Thinking loudly about networked beings. Commonist. Projektionsfläche. License: CC-BY
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Government is a shared myth. When the myth dies, the government dies.

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Government is a shared myth. When the myth dies, the government dies.

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tante
1 day ago
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"Government is a shared myth"
Berlin/Germany
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Speaking from somewhere

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When saying something, anything the context of what you say is at least as important as the literal group of words you are saying or writing.

Context is a big word. In spans the history of the person speaking as well as the time and place or publication that that person choses to speak. We all know that, it’s why people use very public situations to provoke the powers that be by saying something “out of context” to make a point. Playing with context can be very powerful and allows effective and useful forms of communication to push your agenda. Being able to understand context, adapt to it and knowing when to break it is one of the qualities of a good communicator.

In the past I have sometimes criticised forms of messaging within communities I interact with or am part of. For example I criticised people on the left selling DEI initiatives by saying “But diverse teams are more effective and have better outcomes” (even if that is objectively true) because fairness in society is not about it being economically beneficial, it’s a human right. I have also criticised many European NGOs for accepting the framing of “digital sovereignty” in order to acquire money to give to open source projects because I think that by submitting to that framing you have opened the door for nationalistic and xenophobic arguments (basically: “digital sovereignty” is a term every fascist will totally accept, even though they mean something radically different than what the NGOs I am referring to mean.) Basically:

Image of Batman breaking a gun saying: "This is the weapon of the enemy. We do not need it. We will not use it"

Whenever I make an argument like that I get similar responses: “You have to be pragmatic” or “Games of intellectual purity don’t get us anywhere” or “The argument needs to work for those we want to convince” or “Shut up” (it still is the Internet after all). And I am not saying that those replies don’t have any value. They are pragmatic. Saying something in a way that people in power like or that supports their world view increases the chances of creating change. Especially when one has facts and studies at one’s disposal (at least that was how it maybe was a bit in the past before the reign of Musk).

But I think there is a cost. Because I think people mistake tactics for strategy. The basic difference between tactics and strategy is that while tactics focus on smaller, short-term actions, strategy looks at the long-term big picture. And I feel like that is where the costs stack up.

Say for example people who are into actual justice for everyone (hello, cool person!) get certain DEI initiatives pushed by framing them as economically beneficial. Cool, now we get fewer white dudes hired and maybe some people with skills into relevant jobs. Awesome! But this has shifted the position of the speakers. They lost their ground.

When I argue for something based on my personal values, based on human rights and fairness for all this is not an argument business leaders care about. It has no monetary value, I am just marking my “position” in a way. I am saying: DEI is necessary because it is right and our political values and the rights our constitutions grant people demand it. That is the position I speak from. The fact if something is economically beneficial is of no concern for that, I explicitly speak from a different angle. Because I don’t want the next human right to be cut because it’s maybe economically not beneficial.

If I say DEI is great because diverse teams are more effective and a study shows that that is not true when the DEI initiatives concern people with disabilities what is my leg to stand on? Saying “but it would be right”? I’ve given up that position when selling my DEI initiatives with their economic value. I’ve weakened my long term strategic goals for a short-term tactical win. And I think that this is – even more so looking at the USA in the last months – a dangerous mistake. Because a lot of stuff that we need to do or need to build, need to pay for as societies won’t look good on Mr.-Business-Dude’s balance sheets.

As I said earlier: There is value in those pragmatic arguments. They can speak to other people, other groups than ones based on more abstract political values. But I think it matters deeply who makes those arguments. If I wanted to sell some human rights thing based on an economic argument I would not make that argument myself, I’d look for allies who can make that argument without giving up their position. Maybe some left-leaning economic research group/think tank. Someone who does not need to give up their foundation.

Because I have seen what that pragmatism does way too much. I live in Germany where many of the supposedly “left-ish” (more like centrist) parties such as the Greens have given up so much ideological foundation for the sake of making pragmatic (usually economic arguments). And now they have a hard time arguing for necessary changes to our energy sourcing and production because they always need to frame it in narrations of “green growth” and “investments in startups”. They’ve lost their position.

