why they were able to keep making films during the strike.

*: Jesus christ. How did Taylor Swift become one of the most powerful people on the planet?

34

*: Jesus christ. How did Taylor Swift become one of the most powerful people on the planet?

You ever tried saying no to a teenage daughter?

7
Zweibelreply
lemmy.world

"People are complicated."

Very much agree with this sentiment. I feel, too often, this gets lost in discussions. People will do stuff we agree with, and then they'll turn around and do something we disagree with. It's fine to praise and simultaneously lambast 'em.

51

It's pretty healthy, IMO. Seeing the fuzzy set of actions that people take that you agree with and don't agree with as part of a whole person is a sign of maturity mentally.

Having to cleave people into "the Madonna" and "the whore" or the "good object" and the "bad object" is in the mix for a variety of mental problems: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splitting_(psychology)

9

Also pulled her catalog from Spotify to protest their scummy royalty payouts. They changed the payouts for everyone as a result.

31
Klearreply
lemmy.world

which was why she was allowed to release the best-selling concert movie of all time during the middle of the strikes.

When you put it like that, it doesn't really sound like she was doing it out of the goodness of her heart.

13
lemmy.world

I mean, just because she benefited doesn't mean hundreds of others also didn't.

2

Sure, I'm not saying it's wrong what she did, just that it's not a good way to judge her character.

4

Yeah, I imagine she had someone crunch the numbers and figure out that it's worth it to agree to the union's demands to get a premiere in the middle of the strike AND the good PR. Sounds like a pretty safe bet.

Now mind you, I don't really know anything about the situation beyond what I read in your comment. I don't know what movie that was and I'm only somewhat aware there was a big strike in the entertainment industry in the USA. Just little pieces I caught here on Lemmy and maybe back on reddit too. I'm not claiming to have any particular insight into her motivations or anything, just that what you presented as her good side sounds very much like business acumen to me rather than philantropy.

Maybe I'm just a cynic.

15

She has a very good PR manager to keep her in such a good image. You know there are hundreds of people rooting for her downfall and are waiting for every slip up.

Anything Taylor goes straight to front-page, despite my efforts to block it.

9
DarthFrodoreply
lemmy.world

Admittedly I don't know much about her as a person, but how can someone who uses a private jet in 2024 be considered a decent person by any stretch?

Having such a ludicrously unsustainable lifestyle in a climate emergency that will kill millions and displace hundreds of millions in just a few decades is a crime against humanity, change my mind.

8
lemmy.world

The same way a pediatric heart surgeon who also drives a Land Rover can be considered a decent person. People shouldn't be judged on a single data point.

4
DarthFrodoreply
lemmy.world

A land rover isn't nearly as polluting and doesn't drive nearly as far. More importantly, the heart surgeon isn't a role model in terms of lifestyle aspirations for literally hundreds of millions of followers.

People shouldn't be judged on a single data point.

It's not like we're talking about stealing some sweets from children or something. Climate change just gets worse and worse and worse until we reach net zero co2 emissions. As long as it's culturally accepted to cause massive amounts of completely unnecessary emissions, we don't have the slightest chance of fixing this.

The only way a decent person could be doing this is if they were completely uneducated about climate change and their impact as a role model.

3
lemmy.world

Do you really think Taylor Swift not having a private plane is going to do anything about climate change when the real problem is major corporations?

When 100 companies are responsible for 71% of global emissions, why is Taylor Swift to be treated as a pariah because she has a private plane?

Neither the doctor nor Taylor Swift would make the tiniest dent in climate change if they gave those things up and we need to stop blaming individuals when it isn't individuals who are the problem unless those individuals are running one of those 100 companies. Which Taylor Swift is not.

3

There's always a supplier and a consumer. The pollution of these 100 corporations is caused on behalf of their customers who fund them in exchange for fossil fuels, directly or indirectly. They are both responsible, it's 2 sides of the same coin.

Of course, much of this pollution isn't really avoidable at this point. We can't have 100% renewable power and electric cars tomorrow. Some really polluting industries will take decades to decarbonize, like steel and cement production. But this makes it even more urgent to adress the low hanging fruit asap, i.e. big sources of pollution that can easily be cut. Private jets are a prime example.

You could say just a few private jet flights or chopping down one single forest won't make a dent in global carbon emissions, but that doesn't mean that thousands around the world can keep on doing it indefinitely without consequences for all of us. Especially if they are idols for millions of people, normalizing harm to society that we can't afford.

2
stolyreply
lemmy.world

LOL 15 downvotes at time of this comment for you daring to say that she was wrong.

3
lemmy.world

I think they're downvoting me for saying she's a generally decent person considering some of the replies I've gotten.

10
stolyreply
lemmy.world

There is definitely some brigading going on.

3
lemmy.world

Whatever. If people don't like Taylor Swift it doesn't bother me. To be honest, I've only ever heard one of her songs all the way through. She just has done plenty of good things. This is one of the few things I've heard about her that wasn't her being a decent person.

3

I have also never knowingly heard her music. It's not that I avoid her, I just have never listened to pop music in lieu of jazz, classical, or world. But she does seem to be an upstanding person for the most part.

2
jj4211reply
lemmy.world

Well, we got some overriding scenario blasting away all nuance.

It's hard to be sympathetic toward a fundamental privacy limitation associated with flying in a plane exclusively owned by you. So in this context, it's easy to equate "Leave Taylor alone!" with "it's sad how she can't fly in her private jet without being tracked, there's nothing she can do!'

Now broadly speaking, I get that a lot of unreasonable piling on is coming with it, but the private jet is a symbol of excess and environmental harm and it's inherently a risk to hop into that whole mess. Particularly when she could charter private flights to the same effect without the tracking (still excess and environmental harm, but at least obfuscated from public eye a bit).

0
lemmy.world

I never said she should be left alone or that it's sad that she can't fly without being tracked.

I don't care if she can be tracked when she flies. I said she was in the wrong here. All I said was that she generally comes across as a decent person.

3

Yeah, unfortunately, it's the internet so we don't take kindly to nuance around here.

4
lemmy.zip

Its a bit more complicated than that.

Traffic cameras are usually publicly accessible. You are also, generally, allowed to take pictures of people when they are in public spaces where there is not an expectation of privacy.

