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Paypal Founder Puts a Half Million Dollars Into Seasteading

eldavojohn writes "Wired is running an informative article on Paypal Founder Peter Thiel's investment in seasteading. There's a great graphic indicating how the spar design helps platforms weather rough seas with a ballast. There's a lot more than just Thiel throwing the half million towards this and they hope to pitch this to San Fransisco for a bay pilot. Ocean colonies can be both liberating and also downright human-rights-lacking scary."

25 of 275 comments (clear)

  1. Sweet by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 4, Funny

    After years of being a digital pirate, I've been looking for the chance to branch out into naval piracy. This looks like a great career opportunity!

    --
    -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    1. Re:Sweet by MyLongNickName · · Score: 4, Funny

      Stealing people's belly buttons is just wrong.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    2. Re:Sweet by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Funny

      *sigh* Piracy isn't steali....HEY! Who took my BELLY BUTTON! GODDAMMIT!!!

    3. Re:Sweet by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Funny

      Arrr, but that's not me leg ye saucy strumpet!

      //got nuthin

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  2. Confirmed shipping addresses... by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 4, Funny

    So, how will we confirm our shipping addresses within paypal? I mean, we'll be constantly moving around the ocean...

    1. Re:Confirmed shipping addresses... by HorsePunchKid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So just pick a place where there aren't any hurricanes. :)

      --
      Steven N. Severinghaus
  3. Did anyone read that as.... by WMD_88 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Did anyone read that as "Paypal Founder Peter Thief...."?
    Would have been oddly suiting....

  4. "fraternal religious order" by iminplaya · · Score: 4, Funny

    HA! I believe the proper term is "tax dodge". Or dare I say it? Cult

    Attn: Slashdot,
    Please block this post from reaching the UK

    --
    What?
  5. get real by nguy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Do you seriously think the established nation states of this world are just going to let a bunch of platforms float outside their jurisdiction and reach?

    In fact, nations don't even have to do anything about their landmass, they can simply apply their laws to their citizens in international waters, and they can enforce them there too. So, if you are a US or European citizen, you'll still be subject to DMCA, high taxes, and drug laws. Of course, you can give up all your citizenships, but then you'd have a hard time doing business with anybody on land.

    This kind of escapism just doesn't help. Either fix your own nation or stop complaining. Running away stopped being an option when the West was settled, and it won't be an option again until we figure out FTL travel.

    1. Re:get real by scipiodog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This kind of escapism just doesn't help. Either fix your own nation or stop complaining. Running away stopped being an option when the West was settled, and it won't be an option again until we figure out FTL travel.

      You know, for many people it simply isn't an option any more. What are the legal means you have in the USA - you can vote locally, for congress senate and the President.

      Let's face it, for all federal elections (where most power is concentrated these days) you get two choices, which are virtually the same person when it comes down to it.

      If you really intend to "fix your own nation" you virtually have to dedicate your entire life to doing so.

      It is simply unfair to condemn people because they haven't "fixed their own nation" in the face of their compatriots' ignorance and big-government vested interest. It could be argued that it makes more sense to run away to sea - it may be more efficient!

      --
      http://clightnirish.wordpress.com/
    2. Re:get real by fastest+fascist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What if you find the whole concept of nations with millions of inhabitants ridiculous? How do you fix that without resorting to escapism?

    3. Re:get real by bwalling · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Either fix your own nation or stop complaining.
      A recent poll in the US showed that 17% of people thought that the issue of whether a candidate wore a flag pin on his/her lapel was important. The fix for that is a bullet.
  6. Re:no thanks by pjt48108 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    My bet is that these colonies can be the next Atlantis if someone finds a cheep way to use the local resources to make sturdy building material (something like nanites that turn the sand into quartz). However that is a LONG way off. Once upon a time, I read a book which addressed this issue, albeit for a different seafaring concept. It involved using manganese (I seem to recall) bars in a mesh, which, when electricity was run through it, would accrete calcium carbonate to it from seawater. Eventually, this would create a shell on which the colony would float, and from which further accretions could expand it.

    The concept also involved leveraging temperature differentials in seawater to generate electricity, and using the immediate vicinity of colonies to farm algae, etc. Using these colonies as a hub of a hydrogen economy was also envisioned.