You might know the statement that you cannot compromise with a right-winger: When you move a step towards them trying to find a compromise they will make a step back and keep dragging you with them. Making “the wrong” arguments isn’t exactly the same. But it also is not all that different.

It is important to know where you stand – for your political goals as well as your mental health as a human being. And I think one shouldn’t give that up this easily. Even if that makes me not pragmatic enough or “playing games of ideological purity”. At least I know where I stand.

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tante
1 day ago
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When it comes to arguing for fairness or value based programs I think that sometimes "people mistake tactics for strategy"
Berlin/Germany
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AI chatbots are still hopelessly terrible at summarizing news

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BBC News has run as much content-free AI puffery as any other media outlet. But they had their noses rubbed hard in what trash LLMs were when Apple Intelligence ran mangled summaries of BBC stories that were so bad the BBC formally complained. Apple ended up removing the summaries.

The BBC does a lot more than news — such as its research department. In the wake of the Apple debacle, BBC researchers spent December looking into just how good ChatGPT, Copilot, Gemini, and Perplexity really were at answering questions from a large corpus of test data: the BBC News site. [Press release; report, PDF]

BBC journalists rated the LLM summaries on accuracy, source attribution, impartiality, distinguishing opinions from facts, editorialisation, context, and representation of BBC content.

The report starts with a lot of noises about how great and important AI will surely be in the fabulous future — but the reported results are dismal.

91% of AI responses had at least some issues. 51% had “significant” issues.

The most common issues were factual inaccuracies, sourcing, and missing context. Quotes were frequently altered. Opinions were reported as facts. The bots would find old pages on the BBC site and report facts from 2022 as current. Summary sentences would frequently be misleading or partisan.

How can chatbots serve as part of the news ecosystem? “They must first be accurate and follow basic editorial standards when answering questions about the news.” Yeah, good luck with that one.

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tante
8 days ago
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BBC tested AI assistants for summarization and concluded: "91% of AI responses had at least some issues. 51% had “significant” issues."
Berlin/Germany
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If Not Now, Then Never

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Check out the timelapse video of this cartoon being drawn!


TRANSCRIPT OF CARTOON

This cartoon has four panels. They mostly focus on two members of Congress. The first is a bald middle-aged man, usually wearing a collared shirt with a necktie. The second is a middle-aged woman, dressed mostly in skirt suits.

PANEL 1

The man, looking very intense, is waving a piece of paper that says “BILL” in large letters. The woman has her arms crossed and looks thoughtful. The Capitol Building can be seen behind them.

MAN: We must ban trans from participation in sports!

WOMAN (thought): If I give in on sports, it’ll be easier to resist future anti-trans bills.

PANEL 2

The same two, in different outfits, are now chatting in a hallway, with him standing in a doorway to an office.

MAN: Now that we’ve banned trans people from sports, we have to do bathrooms. Bathrooms are like locker rooms, so it’s really the same issue.

WOMAN (thought): I should give in on this too – people are sensitive about bathrooms.

PANEL 3

The two are in different outfits, standing in front of a fancy desk.

MAN: We need to ban changing gender on birth certificates and driver’s licenses to enforce our bathroom and sports bans, right?

WOMAN (thought): That does make sense…

PANEL 4

The woman is on a city sidewalk, talking to three angry-looking constituents. On of the constituents is holding up a newspaper, with a large headline saying “47th TRANS BAN BILL PASSES.”

WOMAN: I’m sorry. There was nothing I could have done to resist.

CHICKEN FAT WATCH

“Chicken fat” is long-dormant cartoonists’ vernacular for unimportant details we sneak into the drawings.

PANEL 1 – Woodstock from “Peanuts” is standing on top of the Capitol dome.

PANEL 2 – There’s a portrait on the wall of Commander T’Ana from “Star Trek: Lower Decks.”

Lower on the same wall, there’s a little recessed alcove. Standing in the alcove is a mouse wearing a collared shirt and tie, holding his morning coffee and contemplating the world.

