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Is Silicon Valley Morally Bankrupt and Toxic?

concealment sends this quote from a post about how the goals of many tech companies are at odds with what's good for consumers: "Since I've been out of the Silicon-Valley-centered tech industry, I've become increasingly convinced that it's morally bankrupt and essentially toxic to our society. Companies like Google and Facebook — in common with most public companies — have interests that are frequently in conflict with the well-being of — I was going to say their customers or their users, but I'll say 'people' in general, since it's wider than that. People who use their systems directly, people who don't — we're all affected by it, and although some of the outcomes are positive a disturbingly high number of them are negative: the erosion of privacy, of consumer rights, of the public domain and fair use, of meaningful connections between people and a sense of true community, of beauty and care taken in craftsmanship, of our very physical well-being. No amount of employee benefits or underfunded Google.org projects can counteract that. Over time, I've come to consider that this situation is irremediable, given our current capitalist system and all its inequalities. To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice and rethinking how we live and work and relate to each other. Geek toys like self-driving cars and augmented reality sunglasses won't fix it. Social networks designed to identify you to corporations so they can sell you more stuff won't fix it. Better ad targeting or content matching algorithms definitely won't fix it."

469 comments

  1. For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Betteridge's law of headlines
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states:

      "Any headline which ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no". ...
    "The reason why journalists use that style of headline is that they know the story is probably bollocks, and don’t actually have the sources and facts to back it up, but still want to run it."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge's_law_of_headlines

    As for the article's content:

    A great discovery!
    The author has finally also found out that their customers are the advertising firms, their 'users' are the product they sell.
    Film at 11.

    The rest is some pseudo-socialist rant.

    Move along, nothing to see here.

    1. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Bushie07 · · Score: 1

      GIVE THIS MAN POINTS~!

    2. Re:For the umpteenth time... by i_ate_god · · Score: 5, Insightful

      er... positing a question on a discussion forum is a generally acceptable way of starting a discussion on said forum

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    3. Re:For the umpteenth time... by zieroh · · Score: 5, Funny

      Slashdot is a discussion forum?

      Huh. Interesting.

      --
      People who say "sheeple" have about as much sophistication as an AOL user, and in fact are probably actually AOL users.
    4. Re:For the umpteenth time... by wamatt · · Score: 2

      1. You are not a journalist
      2. Your post was not a news article

      Therefore,

      >Slashdot is a discussion forum?

      this is not a headline

    5. Re:For the umpteenth time... by phantomfive · · Score: 3, Insightful
      ok fine, I'll rewrite the headline for you.

      Is Silicon Valley at all non-toxic and do they have any morals left?

      Fixed it for you.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    6. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Nostromo21 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why? He's an AC & an apathetic/cynical dimwit. Soulskill does well to remind us of our lost humanity & the soullessness our western society is headed towards, if not already there. Quoting bullshit wikipedia 'laws' at us also doesn't change the facts or change anything in actual fact.

      In any case, SV is just a reflection & extension of our society as a whole, just another symptom of what may be the beginning of the end, if we're not past the point of no return already..??? (who says every discussion post can't end with a ? ? :)

    7. Re:For the umpteenth time... by artor3 · · Score: 2

      Don't be so quick to dismiss it. I don't know about "morally bankrupt", but if you've ever smelled the air around northern San Jose or Milpitas, you'd readily believe it was toxic.

    8. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a good thing that you're using your full real name here, Nostromo21. Otherwise, we'd be forced to think that you're posting anonymously, like some sort of a coward.

    9. Re:For the umpteenth time... by arielCo · · Score: 5, Funny

      Ooh, I got one!

      Can any headline which ends in a question mark be answered by the word "no"?

      --
      This post contains no rudeness or derision of any kind. All arguments are friendly. Terms and exclusions may apply.
    10. Re:For the umpteenth time... by girlintraining · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The rest is some pseudo-socialist rant. Move along, nothing to see here.

      I think that's a hand wave on your part. You're just slapping a label on the author's assertions and then jettisoning them without analyzing it and providing a reasoned response. The author is simply stating that every candle lights the darkness around it -- but it still casts a shadow. The question here is not whether Google (or any company, organization, or group) has done wrong, but whether the good outweighs the bad. And has it?

      Is the ability to search the internet using a proprietary algorithm and database almost instantly worth the steady erosion of our privacy and corresponding loss of civil liberty? Our founding fathers made the vote anonymous for a reason -- and in that day and age, the right to peacefully assemble was also the right to anonymously assemble. Nobody back then anticipated that every public moment of our lives would be stored in a giant machine, and be replayable at the touch of a button in perpetuity. The loss of anonymity means that people who might otherwise become politically active now don't. It means the vote itself is corrupted because people talk about it amongst each other less. It means the mass media gains more sway over popular opinion because what they watch on TV isn't going into a government database, unlike assembling for protest or discussion... which results in arrests and being placed on "no fly" lists. Google provides blogging services, and as a result of using them, many citizens have wound up on such lists. This is proven, documented fact, not "pseudo-socialist" ranting.

      And the author is right: Technology can't fix social problems. And fundamentally, that's what we're discussing, and that's what you missed. Information Technology is fundamentally about improving reliability, efficiency, and speed of digital systems. It says nothing about the process we're making more efficient or reliable. What would you say to speed cameras everywhere? Or black boxes that record everything you do and then fine you? Be honest with yourself: How many weeks would it take before you were hopelessly in debt if every single moment you spent behind the wheel was audited by a police officer... forever?

      Sudden advances in IT expose latent social problems. Our legal system doesn't move as quickly as our industry does, and so there's a gap between the time a problem (like privacy) is discovered, and a socially-acceptable solution is found and implimented. That gap is growing year over year because our legal system isn't getting any faster, but our technology is. So you can wave your hand and say "nothing to see here", if you want... but truthfully, you're young and naive and that's what's on display here, not some insightful social commentary. There are real problems here, and although the author may not have articulated it as clearly as I have, it's still clear what his underlying point is.

      Self-regulation has failed in almost every industry -- sooner or later, dollar signs flash in someone's eyes, and it doesn't matter whether it's ethical or not, only whether it's legal or not. And increasingly, what's legal and what isn't comes down to the balance in your bank account. Is that the society we want to live in? If the answer is no, then we need to start thinking about how to find a socially-acceptable way to even the differences between our ever plodding along legal system with an industry that measures progress in milliseconds.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    11. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, yeah, Rome is burning, along with the rest of the world. We've been hearing that every day since our revolution.

      Meanwhile your quality of life continues to go up, technology continues to improve, fewer people are starving, more people have access to increasingly effective medication, more of us are better educated than ever before... hell, even our wars are becoming less bloody.

      Shit is far from perfect from any perspective, and it never will be, but we keep trudging forward.

    12. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tired of this.

      So if I post a headline question with "Is there any intelligent life on Earth?", is that automatically no?

      I guess people that bust out worthless quotes would qualify at least. Use your brain for once, and stop being a self important simpleton.

    13. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Nostromo21 · · Score: 1

      Hey, at least there's only one of me...last time I checked. ;-p

    14. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1, Troll

      >>The rest is some pseudo-socialist rant. Move along, nothing to see here.
      >I think that's a hand wave on your part. You're just slapping a label on the author's assertions and then jettisoning them without analyzing it and providing a reasoned response.

      The author said: "To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice." Social justice is a code word for Marxism. 'Nuff said.

    15. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing how quick we are to place labels such as "socialist" or "rant" to marginalize someone's opinion with which we do not agree, instead of having the intellectual fortitude to raise an actual counter-argument. But that would be too much trouble wouldn't it? Much easier to demean instead of dealing with facts.

    16. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, social media has really ruined my ability to interact with others, what with it keeping me in touch with friends that have moved away. And introducing me to others. And making it super easy to organize events and thus have a bigger turnout. And with allowing me a measure of control over how I'm presented to people who don't know me (job searching).

      Nothing is ever as simple as a simple assertion would leave you to believe. You have to consider all the parts to get the big picture. Anything less is, well, less. Take into account trends in our education system, media, family dynamics, etc. before blaming SV for the downfall of humanity, please.

    17. Re:For the umpteenth time... by GerryGilmore · · Score: 1

      ." Social justice is a code word for Marxism. 'Nuff said. Gee! And here all this time I thought that Jesus, Gandhi, MLK, etc. were only concerned with "social justice". If only they had known that they were serving Karl Marx! Oh, the humanity!!!

    18. Re:For the umpteenth time... by s.petry · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Have you ever been to Silicon Valley? I live here and can tell you that the answer is "no". SV is not like Detroit with 3 companies that make up the economy, it's pretty much everything you can think of dealing with technology. Why do you rate such a massive amount of technological knowledge on 2 companies in the valley? For instance, Rambus is here as well as every other company designing computer memory. All of the companies designing switching equipment are here also. That's right, Ericsson (formerly Redback and Entrisphere also), Brocade, Cisco, AT&T are all here designing and building the switching equipment for your phones, PCs, servers, and more. Apple is here, as is Dell, HP, Oracle, IBM, and countless others that design and build everything from PDAs to massive servers. Yes, all designed and developed in SV as well as most of the software you use to run on them.

      Okay, piss and moan about Google's lack of morals. Why not also pay attention to the products and services they provide for "FREE" to cynical douche bags like the author of TFA? Don't like Google for their morals, simple answer is don't use their products and tell others the same. That's how the free market works you know, we have the power as consumers to either keep companies in business or put them under in time.

