Model Comparison 100% sign agreement
Model Editorial Structural Class Conf SETL Theme
claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 +0.39 +0.31 Moderate positive 0.23 0.11 Free Expression & Due Process
@cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite +0.50 ND Moderate positive 0.80 0.00 Freedom of Expression
@cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite +0.50 ND Moderate positive 0.80 0.00 Free Speech Technology
deepseek/deepseek-v3.2-20251201 +0.32 +0.15 Moderate positive 0.09 0.52 Free Expression
claude-haiku-4-5 lite +0.75 ND Strong positive 0.80 0.00 Legal freedom defense
meta-llama/llama-3.3-70b-instruct:free ND ND
Section claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 @cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite @cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite deepseek/deepseek-v3.2-20251201 claude-haiku-4-5 lite meta-llama/llama-3.3-70b-instruct:free
Preamble 0.36 ND ND 0.40 ND ND
Article 1 0.24 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 2 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 3 0.30 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 4 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 5 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 6 0.24 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 7 0.36 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 8 ND ND ND 0.30 ND ND
Article 9 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 10 0.42 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 11 0.30 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 12 0.48 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 13 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 14 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 15 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 16 0.30 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 17 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 18 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 19 0.64 ND ND 0.67 ND ND
Article 20 ND ND ND 0.45 ND ND
Article 21 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 22 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 23 0.24 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 24 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 25 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 26 0.30 ND ND 0.15 ND ND
Article 27 ND ND ND 0.30 ND ND
Article 28 0.24 ND ND ND ND ND
Article 29 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 30 0.54 ND ND ND ND ND
+0.39 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea (arstechnica.com S:+0.31 )
1587 points by Brajeshwar 126 days ago | 632 comments on HN | Moderate positive Contested Editorial · v3.7 · 2026-02-28 10:31:03 0
Summary Free Expression & Due Process Advocates
Ars Technica reports on a lawsuit filed by lock company Proven Industries against YouTuber Trevor McNally for posting a video demonstrating how to bypass one of their products. The article strongly advocates for McNally's free expression rights to share security information and critiques Proven's legal action as an illegitimate abuse of process, particularly given the CEO's criminal history and documented pattern of intimidation. The coverage emphasizes that lock-picking videos remain legal and that corporate suppression of such information contradicts principles of fair legal process and due process protection.
Article Heatmap
Preamble: +0.36 — Preamble P Article 1: +0.24 — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: ND — Non-Discrimination Article 2: No Data — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: +0.30 — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: ND — No Slavery Article 4: No Data — No Slavery 4 Article 5: ND — No Torture Article 5: No Data — No Torture 5 Article 6: +0.24 — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: +0.36 — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: ND — Right to Remedy Article 8: No Data — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: +0.42 — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: +0.30 — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.48 — Privacy 12 Article 13: ND — Freedom of Movement Article 13: No Data — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: ND — Nationality Article 15: No Data — Nationality 15 Article 16: +0.30 — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: ND — Property Article 17: No Data — Property 17 Article 18: ND — Freedom of Thought Article 18: No Data — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.64 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: ND — Assembly & Association Article 20: No Data — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: ND — Political Participation Article 21: No Data — Political Participation 21 Article 22: ND — Social Security Article 22: No Data — Social Security 22 Article 23: +0.24 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: ND — Rest & Leisure Article 24: No Data — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: ND — Standard of Living Article 25: No Data — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.30 — Education 26 Article 27: ND — Cultural Participation Article 27: No Data — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: +0.24 — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: ND — Duties to Community Article 29: No Data — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: +0.54 — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Editorial Mean +0.39 Structural Mean +0.31
Weighted Mean +0.39 Unweighted Mean +0.35
Max +0.64 Article 19 Min +0.24 Article 1
Signal 14 No Data 17
Volatility 0.12 (Medium)
Negative 0 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4
SETL +0.11 Editorial-dominant
FW Ratio 58% 36 facts · 26 inferences
Evidence 23% coverage
2H 7M 5L 17 ND
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.30 (2 articles) Security: 0.30 (1 articles) Legal: 0.33 (4 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.48 (1 articles) Personal: 0.30 (1 articles) Expression: 0.64 (1 articles) Economic & Social: 0.24 (1 articles) Cultural: 0.30 (1 articles) Order & Duties: 0.39 (2 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 30 replies
catlikesshrimp 2025-10-27 13:32 UTC link
I am concerned about the public reacting aggressively agaisnt the lock company owner amd his family. The guy is definitely a toxic bully, but he was indeed violently harrassed by filing a lawsuit, however unjust it was.