PANEL 4 – The name of the newspaper is “Daily Opiate.” The subheadline says “Trans People Now Banned From Public Parks and Eating Ice Cream.” The story is accompanied by a photo of a Klansman giving a thumbs up. A different story at the bottom has the headline “Cartoonist Unsure of What to Fill Space With.”


If Not Now, Then Never | Patreon

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tante
8 days ago
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You don't compromise on people's fucking humanity.
Berlin/Germany
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Silicon Valley’s delusion machine

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Think About Supporting Garbage Day!

It’s $5 a month or $45 a year and you get Discord access, the coveted weekend issue, and monthly trend reports. What a bargain! Hit the button below to find out more.

The AI Super Bowl — And Everything Else

I was watching the 2022 Super Bowl with family back in Massachusetts when an ad starring Tom Brady came on. Which obviously caused quite a stir. It was for the crypto trading platform FTX and it inspired my mom to finally ask me what cryptocurrency is. I tried my best to explain and even drew out on a napkin a rough approximation of how a blockchain worked. After a beat of silence she just said, “I don’t think I get it, but that’s nice.”

I felt echoes of the 2022 crypto Super Bowl while watching the deluge of ads last night for artificial intelligence from companies like OpenAI, Google, Meta, and Salesforce. The marketing — and the product — is slightly clearer this time around. It doesn’t require a literal diagram to explain how to use a chatbot, but the result was the same: Here is something Silicon Valley has decided you need and you’re going to have to use it. And it can be hard to remember that up until around 2020, Silicon Valley did not typically operate this way.

Most of the big tech companies that are now shoving AI down our throats got as big as they did, not because they sold us a revolutionary new product they dreamed up out of nothing, but because they found, oftentimes, insidious ways to solve a digital infrastructure problem with a private business. Google figured out how to help us find content we were already looking for, Facebook figured out how to help us find people we already knew, Amazon, physical products we already wanted, etc. Yes, these companies would eventually flood the airwaves with ad campaigns, but Google was already a multi-billion-dollar tech company and Chrome had over 100 million active users when they dropped their first Super Bowl commercial, “Parisian Love,” in 2010. That still-very clever ad told a story about someone one falling in love through the mundane Google searches everyone makes every day. Google’s Super Bowl ad last night, “Dream Job,” depicted a dad getting ready for a job interview by talking out loud in his kitchen to an AI voice assistant, something I am very confident no one has done ever. But that doesn’t matter because Silicon Valley believes they are big enough now to create the future, rather than scale up to meet it.

(tfw you’re being normal and casually talking to an AI in your kitchen like it’s a person.)

But this isn’t just about tech companies being out of touch with how actual human beings use their products. If it was, Google could have chosen to advertise how someone uses Gemini with an ad that featured employees at a Vietnamese content farm generating millions of AI images of amputee veterans praying to crab Jesus or something.

This would all be simply annoying and kind of embarrassing if November's election had gone differently. Thanks to apps like TikTok, Shein, Temu, and, most recently, DeepSeek, we know that China has caught up to the US and its tech industry has figured out how to innovate in ways ours can't or won’t. You might not like machine-learning-based short-form video apps or gamified social shopping platforms, but they are genuinely new ways of interacting with the web. And US regulators can’t actually stop the tide from turning — at best, the US will become an island surrounded by a global internet run by Chinese software. But what elevates this from lame to genuinely dangerous is that this delusion that Silicon Valley can now decide how the future should look has infiltrated the highest levels of the US government. And AI is the technology powering this delusion.

As we speak, Elon Musk’s DOGE team is reportedly planning to use xAI to “streamline” federal contracts and OpenAI is talking to the White House about using their AI for nuclear weapon security. And OpenAI, Oracle, and SoftBank are partnering on a new company called Stargate, funded by a massive investment in AI thanks to President Donald Trump. Journalist Maximillian Alvarez recently described the current AI invasion as an attempt to take over “government and ensure we have no more choice in the matter.” And if they succeed, it won’t just be Super Bowl commercials that no long reflect reality. The entire country will be running on Silicon Valley’s delusion machine. And whatever the future of computing is that was supposed to arrive, never will.