So at what point of this is the line crossed?

  1. Seb in space's car was spotted driving down Main Street at 4:13 pm on Tuesday
  2. Seb in space was next seen on 1st street at 4:15 pm
  3. ...
  4. Seb in space was next seen turning off into the Hairy Palms apartment complex at 9:12 pm on Tuesday
  5. Seb in space was seen leaving the Hairy Palms apartment complex at 06:00 on Wednesday

That is where this gets pretty murky. Because we all more or less acknowledge that parparazzi taking pictures of everyone leaving an airport are assholes (unless it is about figuring out if The Rock is going to come do PR to distract people from the WWE sexual slavery scandal...). But we have no issue with knowing that without even needing to send someone over to see who got off the 1235 LAX->DFW flight.

And while my initial stance is "fuck the super-rich": I am allegedly part of a private chat for "people in tech" to give each other a heads up if we see a CEO getting off a flight. Because if your boss is pretty regularly visiting Facebook HQ and not telling anyone? That is the sign that you need to refresh your CV because you might get layed off after an acquisition/merger. There are definitely business reasons for not making it trivial to track individuals.

So yeah. I am going to side on the stance of "if you need to travel secretly, wear sunglasses like the rest of us". Or, if you are too famous to even risk that, at least use one of the private jet companies rather than owning your own. But I also think this is something that we need to actually consider from a legal and privacy standpoint and it is a lot more complex than that.

22
lemmy.world

That's fair, but that's a discussion about how accessible the info should be. If it's public, it's public, and the public has equal access to it. If it shouldn't be that easy to access, we fix the system, not punish the users. And suing is punishment/aggression, regardless of the outcome. Self defense isn't free.

59

Unfortunately, the way the legal system adapts is through precedent.

"Optimally"? That kid drops it before any legal action is actually followed up on (no harm, no foul). Then they and Swift work with the various lobbyist/activist groups to push this farther on their side.

Or the kid is an idiot and it goes to court and we begin the appeals escalation right then and there.

-29
lemmy.world

I don't think your analogy works, because, as long as you know the plane's identifier, you can just type it into a website and see where it is.

https://planefinder.net/

That's all you have to do.

How do you get that identifier for Taylor Swift's plane? That part I don't know and maybe that part is where her case lies, but I have a feeling she has no case or Musk would have tried the same thing.

40
lemmy.zip

Anyone can write a trivially simple program to analyze license plates (or even car profiles) and feed it traffic cam footage. I've done that for poops and giggles (never pushed since it was sketchy). Have broadband and a few medium sized computers and you can process the entirety of a state's traffic cameras. At which point, it is trivial to track 455M4N's '92 buick.

-21
na_th_anreply
lemmy.world

Where can I find live traffic cameras with high enough resolution to read license plates? I've only seen traffic cameras with something like 320x240 max.

18
lemmy.zip

You know how back in the day, Mythbusters would joke about "adding blah"? Or how a lot of chemistry and engineering youtubers won't provide the exact specifics once they start working with a gun or something meth adjacent?

Its one of those things where if you have the basic understanding of how these systems work, you can find it pretty trivially (or work around things). And if you don't? Then you really don't need to know.

-10

That's a lot of words to avoid saying you're talking out your ass.

"Yeah, I could totally tell you. Honest. Promise. No I can't because... uh... I'd have to kill you."

12
lemmy.world

That's still not the same thing because the FAA is a federal organization and you're talking about something you can only do in certain municipalities. Traffic camera footage is not available universally and a city may not even use them.

13

Hmm. Its almost like

But I also think this is something that we need to actually consider from a legal and privacy standpoint and it is a lot more complex than that.

Just because you can do something or it is even legal to do something doesn't mean you "should". That is why it is important to reassess laws and the like from time to time.

-7

I feel like your example is way more granular than what is going on here. It’s more like ‘so and so has arrived at this city airport now’ and within an hour or two they could be anywhere in a fairly large radius without anyone reporting their location. Also there is the fact that this is ‘punching up’ which is often seen as ok.

I don’t pretend to have an answer here, but it’s hard to feel sorry for celebrities.

8
lemmy.zip

I am suspicious as to whether that is a "legit" site at all...

But yeah. Even mentioned below. It is REALLY not an insurmountable problem. But apparently people don't understand why people might not want to give step by step instructions for how to do something that, in my opinion, is fundamentally "bad". Can't imagine what would happen if Mythbusters talked about "adding blah" or Burn Notice did the "and other stuff" short hand for "Yo dog, this shit is not something we should explain the details of"

-1

I'm pretty sure that's a legit site. It's a product being sold by TransUnion which is one of the big credit reporting agencies.

2
sebinspacereply
lemmy.world

I don’t listen to her music, I’d hardly call her my hero.

12
sebinspacereply
lemmy.world

Weird, it’s almost like they have to to have any usefulness.

At all.

7
stolyreply
lemmy.world

LOL 6 downvotes as of this comment. Fans are gonna fan I guess.

6

It was positive even when I commented, I was just surprised at the number of downvotes.

3
sh.itjust.works

If you are for Musk being tracked, you should be fine with her being tracked the same way.

I'm for anyone in a private jet being tracked.

257

Got cheaper alternatives for that.

A trebuchet can fling a billionaire up to 500m!

2

Every civilian aircraft is required by air traffic regulations to broadcast it's flight path and identifier.

So once a plane registration is publicly known to be owned by someone they can of course be tracked. Of course it doesn't mean that the owner is on the plane, but it certainly let's you gather how much they fly around. Turns out that Taylor's jet is used a lot even for private jets, which obviously doesn't make her look good from an environmental point of view. Now she tries to use her wealth to silence people tracking this and pointing it out to the public. Shame on her!

28
lemmy.world

Woman who made over a billion being a public figure upset she is now a public figure.

Sorry, no privacy for private jets. I don’t care about the “danger.” She can fly commercial in business class or first class if she wants privacy.

239

Her Grammy speech was literally "I love doing this, thank you for giving me the opportunity to do what I love."

Bitch, if you don't want people to track you then fly first class.

51
m-p{3}reply
lemmy.ca

She can also rent a private jet.

33

Yes, and that's a problem.

