• 0 Posts
  • 35 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: July 9th, 2023

help-circle

  • It’s supposed to be growth related to the things which didn’t progress, so to say. So it’s not literally supposed to be growth of processes, just that stagnation makes things diminish in value, and compared to them things more alive “grow”. Something like that.

    Kinda like inflation. And that’s fine, that can describe a pretty sustainable society, it’s not about consuming more and more, it’s like rotation.

    Except with today’s oligopolies there’s a different idea, that they really have to grow as in capturing more and more of humanity’s resources. The AI bubble (or not) is their most recent approach to that.

    That’s because expectations were shaped by the 90s when many things exploded (unfortunately much of that were countries, also landmines and other expendable means of destruction).

    In the 00s it was possible to create illusion of that explosion still going on brighter and brighter, despite just continuing what started in the 90s, and then to create a few large-scale scams (or madness pandemics, or tech fashions, whatever ; point is they weren’t the same as years 1993-1999) with iPhones, new Apple in general, Google, Facebook, Twitter.

    I’m not saying it was fake or worthless, it was a revolution too, but not what companies try to show since the dotcom bubble.

    So - they are still trying to show that, with kinda rough, generic, and insincere effort, a bit like sex workers in their makeup.

    And they can’t show that without such expansion in width, not in height.






  • Well, from this description it’s still usable for things too complex to just do Monte-Carlo, but with possible verification of results. May even be efficient. But that seems narrow.

    BTW, even ethical automated combat drones. I know that one word there seems out of place, but if we have an “AI” for target\trajectory\action suggestion, but something more complex\expensive for verification, ultimately with a human in charge, then it’s possible to both increase efficiency of combat machines and not increase the chances of civilian casualties and friendly fire (when somebody is at least trying to not have those).





  • The point is to make children used to checks.

    It’s a didactic law.

    IRL usually children grow up feeling they are free (except for their parents) to an extent.

    This is intended so that identifying yourself in the Internet were normal by the time you grow up for it to matter.

    But, of course, there might be some good considerations, if you’re into playing devil’s advocate. People might remember which stupid shit they were posting when they were younger, and want for future generations to be always conscious of the difference between pseudonymity and anonymity, and superficial anonymity vs real. People might want to make it so that nobody had a false sense of security, leading to really bad mistakes. People might want this to be the step preceding some way to fight bots.

    And they might even not have good considerations, but eventually realize that the oppressive system they are building is best rebuilt for something better and used differently. Wouldn’t be the first time in history.

    It’s just that laying down your arms in hopes for that is unwise.









  • It’s P2P, like Napster used to be. You’ll have to share something or you’ll get auto-ignored by most users.

    Oh, reminds me, you should also sort your share. I once got march-horny, added some German marches to my download queue (no judging pls), and then got a PM from the guy sharing them that I should keep my collection in order. And yes, the jerk ignored me.

    Also not really p2p, there is a central server. The downloads are p2p.

    RuTracker is a great non-private/non-ratio-monitoring torrent site for music

    It was ratio-monitoring, that’s how it became great. Just after being banned in Russia they decided that those who try hard enough to even reach there can be trusted to behave.

    It’s not only for music, it’s for everything.


  • Suppose true, then we’ll reduce the use of “the whole Internet”.

    OK, we won’t, no tools yet.

    I really love Briar, except it’s functionally not quite there yet, and the desktop kind of such application synchronized with neighboring ships, so to say, with a delay-tolerant Web alternative, would be good. Over various links and media.

    Anyway, it’s not a technical problem, it’s a social problem. Not really different from ID checks on the streets and everywhere you go in the city, except much of the city got virtualized. And ID checks on the streets are automated by cameras everywhere and face recognition.

    Social problems are resolved in the legal, social, protest, civil war fields.