The correct support for a just cause must have been constructive: providing financial support for the defendant, public manifestation campaign, professional lobbying, etc

Although this time I agree with the defendant cause, the response by the public was as toxic bullying as the plaintiff, only stronger.

mothballed 2025-10-27 15:01 UTC link
This guy shims a $100+ lock in 10 seconds with a liquid death can, all without speaking in the video, just replays and then destroyed their claims and GTFO. Absolutely masterful.
ProllyInfamous 2025-10-27 15:30 UTC link
Back in 2007, I published the first YouTube bypass of the Master Lock #175 (very common 4-digit code lock), using a paperclip.

After the video reached 1.5M views (over a couple years), the video was eventually demonetized (no official reason given). I suspect there was a similarly-frivolous DMCA / claim, but at that point in my life I didn't have any money (was worth negative) so I just accepted YouTube's ruling.

Eventually shut down the account, not wanting to help thieves bypass one of the most-common utility locks around — but definitely am in a position now where I understand that videos like mine and McNally's force manufacturers to actually improve their locks' securities/mechanisms.

It is lovely now to see that the tolerances on the #175 have been tightened enough that a paperclip no longer defeats the lock (at least non-destructively); but thin high-tensile picks still do the trick (of bypassing the lock) via the exact same mechanism.

Locks keep honest people honest, but to claim Master's products high security is inherently dishonest (e.g. in their advertising). Thievery is about ease of opportunity; if I were stealing from a jobsite with multiple lockboxes, the ones with Master locks would be attacked first (particularly wafer cylinders).

c420 2025-10-27 15:44 UTC link
https://youtu.be/qL_MeobAp5s?t=1487

For those interested in the actual case, here's some deeper coverage of this bruhaha including how Lee may have perjured himself during deposition.

pcthrowaway 2025-10-27 15:48 UTC link
Lock-makers should start including RFID and a software key checking mechanism, then sharing the key would be illegal
hinata08 2025-10-27 17:11 UTC link
The internet : sees thoughts challenging facts

Someone : “Sucks to see how many people take everything they see online for face value,” one Proven employee wrote. “Sounds like a bunch of liberals lol.”

The company : Proven also had its lawyers file “multiple” DMCA takedown notices against the McNally video, claiming that its use of Proven’s promo video was copyright infringement.

When did facts and enlightenment started to be for "liberals lol" ?

Freedom of speech based on facts should be universal.

jwr 2025-10-27 18:15 UTC link
If you don't know him already, I highly recommend videos by LockPickingLawyer — he routinely destroys bogus claims of various companies within seconds. It's quite entertaining to see how little security you actually get from most locks.

I wonder if anybody tried suing him…

tuetuopay 2025-10-27 18:36 UTC link
The most absurd thing is the original video response from the company was good, and with a very compelling argument: their customers never saw shimming in the field. Their user base don't need shimming resistance: security needs to be adequate, not perfect. And they follow-up by presenting options about people requiring the lock to be shim-proof.

Granted, in this day and age, it's a disgrace to still make locks that can be shimmed. Especially when the shim-proof alternatives they show just have an additional notch to catch the shim.

robotnikman 2025-10-27 18:55 UTC link
I wonder how many stories like this are caused simply because a corporate lawyer is looking for some work to do, and maybe to meet some kind of internal KPI.
jimbokun 2025-10-27 18:58 UTC link
> Under questioning, however, one of Proven’s employees admitted that he had been able to duplicate McNally’s technique, leading to the question from McNally’s lawyer: “When you did it yourself, did it occur to you for one moment that maybe the best thing to do, instead of file a lawsuit, was to fix [the lock]?”

