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Plutonic Rainbows

Last Picture at Westover Road

The last ABC Cinema in Britain closed in Bournemouth in early 2017, showing Back to the Future on a public vote. The building had been designed in 1937 by William Glen, the chain's regular architect, and the sign over the entrance had survived a corporate buyout by Odeon in 2000 only because the two cinemas faced each other across Westover Road and management worried about the confusion of two identical names on the same stretch. Eighty years on the same site, and the end was a film about a teenager going home to 1955.

ABC had peaked at more than four hundred cinemas. That number is hard to picture now. It meant that a Lancashire mill town the size of Burnley had two of them on the same parade, and a market town of twenty thousand people had at least one, and a seaside resort had three or four operating in parallel through the summer. The chain was a circulatory system; the films were the blood. By 1984 UK cinema admissions had collapsed from a wartime peak of 1.64 billion to 54 million, a number that looks like a misprint. Television took most of it. The package holiday took the summer. The first purpose-built multiplex opened in Milton Keynes in 1985 and finished what was left.

What disappeared with the chain was a particular institution that had no real name in English. The seaside Odeon or ABC, the kind on the esplanade at Bournemouth or Great Yarmouth or Blackpool, did not function in summer the way it did in winter. The 2,000-seat auditoriums switched from films to live variety for three months a year, with stars like the ones the working men's clubs were also booking, just on a bigger stage. The big-house variety circuit intersected the cinema circuit inside the same buildings, and the same families went to both. When cheap flights to Spain emptied the resorts, it was the cinema-as- variety-theatre that died first, and the cinema-as-cinema that followed it down a few years later.

The texture is hard to reconstruct from photographs. The smell of a British cinema in 1978 was the smell of upholstery that had absorbed forty years of tobacco smoke, mixed with the orange chemistry of Kia-Ora and the popcorn-substitute that British exhibitors used because real corn was American. There was an intermission, with a trolley pushed up the aisle. The Rank Organisation gong played before the feature, a thing that has now been turned into a YouTube nostalgia clip with comments from people younger than the clip itself. The projector was visible from your seat through the haze above the smoking section, throwing a cone of light across the ceiling that looked solid where the dust hit it. The film flickered. You could see it flicker.

Streaming does not replace this, not because the picture is worse, but because the structural conditions are wrong. The seaside cinema was an institution of bounded time. You bought a ticket for a screening that started when it started and ended when it ended, and there was nothing you could do about either. The intermission was not a pause button; it was a fact about how reels worked. You were in a room with several hundred strangers who had also paid, and the social etiquette of that room — coats off, cigarettes lit where permitted, no commentary — was negotiated over decades and is gone with the chain that hosted it. A film on a laptop is something else entirely, and it doesn't have to apologise for that, but it isn't the same kind of object.

The buildings are still there in places. Some have become churches, some are bingo halls, some are flats, and a small number have been reopened as community cinemas by people who remember the originals. The Odeon in St Albans reopened as the Odyssey in 2014, overseen by the entrepreneur James Hannaway after the chain had walked away. Six "Oscar Deutsch" Odeons from the founder's original 1930s build-out are still trading as Odeons, including Leicester Square. The hauntology of all of this is not that the cinemas closed. It's that they were replaced by something that performs the same function and delivers a structurally different experience, and a generation grew up never knowing what the previous one had been, except as a smell they vaguely associate with their grandparents' coats.

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No One Was Taking Notes

The apartment guide lived in a metal rack at the entrance of the Pathmark, between the gumball machine and a stack of free real-estate flyers nobody read. It came out monthly, with glossy back-cover ads for waterbed showrooms and an inside spread of full-page ads from the big leasing companies. You picked one up on the way out with your groceries because you were thinking about moving, or because your brother was, or because it was free and the layout was hard not to read. Then you got home and read it. Then you threw it out. There is, as far as I can tell, no archive of those guides. They were printed in the high millions across the United States from the late seventies until the late nineties and almost none survive. The culture did not have a category for them. They were not really magazines and not really classifieds, they were infrastructure.

