What does Jeff Bezos' non-endorsement mean?: Max notes that historically it’s been the owners of newspapers that did want to endorse candidates and the reporters that don’t.
Recently I read:
Bluesky and enshittification: The most well-intentioned service remains at risk of enshittification whilst there remains significant costs incurred when switching away from it.
The Washington Post sold Democracy. Now it needs a new line of business. : The WaPo and the LA Times lost a lot of subscribers when their owners refused to let them endorse a presidential candidate.
Handy guide as to whether it’s safe to go to bed from The Guardian.
a
Some publications aren't afraid to endorse Harris, and do better for it
Unlike the enfeebled Washington Post and LA Times, the Guardian isn’t pulling many punches on its front page. Granted it isn’t under the same jurisdiction as the two aforementioned institutions, and it also isn’t owned by a a cowardly tech billionaire.
Americaâs moment of reckoning has arrived. On Tuesday, the nation will hold a presidential election like none before, poised between the historic candidacy of a Black woman and a former president branded a fascist by his own former officials.
Their formal endorsementcame a couple of weeks ago:
It is hard to imagine a worse candidate for the American presidency in 2024 than Donald J Trump. His history of dishonesty, hypocrisy and greed makes him wholly unfit for the office. A second Trump term would erode the rule of law, diminish Americaâs global standing and deepen racial and cultural divides. Even if he loses, Mr Trump has shown that he will undermine the election process, with allies spreading unfounded conspiracy theories to delegitimise the results.
…
Defeating Mr Trump protects democracy from oligarchy and dictatorship. There is too much at stake not to back Ms Harris for president.
A surprisingly (to me, perhaps it should not have been) good effort from a US based publication came from Teen Vogue’s Harris endorsement. They made the very valid point that even if you don’t like Harris' policies - specifically in their case the actions taken on the Israel/Gaza conflict - Trump would be so much worse on the same things, and furthermore make it hard to organise against it.
Donald Trump cannot win this election. Full stop.
Right now, we have the power to make sure that doesnât happen.
…
Autocrats thrive on overwhelming people. President Trump overwhelmed us every single day.
…
Itâs not enough to beat a fascist with razor-thin margins; ideally, we need to run up the margin of victory so high it becomes that much harder for Trump and his cronies to claim they represent the will of the American people.
…
Right now, we have the power to stop Trump. Should he win, we may not have these tools at our disposal again. Trump is on the record telling conservative Christians he just needs them to vote this year and then they wonât have to vote again. âFour more years, itâll be fixed, itâll be fine, you wonât have to vote anymore, my beautiful Christians,â he said this summer, one of many comments that should have set off a weeks-long scandalous news cycle but got subsumed by, well, everything else. He has an army of election deniers ready to do his corrupt, anti-democratic bidding.
In being censored by their owners from making an endorsement, the Washington Post and LA Times appear to have lost a lot of their subscribers. Semafor reports, in an article wonderfully titled “The Washington Post sold Democracy. Now it needs a new line of business” that the WaPo lost at least 200,000 of them - a cost thought to represent a possible $20 million in revenue. The LA Times lost at least 18,000, with both figures potentially still growing.
This, in their view is at least in part down to many subscribers to newspapers doing so as part of an effort to support “capital-J journalism” rather than merely improved access to a specific product’s content.
Hundreds of thousands of Americans didnât necessarily feel they needed the Postâs journalism or its service products, but they did want Journalism with a capital J, a force willing to take Trump on directly and to absorb his wrath when other institutions werenât.
That feels right to me. Whenever I have subscribed to a newspaper it wasn’t usually for the content. There’s more than enough information of interest floating around the internet “for free” - free if you disregard the payment taken via the secretive harvesting of your personal data at least.
It was because I supported the process and the people that created that content; supported the effort to go out there, do the no doubt often grueling work that stands some chance of informing us about reality, and critically, to expose and challenge the powerful when they lie to or otherwise abuse us.
Not that this should be the point, but endorsing Harris certainly didn’t cost the Guardian much in terms of subscriber or direct revenue. Rather it apparently let to a big increase in donations - around $2 million - making it, according to the Press Gazette:
…one of the most successful subscription marketing messages in the history of online news.