Sometimes a single question tells you how the entire case is going to go.

rdtsc 2025-10-27 19:18 UTC link
> On July 7, the company dismissed the lawsuit against McNally instead.

> Proven also made a highly unusual request: Would the judge please seal almost the entire court record—including the request to seal?

Tough at first then running away with the tail between their legs. Typical bullying behavior.

> but Proven complained about a “pattern of intimidation and harassment by individuals influenced by Defendant McNally’s content.”

They have to know it's generated by their own lawsuit and how they approached it, right? They can't be that oblivious to turn around and say "Judge, look at all the craziness this generated, we just have to seal the records!". It's like an ice-cream cone that licks itself.

> the case became a classic example of the Streisand Effect, in which the attempt to censor information can instead call attention to it.

A constant reminder to keep the people who don't know what they are doing (including the owners of the company!) from the social media.

tptacek 2025-10-27 22:04 UTC link
dekhn 2025-10-27 23:34 UTC link
I once worked for a company that kept its passwords locked in a safe. One day, all other copies of the password were lost, and they needed it, but the safe's key could not be found.

They expensed a sledgehammer and obtained the password through physical modification of the safe using a careful application of force. Some employees complained that meant the safe wasn't... well, safe.

The security team replied "Working as Intended" - no safe is truly safe, it's just designed to slow down an attacker. At that moment, I was enlightened.

croes 2025-10-27 23:58 UTC link
> Lee’s partner and his mother both “received harassing messages through Facebook Messenger,” while other messages targeted Lee’s son, saying things like “I would kill your f—ing n—– child” and calling him a “racemixing pussy.”

Some people always go too far, undermining the good cause of the others

anitil 2025-10-28 00:46 UTC link
If anyone is interested in the legal side, I'd also recommend 'Runkle of the Bailey' who has a series on this saga but with a focus on the legal shenanigans [0]

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y3WVme9LAcQ&list=PLo0bMOObfk...

hufdr 2025-10-28 07:16 UTC link
If a company’s first reaction to a flaw is to sue instead of fix it, the problem probably goes beyond the lock itself. A real security company would appreciate someone pointing out a weakness rather than trying to take the video down. That kind of openness would actually make people trust them more.
pkphilip 2025-10-28 08:20 UTC link
One of my favourite lock pickers is Marc Tobias. He was also sued by a number of lock companies.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NadPAE6BDbA

It is interesting to see that these companies still don't know about the Streisand Effect or they choose to think that it won't happen to them.

Azkron 2025-10-28 08:44 UTC link
This reminds me of the CEO of a cyber security company that challenged Anonimous https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HBGary. If you work for any kind of security company, do not ever ever ever challenge any kind penetration specialist. Everything is hackable, it is only a matter of cost vs reward, but when you challenge someone that goes out of the window.
simonw 2025-10-28 09:32 UTC link
This reminded me of Matt Blaze's work on physical lock security back in 2003. He found a method of deriving the "master key" for a building (one key that opens all locks) from a single example: https://www.mattblaze.org/masterkey.html

When he published about this he was bombarded with messages from locksmiths complaining that they all knew about this and kept it secret for a reason! https://www.mattblaze.org/papers/kiss.html

It was a fascinating clash between computer security principles - disclose vulnerabilities - and physical locksmith culture, which was all about trade secrets.

sebstefan 2025-10-29 08:56 UTC link
The entire field of locksmithing has a failing culture around security. They still rely on security by obscurity, they sue attackers, and they never improve
tyleo 2025-10-27 14:02 UTC link
You’re getting downvoted which is unfortunate because I think you make a worthwhile point.

Emotionally I disagree with you. It feels like a bully is getting what a bully deserves. Logically, I think you are right though. Crowds just aren’t equipped to handle these situations. There are cases where the wisdom of the crowd is correct, but there are many more where it multiplies harms.

