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in 2006, the bbc faced a problem. the reboot of doctor who was doing well, and had revived interest in the original series. there was clearly a market for selling dvds with old episodes. but many old episodes were erased after broadcast, and now lost.

you know this story so far.

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it turns out that the bbc were not the only organisation to have this problem. actually, lost media is a problem affecting a whole industry. there are many large copyright corporations who desperately wish to extract a rent off parts of their back catalogue that no longer exist.

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so many lost works… many are historically significant. there is a clear demand for them, but there is, well, no supply, for they no longer exist. if scarcity is the true source of value, then there must be a great financial return in finding such scarce items. maybe infinite.

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it's incontrovertible really: the bbc exists, and it relies on a tax that is unenforceable unless the television detector van is real, and the television detector van seems to be impossible… so our idea of what is possible must be wrong. stop reading if you see a flaw here.

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it quickly became apparent that this problem could not be solved with just the bbc's own funds, but this was not a problem. the larger copyright industry was all too happy to chip in. with so much demand and only one hope for supply, the market could tolerate a very high price.

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and it turns out they placed their bets on just the right organisation. it turns out that, in 1952, the bbc had created a small side-channel within the television licensing unit that enabled minor violations of causality. a fact of course that must be concealed from the public.

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now, at this point you might think the answer is simple. the british government should simply give the bbc the power to break into people's homes and check if they have televisions. or, to simply use general taxation.

but the new conservative government knew this would end them.

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in the end, the bbc was only able to extract a tiny concession: if they could find a way to detect television ownership that never had false positives, that would never be incorrectly wielded against a good, middle-class home-owning tory voter, they could fast-track enforcement

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but as we know, it's very hard to guarantee no false positives. while this let them immediately enforce the outcome of their investigation, the time needed to investigate was still a problem, so it shouldn't be so useful, right?

this is where small causality violations come in.

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this side-channel allowed them to leak a single bit of arbitrary data backwards in time, over a span of at most a few weeks. the cost to doing so was quite high: willing participants at both ends are needed, they need physical space and some amount of time, and special equipment.

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a single bit of data means all that can be conveyed is β€œ0” or β€œ1”. or, in another interpretation, β€œno” or β€œyes”.

for the bbc's television licensing department, this single bit of data was the answer to the question: β€œafter investigation, did the person have a television?”

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in the usa, it is widely believed that cops engage in β€œparallel construction”. this is when they do blatantly illegal shit to obtain evidence, which shouldn't be admissible in court. but then, using the evidence, work backwards to find a legal way they β€œcould have” gotten it.

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what the bbc television licensing department did was essentially the same idea, but with a fun twist. they didn't use invented traditional evidence gathering to cover up surveillance… they used invented surveillance (the vans) to cover up future traditional evidence gathering.

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if someone was a difficult case who didn't immediately slip up or confess, this was no problem. they could spend weeks, or maybe months investigating them, but by leaking the outcome of the future investigation to the present, they could enforce immediately with no false positive

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now, we all know about the problems with anything adjacent to time travel. if they were stealing the outcome of a investigation from the future, and then using that information to immediately enforcing the outcome, won't that mean the investigation never ends up happening? indeed

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the second time around, they get the answer and immediately enforce the result. in the process of enforcement, they find out that, indeed, the person has a television, so there is no painful penalty for a false positive. weeks later, they send back the same answer. a neat loop.

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so far i described these people as resisting temptation. but, like anyone else who discovers a way to leak future information into the present, they of course immediately devised and implemented a scheme that would give them the option of doing insider trading, if they wanted.

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i said that they could leak one bit of data backwards in time, over a timespan of a few weeks. that sounds quite limited, but that's if you only pay the time, space and people cost once. with several people you have several bits. pay it repeatedly and the timespans can be chained

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that makes it start to sound practical. but consider: this scheme is designed for insider trading. it is a conspiracy! the number of participants must be kept small to avoid detection, and for trading on information from the far future, they need to be committed for a long time.

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well, the original insider trading conspiracy of old british men who worked in r&d was not large enough for this. it was a handful of people, in it for life for the fun of it. with regular meetings over a few decades, they could convey only a few bits of information back in time.

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but, they had just enough bits that they could retroactively bootstrap a larger conspiracy if necessary. you don't need a lot of bits to do insider trades. if you can make a successful trade, you can hire more people for your conspiracy, and now you have more bits. virtuous cycle

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so, finally, what happened in 2006? well, you can probably guess at this point what occurred in many essentially identical 2006es: the tiny conspiracy of old men tried to use their half-century-long chain of side-channels to reach back a few decades and prevent media being lost.

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Graham Sutherland / Polynomial , @gsuberland@chaos.social
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@hikari it is, sort of, a hoax. they can't somehow wirelessly detect you being tuned in - that's impossible - but for a while they did have a few vans detecting the brightness pattern changes from people's living rooms when live sports events were on, which could be used as proof of watching TV without a license.

wasn't widespread at all though, and was mostly just done to create the illusion that they could tell and prosecute you for it, to scare people into paying for a license.

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