The 1980s and early 1990s sit in a peculiar trough between two archives. They are too recent for the heritage industry, which is still mostly digesting the 1960s and seventies, and they are too early for the internet, which begins in earnest around 1995 and forgets almost nothing after that. Fifteen or twenty years of daily life fell into the gap. The objects that disappeared were the ones that everyone touched and nobody framed: the TV listings in the local paper, the hand-corrected office address book, the printed MLS book with its single grainy photograph of each house, the rolodex on the receptionist's desk, the carbon copy of a fax. The things themselves were ordinary, the practices around them were elaborate, the documentation was zero.

A recent manifesto in the TMG Journal for Media History makes the same point in academic register. The 1980s and 1990s have been called the wonder years of new media, the authors note, without receiving anything like the attention paid to the radio, the newspaper, or television itself in earlier decades. The cable rollouts, Minitel, teletext, the first commercial television in countries like the Netherlands (allowed only from 1989), the fax boom, the answerphone, the proliferation of 1-900 hotlines: each has a Wikipedia stub and almost no monograph.

The losses are most acute where they are most boring. Cable TV between 1983 and 1992 looked a certain way. There was a specific palette of on-screen graphics, a specific style of voiceover for local-news headlines, a particular hum from the set during the seconds before a station identification. None of that was preserved except by accident. A handful of collectors taped overnight runs on Betamax or VHS, then died, or moved house, and the tapes ended up in skips. The Reader's Digest condensed novels on the shelf are indestructible by comparison. They survived because they were objects somebody once paid for and could not bring themselves to throw out. The tapes survived only where somebody decided, against the grain of every reasonable storage decision, to keep them.

Mixtapes followed the same logic. A teenager in 1987 recorded the American Top 40 off the radio with a finger on the pause button to clip Casey Kasem's voiceover out. Six months later, the same cassette went under the head of the same deck and got overwritten with the new chart. The recording practice was universal, the recordings were ephemeral by design. What was lost was not the music, which the labels preserved, but the personal sequence: the order in which a particular twelve-year-old in Wolverhampton wanted to hear "Living on a Prayer" followed by "Notorious" followed by an ad for the local Wimpy. That was a document of a kind. Nobody catalogued it because nobody knew it was one.

Glamour Shots became a mall fixture across North America in the late eighties and peaked in the early nineties. The signature look (soft focus, off-shoulder boa, hair backlit into a halo, eyeliner sharp enough to slice) is now read entirely as kitsch, but at the time it was the gift you gave your mother for her fiftieth. The studios are mostly gone. The prints survive in shoeboxes. The makeup chairs and backdrops and feathered shawls and the specific medium-format cameras that the operators used are not, as far as I can find, preserved in any museum collection.

The pattern repeats. Patrick Nagel prints in the dentist's waiting room. The specific yellow of a 1985 Pages Jaunes. The look of a 976 phone-line ad on a city bus shelter at 3am. The fold-out coupon book from a regional Sunday paper. The sponsorship bumper between a Magnum P.I. commercial break and the show resuming. The standard fax cover sheet with the "To/From/Re/Pages" grid that every office secretary had photocopied a thousand times from the original somebody typed up in 1986. None of it lived in a category anybody was paid to maintain.

Nobody catalogued any of this because the period felt aggressively present-tense. The eighties thought of themselves as the cleanup after the seventies, the prelude to whatever computers were going to do. The early nineties thought of themselves as the cleanup after the eighties. Everybody was busy being modern. The idea that someone would, in 2026, want to know the exact phrasing of a regional tile-shop voiceover from 1989 would have struck anybody alive at the time as a category error.

Nostalgia is what you do when the object is gone and the practice is gone and even the reference room that might have helped you reconstruct the practice has been closed for budget reasons. The closest thing the period has to an archive is the memory of the people who were there, which is itself a decaying medium, and the occasional Betamax that turns up in an estate sale and gets uploaded to YouTube where it sits at four hundred views.

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The Exploit Had Docstrings

Google's Threat Intelligence Group announced on Monday that it had spotted, and shut down, what it considers the first zero-day exploit in the wild built with the help of a large language model. The target was a popular open-source system-administration tool with web access. The exploit would have bypassed two-factor authentication and primed a mass campaign run by a known cybercrime group. GTIG caught it before the attack went live.

