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📺 Watched Industry.

Here we follow the lives of a group of ambitious and mostly new-to-it investment bankers and traders as they enter the still-brutal banking industry some time after the massive 2008 market crash. Some of it is financial drama, something I find myself strangely attracted to despite the cruel destruction the real thing has overall wreaked upon the world. A lot of it is lifestyle drama - sex, drugs, maybe some rock ‘n’ roll.

There are no heroes here. The first series really starts off with a young lady who has lied her way into getting a job in the first place. The ethics don’t really improve from there as everyone lives or dies - mostly metaphorically - by whether they can make more money for their employer than their peers.

As the seasons move on, the plot felt like it focused on the day-to-day work life of these under-pressure yet unfathomably rich wannabe bankers and more on the surrounding antics of the players in question. Nonetheless, whilst it’s “entirely” fictional, some of even the bizarre later events I believe are echos of what we know to have happened in the real world. For example, the meeting of a bunch of the very wealthy and very racist multi-millionaires for a lovely dinner? It’s hard not to see this as a direct parallel to, for instance, Peter Thiel’s various dinner parties involving the rich and influential ruiners of today’s world.

In fact, as I often think with these “fictional but obviously not entirely so” programs, I wish they’d done a documentary after the fact of which real life events may have inspired which story-lines. I think anyone sensible with less of a compulsive news fixation than myself might have been surprised, as I imagine I would be.

I was somewhat darkly amused to see the Office for National Statistics complained that it unfairly represented their employees in a damaging way. Without spoiling the storyline perhaps they do have a plausible reason to do so, although I’d be surprised if the damage was all that damaging.

But it has been noted elsewhere that perhaps the banking industry might have more cause for complaint:

Simon French, the chief economist at the investment bank Panmure Liberum, said: “If that is Darren’s major issue with Industry, he has been focusing on the wrong bits … Can I write a letter saying that City workers are worried that BBC is portraying us all as sex-mad, drug-peddling sociopaths?”

That said, the stories a friend of mine who worked in the investment banking industry once told me might suggest that there really is little that could be really be described as libellous there.

Three serious-looking individuals posed closely together with the word INDUSTRY displayed prominently in bold pink letters at the bottom.

📺 Watched Under Salt Marsh.

This is a 6-episode crime drama set in a small and isolated community in Wales that’s in impending risk of destruction by rising sea levels and other aspects of the IRL climate catastrophe.

Currently a school teacher, former detective - the “former” part of that being the choice of her superiors rather than herself following an earlier conflict- Jackie tragically lost her niece a few years ago. Lost in the sense of “inexplicably went missing”.

A few years later, another school child unfortunately turns up dead, seemingly drowned in a ditch. But are things as “simple” as that? Well, obviously not given there’s 6 episodes of atmospheric, gloomy but compelling detective work by someone who isn’t actually allowed to be a detective any more, racing against time before the evidence is erased by the incoming evacuation-level storm.

A woman with red hair and a man wearing a police coat stand in a stormy marshland with the tagline No secrets are safe from the storm above them.

🎥 Watched The Apprentice.

Why do I do it to myself one might fairly ask? But I did.

This is the story of Donald Trump’s early years in 1970s-80s New York. It is nearly as full of the misogyny, racism, greed, arrogance and incompetence that shaped his bizarre success as one might imagine. The main narrative seems to be around how his relationship with the famously aggressive lawyer Roy Cohn aided his rise and shaped his business and political “style” for want of a better word. A bit of Trump’s family life is portrayed, again providing clues as to how he turned out like he did.

It’s full of foreshadowing of what came next, although the story cuts off just as he (well, a journalist, Tony Schwartz) is writing his book - I assume the “Art of the Deal”. That’s the book Trump says is his second favourite book ever, modestly demurring to the Bible as the first. Schwartz on the other hand later said being involved with it was the greatest regret of his life and that Trump was not in the least bit involved in writing it.

The mannerisms and speech patterns of the actor playing Trump are certainly enough to bring shudders to anyone who has had the displeasure of hearing him speak in person.

Roy Cohn in the real world is certainly a character worth learning about to help understand how we got to where we are today. The BBC has a rundown of the guy here:

A Washington Post article about Cohn’s influence, published during the 2016 presidential campaign, had the headline “The man who showed Donald Trump how to exploit power and instill fear”, and summed up his lesson as “a simple formula: attack, counterattack and never apologise”. Cohn was also expert at media manipulation.

A golden statue-like depiction features two men, one standing behind and resting a hand on the shoulder of the other who is seated on an ornate throne surrounded by miniature landmarks and objects, with the title The Apprentice and the names Sebastian Stan, Jeremy Strong, and Maria Bakalova displayed above.