Cowardly tech billionaires further ruin their newspapers by letting Trump intimidate them into censoring the Opinions out of their Opinions section
As everyone on the internet noticed, all of a sudden last week the Washington Post newspaper decided that for the first time in a few decades they weren’t going to endorse a candidate for the presidential election.
This has not gone down well. It doesn’t help that the paper adopted the tagline “democracy dies in darkness” a few years ago. Cue statements such as:
So much for âDemocracy Dies in Darknessâ. This is the most hypocritical, chicken shit move from a publication that is supposed to hold people in power to account.
from Susan Rice, former US ambassador to the UN.
This is cowardice, a moment of darkness that will leave democracy as a casualty.
from Marty Baron, a former Washington Post executive editor.
The paper I’ve loved working at for 47 years is dying in darkness.
says David Maraniss, a reporter and editor at the Post.
Today has been an absolute stab in the back. What an insult to those of us who have literally put our careers and lives on the line, to call out threats to human rights and democracy.
says Karen Attiah, WaPo columnist.
The Postâs editorial board just won a Pulitzer Prize for calling out authoritarianism and defending democracy around the world…How sad is it that we canât do that at home?
as an anonymous “senior Post staffer” told The Guardian.
A union with many WaPo employees in, the Washington Post Guild, expressed its deep concern at the decision.
What is particularly disgusting about the manoeuvre is the reason that it happened. It wasn’t that the editorial writers had nothing to say on the subject, that the reporters didn’t think they knew enough to have an opinion, or that it was decided sometime between 2020 and now that the Opinion section of a newspaper must never in fact contain any Opinion. In fact the Washington Post team had already written an endorsement for Kamala Harris. It had already been approved by the editorial page editor, David Shipley.
But then, the Washington Post owner - who is none other Jeff Bezos, who, most famously, founded and CEOd Amazon along with all the catastrophe that that particular enterprise unleashed upon the world - ordered them to pull it at the last minute. Ergo it was censored it out of existence, never to see the light of day, destined to die in darkness.
Yes, once again one of the weird tech billionaires is interfering with the standard practice of democracy, seemingly for nothing other than peculiarly selfish and small-minded reasons.
Platformer summarises the likely reasons as including basically being out of fear that if Bezos was even vaguely connected to something that might be read as criticising President Trump then Trump might take it out on him later if, heaven forefend, he became president. Which doesn’t seem like an unreasonable fear based on Trump’s previous behaviour. But, come on, we are talking about Amazon billionaire Jeffrey Bezos. I think he might just survive. He’ll be able to pay his bills (or, more likely, pay someone to pay someone to pay someone to avoid having to pay his bills).
Another possible reason might be payback to the current Democrat administration who have been overseeing a surprisingly strong - well, in a relative sense - pushback against some of the Big Tech monopolists, pursuing antitrust cases against a slew of companies including Bezos' own Amazon.
To be fair Bezos isn’t alone in this. His other weird tech billionaire pals are also cosying up to the disgraced ex-president, just in case.
Per Wired, Google CEO Sundar Pichai apparently called Trump so congratulate him on his bizarre “I work at McDonalds” stunt. Apple’s Tim Cook has also been on the blower plenty. Meta’s Zuckerberg called him up, presumably to congratulate him on being a “badass”, after the first assassination attempt, something that Bezos also did before the Washington Post incident.
The WaPo wasn’t the only newspaper to have its presidential endorsement story burned by its owner. It seemed to generate a bit less publicity, but eagle-eyed readers of the LA Times endorsement list last month might have noticed the distinct absence of a presidential endorsement. So in a way this is even weirder; they’ve no problem with the concept of political endorsements. There’s plenty on that list. They just decided to not publish one for the position that comes with the most impactful amount of political power going.
Well, I say “they”. Again the blocking of an endorsement wasn’t a “they” decision. The team had already decided that they were going to endorse Kamala Harris. It was a “he” decision.
Once again the article itself was blocked pre-publication, apparently the decision to censor was made by the paper’s owner - Dr Patrick Soon-Shiong.