What I keep circling back to is how they spotted it. The attacker's Python wasn't subtle. It was wrapped in long explanatory docstrings of the kind no human attacker writes into a payload, structured like a textbook example, and decorated with a CVSS score that, on inspection, was fabricated. The model had hallucinated a severity rating and left it in the source like a confident schoolboy filling in a form. John Hultquist, GTIG's chief analyst, told reporters the team had been waiting for evidence of this kind of escalation for a long time. The tells gave it away.

Google is careful to note its own Gemini model doesn't appear to have been the one used. CNBC's reporting names a model called OpenClaw being adopted by criminal groups, which sits in the underground tier of LLMs that strip refusal training out of otherwise familiar architectures. North Korea, per Forbes, was described by Hultquist as an early adopter, moving from phishing-with-AI into something more like vulnerability-discovery-with-AI. The Verge framed it as the moment a long-predicted threat finally produced evidence rather than speculation.

The story is being told two ways in the press, and both are true. One framing is the bad news: a meaningful capability threshold has been crossed, the offensive use of LLMs is no longer a thought experiment, and the cost curve for novel exploit discovery has shifted in the attacker's favour. The other framing is the good news: a defender with model introspection caught the artefact early, and the very thing that made the exploit possible (an LLM doing the writing) also made it visibly LLM-shaped enough to be flagged.

That second framing is what interests me. The same week, the US administration is pushing harder on pre-deployment safety testing for frontier models, an about-face I wrote about a few days ago. The argument that offensive AI capabilities should be developed and studied inside controlled environments, so that defenders see them first, isn't an abstract one any more. GTIG just demonstrated the workflow in public.

The bit I can't quite shake is the docstrings. There's something almost endearing about a piece of weaponised code that writes its own footnotes. It's the LLM's tell, the same way certain transition phrases give away machine-generated prose. For now those tells are useful, they're how this particular attack got caught. The version of this story I'm nervous about is the one a year from now, when the operators have learned to strip the docstrings before shipping.

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Four Novels Per Volume

The shelf of burgundy hardbacks in my aunt's spare bedroom was not a library. It was a quarterly subscription that had been left running for two decades. Each volume held four condensed novels, gold-stamped along the spine in a colour sequence so reliable that the row alphabetised itself by season, not by author. The dust jackets had paintings on them that nobody had been asked to feel strongly about: a yacht in heavy weather, a woman in profile against a window, a country house with one lit room. The Reader's Digest art department commissioned them by the dozen and the freelancers turned them in like a weekly newspaper turns in crosswords.

Reader's Digest UK announced its closure earlier this year, after eighty-six years. The magazine and the book division went together. The Condensed Books series itself had been quietly running since 1950 in the States and arrived here soon after, was rebranded Select Editions in 1997 when the word "condensed" started sounding like an insult, and kept appearing in subscriber hallways every three months for another quarter-century after that.

What dies with the imprint isn't the books, which are indestructible. Britain's charity shops are paved with them. The Oxfam in any market town will have a wall of burgundy, priced at fifty pence, untouched. The books outlast the company that produced them by a margin that gets longer every year. They were built to last the way 1970s flatpack wasn't, proper boards, sewn signatures, headbands, ribbons. A subscription object engineered for one read and then a lifetime of dust accrual.

The condensing was the thing. An editor took a Wilbur Smith or a James Michener or a Dick Francis and cut it substantially, supposedly without the reader noticing. Arthur Hailey said, late in his life, that he thought his novels were improved by the process. That is either the most generous remark a popular novelist has ever made or a quietly devastating one. Either way it describes a literary culture that took for granted the right to file off a story's edges to make it fit between two boards alongside three others. The cuts were professional, the prose smoothed where the joins showed, and the reader at home in Stockport or Ballymena got four bestsellers for the price of a subscription and a small surrender of the original sentence.

Frederick Forsyth, Helen MacInnes, Dorothy Gilman, Herman Wouk, Mary Higgins Clark, Lee Child eventually. The roll-call is a map of middlebrow reading from the postwar welfare-state library boom through the airport-bookshop nineties. None of them was a Booker shortlist; all of them sold in numbers that would now look like fantasy. The Condensed Books volume was the way that fiction reached the houses where there was no second living room and no specific appetite for "literature" as a category, only an evening and a chair and the sense that one ought to be reading something.