Read Andy Burnham and Steve Rotheram's 10-point manifesto for a better Britain in their 2024 book 'Head North'

📚 Finished reading Head North A Rallying Cry for a More Equal Britain by Andy Burnham and Steve Rotheram.

Having recently won a by-election by a very impressive amount, it seems that Andy Burnham is almost certainly going to be the next Prime Minister of the UK. With that in mind, I set to reading the book he co-authored a couple of years ago whilst he was the mayor of Manchester alongside his colleague Steve Rotheram, mayor of the relatively nearby Liverpool City Region.

The first section of the book is mostly memoir style for both of them. Each author writes a few paragraphs and then the other takes over for a while, identified by the font. Helpfully, their journeys and opinions are not dissimilar. Interestingly, both of them seem to have been (quite fairly) “radicalised” into politics by the corrupt state cover-up of the Hillsborough stadium disaster back in 1989. It was not until nearly 30 years later that, the truth having finally been revealed and accepted by most, anyone was charged with an offence.

Burnham was, famously, an MP in the past. Much of this book is about why the Westminster system is basically corrupt, or at least designed in such a way that actually getting something done to further the goals of the authors - most notably to address the vast inequality between the relatively wealthy city of London and the deprived areas of the north (hence the title…) is absolutely impossible. The seemingly unmodifiable method the government uses to judge the worthiness of new investment, in their eyes, is guaranteed to favour well-off areas every time. And the whole Westminster voting, whipping, etc. system means that even the best intentioned of MPs ends up supporting stuff they vehemently disagree with or is against the interests of the constituents they are supposed to represent. In many ways, the authors' views on Parliamentary-adjacent practice are at times rather in line with former MP Rory Stewart’s.

Eventually Burnham tired of the futility of it all and became instead the mayor of Greater Manchester. He found this position, with its tie to a specific place, to be a much more effective conduit for change, albeit still frequently having to battle central government naysayers. It is thus quite interesting to me how he reconciles his masterful effort to return to Westminster with this. All I can think is that he believes that now he is very likely to be in a position of great power, he can burn down the system and build up something just and effective. Best of luck to him.

In the second half of the book the two authors present their joint manifesto for change. Perhaps it’s worth enumerating it here given one of them is likely to be ruling the country fairly soon. There are ten points to it:

  1. Britain should have a written constitution - a single legally binding document to protect the rights of citizens and limit governmental power.
  2. The introduction of a “basic law”. This would be a statute that protects our core rights and protects democracy, designed in a way that any given Parliament of the day could not override. Germany has something like this already. Burnham and Rotheram think a big component of this should be a requirement guaranteeing citizens equal life chances irrespective of where in the UK they are born or live.
  3. Reform of the voting system: No more first-past-the-post. Switch to some variation of proportional representation.
  4. Abolish the whipping system in Parliament so MPs can actually choose how to vote themselves.
  5. Replace the House of Lords with an elected second chamber that is guaranteed to represent all of England’s regions. Something more like the US Senate I suppose.
  6. More devolution. Similar to the situation with Scotland and Wales, devolve as many powers as possible to England’s cities and regions. Let local mayors make local decisions.
  7. Reform education so both vocational and academic routes are equally funded and respected.
  8. A Grenfell law - legislate for and thoroughly enforce building safety standards. There should be corporate accountability and criminal liability for those who do not adhere to them.
  9. A Hillsborough law - this has two aspects in their view. First, make it illegal for police and other public servants to lie about public disasters. Yes, it is kind of incredible that this isn’t already the case, but apparently it isn’t. Secondly, ensure parity of legal funding for bereaved families bringing court cases against public bodies in these situations. It is clearly unjust for the government to win cases simply because they can afford more expensive lawyers (with public money).
  10. Use Net Zero to re-industrialise the north. The clean energy revolution we so desperately, desperately need could be an avenue for re-introducing good, well-paid manufacturing and other jobs into the areas of Northern England currently plagued with a lack of quality jobs.

OK, there’s not too much I’d argue against there. I await with a mix of excitement, but perhaps more trepidation, to see what Burnham can do about the above, in the very likely case that he will soon be the leader of the Labour party with, to be fair, a very large majority at present.

A book cover displays the title Head North: A Rallying Cry for a More Equal Britain by Andy Burnham and Steve Rotheram against a blue background with a pink map of the UK.

Patriot: the memoirs of the incredibly brave Russian anti-corruption campaigner, Alexei Navalny

📚 Finished listening to Patriot by Alexei Navalny.

This is the incredibly brave political campaigner Alexei Navalny’s (tragically posthumous) memoir.