      And look, I'm as cynical as the rest (maybe more) when it comes to Government. You can check my post history if you have doubts. But companies are not the same (at least currently in the US) as the Government. People still have power in the market, but you have to be smart enough to use the power you have.

      So the answer again is "No", you obviously have no idea what Silicon Valley is or does to make such an ignorant argument. Come visit sometime, surprisingly most of the people you meet here are very courteous and helpful. I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    19. Re:For the umpteenth time... by JWW · · Score: 5, Interesting

      When independent leaders ask the people to treat their fellow members of the human race better, they are advocating for social justice.

      When an enormously powerful government takes things from one class to earn the political support of another class, that is NOT social justice.

    20. Re:For the umpteenth time... by s.petry · · Score: 1

      As I mentioned above, Silicon Valley is a lot more than Google and Facebook. Dumping every company here in to the same basket as those two is not logical.

      With that out of the way, why do people neglect the power they have as consumers in the market? At least for now, it still works. Boycott, go look up the definition. We, consuming citizens _can_ and _do_ make companies behave differently. Whether it's through legislature (Prop 37 for example) or just by bankrupting companies that do shitty things by never purchasing their products or services (even if they are free). Word of mouth from you to your friends can start a wildfire of people dropping Google search for Bing. If Bing takes over in the "F-UR-PRIVACY" department, find another one or start your own Privacy Happy company to do searching. Harder to start your own of course, considering the IP laws currently but still possible. Thing is, if people started dumping Google for Bing and were Boycotting properly (Letting it be known publicly "why" they are not using the service) then Google would probably start to change their behavior.

      I agree with your point that $$ rules things and that way too often is the top priority. Be vocal about people doing bad things and use what you have to start trying to make things differently.

      Last point, there are thousands and thousands of technology companies in the Valley that are not Google or Facebook. Facebook's campus is smaller than Brocades by far, or Cisco, or Ericsson, or Oracle, or HP, etc... With all the good here, it's ludicrous to say what TFA did. 2 Companies don't make the Valley, and the valley would survive without those 2. If you don't think Mountain View was a city before Google was here.. well...

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    21. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Does the set of all sets of headlines that don't pose questions include itself?

    22. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      > Gee! And here all this time I thought that Jesus, Gandhi, MLK, etc. were only concerned with "social justice".

      Yes, I'm sure they all wrote long letters about Social Justice in Mother Jones magazine.

    23. Re:For the umpteenth time... by girlintraining · · Score: 4, Insightful

      With that out of the way, why do people neglect the power they have as consumers in the market?

      I have only one question for you: Do you feel powerful?

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    24. Re:For the umpteenth time... by phantomfive · · Score: 1
      Your answer is 'no' to which question?

      I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      Being arrogant is frowned on in Silicon Valley? Are you really implying that people will do violence on you if you're arrogant in Silicon Valley? You mean, like go Hans Reiser on you?

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    25. Re:For the umpteenth time... by girlintraining · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Social justice is a code word for Marxism. 'Nuff said.

      Another hand wave. I never used the "code word". I also didn't use the secret handshake or the special hand signal. What I did ask for was that people consider the consequences of their decisions, politically and personally. In other words, I asked for personal responsibility. People like you remind me that there is a growing subset of americans that think any call for responsibility is socialism, communism, marxism, etc. They believe that consequences can be reduced to dollar signs. Something is good and responsible if it makes a profit, and bad and irresponsible if it results in a debt.

      I don't know what you want to call that ideology, but it is morally debased and corrupt to its very core: There is more to life than money.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    26. Re:For the umpteenth time... by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      No, it's not.

      The problem isn't technology. From throughout human history - all technology through the ages is inherently neutral. A gun that can be used to kill an innocent person, can also be used to kill a criminal. Likewise, high-technology is socially neutral.

      The problem though is that humans are not neutral. Those in power (social power, political power, or monetary power) often exploit new technology in ways to enforce their power. Is it a fault of the inventors? Not really - I'm sure most inventions were created as a way to be the next great equalizer (like how the Internet was supposed to be the great equalizer and that anyone can publish). Except those in power realize its potential and quickly create methods to turn that equalizer into the great stratifier - those in power will either keep their power or gather even more of it. Those without, get oppressed.

      The problem happens because technology is used by morally bankrupt individuals. It's a social problem, and technological innovations created to try to solve social problems ultimately fail. You can't fix social problems with technology.

    27. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1

      So if I post a headline question with "Is there any intelligent life on Earth?", is that automatically no?

      Lemme put it this way ...

      If you had to ask the question "Is there any intelligent life on Earth?" you already got the answer, haven't you?
       

      --
      Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    28. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Social justice is a code word for Marxism. 'Nuff said.

      You're an idiot who doesn't understand a basic concept. 'Nuff said.

    29. Re:For the umpteenth time... by EdIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What's so wrong with socialism? Why is it always an insult?

      It's not like we ever had communism yet either. Every attempt at communism was just an elaborate tribute to Orwell's Animal Farm. It's not like capitalism is the clear winner, in terms of both economic and moral success.

      Both are deeply flawed implementations of their ideologies where corruption and greed have perverted the movement towards the original positive ideas of freedom and equality (equality in the sense of human worth and opportunity, not material distribution).

      It's so obvious to me that some aspects of society need to be to treated like critical infrastructure and all attempts must be made to remove corruption from it. Step one, is removing profit.

      I've lived long enough to realize that we don't even have capitalism. That's a farce. Any attempts and pleas to even move towards fairness, sanity, social justice, or basically towards the center of capitalism is perceived as far left socialism. Which again, as an insult makes no sense.

      Hmmm, what's that political term about windows? Oh yeah, Overton.

    30. Re:For the umpteenth time... by vikingpower · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It is quite refreshing and thought-provoking to read such a comment on Slashot, of all places. I tend to wholeheartedly concur with girlintraining. My European vantage point must have something to do with that. No industry, when growing beyond a certain size, can go without regulation for a long time and still be governed by something that looks and smells like "ethics". The role of the state is NOT only to protect the weak - it is, also, a role to reign in the strong. We have known that since the Romans, more specifically since the attempts of more than one emperor to regulate the worst excesses in Roman economy ( Diocletian, most of all ). To ignore this is to deliberately let the lions' cage open, backstage in a circus full on unsuspecting public.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    31. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Only by a true scotsman

    32. Re:For the umpteenth time... by khallow · · Score: 1

      Self-regulation has failed in almost every industry

      See "payment card industries" or PCI for a widespread counterexample of self-regulation that works. It doesn't keep businesses from losing or exposing credit card numbers, but it does, especially for the largest businesses, provide nasty and credible consequences. The biggest is simply that the business, if it continues to fail to meet PCI standards, simply can't do credit card transactions.

      Government regulation is failing as well. In recent years, US regulatory agencies have been adding somewhere around 70-80k new pages per year. From that graph, I'd also characterize the growth rate in regulation as vaguely exponential over time with a doubling every 30-40 years.

    33. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ooh, I got one!

      Can any headline which ends in a question mark be answered by the word "no"?

      Yes. All questions can be answered with a no. It might not be the right answer, but it is an answer.

    34. Re:For the umpteenth time... by flyerbri · · Score: 1

      If it can be imagined it can be simulated.
      If it can be simulated it can be created.
      If it can be created by all means it deserves to have questions asked regarding it...

      So why would you agree with a law that intentionally limits asking questions?

      Oh yeah. You're one of them.... I've got a great book for you. It's called 1984...

      Your 'one size fits all' equation (aka law) fits in JUST perfect with your limited capacity to imagine why, instead choosing to regurgitate a flawed 'law' that make it easy for you to sound intellectually superior. Where the simple fact is, you're just too lazy to consider how questions are responsible for ideation!

      That or it strokes your insecure arrogance to quote jaded journalists who just happen to share your cynical perspective on life, technology and people in general..

      Now why you get 'ranked' higher for comments like this bewilders me. Is cynicism the key to gaining favoritism on this site?

    35. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Gordo_1 · · Score: 2

      Um, that's quite a block of text. I'm sure you make some valid arguments in there somewhere, but can I briefly bring attention to the words your fingers typed here:

      Is the ability to search the internet using a proprietary algorithm and database almost instantly worth the steady erosion of our privacy and corresponding loss of civil liberty? Our founding fathers made the vote anonymous for a reason -- and in that day and age, the right to peacefully assemble was also the right to anonymously assemble.

      I beg you to explain by what mechanism Google providing Internet search capabilities or any service for that matter -- services, I might add, that you may freely choose to use or not -- your right to privacy, anonymous voting, civil liberties and freedom of assembly have been eroded?

      Has Google unbeknownst to me, taken away free will?

    36. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      > People like you remind me that there is a growing subset of americans that think any call for responsibility is socialism, communism, marxism, etc

      That is not what I said. What I said is that "Social Justice is a code word for Marxism", which is absolutely true in our modern society. You are reading far too much into an explanation of a code word.

      >I don't know what you want to call that ideology, but it is morally debased and corrupt to its very core: There is more to life than money.

      Again, amazing you can read so much into my explanation of a term to you.

    37. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      >It's not like we ever had communism yet either. Every attempt at communism was just an elaborate tribute to Orwell's Animal Farm. It's not like capitalism is the clear winner, in terms of both economic and moral success.

      This is a pretty standard communism apology. No matter how many times communism has been implemented in a state, tyranny results. But apologists always say, "Well, it just wasn't done right."

