Friday headlines: Heel thyself
The White House and the Treasury will restrict DOGE's taxpayer access to read-only, anonymized data—the same as what academic researchers and IRS IT professionals can see. / The Washington Post [+]
See also: Finally, my tax dollars are being used to uncover publicly available government information. / McSweeney's
An agency-by-agency list of how far Project 2025 has succeeded in its goals—for example, USAID is now at 100% completion. / Project 2025 Tracker
After Texas banned abortion in 2021, "the rate of sepsis shot up more than 50% for women hospitalized when they lost their pregnancies in the second trimester." / ProPublica
Elon Musk says he will "fix" fact-checking on X that contradicts Trump's claims Zelenskyy is unpopular in Ukraine. / Al Jazeera
See also: X is reportedly intimidating advertisers to return to the platform by suggesting companies who don't may trigger the federal government's ire. / Gizmodo
Probably unrelated: X is in talks to raise money at a $44 billion valuation, the same amount Elon Musk purchased it for more than two years ago. / Reuters
Germany's top court rules Birkenstocks are not works of art, a designation the company sought to access stronger copyright protections and fend off copycats. / The Guardian
Microsoft says it has created a new state of matter that is neither solid, liquid, or gas. / The New York Times [+]
Google's ad tech violates its own policies, allowing targeting of users based on personally sensitive data—potentially to where a specific individual could be identified. / WIRED
See also: Ways to rethink how your online shopping tools and habits to fight surveillance pricing. / The Cut
Always-on social media and location sharing means we all know too much about each other. / Dazed
Fascists do love to exert power over art communities that have long rejected them. / Hyperallergic
What it's like to be queer in Nigeria, where "to live safely as themselves, they have to do so underground." / The Dial
From the menswear guy: What do James Baldwin's clothes tell us about him? / PBS