Navalny was an unimaginably brave anti-corruption campaigner who wanted to see the freeing of Russia from the cruel and kleptocratic regime of Putin et al. He is perhaps most famous for the YouTube documentary-style videos his organisation created to reveal the hypocrisy and corruption of the Russian political elites as well as call for a popular uprising to liberate Russia from this gang of criminals who he saw as, apart from anything else, ruining Russia’s chance to become a successful and happy country. That said, along the way, we learn that making videos was far from his first choice of activity. It’s just what he found broke through the most.

Famously, back in 2020, he was poisoned with Novichok, and nearly died, via a criminal act facilitated by the Russian state. Thankfully, his life was saved in Germany. And he no doubt could have stayed there with his family and continued his campaigning remotely if he wanted to. But he most certainly did not want to.

In the book he makes it clear that he wanted to lead by example. He does not want everyday Russians to act in fear of Putin’s state, and so he made himself act as though he didn’t either (it may not have been an act, certainly later on he enumerates the ways he found to avoid the fear at the darkest points in his journey). So he returned, with his equally courageous and supportive wife Yulia, to his homeland. Inevitably he was immediately captured and imprisoned, and was stuck there for years, in increasingly cruel and punishing jails.

Much of the book is thus a prison diary, interspersed with a few of his Instagram posts over the years. However he tells of even the dourest of events with incredible humour; wit and irony abound. He’s an incredibly likeable character, perhaps amongst the best of what humanity has to offer.

Whilst he’s almost entirely locked away, invisible to the outer world, the regime throw more and more allegations of new crimes against him, ramp the level of his punishment up and up - and yet still in no way does he give in.

When he is able to convey some sort of message to the outer world, it’s always to thank his many supporters for their efforts and implore anyone subject to Putin’s state to fight back, to never be afraid, to never stop highlighting the cruelty and hypocrisy of their government, and above everything else, to never let go of the idea that Russia could be a truly happy and successful country if only it was led by a less greedy, cruel and criminal government.

Of course recent events don’t necessarily suggest that that day is particularly near. And when the day eventually comes sad to say, Navalny will not be around to see what one has to hope will be a marvellous enactment of his vision at some point in the future, having, since writing the book, died of “natural causes” / in very suspicious circumstances whilst jailed within a Siberian penal colony, at the age of 47.

His brave widow, Yulia Navalnaya, herself an avid campaigner, convinced that her husband was murdered with poison, continues the fight. She’s now the head of the Anti-Corruption Foundation that Alexei founded as well as the chair of the Human Rights Foundation. Godspeed.

A close-up portrait of Alexei Navalny is featured alongside the title Patriot and various endorsements describing the book as a global bestseller about his life story and secret prison diaries.

📚 Finished reading The Compound by Aisling Rawle.

Imagine the show Love Island, except with fewer limitations, worse incentives and set in an isolated desert compound in world that is at least, outside of the compound, somewhat dystopian. A bunch of beautiful people go into the house and may stay as long as they both share a bed with someone else each night and are not the worst at completing deliberately manipulative challenges.

Challenges bring increasingly luxurious rewards which you may keep forever, an unimaginable boon in a world where the average person can do no more than struggle day-in-day-out to get by in what’s left of the world. If you win you can stay in the house as long as you like, protected from the outer world.

So it’s basically a slightly less moral version of Love Island set in a slightly more dystopian world than we live in. i.e. highly compelling, and probably a foreshadowing of what we’ll all be watching in a couple of years.

The cover features the title The Compound by Aisling Rawle against a twilight sky with a silhouette of a figure on a hill and a colorful abstract building in the foreground, along with quotes and a The Book Club badge.

In further ‘if you can’t download and back your digital content up in a DRM free manner then you don’t really own it’ news, Sony is deleting over 500 movies from people’s PlayStation libraries. Films they bought for money. No refunds available.


Learned a new word today: Kakistocracy

…government by the worst, least qualified, or most unscrupulous people

I’m sure I’m going to be using it daily.

Turns out it was the Economist’s word of the year in 2024.


Some good context from George Eaton:

Reform have now lost six by-elections in a row in England, Scotland and Wales.

Their national poll rating is 26% – below Labour in 1983 – and Farage’s approval rating is -37.

They’re very far from the voice of the people and need to stop being treated as such.


Labour's Andy Burnham wins Makerfield election by ~9000 votes

Finally a surprisingly good-news election result here in the UK.

Andy Burnham wins huge majority in Makerfield byelection, paving way for Starmer leadership challenge

This is of course also potentially the entrance of our next Prime Minister, tbd.

