Nice job, Danny! 
Shams Charania: Commissioner Adam Silver informed the league's 30 general managers on Thursday that the NBA plans to make anti-tanking rule changes for next season, sources tell ESPN. Stakeholders have intensified dialogue about combatting tanking.
Multiple sources with knowledge of Thursday's GM meeting as well as a late January Competition Committee meeting told ESPN that the following concepts have been discussed to curb tanking: First-round picks can be protected only top-4 or top-14+. Lottery odds freeze at the trade deadline or a later date. No longer allowing a team to pick top 4 in consecutive years and/or after consecutive bottom-3 finishes. Teams can't pick top-4 the year after making conference finals. Lottery odds allocated based on two-year records. Lottery extended to include all play-in teams. Flatten odds for all lottery teams.
This seems overly complicated to me, but overall a step in the right direction. In my mind, the most flagrant tanking occurs when teams are trying to keep protected picks. They have addressed this, sort of. The two year record thing does not seem sustainable and I am not sure about punishing teams that are bad for a few seasons in a row; teams that may not even be tanking. It could be bad management, bad luck with injuries, and other things not tanking. Those bad teams are just going to have a harder time getting good.
For a team like UTA, that decides to shutdown Jackson so he can have surgery, is that really tanking? Is it better for the league if they keep playing him and the injury becomes career threatening? There is definitely tanking going on every season, but there is also just a some bad teams being bad, or teams making decisions on injuries that are simply in the best interest of the team (like old guys not playing back to back). It is not always easy to differentiate.