Her complaint about her jet being tracked would be solved by renting as those companies tend to be rather quiet about who is on which plane at any given time.

Be a lot cooler if she had her own train car.

22

While true, the topic is about tracking, and as a pragmatic option this would bury her travel in obfuscation.

If it were just about tracking environment, then having the popular tracker be just an odometer rather than specific paths would show the point without the scary tracking vibes.

Of course, this suggests the tail number is somehow well known and thus she's got a problem regardless of this specific tracker. Once the tail number is known, all semblance of privacy is out the window.

2
BoscoBearreply
lemmy.sdf.org

They can charter jets and travel in greater luxury without having a tail number assigned to them personally. When I become a multibillionaire I will charter jets.

11

My step father is a private plane pilot.He owns the plane and rich people pay him to fly them places.

You're right, rich people like Swift don't need to own a jet themselves. It's very easy to find jets to charter and likely cheaper because you're not paying to maintain a plane.

So she can stop complaining about her silver spoon not being polished enough.

8
ctkatzreply
lemmy.ml

taylor swift publicly has a tour schedule that anyone with internet access can get. and I'm sure that these places have airports. and flight logs are public. it's not hard to figure out what plane left from the city she was in is going to her next tour date.

if she, the most famous and richest white woman on the planet doesn't want her movements tracked her movements would not be tracked.

10

Do you think someone is going to try to shoot down her plane or something??? She still has that security with her right before takeoff and right after she lands

0

Note that her private plane is a bit separate and I think flying a private plane means your privacy is screwed unless you absolutely know your tail number is a secret.

On the matter of tour schedule, that may be a matter of 'professional' versus 'personal' time. While doing her professional act, well, her whereabouts are obviously well known and extra precautions and vigilance are part of the cost of doing business. During 'off' time one might reasonably hope for being able to let your guard down a touch when you get to your rural mountain cabin that no one should know about.

Again, using a private jet as means of transport throws that out the window, but the concept that your work itinerary being widely known implies that of course your personal itinerary is fair game is not something I can get behind.

1
derf82reply
lemmy.world

Oh, poor Billionaire that can afford 24 hr private security! /s

I don’t care. She has other options, anyway. She can’t have her cake and eat it, too.

1
derf82reply
lemmy.world

Yes she can, she can also afford a private jet to fly her around. Not sure what your point is.

Choices have consequences. She chooses a private jet that will have an ADS-B transponder that will thus be linked to her travel. That’s just how it works.

And you are complaining she faces violence threats. My point is, she can easily mitigate them.

Private security ain't gonna do much in a sealed tube 10k feet in the air.

Stalkers aren’t going to do mush there, either. What danger do you think she faces in the air?

Such as?

Fly commercial. Much harder to find when you could be on any of dozens of flights. Also, she could charter different jets. People might still find her from flight plans, but it would be much harder.

0
derf82reply
lemmy.world

We all know how it works. I'm suggesting maybe the way it works should change to improve safety.

I do not believe the current system is unsafe. This is 100% her not liking the articles about her massive carbon emissions. If anything, we should further expose these megapolluters.

I've "complained" about nothing. You're imagining things.

Oh, going off a semantics! Whatever. You certainly are stating it.

Would you care to make a suggestion?

I did. You ignored it. What do you think paid security is?

I literally just explained that in the comment you just replied to. Verbal and physical assault and harassment while in a sealed tube tens of thousands of feet in the air.

How on earth are people verbally or physically assaulting her on her private jet? It is literally only her and her entourage on board. How does being able to track her flight lead to someone able to assault her on board? You make no sense

Hell, even flying commercial, they will land the plane and place the offender under arrest. They will restrain you in the meantime. They carry zip tie handcuffs and tape to secure disruptive individuals. Celebrities fly commercial all the time. Aside from maybe stares or people asking for selfies, they are perfectly safe. But that is part of the deal of being a celebrity. She is well compensated for it.

And I am ignoring nothing. I just wholeheartedly disagree with you an every point you have made.

-1
lemmy.world

Didn't the richest person in the world try to do this exact same thing? I'm still convinced it's the reason he bought Twitter. Those flight logs are public information because they prevent mid air collisions, your not going to change that. No one is going to be putting military grade radar equipment on a Boeing 757 if they can't even stop the doors from opening mid flight.

180
aestheletereply
lemmy.world

Those flight logs are public information because they prevent mid air collisions, your not going to change that.

One way to prevent being personally identified is to not fly around in your own personal jet and use one of the many other available options that aren't trackable this way.

163
lemmy.world

Trains are cool. Maybe not private trains, but we all need to make sacrifices.

30
stolyreply
lemmy.world

Private trains are still a thing and they can be very luxurious.

24
sh.itjust.works

Several points:

  • Lots of information is public, such as your address. That doesn't mean somebody explicitly publishing your address for the purpose of harassing you isn't committing an offence.

  • Some celebrities can't fly on passenger planes for their own safety and even that of others or the proper functioning of infrastructure. Can you imagine Taylor Swift trying to fly on a public carrier? She would get mobbed at the very least. At worst she might be putting her health or even her life in danger. Especially now that the MAGA morons are attacking her.

I find Taylor Swift bland as beige, I don't get the appeal at all, and I think Musk is a rabid twatwaffle. I also don't believe anyone should really get to be so wealthy. Still, there are good reasons why one might need to travel by private means without their movements being broadcast.

-29
mander.xyz

My friend met Hugh Jackman on Eurostar, he seems pretty chill. Didn't get mobbed at all.

36
Gorditoreply
lemmy.world

You're comparing Taylor Swift to Hugh Jackman?

-18
lemmy.world

I mean, if I had the choice of meeting one of them, I’d 100% pick Hugh Jackman. By all accounts, the dude is a genuinely cool guy.

21

How about Keanu? I think he would be cool to meet as well. Would genuinely find it hard to choose between the two (Hugh and Keanu)

1

I honestly don't know.

I know Hugh Jackman has been in couple movies couple years ago, and he is also in one of the movies I liked.

I thought Taylor Swift stopped singing after the Romeo Juliet song. I didn't realize people still cares about her until last year.