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Good Song About The Coup

Instagram post by @veryveryvinny


One of the hardest pills to swallow about our current constitutional crisis is that a majority, though slim, of the country voted for it. And, sure, there are a million stories emerging right now about Trumpists realizing that, yes, the leopards will eat their face too. But the managerial class, on both sides of the political spectrum, that truly believed in atomic age neoliberalism is really struggling to make sense of the general glee felt around the country as President Donald Trump destroys the institutions that, well, make America, America. The hope, it seems, is that eventually Trump’s team will sever something in the system that will truly infuriate and activate voters. Never mind that that’s literally not how most coups play out. Boiled frogs and so on.

CBS News partnered with YouGov on a poll out this week showing that the majority of Americans are still all in on Trump. More than half of responders believe Trump is “tough,” “energetic” (lol), and “focused” (lmao). And the majority of those polled approve of what he’s doing, overall. Now, there’s some quibbling over on Bluesky about how serious to take this poll, but I think that’s a lot of cope tbh. Similarly, I saw reports on social media that Trump was booed at the Super Bowl last night, but based on what I’ve read, Taylor Swift got the majority of the boos last night, not the president.

Here’s the thing, though. None of this actually matters. All kinds of stupid, awful, ugly shit is popular. That doesn’t mean we have to accept it as inevitable. And, most importantly, it doesn’t make it above the law. Hopefully, someone can forward this email to Democratic Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. Might help him brainstorm some better ideas for wrestling back some power in 2026.


The Bluesky Coalition Did Not Last Very Long

—by Adam Bumas

As Democratic Party leaders like Jeffries and Chuck Schumer continue the outward messaging that they’re just little birthday boys, there’s been a pretty wide desire for more direct political organizing that can effectively resist the subversion of the federal government. So far there’s been a few successes, but over the weekend, we saw a big failure on Bluesky of sorts.

On Saturday, journalist and Western Kabuki host Juniper tried to build an Axis of Posting with Will Stancil, the longtime Twitter warrior and wannabe establishment Democrat. Juniper called for Stancil to “heal the divide between the far left and liberals online,” and create a united front of political messaging on the internet. Stancil was initially positive about the idea, but in less than an hour Stancil had started getting into it with Juniper’s followers, and once the replies and quote-tweets got four or five deep, the idea of the coalition had completely been forgotten.

There’s a lesson here! Both Juniper and Stancil clearly agree on quite a lot about politics. It would definitely be good for both to agree on simple and succinct messaging that’s easy to internalize for people who aren’t posting about politics all day. But there are probably better places to figure that out than on the Misinterpreting Your Post App.


Talk Tuah, Leaked

An unreleased episode of Haliey Welch’s podcast, Talk Tuah, leaked last week. In the episode, Welch starts crying at one point, as the co-host of the episode, FaZe Media CEO Ricky Banks, tried to explain what happened with the disastrous launch of the $HAWK coin back in December. Welch has not made any public comments since the coin was pumped and dumped at the end of the year. Welch and her team are now facing a class action lawsuit over the coin.

The TL;DR of what happened, according to Welch in the leaked episode, is that a “friend of a friend” was running $HAWK and though things felt “a little weird” as it was launching, she was unaware of how much of a rug pull it would end up becoming. She also said that she was only interested in doing a memecoin because she wanted to donate half of the money to her animal rescue charity Paws Across America.

Reading between the lines here a bit, it seems fairly clear that Welch fell for all the standard crypto BS uninitiated investors get told at the outset of these kinds of projects. The tell here is Welch’s mention of how she was told the project would be “positive” and “community-based” which is the same kind of multilevel marketing speak I’ve heard at countless crypto events over the years.

Look, here’s a good rule. If a 30-something man with flavored-vape vocal fry dressed like a professional snowboarder tells you that crypto is good a way to make friends, you need to run as fast as possible in the opposite direction. You are a mark.


