3D Printed Guns and UnitedHealthcare

59m
This week we start with Joseph's story about how the weapon found on the alleged UnitedHealthcare CEO murderer was a particular 3D printed design. Then Jason tells us what he found about the alleged killer Luigi Mangione through his online accounts, and why, ultimately, this kind of journalism might not matter. After the break, Sam talks about how various healthcare companies removed pages about their leadership after the murder, and what we're seeing when it comes to social content moderation around it. In the subscribers-only section, we talk about Congress getting big mad at Apple and Google after 404 Media's reporting on deepfake apps.

YouTube version: https://youtu.be/HuyJp3QDTbk

404 Media Objects to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's Subpoena to Access Our Reporting

UnitedHealthcare Shooting Person of Interest Had 3D Printed Glock

Luigi Mangione Played 'Among Us,' Breathes Air

Major Health Insurance Companies Take Down Leadership Pages Following Murder of United Healthcare CEO

Moderators Across Social Media Struggle to Contain Celebrations of UnitedHealthcare CEO’s Assassination

Congress Pushes Apple to Remove Deepfake Apps After 404 Media Investigation

Subscribe at 404media.co for bonus content.
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Transcript

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To calbener para sabermás.

So, my 404 media colleagues probably remember when I got doxxed, which was a nightmare for everyone involved, mostly me.

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I am your host, Joseph, and with me are 404 Media co-founders Sam Cole

and Jason Kebler.

Hello, hello.

Noah Manuel this week.

Hopefully, he'll be here next week.

One brief piece of housekeeping.

There is an article on the site called 404 Media Objects to Texas Attorney General Kim Paxton Subpoena to access our reporting.

I'll read one quote from the article.

This subpoena undermines the free and independent press.

It also highlights the fact that the alarm bells that have been raised about legal attacks on journalists in the second Trump administration are not theoretical.

Politicians already feel emboldened to use the legal system to target journalists.

End quote.

That's all we're going to say about this for now, but go check out the article if you do want to get a little bit more context on that.

Jason, merch.

Yeah, so Sam and I, and the others, but mostly Sam and I, have been working on getting a refreshed, like new merch, new shirts, hoodies, crew neck, sweatshirts.

We tried really hard to get these before Christmas so that you could give them as gifts, but we're not going to have them in time.

The reason that I'm talking about this now is because probably later this week, we'll put them up on our Shopify if you're interested.

And I want to highlight that it's a pre-sale, as in we've ordered them, but we're not going to get them before Christmas.

But if you want to buy them, I will ship them out the second that I get them, which will probably be at the very beginning of January.

So if you want to give your loved ones a piece of paper that says you're getting a shirt from 404 Media,

now is your chance.

Is that right, Sam?

Yeah.

Yeah, the coveted IOU, always a classic for the last minute gift giving.

I've done it a thousand times, unfortunately.

But yeah, and it helps us if you pre-order to know how much to get.

So, and I think they look sick.

So watch for that.

I haven't done an IOU, but.

I might do that this year.

I've done it most years.

I've done it so many times.

I'm probably going to say that.

Here's the printout of what I buy you.

It's

in the mail.

It's like, that's, yeah, for sure.

I respect it.

I didn't know that was a thing.

And I guess soon.

Yeah, soon we're going to begin to, I don't know, we're going to get into sneaker culture because we're doing all these drops now and pre-sales.

We're going to have bots on our website.

No, I don't want to give anybody any ideas.

But yeah, definitely go and order that if you want.

The show is going to be a little bit different here.

And then we're going to have a couple of breaks because there is just so much to talk about.

with the United Healthcare CEO.

We've done a few different stories on it, probably different to the ones you've read at other outlets.

Obviously, this is the biggest story, at least in the United States.

But let's get into it.

The first one that we're going to talk about is one that I wrote called United Healthcare Shooting Person of Interest Had 3D Printed Glock.

I will give a super brief summary.

of recent events.

I'm sure many people know this, but last week a man ambushed the CEO of United Healthcare, Brian Thompson, in Manhattan,

on the pavement and shot him in the back and killed him.

There was a massive manhunt with various things along the way.

The police found a rucksack full of monopoly money in Central Park.

Lots of photos of the alleged shooter were released as police got them.

And then eventually, reportedly, an employee at a McDonald's in Pennsylvania called authorities after seeing this person of interest later turned suspect.

He's arrested, and his name is Luigi Mangong.

ABC, NBC,

CNN all obtain images of a weapon found on him.

This is where my story comes in.

I think Mangioni.