Auto-generated description: Labour's Andy Burnham won the Makerfield by-election with 55% of the vote, showing a 10% increase from the 2024 election, followed by Reform UK's Rob Kenyon with 35%, while the Conservative and other smaller parties saw decreases in their vote shares.

The scale of the victory is impressive. To be honest I was hoping/expecting Burnham would win but only on the basis of the despicable Restore party attracting the votes of the most hate-ridden Tommy-Robinson-pilled of the potential Reform UK vote. But here Labour attracted over 6000 more votes than those two horror shows combined.

Sure, there was a huge ground game with every potential voter’s door apparently being knocked on 6-7 times by various levels of Labour campaigners, including plenty of fellow MPs. There was a concern that it was so intense that’d it end up actually annoying the voters. That’s not obviously not sustainable for a General Election.

I don’t know how much that affected the the vote. But the point is, it can be done.


Explaining Social Deviance is a 10 part run-through of answers to 'what makes something deviant?'

📚 Finished reading Explaining Social Deviance by Paul Root Wolpe.

This is really a series of lectures and PDF notes. I’ve enjoyed the series before and at some point I watched enough Criminal Minds that I decided that I too needed to virtually join the fake FBI team and understand all about causes “deviance”.

This series isn’t quite that, but rather an examination of the critical question of what the category of “deviant” even means.

Over the centuries “deviance “has been defined in very different ways by different people with a wide range of consequences. Perhaps fairly obviously, there’s no right answer, or at least no obviously objectively right answer. When formulating our own views we should always examine why something is considered deviant and who benefits from that classification.

This audio-and-text then seeks to educate us about some of the theories that humankind has come up with over the years, which is an equally fascinating topic.

Here’s a quick list of the theories covered, or at least the ones I remembered. Many are of course incompatible with each other:

I’m a big fan of the Big Theory genre. This added, or at least refreshed, a few to my mental repertoire.

Cover art for Explaining Social Deviance by Professor Paul Root Wolpe, featuring a metallic door against a blue background.

Unsurprisingly the Online Safety Act hasn't stopped social media companies pushing dangerous content

In case anyone was in danger of thinking that the Online Safety Act has solved the harms caused by the big social media platforms:

Nearly half of girls and a third of all teenagers saw suicide, self-harm and eating disorder content on social media in a week, a study shows.

(Source)

Or:

X has refused to take down dozens of social media posts reported as “hate, abuse or harassment” in which prominent UK politicians, including Kemi Badenoch], have been racially abused.

In May, researchers from the social inclusion thinktank British Future reported 30 posts from this year in which the Conservative party leader was called the N-word. In each case the researchers used the platform’s “hate, abuse or harassment” reporting option. X refused to act in the majority of cases, despite repeated requests

(Source)

It remains astonishing that some of these platforms are allowed to exist in their current form. I mean, our government, including the politicians specifically being regularly abused, continues to use X for official communications.


The Trump administration forces Anthropic to stop foreign nationals accessing its latest AI models

Yet more real life evidence as to why digital sovereignty is a critical issue.

Last week Anthropic gave access to its latest AI models - Fable and Mythos - to anyone who wants to pay for it, my employer included.

Yesterday the apparently anti-freedom vengeful scared little snowflakes in the US government decreed that Anthropic, a private company, must ban non-American citizens from using it. And so they have.

I imagine this product is too new for very many people to have introduced a real dependency on it. And there’s plenty of people who would be anti its use, anti its existence, for other good reasons.

But if the model is either good enough that it provides substantive new power to its users, and/or this same type of arbitrary legislation is used on some other more mainstream technologies, well, a big chunk of the globe may feel the pain.

After all, if US was to shut off just all of its big AI models to the world, well, I think a concerning number of businesses and governments would face some real obstacles - to a large extent predictable ones of their own making. And that’s just AI, a relatively small part of our overall technological dependence on US tech.

If this stuff is really as powerful and critical as it is claimed, it’s very obviously the height of irresponsibility to allow a handful of extraordinarily rich private companies who are subordinate to the rule of a couple of unfriendly governments to have a monopoly on it.


Dark Mirror retells the Edward Snowden story from a journalist's viewpoint

📚 Finished reading Dark Mirror by Barton Gellman.

This is a 2020 re-telling of the (in)famous story of Edward Snowden and the leaks of NSA material he provided that made real the degree and methods of US government spying on its own citizens, as well as the rest of us.

This was where we learned the details of the NSA’s easy access to and storage of your email, photos, messages, your physical location via mobile phone cell towers, as well as all sorts of other extremely dystopian, extremely abusable and potentially illegal material.

Remember PRISM et al? As revealed to us by a trove of horribly-designed top secret powerpoints.