The underlying problem is that it never feels like justice is being served. Another comment mentions that there should be harsher punishment for false DMCAs. I don’t think the “wisdom of the crowd” approach is the best way to write those wrongs but I lament that modern justice has not been up to the task.

mikestew 2025-10-27 14:40 UTC link
I’m going to border closely to blaming the “victim” here, but if the lawsuit had been filed without toxic, threatening, man-baby social media posts, we wouldn’t be hearing about it. Harassed because he filed a lawsuit? C’mon, there’s a lot more to it than that. When one goes swinging their dick around on Twitter in an attempt to garner support (from one’s equally toxic fans, I presume), one will also likely attract equally toxic folks who disagree. Talk enough shit, and you’ll eventually get a punch to the face. Right or wrong, such is the world long before social media.
MBCook 2025-10-27 14:43 UTC link
That’s the internet these days. It’s been going on for decades. Game developers got death threats over minor changes to video games and nothing happened to them. Is it that surprising that tactic has continued?

People can make fun of the company all they want. That’s fair game. They shouldn’t be calling the guy’s personal phone or harassing his family, that’s totally over the line.

But nothing happens. The behavior gets a pass so it continues to become more common. That passes for debate now.

greedo 2025-10-27 15:35 UTC link
This all sounds great in the abstract. But reality is different due to the power differential. McNally is just one dude (albeit with a huge following). Lee is obviously a toxic jerk and his attacks and mockery of McNally triggered both McNally repeatedly proving the flaws in Proven's technology.

McNally obviously did the correct thing it seeking counsel and basically demolishing Proven's case in court. Too bad the SLAPP stuff doesn't work with DMCA takedowns.

And everyone else cheering on the sidelines (who isn't a paid shill of Proven's like the guy making the "liberal" comment)? Well giving Lee's company shit is fine IMHO. Call up the publicly available phone numbers, make service requests to flood his business etc. Fine with me. You poke the Internet bear, you get some claws.

As to the threats? If they actually occurred (which is questionable considering the BS Proven has been saying), then let the authorities know about them. That's not on McNally at all, it's more Lee being a jerk who doesn't know about the Streisand Effect, combined with social media companies that allow stuff like that to happen. It's also a good idea to not expose too much info about your personal life on social media that can be linked to your business, opsec ya know?

mothballed 2025-10-27 15:44 UTC link
Actual thieves don't give a shit to learn lock picking, they can use a fine toothed sawzall or oxy-acetylene torch and defeat any lock just as fast without having to youtube the particular brand.
mindslight 2025-10-27 15:55 UTC link
> the lock company owner amd his family. The guy is definitely a toxic bully, but he was indeed violently harrassed by filing a lawsuit

I think you're confusing who filed the lawsuit here. That was also the lock company owner as well (Lee/Proven).

While I agree that flash mob harassment from the Internet is a terrible dynamic, filing baseless lawsuits has been a longstanding way to predictably summon them. So if the table stakes of launching or defending these type of aggressive attacks have gone from a significant amount of money for attorneys, to a significant amount of money for attorneys plus public relations and/or having a large audience, does that really actually change much? Either way most people simply don't file lawsuits, even if they've been actually wronged, due to the extreme personal stress.

The straightforward way of diminishing mob justice is to make people believe the system provides justice. If we lived in a society where McNally would predictably win the lawsuit [0], and be predictably compensated for his expenses/time/emotionalDistress for being on the receiving end of this baseless SLAPP, then there would be much less mob outrage to begin with. As it stands, everyone can imagine themselves receiving these types of legal shakedown letters, but having much less power to push back.

[0] it sounds like this particular suit was slapped down pretty hard and "quick" by the standards of the legal system, but there are many similar cases that don't go this way

mothballed 2025-10-27 17:15 UTC link
>Freedom of speech based on facts should be universal.