Sure, we'll go for that.

Thank you very much.

I even checked.

Trying to be respectful.

I'm awful.

I apologize.

Okay.

It's the mispronounced word of the week.

We're bringing it back.

Bringing it, but yeah, we had a good run.

I saw in the replies on Twitter immediately

the photo of the weapon.

And, you know, to an untrained eye, like mine, it just looks like a black Glock you know it just looks like a pistol but then people were tagging a particular Twitter user and mentioning somebody and saying it was a particular a particular design of a 3D printed Glock

frame I then spoke to two people who said the same One of those sources we granted anonymity and another one was Print Shoot Repeat who, for those who don't know, is a pretty high-profile YouTuber and 3D printed firearm community member.

They do all sorts of things with firearms and 3D printed weapons and uploads videos.

They have

various issues with YouTube as well, demonetizing content, as you might expect, all of that.

But both of these people

said that

the weapon in the photo released was a Chairman Wong version one.

And I think, and I think others would agree, that is hugely significant in that this might be the first assassination in the United States using a 3D printed weapon.

Now, again, I'm no expert, but Jason helped me with this because you have a little bit more knowledge than me and through the two people I spoke to.

Just because we say a weapon is 3D printed, that doesn't mean the entire thing has been made by a printer.

You're going to have different components like the slide, which you'll have to purchase, but this was the Glock frame, you know, and that was 3D printed.

Before we touch on that a little bit more, Jason,

we haven't covered 3D printed guns, I think, directly at 404 Media, just because, I don't know, it hasn't super come up.

But way back at Motherboard, the technology section of Vice where we used to work, and I think actually before my time there, Motherboard made

probably like the first serious documentary about 3D printed guns.

What was the deal there?

Yeah, so it was called Click Print Gun.

And it was made by our ex-colleagues at Motherboard.

It was, I think it came out maybe in like 2012.

Like it was a long time ago.

And it followed Cody Wilson who made this 3D printed gun called the Liberator, that he called the Liberator.

And basically was just showing that it was possible to make a 3D printed gun and I will say just like for people who are interested the producer and director of that documentary which I think was like 25 minutes long was Aaron Lee Carr who has since gone on to make some like very high profile documentaries for HBO and and other outlets so it's it's extremely well made and it's very like it's worth watching

And this was a really big deal for Motherboard as well.

Like I remember it got coverage from CNN and like other major media outlets because they had no idea that this was even possible.

And it really raised like a lot of questions about

free speech,

like content moderation, things like that, like back sort of the extent of the Second Amendment, various issues like this, back when people were not talking about it as much.

Cody Wilson

went on to found this,

I guess it's a company.

I don't even know if it's a company or if it's just like an online platform, like non-profit type thing called Defense Distributed, which has like all of these different designs for 3D printed guns, things like that.

But the big thing is that the Liberator was, I believe, made entirely out of 3D print resin, which is like

printable plastic, more or less.

And

he fired it, like he tested it, showed that it worked, but you know, it wasn't super like reliable as a gun.

I think.

Well, there's like footage of it breaking and stuff.

Yeah, like it breaks.

It's kind of like one of those like one-time use guns, more or less.

And I think the very interesting thing is that in the years since then, as most things do in technology, 3D printed guns have gotten a lot more sophisticated and a lot different.

The gun that Joseph wrote about earlier this week that we're talking about, the Chairman Wand gun, is,

I guess you'd call it like a hybrid 3D printed gun where the case is 3D printed plastic resin, but then as Joseph mentioned, many of the parts are like are metal, and you buy those metal parts from the internet.

And

there was actually a kind of interesting academic study that's referenced in that article that came out in October about the rise of this type of gun

because they're a lot more reliable than just like a plastic gun, as you'd expect.

But they're like a lot more sophisticated and it's causing like some,

there's speculation in this paper that it's gonna cause some problems for law enforcement because the definition of like what a 3D printed gun is is changing.

And sort of like tracking this stuff is getting a lot more complicated for that reason.

And that paper came out in the United Kingdom that has actual gun laws, whereas like the United States, very few, very, very few.

But I thought that was like very interesting context was this paper.

But anyways, Joseph, you want to talk a little bit more about this specific

gun and then also

what this tells us about what might happen here.

Yeah.

So, and I guess just before that,

when you talk about the Liberator from the early documentary,

it looks very much like his own gun, right?

It's like a particular design.

It's not trying to like replicate a Glock from what I remember.