The shelves still hold those volumes. The company that put them there has stopped. The interesting hauntological move is not that the books survive, it's that they survive without anyone replacing them. The subscription model that filled those shelves at one a quarter has no successor. The next generation of those same houses has e-readers, or doesn't read, or reads in fragments on a screen that does not stack into a colour-coded year. What's missing from a modern hallway is not the books. It's the quiet expectation that a hardback would arrive in the post, unbidden, four times a year, because somebody once filled in a card.

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Three Stickers Deep

Pull an old rental copy of an 80s horror film off a charity-shop shelf and the cover art is almost incidental. The illustration, some hand-painted ghoul reaching out of a doorway, is partly obscured by a green circle reading HORROR. The green circle itself is half-peeled, and underneath you can see the corner of an earlier orange one that read 18. Above both, on the spine, a faded barcode label from a chain that closed in 1994, with a ballpoint number written across the top in someone's careful hand. And then a brittle adhesive square, mostly removed, saying PLEASE REWIND BEFORE RETURNING. The cover is no longer the cover. The cover is whatever the rental shop did to it across eight years of weekend trade.

That accumulation is what designers now reproduce on purpose.

You can see it most clearly in horror-adjacent merch, in boutique vinyl reissues of synth-soundtrack scores, in the way boutique horror streamers grade their title cards to look like the third tape down a stack at a 1992 high-street rental shop. The aesthetic vocabulary, the green genre dot, the distressed barcode, the half-removed instructional label, the typewritten member-number sticker, is now applied to objects where no rental shop ever touched them. A film that streams from a CDN gets cover art designed to look like it survived a shop that closed before broadband. The damage is the appeal. Authenticity, here, means proof of institutional handling.

What's odd is that the people who applied those stickers weren't trying to make anything. They were trying to manage inventory. The green HORROR dot was a wayfinding aid, so the counter staff could find the shelf without reading the title. The barcode label was for the till. The REWIND notice was an attempt to discipline customers who routinely returned tapes in whatever state the last viewing had left them. Every adhesive layer had a job. Together they constituted a kind of involuntary archive, every tape carrying a record of which shop owned it, when, what category it was filed under, who had borrowed it, what the shop staff thought you needed to be told. The cover painting, the one some art director in Soho had been paid to commission, was the substrate. The stickers were the actual document.

Nobody who worked the counter at a Saturday rental shop in a provincial parade thought of themselves as making graphic design. They were sticking labels on plastic. The labels are now what designers reach for when they want to communicate a particular register of cheap, dangerous, and slightly contraband. The contraband part matters. Rental-shop horror existed in a kind of legal grey, all those video nasties moving through high street shops that were technically retail businesses while the DPP tried to prosecute the distributors. The half-removed BBFC 18 sticker on an 80s splatter tape is a record of an actual culture war. Reproducing that sticker on a 2024 t-shirt is a costume of that war, worn by people who weren't there.

Which is fine. Costumes are how culture works. The thing I notice is that the costume requires the original to be roughly illegible. If the BBFC notice were perfectly preserved, if the HORROR dot were freshly stuck on with no peeling at the corners, the look wouldn't work. The aesthetic depends on the sense that something has been mostly removed, that you are reading a surface across which institutional time has run. A clean sticker is just a sticker. A sticker that someone tried to take off in 1991 and gave up halfway through is a fossil.

The original tapes are mostly gone now. The shops are gone. What survives is the surface, the layered, scratched, partially peeled surface, and the surface is what designers found worth keeping. Not the films. Not the art. The accumulated evidence of having been handled by a small business that no longer exists.

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Mugler Directed Too Funky

The bustier came first. Thierry Mugler showed it at the Spring 1992 ready-to-wear collection he called Les Cowboys, a Harley-Davidson chassis collapsed into something a body could wear: tank, headlamp, handlebar moustaches of chrome at the shoulder, leather and rubber where a bike would have steel. The FIT Fashion History timeline catalogues it under his haute couture-adjacent showpieces; the academic case study at City Tech makes the point that Mugler rode motorbikes himself, and the sculptural logic of the corset wasn't drawn from couture so much as from the silhouette of the thing he commuted on.