In reaction to their article being blocked by the paper’s owner, the editorial editor Mariel Garza felt compelled to resign
âI am resigning because I want to make it clear that I am not OK with us being silent,â Garza said. âIn dangerous times, honest people need to stand up. This is how Iâm standing up.â
In a strong parallel to the WaPo’s equivalent, the LA Times Guild Unit Council & Bargaining Committee reported that it was:
…deeply concerned about our ownerâs decision to block a planned endorsement in the presidential race.
In case Dr. Soon-Shiong’s sensibilities aren’t clear, he’s not a newspaper man by trade. Rather, he is - can you guess? - a (bio)tech billionaire who in the past has been seen “palling around” with Donald Trump, begging him for a job.
He may be the richest doctor in the world, but is nonetheless a man so delusional that following one such dinner with the president-at-the=time he publicly shared that it was an:
Incredible honor dining w/Pres-elect @realDonaldTrump last night. He truly wants to advance healthcare for all.
“For all”. Hmm.
That said, the New Yorker profile of the good doctor makes it clear that he does have certain lifestyle similarities to Trump. For example, they’ve both been repeatedly taken to court over various violations.
âHe gets very enthusiastic, and sometimes he might exaggerate,â Hentz said. âHe can embellish a little.â Outcomes for his diabetes treatment were disappointing, and one case ended tragically.
While pursuing this therapy, he also began researching chemotherapy. At the center of his fortune is a cancer treatment that costs more than a hundred times as much as another drug, available as a generic, that is prescribed for some of the same conditions.
Soon-Shiong has been repeatedly accused of financial misrepresentation, self-dealing, price gouging, and fraud. He has been sued by former investors and business partners; he has been sued by other doctors; he has been sued by his own brother, twice; he has been sued by Cher.
Let’s not even get started on Elon Musk - the richest master-performer of self-cringe that ever lived - who is now acting as Trump’s pet, literally (but awkwardly) jumping for joy, or whatever the Musk form of that emotion may be, on a public stage during his campaigning. As it happens, in between occurrences of this “I’m not just MAGA - I’m dark Maga” buffoon upwardly prostrating his body into some form akin to a broken X-shape for Likes, he’s also quite possibly breaking voter bribery laws.
These people - each of whom has more access to power and resources than any human should ever have, and have vastly benefited from so many aspects of the very systems of governance that Trump threatens to derail - are each presumably somewhere on the scale between MAGA-pilled ideologue true believers and selfish, spiteful, cowards.
Casey Newton sums it up well:
This is not, of course, a moral case for business leaders supporting Trump. There is no moral case for business leaders supporting Trump. Trump is an openly corrupt 78-year-old fascist, twice impeached and on 34 felony counts convicted, who attempted to stop the peaceful transfer of power in 2021 and now promises to further undermine the democracy of the United States if he manages to assume power again.
But a democratic emergency like the one we are now living through is not necessarily a business emergency. In the billionairesâ view, it could actually be an opportunity â to bring an end to the antitrust cases, to block further regulation of Big Tech in Congress, and to pursue their dreams of superintelligence in peace.
Admittedly this isn’t the most pressing issue of the forthcoming US presidential election, but all the excitement of seeing Donald Trump pretend to work in a McDonalds for a few minutes as part of a staged political stunt brings back to mind the previous revelation of his usual order when attending that institution as a customer (or sending someone to do so on his behalf).
As revealed by a couple of his former colleagues, his typical order would be 2 Big Macs, 2 Fillet-O-Fish and a chocolate milkshake.
What an…interesting combo. Grounds alone to accuse him of an incredible lack of judgement. It also represents substantially than his recommended calorie intake for a day consumed in one fell swoop: at least 2672, or more if it wasn’t a small shake.
It seems even being prosecuted in court didn’t sate his appetite, with reports of a “Massive stash of McDonaldsâ being delivered to a court when he was there to defend one of the many legal cases against him.
Tampering with the polls for the US election
It seems that US Republican affiliated groups may have commissioned presidential election polls that are deliberately biased towards saying Trump will win.
This as a possible prelude to the horrific but plausible idea that if Trump loses then team MAGA will use ‘but the polls said Trump has the bigliest lead’ as (manufactured) evidence of some imaginary tranche of electoral fraud. They’d conclude of course that even though he got the least votes he should in any case be crowned the some-would-say-wannabe permanent king of what we previously referred to as the ‘free world’.
