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Summary

  • Charles Hoskinson discusses potential data privacy violations by the European Union, specifically regarding a proposed measure that could allow the collection of extensive personal search data from Google users.
  • The European Commission's proposed measures under the DMA, Article 6.11, could lead to daily data sharing of search behavior with third parties, including government agents.
  • Hoskinson compares this situation to Mao's Hundred Flowers Campaign, highlighting the dangers of surveillance capitalism where private companies collect personal data for government use.
  • He warns of the implications of soft and hard power, where individuals could face de-platforming or restrictions on their freedoms based on their data profiles.
  • The integration of Palantir into U.S. government agencies is mentioned, emphasizing the growing surveillance infrastructure involving at least 27 agencies.
  • Hoskinson raises concerns about social credit systems that could be enabled by this data collection, affecting individuals' access to services and freedoms.
  • He argues that constitutional protections may not apply to actions taken by private companies, which can restrict individuals' rights without government involvement.
  • The video emphasizes the importance of self-sovereignty, urging individuals to own their data and identity to resist oppressive systems.
  • Hoskinson advocates for cryptocurrencies as a means to maintain personal freedom and privacy against increasing surveillance.
  • He concludes by stressing the necessity of fighting for freedom of association, commerce, and expression to prevent a future where personal liberties are severely restricted.

Full Transcript

Hi, this is Charles Hoskinson broadcasting live from warm, sunny Colorado. Today is April 27th, 2026, and we're talking a little bit about some historical events because history repeats itself, or at the very least, to quote George Lucas, it rhymes. And boy, do we have enough rhyming for a poem. The European Union today—I saw a little tweet about something they're trying to sneak through. Sneaky, sneaky European Union.

Let me show you guys this right here. All right, let me move this on over. Perfect. Are you ready? Hold on to your butts.

Wow! Here we go from International Cyber Digest. By the way, I included a link in the video to the source document fact-checking this. The European Commission is about to steal your search history in one of the largest forced data grabs in the history of the open internet, and almost nobody's talking about it. The scope is staggering: every query you type, every voice and photo search, every autocomplete you accept, your language, your device, your country pinned to a three-kilometer grid, every result you saw, every link you hovered over—not even clicked, just hovered over—every click and scroll in the full chronological order of all your search sessions on Google.

What this means is that the European Union is going to know your health symptoms, your pregnancy status, whether you're gay or straight, if you like furries or dogs—who knows? They know it all: your political beliefs, your religious beliefs, your financial distress, whether you're in legal trouble or not, your addictions, if you're having an affair, and more. This is under the proposed measures for the DMA, Article 6.11. Google would be ordered to ship daily search behavior of hundreds of millions of Europeans to multiple third parties through a daily API feed.

Any approved online search engine, AI chatbots included, would get five years of access, including the government's agents, so they can make a social credit profile on people. How about that? And you might say, "Oh, come on, Charles. They can't be doing that. Nobody would be that dystopian.

" Well, if you look at the source document and the notes, they are. Where this comes from is something from Chinese history that the Europeans are embracing. Mao was a pure evil person, but very smart, and he created something called the Hundred Flowers Campaign between 1956 and 1957. He said, "Let a hundred flowers spring from the ground," and those hundred flowers would represent the intellectuals and the critics who would tell us what's not working, where they're disgruntled, and what the problems are. People were a little suspicious, but over time, they started sharing information.

Then what did Mao do? He pulled an Uno reverse card and called it the Cultural Revolution. It was purging time, and he killed two million people. All those critics were lined up and shot. Why?

Because he wanted to use the answers to identify who was with them, who was against them, who had politics they didn't agree with, and who needed to be put in the gulag. It's the Aspen of history, and the problem is the Hundred Flowers Campaign is not being done by a government anymore; it's being done by private industry. This is why it's called surveillance capitalism. Surveillance capitalism is where a third-party company that is not owned or operated by the government collects information about you from your interactions with it or its affiliates and then acts as an agent of the government to help the government decide whether you're a good actor or a bad actor and what to do with you. There's soft power and hard power.

Hard power is where they de-platform you—your YouTube account just disappears, or you can no longer access your bank account. Recent legislation in the United States is talking about DUI prevention, creating software inside your car so that you can't drive if they think you're impaired. Well, maybe freedom of transportation can just be de-platformed too. The soft power is restricting your movements, your ability to communicate, and your economic agency. Hard power is Mao—that's the death camps.

Some people, the Musks, can't really be controlled, so you have to get "Perji McPerjures." This is happening in real time. Historically, when you looked at the Stasi or the KGB or any of these other secret police, it was very expensive and time-consuming to target you. Their methodology was to make an example to create fear. That's why the Romans had crucifixion.

They nailed you to a cross—not in the basement, but up on a hill where everybody in town could see it. They'd walk by and say, "Oh boy, what happened to Matthias?" "Well, he pissed off the Romans. You better not piss them off; they'll nail you to a cross." With AI, you can go much further using surveillance capitalism and this Hundred Flowers concept of getting people to dox themselves through various means.