12

Bland as beige; as entertaining as watching paint dry; as creative as rocks. All subjectively true, but if per rabid base of zombie fans come through and sink Trump's election, I will buy one of her CDs and display it, and pretend to have listened to the whole thing.

5

Some celebrities can’t fly on passenger planes

Note that isn't the only option. They can charter private planes. Still not publicly trackable as it isn't public knowledge that a given tail number equals that celebrity.

Still, if it's about environment, abstracting the flight to an odometer would suffice without stalkery implications. However I presume it's not hard to get the tail number for a rando, and then they don't need any help tracking her in particular, public flight tracking resources would do it. So while she might be able to fight a targeted tracker, probably the worst she has to fear would still be able to track her.

If I were anywhere vaguely in those shoes, I'd always use chartered private planes, limo services, etc. I would not move about in easily recognized and tracked personally owned transportation. Of course I'm not and definitely wouldn't want to be flying much at all, but if I were in a position where I needed to fly, but couldn't reasonably risk sitting among random folks, then chartering a flight seems a logical strategy.

3

Why wouldnt celebrities be able to fly on passenger planes?

If there was some security risk to consider, it would still be cheaper by a factor of 100 or more to just buy a business class ticket and buy some tickets for the security guards too. I am sure, there is also options to organize not going through the public check-in of the airport and to be able to board the plane discreetly before the normal boarding.

Also it is very easy to defend someone on a public plane. the aisles don't allow for more than one attacker at once, and i am sure there is enough tall muscular men for hire to block all aisles.

0

Musk is an idiot but that's not why he bought Twitter, especially when he balked at the idea of paying $10k instead of his offered $5k to do the same thing.

No, Musk bought twitter for a much, much more stupid reason.

5
lemmy.world

But flight data is available - this guy just labels her N number and filters the data in a creepy way. I get that it's probably causing her danger to have stalkers waiting at the destination for her - but those stalkers always had access to this flight data.

Seems like a workaround for Taylor would be to not own a plane and charter a different one every time. (Or do something actually environmentally minded :/)

175
kbin.social

How is it creepy? It’s activism.

This person is a hell of a lot more useful to the world than some billionaire piece of shit.

70

Just because it's done to a woman it's suddenly "creepy". Don't think anyone ever called that guy creepy when it was done to Elon.

38

As an activist tool, a simple 'miles flown' counter would do it without the 'creepy' facet of knowing her general whereabouts at all times.

Of course, as a more mundane person without a private plane or cash to fly much, anyone who cares to know what airport I'm closest to just knows the answer is almost always the one nearest my home city... So in a sense I have no more privacy than Swift, since this only lets you know what airport she last left from and presumably is closest to, which is vague enough to describe 99% of my time just by sitting still.

2

I guess a workaround for the guy posting the data (if he is forced to stop) would be to instead just post the distance traveled and CO2 emissions for every flight. That’s still shaming her for being an environmental asshole while avoiding issues with stalkers or whatever their defense is.

14
lemm.ee

There's a difference between the data being available and it being broadcasted, which is probably what her argument would attempt to stand on if it went to court

-11
GBU_28reply
lemm.ee

But data brokers are doing this to all of us, all the time.

17
lemm.ee

There is also a difference between paywalling info behind a company that only three letter agencies and targeting advertising firms will even know the name of most of the time, and broadcasting that information on social media.

-20
GBU_28reply
lemm.ee

Why should corporate entities get to stalk you more successfully or more permissively than anyone else?

27

They shouldn't, but they also use a method that's a lot more tedious and annoying for a rando to use than just being able to see it on Twitter, which is like, 99% of the definition of "more secure"

-15
lightnsfwreply
reddthat.com

If it's not safe for people to use publicly available information then it shouldn't be publicly available. No one was worried about it when it was used to call Musk out. Or the 1000s of people dealing with stalkers that aren't famous enough for anyone to give a fuck about. Either protect everyone or don't. You can't just single out the rich white girls.

38
lightnsfwreply
reddthat.com

My point is just going after this guy isn't going to fix the root of the problem. If him being able to do this is an issue then the information he is accessing should be restricted. Just making him stop won't prevent the next person from doing it to someone else.

11

That was meant more as a general statement to all the people who are up in arms about this but were jerking themselves off when it happened to musk a while back.

6
MagicShelreply
programming.dev

The federal government will take publicly available information and if it is bundled up with enough other information it is still considered classified and you can still (if you hold any sort of clearance) be in trouble for sharing that classified bundle.

Which is just to say there is legal precedent agreeing with your point, although AFAIK that responsibility only applies to folks who have already agreed to responsibly handle confidential information.

25
lemmy.world

I always figured the point of tracking her, just like Musk, was commentary on the incredible waste that is the private jet industry. The politics of the person matter far less than the environmental consequences of their actions.

12
sh.itjust.works

Obsessed incels have been and will be stalking no matter if there's flight data or not. This isn't about that.

3
kbin.social

If someone drove around and picked up everyone who has explicitly said they’d like to rape or kill her, and dropped them off at her doorstep with knives and guns, I hope we’d all agree that’s pretty fucked up and shouldn’t be condoned.

We have legal ramifications for that already. That's being an accomplice in the commission of attempted murder. And the rest of your comment is mostly the exact same thing, we have laws for when we cross a particular line.

The thing is the publishing flight information on a social media site isn't technically crossing a line. Now I'll tell everyone here the same thing I said with Musk's whole thing. As citizens, we have to lobby for any of those lines to be redrawn. That's the same thing here. Should we place that line elsewhere? Maybe, maybe not. But that's for us to dictate.

But as it stands, we can extrapolate all kinds of bad things that could come to pass and a lot of those are very illegal. But at the moment, what the person is doing is distinctly not illegal. Should it be? Maybe. But it is currently not. Can it lead to bad things? Yes. That's kind of with anything in terms of public information.

The balance that is traditionally struck, is a balance between the public's need to know and an individual's right to privacy. There's not hard and fast rules on where we put the line on that and finding the right spot today for that line, doesn't mean that it's the right spot for it tomorrow. Society changes and sometimes our laws must change with it. Sometimes it shouldn't change. But that's for us the Citizens to direct.