A detailed chart of the NSA PRISM program shows service providers and types of data collected, including emails, videos, and VoIP.

The author here, Gellman, is one of the journalists that originally worked on reporting the story after Snowden approached him, at first under his covert identity as “Verax”.

Whilst I’ve read countless articles over the years as well as Snowden’s autobiography, I very much appreciated the tale from the journalist’s point of view. Understanding the process of the approach, Gellman’s efforts to understand whether he was for real or simply an internet weirdo, as well as how he thought about the tension between reporting extremely important truths vs revealing state secrets that were potentially of benefit to the US’s enemies provides a vantage point distinct from Snowden’s own. Gellman also had to consider his own safety, threats of both legal action and having his own computer targeted for hacking included. After all Gellman has seen, and stored, documents most of us will probably never see even after the main revelations have been reported on.

Whilst the book is perfectly readable by someone with no interest in or knowledge about tech, I did enjoy him providing a handful of the Linux commands he used to explore the vast amounts of files in the leak.

He presents Snowden as a complex character. Often people either believe he’s a white-knight hero striking back against the illegal acts of his government, or a traitorous evil-doer who hates America. Being human, he clearly isn’t entirely either. There was plenty of tension and uncertainty between the parties involved at times. I personally lean towards the hero side. Reading this book provided an important reminder that if you truly want your data to remain private, unfortunately it is incumbent on you to figure out the appropriate tools and services that will present the most challenge to any wannabe spies, state or otherwise.

Of course most of us will not become specific targets of the state, but the point of the revelations was that that doesn’t matter. They’re collecting and your information anyway and running analysis over vast swathes of it. I am especially uncomfortable about that given the nature of some of the world’s governments at present.

Cover of the book Dark Mirror by Barton Gellman, featuring text overlay on an obscured background portrait.

DocFetcher is a great multi-OS application for searching through vast tranches of your files

DocFetcher is a free and open source application available for Windows, Linux and macOS operating systems that lets you search the contents of the files you have on your computer. What’s great about it is its search speed and comprehensiveness. You have to let it build an index of the files you want it to search, but once that’s done you can search through massive hauls of any compatible docs.

I tried it out on the whopping archive of Epstein related files the US Government released a while ago - vast number of large PDFs, hundred of gigabytes - and it worked a treat. Indexing them took ages, best left overnight, or over several nights. But the resulting search was perfectly fast and comprehensive enough for interactive use.

Here’s a screenshot from its official site:

The software interface of DocFetcher is displayed with a Wikipedia page about Fourier series and a list of document search results on the left.

It can search through a wide variety of files. To quote:

  • Microsoft Office (doc, xls, ppt)
  • Microsoft Office 2007 and newer (docx, xlsx, pptx, docm, xlsm, pptm)
  • Microsoft Outlook (pst)
  • OpenOffice.org (odt, ods, odg, odp, ott, ots, otg, otp)
  • Portable Document Format (pdf)
  • EPUB (epub)
  • HTML (html, xhtml, …)
  • TXT and other plain text formats (customizable)
  • Rich Text Format (rtf)
  • AbiWord (abw, abw.gz, zabw)
  • Microsoft Compiled HTML Help (chm)
  • MP3 Metadata (mp3)
  • FLAC Metadata (flac)
  • JPEG Exif Metadata (jpg, jpeg)
  • Microsoft Visio (vsd)
  • Scalable Vector Graphics (svg)

I also enjoy that the first point the creator mentions when discussing their design philosophy is that it is “crap free”.

It’s potentially marginally less friendly to set up than some applications that claim to do similar things. But an average user should get on with it well. You will need a bit of extra disk space for the index which can be of substantial size, but obviously still substantially smaller than the source files you’re searching. The resulting search speed and scope is well worth the indexing, as is the way it immediately shows a snippet of the actual line in the document where your search term is found to give you the context up front.

The one slightly fiddly thing I did adjust in my version was the amount of RAM it is permitted to allow. By default it’ll only use some relatively small amount, I forget whether it was 512mb or 1gb. But there are ways to configure it to use much more. I think I upped it to 4 or 8gb when testing indexing the big tranche of Epstein files. The in-app doc tells you how - it’s basically either overwriting one file with another or editing a configuration file.

Once indexed, the search syntax comes from Apache Lucene, which means as well as simple Google-style searches (“dog”, “dog OR cat”) you can come up with constructs like “words similar to dog”, “dog but it needs to be within 10 words of cat” or “the document title should contain dog or cat but dog is more important”. The software’s documentation on this is here, and the Apache Lucene docs themselves are here.