What turned it from a runway piece into a generation's reference image was the second life it got that summer. George Michael needed a video for Too Funky. Mugler agreed to costume it, then ended up directing it as well, which is a sentence I have to type slowly to believe. The cast list reads like a casting sheet smuggled out of a Paris atelier: Linda Evangelista, Tyra Banks, Nadja Auermann, Estelle Hallyday, Eva Herzigová, with Julie Newmar and Rossy de Palma in the actress slots. Emma Sjöberg got the bustier. She wore it down the catwalk inside the video, with Mugler himself visible at the side of the frame in a director's chair, calling shots.

The original plan was different. Michael had wanted the Big Five, Linda, Naomi, Christy, Cindy, Tatjana, but Mugler argued for newer faces and the lineup got rebuilt. Linda stayed. Everyone else turned over. This is the small fact I keep returning to, because it suggests the video was already being treated as a fashion-house production with casting authority sitting on the designer's side of the table, not the label's. Michael, by all accounts, was content to direct from the music side and let Mugler handle what the camera saw.

The afterlife is busier than the runway. Beyoncé wore a Mugler-rebuilt version of the bustier in promotional imagery around I Am... Sasha Fierce, and the Met's Costume Institute included the original in its 2008 Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy show. The garment has been read since as a campy prefiguration of cyborg couture, of the Cirque d'Hiver chrome bodysuit three years later, and of every subsequent attempt to put aerospace or automotive construction on a human torso.

What I want to mark is the cross-medium routing. A couturier showed a motorcycle as a bustier in March, costumed a pop video in May or June, directed it himself, and put the same garment on a runway inside the video, on a different model, in a different city. That round trip from atelier to MTV in under a season is the kind of thing the rest of the 90s spent trying to imitate, badly, with brand-deal pop videos that did none of the choreography Mugler did instinctively. The bustier is the artefact most people remember; the video is the route by which they remember it.

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Norwich Had a Knight

From October 1970 until March 1988, Anglia Television opened each transmission day by pointing a camera at a silver-gilt model of a knight on horseback, sat on a turntable, rotating slowly under even studio lighting while an arrangement of Handel's Water Music played. The arrangement was by Malcolm Sargent. The model was a real trophy, originally commissioned by a Dutch firm, then bought by Anglia's chairman Lord Townshend. It had been based on a planned statue of Edward the Black Prince that was never built. So the ident was a piece of unbuilt fourteenth-century commemoration, repurposed as the herald of Sale of the Century and the regional news from Norwich. Nothing about that arrangement is rational, and that is the interesting part, because ITV in 1959 was a federation. A spread of regional companies, each holding a franchise, each running its own studios, each expected to make and broadcast its own programmes alongside a shared spine of national content. The BBC had pretended for a generation that Britain spoke with one voice; ITV was the admission that it did not. Granada had Manchester and the north, ATV had the Midlands, Tyne Tees had Newcastle, and Anglia had Norfolk, Suffolk, Essex, Cambridgeshire, and a clutch of counties beyond. The model was deliberately devolved. The idents were the visible face of that devolution.

What I find strange, looking back at it, is how seriously each region took the symbolic stakes. Tyne Tees stacked the letters of its name into a three-bar logo that read like a council crest. Granada gave itself a sober, modernist arrow. Anglia went further: a silver knight, in plate armour, holding a pennon, turning silently in front of you for the entire length of a Handel arrangement before any human face appeared. It was not a logo. It was a heraldic claim. The region had decided that the appropriate way to introduce itself, every weeknight at five-fifty, was to assert that it had a past worth riding through.

And the past it was claiming had nothing to do with East Anglia. The Black Prince was the heir of Edward III, his campaigns conducted mostly in Aquitaine and Castile. The trophy was Dutch in manufacture. Norwich was reaching for any medieval signifier it could find, because what mattered was the gesture, not the provenance. The knight said: we are not a suburb of London, we are a place with weight. The fact that the weight was borrowed was not the point.

This is, I think, what people miss about the regional ITV era when they get nostalgic for it. It was not authentic in any deep folkloric sense. It was a federation of mid-century boards of directors who had decided that television needed to feel rooted, and who reached for whatever heraldry, mottos, or county-council aesthetics they could borrow to perform that rootedness on screen. The performance worked because everyone participated. You watched the knight turn, and you accepted that you were in the East of England now, and that whatever followed had been chosen by people who lived nearer to you than to Television Centre.