Elsewhere I heard suggestions that the actual legitimate pollsters were potentially underestimating Harris, deliberately or not, on the basis that failing - once again - to predict a Trump victory would be embarrassing.
Let’s hope then that the former story isn’t true - or at least isn’t effective in what the people concerned trying to accomplish - and the latter is.
The events leading up to the US election seem even more horrifying than usual
I’m wary of succumbing to my own biases by seeing the risks of the rise of the far right looming around every political event no matter how minor, but it’s hard to not to feel a certain amount of hopeless despair when it comes to forthcoming US election.
Perhaps I’ve overdosed on Timothy Synder’s excellent books, but when one sees things like the Madison Square Trump rally it’s hard not to hear several extremely loud metaphorical warning klaxons go off.
Trump vowed to win New York, saying it would be an “honor” to win his home state. But his remarks were overshadowed by the crude and offensive speakers that went before him, which included racist jokes about Puerto Ricans and Black people as well as prominent Democrats.
In the lead-up to Trump, comedian Tony Hinchcliffe, who goes by Kill Tony, referred to Puerto Rico as a “floating island of garbage,” made a crude joke about Hispanics and birth control, inferred that Jews are cheap and Palestinians are “rock-throwers” and made a racist comment about a Black man in the audience eating watermelon.>
…
Other warm-up acts called Hillary Clinton a “sick son of a b***”, another referred to Vice President Kamala Harris as the “antichrist” and a third said Harris “and her pimp handlers will destroy the country.” Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani said Harris is “on the side of the terrorists.”
For all their many harmful, dangerous and deadly faults, it’s hard to imagine the UK Conservatives PRing themselves like that. It feels qualitatively different.
Next up, I suppose there’s no need to spend time lying about vote fraud when you can just burn the votes
A ballot box in Portland and another in Vancouver were set on fire, potentially disenfranchising the wise folk who had already voted early via depositing their ballot into one of them. I don’t think we know much about the what and why this happened yet, but it doesn’t seem exactly normal let alone good. If it makes any difference, the states concerned are (usually) safe Democratic seats.
Finally for now, continuing the habit that US MAGA-style Republicans have of saying the quiet bit out loud, we have ProPublica’s reporting about the previously private speeches of Trump’s “key ally” and previous director of the Office of Management and Budget, Russell Vough. He’s thought to be very likely to get a high-level governmental role should Trump get back into power.
A key ally to former President Donald Trump detailed plans to deploy the military in response to domestic unrest, defund the Environmental Protection Agency and put career civil servants âin traumaâ in a series of previously unreported speeches that provide a sweeping vision for a second Trump term.
…
Other policies mentioned by Vought dovetail with Trumpâs plans, such as embracing a wartime footing on the southern border and rolling back transgender rights…decrying the âtransgender sewage thatâs being pumped into our schools and institutionsâ and referring to gender-affirming care as âchemical castration.â
…
âWe want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected,â he said. âWhen they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains. We want their funding to be shut down so that the EPA can’t do all of the rules against our energy industry because they have no bandwidth financially to do so.
“We want to put them in trauma.â
Cruelty as praxis, once again.
Vox's take on "Is AI the new nuclear weapons?"
Last year, Vox laid out their view as to how true or useful the “artificial intelligence is the new nuclear weapons” analogy actually is. The high-level summary of their take is:
Similarities:
- The scientific progress on the technology has been very rapid.
- There is potential for mass harm, even if the mechanism is generally less obvious in the case of AI.
- Both require materials - uranium for nukes, certain types of microchips for AI - that are relatively scare and potentially trackable.
- They have dynamics of an arms race.
Differences:
- Nuclear weapons are a wholly military technology, AI is a general-purpose one.
- It’s much easier to copy someone’s AI than their nuclear bomb.
Their takeaway is that the general “AI is like a nuclear weapon” analogy is usually quite parallel enough to prove useful, but that certain specific processes involved are similar. And in any case, in general:
The best way to handle a new, powerful, dangerous technology is through broad international cooperation. The right approach isnât to lie back and just let scientists and engineers transform our world without outside input.
'Oppenheimer' tells the story of the man behind the world's first nuclear bomb, and his later regrets
đĽ Watched Oppenheimer.