To be fair that's not what we have in USA. For instance, a nurse who never even signed a private privacy agreement with anyone (unusual, but could happen) could violate HIPAA if they factually tell a patient's spouse the patient is being treated for AIDS and they ought to watch out.

ranger_danger 2025-10-27 18:25 UTC link
> sharing the key would be illegal

How so? And what region are you referring to? There are many countries in the world with vastly different laws.

dcan 2025-10-27 18:28 UTC link
09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
nomel 2025-10-27 18:29 UTC link
Could you make access illegal using the DMCA, by putting some copyrighted content inside, with the physical key also being the license key?
jasoncartwright 2025-10-27 18:35 UTC link
LPL is superb. He inspired me to get a lock pick kit and a few simple padlocks - a cheap and fun hobby during COVID lockdowns.
OkayPhysicist 2025-10-27 18:41 UTC link
LPL owns Covert Instruments, who employs McNally, the YouTuber who got sued in this case. Probably not a coincidence that Covert Instruments wasn't named in the lawsuit.
skopje 2025-10-27 18:58 UTC link
They're all a tough guys act. It's the type. Many American men love playing soldiers. What is Liquid Death? It's water LOL. See?
hinkley 2025-10-27 18:59 UTC link
That guy sure isn’t in a hurry to get anywhere. Good one to watch at 1.25x speed.
pcaharrier 2025-10-27 19:14 UTC link
Former in-house lawyer here and in my experience the answer is something like "probably less than you think." The job of the lawyer is to advise the client and (within the bounds of ethical rules) advocate for their position, not to come up what the company's position should be.
yojo 2025-10-27 19:18 UTC link
"Reality has a well-known liberal bias."[0]

0: https://youtu.be/IJ-a2KeyCAY?si=cIcawm3U5-55nI2D&t=252

embedding-shape 2025-10-27 19:38 UTC link
> A constant reminder to keep the people who don't know what they are doing (including the owners of the company!) from the social media.

I'm just guessing based on the contents of the article, but it sounds like a typical "hard-fist founder-run company" so good luck convincing the founder to not sit on social media and argue their points.

zahlman 2025-10-27 19:39 UTC link
> When did facts and enlightenment started to be for "liberals lol" ?

It didn't. That's one employee of the company, who has a clear bias in the matter, being ridiculous. It has nothing to do with liberal ideology, nor critique of liberal ideology, nor whatever sort of person that employee thinks should be considered a "liberal", nor their ideology. It's only the employee who even suggests that, and probably not even seriously.

jihadjihad 2025-10-27 20:12 UTC link
LPL is a crown jewel of YouTube. His April Fools' Day videos are hilarious, too, like the one where he gets into his wife's beaver [0] (SFW).

0: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRozAbaKs9M

ErroneousBosh 2025-10-27 20:46 UTC link
> he routinely destroys bogus claims of various companies within seconds

I watched his video on high-security shipping container locks. Jeez, two minutes long? They must be tough!

No, it was two minutes long because he bypassed ten of them, one after the other.

lexszero_ 2025-10-27 20:52 UTC link
Here in Finland mechanical locks with electronic keying are pretty common in some places. Some of them like iLOQ or Abloy eCLIQ are actually pretty clever: electrical bits of the lock are powered from mechanical action of inserting and turning the key, so you don't have to worry about batteries. In theory, they promise significant cost savings in scenarios like rental apartment buildings where tenants move in and out, need access to common areas, lose keys, etc, without compromising security or having to replace or recode locks - they just give you a generic key, click some buttons in the admin panel, and your key could be provisioned accordingly once you first enter the building and interact with one of the "smarter" locks that are externally powered and networked to the mothership.

In practice, in addition to the usual bugs you would expect from a software-based system managed and maintained by a plethora of organizations and contractors, they tend to become very annoying as parts wear out, so you have to fiddle with the key reinserting it repeatedly trying to find just the right angle so it will make a good contact to be recognized by the lock (for example the iLOQ system by my landlord communicates over a thin contact strip molded into the key opposite of the cutting and separated from the rest of the key with a thin layer of plastic).

adgjlsfhk1 2025-10-27 21:10 UTC link
> their customers never saw shimming in the field.

This is arguably good PR, but a terrible response. Shimming is so quick and hard to detect that even if you had 24-7 video of the lock, you probably wouldn't notice that the lock had been shimmed. You would just assume that someone lost a key.

dekhn 2025-10-27 21:20 UTC link
Issues with master locks are hardly new- back in the 1980s, I downloaded a file from a BBS explaining how to open a combo lock (basically by pulling on the shackle while turning, and a few other tricks.