The free version of the software is considered “legacy” and no longer updated. However, it still works just fine on modern operating systems. There is a newer closed-source “pro” version of the software should you need a more or more up-to-date features or just want to financially support the software - although I have found the free version features perfectly fine for my use cases.

The Pro version has apparently got better text extraction abilities though so I would consider it for any project for which that would be important. It’s a one-time cost of 40 euros which I think is perfectly reasonable for folk in a position to pay.


On the grimmer side of Wikipedia entries I see there’s now an official page for ‘Deaths linked to chatbots’. It’s much more up-to-date than my motley collection of these tragedies.

One of its sources is llmdeathcount.com, a site that no one can argue has a misleading URL.


The economic benefits of Open Source software

Continuing to make my way through the Open Rights Group’s important report on Digital Sovereignty. Their (and my!) preferred solution involves moving systems over to open source technologies, or, if suitable candidates don’t exist, then creating new technologies that are open source from the start.

The key advantages that following this path would provide I think exist in domains far beyond the financial. It would be urgently worth doing even if it cost significant money. But it’s nice to see some figures collected which suggest that such a move could in fact support local economic growth. That was, after all, the one true key sole priority of our current government not so long ago, for better or worse.

From p19 of the report:

• Greater investment in Open Source can also drive UK economic growth, supporting domestic innovation and a more competitive technology sector.

• Despite underpinning much of the global digital economy, Open Source remains underrecognised in UK government strategy.

• National economies would be 2–3% smaller without Open Source software.

• Open Source is present in over 95% of proprietary software systems, making up around 70% of their codebase on average.

• EU research suggests every £1 invested in Open Source returns around £4 in economic value.

• The Linux Foundation estimates 2–5x return on investment for organisations contributing to Open Source, rising to around 6x for leading contributors.

• France’s government preference for Open Source procurement helped generate 9–18% annual growth in IT startups, while also creating globally valuable Open Source assets.

• In the UK, OpenUK estimates Open Source contributes around £13 billion annually, representing 27% of the technology sector.

• A 2024 Harvard study estimates the global demand-side value of Open Source at $8.8 trillion, noting firms would need to spend 3.5x more on software without it.

• European Commission research suggests a 10% increase in Open Source contributions could add 0.4–0.6% to annual European economic growth


Evidence-based investing guidance from Tim Hale's book 'Smarter Investing'

📚 Finished reading Smarter Investing: Simpler Decisions for Better Results by Tim Hale.

This is the fourth edition of Smarter Investing. It was actually one of the older editions that helped me get going on the pro-investing path back in the day. But since then, temptation has on occasion led me off the Hale path. Nothing disastrous ensued, but nonetheless I figured it’s time to give it another read. Besides, a lot has happened in the world since the first edition

The book was revised in 2023 so of course it doesn’t contain direct reference to the absolute chaotic insanity in the world of economics that we see in very recent times. It knows what a Bitcoin is (his advice: avoid) but it doesn’t know that a tariff-obsessed corrupt baby is in charge of the free world (my advice: avoid).

However, the whole point of the book is: don’t worry about it. Just keep doing the same thing when it comes to investing, and you will - assuming you are not very unlucky - come out on top.

In sum, the idea is that instead of making your own dodgy stock picks and/or paying an advisor to ruin your fortune, you should instead build a low-cost diversified portfolio that is in line with your appetite for risk. Rebalance it now and then so it keeps doing what you want it to. Repeat forever. No new decisions needed. Wait a while. Retire richer than you’d otherwise have been.

Why is this the method of choice? The book contains a lot of evidence around how even the average professional stockpicker returns less profit than the market average, so what chance have I, an uninformed pleb, to do better? Instead, we should use historical evidence to understand the general direction of various markets and their correlates.

The book also goes into the psychology of investing which is where people apparently tend to go wrong. Your worst enemy is: you. Yes, it’s You that tempts you into buying things high and selling them low.

The real practical side of the book is its clear and illuminating guide as to what components your portfolio should consist of, as well as suggesting some funds and ETFs that you might consider for each component.

It can be nearly as simple as you want. Below I’ll pop what I take to be his favoured breakdown of investment components - but he seems open to simplifying it if it seems a lot. Just buying 1 cheap fund to represent “all stocks” and another to represent “bonds” is perfectly compatible with his mindset, and a lot better than what most people do.

But if you want to go all-out Hale, this is what he’s driving at. The risk rating increases as you go up with respect to the “return engine assets”. You pick a column that suits you riskwise and go with that.

A table presents different asset allocation percentages for a Smarter Portfolio, categorizing them into allocation summary, growth assets mix, and defensive assets mix across various return levels from 0 to 100.