      This is utter bullshit, and here's why. A communist economy is by definition managed by the state. Thus, by definition, you have a top-down, managed, economy, instead of a bottom-up economy which is what you get with capitalism. Top-down managed economies only work when they can make people do things other than what they want to do (which is what a bottom-up economy is). This force naturally comes at the point of a gun. Holding guns to people's heads and telling them where they can live (near their factory) and work (the shoe factory) is the definition of tyranny.

      Therefore tyranny is not "communism done wrong", but the natural, logical consequent of communism being implemented in a country.

    38. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >You're an idiot who doesn't understand a basic concept. 'Nuff said.

      You study this in college? No, of course you didn't.

      If you study this subject in college, or otherwise get exposed to Marxist ideology in college or your local OWS protest, you'll become aware what social justice, a focus on income inequality, wealth redistribution, an open society, and so forth actually means, much like how our forefathers could easily read between the lines whenever someone suddenly started talking about the proletariat versus the bourgeoisie, or alienation of labor, or worker control of production. They are code words that mean more than their face value.

    39. Re:For the umpteenth time... by FoolishOwl · · Score: 0

      A communist economy is by definition managed by the state.

      False. A communist economy is by definition one in which there is no state. That's how Marx and Engels defined it.

      When, in the course of development, class distinctions have disappeared, and all production has been concentrated in the hands of a vast association of the whole nation, the public power will lose its political character. Political power, properly so called, is merely the organised power of one class for oppressing another. If the proletariat during its contest with the bourgeoisie is compelled, by the force of circumstances, to organise itself as a class, if, by means of a revolution, it makes itself the ruling class, and, as such, sweeps away by force the old conditions of production, then it will, along with these conditions, have swept away the conditions for the existence of class antagonisms and of classes generally, and will thereby have abolished its own supremacy as a class.
      http://marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/communist-manifesto/ch02.htm

      You may not like this idea. You may not believe it is possible. But it is the definition of communism.

    40. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything a socialist/communist condemns is a major feature in socialist/fascist governments. The only difference, is that in those governments they're the ones at the top of the food chain. The politicians, I mean, the rest become "labourers" (slaves) because that's what they want.

      Another major feature in socialism, is that as soon as a "leader" gets in power, it quickly kills the competence, then changes the rules to prevent other people to question his/her rule (that's not entirely correct, in many cases they kill each other even before they have a chance to get in power), because that's the way socialism works. Socialism regimes are very effective tyrannies that last for decades.

      Socialism actively punishes the ones in the team that are doing too well, while at the same time makes sure that no one on the last positions leaves the team. As such, it works as reverse natural selection, which naturally optimizes to everyone going at the rhythm of the slowest member of the team. It's not only supported by theory, but also in practice by a long list of examples, because unfortunately, there have been many socialist governments, and every single one of them has end in tragedy.

      In sum, socialism is the opposite of what their supporters want, it's guaranteed to fail (and fail HARD), and once achieved, you can't get rid of his tyrannical grip for the rest of your life. That's the reason socialism is an insult.

      Disclaimer: I am for a country that has went bankrupt TWICE under socialist governments, which in three years stole so much money that the country now has a debt that's impossible to pay, which means we can forget about welfare for the next fifty years.

    41. Re:For the umpteenth time... by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

      There was this thing called the 20th Century. Socialism got a pretty bad reputation during this time. Good idea that just doesn't work.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    42. Re:For the umpteenth time... by slew · · Score: 1

      Sudden advances in IT don't expose latent social problems. All the social problems I can think of were exposed long before any advances in IT. There have always been nosey neighbors, bullied kids, crank phone calls, voyers, stalkers, and perversions of every kind imaginable before there was anywhere near the current IT technology. Telephone operators listened to calls, voyers with telescopes looked through windows, nosey neighbors snooped through mail.

      The problem with advances in IT are that now people who work for corporations have the ability to tempt the masses and apply technology to mixit up with the masses to serve their customers. By allowing IT into our lives (through social networking) we've created a new social problem for ourselves by deliberatly sharing information with someone that we don't know, and doesn't have a duty to serve us. Since we don't pay them, and we aren't customers (advertisers are the customers), they don't naturally have any kind of fidicual duty to us.

      It's as if we handed a briefcase full of $100 bills to a stranger on the street to give to our neighbor and trusted the laws to make sure that they did it. Sure that stranger might do it today, but they might also tell a friend that we handed them a briefcase and it had a lot of money in it. I don't see how any theory of law protects us in this situation. Nobody is peeking through a window, nobody is listening to a phone call, nobody is opening up mail. Basically there is a briefcase. No milliseconds are necessary.

      Is privacy worth anything to the typical person? I'm afraid the answer is no. Nearly everyone seems willing to turn over a phone number or address to a total stranger for a 1 in a billion chance for a stupid prize. Maybe that's not the society that you want to live in, but sadly, it is the society that you live in. The only way to change it is to change the masses mind about privacy (which is something they don't really care much about right now). Once the masses mind is changed, government will often follow, but aiming at the government as the way of attacking this is really just one person thinking they know better than the rest (which they may know better, but that's not a very populist approach and sometimes frowned upon).

      Anyhow...

    43. Re:For the umpteenth time... by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      "Top-down managed economies only work when they can make people do things other than what they want to do (which is what a bottom-up economy is)."

      An accurate criticism of managed economies, but the same is true of self-organising market economies. What people want to do is sit at home, watch tv, go to parties and generally *not work*. But work is needed for an economy to function, to produce goods and keep people fed and warm. Manged economies force people to do things they don't want through giving commands, yes - but unmanaged economies also force people to do things they don't want, via the less organised threat that they'll end up living on the street and scavenging leftover food from bins if they don't get a job.

      An ideal, utopian and completly unrealistic economy should be able to keep everyone in a modest standard of living using only volunteer labor - we've got vast wastage today, and production in excess of essential goods like food. But this would require a management feat of unprecidented scale and efficiency. Not going to happen.

    44. Re:For the umpteenth time... by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

      I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      Message received loud and clear: your insane. Duly noted.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    45. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, ham-fisted blood-soaked attempts at Communism got a bad reputation. Communism, it would seem, is a non-starter. Socialism on the other hand has led to world-leading quality of life (when measured by pretty much any metric) in Scandinavia and much of northern Europe. There is a reason that it isn't used as an insult here.

    46. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was about as "socialist" as people's democratic republics are "democratic". Just because I call a shit sandwich "bacon" doesn't mean that bacon is bad.

    47. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The rest is some soviet communist rant. Move along, nothing to see here."
      Fixed it for you.

    48. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Didn't Rambus tried to screw every memory supplier around by pushing their product specs and implementations into the standards organizations and then patenting it and asking high rates to use the said standard...

    49. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you like socialism you should move to Europe, every country is effectively socialist here. Well, and so are the democrats after Kennedy's death too. To think that people have been made to believe communism "lost" the cold war... ha!

    50. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      excellent post.

    51. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      Marx doesn't get to magically define communism as rainbow farts and unicorns. The fundamental characteristic of communism is common ownership of the means of production. All the other consequents that I listed above fall out from this fact.

      You or Marx or whoever can pretend that in your magical rainbow world that this leads to a stateless society, but I've already said above how it instead leads to a tyrannical dictatorship every time.

    52. Re:For the umpteenth time... by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm. What's the word?
      Oh, yeah...

      Whoosh.

      --
      "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
    53. Re:For the umpteenth time... by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 3, Funny

      Slashdot is a discussion forum?

      I view it more as a comet, a dense head of quoted original article at the top and then thousands of gibberish comments streaming out behind it as the tail.

    54. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >If you like socialism you should move to Europe, every country is effectively socialist here.

      We'll see how long it takes before they're all bankrupt. Greece, Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium.... they're all in the shit.

      Switzerland, though, has both one of the lowest tax rates in Europe, one of the highest per-capita incomes, and the Franc is so solid that people have been buying negative-yield bonds to get into it.

      They have a strong welfare system, but still have a smaller government and lower taxes than the US.

    55. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Betteridge's law of headlines
      From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

      Betteridge's law of headlines is an adage that states:

        "Any headline which ends in a question mark can be answered by the word no". ...

      All it takes to disprove that statement is a headline ending in a question mark that isn't a yes/no question.
      Well, technically you can still answer with no but that doesn't make it an appropriate answer.

      Consider the following headline: Who Will Win the November Election?
      Do you consider "No" to be a reasonable answer to that question?

    56. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      Do you feel powerful?

      Yes. I can deny a company any revenue that might hope to get from me. I can - in a way never before possible in human history - make an eloquent pitch to hundreds millions or billions of other people, encouraging them to do the same. I just have to be peruasive, which means having a valid point. And of course most of the "OMG teh evil corporationplutocrats are pwning my cheezeburgers!" rants are based on pure BS or nothing more than lazy resentment, and thus unable to inspire the ranter's desired change. This is why idiots like the Occupy types just get angrier and angrier ... because they fail to see how shrill most of their rants actually sound to most sensible people. But when groups like that focus cogently on legitimate concerns (for example, strains of the Tea Party types who focus like a laser on massive deficit spending) they get somewhere, at least enough to change some legislative seats here and there.

      So, you can be powerful with nothing more than words and some personal spending or voting decisions. But you have to have a damn point. Pure BS doesn't float anymore, because information gets around too quickly.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    57. Re:For the umpteenth time... by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And the No True Scotsman fallacy rides to the rescue again. Where would socialism be without it?