In the age of worldwide social media

And I'm just going to say this is with a LOT of things. At the moment our laws woefully handle social media because it's just so new and law takes so long to catch up. But that's what I was getting at with Elon Tracker back in the day. Musk can go to the Government to ask for laws to be updated, not get petty and ban folks off his social media site. Now Musk has every right to ban who he deems fit to be banned. It is absolutely his ship to wreck here. But it was pretty petty when Musk could have channeled a lot of that energy into getting new laws enacted and we could have avoided this whole thing with Swift. And Swift seems to be mulling litigation rather than actually reforming laws, which means this will inevitably happen again and again and again.

The solution is to get our laws up to speed with our society. And thus far from Musk and Swift there's been every indication that people with the means to actually get a face-to-face with members of select committees in the House and Senate, are opting to take the whole thing personally than an opportunity to do good for the Nation at large. That's my issue with the Rich on this. All of these folks thus far have taken these things personally, and rightly so because crazy people hunting you down can absolutely trigger that self preservation instinct, but there's also a chance for them to look past how this affects just them. But we have yet to see any move in that direction without it being like Musk in the first bits of it before he banned Elon Tracker, calling for the FAA to just be completely done away with. That's clearly not a solution that the public at large should be okay with. So for Musk, there's likely a middle ground he could reach between where we are and a complete dismantling of Government regulations.

And for the public discourse on this, that's my issue because it seems that public discussion on the matters related to this, start veering off into maximums and ignoring any kind of slight changes in current regulatory power. It starts becoming discussions of "oh my god so and so could be killed and here's a what if indicating the path one COULD take to cause harm." And yeah, those are interesting to say the least thought experiments, but they are not addressing the issue of widely disseminating that information. Something that could be resolved with new rules indicating that FAA transponder information and matchup databases operate under a limited distribution model. So one can reproduce the data for personal consumption, but cannot reproduce the data wide consumption. Much like the same way the NFL (because we're talking Swift here so apt entity to pull in) says you can have a Super Bowl party but you cannot have a projector for your entire neighborhood. There's a middle somewhere and I'm not going to pretend I have all the answers, but just running the extremes doesn't talk about that middle. That's my issue with the Public on this.

10
Umbreonreply
lemmy.world

I agree, I think you're being down voted by the people who cheered on the Elon musk tracking kid. Sure it might be legal but I think everyone can all agree they wouldn't want this done to themselves.

-9
sh.itjust.works

99.999 percent of us here would never have this problem because we will never be close to owning a private jet, even if we wanted to for some reason. I also think most of us here agree that owning a private jet is selfish, and since its kind of a problem brought on by her own selfishness, it's kind of hard to feel bad for her.

1
andrewtareply
lemmy.world

"We want the artist to perform near us, all of us,but we don't want them to be on planes in a way that makes that possible."

-40
AbidanYrereply
lemmy.world

There are plenty of ways to get someplace that don't involve owning your own personal jet.

32
skozziireply
lemmy.ca

I found the peasant who doesn't own a private jet, LOL. Get with the times.

15

I don't care if she tours or not, but I know for a fact my favorite bands either rent a bus or fly commercial.

14

The solution is obvious.

Stop owning private jets.

Billionaires threatening, harassing, and intimidating normal people with their army of lawyers and sycophant fans is never okay.

Fuck Taylor Swift and every other rich piece of shit.

142
lemmy.world

Her lawyers must be crazy to think they can get anything done that elon couldn't. Taylor should be mad at her PR for not stopping her if she asked for this personally.

As for private jets. People with wealth, use that wealth to find an alternative. God knows you haven't found anything else to do with it.

Edit: Also, please let it be zeppelin technology.

109
BigPotatoreply
lemmy.world

They could invest in whole new rail lines with their own private cars and fill the other cars with low cost seats. Tons of people on it and no way reasonable way of tracking them because so many people boarding it each time.

25

(Top: Taylor Swift's private jet -- or at least the same model, a Dassault Falcon 900. Bottom: JP Morgan's private Pullman railcar.)

35
stolyreply
lemmy.world

Dude dirigibles are STUPID EFFICIENT because they don't have to fly. They just float so you only need some tiny little fans to move them in the direction you like. I really do wish they'd come back

10
lemmy.world

Airships; When you want to be as fast as an ocean liner, as cheap as an airplane, and as subtle as a train.

15
T00l_shedreply
lemmy.world

Jesus, what are you still not getting about that? Umm core concept?

6

Well, that's a big one. Hydrogen is a much more available element to pump up an airship, and with hydrogen effectively off the table, then helium which if used at scale would be a problem, and it's already a bit of a problem as it is.

Aside from that, it forever shaped public perception, so airships have an uphill battle.

But it's still a thing, the butt-looking Airlander wants to bring back the airship. Their '10' model however has half the cargo payload of a 737. Their more hypothetical '50' would compete with an A300 on Cargo, which is respectable. However the top speed is 85mph, so 6 times slower than a typical cargo aircraft. However it may be able to tout versatility closer to a tractor trailer, they do still need a landing area, but not so much a runway. Tractor trailers are often used for long haul despite not being able to go 85mph, and definitely not 'as the crow flies'.

4

Afaik, mostly for not being too efficient in a suboptimal environment. Also for having a limit on minimal size, but there has been an article somewhere, I'll update if I find it

Edit: haven't found the article, but what I found is this. They fly relatively low (under 2 km), have a hard time going against wind, old ones also had trouble landing. Also contemporary ones are more of a hybrid of dirigible, plane, and helicopter, that probably makes them expensive, too. Existing airship infrastructure is also not suitable for them

Edit2: oh, and some claim that dirigibles don't work for commerce because commerce is too conservative, but it's not too likely because there were news of dirigibles almost taking over the cargo transportation since like 1960s and it didn't yet, so likely there are things to be solved

3
lemmy.ml

nope. sorry taylor. if your plane's tracking information is public knowledge it's allowed. if it's good for elon it's good for you too.

107
lemmy.world

Ehh, she is still human. She is one of the most recognizable and sought after a celebrities we've seen in a very long time. It must be absolutely horrible to be 24/7 in the public eye. But you can't fight it and she hasn't learned that yet. Try not to blame her, just be glad we got a level of goodwill that you don't find in most celebrities, and hope that it continues.