This is the story of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the scientist who led the Los Alamos Laboratory, assigned in 1942 to the task of developing the world’s first nuclear weapon. Whilst he appeared to some reservations from the start, the race was on given his fear that the German Nazis might beat them to it which might then lead them to victory during the ongoing Second World War.
The nuclear bomb Oppenheimer et al. developed of course worked, even if whilst during testing the effects of atomic detonation they weren’t absolutely certain that it wouldn’t cause the literal end of the world. So quite a high-stakes workplace, at least compared to the average day of work in my job.
I’m sure some people might see modern-day parallels with the unconstrained development of AI, even if the mechanisms towards destruction are a lot less straightforward.
After the nuclear bomb was used against Japan in 1945 - in Hiroshima and Nagasaki - Oppenheimer became an advisor to the Atomic Energy Commission.
He became ridden with guilt about the sheer amount of destruction and huge loss of life that his life’s work to date had led to. His ethical concerns led him to argue for global control of nuclear power to avoid nuclear proliferation, particularly the risk of an escalation of the technology during the Cold War with the Soviet Union. This led him to opposing the development of the H-bomb, contrary to the President’s wishes.
This, along with his past associations with the Communist Party, meant that he was subject to accusations of disloyalty. He ended up in front of a private security hearing, after which his security clearance was revoked.
The film is three hours long, but it’s a big story to tell, and an important one. It very much captured my interest throughout, even if my ability to find such a lengthy continuous timespan of focus given the constraints of modern life is such that I ended up have to watch it over two sittings.
Tell me how you measure me and I will tell you how I will behave. If you measure me in an illogical way donât complain about illogical behaviour.
Eliyahu M. Goldratt, from The Haystack Syndrome.
The New York Times advises us to believe Trump when he tells us what he's going to do
We’re not far away from the next US presidential election, which is to be held this November 5th. Either Harris or Trump are destined to walk away the victor, with the polls being scarily ambiguous on which it will be. It’s a fairly scary time, even for those of us outside of the US.
Whilst campaigning, Trump often makes a series of claims about what he will do that at a glance seem too ludicrous or cruel to be true.
In the past it’s often been suggested, especially by some of his high profile supporters, that we should take Trump seriously but not literally, to take him symbolically, not literally. But The New York Times implores us to take him at his word; to believe him when he tells us what he wants to do.
Donald Trump has described at length the dangerous and disturbing actions he says he will take if he wins the presidency.
…
These statements are so outrageous and outlandish, so openly in conflict with the norms and values of American democracy that many find them hard to regard as anything but empty bluster.
We have two words for American voters: Believe him.
The article goes through the what he says and why you should believe him using the following categories.
Trump says he will:
- use the Justice Department to punish people he doesnât like.
- will round up and deport millions of immigrants.
- deploy the American military against U.S. citizens.
- allow vigilante violence to end crime.
- order the military to strike foreign civilian targets if the United States is attacked.
- punish blue states by withholding disaster relief.
- use ideological tests to decide which public schools get federal money.
- abandon U.S. allies.
The Pudding visualises the process of getting an abortion as a maze
The Pudding visualises the often laborious and damaging path some who needs an abortion needs to take if situated in the US as a series of mazes.
Even whilst. Roe vs Wade was in force the process was often full of “twists, turns and roadblocks”. But now, since its overturning in 2022, states have the power to take away someone’s right to an abortion, even to ban abortion entirely. 13 did exactly that. Some other states made access harder, and a few put new legislation in place to protect this important right.
Whilst interacting with The Pudding’s visualisation you find yourself following a story of an individual, based on a real-life case, who is seeking such a service whilst trying to make your way through a literal maze of a complexity related to the real life difficulty of obtaining this important medical care - whether this be, for instance, California’s relatively simple process or Tennessee’s fiendishly complicated effort.
In no case are the individual’s stories entirely uncomplicated. A maze is still a maze. But this very effectively, and very creatively, highlights the huge variation in the access our US friends have to this type of healthcare.
Two types of information overload: the situational vs the ambient
I have an information problem. There are 278 books on my “Want to read list”. There are 1,794 articles saved in my read-later app. There appear to be 2,241 episodes in my podcasts “to listen to” queue. The knowledge of hundreds of pending unread journal articles put me off ever even opening my collection of them to check.