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    58. Re:For the umpteenth time... by AliasMarlowe · · Score: 1

      I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      Message received loud and clear: you're insane. Duly noted.

      Probably not insane; just another arrogant prick in SV. No doubt accustomed to being frowned upon for bad attitude and regularly getting lost.

      --
      Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
    59. Re:For the umpteenth time... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Have you ever been to Silicon Valley? I live here and can tell you that the answer is "no". SV is not like Detroit with 3 companies that make up the economy, it's pretty much everything you can think of dealing with technology. Why do you rate such a massive amount of technological knowledge on 2 companies in the valley? For instance, Rambus is here as well as every other company designing computer memory. All of the companies designing switching equipment are here also. That's right, Ericsson (formerly Redback and Entrisphere also), Brocade, Cisco, AT&T are all here designing and building the switching equipment for your phones, PCs, servers, and more. Apple is here, as is Dell, HP, Oracle, IBM, and countless others that design and build everything from PDAs to massive servers. Yes, all designed and developed in SV as well as most of the software you use to run on them.

      Okay, piss and moan about Google's lack of morals. Why not also pay attention to the products and services they provide for "FREE" to cynical douche bags like the author of TFA? Don't like Google for their morals, simple answer is don't use their products and tell others the same. That's how the free market works you know, we have the power as consumers to either keep companies in business or put them under in time.

      And look, I'm as cynical as the rest (maybe more) when it comes to Government. You can check my post history if you have doubts. But companies are not the same (at least currently in the US) as the Government. People still have power in the market, but you have to be smart enough to use the power you have.

      So the answer again is "No", you obviously have no idea what Silicon Valley is or does to make such an ignorant argument. Come visit sometime, surprisingly most of the people you meet here are very courteous and helpful. I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      Like my parents and three of my grandparents, I was born in "Silicon Valley." My family has had a front-row seat to the transformation of the South Bay from orchards to technology companies and I have watched the Silicon Valley culture completely takeover and displace the existing culture. If you happen to be in a profession that benefits from Silicon Valley, then good for you, you get to stick around and watch Silicon Valley subsume everything that was great about the Bay Area; that unique mix of red neck farmers, libertarian outdoorsmen, and hippies. Of course if, like my family, you happen to be blue collar and your sleepy little town lies within commuting distance of Cupertino or downtown SF then you get to watch rich assholes from out of state move in and buy every house in sight for ten times what its worth. They wait like vultures until someone who probably built their house when they came back from WWII drops dead and, when the children can't afford the taxes on the inflated real estate, they generously step in to buy the house, which they promptly tear down or remodel into a walled fortress. Your close-knit neighborhood, surrounded by oak trees and poppies where you used to wander with impunity..? Yah, that's now an up-scale area with high fences and manicured yards; everything else is an over-grown mess because everyone is too important to pitch in and trim back the brush on weekends.

      I remember when stores were still closed on Sundays in San Jose because they were all small, locally-owned businesses. There was a small, local grocery store near my grandparents' old house--which they were forced to sell when they retired because of the skyrocketing cost of living and property values--that I used to buy candy at after school. I visited a couple of years ago and was happy to see that it was still standing. I was, however, enraged to find that it had become a "specialty market," selling gluten free bullshit and $10 loaves of "artisan bread" to the owners of the expensive German car

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    60. Re:For the umpteenth time... by squiggleslash · · Score: 2

      What I said is that "Social Justice is a code word for Marxism", which is absolutely true in our modern society

      No, it isn't. I use the term myself. I know many people who use it. Rarely is it used to advocate Marxism.

      The only way it can be true is if you redefine the term Marxism. That seems popular on the right: I've seen the same thing happen to the word "socialism". Somebody will say "You know, wouldn't it be good if we had universal healthcare?" And a rightist will say "No! Because that's socialism!" And the first person will say "Hold on, then this socialism thing sounds pretty good". And the rightist will say "No it isn't! Socialism is where the government runs and owns everything, according to this made up definition I and many others use that kinda ignores socialism's origins and what socialism actually is." And the first person will say "But I didn't advocate the government running and owning everything. I just advocated universal healthcare."

      And the rightist will bitch and whine and protest that the first person is a damned commie, because while he doesn't believe that the government should run and own everything, he did advocate universal healthcare, ergo he advocated socialism, ergo he believes the government should run and own everything.

      That's how stupid political debate is, especially when it's over code words. You picked the wrong one incidentally. Social justice is a description. The code word in a sentence that includes the term "social justice" and "marxism" is "marxism". Social justice is a goal. Marxism? That's anything you want it to be, and is always a code word for something.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    61. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Ginger+Unicorn · · Score: 1

      Pilcher's Law of Betteridge's Law of Headlines:

      Any headline which ends in a question mark will have Betteridge's Law of Headlines posted right at the top of its comment thread.

      --
      (1.21 gigawatts) / (88 miles per hour) = 30 757 874 newtons
    62. Re:For the umpteenth time... by squiggleslash · · Score: 1

      From that graph, I'd also characterize the growth rate in regulation as vaguely exponential over time with a doubling every 30-40 years.

      That's a more important figure than a vague handwave about the number of pages being added to the CFR. But here's a question: over the space of 30-40 years, has the number of products, product-types, and amount of money involved, doubled, less than doubled, or more than doubled? Would you expect regulation to become more or less complex with a more complex economy?

      (Not to say there's a lot of crap in the CFR. I get the impression that despite the various reform acts of the 1980s, the Railroads are still predominantly governed by regulations that assume it's still the early 1900s - something that was brought home to me when I read the FEC's Federal submissions asking for permission to restart their own passenger services.)

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    63. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Self-regulation has failed in almost every industry"

      Not really. It's true that greed drives unethical behavior, but government regulation is every bit as susceptible to the same problem. Even in a purely socialist environment you have the elite, and then you have the masses. Capitalism isn't the problem. It's human nature. Part of the responsibility also lies in the individual. We have the right to vote for the government we want and we've chosen what we have. If you're not willing to fight for your rights and what you believe in someone else will be more than happy to take what is yours. No government system is going to fix that. It's just as true for corporations as it is for the government. Our founding fathers understood that when they created our government small tasked with defending the nation. Out of laziness, appathy, incompetence, and indiffernece we have handed over all of our social problems for the government to solve. I would posit that they are ill equipped for the task and will never succeed. All one really needs to do is look at the social programs we have and contrast what they cost to the benefit that they provide. Not only have we spent a whole lot of money, all of the problems still exist.

    64. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/your/You\'re/

    65. Re:For the umpteenth time... by BVis · · Score: 1

      Yeah, the rich have enough money already.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    66. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      because he's a wannabe hippie and he's sad that capitalism is an economic driver instead of unicorns, love-ins and hemp. All he can see is the commune utopia promised by free software, open networks, and open source hardware eclipsed by the reality that people want to be financially rewarded for their work and the more they are rewarded the more their competitors will try to out do them. He's frustrated because this system doesn't make him feel loved and appreciated like he's part of a community that really matters. And now he's angry and he wants to destroy what does work for the rest so he can get what he wants and create an ideal work society where he can be rewarded with lollipops and kind affirmations while taking a week off each month to march for somebody's rights. I'm just surprised he didn't build a straw man based on Ayn Rand and then launch into castigating attacks on the 1% in silicon valley.

    67. Re:For the umpteenth time... by BVis · · Score: 1

      Government regulation is failing as well. In recent years, US regulatory agencies have been adding somewhere around 70-80k [blogspot.com] new pages per year. From that graph, I'd also characterize the growth rate in regulation as vaguely exponential over time with a doubling every 30-40 years.

      The fact that there are more regulations does not mean that government regulation is failing. Yes, in a perfect world, government regulation would not be necessary. Every private company in the country would act in the best interests of its customers, its employees, and its stockholders at all times. Industrial pollution would not exist, insider trading would not exist, employees of every company would share equitably in their employer's success or failures. Nobody would ever be required to work unpaid overtime, no employee would ever be asked to do something that would put life and limb at risk, no company would deliberately mislead its customers in order to realize short-term sales gains. The day that all of the preceding has come to pass is the day I will gladly burn all the regulations side by side with you.

      Unfortunately, we live in the real world, where people (and the companies they run) are short-sighted, greedy, selfish, irresponsible assholes. That's the real problem; the government regulation is just a band-aid.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    68. Re:For the umpteenth time... by aclarke · · Score: 1

      That's "progress" for you. Nothing's more important than real estate developers, and the free market rules all. I moved to CA for 9 years, and even in that time I was sad to see what was happening. I still think the Bay area is better off than San Diego and Orange Counties at least. I miss a lot about California, but overall I'm glad to be gone.

    69. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They believe that consequences can be reduced to dollar signs. Something is good and responsible if it makes a profit, and bad and irresponsible if it results in a debt.

      This is only true if money is the only true way of defining value. Money defining value is only true if all financial costs are internalized. Because the financial costs of most actions are not internalized, money does not in most cases equate value. Therefore, unrestrained capitalism is not an appropriate social model.

      I realize I just made most of my Republican American friends' heads pop off in apoplexy, but after having been gone from California and the US for a few years, I'm shocked and dismayed at some of the attitudes I encounter when I return. Hmm, I'm going to post anonymously to avoid causing issues with people who may be reading this.

    70. Re:For the umpteenth time... by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Considering the lack of ethics and morals in almost every organization, I'd say this didproves Betteridge's "law" of headlines.