It's made in a certain way.

presumably because the physics of it has to try to be ineffective even if one shot or a couple of shots weapon right and it's different now in that the the 3d printed firearms market or community are basically making copies of established weapons that people know work, and they're able to effectively replicate them.

So, this weapon, the Chairman Won V1,

I was told, you know, it was released in around 2020 or 2021,

depending on where it was potentially downloaded from.

And it quickly became unpopular because the V2 came out something like six months later.

We don't know enough about, you know, the suspect and whether they did download this, when they downloaded it, but I thought that was an interesting data point in that this isn't like the version three or the version four or whatever, or a more recent one.

It is a years-old model of this particular 3D printed firearm design.

So, interesting data point there.

You just mentioned

that UK paper and how it could have problems for law enforcement.

When the reporting initially came out about this 3D printed weapon, a few outlets, relying on the comments of the police obviously were framing it as a ghost gun which is a gun without a serial number and of course that is true in that you know you don't 3d print a serial number onto it if you have any sense right um

But I do think it's much more significant that's 3D printed than it just doesn't have a serial number.

And I think it bears repeating that, as you say, Jason, it could be a real problem in the UK, in the US,

basically nothing in the way of somebody just buying a weapon like this.

Anyway, that being said,

stuff might change now.

And I'm glad, like, I didn't like, we don't want to make predictions.

I remember when Emmanuel was editing this piece, he changed the word because I said it might likely have legal ramifications.

He's like, we don't want to predict, which is true.

Print shoot repeat, the high-profile YouTuber, they said, quote, it appears to be the first high-profile case involving a 3D printed gun.

And it's my guess that this will have a huge impact impact on DIY firearms regulations going forward, end quote.

So that's one of the most prominent members of this community acknowledging and seeing that maybe there's going to be some sort of legal crackdown.

Now,

what that exactly looks like,

I'm not clear on.

Some members, I think many members of the 3D printed firearms community would say that this is information, it is a speech issue.

What we're doing is distributing plans, that that sort of thing.

So we'll see how that pans out legally.

But

as well as

a weapon of this type being used in a very high-profile murder and assassination, I think it really just shows how far 3D printed weapons have come.

When I was writing my book about Anom, the

encryptophone company the FBI secretly ran and backdoored and read all the messages.

On there, the FBI and other authorities got messages showing that a gang in Finland had basically made a factory for 3D printed submachine guns.

And you look at the photos and it's crazy.

There's like three or four 3D printers all lined up and they just have a supply chain of these things.

So you have that.

You also have some neo-Nazis in Finland who have turned to the weapons as well, apparently.

And then

if you are interested in this, I recommend you go follow the work of Popular Front from Jake Hamrahan, who's done a bit more reporting on this.

And I think he did a recent documentary.

But there's also even rebels in Myanmar who are now using 3D printed weapons.

Like, this is

here to stay now.

It's, we're so far from the Cody Wilsons doing a single shot pistol now.

Yeah, I've been pretty shocked at the fact that a lot of the 3D printed guns appear to me to be like submachine guns or like automatic weapons in some way.

Preface, well, or

post-face, I don't know anything about guns.

Like, I know a little bit about 3D printed guns, guns, just enough to sort of edit the piece that you did, but I don't know terminology.

I don't know exactly if they're technically automatic weapons or what, but I have been surprised at how far it has clearly evolved since that initial Cody Williams story.

Yeah, absolutely.

Let's have a quick break.

And when we come back, we're going to talk about

a couple more stories around all of this.

We'll be right back after this.

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Okay, and we're back.

This one, Jason, you just published this today.

Luigi Mangioni played Among Us, breathes air.

Obviously, a sarcastic headline.

I think before we get to sort of what you're criticizing, when the name of the suspect came out, what did you do?

Yeah, I mean, I think anyone who has done journalism on the internet has done this at some point.

And I think actually just like random people who are interested in stories have started doing this as well, which is

the name was announced.

The name Luigi Mangioni was announced yesterday by the NYPD.

And then you Google the name and you try to figure out like, who was this person?

And is this like you try to look for their accounts more or less?

And

in this case, it wasn't like John Smith.

Like

it was easy to find quickly.

There were several Luigi Mangionis, but the sort of like biographical information seemed to match what was happening on these this person's account.

And the most common thing that people do,

the most common time that this happens is in the result of like a mass shooter where the name of a mass shooter is released.

And then the people who cover these things essentially go like looking for their online footprint and their manifesto if there is one.

Like there's been several high profile examples where, you know, a mass shooter had like a YouTube

channel they had lots of hateful stuff, or in some cases, explained explicitly like why they did what they did.