Then on the other side of the equation there’s the collection of hundred of read items I want to blog about, and several half-written posts about a fraction of them.
I’m somewhat ashamed to say I even started a new RSS reader account on the basis that my collection of feeds felt somewhat unmanageable when all in one place. I guess I’m going to have to stop teasing my colleague for starting a new Google mail account because their previous one filled up.
It’s absurd. I’ve only got one lifetime, as far as I know. And it’s not like these numbers don’t grow every single day.
I know I’m not alone in this. Nicholas Carr writes about two forms of information overload, only one of which is solvable by the standard solution of improving the information filters, search and prioritisation algorithms that are available to us.
One can intuitively feel this to be true. We have so many more electronic facilities to aid us in sorting through and finding high quality material than we used to - even whilst acknowledging that some of the more famous ones are perhaps getting worse. But who feels like they have less information overload now than in the past?
In Carr’s view, that’s because these filtering systems only solve “situational overload”
Situational overload is the needle-in-the-haystack problem: You need a particular piece of information â in order to answer a question of one sort or another â and that piece of information is buried in a bunch of other pieces of information.
Many information-sorting technologies, from the introduction of indexes, catalogues and the Dewey Decimal system onwards, have made inroads into this.
But these systems don’t help with “ambient overload”.
Ambient overload doesnât involve needles in haystacks. It involves haystack-sized piles of needles.
We experience ambient overload when weâre surrounded by so much information that is of immediate interest to us that we feel overwhelmed by the neverending pressure of trying to keep up with it all.
This is exactly right. I’m not confused as to which handful of my 278 to-read books are actually going to be of interest to me. In principle they all are. I hand-selected them. This is a post-filtered list, full of likely needles; full of signal, not obscured by noise.
The world’s best search isn’t going to help me here. In fact, improving the filters we have available to us simply pushes ever-increasing amounts of ever-more interesting content in our direction.
There are people trying to solve this problem, but no solution that I’ve seen feels very satisfying. For example, there are multiple book summarisation services - Blinkist, Shortform and their ilk - which I’ve played with a bit in the past. Whilst they have their uses I don’t find them to be an adequate substitute for the original material. Let alone the modern AI based solutions - either the generic “Please, chatbot, summarise this book in 2 paragraphs” options or the dedicated “summarisation services”. Many people naturally have ethical concerns about the type of AI they typically use, alongside the ever-present risk that they in fact fail to summarise the content correctly.
If however we determine that these services do have a legitimate place, then again I feel like - at least for me - they’re addressing situational overload. I’d be using them as filters for “do I want to read the whole thing?” rather than as a substitute for “I have read the whole thing”.
Of course, if you’ve a need to get the basic gist of a book very quickly but have no desire to spend substantial time working through it then those services might potentially work well for that - I haven’t checked the efficacy studies! - but that lack of desire isn’t the problem I face.
So what is the solution? Carr doesn’t really present one. Perhaps there are none, other than somehow reconciling oneself to be able to happily live whilst giving up on the idea that we could possibly indulge in even a sizeable fraction of the things we’re interested in within this new(ish) world of information abundance. Or, as Keenan writes, accepting that “Itâs okay if we donât consume all of the worldâs information before we die”.
Currently trying out a combo of FreshRSS and NetNewsWire to experience the joy (?) of aggregating, managing and perusing RSS feeds without relying on someone else’s cloud service.
FreshRSS is “A free, self-hostable feed aggregator”. Think Feedly, Google Reader (RIP) et al. but self-hostable, open source, private (if you want it to be) and subscription-free. You can access it via the web, desktop or mobile. Here’s a screenshot from their site.
NetNewsWire is one of many client RSS apps that are out there that can sync with FreshRSS if you prefer reading your feeds in an app. This one has the selling point being both free, open source and, again, not infused with features to sell your brain to the highest bidder.
There are of course several similar options if those two don’t float your boat.
Found a new creepy critter in the garden, just in time for the Halloween season.
My phone believes this to be an Araneus Quadratus, also known as a “four-spot orb-weaver”.