Reddit Is Obsessed With The New York Times Beans

—By Adam Bumas

The New York Times Cooking app is popular enough it’s had its share of viral moments over the years — most infamously, Alison Roman’s shallot pasta back in 2020. More recently, r/NYTCooking has become a hub for this beautiful little outgrowth of the social web.

For the past month or so, users on the subreddit have been making and posting pictures of this recipe for “Creamy, Spicy Tomato Beans and Greens”. The subreddit was so overwhelmed by posts about the beans (here are some of the highlights) that, on request from the community, the mods started a Beans Megathread. And today, the Times’ official Reddit account will be hosting an AMA with Alexa Weibel, who created the recipe.

Congratulations to everyone involved, and especially to the top commenter on the beans recipe, who says “Loved it! I substituted everything with a Taco Bell burrito supreme. It was a hit!”


Crucial Updates From The Philly Police Scanner Last Night

You can — and should — click the link above and read the whole thread. It rips. Go birds (unless they’re playing against New England).


Did you know Garbage Day has a merch store?

You can check it out here!



P.S. here’s a hidden stoat.

***Any typos in this email are on purpose actually***

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tante
9 days ago
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"current AI invasion as an attempt to take over “government and ensure we have no more choice in the matter.” And if they succeed, it won’t just be Super Bowl commercials that no long reflect reality. The entire country will be running on Silicon Valley’s delusion machine. And whatever the future of computing is that was supposed to arrive, never will."
Berlin/Germany
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The Open Source Torment Nexus

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One of the most popular memes when it comes to talking about the tech sector is Alex Blechman’s tweet about the Torment Nexus:

"Alex Blechman @AlexBlechman Sci-Fi Author: In my book I invented the Torment Nexus as a cautionary tale Tech Company: At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus from classic sci-fi novel Don't Create The Torment Nexus 5:49 PM Nov 8, 2021. Twitter Web App"

One can interpret the tweet in a bunch of ways. As a comment on the level of reading comprehension that billionaire tech leaders like Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk or some ghoul that Peter Thiel funded constantly show: Calling one’s products or comapnies “Metaverse” and “Palantir” does not express an understanding of who and what is criticized in the respective works of fiction. And we are not even asking for nuance here.

Another interpretation is that the products that are being brought to market as massive innovations seem to be less than stellar. Best case scenario they are just weird stuff nobody asked for (think Juicero), most of the time they are “here’s a thing you kinda want but you have to pay rent for it now instead of buying it and we might shut it down any time”. And a lot of the time they are just bad for you, products that insult your existence as a human being.

Obviously there is no objective way to make these calls, to decide what is dumb but meaningless or what is evil. People have different values, different needs and sometimes can accept different levels of crap for a specific product or service.

We talked about this a bit in the Q&A part of my talk at Fluconf that gave a bit of criticism of the Open Source movement and its beliefs. But while my argument in the talk was mostly that the beliefs that Open Source is based on might not actually be based on or support the actual political values that people might have there is value to having Open Source software. Software that you can use and change to suit your needs and demands (if you can of course).

But Open Source software does not happen in a vacuum, it is written by people. Often to serve their needs, sometimes to serve a community’s needs: To provide a better solution for users. The “Open Source Alternative to proprietary X” thing.

If you’ve been on the Internet for about 7 seconds you will have come into contact with guys (using a gendered term here because they are mostly male) who will respond to any criticism of or issue you have with a proprietary software with “Just use this Open Source tool”. It’s a bit annoying because a lot of the time that answer doesn’t come from a genuine desire to help based on empathy and an understanding of the problem the original post expressed. But It’s also oftentimes better than one might think.

The Open Source community has gotten quite good at replacing proprietary tools with open source solutions. The feature set might not be 100% there and some things might not work but there are totally valid alternatives to Slack or Chrome or Microsoft Office (if you really just need office tools and not something that specifically depends on MS’s ideosyncracies). There are whole websites dedicated to listing Open Source alternatives to proprietary tools with at least one of those alternatives being pretty much a copy.