We can talk about why that is

a problem

in a minute.

But basically, it's like I, and I believe all of you to some extent started looking for Luigi Mangioni's online accounts.

And there were many, many, many accounts.

Yeah,

it's almost like a reflex, unfortunately, at this point, which I don't really know whether that says about us or journalism.

And maybe it's not all bad, but

it's like an impulse.

Yeah.

Yeah.

And the interesting thing in this case, a couple interesting things.

One, we've written a lot of articles about,

like, he was not a mass shooter.

This was like an act of political violence.

And there

is.

It has resonated with people in ways that we are probably going to talk about in the second half of this show.

And so I think that people wanted to see: like,

did this person's online politics align with an idealized version of him

where he did this killing, allegedly, it was him,

to like start a class war against a very repressive and anti-human health insurance regime.

And

I think that people pretty quickly realized that, at least on the surface, there was not a manifesto.

There was not like a

long history of talking about health problems on his social media accounts, things like that.

Like some of that has now since been reported.

But I think often about the website heavy.com, which is like a website that I don't even know what it is, other than they're very good at

SEOing to the top of any search result for a mass shooter.

Like,

you know, terrible mass shooter, five quick facts you need to know.

And it always goes like, it's always the first thing that pops up.

And I think that every,

well, many, many, many online media outlets are playing that game with this shooter, with mass shooters, with tragedy, with the big news story.

And I think that reflex to do that is understandable because I'm very interested in sort of like who this person is and why they did what they did and that sort of thing.

There's like a big vacuum of information, and then there's like one little detail, which is his name.

And then you try to fill in all the gaps of the

information that you don't have.

And

sometimes that's very easy,

but like usually it's very hard because what people were finding was

his like GitHub page where he had worked on some AI stuff back in 2016, 2017.

You know, we're talking six years ago, like a Facebook page that had stuff on it, but was also very outdated, a WordPress, a Substack, a Twitter feed.

And most of this stuff was quite dated.

By years, yeah, like a couple years, several years, something like that.

Yeah, and a lot of it was like unrelated, I guess,

because people's online presences don't neatly align

with an act like this, usually.

And then there was also the Goodreads account.

So I think pretty immediately people found the Goodreads account, which is, if people don't know, Goodreads is a website where people review books.

And

Luigi Mangioni has an account there, and there's like dozens and dozens and dozens of books that he read.

And so people were trying to like form this narrative of what information ecosystem was he surrounding himself with?

Is he leftist?

Is he a rightist?

Is he a class warrior?

Like

people learned very quickly that he went to this fancy private school in Maryland and so on and so forth.

And all of this is like very understandable, but every morsel of information was turned into some sort of blog.

And the worst of them that I have seen that everyone has been dunking on was an NBC News article that had the headline and lead sort of explaining that he had once played the game Among Us,

which is,

in my opinion, it's a game for children.

It like millions and millions and millions of people have played it.

Adults play it, etc.

But it's like one year we played it for my birthday, actually.

Oh, yeah, we did.

So, we did.

You know, yeah, I'm not, I'm not mad at anything.

A baby game, but by that, by a game for children, I mean, like, if I had a kid and they were five years old, I would feel comfortable allowing them to play this game.

It's not really like that violent of a game.

It's a cartoon game that doesn't have any like blood or guts in it, as far as I know.

And it's a game about social skills, more or less.

If you're not familiar, basically it's like the parlor game Mafia, where each round or like each time you play, you're randomly assigned a role.

You're either a crew member or an imposter.

And if you're an imposter, you try to kill one of the crew members secretly.

and then you talk over voice chat if you're on zoom or you just like I don't know if you talk in the game in some way but basically you try to like

trick people into thinking that you didn't do the murder more or less uh and the NBC news article was like

it was more or less like Luigi Mangioni like uh role played as an assassin in this game at some point uh and that's like not useful information well and spoke to a friend who played with them right or somehow else associated and like called it extremely ironic that we were playing this game and they turned out to allegedly murder somebody.

And it's just like you get to this in the piece and it's, and it's not just

your social media posts from years ago are not representative of the very complex person you are.

Also, the comments from somebody you played an online game with years ago mean jack squat, basically.

And yet, NBC News feels like it should be the headline and the lead.

Yeah, and then so the article then sort of gets into like we did this whole search and we talked about whether we were going to write an article, and then we basically didn't write an article, but then your article to be clear, yeah, yeah, and then I ended up writing this meta article about it because everyone was talking about this NBC News article and how it's like useless, it is a useless exercise.