It's still online: https://cdn.preterhuman.net/texts/anarchy_and_privacy_contro...

SacToHacker 2025-10-27 22:57 UTC link
If you want an extreme example of this; go look at the Sacramento startup Sircles. 7+ year old "startup" that has sub $100k revenue after several years but 9 million in debt. The founder has an account there under u/Sirclesapp where he goes off on toxic and insane tirades to anyone who dares say anything but utmost praise at his app. Apparently he stalks their reddit accounts and sends threatening letters to their personal home addresses from his lawyer for "defamation". That I understand he sent one to some ex employees and one to some woman who I think is a paralegal and is now suing them in civil court.

He partnered with some radio program called radradio where the host had a lot of personal issues and the show ultimately got axed. The radio host was known for having issues with alcohol, but they kept partnering with him because he kept shilling their WeFunder. They've raised over $6m in SAFEs but considering they are $9m in debt, haven't broken $100k lifetime revenue after 7 years, and seem to have over a million a year burn rate, it's doubtful that the shares from those SAFEs (if ever executed) would ever be in the money.

legitster 2025-10-27 23:01 UTC link
> It's quite entertaining to see how little security you actually get from most locks.

Yeah, one of my conclusions after years of watching LPL is ironically to start buying cheaper locks.

The difference between a $3 and a $300 lock is just about a minute of time for an experienced lockpick. No lock is capable of dissuading a determined thief, but any lock is equally capable of dissuading a lazy one.

anitil 2025-10-28 00:50 UTC link
They also made sloppy mistakes like naming the Proven owner's partner un-redacted in a document they submitted to the court (which is then available through legal search engines). If they were concerned with privacy they could easily have withheld her name.
Terr_ 2025-10-28 01:38 UTC link

    All Security
    Hinges on the arrival
    Of people with guns
Brian_K_White 2025-10-28 04:11 UTC link
Guy who paid someone to throw a brick through his ex wife's window is insensed at being intimidated.
DecentShoes 2025-10-28 04:26 UTC link
The company who sued him is, still, embarrassingly, attempting to hold a social media presence, despite getting exposed as fraudsters and bullies:

https://m.youtube.com/@provenindustries8236

kqr 2025-10-28 04:30 UTC link
Slow down -- sometimes. But for the most part, locks are more like envelopes. They produce evidence of tampering.
Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.80
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High Advocacy Framing Coverage
Editorial
+0.80
SETL
+0.57

Article strongly advocates for McNally's right to free expression and information sharing about lock vulnerabilities. Title and throughout, frames the lawsuit as illegitimate interference with expression rights. Directly affirms: 'It's still legal to pick locks, even when you swing your legs.'

+0.70
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights
High Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.70
SETL
+0.53

Article's central argument: Proven Industries is abusing legal processes to suppress McNally's speech and expression rights. Frames this as violation of Article 30—using law to abuse rather than protect rights. CEO's criminal history and threats establish pattern of abuse.

+0.60
Article 12 Privacy
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.60
SETL
+0.42

Article defends McNally's privacy rights by framing Lee's text to his wife as an invasion of privacy and intimidation. Strongly implies the act violates privacy and personal boundary protections.

+0.50
Article 10 Fair Hearing
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.50
SETL
+0.32

Article questions the fairness of legal proceedings by highlighting the CEO's criminal history as disqualifying context. Implies the lawsuit itself may lack legal/moral grounding due to the plaintiff's character and prior abuse patterns.

+0.40
Preamble Preamble
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.20

Article implicitly supports principles of human dignity and individual rights by defending McNally's right to create and share information; frames attempt to suppress his expression as contrary to justice and fairness.

+0.40
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.20

Article questions the fairness and equality of the legal action by Proven Industries, questioning whether the lawsuit is appropriate and suggesting the CEO's tactics lack legal or moral grounding. Title itself ('Bad idea') questions the legality/fairness of the suit.