This has tremendous value and provides a bunch of people with the software tools to do their thing – me included. But when building those replacements the Q&A at FluConf made me wonder: Are we maybe doing a tech-bro? Are we not properly reading and understanding the texts we reference?

Any artifact is a text. You can read for example any piece of software as a document about the beliefs and assumptions of the programmer about the users. The software tells you how the programmer sees and understands the user. It’s just a form of text that is maybe a bit harder to read and it might have animations and sounds and can send bits somewhere.

What triggered this train of thought was me thinking about social media platforms. With Meta and X and all US tech companies finding their love for fascism currently many people want to jump off those platforms to find a better home. And there are Open Source Alternatives to Twitter/Instagram/WhatsApp/etc. Which in general is good. Maybe. Sometimes.

(Quick sidebar: I’m gonna use an example of an Open Source project here but don’t read this as me shitting on that project. People can build what they want and have their reasons for doing things. My feelings and needs are not “right” and other perspectives are wrong. I’m using the project as an illustration.)

I don’t use Instagram. Not because I don’t like seeing pictures or because it is “beneath me” and not even because it’s Meta and Mark Zuckerberg bend the knee to Trump. (In fact I have an account I use to follow tattoo artists but that I only use for exactly that research because tattooers live on Instagram sadly) I don’t use Instagram because it’s bad for my mental health. The affordances and the social practices of Instagram have lead to every picture (and the people and lives in it) looking like an ad. Perfectly designed and sculpted representations of better lives of better people. It just makes me feel bad about myself, my looks, my life. For me Instagram is the Torment Nexus.

Now that might just be a me-problem. But when I see an Open Source project like Pixelfed that basically attempts to provide users with a federated, open source drop-in replacement for Instagram I wonder: Are we just building an Open Source Torment Nexus? Because Pixelfed looks like Instagram. Has all the bones of Instagram. The same basic logic of the app (maybe the recommendation algorithms aren’t as aggressive but you can always patch that). There is nothing that would lead me to believe that – should Pixelfed get very popular – it would not also develop similar esthetics. Would also help people feel bad about themselves (if they are vulnerable to that kind of thinking).

And Pixelfed isn’t the only tool here. Bluesky is basically a carbon copy of Twitter a few years ago (not technology wise but in the way that interactions work, the way in which status is produced). Mastodon isn’t that different either. Which in this case doesn’t feel as bad for me – but I also liked Twitter.

It feels like too often we are bound to think about what’s possible in the framing of what businesses think is possible. I recently argued against scale and that topic is a perfect example: Meta needs any new product to scale to millions if not billions of users. Amazon needs to scale products to the whole world. Google needs to scale. Microsoft needs to scale. And they all need to do the things you need to do to scale. Build interaction loops that enforce you coming back to an app or platform regularly ideally daily, to make it a habit. Build tools promising you a view on everything, to give you feelings of power, understanding and control.

We here on the open, decentralized, free web don’t need to do that. Pixelfed does not need to scale. Mastodon does not need to scale. At least not in the way that Facebook needs to.

We are doing a tech-bro. Just like Peter Thiel calls his surveillance company after the stones the evil wizards use in The Lord of the Rings because he doesn’t seem to have understood that those are the baddies we are building tools that are built for growth hacks and scamming VCs out of their money because we don’t read them properly. Because we just take what’s there and make it open source.

Just is doing a lot of work in that last paragraph. The amount of work that goes into duplicating those proprietary functionalities is incredible, awe inspiring. Thousands of people put work into building those tools, often without payment, without a lot of thanks. Spending their limited time on this planet contributing to the commons with software.

But recognizing the amount of work and time and life that goes into building this huge pile of software shouldn’t we spend it on something good? Something that is actually good for the people using it? And are we always so sure that the things we build do that, enable that?

We should stop building the Open Source Torment Nexus. Because the problem with the Torment Nexus is not the software license or opaqueness of the code: It’s the part with the torment.

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tante
10 days ago
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"It feels like too often we are bound to think about what’s possible in the framing of what businesses think is possible."
Berlin/Germany
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