The wrongness of 'If you've got nothing to hide then you've nothing to fear'
“If you’ve got nothing to hide then you’ve nothing to fear” is a common response to those of us who worry about the ever-increasing rise of systematic and universal surveillance and the peel-back of privacy.
It’s snappy and intuitive. But wrong. I prefer one of the following constructions.
From Edward Snowden’s autobiography - at least that’s where I think I read it? It’s certainly something he said:
Arguing that you don’t care about the right to privacy because you have nothing to hide is no different than saying you don’t care about free speech because you have nothing to say.
From Shoshana Zuboff’s pivotal book, “The Age of Surveillance Capitalism":
The real psychological truth is this: If youâve got nothing to hide, you are nothing.
Privacy is a right. The European Convention on Human Rights agrees, as does the UN Declaration of Human Rights.
That said, such legislation is often thought of as targeting the potential for governmental overreach. This may not be the primary concern for the majority of us in a world where it’s primarily capitalists that are capable of and desperate to know what we’re up to (largely so that they can change it). In any case, governments often rely on the technology capitalists for their surveillance work; there’s no clear dividing line.
Some people are only able to thrive - perhaps only stay alive - because they have privacy. This isn’t only theoretical. The LGBTQ community, particularly within countries with outrageously repressive laws and norms around the subject, provides an obvious example.
Via The Verge:
As LGBTQ Egyptians flock to apps like Grindr, Hornet, and Growlr, they face an unprecedented threat from police and blackmailers who use the same apps to find targets. The apps themselves have become both evidence of a crime and a means of resistance.
This might not be the case for more privileged folk for whom little immediate drama might result if our behaviour or implied thoughts were to be revealed. But when de-valuing the right to privacy on the basis that you don’t think that (right now) you have anything to hide from any institution that might wish to surveil you, you also implicitly imperil the right to privacy for other people, for those to whom it may be more acutely important.
Plus rules change. Norms alter. Over in the US, when the Roe vs Wade decision was cruelly overturned some folk who previously may have felt little concern about certain aspects of their data privacy suddenly had a potential new reason to care what happened to the data associated with period tracking apps.
There have been several instances of, for instance, the data associated with people’s web search history or voice assistant usage being used in their legal prosecution. Over here in the UK, the British Crown Prosecution service makes it clear this is a move both intentional and expanding, writing that:
Digital devices like smart doorbells, dashcam footage, car GPS systems and even Amazon Alexas are providing increasingly more evidence in criminal trials, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) said in a speech today.
Some will argue that this is a good thing, making it easier to prove criminal behaviour, more likely that victims of crime will see justice. Others will fear that, even so, this may not be the only use your personal data will be put to.
New Scientist Live show 2024 books list
Inevitably after attending any type of show that features something even vaguely sciencey the list of books that I simply must read expands.
Here, as a service to anyone else similarly afflicted, is a list of books from as many of the speakers from the recent New Scientist Live show as I could quickly find.
The organisation of the show is such that you can’t possibly attend more than a few of the talks whilst you’re there, but that’s no reason to let unread books from people you could in theory have listened to pile up on one’s shelf of course.
Many of these distinguished folk have written several books. In those cases I picked a single one based on either which title it seemed they were implicitly or explicitly sales-pitching the most in their talk, or if not applicable, then perhaps their most recent or, just the one that caught my eye.
TIL: Thanks to the innate lack of privacy that the technology has, whilst we might not know who “Satoshi Nakamoto”, inventor of Bitcoin, actually is, people do believe that he has enough of it - between 750k and 1.1 million coins - to be worth somewhere between 50 and 75 billion dollars today.
In 2021 that made him - if it is a single person and one that goes by ‘he’ - the 15th richest person in the world.
(h/t episode 616 of Core Intuition)
Added a few more books to my absolutely unrealistic “Books about AI I want to read” list.
It is a battle evident in the psyche of many partnered people, and especially so in midlife. It shows itself, even within a happy long-term relationship, in the crystal-clear desire to be left alone.
To be allowed to work undisturbed, to perhaps write or paint or just sit at the computer, to think or nap or to choose to spend a day as one requires. To let things live where one has left them; to visit friends alone without guilt; to be who one is, without that being a daily source of irritation to someone else.
Derren Brown, from A Book of Secrets.