-21

You don't even need to fly commercial to avoid being tracked in this way. If you charter planes then the tracking strategy falls apart too.

Owning your own plane means that anyone who cares gets to know your rough goings on. For example, we get to hear Harrison Ford get in trouble for accidentally landing on a taxiway in his plane (he was quite reasonable about it)

10

No one is forcing her to fly around that much. And she's by no means a new up and coming celebrity but has been dealing with this since 2 decades now.

So no, she doesn't get a free pass to use her wealth to silence very deserved criticism of her disgusting global footprint! Heck, she could spend a tiny amount of her dragon hoard sized wealth to donate to environmental protection to offset this footprint. But no, she rather uses that money to sue someone who she knows doesn't have the wealth to fight her legally.

12
lemmy.world

I feel you. Makes sense to me.

I wonder why someone hasn't started a Part 135 for celebrities that way they can't be tracked per se. Rent out planes instead of being owned by any one celebrity.

-2
lemm.ee

Only half the country is inundated and riled up to see her as an Enemy of the State and an Enemy of the people. There must be many thousands now who want to see her raped, tortured and killed. She's been vilified. And she's not really a political figure unlike Musk who controls a significant part of the worlds communication medium and is politically active.

Taylor Swift has enough money to protect herself, but imagine someone less wealthy would be similarly tracked and/or vilified.

-37
lemm.ee

Nobody should own a car. If you have one, you get put on a list and hunted down! :D

-48

They're not tracking her you barely sentient punching bag, they are tracking the plane which is kind of necessary for safety.

25

someone less wealthy would be similarly tracked

I'm sympathetic to the perspective, but actually no, someone less wealthy couldn't be similarly tracked. To be tracked in this specific way, you must have exclusive ownership of plane(s) with tail numbers.

If you fly commercial and don't publish your itenirary publicly, then the public won't know your association with the flight. If you charter a private flight, then again no one knows that chartered plane == you. You have to actually own a dedicated private plane for anyone to use these resources to confidently track you in particular.

So I'm broadly sympathetic to the plight of celebrities with respect to paparazzi and stalkers and such. But with the availability of charter flights, hard for me to be too sympathetic of someone afflicted by private plane tracking.

13

I'm thinking since the super bowl drama she's probably getting more death threats than usual, and this is a reaction to that. It's not going to work. You cant sue someone for publishing publicly available information.

94
lemmy.world

If you travel in the same plane all the time, and you own that plane, people will be able to track you. Why not just get a good contract with a private jet company so you can fly anonymously? Even if she wins this case, she will still be trackable until she takes advantage of any of the options she has at her disposal.

90
feddit.de

Or buy two more private jets and always have two fly randomly across the country while noone knows which one you're using

Checkmate

14

Go the extra mile and have body doubles on each flight

2
Syndicreply
feddit.de

Heck she could spend a tiny amount of her dragon hoard sized wealth to offset the environmental impact of her air travel. For example by buying endangered rain forest land and donating it to a public charity. But no, she rather uses her wealth as a legal club to try to silence people pointing out the harm she does to the planet.

4
jj4211reply
lemmy.world

To be fair, she could do that put people would still fixate on the private flight usage.

No, obfuscating her travel in charters is the viable 'solution' to this problem. Still roughly equivalent environmental impact (actually, potentially a bit more since a charter company might have to do extra empty flights for repositioning), but her travel would be harder to discern.

7

To be fair, she could do that put people would still fixate on the private flight usage.

Some sure would. But with good PR she could definitely come up on top of it. Certainly better than she fares now. And if someone could pull it off, then it's her.

No, obfuscating her travel in charters is the viable ‘solution’ to this problem. Still roughly equivalent environmental impact (actually, potentially a bit more since a charter company might have to do extra empty flights for repositioning), but her travel would be harder to discern.

That would be the "rich way" to avoid such a problem yeah. But it certainly wouldn't make her a better person.

1
lemmy.dbzer0.com

The irony of "all billionaires bad" is that Taylor Swift earned that money through album sales and live touring. She wasn't actively exploiting the labor of workers in order to be rich, she is just that popular.

And before everyone jumps down my ass about my opinion sounding too conservative for Lemmy, I invite you to check out my post history.

11
lemmy.world

The thousands of people making those records sell and shows happen:

There is no self made billionaire, a billion is an absurd amount of wealth a singular person cannot actually earn or be worth.

93

"To make apple pie from scratch, you must first invent the universe" ~Carl Sagan

20
nexguyreply
lemmy.world

People payed $2,000 a ticket to see Taylor perform... that was their decision.

0

He's talking about all the people working at the label and concert agency. Do you think the technicians and riggers whot take care of all the audio, light and show effects get more money at her concerts? What about the people doing the security, check-in, cleaning and so on?

Try having a concert without any of these. There is hundreds of people working to make stadion concerts happen.

31

She wasn't actively exploiting the labor of workers in order to be rich

14

What a sad state of affairs that you feel the need to "defend" yourself by claiming you're not conservative. What the hell happened that we can't have differing opinions without making blanket disclaimers?

7
EatATacoreply
lemm.ee

If this one action makes her a bad person, then there are no good people, which then of course would mean there are no good billionaires.

-15
Dulusareply
lemmy.world

"that one action" lol

She is basically the worst case of private jet usage and leading the list of such individuals, while somehow advocating for the environment.

This is just ridiculous.

And she is trying to fuck that guy up for "stalking" and "harassment", just for showing public data.

On top, for whatever reason, she had 2 private jets flying around until now. Seems like she sold one this month.

9
EatATacoreply
lemm.ee

I'm don't want to defend her use of a private her, but it seems like a ridiculous puritan test if that this makes her a bad human.

2
graymessreply
lemmy.world

Just such an incredibly weird statement to make that Taylor Swift of all people is the threshold for finding any good in the world, and if she's not it then no one is.

5

This is not at all what I said. I said the metric used here to paint Taylor Swift as a bad person requires a level of pureness that would mean pretty much everyone is a bad person.

I have no idea whether she is a good perspn, but I do know that "she flies in a private jet and her lawyers sued someone because they claim it is a threat to her safety... So she's a bad person!" Is a terrible argument.

0
odelikreply
lemmy.today

I think you hit the nail on the head.

