kradeelav: Dr. Kiriko (overlord)
[personal profile] kradeelav
got lucky with some very fun links and books recently, spreadin' the goods here.
  • lainchan is. a marvel. of a site that's like a more curated version of 4chan for my tastes? 
  • (and tangentially) lainzine. collection of 4.5 zines that oh my god instantly have a spot on my library. nowhere else can you find material that teaches you to make a stun gun(!!!) plus probably the most accessible introduction to hacking i've ever read plus a philosophical-slash-fiction dream sequence. also by far the best book design/layout from a graphical standpoint I've seen - it makes me suspiciously curious as to what the creators do for their dayjobs - probably at the top of their fields.
    • 04: “ Two of the most famous products of Berkeley are LSD and Unix. I don't think that is a coincidence”  l  o  l

(no subject)

Date: 2020-06-22 08:52 am (UTC)
queenlua: (Default)
From: [personal profile] queenlua
i clicked the lain stuff thinking "lol like that lain anime" and. apparently that is the namesake. lol.

thanks for the link to Hackers & Slackers; that one looks very much up my alley. (jaron lanier's one of my favorite thinkers around today ahhh)

(no subject)

Date: 2020-06-22 06:17 pm (UTC)
queenlua: (Default)
From: [personal profile] queenlua
my introduction to him was Who Owns the Future?, which i read while at that hippie hacker retreat in 2014, on the recommendation of a friend, and—ha, this actually compelled me to pop open a Kindle tab, here's the bit where i remember thinking "damn this dude gets it":

"I know many of the people who run the biggest, richest servers, where the money and power are being concentrated. They're remarkably decent, for the most part. You couldn't ask for a nicer elite. But that doesn't really help. Iconic online empires have been accepted as sacrosanct. It's okay to notice in the abstract that free online services aren't creating as many jobs as they destroy, but we still hold up these newfangled companies as examples of how innovation will drive the economy.

The problem is broad and we are all part of it. Individuals of high or low station are not reasonably able to avoid playing along in an immediately compelling system, even if that system is destroying itself in the big picture [. . .]"

that "you couldn't ask for a nicer elite" line, in particular, has stuck in my brain all these years. you couldn't ask for a nicer elite, but it doesn't matter—this seemed like a much more accurate presentation of The Tech Industry than is ever offered by the tech press. the tech press is constitutionally incapable of talking about tech in any shades subtler than "breathless enthusiasm" OR "hyper-critical anger," and while i get why that is, i think it means we ground the problems in tech in very odd places. like, all the exhortations of "engineers should take ethics classes" and "zuckerberg being a jackass is specifically the reason facebook sucks," as though tech would be better if everyone were just a bit nicer and took more humanities classes—which just does not square with the reality i know. in the corners of bigtech i've seen, the average engineer could not care harder; they will fight subpoenas & government surveillance at every turn; they're constantly wrestling with ways to do better and more right by our users; they're often riven with doubt and earnest questions of how can i help more?

the problem isn't "engineers suck." it's that, even when they're remarkably decent, it doesn't matter, in terms of societal impacts and all that.

...which is all a sidebar from the main point of that book, haha :P i found the thesis of the overall book very compelling, and while it's not tackling a novel question ("so the information age seems to be concentrating all the info and thus all the power in a very small number of places, what do"), Lanier approaches the question with more nuance and lucidity than most thinkers (see above), and notably i respect him hugely for trying to propose solutions that might work—and while i do find his suggested solutions pretty lacking, he's upfront about, "look, i'm not sure this is a very good answer, but i think it sucks to talk about how bad something is without at least trying to propose something better, and if i throw this idea out there and some other smarter folks are able to turn it into something workable, that will just rule." he's an optimist at heart! i too am an optimist! he is my people lol.

there's also just a deep attention to humanism in all his writing and i really love him for that as well.

/lanierfangirling, lol

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