Um,

and I said this in the article, and then you and Emmanuel said really mean things to me.

But it's like, I'm not going to do a murder.

Like, I'm not going to do, like, I'm not going to do anything like this.

I hope to never, ever, ever be in the news for anything like this.

But

anytime I do this process of Googling for people, I start thinking about what my online profile looks like if someone were to do this to me.

And if you Google me and I have Googled me, it's like all this like random shit comes up that has, that is either very old or from like really old like live journal I had as a teenager, you know, photos of things that where I've been places that don't actually mean anything to me.

I was actually on Facebook the other day buying a couch on Marketplace and a post came up from 10 years ago that I don't remember writing.

Like there's just all this stuff that I don't really remember doing on the internet because I've been on the internet for 25 years

just posting and doing stuff.

And

if you want to have a narrative about someone, you can kind of like pick out any little detail and say like, oh, this is why he did it or like, this is relevant or so on and so forth.

And so that's what I tried to write about.

Yeah, it makes sense.

The only time you're going to be able to get a good

sort of picture of somebody is when you know a magazine comes in and does a real real deep dive And we've done those sometimes,

at least motherboard and stuff.

They require a lot of time, a lot of resources.

But you're simply not going to get that in a breaking news situation to the point where you might publish something completely garbage.

Yeah, I guess the last thing I'll say on that, and I struggled to say it in the article, but I thought that

Riley McLeod at Aftermath did a very good job of this in a similar piece on Aftermath.

It's like nothing that they, that Luigi Mangioni has posted online or told anyone or done is as relevant as the fact that they allegedly killed a CEO in, you know, broad daylight and had, you know, a message on the bullet casings.

It's like that is a far stronger political statement.

It's an extreme political statement that is far more illustrative than a comment they left on a sub stack or a tweet that they did six months ago.

And I think that that is like, I don't know, worth pointing out for sure.

All right, we have a couple more stories.

The first one here from Sam.

Major health insurance companies take down leadership pages following murder of United Healthcare CEO.

Obviously, we're stepping

a little bit back in time here.

This is basically right at the start

of the manhunt.

But Sam, what did other health insurance companies do in the immediate wake

of that murder?

Yeah.

So this was five days ago, which has been a really long five days.

It feels way longer than that.

Let's go back in time to five days ago.

It's been a long week and it's Tuesday.

Yeah, so

this is something that I saw someone, I think someone tweeted about or posted about on Blue Sky or something, but someone had, actually, I had been texting with my friend

about this back and forth during the day that day.

And it was like two days after the shooting, but he was like, did you see that United Healthcare took down their leadership page?

And I was like, yes, because I was just looking at, I was looking for that page for a different story.

And it was down.

I was like, well, that's weird.

And then he texted me that, and then I looked on Twitter, and someone had been posting about

lots of different

insurance companies, health insurance companies taking down their leadership and board of director pages or like redirecting them to the home page and things like that.

So, yeah, I was like, oh shit, like, let me look at like every major

health insurance company and see if I can find if any of them have taken down their pages also.

And most of them that I looked up that day had.

What were some of the first ones?

And of course, this won't mean all that much to non-US listeners.

You'll still appreciate the lost media archiving aspect of it, but maybe the names of companies won't mean much to them.

But to sort of US listeners, what were the sort of those first companies you found?

Yeah, I feel bad for anyone like trying to learn about this news cycle from outside the U.S.

And they feel bad for us for living in this hellhole.

But I feel that's

something that people like to say, though.

It's like, I mean, they're very depressed for us, but I think it's like,

that's crazy that y'all.

That's crazy.

Like, sucks.

Sucks.

Sucks to suck.

Sorry, sorry for you and or.

Yeah, what's going on over there?

Yeah, so obviously United Healthcares was down.

They were redirecting to the homepage.

And this is all on Friday.

So again, it was like a couple of days after.

Anthem Blue Cross Group Shields was down, or it was redirecting to its About Us page, which didn't have anything in it.

As far as like leadership, the Care Source leadership pages, which were like multiple individual pages of every like, like the CFO, the executive vice president, the CEO,

the CEO, like everyone's page was gone.

It was returning like a URL not found.

Medica, which I had not heard of before this,

their executive leadership page returned to its home page.

And then its foundation leadership actually also was down and said, oops, oops, that page does not exist.

Elevent's Health was down and said, sorry, that page is no longer here.