We all suck, there's no good in humans. Maybe we should stop looking at humans, dogs might be a good place to start after all the comments I've heard about us not deserving them.

-2

Where we disagree is that I don't think all humans are bad. We all do sucky things from time to time; no one is pure. Additionally it's often hard to see why someone might do something if you don't share the same experiences, so it might seem evil to you.

What I see happening here is that people want to hate her because she's rich, and by golly anything they can latch onto to confirm that desire to be true will be trotted out.

But we certainly agree dogs are pimp.

2

It’s public information. If you have a problem then stop flying around in your fancy fucking jet.

God damn rich people. Fuck em all.

72

Looks like someone doesn't know how transponders work.

Understandable I guess: It's not really something most people know anything about, but you'd think someone working for her would've been like, "Yeah, no, that's not really how aviation works, they are public by design" before it got to the point where a legal threat was made.

67
Zer0_F0xreply
lemmy.world

They know how it works, but they also know the average person won't go against a billionaire and the army of lawyers they can afford. It's a scare tactic.

23

Yeah, that seems pretty probable, especially for someone with such a manicured public persona. Still though, they don't really have a legal leg to stand on no matter how many lawyers they throw at it.

3

Yeah, but if the cat is out of the bag with respect to her tail number, then it's just some rando typing in a random tail number in a flight tracking database. You don't have to be setting up a dedicated service to do this, just using publicly available stuff that would let you track a random delta flight just as easily as some celebs private plane.

Unless you start declaring the public tracking databases must honor requests to filter 'special' tail numbers from queries.

1

I'm expecting her to be revealed as a villain at some point. She was born with a silver spoon, there are skeletons in closets, and she knows it. Time will tell.

60
lemm.ee

Threatening legal action against some kid because she is too much of a rich asshole to travel like a normal person. If being a billionaire wasn't it then this is should be the reveal.

32
Syndicreply
feddit.de

Especially since she's definitely rich enough to offset her global foot print from her jet usage by actively donating to charities trying to protect the planet ten times and she wouldn't feel it one bit.

2

While true most of the carbon offset stuff is a scam and a way to shuffle your carbon emissions around enough that it just gets lost and not offset at all.

1
stolyreply
lemmy.world

I don't know anything about her. Was she born wealthy? That could explain a lot of the success.

10
mander.xyz

According to wikipedia:

Taylor Alison Swift was born on December 13, 1989,[1] in West Reading, Pennsylvania.[2] She is named after singer-songwriter James Taylor.[3] Her father, Scott Kingsley Swift, is a former stockbroker for Merrill Lynch[4] and her mother, Andrea Gardner Swift (née Finlay), is a former homemaker who previously worked as a mutual fund marketing executive.[5] Taylor has a younger brother, actor Austin Swift.[6]

Not an emerald mine, but at least upper middle class.

34
mander.xyz

Hum, that is not what wikipedia says:

Carl Moyes was a truck driver hauling produce for C.R. England in the 1940s out of northern Utah.[4] In the late 1950s Betty and Carl Moyes started a small trucking company in Plain City, Utah, B & C Truck Leasing. After their son, Jerry, graduated from Weber State University in 1966, they moved the small company to Phoenix, Arizona. Carl and his two sons, Ronald and Jerry (vice-president), formed the company Common Market in Arizona, that would become Swift.

Also

The name Swift Transportation was purchased from a descendant of the Swift Meat Packing family, when the Moyes family bought the trucking assets of Swift & Company. The three Moyes family members and a fourth partner, Randy Knight, grew the business to $25 million in annual revenues by 1984. Jerry Moyes became president, chairman, and CEO that same year, and when Carl died in 1985, Jerry bought out the other two partners, his brother Ronald and Randy Knight. Ronald would continue to hold shares in Swift while Randy would become a co-founder of Knight Transportation.[6]

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift_Transportation

3

Yep, you're right. I was lied to by a friend.

I think I need to stop trusting them with factual tidbits.

2
lemmy.world

She was. She basically bought her way into the music industry. In her early years, a lot of her hype was manufactured and astroturfed. Notably she did write her early songs herself, (the vast majority of pop songs are ghostwritten,) but didn’t have enough appeal to actually break into the industry. So her rich parents basically bought her a record label contract.

She has managed to turn the original millions into over a billion. So that is absolutely notable. But she wasn’t born poor, and it’s not a rags-to-riches story. Even without music, she never would’ve had to worry about rent or groceries.

26
lemm.ee

Looks as if she grew up in a comfortably upper class family. Maybe not mega rich, but they had money, a giant house, and land, and seem to have been able to use money to get her seen in the right places.

Regardless, she clearly has talent far beyond simply coming from an affluent childhood.

18
Guntriggerreply
feddit.ch

We have different definitions of mega rich. Stockbroker money, giant house and land... what other boxes need to be ticked?

12
stolyreply
lemmy.world

Wow people are sensitive about your comment.

0
Guntriggerreply
feddit.ch

Because it's quite ignorant. In no world is an upper class daughter of a stockbroker not filthy rich.

Sure she has some songwriting talent, but would she be as big as she is without that generational wealth backing her from birth?

0

would she be as big as she is without that generational wealth backing her from birth?

Maybe? Dolly Parton had relatively humble beginnings. My wife's school had a random band that made a decent splash in the industry with radio play time and record sales. Not Parton or Swift level, but still; they seemed decent enough but didn't see anything to know why a label went for them over a bunch of other similarly decent acts.

Celebrity can be weird sometimes. Sometimes you see someone pour all sorts of resources in trying to be 'popular' and fail, and sometimes you see someone come randomly out of nowhere.

3

Well to do with parents who were shockingly willing to bend over backwards to give her a chance at success. She's still remarkably wealthy given where she started but it's no rags to riches story.

11

I kinda hope so. It'd be pretty boring if it turns out she's just a mostly milquetoast white girl from Pennsylvania with a penchant for writing pop songs who stumbled into a billion dollars...

7

ADS-B data is public. There is no reasonable expectation of privacy. I grew to respect her recently, but in this matter, she is full of shit.