That contract collapsed in March 1988. Lambie-Nairn redesigned Anglia's on-screen identity around a CG flag, kept the heraldic pendant but lost the knight, and over the following fifteen years the regions were merged, rebranded, and eventually subsumed into ITV plc. The trophy itself was displayed at Anglia House in Norwich, then loaned to the Museum of Norwich, then returned. There is no longer a five-fifty moment when the camera lingers on a rotating statue. There is barely a regional moment at all. The public information film grammar that surrounded the knight, the threat letters, the detector van adverts, the licence fee voiceovers, has thinned out into something more centralised and less strange.

What survives is the recording. You can watch the 1971 ident on YouTube, in colour, for the full length, and the thing that strikes me is how unhurried it is. Nearly forty seconds before the announcer speaks. A federation could afford that pace because it had nothing else to prove that night. The knight was the proof.

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What Voluntary Means in Brussels

The European Commission said on Monday that OpenAI had offered to give it access to a new "cyber" model for pre-deployment review, and that Anthropic, after four or five meetings, had not agreed to the same arrangement for the model it calls Mythos. The story was reported within a few hours by Reuters and CNBC, both quoting the Commission spokesperson Thomas Regnier. The framing on both sides was cordial. Talks are ongoing. Nothing has broken down. It is the kind of language a regulator uses when it does not actually have a stick.

That is the part worth dwelling on. The AI Act is in force. The General-Purpose AI Code of Practice is in force. The Commission has named a model that it wants to inspect before deployment, and the company that built it has politely declined to schedule the inspection. There is no provision in the current enforcement framework that lets Brussels compel the access it is asking for. The whole regime, at this stage, runs on the willingness of American labs to hand over their weights, their evaluations, and sometimes their pre-release prompts to a foreign regulator who has no domestic frontier model of its own to apply the same rules to in return.

OpenAI's calculus is easy to read. Cooperating builds goodwill in the market that has hosted the most aggressive non-Chinese AI regulator on the planet, and it costs nothing OpenAI was not going to spend on red-teaming anyway. The cyber-capability evaluations the Commission wants overlap heavily with the work the UK AI Safety Institute has been running since late 2023 and the US AI Safety Institute since 2024. Sharing them with a third regulator is a diplomatic gesture priced into the cost of doing business.

Anthropic's calculus is harder to read from the outside, and the absence of an on-the-record reason is itself the interesting signal. The company has been publicly enthusiastic about pre-deployment testing in the United States; I wrote about its shift from hands-off to pre-deployment only a few days ago. To accept that framework at home and decline it in Europe is a position that requires a reason, and the absence of one in the Commission's statement is exactly the gap where the structural problem lives.

Maybe Mythos is closer to release than is publicly understood, and an EU evaluation cycle would slip the launch. Maybe the Commission is asking for something more invasive than its American counterparts ask for, and Anthropic is testing whether "voluntary" really is voluntary. Maybe the company has concluded that the AI Act will be re-scoped in the next twelve months and that early cooperation locks in a baseline they would rather not set. Any of these would be a rational reason to wait, and any of them exposes the same thing about the regime: it is enforceable exactly to the degree that the regulated party finds enforcement convenient.

Europe has staked a great deal on being the place where the rules are written first and the consequences come later. The first half of that bet has paid out. The second half assumes that companies without a European competitor breathing down their neck will turn up to the appointments they have been invited to. One of them has. One of them has not. The next eighteen months will tell us which posture the rest of the industry copies. My suspicion is that it will be whichever one carries the smaller bill.

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Calibrated to Frighten

No British prosecution has ever been secured on the basis of a TV detector van alone. Not in 1952, when the GPO first sent the vans out on behalf of the BBC. Not in the 1970s, when the public information films were at their most lurid. Not since. The National Audit Office's 2015 review of licence fee collection describes the vans as the BBC's final "detection and enforcement" option, without ever quantifying a contribution to revenue beyond the threat they imply. Courts have not admitted detection-van evidence as sufficient for conviction, and the BBC has not tried to make them.

The physics was real, though. An analogue television set's tuner needed a local oscillator running a few megahertz above whatever channel you were watching. The oscillator leaked a faint RF signature in the 45 to 75 megahertz range, and a sensitive receiver in a van outside could pick it up and, in theory, work out which channel a given house was tuned to. The vans had directional antennas on the roof and the operators had headsets, and the whole apparatus was sufficiently plausible that the public information film could show one rolling slowly down a suburban street while a stern narrator read out your postcode.