You can then retroactively look through, as Mao did, and AI can target every single person in the world. Everybody gets to be made an example of. Stage one is the soft power of de-platforming, and they've tested it with COVID. They've tested it with economic de-platforming, with Operation Choke Point, and now they're testing it with freedom of movement, as they did with vaccine passports. You might say, "Oh, but Charles, come on, who would do something like that?

" I'm glad you asked. We have this thing—let me see if I can spell it—Palantir. The Palantir ontology is integrating itself into the U.S. government as we speak.

Let me show you how big the octopus grows. Currently, all this stuff is being wired together to a total of at least 27 agencies—not just the scary ones, but also the ones you don't fear right now: the Department of Defense, the U.S. Army, the Air Force, the Marine Corps, U.S.

Special Operations Command, the Department of Homeland Security, ICE, HSI, HHS, the CDC, the FDA, USDA, the Federal Aviation Administration, Border Patrol, the CIA, IRS, the DOJ, the FBI, the NSA, the Social Security Administration, NASA, FEMA—27 agencies. So, everybody's getting wired into a private surveillance capitalism stack that knows everything about you, everything you do. The European Union is mandating that Google has to turn it all over to third-party APIs. Who's going to plug into it? Firms like Palantir.

And then what are they going to do with that? Turn on social credit for everybody. Flip a switch, turn on social credit, and that'll be connected to your communication, your transportation, and your money. If you say or do the wrong things according to the power structure, your bank account gets turned off, a la CBDC. Your voice is turned off—no more Gmail for you, no more YouTube, no more X, no more social media, no more TikTok.

It's out. And your car doesn't turn on, and your passport gets revoked. Let’s make it a little spicier. What if we punish people for associating with you? If Bobby over here has a score of 200 and Jimmy's score is 500, if Jimmy interacts with Bobby, sorry Jimmy, now you're at 450.

You're getting close to stuff being turned off. Better not talk to Bobby. What does that make you? It makes you the enforcer of the tyranny of the regime. You, the individual, are going to comply because if you don't, you get your bank account shut off, you can no longer drive your car, and you can no longer express your voice.

You might say, "I have constitutional protections." Where do they apply with private companies? Remember that argument? It's a private company; they can do whatever they want. Yeah, they can just shut you off.

You have no constitutional protections because it's not the government doing it; it's a third party. All your criticism, your search histories, your political affiliations, your sexual partners—all that's going to be turned over in both America and the European Union, and it's going to be entered into these giant, scary ontologies. They're going to use it to exert soft power, and then the people they can't exert it over, they can systematically harm. If you complain about harming them, what happens? You get added to the list.

Unlike the Soviet Union or the time of the Romans, it's not just one out of a hundred who gets punished. AI makes it everybody. So when someone asks you why midnight, that's why. Freedom of association, commerce, and expression—we cannot allow trusted third parties to know everything about you, control AI, control the flow of money, and control the flow of information. You need to be your own bank.

You need to own your own data. Your identity needs to be self-sovereign. And guess what? You need systems that can't be evil, that cannot comply with these types of things. It's a fight worth having.

Never in human history has so much power been given to so few, and so much capability belonged to so few. The reason constitutions exist is to restrain this behavior, and these governments have found a loophole through surveillance capitalism. They found partners in crime to help them do these types of things. The only thing we have are these protocols to push back. It's why cryptocurrencies are the most consequential technology in the history of humanity because this is the technology that prevents humanity from being put into chains by the few at the peril of the many.

So that's why midnight. It's a binding tissue that connects many different technologies together, lets you interact with the big people and the little people, and preserves your self-sovereignty and privacy. And what? You can't debate this video. You really can't because all this stuff is happening in plain sight.

You can see the documents, you can see the partnerships, you can see the billions of dollars of value being exchanged, and you can see the Snowden disclosures. They've been working towards total information awareness since DARPA had the IAO, the Information Awareness Office. Google it. Look at the logo—it's a pyramid with an eye looking at the planet. These people never go away; they just flare up like surveillance herpes.

We beat them down, we seem to have a victory, and then ten years later, they come up using a different set of boogeymanism. I didn't even mention the identity backdoors that are currently being proposed for many operating systems. They want KYC to use a computer. So not only is your freedom of movement, your freedom of speech, and your economic agency at risk, but your access to a computer could potentially be shut off if your identity is shut off. Doubt me?

Google it. Look at the legislation. They're haggling over whether open-source software should use it or not. Tell me, is iOS open source? Is Windows open source?

How many people are there? And does Android really count? Google will comply, as will Samsung—they're forced to. Are you getting it yet? If we don't have freedom of association, commerce, and expression, we have nothing, and life won't be worth living.

I don't believe some wave of robots led by an evil AI is going to kill us all in a Terminator-style scenario, but I sure as hell do believe that if we admit the status quo and stay distracted, this is the kind of stuff that's going to do us in and make life not worth living. That's why I'm still in the fight. That's why we got midnight, and that's what we fight against philosophically. You and only you should own your own identity. You and only you should be your own bank, and you and only you should own your own data.

No one should have this much power ever, under any circumstance. Thank you all for listening, and until next time, have a good day.

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