To over-simplify, the “Smarter Portfolio 20” column means you’ve got a 20:80 split between high-performing-but-riskier equity and low-performing-but-less-risky bonds.

But to understand why and how we get to the numbers above, and how to actually go ahead and create the requisite portfolio, you should definitely read the book. It’s not even particularly heavy going. Oh, and I transcribed the numbers in the table above myself, so also it’d be wise to get your hands on the book to double-check I did that correctly.

It’s a British book, meaning the specific funds and ETFs suggested are actually all available to us UKers, which is nice. There’s chapters about if and when you should employ an advisor, the merits or otherwise of sustainable investing and other useful bits and pieces.

It’s a great guide especially for anyone new to investing, but it has important lessons for us all. I am glad to have re-read it. There’s a reasonable chance, should I suddenly stumble across a big pile of money - in this economy!? lol - that I’ll feel more confident about what to do with it.

The cover of Smarter Investing by Tim Hale features bold typography and a striking red geometric design, promoting its fourth edition with a focus on making simpler decisions for better investment results.

Pure nerd in-joke perfection from @KyleTrainEmoji:

PICARD: Data, shields up

DATA: Brilliant! Shields can reduce damage we sustain. Not immunity. Not hubris. Just prudence. It’s not precaution—it’s strategy.

[camera shakes]

WORF: HULL BREACHES ON NINE DECKS

DATA: Here’s what happened: you told me to raise shields, and I didn’t

IYKYK


Anti-wealth-inequality campaigner Gary Stevenson shows us how he became so rich - and what it cost him - in 'The Trading Game'

📚 Finished listening to The Trading Game A Confession by Gary Stevenson.

These days I mostly come across Gary Stevenson for his much needed ongoing anti-wealth-inequality, pro tax-the-billionaires campaigning.

Famously, he himself is a rich man, his wealth originating from his surprising career as a (financial) trader in the City of London. This book is his memoir of that period of his life, starting off from his working-class childhood of very modest means through a series of somewhat unlikely events involving him becoming “the most profitable trader at Citibank”.

The book is named after the “trading game”. That was a card game designed to reflect some aspects of financial markets, the winning of which got him a position as an intern in an investment bank. This was, and as far as I know still is, a real rarity for anyone whose parents weren’t already very wealthy and/or having had a private education.

He then goes on to make untold wealth for both the bank and himself, basically by betting on a continuous post-2008 economic crisis being forced upon the everyday person whilst the likes of him-in-his-new-position and his fellow mega-wealthy colleagues got richer and richer. He kept betting on a public economic crisis when the “professional” consensus was the economy would improve.

In particular, he took the unpopular view that historically low interest rates would remain historically low as inequality increased- and he kept winning those bets. As he says, as a trader, if you want to make money, it’s not enough to be right. You have to be right when everyone else is wrong. And this, at least as he tells it, is exactly what the situation was.

We learn a bit about the lifestyles of the average investment banker which is probably about as immoral, decadent and, on occasion, repulsive as you would imagine.

His new-found functionally unlimited wealth does not bring him health and happiness though. His personal relationships fall apart, as does his health, both physical and mental, until betting so successfully on the economic crisis has caused him enough of a personal crisis that he finally realises he’s got to give it up.

His employer, however, has different ideas for him.

The book ends before his rebirth as a pro-equality activist, although the signs are surely there. It’s a rags to riches story; where the riches are exclusively financial and came at a cost that he couldn’t tolerate. But credit is due to the guy for realising the damage that he and his colleagues were doing to the rest of us and subsequently going all-out on the campaign to stop it getting even worse.

Gary Stevenson stands in front of a stylized skyline on the cover of the book The Trading Game by Gary Stevenson.

Instagram quietly disables end-to-end encryption on your DMs

Instagram is quietly disabling the end-to-end encryption option they provided for direct messages.

Not that it’s easy to trust anything their infamously surveillance based parent company does, but still:

In 2019, Meta pledged to introduce the technology across messaging on Facebook and Instagram, saying “the future is private

In 2026, well, I suppose the plan flipped to actively remove the few privacy features they’d built.

The implications are that Meta can now read everything you send via DM.

By switching off E2EE, Instagram will now be able to access all the content of direct messages, including images, videos and voice notes.


New genetic test reveals whether or not you'd benefit from chemotherapy

A new marvel of medical science:

Groundbreaking genomic test could spare millions of breast cancer patients chemotherapy

The Prosigna test, made by the global diagnostics company Veracyte, analyses the activity of 50 genes in tumour tissue. It determines the molecular subtype and provides a score revealing the risk of breast cancer returning in the next decade, helping doctors decide if chemotherapy is worthwhile or not.