    71. Re:For the umpteenth time... by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      You look to Roman emperors to reign in excesses? Your European fealty to power does indeed pervert your perspective. Government is the most psychopathic of corporations.

    72. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Jiro · · Score: 1

      ok fine, I'll rewrite the headline for you.

      Your new version won't fall under Betteridge's Law unless it actually appeared as a headline. And as a rule, it won't, for exactly the same reasons as to why we have Betteridge's Law in the first place. It would only appear if everyone agreed that Silicon Valley has no morals and the reporter wanted to suggest that it does, but is incapable of proving it. This scenario is more than unlikely.

    73. Re:For the umpteenth time... by davidshewitt · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right about how businesses must be regulated after they get to be a certain size. Just look at the gilded age. There was a whole bunch of new manufacturing technology, and businesses saw an opportunity to make a shit ton of $$ on it. They abused the system, and people got pissed off and demanded reforms, which led into the progressive era.

      I think that we're going through a similar phase with computers. Right now, there is little regulation, and the companies are taking full advantage of that. However, I think that more and more people will get pissed off at the tracking and invasion of privacy. Many people fought very hard to bring in the reforms of the progressive era. I hope people today will fight to bring in the reforms needed to keep up with today's tech.

    74. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That's how the free market works you know, we have the power as consumers to either keep companies in business or put them under in time."

      Except that facebook isn't funded by people who use the software. Investors put lots of money into facebook before it became popular. They didn't put money into it because it became popular.

      The revenue facebook gets is laughable. However, it appears that to investors it serves some social function they find important. It is kind of like supporting a political candidate where there is no direct line on return on investment.

      So I am not sure how we have the power to kill facebook. And even if we did, the investment would just get put into whatever altrenative comes up and will serve the same social function the investors used facebook for.

      Do you believe something like a supermarket is a free market? The moment you step in the door, the products have already been chosen for you. The prices are choosen for you. You simply have the choice of going to another store which most likely has the same products. Consumerism is reactionary...that is all it can be. A reactionary power is limited in it's scope and affect.

    75. Re:For the umpteenth time... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      The author said: "To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice." Social justice is a code word for Marxism. 'Nuff said.

      Can you even define Marxism? I mean really...

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    76. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      oh please -- if Silicon Valley didn't bring money to the area, you would be living like the people in King City and then you'ld complain about all the Spanish speaking people that make it not like your childhood memories.

      nobody stole your home town. Your neighbors and your family sold your home town to rich outsiders. Nobody held a gun to anyone's head

    77. Re:For the umpteenth time... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      Well said!

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    78. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It's not like we ever had communism yet either. Every attempt at communism was just an elaborate tribute to Orwell's Animal Farm." -- No true communist Scotsman? In fact, there have been "pure" attempts at communism including the hippie communes, early attempts by European settlers to North America, etc.

      "Both are deeply flawed implementations of their ideologies where corruption and greed have perverted the movement towards the original positive ideas of freedom and equality " -- Any system that ignores the basic human traits of greed and corruption is bound to fail.

      "It's so obvious to me that some aspects of society need to be to treated like critical infrastructure and all attempts must be made to remove corruption from it. Step one, is removing profit." -- Then stop accepting a paycheck for doing work. Just do nice things for everyone and hope everyone will do nice things for you and see how it works out.

    79. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the same story as my home town in Chicago. Northbrook, IL 60062 was a town out of a fairy tale. Then all of the same things happened to it just like your town. It all started around 1990. Now I live in Indiana and it's okay and the cost of living is very low..but it's not home.

    80. Re:For the umpteenth time... by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1, Interesting
      "When an enormously powerful government takes things from one class to earn the political support of another class, that is NOT social justice."

      Oh, you're speaking now of the 1% who engineer the laws to take money from taxpayers and give it to themselves?

      http://www.amazon.com/Free-Lunch-Wealthiest-Themselves-Government/dp/1591842484

      http://www.unjustdeserts.com/inside.cfm

    81. Re:For the umpteenth time... by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      What we are seeing in silicon valley is that it has become a mature industry under capitalism, while regulated capitalism can do well for incubating new industries developed out of a pre-existing scientific base (usually funded by the goverment), once the products have matured most companies under capitalism focus on "securing the revenue stream" - not innovation or other activities which promote societal wealth - these activities involve locking others out and basically finding ways through marketing, branding and using their quasi-monoploy like status fasciliated by economies of scale - like driving down the cost of labor and shaking down suppliers. These activities of a mature industry under captialism while increasing individual wealth for the owners, perversely limit or decrease the wealth of society by driving down wages and dsicouraging innovation. Most countries recognise this at some lever through anti-trust laws, but the US doesn't really enforce them any more and in my opinion much more should be done to discourage predatory behavior, such as aboloshing or severely reworking patent law and taxing the shit out of genuinely unprodcutive activites like marketing and much of finance.

    82. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It apparently takes an entire book to define. Anytime I've ever asked for a concise definition, I'm told to just go read Das Kapital...

    83. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Romans already were corrupted by low morale (too much of hedonism comparing to republican time) and by seizing too much of power in the hands of one emperor. Republic made Rome great, not Empire. In fact, Republic was politically so much more advanced than every another state around, so they crushed most of them and even degrading Empire would say for some more hundred years. Before really bloody disentegration would come.

    84. Re:For the umpteenth time... by SleazyRidr · · Score: 2

      Betteridges law states that the answer is no. To avoid the paradox forming I recommend putting your fingers in your ears and sing "la la la".

    85. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All technology creeps into our life, it's not always so simple to just deny it when it first becomes available. All new technology solves issues, or makes some part of our life easier, but creates problems at the same time. It may not even be something we see face on until many years have passed and the technology has become a huge part of our life. The most powerful example I can imagine, is one which nearly everyone ignores is the suburban experiment and the impact it has had over the last 50 years. What was once supposed to convinence us is now a massive inconvinence. We rely on automobiles becuase we don't have cornershops on our block we can walk to anymore. Grocery stores are not even allowed by law to be convinently located to our homes. This goes for our offices, schools, etc. Instead designing places we can walk and bike around, we're stuck in a car on a highway in gridlock with nothing to look forward to but some McDonalds on the way home and quality TV. This has many ill effects, one of which is the complete loss of anything resembling a community. They just don't exist anymore. We don't care about anyone around us because there is no connection. I would say that is a pretty big social issue, and one which is made worse by newer technologies like facebook and much of the internet. We should just keep these things in the back of our mind, so when things start to break down, we wont be suprised (or easily fooled by the companies promising bs alternatives).

    86. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Mashdar · · Score: 1

      I hope my house never gets bought for ten times what it is worth. That would be terrible.
      I agree that it sucks if your tax rates go up, but they are only doing so because you are getting "free" money in the form of home equity. It's hard to count that as much of a wrong. Variable pricing is a requirement for capitalism. Development is an inevitable consequence of increasing population and improving farm yields.
      You come across as feeling smug and superior to all those "yuppie idiots". Frankly, you can take all the pride you want in your fishing lures. But if I don't find it worthwhile to make them, you are just an ass if you look down on lures I might purchase. Mind your own. I make my own furniture, but you don't see me shitting all over my neighbor's composite board table when he hands me a beer.
      Anyway, gentrification sucks for those pushed out by it, but I don't think there is much to be done without ending capitalism in the housing market.

    87. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This - exactly

    88. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "SV is not like Detroit with 3 companies that make up the economy, it's pretty much everything you can think of dealing with technology."

      You've obviously never been to Detroit!?!?!?

      Metro Detroit is filled with every company you could possibly think of that relates to selling automotive industry related products. It's far more than just 3 companies running the show here.

    89. Re:For the umpteenth time... by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      Hey don't forget the socialist backwards mess of a country called Germany, with their health care, strong unions, social saftey net and state directed industrial policy - they are so backwards they can't make anything for themselves, and they are bankrupt! oh wait....

    90. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      children can inherit their parent's prop 13 tax assessment, so no, no children ever have to sell their childhood home because they can't afford the taxes.

    91. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Quila · · Score: 1

      It's not like we ever had communism yet either.

      Regardless of definitions, every time it was tried it has failed, and resulted in severe human rights abuses. In many examples, the only keeping the economy afloat was an underground capitalist system. The problem is, everyone who wants to try communism thinks "We can do it right THIS time." Uh, no, that's what every failed one before you thought. Learn from history.

      At least capitalism is based on freedom. You are free to trade with others, and others are free to trade with you. It's human nature. But then we don't have a capitalist system either with all of the government manipulations of the markets (often in the name of "fairness"). Negative unintended consequences abound abound even when intentions are good. There is also rampant buying of government favor by businesses. A government powerful enough to tell a business what to do is a government powerful enough to give businesses special privileges at the expense of the people.

    92. Re:For the umpteenth time... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 0

      That "free" money is great if you are mid-life, with kids, but not so great on a fixed income when your property taxes go through the room. Or when you inherit the houes that your father built only to find out that you owe taxes on the inflated value, forcing you to sell it just to cover the inheritance tax. Many people were displaced by the absurd real estate bubble created by Silicon Valley. They were given the choice of refinancing and paying higher taxes or selling and moving far, far away where housing prices aren't so high. That is why, in the 90's, those "Native Since XXXX" bumper stickers became so popular in Oregon and why Oregonians started using the term "Californian" derisively.