57
lemmy.dbzer0.com

If you don't want people to know where your going just throw on a medical mask and buy a Greyhound ticket in cash like every other undercover federal agent

/s

46

Looking forward to her new, highly-relatable single, "Why you gotta track my jet?"

45
reddthat.com

If she had simply not said anything, no one would be talking about it

38
lemmy.world

She's not doing anything, her team is. She probably isn't even aware of it.

-2

Crazy how she's rich enough to waste money on this without even realizing it while children are starving to death lol.

2

Is everyone else sick of hearing about T Swift? I don't have anything against her, just don't want to see or hear her any more.

33
lemmy.world

If you think her fans will care, you are very wrong. I'm sure the vast majority of her fans want that Florida student to stop "harassing" and "stalking" her.

17

Same with Elon Musk's fans, but he's definitely gone downhill among non-fans. Not just from that, but it was one piece of the puzzle.

11

I disagree with the use of "Florida Student" when "Florida Man" would have been a better title

19
elrikreply
lemmy.world

Are you saying... TAYLOR SWIFT'S ARMS AREN'T REAL??!

7

it's literally delayed by 24 hours so that it's not a security risk for her. The only reason they're sharing it is to raise awareness about insane fuel consumption for example when she flies from one side of St. Louis to the other (and back), burning hundreds of gallons of jet fuel for what should have been a 30 minute drive

10

Nay nay TayTay. I support her, but she lost the plot on that one.

10

Precedent states that the only legal remedy is to buy whatever social media platform the dependent uses, ban them, and run the rest of the site into the ground.

9
lemmy.zip

Couldn't he dodge this by publishing the data on a delay? Say, new flight info only shows up on the website 72 hours after it happened?

6

It's just publicly-available flight data. Anyone can get this information, there's nothing hidden or secret here.

23
Sho
lemmy.world

Didn't she go on the record saying she doesn't own her jet and it gets leased out to other people? Ya know because pollution...

5

She does own the jet, but charters it out for most of the flights. Because when you own a jet but only fly two or three times a week, your crew needs something to do for the other two or three workdays each week.

4

I'm just posting sources to back up my claims while everyone else just says stuff because they want it to be true. No need for sources when you can just say stuff... it's like Republicans.

1

Didn’t she just have an issue with a stalker that was arrested?

1

ITT: People who suddenly always hated Taylor Swift and were just waiting to hear who to point their torches and pitchforks at this round.

-3
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

What does fEmInIsT have to do with anything? Was elon musk a feminist when he did this or..?

3
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

I'm guessing you have used the term "feminazi" more than a few times. Not understanding your weird issue with women is not a loss for me.

-1
lemmy.ml

This is actually an interesting debate because it actually puts into question at what level people should be allowed to track other people. We would not want the government to follow us around, but a private citizen knowing where we are is kind of like stalking and could endanger them.

-10
lemmy.world

They aren’t tracking her. They are tracking her plane. Planes need to be tracked and the info should be public.

29
lemmy.ml

I get it, but she is typically the person in the plane (I am guessing), so I think it is pretty fair that its tracking a person and it gives people details on where they are.

-9
dogglereply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Iirc she (or someone on her pr team) has publicly stated that she actually isn't on board most of its flights; she charters it out frequently

6

Does she say that or is it misinformation? Also can people easily figure out where she is from that information. I think if she doesnt use it very often then its not a big deal, if not then it is kind of stalking.

-4
lemmy.ml

I would say she is not a private citizen when she joins a government position.

-5
kbin.social

Especially now with newspapers reporting that Taylor Swift is seen as a 'danger to Republican norms' (per USA TODAY copy, Feb 2 - 4), this is an especially dangerous position to put her in. Republicans are starting to claim she is swaying the country away from their "values" (whatever those might be) and they are looking at her as an enemy of our country.

So the person doing this might have innocent motives, but it could lead to horribly disastrous results, and he could also be jailed for doing this. So I'm glad she's taking some legal action up front if only to protect herself and show that she is unwilling to be made a victim of other people's nutjob bigotry.

-56
lemmy.world

he could also be jailed for doing this

My fucking ass lmao. It's public information being posted on a public forum with no call to action whatsoever.

55

It seems your anger is at about 8/10 but I won't accept that you're right until you dial it out 10. Can you crank up your impotent, ignorant rage a bit more and then comment? You can do it, I believe in you.

12

Wow, seems you're wrong about all kinds of stuff. Elon jet tracker for reference.

6

Dude made, essentially, a data visualization tool.

No more and no less.

If you want the data to be private, go after that. Stand up in front of us all, and argue "private jets deserve the privacy of any one of us"

Taylor Swift is a public figure that lives like royalty. At the level, I don't think she gets to live normally. This isn't even her - this is her publicist and/or lawyers, maybe responding to discomfort she's personally expressed... I doubt she goes anywhere without bodyguards. I doubt she's in real danger comparable to even most US politicians - the beetles were small time by her standards. She's a corporation - she's just the face of something enormous

4

Dude made, essentially, a data visualization tool.

No more and no less.

If you want the data to be private, go after that. Stand up in front of us all, and argue "private jets deserve the privacy of any one of us"

Taylor Swift is a public figure that lives like royalty. At the level, I don't think she gets to live normally. This isn't even her - this is her publicist and/or lawyers, maybe responding to discomfort she's personally expressed... I doubt she goes anywhere without bodyguards. I doubt she's in real danger comparable to even most US politicians - the beetles were small time by her standards. She's a corporation - she's just the face of something enormous

2
solrizereply
lemmy.world

We may have reached peak Taylor now that she is making a show of dating that football player. She intrigued me for a while but now I mostly cringe.

7
TrickDacyreply
lemmy.world

Yeah I don't really know anything about her except her music isn't really my thing. I recently gave it another shot but every song felt kinda ragey and judgey in an unexpected way. It falls in this "quite literal but somehow unclear and never abstract" style of songwriting that to me is.. yeah, cringey.

4
solrizereply
lemmy.world

Her music never did much for me but that's fine, that's just me. But I heard she was supposed to be a good lyricist. It seemed to me she had some sharp lines here and there, with filler in between. I was more interested in her persona and how she hit back against the record labels and movie studios. She did a good job of that.

5

Yeah. Re-recording her album after the record label fucked her over was a genius and commendable move

3