What the films left out is that knowing somebody is watching is not the same as proving it in a magistrate's court. You also have to convince the magistrate that the leakage signature is yours, not your neighbour's. You have to convince them that the operator's headset reading is a valid form of evidence. You have to convince them that the van was where the operator said it was. The BBC's legal team understood this from the start, which is why they preferred the cheaper route: a letter through the door saying we know.

The letter is the part that survives. The vans are mostly gone. The serious residential sweeps appear to have wound down around the digital switchover, by which point a digital tuner did not leak the same RF signature, and a tablet or laptop did not have a tuner at all. But the threat-letter design has been preserved with care: red and black, the same severe typography, the same paragraph structure that opens with your address and closes with the words officer will visit. The letters cost very little. The deterrent effect is the entire product.

There is a strange honesty in admitting that. Most enforcement regimes pretend the equipment works. The TV licence regime, read through the National Audit Office report, more or less concedes that the vans are theatre. A 2020 LessWrong post that pulled actual warrant applications found one where the "detection equipment", on inspection, was just a camera pointed through the front window. The author noted dryly that the warrant itself called it a camera further down.

What I find hauntological about this is the time-shift. The vans were calibrated to a country where everyone watched terrestrial television at predictable hours on a set built around a 45 MHz local oscillator. That country has been gone for fifteen years. The infrastructure that enforced it is mostly gone too. The letters keep arriving on the same schedule because the deterrent was never the technology. It was the willingness to keep sending the letter. The country changed; the envelope didn't.

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Day-of-Year, Still Compiled

Somewhere on a network most people forgot existed, a weekly text file was compiled and distributed on the fifth of May this year. It was called NODELIST.125. The number after the dot is the day-of-year, the Julian day count Tom Jennings reached for in 1984 because he needed a way to version a plain-text roster that would update every week without breaking anything that parsed the name. The roster had two entries on it then. Jennings and John Madrill, Fido #1 and Fido #2. The early copies were typed on paper.

The format that built around those two entries is still the format in use. FTS-0005 codified it: a fixed-length header, a list of zone-net-node lines, simple Cnn/Ann/Dnn nodediff commands so a weekly subscriber only had to download the changes since last week. Compressed in ARC at first and later ZIP, with ARJ, LZH, and RAR also seen in the wild as archive fashions shifted. The contents moved through a dozen generations of the modems that were supposed to read them. The nodelist team still collates submissions from each zone and pushes out the diff.

NodeHist, a search index hosted on a Ukrainian server, holds 6,943 weekly nodelists at the time of writing. The earliest is 3 October 1986. The most recent is 5 May 2026. That last figure is what stops me when I think about it. Most of the protocols I remember from the 1990s died with the things they connected. The NODELIST kept going.

Part of what kept it going is that nothing else does what it does. A FidoNet node is identified by a four-part address (zone, net, node, point) that only resolves because the nodelist tells every other node where to send mail and how to reach it. Strip the nodelist away and the addressing collapses into noise. The list is the network's namespace. There is no DNS, no fallback. You are in the file or you do not exist.

The other reason it kept going is that the people who run it never stopped. They are not running it as nostalgia. They are running it because they still use the thing. Mail is moving through FidoNet right now, slowly, mostly between operators who have been there since the Reagan administration but also occasionally between someone who found a sysop's number in a back issue of 2600 and decided to try. The mail moves because the nodelist still tells the software where the recipient lives. This is the same logic that made the modem handshake sound outlast the modems: the protocol survives by being the thing that actually does the work.

It does feel like a haunting, in the strict sense Fisher meant. The format is a future that was supposed to scale and didn't. By the time FidoNet's traffic peaked in the mid-1990s, the architecture it pioneered (store-and-forward, decentralised governance, a trust-on-first-contact addressing scheme) was already being absorbed into the early commercial internet without attribution. Tom Jennings had spent a decade building a community on top of a plain-text directory and a 1200-baud modem. The internet took his ideas and forgot his protocols. The protocols, very politely, refused to leave.

I think of the nodelist as the last published artefact of a network that has stopped expecting to grow. The day-of-year number will tick up to 132 next week, and the format Tom Jennings typed by hand will get its 6,944th weekly issue. Counting forward.

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