      Lures are not the same thing as flies. California used to have some of the best fly fishing in the country until it became a fad for rich people as a way of getting out of the office and enjoying Nature. They ruined the sport by treating it like an amusement park. I'm not looking down you for buying flies, I'm expressing my frustration that people like me now have to make a living selling flies to you because everything is expensive thanks to the economic microcosm created by the influx of money into Silicon Valley. Let's see how you feel when you have to start making composite board tables for your neighbor because he wants some hand-crafted furniture that looks just like what he's used to.

      Smug and entitled? Smug because I can't afford to live anywhere near where I grew up because I chose a career outside of the tech industry? Entitled to what, being displaced from my home? Are you implying that it is a feeling of entitlement to want to stay near your family? No, it's all the transplants that move to the Bay Area for a job in Silicon Valley that are smug and entitled. They think their shit smells like roses because everyone that didn't move there to work for Google has had to make a living catering to them. They should have to pay a tax for ruining my home that subsidizes my mortgage payment, just like the oil companies in Alaska. This is gentrification on a massive scale that displaced orchards, dairy farms, cattle ranches; population-wise it is as if the entire state of Iowa was turned into a hipster neighborhood in Brooklyn.

      I'm sorry if I get a little angry reading about some Australian that moved to Silicon Valley and found it lacked the moral center she was looking for in her career. At least she got to go back to Australia to decompress and re-evaluate. Where do I go to get away from the people that took over my home? It just rubs me the wrong way to read a whole threat about peoples' problems with the nuances of an industry without any recognition that that industry overwhelmed and displaced the people and culture that used to define the Bay Area.

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    93. Re:For the umpteenth time... by epine · · Score: 1

      Slashdot has been drifting into the Betteridge bayou full speed ahead for some time now. If the story has no story, then the contributed commentary mainly consists of recycled navel lint. If any fool comes along who actually has something to say, it will drown in the din.

      I think it was Bombeck who once had a quip that conversation consists of talking and preparing to talk. This is what happens on a conversation forum which begins knee deep in brackish backwash. If the story has no story, there's no reason to listen to any other contribution beyond identifying a suitable launch opportunity for a hasty rewording of your party line.

      I mean, everyone loves the opportunity to burnish yesterday's tweet. Off-hand remarks don't come along every day. When you have one, why not use it again?

    94. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

      The OP reached a "conclusion" without even attempting to reason an argument. There were some vast generalizations and slippery-slope thinking, but not much in the way of thought. You did not so much "articulate" as you did "bloviate". From what I can tell, to OP worried that people want to make a profit at the expense of others. That's nothing new at all. Especially when he/she focuses rage on technology due to anecdotal evidence.

      Did we suddenly forget Twitter's role in the middle-east protests? Conveniently overlook the use of the internet in CHINA of all places to organize middle class protests against pollution? I'm delighted to keep in touch with old friends on Facebook, it strengthens enduring relationships because I don't always have the time or money to visit them.

      Are we ignoring the fact that no one is putting a gun to your head forcing you to use search engines or social media or free email?

      Yes, there have been cases of people accidentally "outed" because of technical glitches on Facebook, but the nightmare scenarios you describe aren't even close to happening because we can simply choose to unplug. ISP records used by the RIAA to police people for illegal sharing records matters mostly to people under 15. If we want to talk about property rights for electronic doodads and files, here's a solution: don't buy them. It's like you never heard of the word "lease." If you don't like the terms of service, DON'T PATRONIZE IT. Quite simple. I blame that ignorance on greedy youth who think everything should be free because they want it, like music. Which is just the nascent greed that drives wall street.

      Wake me up when the government tries to pass a law forcing us to sign up for Google+ with our real names and installs cameras in our houses.

      Did you see how fucking fast the courts smacked down laws that tried to make it illegal to video record police? Bam! The system works.

      Sure, we can slippery-slope all day about Google becoming oppressive Orwellian force that will crush freedom. You know what, "Iran is four years from a nuclear bomb." Been hearing that trope for ~30 years. How about we focus on the positives.

      So instead of panicking about people trying to make money, which will never go away, how about we focus on making sure we can watch the watchers. Read the book "The Transparent Society" by Brinn, and "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace" by Lessig. Those are two great starting points that actually address the concern of the OP.

      Both of you need some serious facts in your arguments.

      --
      https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    95. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Quila · · Score: 1

      The role of the state is NOT only to protect the weak - it is, also, a role to reign in the strong.

      That means the state is the strongest. Who reins that in when it becomes too large and unethical, when it becomes engrossed with its power to rein in citizens, or groups of citizens, who have become too strong in its opinion?

    96. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you mention is a groovy way of life, but the problem is not with Silicon Valley but a society that believes that greed is the only thing that matters. It's not just the Bay area, take a look around. Detroit area was like that long before SF was, I know since I moved from there to the bay area just a few years ago.

      We have a society that has been trained to believe that money is everything, there are no morals worth keeping, and that nothing matters unless you are getting yours. This is a societal issue brought to you by propaganda, monopoly media, and collusion that has people dumbed down (and believing that dumb is cool).

      In summary, I agree with your point but disagree with the claim that it's a problem with morality in the Bay area.

    97. Re:For the umpteenth time... by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Engrish is not your furst language may be?

      Coming from Detroit, I was amazed at how nice people were here. Maybe you should move out of the ghetto and see what SV is like to most of the world.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    98. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fundamental characteristic of communism is common ownership of the means of production and equitable shares of the fruits of production.

      FTFY

    99. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've had similar misgivings about the industry, but for very different reasons.

      For better or for worse, we tech people have put others out of work and we've changed the lives of many more without regard for whether they want or can adapt to having them changed. I see people from my mother's generation that have struggled to adapt to our more modern world. The half-life of work skills is shorter than it's ever been and we're rapidly running into a very serious problem where significant portions of the population have very little to offer above and beyond what can be accomplished by machines for far less money.

      I struggle with this question because I firmly agree with the sentiment that the much-trotted-out buggy-whip makers don't get to hold up progress just because it obviates the need for what they have to offer, but I also don't believe that the "keep up or be left behind" mentality is fair. Some people just aren't capable of adapting as quickly and as constantly as is becoming required. And the reality is that the faster we progress, the more people will fall behind and I wonder whether my industry has a moral obligation to care about those people that are being adversely affected by our efforts.

    100. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No.

    101. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      Surprisingly, my experience has been the opposite. Arrogance abounds in Silicon Valley. Ever been to a job interview here? They amount to pissing contests rather than actual assessment of ability to do the job and personality fit. Pricks are admired and stroked even if they are incompetent and cannot do the job-- as long as there is hubris, the sky is limitless.

      Truly if what you're saying is the case then this would be a ghost town.

    102. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One could also posit the question "Is President Obama really an alien from outer space?" as well.

      But some questions are just too goddamn stupid to even bother asking. Especially on Slashdot, generally known for containing less stupid people than society in general.

    103. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "waaaaaaaah"

      Welcome to the earth. Nobody has the same thing they had as a child. No prices are fixed for extended periods of time. Economies fluctuate, populations grow and shrink, everyone has something to complain about. Get over it.

    104. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy: the people rein in the state, since the state derives its power from the people

      If the people isn't reining in the state, then they only have themselves to blame for not doing so.

      You can't do the same with private companies. You might say boycott them or go to a competitor, but that's no different than saying "well, why don't you just move to another country". That is passive. It's reactive. It's running away from the problem instead of confronting it.

      With the government however, you can actively confront it. You can challenge the laws. Challenge whether the government is actually abiding by its laws. You can't do that sort of thing with a private company, since a private company is not bound to any Constitution, and a company certainly doesn't have to form any agreement with you. A company does not have to answer to you if you challenge it. A government - a legitimate one - has to.

    105. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever been to Silicon Valley? I live here and can tell you that the answer is "no". SV is not like Detroit with 3 companies that make up the economy, it's pretty much everything you can think of dealing with technology. Why do you rate such a massive amount of technological knowledge on 2 companies in the valley? For instance, Rambus is here as well as every other company designing computer memory. All of the companies designing switching equipment are here also. That's right, Ericsson (formerly Redback and Entrisphere also), Brocade, Cisco, AT&T are all here designing and building the switching equipment for your phones, PCs, servers, and more. Apple is here, as is Dell, HP, Oracle, IBM, and countless others that design and build everything from PDAs to massive servers. Yes, all designed and developed in SV as well as most of the software you use to run on them.

      Okay, piss and moan about Google's lack of morals. Why not also pay attention to the products and services they provide for "FREE" to cynical douche bags like the author of TFA? Don't like Google for their morals, simple answer is don't use their products and tell others the same. That's how the free market works you know, we have the power as consumers to either keep companies in business or put them under in time.

      And look, I'm as cynical as the rest (maybe more) when it comes to Government. You can check my post history if you have doubts. But companies are not the same (at least currently in the US) as the Government. People still have power in the market, but you have to be smart enough to use the power you have.

      So the answer again is "No", you obviously have no idea what Silicon Valley is or does to make such an ignorant argument. Come visit sometime, surprisingly most of the people you meet here are very courteous and helpful. I will warn you to keep the arrogant attitudes at home though, pricks are frowned upon here and it's a very big place.. easy to get lost if you get my meaning.

