A Personal Blog
by Michael Froomkin
Laurie Silvers & Mitchell Rubenstein Distinguished Professor of Law
University of Miami School of Law
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All opinions on this blog are those of the author(s) and not their employer(s) unelss otherwise specified.
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Recent Bluessky Posts- Trump admin continues scorched-earth policy re: spending any money that might conceivably benefit a foreigner, a non-white person, and especially anything when those sets intersect. Duty to implement laws is now just a pleasant fantasy. See also Epstein files. www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025... December 22, 2025 Michael Froomkin
- This. So totally this. Except I'm OK with functional hats. December 21, 2025 Michael Froomkin
- NYT published obit of analyst whom Merrill Lynch fired for being right too early about Enron. (He landed on his feet.) As far as I can tell from Web searching, unsurprisingly only good things happened to the guy who fired him. www.nytimes.com/2025/12/18/b... December 21, 2025 Michael Froomkin
- Immigration judges are not true judges, rather they are employees of the justice department who have no tenure in office. In contrast, JAQs are army officers who are detailed to work as immigration judges. If they are fired as judges, they go back to their regular jobs in the armed forces. December 21, 2025 Michael Froomkin
- As I predicted, making JAGs into immigration judges increases the independence of immigration judges because JAGs have other jobs to fall back on, not to mention a sense of honor. www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025... December 21, 2025 Michael Froomkin
Recent Comments
- Michael on Robot Law II is Now Available! (In Hardback)
- Mulalira Faisal Umar on Robot Law II is Now Available! (In Hardback)
- Michael on Vince Lago Campaign Has No Shame
- Just me on Vince Lago Campaign Has No Shame
- Jennifer Cummings on Are Coral Gables Police Cooperating with ICE?
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Yearly Archives: 2010
Sign You Live in a Wealthy Society
Posted in Sufficiently Advanced Technology
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A Post About Blog Software
Should I upgrade? Change platforms? Once every great while, I think I should either update to a more current version of MovableType from my increasingly archaic 2.64, or attempt the even more herculean task of converting to WordPress. (MT is up to version 5.02!)
Due to the large number of customizations and plugins I've used (not least my dependence on Textile 2 for text formatting, and the somewhat quirky file structure I settled on some week in '03 or '04 when it was Google-friendly), either task would be a real struggle. The whole look of the thing would have to change — which would in fact be the reason to do it. Plus I'd get lots of shiny new toys to play with (aka modern plugins). The version of MT I run now isn't just a dead end, it's a dinosaur in Internet terms. And it has some annoying technical limitations.
If I were going to undertake the upgrade project, I'd either have to do it this summer — a unique moment when I'm not actually supposed to working, so I have the time — or pay someone (who? how to find them?) too much money to do it for me. And given my erratic skills in this area, even I tried to do it, it's not obvious I could import old blog posts into the new system, especially if I switched to WordPress, which works quite differently. The idea of having an “old” and “new” blog isn't all that appealing, but maybe there's no choice. I certainly could set up a new one from scratch and lock down the old one.
Then again, WP is a bigger target for hackers; old versions of MT have some small security through obscurity, and due to their dwindling user base.
Advice from the knowledgeable always welcome. And comments about the aesthetics also appreciated: to my eye, discourse.net's design — if you can dignify it with that name — looks not just crowded but increasingly stogy. Is that:
(a) charming and quaint, or
(b) annoying as hell, or
(c) not important: content is king, never mind the design, or
(d) irrelevant given almost everyone uses the RSS feed to read blogs these days, or
(e) other (explain).
Let me know.
Posted in Discourse.net
11 Comments
UM Decides It Can’t Regularly “Lockdown” Thousands of Adults
The following popped up when I logged into UM’s employee website yesterday:
Members of the University community are asked to read these important new safety guidelines.
As part of efforts to help ensure the safety of the UM community, the University has adopted a new protection strategy for on-campus incidents with the potential for loss of life or bodily harm. After extensive research among peer institutions, the
University of Miami Police Department has recommended a “STAY in Place” approach as the best safety practice, as opposed to a campus-wide lockdown.The key components of the STAY strategy are:
S: Secure your area, lock doors and windows, close blinds, prevent suspect from accessing victims. T: Take cover, hide, stay out of sight. A: Advise others so that they can take steps to protect themselves; await further information. Y: You must take measures to protect your safety. Police will be busy with the actual response to the incident and will not be able to direct your personal actions unless you are actively involved. Under the STAY strategy, all buildings and organizational units would use existing emergency plans and, at their discretion, allow others to access their facilities to seek shelter. It is expected that a large number of people would seek shelter-in-place in classrooms and major buildings on the campuses. Any decision to lock down buildings would be made on an individual and localized basis within the framework of managing the overall incident. There are special situations, such as clinical care facilities on the medical campus, for which lockdown would remain a clearly defined strategy that can work in conjunction with STAY guidelines.
Individuals who are outdoors on campus in an emergency situation need to make the best personal safety decision they can based on common sense, situational awareness, immediacy of the threat, and availability of nearby facilities that may
provide shelter-in-place options.
Translated into English, I think this means I, other faculty and staff, and all the graduate and undergraduate students (almost all of whom are also adults), are on our own in an emergency, but at least the cops won’t be distracted by trying to shoot me if I don’t stay under my desk. Given that they push the emergency button fairly often, I think I’m just fine with that.
I do find it a little ominous how the phrase “lockdown” has migrated from prisons to K-12 and is now it seems common parlance for treatment of staff and students in universities. I guess neighborhoods are next.
Posted in U.Miami
3 Comments
Great Filter
I love that my email sp*m filter, Sp*mAssassin, has a category called “VANITY” which it defines as “Vanity or fake awards” and assigns 2.1 of the five points needed to be flagged.
And it seems to work. Although weirdly this test is not listed among the official tests performed. (Is it something special for the academic edition?)
Posted in Software
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All (Virtual Worlds) Politics Is Pizza
Aporia, in The Politics of Frozen Pizza, says “All politics is pizza.”
The context is governance of online spaces (not therefore regions of, say, scarcity, war, or genocide), but in that realm it's a better metaphor then you might think.
Posted in Virtual Worlds
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Librarians Are Cool
Posted in Kultcha
3 Comments