The test returns a score. The study showed that if the score was low then having chemotherapy - a famously unpleasant process to go through- had no significant positive benefit.

Five years after treatment, 95% of those who had chemotherapy and hormone therapy were alive and free from breast cancer recurrence, while 94% of those who skipped chemotherapy were also alive and recurrence-free.


The pope has (very lengthy) thoughts on AI.

I can’t pretend to have read it all yet, but the intro seems good:

Humanity, created by God in all its grandeur, is today facing a pivotal choice: either to construct a new Tower of Babel or to build the city in which God and humanity dwell together. Each generation inherits the task of shaping its own era, of guiding history to become a place where the dignity of every person is safeguarded, justice is promoted and fraternity is made possible. Yet every era also runs the risk of creating an inhumane and more unjust world.


Government department saves £ millions by replacing its Palantir IT system with an in-house one

Heartwarming stories like this reinforce how taking public IT infrastructure in-house can be not just an ethical and operational imperative, but also a financially advantageous one - despite what all the big-tech-fanboys like to think.

This, the system behind the Homes for Ukraine scheme which enabled people fleeing the war to find accommodation in the UK, is the perfect example of what all the anti-Palantir campaigners talk about, but actualised.

Palantir did their classic “hey have the system for free….for now” and, guess what, it ended up costing the taxpayer millions. Over £10 million in fact, if I understand this report correctly.

It also wasn’t very good.

…the speed of the deployment meant that it had not carried out the usual testing before it went live, and some local authorities found it confusing to use. …DLUHC has not mandated that local authorities use it, and consequently DLUHC recognises it does not have complete data on some aspects of the scheme.

The system has since been replaced with an in-house one that appears to not only leave the UK that bit less dependent on extremely weird US tech billionaire babies who spend their time publishing offensive manifestos, but also saves a lot of money and is nicer to use.

From the BBC article:

“Longer term, we wanted to replace the platform with a more flexible technology solution, enabling [MHCLG] to save significant support costs, control the system data and code,” Chan wrote.

She added its in-house replacement was “already saving MHCLG millions of pounds a year in running costs”.

MHCLG is the government department in question. Standing for “Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government” if that’s not obvious, which it isn’t.

User reviews are in:

“It’s easier to navigate than the previous system, safeguarding checks are easier to complete and visualise where cases have outstanding issues.”

“it’s a very user-friendly system, much easier to navigate.”

As a former government technology adviser said:

“When given suitable resources the Civil Service can often outperform private companies like Palantir,” the former government technology advisor said.

Eden added MHCLG had created a “better, easier to use, and cheaper” system.

The truth of this seems logically self-evident, but it’s nice to see 1) a concrete example of it being done in the real world, and 2) that the UK can still build good things even within its starved and diminished public sector.

For the most part I still think it would often be worth settling for a lesser IT system if it meant we weren’t dependent on the whims of the ultra-rich foreign agents who dance to the tune of their Britain-hating president.

But the truth is that’s not a choice that we have to make. We can be both less dependent on private agenda-ridden “goodwill” and also have better systems.

More of this please!


WhatsApp is being repeatedly sued alleging that it's lying about its end-to-end encryption

I obviously don’t know the truth of the situation any more than any other random person does. But it feels concerning that Meta seems to be facing at least 2 court cases accusing them of lying about how WhatsApp is super secure and, specifically, end to end encrypted. At least I think it’s two separate cases?

Firstly:

A new class-action lawsuit accuses Meta Platforms of misleading billions of WhatsApp users by claiming their messages are protected by unbreakable end-to-end encryption.

Filed in the San Francisco federal court, the suit alleges the company secretly stores, analyzes, and grants employee access to chat contents via internal tools.

And then there’s this:

The Texas Attorney General has sued Meta over allegations that the company’s WhatsApp messenger, used by more than 3 billion people, doesn’t provide the end-to-end encryption (E2EE) it has long claimed.

To be clear, previous investigations into the topic don’t seem to have produced a lot of evidence that this is the case - and it would be a particularly egregious sin for Meta to put out a lie of this magnitude.

But, as a previous security researcher noted, there’s no way for the average nerd in the street to know:

He said the closed source status of WhatsApp makes a definitive assessment of the code impossible

A previous audit found a different security issue with Meta employees being able to arbitrarily add anyone they wanted into otherwise private group messages, the implications of which may be dangerous given how much supposedly top secret business gets conducted via WhatsApp.

Signal apparently never had this problem - and we’d know if it did because it’s open source - so hey, why not just use that instead under the precautionary principle if nothing else? If only everyone else agreed huh.