      Like my parents and three of my grandparents, I was born in "Silicon Valley." My family has had a front-row seat to the transformation of the South Bay from orchards to technology companies and I have watched the Silicon Valley culture completely takeover and displace the existing culture. If you happen to be in a profession that benefits from Silicon Valley, then good for you, you get to stick around and watch Silicon Valley subsume everything that was great about the Bay Area; that unique mix of red neck farmers, libertarian outdoorsmen, and hippies. Of course if, like my family, you happen to be blue collar and your sleepy little town lies within commuting distance of Cupertino or downtown SF then you get to watch rich assholes from out of state move in and buy every house in sight for ten times what its worth. They wait like vultures until someone who probably built their house when they came back from WWII drops dead and, when the children can't afford the taxes on the inflated real estate, they generously step in to buy the house, which they promptly tear down or remodel into a walled fortress. Your close-knit neighborhood, surrounded by oak trees and poppies where you used to wander with impunity..? Yah, that's now an up-scale area with high fences and manicured yards; everything else is an over-grown mess because everyone is too important to pitch in and trim back the brush on weekends.

      I remember when stores were still closed on Sundays in San Jose because they were all small, locally-owned businesses. There was a small, local grocery store near my grandparents' old house--which they were forced to sell when they retired because of the skyrocketing cost of living and property values--that I used to buy candy at after school. I visited a couple of years ago and was happy to see that it was still standing. I was, however, enraged to find that it had become a "specialty market," selling gluten free bullshit and $10 loaves of "artisan bread" to the owners of th

    106. Re:For the umpteenth time... by lightBearer · · Score: 1

      Something important to note about many corporations is how difficult it is to know how far their reach extends and stay clear of it. This makes it difficult to not become one of their customers in some sense. I'd love to avoid Phillip Morris and not give them custom but it's not obvious that in order to do that I also have to avoid Kraft and other things related to it.

      --
      - No Bounce, No Play -
    107. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Quila · · Score: 1

      Easy: the people rein in the state, since the state derives its power from the people

      A state powerful enough to reign in any power within it is powerful enough to resist the will of the people.

      If the people isn't reining in the state, then they only have themselves to blame for not doing so.

      Correct. And they got to this situation by saying things like "The role of the state is NOT only to protect the weak - it is, also, a role to reign in the strong."

      What we need is a government strong enough to protect the people from abuses, internal and external, and no more. It should not have the power to arbitrarily decide "you're too powerful," because the next organization it decides is "too powerful" may just be the one lobbying against government abuses of the people.

      Challenge whether the government is actually abiding by its laws.

      Who decides whether the government is abiding by its laws? Oh yes, that would be the government. In the US, the government has decided that public use for eminent domain as required by law now includes a private corporation building privately owned and controlled real-estate. The federal government has assumed many powers not granted to it by the Constitution, and little has been done to reign that in.

      A company does not have to answer to you if you challenge it.

      A company also can't legally execute you for challenging it. A government can.

    108. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      That's a fine example. Universal Healthcare is Socialist if you have the government controlling the health care industry. The British system, for example, is Socialist. Our Post Office is Socialist.

      Obamacare though, is not Socialist. It's not very fair to individuals, but it's not Socialist.

    109. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyway, gentrification sucks for those pushed out by it, but I don't think there is much to be done without ending capitalism in the housing market.

      You've grabbed the bull by the horns. Money turns people into assholes, which is why we NEED to make America non-capitalist.

      Doing this will not only stop gentrification, but it will stop pollution, crime, banking failures, foreclosures, and just about every evil you can think of. There are too many zealots who think that Capitalism is some type of Utopia.

      If you really think about, and are actually honest, you will realize that the only people who preach Capitalism are thieves, religious leaders (i.e. con artists), racists, Conservatives, tax cheats, and gun owners. Those are the type of people who believe in Capitalism.

    110. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tough luck, so you get to get rich by selling your house. You get a piece of the pie because you are lucky enough to be where technology boom happens. Talk to smaller towns in Iowa where things have NOT changed for the last 50 years and see if they would like to swap places with you. What is the bullshit about the entire sale price of the house going to inheretence tax ? The inheretance tax is utmost 50%. If you have a house in cupertino or los gatos that is 500k after taxes.

    111. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, come now! Don't cloud the anti-socialist rants with facts. ;)

    112. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because you say NOT? It is completed dependent on circumstance if something IS or is NOT a social justice.

      By your logic:

      The relatively independent Hitler asking fellow members of the human race to better itself by ridding the world of filthy Jews is considered a social justice.

      However, preventing cotton farmers access to slave workers to earn the political support of northern states is not a social justice.

      Quite an interesting world you live in.

    113. Re:For the umpteenth time... by khallow · · Score: 1

      The fact that there are more regulations does not mean that government regulation is failing.

      It's merely strong evidence for such a claim. What are the costs of complying with or enforcing regulation that is growing exponentially? I wager, even in the information age, that these costs are exponentially growing over time as well.

      Unfortunately, we live in the real world, where people (and the companies they run) are short-sighted, greedy, selfish, irresponsible assholes. That's the real problem; the government regulation is just a band-aid.

      Another clueless appeal to the "real world". Regulation no matter how imposed is not intended to fix a basic trait of the human race. Instead it is to mitigate this ill at some cost.

      Without a consideration of the benefit and the cost, it makes no sense to moralize. You may just be making the matter worse. My view is that some regulation, even government regulation, is desirable. But when the description of that regulatory burden increases at an exponential rate, then something is out of control. Even if the cost justifies the benefits now, it won't remain the case without long term changes in how regulation is created and maintained.

    114. Re:For the umpteenth time... by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      when the children can't afford the taxes on the inflated real estate

      WAAAAAIT a second. Don't the children get to keep the same tax valuation for Prop 13 when they inherit a house?

      (The first result of my google searches, http://calestateplanning.blogspot.com/2010/03/property-taxes-and-prop-13.html, does say that "it is not necessarily true that the value of the home will be re-assessed for property tax purposes".)

    115. Re:For the umpteenth time... by EdIII · · Score: 1

      "It's so obvious to me that some aspects of society need to be to treated like critical infrastructure and all attempts must be made to remove corruption from it. Step one, is removing profit." -- Then stop accepting a paycheck for doing work. Just do nice things for everyone and hope everyone will do nice things for you and see how it works out.

      That's not what I meant, and I think you know it.

      Removing profit means making the whole enterprise a not-for-profit. You can still pay all involved with a fair wage, benefits, etc. Removing profit means that there are no shareholders that need to be satisfied with consistent growth and ROI.

    116. Re:For the umpteenth time... by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Why did your property taxes go up? They shouldn't've.

      http://calestateplanning.blogspot.com/2010/03/property-taxes-and-prop-13.html

    117. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too true. The official term is "legal fiction" and their nature means once they've grown big enough, they completely lack ethics. I'm tempted to suggest we need a constitutional amendment that once a legal fiction is large enough, they cannot disclose records without a warrant. Then goes that states legal fictions are not people. As far as this goes, Google is a shining star. They're doing some bad things, but the worst is for the moment still under control. I'm not too optimistic about their future.

    118. Re:For the umpteenth time... by BVis · · Score: 1

      Regulation no matter how imposed is not intended to fix a basic trait of the human race. Instead it is to mitigate this ill at some cost.

      Um, I think that's what I said in the GP post.

      Without a consideration of the benefit and the cost, it makes no sense to moralize. You may just be making the matter worse. My view is that some regulation, even government regulation, is desirable. But when the description of that regulatory burden increases at an exponential rate, then something is out of control. Even if the cost justifies the benefits now, it won't remain the case without long term changes in how regulation is created and maintained.

      So if I read you correctly, your problem isn't with regulation per se, but with its complexity.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
    119. Re:For the umpteenth time... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1

      Why do you think Prop 13 was proposed in the first place? This was already a pervasive problem in the late 70's (which is when a lot of the dairy farmers were being bought out to develop residential real estate). And that little clause "plus annual adjustments" is applied very differently depending on where your house is (i.e., if you are standing in the way of a lucrative development deal).

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    120. Re:For the umpteenth time... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 2

      Prop 13 was passed because of growing problems with the distorted housing markets in the Bay Area and Southern California in the 70's, which was when a lot of the storied tech companies in the Bay were building like crazy, driving up the value of all the orchards and dairy farms. If you have ever visited IBM in Almaden, which now sits on a nature preserve, that is what a lot of the Bay was starting to look like in the 70's; high-tech facilities sitting in the middle of a field. By the 90's, Prop 13 was practically all you heard about during elections because the state saw it as a huge loss of revenue, but it allowed old people (i.e., voters) to stay in their homes on a fixed income as real estate developers pushed further and further out to satisfy the growing demand for sub-urban homes.

      It all depends on where you live and for how long. If you were unlucky, taxes or the cost of living forced you off of your land before it was really valuable. If you lucky, you got to stick around until the offers became irresistible, at which point your either sold or borrowed against the increased value and developed it yourself. Still others were forced off of land that was standing in the way of extremely lucrative real estate development either through loopholes in Prop 13 or just shady political moves (i.e., ridiculous fines, or enforcing impossible-to-meet codes). The point is that, at the end of the day, people were forced to move because it was just too expensive to stick around and, contrary to what we like to tell ourselves, not a lot of them got rich in the processes. And yah, Prop 13 should prevent that from happening on paper, but it doesn't always.