    These ideas made it into a website for the Living Universe Foundation, but I don't recall if the book had any connection to them or not.
    --
    Mmmmmm... Bold, yet refreshing!
  7. Great Pacific Garbage Patch by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Here's a crazy idea...

    Word is there exists the Great Pacific Garbage Patch which is the accumulation of seaborne trash into a blob somewhere on par with Texas in size.
    Now work with me here ...
    That's a whole lotta floating stuff already in a relatively stable position (occupying a major ocean current vortex); surely an inventive aspiring frontiersman could turn that mass of materials into an inhabitable floating island. Material acquisition & relocation is already mostly taken care of, as there's a Texas-sized mass of it already there. Much of it is plastic, which should be easily (for the "news for nerds" crowd) reformed on-site into more suitable structures. It's already in a stable vortex, so it's not going to be unmanagably mobile, and remains well outside any nation's claimable waters. There may already be sufficiently compacted sections to stand on & start work from.

    Thoughts?

    --
    Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
  8. Re:Best current bet for utopia by nuzak · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Utopia doesn't exist, will not exist ... ever.

    You are aware that the word "Utopia" means "Nowhere", right?

    --
    Done with slashdot, done with nerds, getting a life.
  9. Re:Slashdot Whipping Post Du Jour by Trespass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Or is there some mysterious eBay-PayPal-Scientology connection I'm ignorent of?

    They're all full of assholes?

  10. Re:Best current bet for utopia by Bombula · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not sure seasteading is necessarily the best bet. Creating artificial islands might be more feasible than creating floating platforms. There are a vast number of seamounts just under the ocean's surface (ie: within 20 meters) that lie well outside any territorial waters of nations, particularly in the southwestern Pacific and the mid-atlantic. I'm not sure the advantages of mobility offered by seastead platforms outweigh the advantages of building up from the seafloor itself. And don't get locked into thinking this could only be done by building a tower down from the surface. For a a relatively modest cost (hundreds of millions), artificial islands make from deposited rubble just like the projects in Dubai could be undertaken in hundreds of locations worldwide.

    --
    A-Bomb
  11. Deep Libertarianism: Human Ecology by Baldrson · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Seasteads are a great way to protect human rights because they protect the most fundamental human right, the one from which all others are derived: The right to vote with your feet.

    If all you do is ensure that anyone can leave any time they want, then you have only one remaining ingredient to support this most fundamental human right:

    Somewhere to go.

    With the current, very limited, number of territories world-wide, the choices available to refugees is limited not only by the number of territories that would welcome them, but by the absolute number of territories.

    Increase the baseline number of territories and freedom reigns.

    The problem with current conceptions of "human rights" is they are enumerated in some sort of unstructured laundry list which results in the entire edifice crumbling under stress. Its tragic because the more you "feel" various things are "rights" -- the more "rights" you put on your wishful-thinking-list, the more "righteous" you sound to the intellectually handicapped. This creates a terrible situation for humanity -- where facades of "human rights" displace the need for territory -- the need for carrying capacity -- that forms the real foundation of life hence humanity hence their rights.

    I've written up some thoughts on the nuances of a more rationally architected system supporting human rights in Deep Libertarianism: Human Ecology that allows jurisdictions to become as "tyrannical" as they want over their territory, so long as they let people leave at will and support the creation of carrying capacity for the formation of volulntary association.

    Seasteading is an important potential in this direction.

    Unfortunately, Google's Patri Friedman, while far better than most, is indulging in more of the sloppy thinking that endangers human rights when he says things like "You can change your government without having to leave your house" or implies the assumption that seasteading jurisdictions will not exclude immigrants at their whim. We live in a physical universe with ecologies that operate in space. Attempting to deny spatial structure because you find it inconvenient or even "oppressive" is simply fantasy.

  12. Re:no thanks by StikyPad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Exactly.. storms and quakes are dangerous enough on land. And while there may not necessarily be physical assets worth plundering (because rich people never keep their valuables on hand, I guess), there are still protection rackets, hostage/ransom situations, and random violence to contend with, and as a wealthy independent nation, you'd be ripe for all of the above.

    You'd have low volume, high cost, and high reliance on imports, with little to nothing to export, except perhaps intellectual property (with no means to protect), assuming you even believe in IP as a libertarian. Satellite internet is high latency, low bandwidth, and most people would probably be dissatisfied with such limited connection to the outside world.

