“Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Cupertino d’État” is identified in the supplied source material as an entry from Ctrl-Alt-Speech, a weekly podcast about online speech associated with Mike Masnick and Ben Whitelaw of Everything in Moderation. The item is categorized under Policy, Ethics & Law and tagged with a focus on copyright lawsuits and publisher disputes.
The source description states: “Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about the latest news in online speech, from Mike Masnick and Everything in Moderation‘s Ben Whitelaw.” Based on that wording, the verifiable facts are limited to the podcast’s name, weekly cadence, subject area, and the association with Masnick and Whitelaw.
The title given in the source material is “Ctrl-Alt-Speech: Cupertino d’État.” However, the provided context does not include a synopsis, transcript, publication date, or details about any specific lawsuit, publisher conflict, court case, or party discussed in the episode. As a result, no further substantive claims about the underlying legal or policy issues can be verified from the excerpt alone.
That limitation is important in Policy, Ethics & Law coverage, where disputes involving copyright and publishers often require precise attribution, identification of parties, and documentary sourcing. For related coverage of legal accountability in AI and online information systems, see our report on Google AI Overviews liability and governance implications. Readers tracking broader AI and publishing debates may also find context in AI narrative formation research summarized by Marketing AI Institute.
The source also lists where the podcast can be accessed. It says: “Subscribe now on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Spotify, Pocket Casts, YouTube, or your podcast app of choice — or go straight to the RSS feed.” Those platforms are:
- Apple Podcasts
- Overcast
- Spotify
- Pocket Casts
- YouTube
- RSS feed
Readers can compare those distribution points with the podcast platforms’ official services, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify Podcasts, and YouTube.
The supplied notes also indicate a source claim that extended episodes with additional coverage are available through support. Because no supporting details are provided, that point can only be attributed as an unverified source statement rather than reported as a confirmed feature.
In short, the available record supports only a narrow description: Ctrl-Alt-Speech is a weekly podcast about online speech, this entry is titled “Cupertino d’État,” and the listing is categorized around copyright lawsuits and publisher disputes. The provided context does not substantiate any more detailed account of the episode’s subject matter.