This quote doesn’t seem to resonate with absolutely everyone, but does in seemingly plenty of folk. There can surely be a unique kind of freedom, and certainly peace, in solitude.
Ken Follett's Fall of Giants tells fictional-but-realistic stories of family life in the early twentieth century
đ Finished listening to Fall of Giants by Ken Follett.
This is the first book of Ken Follet’s “Century Trilogy” which sets out to allow the reader to follow the stories of five families through the highs and lows of the twentieth-century. This one covers the start of the century, up to and including the immediate aftermath of the First World War.
Amongst various other socio-cultural changes there’s big political change in the air, from the Russian revolution, to demands for women’s rights - including the British campaign for the right to vote, for workers rights and more. The “fallen giants” include the aristocracy, the royalty and perhaps even a couple of nations, at least in terms of how people thought about them at the start of the century.
Whilst primarily a work of fiction telling a made-up story of families that didn’t exist, we do see some historical figures pop their heads up. Several are from the political class, inculding Lloyd George, Woodrow Wilson, Vladimir Lenin and, inevitably, Adolf Hitler.
Supposedly Follet has made every effort when it comes to the actually-real folk to ensure that the events they’re involved in either did happen or could realistically have happened. What they say, how they behave, where they are are all intended to be plausible. Personally, this feels usefully educational to my limited knowledge of early twentieth century history, but there’s also a risk of course that I’ll mix up fiction with reality in my mind, although the danger feels less acute than with The Crown.
The five families represent folk from across the class spectrum. One of the major themes is the struggle of the working class to achieve liberation, whether via politics or other methods. We start off with Billy Williams, a child, who’s sent off to work down a Welsh coal mine. Next up we sight the aristocracy, Earl Fitzherbert, who owns the said mine amongst other lands. His sister inadvertently falls in love with a German man, which is to prove problematic given the rise of Hitler and the consequent looming conflict. Over in Russia, two orphans struggle against poverty in very different ways, orphans in part because the Russian aristocracy executed their father.
Throughout, we see how these families live, meet and mix in ways both predictable and not, as they thrive, struggle, rise and fall through a seemingly quite realistic replica of our twentieth century.
Sure, the written form of the book is apparently nearly 1000 pages long, which is something that I’d usually find tremendously off-putting. And I can sometimes find historical fiction somewhat dry. But not in this case; it proved fairly gripping as I happily listened to the 30-and-a-half hour long audio edition at a more rapid rate than I usually manage to listen to audiobooks. And in the end, the next two books in the trilogy, Winter of the World (apparently mostly covering the 1933-1949 period) and Edge of Eternity (1969-1989) have surely made it to my want-to-read list.
Ryan Broderick succinctly sums up why the contemporary mega-hype around AI doesn’t depend on the systems we have being all that good, let alone ‘superintelligent’.
…the so-called AI boom we’re in right now is really selling two things, neither of which have to be very good.
A way to automate work you don’t value enough to hire a human being to do or, at the bare minimum, a way to hide the human beings doing that work so you can feel better about how little you pay them.
After all, the only person that the hype merchants really needs to convince is your boss.
New Scientist Live talks 2024
Journeying back from the ever-fascinating New Scientist Live show, 2024 edition.
A list of the talks I managed to get to in person:
- Weird science: An introduction to anomalistic psychology, by Christopher French.
- A life of crime? By Anne Coxon.
- Our accidental universe, by Chris Lintott.
- Generation pup: The science behind the UK’s pooches, by Rachel Casey.
- The balanced brain: The science of mental health.
- The atomic human, by Neil Lawrence.
- How we break: Navigating the wear and tear of living, by Vincent Deary.
- The human-fungal symbiosis, by Nicholas Money.
More words coming on some of these in the future quite likely.
Unfortunately I was compelled to miss last year’s sci-fest, but here’s the equivalent post from 2022.
I’m curious about precisely what level of surveillance technology is powering this (admittedly useful) public toilet info sign.
Hoping Meta isn’t somehow linking me to my…biological requirements.
Busting ghosts for breakfast.
Well this is one of the more aggravating CAPTCHAs I’ve had to solve. Especially as 2/3 of the time it was the last of the twelve images of dice that was the correct one.