    Cabin fever is all but guaranteed, and an active social life is basically out of the question. You'd have to worry about mutiny, sabotage, fires, fresh water supply, leaks, maintenance, and all the other concerns of a seagoing vessel, without the convenience of being able to pull into a port if things get hairy. In short, it seems like the disadvantages seriously outweigh any advantage of pseudo-independence (pseudo, since you're still reliant on the outside world to A) play nice, and B) supply you with durable goods and consumables).

    But what do I know? I've only spent 6 years in the Navy, and 6 years living on a small island.. not like I've had any relevant experience.

  13. The Millennial Project by Chris+Acheson · · Score: 4, Informative

    I read it too. The book was called "The Millennial Project: Colonizing the Galaxy in Eight Easy Steps". At the end of the book, the author called for the formation of "The First Millennial Foundation" in order to advance the project that he had outlined. The FMF later changed their name to "The Living Universe Foundation".

  14. Pacific Gyre / Great Pacific Garbage Patch by djdavetrouble · · Score: 4, Informative

    Only if they could build a big plastic island like this guy,
    and somehow make it out of all this crap. Now that would be
    worthwhile.

    --
    music lover since 1969
  15. Re:heh by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Also wondering about food, waste disposal and power.

    The ocean is full of tasty critters.

    The critters dump their organic waste into the water, where it is recycled by other critters. Why shouldn't the humans? (They already do it on ocean-going vessels. Blackwater is an issue on land and enclosed waterways, not in mid ocean.)

    For non-biodegradable waste: Jetsam dumped overboard in deep water won't be an issue for geologic time. That leaves flotsam, which would have to be dealt with in more ordinary ways. (Fortunately, that's a small amount of the waste and mostly imported anyhow. So it can be shipped out to some place that can handle it.)

    At most latitudes there's lots of wind available, with no mountains, trees, and buildings to slow it down. (Sometimes there's a bit more wind than you'd like.)

    If you want to settle the "horse latitudes" (where there's rarely wind), there's plenty of solar power. And a handy way to tap it is to pump up cold water from deeper down and run a heat engine on the temperature difference between it and the upper-level water. Then you dump the nutrient-rich deep water locally and farm the resulting massive explosion of plants and critters.

    The idea that purchasing a flag of convenience will providing meaningful protection seems a bit naive..

    Flags of convenience are a protection against GOVERNMENT predation. (Which is essentially the point of this whole exercise.)

    Will every citizen be a trained firefighter? Who will provide emergency medical services?

    The same sort of people who provide such services on ocean-going vessels or in houses in very rural areas. These are already solved problems - with solutions that vary depending on the size of the community and the degree of its location's isolation.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  16. Re:Best current bet for utopia by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    First time I've ever wanted to friend an AC.

    Living in a society is about compromise and respect for other peoples opinions and beliefs. Groups inside a society who have no tolerance for other views are a serious issue. Most of the problems societies have are when these groups get too powerful.

    Frankly sending them all out into the middle of the ocean sounds like a great idea. Living accommodations optional.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  17. Re:Best current bet for utopia by spun · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Utopia is not an option. On the other hand, free markets and private property limit the negative effects of greed and turn it into a positive externality. Prove it. From what I've seen, free markets allow greedy and selfish people to accumulate more money than cooperative people. Money is force. With enough money, one can manipulate markets. This allows the greedy to attack the rest of us economically, to force us into servitude.

    By encouraging greed and discouraging cooperation, a free market system ensures that everyone will have to act in a greedy and selfish fashion in order not to be taken advantage of by the greedy and selfish.
    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  18. Re:Best current bet for utopia by Original+Replica · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Groups inside a society who have no tolerance for other views are a serious issue.

    The inverse, groups that cannot be tolerated by society can be problematic as well. Giving the Puritans land far far from the rest of England was just as much a blessing to England as the Puritans. Any modern day cult that builds a compound in the middle of nowhere could be said to tolerate other's views, but they don't really fit in so well when we find that they are like to marry 14 year old girls to 45 year old men. But out in the middle of the ocean, it wouldn't really bother us anymore. Or would it? Would the American people allow such a society to sit just off our shores? What about a cannabis farming floating island anchored just north of Bermuda, do you think Uncle Sam would let them alone? I don't think these floating islands are going to be the escape from global government/society that many want them to be.

    --
    We are all just people.