And then on Monday, I checked.

again because a couple more had not taken theirs down yet and I was like oh let me see who else Kaiser permanente's page had gone down as of like late Friday um Atna's page said error 404 many people have pointed out the irony of writing about 404 errors on 404 media um it's fun yeah uh humana's board of director page now says you're not authorized to access this page um so it was nine in total

that I checked.

And then only one actually, I hit all them up, obviously, to see if they had comment, but only one, which is Aetna, which is owned by CBS Health.

That was the only one that actually replied to me.

And they replied

today or yesterday.

And they said,

it was like out of respect.

They said, out of respect for the Thompson family, we are declining to comment, which in itself is like, yeah, we're acknowledging that this is about the shooting, which obviously.

Oh, I see what you mean.

Right.

Like, I didn't, I asked, I said, was this related to the shooting of Brian Thompson?

And then they said, out of respect to the family, we're not commenting on that, which,

you know, it's not just like, oh, our page is broken coincidentally.

Right.

Sometimes as journalists,

we know the answer.

The reader knows the answer, but we have to ask these questions because that's our job and we have to give them a fair chance to respond.

As you say, most of them didn't get back to you, but one did.

And then they gave that sort of explanation.

I guess just the last thing is that, you know, a lot of people obviously pointed out the Wayback Machine.

And yes, you know, I'm sure the health insurance companies are aware that you can't remove stuff from the internet

like that.

I'm just,

we have to speculate a little bit, but like, what do you make of that?

And do you think that they are also aware of that?

Or I mean, they must be, right?

I mean, I think probably like this is me entirely speculating just as a disclaimer.

This is me as an individual person, not

trying to assume things about these companies and their actions.

But

having seen this happen, having worked at places where consulting firms are brought in to fix a mess on the fly, I am going to assume that some like safety consulting team, either internally or like because they all did it at the same time, I'm assuming like they all have the same kind of like crisis

comms or crisis safety kind of

protocols that are being passed around.

I assume someone's paid a lot of money to tell these companies, hey,

you should take down these pages as like just something to do.

You know, it's like,

it doesn't actually do anything.

It might make these very like,

I don't know, I assume panicked and other people have reported

not happy CEOs and leadership teams feel better.

So it's kind of like a band-aid.

It's obviously not anything that's like real security or real OPSEC

on any kind of meaningful level, but it's just weird to me to do it at all.

It's, I assume they didn't think anyone would notice,

which, as we just went over, we're digging around for everything all the time on the internet these days.

So of course people noticed.

And then it became its own story, you know?

Right.

I guess just the last thing I would say is that

like purely from like a cold security perspective i don't know you still got to deal with the low-hanging fruit you know even though it's like oh then someone could get around it look on wayback machine or you you know someone motivated enough obviously to go cause physical harm is not going to be deterred by a website uh 404ing right but i don't know from a cold analytical security perspective you still deal with the low hanging fruit so again we can have to speculate why but that kind of all makes sense And it'll be interesting when do they put them back up, or is there a bigger cultural shift around,

I mean, to put it bluntly, hatred towards CEOs and leaderships of companies like this, which will be a good thing.

I mean, it's really wild because you can't like hide this stuff.

Like, as in, they are allowed to not have it on their website, but it's like the disclosure rules around corporate information make it such that you have to know who the CEOs of these publicly traded companies are.

Which is good.

Which is definitely good.

So, I don't know.

It's kind of interesting.

This is a little bit far afield.

I'll promise I'll keep it short, but like the controversy over the private jet tracking stuff, where like Elon Musk doesn't want his jet tracked, Mark Zuckerberg doesn't want his jet tracked.

Like, the people tracking them have been banned from threads and have been banned from Twitter.

It's like immediately after Mark Zuckerberg banned the tracking of his private jet on threads,

His private jet was seen at Mar-a-Lago meeting with

President Trump.

It's like there is a reason that this stuff can be tracked.

And I understand that there is, that these companies are worried about protecting their executives.

But at the same time, it's like they have these very public roles.

And so I don't know.

I think maybe there will be a push by these companies to

either beef up security or keep these things a little bit more private, but they can't really do it that much.

Yeah,

I didn't think of the link to the plane tracking.

That makes complete sense.

All right, let's take another quick break and then we'll talk about one more United Healthcare story before the subscribers only section as well.

We'll be right back after

this

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All right, and we are back with one more from Sam.

Moderators across social media struggle to contain celebrations of United Healthcare CEOs' assassination.

Again, we're back in time, sort of around the time of that other piece that we just covered.

These came in very quickly.

Thank you.

Okay.