+0.30
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
0.00

Article identifies security concerns for McNally based on CEO Lee's threatening message and criminal history (prior violence). Frames these as legitimate liberty/security threats warranting concern.

+0.30
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
0.00

Article presents McNally sympathetically and without accusation; treats him as innocent of wrongdoing. Does not presume guilt based on being sued.

+0.30
Article 16 Marriage & Family
Low Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
0.00

Article frames Lee's contact with McNally's wife as inappropriate interference with family privacy and security. Implicitly defends family unit integrity against external intimidation.

+0.30
Article 26 Education
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
0.00

Article frames McNally's lock-picking videos as educational content about security vulnerabilities. Treats information sharing as having educational and public value.

+0.20
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
-0.17

Article treats McNally (individual) and Proven Industries (corporation) as legally and morally distinct; implicitly affirms that both have rights but McNally's expression rights take precedence in this context.

+0.20
Article 6 Legal Personhood
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
-0.17

Article recognizes McNally as legal and moral person with agency, rights, and standing in the dispute. Does not reduce him to an object or strip his personhood.

+0.20
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
-0.17

Article recognizes McNally's content creation as livelihood and career (7M followers, 2B views generating income/status). Frames legal threats to this as rights-relevant.

+0.20
Article 28 Social & International Order
Low Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
-0.17

Article questions whether suppressing information serves social order; implies that legal processes used to suppress expression undermine rather than support social order.

ND
Article 2 Non-Discrimination

No observable content addressing discrimination or equal protection on grounds of race, color, sex, language, religion, opinion, national origin, property, birth, or status.

ND
Article 4 No Slavery

No observable content addressing slavery or servitude.

ND
Article 5 No Torture

No observable content addressing torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment.

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

No observable content addressing right to remedy through competent tribunal for violations of rights.

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No observable content addressing arbitrary arrest or detention.

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No observable content addressing freedom of movement.

ND
Article 14 Asylum

No observable content addressing asylum and refuge.

ND
Article 15 Nationality

McNally's US nationality is mentioned but not substantively addressed as a human rights matter.

ND
Article 17 Property

Lock ownership is mentioned but not addressed as a UDHR property rights matter.

ND
Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No observable content addressing freedom of conscience or religion.

ND
Article 20 Assembly & Association

No observable content addressing freedom of association.

ND
Article 21 Political Participation

No observable content addressing democratic participation.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

Economic impact (Proven's lost business) is mentioned but not substantively addressed as a social/economic rights matter.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No observable content addressing rest and leisure rights.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

No observable content addressing adequate standard of living.

ND
Article 27 Cultural Participation

No observable content addressing cultural participation.

ND
Article 29 Duties to Community

No observable content addressing community duties/responsibilities.

Structural Channel
What the site does
+0.40
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High Advocacy Framing Coverage
Structural
+0.40
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.57

Site publishes the article without restriction, enables public comment discussion (368 comments), and makes article freely accessible to broad audience.

+0.30
Preamble Preamble
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.20

Site publishes article freely and allows public comment discussion, supporting principles of open discourse and dignity recognition.

+0.30
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Low Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.17

Site structure does not discriminate in content access based on reader background or status.

+0.30
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

Site's comment function and public discourse enable collective security awareness.

+0.30
Article 6 Legal Personhood
Low Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.17

Article platform recognizes reader/commenter personhood through comment section.

+0.30
Article 7 Equality Before Law
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.20

Site publishes critical legal analysis, supporting equal access to information about law.

+0.30
Article 10 Fair Hearing
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.32

Site publishes analysis supporting fair trial principles through transparent reporting.

+0.30
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

Site publishes this sympathetic framing without requiring disclaimers or forced 'both sides' framing.

+0.30
Article 12 Privacy
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.42

Site collects user data through comments but publishes content defending privacy boundaries.

+0.30
Article 16 Marriage & Family
Low Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

Site supports family privacy through standard user privacy policies.

+0.30
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.17

Site structure enables content creators to reach audiences, supporting work/employment rights.

+0.30
Article 26 Education
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

Site publishes educational content freely, supporting collective learning.