So

I'm sure people have seen these.

Maybe they've participated in them.

It's such a wide sentiment across all social media.

Just what are some of these posts?

I almost feel stupid asking the question because it's so obvious, but we have to lay the groundwork.

What are some of these posts and what is the sentiment that people were exhibiting around this time, four days ago, as you said?

Yeah.

So,

like, immediately after the shooting,

before we even knew like who did it or we we were still kind of unclear on any kind of hint of a motivation,

people were like, I mean, the reaction generally online was good.

You know, it was like

celebratory that the CEO of

a health insurance company was shot.

So

yeah, it's this story has a lot of like elements to it.

And I think that's a result of like trying to get the story early and be like, what's happening?

Let's let's just get out there what's happening without doing like a everything we know kind of post.

But, you know, addressing just like that this is something that is happening across social media.

So yeah, the posts were generally like people were, people were like celebrating, people were saying, you know, I telling their own like horror stories about health insurance and dealing with that.

One really striking example of this was the nursing subreddit.

They are wild in there.

I think Jason was the one that pointed out that that was the mood in there.

The memes are meming in our nursing.

And then by contrast, you have lots of other big front page subreddits

trying, or you know, subreddits that were having posts that were reaching their front page,

trying to keep people from breaking the subs rules, which usually like Reddit's wider terms of use say

no celebrating or glorifying violence, something to that effect.

So moderators have to basically moderate to those rules at a minimum to keep their subs going and to keep them from getting completely banned by Reddit administration.

So, I mean, it's

I understand like the mods being like, let's chill on the celebrations because you're literally breaking the rules when you're doing this.

But also a lot of the threads that we saw getting deleted, which they're all visible on a subreddit card are undelete,

were

stuff like, I mean, I can give some examples.

I don't know how far ahead of the story I'm getting here, but

yeah, give a couple.

Yeah, some of the big threads were, you know, it was just kind of like,

can you explain why

this is a big deal?

And that was deleted.

And I think that's like a reasonable question to ask for, again, like we just said, for people outside of the US who haven't had to deal with this.

It was like a sincere question.

Yeah.

Yeah.

I mean, like, who knows, really?

But, like, people were replying to it sincerely.

And then there was like

interesting as fuck, which we've written about before, had a thread that was like United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson's final kill-death ratio lands him amongst the all-time greats.

Which, for those who don't know, is a reference, obviously, to the game Call of Duty, where you have a kill-death ratio and you kill more players and you get killed.

And there's a CEO of a health insurance company, which will reject a lot of claims.

Presumably, he would have had a pretty good one.

Yeah.

So that one was deleted, obviously, because their reason was no politics.

I don't know.

It's like,

I feel for the mods.

They're trying to tow a line that is, they're unpaid volunteers, first of all.

They're trying to toe a line that's like, we want people to talk freely in the subreddit, but we also don't want to break Reddit's rules.

There was like in Our Face Palm, which is another great subreddit, imagine this is your payback for your own policies.

That is kind of a face palm.

I don't know.

Leopards Ate My Face is a subreddit about like the meme that's,

you know, the Leopards Eating Faces party.

I didn't think they would eat my face meme.

And they took a thread down that was basically basically like

saying they won't hurt all the billionaires.

And the reasoning for that was it doesn't,

it doesn't abide by the structure of the meme or something.

I don't know.

So yeah, maybe Jason wants to talk a little bit about the Moz answers because we hit all of them up and we said, you know, hey, what's going on here?

And he got some really interesting answers, I think.

Yeah, so Sam mentioned this, but the undeleted subreddit is very interesting because the way that it works is it archives threads that have been deleted from Reddit if they have reached the top, I believe it's top 50 or top 100 of R/slash all.

So it only archives posts that are incredibly popular.

And for like the two days after the shooting, all of the posts,

almost all of them, it was like, sorry, not all of them, but like 75% of the posts were about this.

And so that just shows that the overwhelmingly, overwhelming sentiment on Reddit was,

if not valorizing this guy, then expressing frustration and empathy for what he did.

So there's that.

And then a lot of the mods were basically like:

some of these posts we are taking down because they violate Reddit's rules.

Some of these posts are being taken down by Reddit administrators because they are seeing it and taking it down.

And unfortunately, there's no real way for the public to which is which.

It's like, it's just not clear.

A lot of them were just like, we don't want to get banned by Reddit.

Like, we basically don't, we're in a tough spot and we don't know what to do.

I guess my broader thoughts on this, because Sam did the heavy lifting here, but I did talk to some of the mods and I did like, you know, I was kind of, I contributed reporting on the story, so I was looking alongside of it.

And

I understand that this is tricky and that many people are saying, like, you can't valorize a murderer and

that's bad, et cetera, et cetera.

But, comma, but, like, there's, there's a big but here.

And that's like been the tone of a lot of the conversation online for the last week is that people are fed up with the American healthcare system, especially insurance company profiteering, et cetera, et cetera.

And these are very, very real problems.

And we just went through an entire election cycle where Democrats, the left, liberals, et cetera, said, we need to listen to Donald Trump voters because they are mad.

And here's what they're mad about.

And we just had years and years of discussion about free speech online and censorship and censorship of political speech, blah, blah, blah.

And

here's political speech.

like very blatant political speech.

It's getting deleted

like systematically by companies, publicly traded companies.

Reddit is a publicly traded profiteering company, and it's like they don't want to have the conversation and they don't want to listen to the people who are mad about it.

And

I don't know.

It's like it's a tricky thing.

I understand.

It's like, it's not something that we want to like face as a society, but I don't know.

I have a really hard time squaring.

We must listen to Trump voters who are mad about trans people in bathrooms and we're mad about illegal immigrants, undocumented immigrants, et cetera, et cetera.

And then turn around and say, we can't have a conversation about health insurance in this country that kills millions and millions of people constantly.

And it's like a lot of our behind the blogs were about this last week, where we've had experiences with the healthcare system.

A lot of people have had it.

And I just think that, I don't know, I think that this is like a very interesting time, obviously.

Like, obviously it's a very interesting thing and I think that there are two other things that

were very eye-opening to me which is Ben Shapiro and the other dipshit on his uh

like right

Matt Walsh both like tried to say that these are like leftist plots celebrating whatever and they're getting shred to bits in their comments by

People who say, I'm a conservative.

This is not a conservative versus liberal issue.

This is like a class and economic and like health issue for everyone.

And so I do think it's very important.

I think that

I understand that Reddit has rules and these moderators are in a tough place.

And you don't want to condone violence necessarily or like promote violence.

But at the same time, it's like this conversation is a very important one.

And I find it very disheartening to see that a lot of it's just getting deleted.

But I don't know.

I think that's also had the Stry Sand effect where it's just leading people to talk about it more.

So, who knows?

On that,

Sam, is it the same now?

Like, is stuff still being deleted?

Has the conversation moved from

people talking about healthcare now to talking more about the suspect?

Or I know that's kind of hard to answer because you don't have

a all-seeing eye of social media, but like, has it moved on or yeah thank god um

yeah i mean i haven't i haven't like checked in on reddit in particular and if they're still deleting threads i think probably people um had like that immediate reaction and then moved on i something that i do think is interesting is

people who

I don't know how to word this, like people who don't want to have the conversation about healthcare in this country and who think that they have great health care or that they've never encountered this problem before in their lives.

They don't understand where this kind of like outrage and this betrayal is coming from.

They're doing a lot of like hand-wringing.

They want to talk about

people's reactions to a murder and not

the

reason for the reaction.

You know, it's like they want to talk about how people are glorifying violence and rooting for shootings in the streets, which is not the conversation that I've seen for the most part.

Most part, people want to talk about how healthcare is fucked and how they have had, almost everyone has had this experience.

And we now

know that the person of interest, you know, who's in this story, who we've been talking about this whole time, comes from a wealthy family

and

still

possibly struggled against the system that's very broken in this country.

And maybe wasn't this kind of like violent, vigilante leftist that a lot of these podcasters and as Jason said, dipshits want to paint this kind of like character as.

He's like a, he was probably a tech bro.

Like he was into like Peter Thiel and Elon Musk.

And we don't, obviously, we don't know all this for sure at this point.

This is all kind of with that caveat, but it's not so cut and dry left and right.

But instead of addressing that and instead of saying, oh, this is an issue that a lot of people care about and a lot of people are mad about,

people with an interest in keeping things

very black and white, left and right, like Matt Walsh and his friends

are focusing on that aspect of it and saying, oh, well, people are just like bloodthirsty and they want to see violence in the streets against innocent people,

which, you know, is not what we've seen.

Yeah.

So I just hope the conversation can remain on the issue, which is healthcare, you know, But okay.

If you are listening to the free version of the podcast, I will now play us out.

But if you are a paying 404 Media subscriber, we're going to talk about how our reporting on deep fake apps has made Congress, you know, push Apple and Google to basically sort their shit out.

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