+0.30
Article 28 Social & International Order
Low Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.17

Site publishes analysis supporting transparent legal/social discourse.

+0.30
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights
High Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.53

Site publishes critique of rights abuse, supporting protection against abuse through transparency.

ND
Article 2 Non-Discrimination

No structural signals regarding non-discrimination observable.

ND
Article 4 No Slavery

No structural signals regarding slavery observable.

ND
Article 5 No Torture

No structural signals regarding torture/cruelty observable.

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

No structural signals regarding remedy observable.

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No structural signals regarding detention observable.

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No structural signals regarding movement observable.

ND
Article 14 Asylum

No structural signals regarding asylum observable.

ND
Article 15 Nationality

No structural signals regarding nationality observable.

ND
Article 17 Property

No structural signals regarding property observable.

ND
Article 18 Freedom of Thought

No structural signals regarding conscience/religion observable.

ND
Article 20 Assembly & Association

No structural signals regarding association observable.

ND
Article 21 Political Participation

No structural signals regarding democratic participation observable.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

No structural signals regarding social/economic rights observable.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No structural signals regarding rest/leisure observable.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

No structural signals regarding living standard observable.

ND
Article 27 Cultural Participation

No structural signals regarding cultural participation observable.

ND
Article 29 Duties to Community

No structural signals regarding community duties observable.

Supplementary Signals
How this content communicates, beyond directional lean. Learn more
Epistemic Quality
How well-sourced and evidence-based is this content?
0.76 medium claims
Sources
0.8
Evidence
0.7
Uncertainty
0.7
Purpose
0.9
Propaganda Flags
2 manipulative rhetoric techniques found
2 techniques detected
appeal to fear
Lee's violent criminal history (hiring someone to break window of ex-wife) presented immediately after describing threatening messages to establish danger/fear response
loaded language
Descriptions like 'saucy little video,' 'practically begging people to attempt this,' 'Oddly enough'—emotionally charged language shaping reader perception
Emotional Tone
Emotional character: positive/negative, intensity, authority
measured
Valence
+0.3
Arousal
0.6
Dominance
0.6
Transparency
Does the content identify its author and disclose interests?
1.00
✓ Author
More signals: context, framing & audience
Solution Orientation
Does this content offer solutions or only describe problems?
0.44 problem only
Reader Agency
0.4
Stakeholder Voice
Whose perspectives are represented in this content?
0.68 3 perspectives
Speaks: individualscorporation
About: individualscorporationcommunity
Temporal Framing
Is this content looking backward, at the present, or forward?
retrospective historical
Geographic Scope
What geographic area does this content cover?
national
Florida, United States
Complexity
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
accessible low jargon none
Longitudinal · 5 evals
+1 0 −1 HN
Audit Trail 25 entries
2026-02-28 10:31 model_divergence Cross-model spread 0.36 exceeds threshold (5 models) - -
2026-02-28 10:31 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5-20251001: +0.39 (Moderate positive)
2026-02-28 01:40 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea - -
2026-02-28 01:39 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:38 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:36 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-28 01:36 dlq_replay DLQ message 97640 replayed to LLAMA_QUEUE: 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea - -
2026-02-28 00:16 eval_success Light evaluated: Moderate positive (0.50) - -
2026-02-28 00:16 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: +0.50 (Moderate positive)
2026-02-27 20:07 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea - -
2026-02-27 20:04 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 20:03 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 20:02 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 20:02 dlq_auto_replay DLQ auto-replay: message 97588 re-enqueued - -
2026-02-27 16:19 eval_success Light evaluated: Moderate positive (0.50) - -
2026-02-27 16:19 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.50 (Moderate positive)
2026-02-27 14:42 eval_success Evaluated: Moderate positive (0.42) - -
2026-02-27 14:42 eval Evaluated by deepseek-v3.2: +0.42 (Moderate positive) 15,565 tokens
2026-02-27 13:02 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea - -
2026-02-27 13:00 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:59 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:58 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 12:54 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5: +0.75 (Strong positive)
2026-02-26 18:42 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea - -
2026-02-26 18:41 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: 10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him – bad idea - -