      The Bay wasn't always a booming metropolis; not that long ago it was still small-town politics. A relative of mine build a house in the late 50's with a lovely view on a piece of property that was totally worthless. They hadn't even run sewer lines out from the city yet and roads weren't paved. Fast forward 30 years when a Silicon Valley millionaire decided he liked the view and wanted to buy that property and the agacent property to build a big-ass house. My relative said no, so the millionaire started putting pressure on the city to squeeze whatever taxes were due (i.e., Prop 13 is not relavent), levy fines, etc. My relative stuck around, so the millionaire decided to buy the property in front of the house, build something to obstruct the view and then, when my relative's land was worthless, buy them out... or, he would generously buy up the land now, and avoid the whole trouble. Ok, long story short, the whole thing turned into a real small-town political battle that we eventually won by getting the city to re-zone the land in front of the house to prevent the millionaire from building. Fast forward another 20 years and that beautiful vista now has a giant mansion blocking part of the view because some Google billionaire (or Apple, I can't keep track) bought off the city to re-re-zone land a little bit further away to allow him to build a lovely little weekend retreat that blocks the view of at least five houses that have been there for 40-50 years. It also violates numerous building codes that said billionaire was given special exemption to, and they allowed him to put a fence up that blocks access to what used to be a local fishing spot.

      Now my relative's house is literally worth 1,000 times what it was in the 50's; yah, Prop 13 helps a bit, but there is an "annual adjustment" clause that allows that increase to be felt in state taxes. You're just going to have to take my word for this, but if that relative dies and allows the house to pass in a will, Prop 13 will not provide tax shelter and the kids will be forced to sell simply by virtue of the fact that there is a line of billionaires around the block willing to pay twice what it is worth to bulldoze it and build an even bigger penis than his other billionaire buddies. Now my relative had to hire a bunch of lawyers to refinance the house, use that money to set up a blind trust, pass bits of it to different family members through tax-exempt gifts, blah, blah, blah, mountains of paperwork and thousands of dollars in legal fees and taxes, all so that a bunch of farmers aren't forced to sell off a house that they built 50 years ago.

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    121. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Wandering+Idiot · · Score: 1

      This is a pretty standard communism apology. No matter how many times communism has been implemented in a state, tyranny results. But apologists always say, "Well, it just wasn't done right."

      Interestingly, the proposed end-state Communist utopia is pretty much the same as a Libertarian utopia, if you strip out the buzzwords. The totalitarian stage (even if it's never been implemented exactly as Marx envisioned) is explicitly not the end goal, but envisioned as a necessary step along the way. Of course, no attempt in the real world has actually gotten past that stage, just as the efforts of economic libertarians are likely to just leave us stuck in a state of dystopian corporate feudalism if actually implemented.

    122. Re:For the umpteenth time... by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      What we need is a government strong enough to protect the people from abuses, internal and external, and no more

      You say that like you think you are arguing for limited government there. You are not. In order to "protect the people from abuses", the government must be able to prevent industries from acting in ways that abuse the people, i.e. dumping their waste products into public waterways. This gives government a HUGE amount of power over the corporate entities that comprise any industry. If I can tell you "You must spend $X to properly clean up after yourself", I have just given you incentive to spend $X-1 to corrupt the oversight process. Fast forward a bit, and you get what we have here.

      A company also can't legally execute you for challenging it.

      Not today. They could yesterday (look up the history of the railroads and mines and Pinkertons). They might be able to again tomorrow. Only government prevents that. The only reason government is currently the greatest threat to individual liberty is b/c our ancestors decided that was preferable to having any person with enough money and dudes with weapons willing to follow orders being a threat to whatever they felt like threatening. If you want to reevaluate that trade-off, fine. Just be aware it IS a trade-off; there is no magical fairy dust that will prevent the powerful from taking advantage of the weak.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    123. Re:For the umpteenth time... by khallow · · Score: 1

      So if I read you correctly, your problem isn't with regulation per se, but with its complexity.

      And the common tendency for such regulation to have costs far out of proportion to the benefit they provide.

    124. Re:For the umpteenth time... by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >Interestingly, the proposed end-state Communist utopia is pretty much the same as a Libertarian utopia, if you strip out the buzzwords

      Except for the fact that they're completely opposite, sure.

      For example, one friend of mine has established a music studio in his house in SF. He isn't a rich man, but he invested his limited time and money into building it up. It now pays off enough to cover his rent along the Great Highway in SF.

      When I proposed this model to a communist here on Slashdot, the communist said that it was wrong of him to privately own this business, and that he should turn it over to the community to own and run, and reap the profits from. I don't think he understood how such a model would completely kill any interest in people doing things exactly like what my friend did. Why would they go to all that effort when the government would take it away at the point of a gun?

      See? It is the exact opposite of a Libertarian Utopia.

      You could probably dig up the conversation in my comments archive.

    125. Re:For the umpteenth time... by girlinatrainingbra · · Score: 1
      I think I tried to say almost the same thing about the lack of actual content here [at /. in general], though I didn't state it as well as you do here and I was griping about the non-content of the long post by Cowboy Neal which seemed like a pre-teen writing a book-report that he did not want to write: So what is this, a book report style droning on? asking about the future of free and open source software.
      .

      There was nothing original said in the main post; there was no pointer to some external story of interest; there seemed to be no main thread or motivation holding it all together. It was as if it was just a perfunctory performance of an assignment. There was no feeling of an idea driving the article or motive pushing the concept.

      As to your comment about Bombeck, I had to look up who that was, and soon learned that my mom must have plagiarized the comment she taught me as I started sitting in and listening to adults conversing after dinner at the table: i paraphrase her as saying "if you find yourself thinking about what you're going to say next at the next pause instead of actually listening to what the other person is saying, then you're just a pair of people interrupting each other's stories rather than a pair of people having a conversation." She gave me a brilliant insght into having actual conversations and actually listening to people, even if she lifted the idea from Erma Bombeck. (I'll have to point that out to her at tomorrow's dinner.)

      BTW, I found this post of your following your interesting comment about using {X}\times{Y} for screen resolution rather than {Y}\times{X}. I try to follow interesting (content filled) comments to see if the posters have dropped other breadcrumbs of interest recently.

    126. Re:For the umpteenth time... by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      Got news for you: gluten is horrible poison. I didn't believe it either, but when I was diagnosed with terminal cancer, I stopped eating it in desperation. Guess what? I don't seem to be dying and I feel better than I have felt in decades. Getting rid of gluten is far from all I did, but the few times I have eaten it, by mistake or laziness, I have profoundly regretted it.

      My point is that you have thrown the baby out with the bathwater. Silicon Valley is a tremendous bastion of free enterprise creating fortunes for otherwise ordinary people. This disrupts the otherwise monolithic progress of the entrenchment of old money, and for that the sacrifice of the charm of the Santa Clara valley is profoundly to be forgiven.

      Perhaps just as important is the way Silicon Valley, by showing what does work about free enterprise, also illuminates what emphatically does not, for instance, providing electrical power distribution does not permit competition, so there free enterprise fails miserably.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    127. Re:For the umpteenth time... by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      >> I don't know what you want to call that ideology, but it is morally debased and corrupt to its very core: There is more to life than money.

      Here's a heaping helping of irony. The biggest barrier to social justice, i.e. freedom from corruption, is, in fact, money. Not money per se, but monetary systems. I said systems with an 's', but that's a joke: there is only one system in use in all the nations on this planet. All others have been ruthlessly purged. My sig is the red pill.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    128. Re:For the umpteenth time... by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      And as long as people believe such nonsense, the government will continue to haphazardly stumble instead of actually accomplishing the goal. The greatest growth of the middle class in the entire history of the planet took place in the late 50s and early 60s. Look up the top tier marginal income tax rate during that era. It's no coincidence.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    129. Re:For the umpteenth time... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1

      My point is that you have thrown the baby out with the bathwater. Silicon Valley is a tremendous bastion of free enterprise creating fortunes for otherwise ordinary people. This disrupts the otherwise monolithic progress of the entrenchment of old money, and for that the sacrifice of the charm of the Santa Clara valley is profoundly to be forgiven.

      Silicon Valley creates fortunes for "otherwise ordinary people" at the expense of many other ordinary people. A handful of people get rich and thousands of others are forced into exile. The rest are forced into the service industry to cater to the sea of people moving there for a few years to make money and then leaving. So while many people get rich and prosper as many, if not more, are robbed of their livelihoods, their quality of life is dramatically reduced, and no one gives a shit because "that's progress." It's just redistributing and concentrating wealth by shifting from agriculture and manufacturing to hi-tech. It happens in one form or another all over the world (e.g., in Hawaii where they locals all work at restaurants and hotels now), but the scale of it in Silicon Valley is unprecedented.

      Congratulations on beating cancer--I happen to love gluten personally--but you are talking in the abstract about something very personal to myself, my family, and hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of others. I have almost 100 years of family history in the Bay Area and it's all been paved over by "progress" and "free enterprise."

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    130. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Quila · · Score: 1

      the government must be able to prevent industries from acting in ways that abuse the people, i.e. dumping their waste products into public waterways

      Yes, protect people from harm, not claim "you're too big" by some arbitrarily set definition and then punish a company for success. That is a power the government shouldn't have. Punish a company when it starts hurting people. Otherwise, leave it alone.

    131. Re:For the umpteenth time... by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      Yes, protect people from harm, not claim "you're too big" by some arbitrarily set definition and then punish a company for success. That is a power the government shouldn't have.

      Nor does it. Are there any other limits under which government currently exists that you agree with and think we should discuss?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    132. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Slashdot is a discussion forum?

      Huh. Interesting.

      Dude didn't originally post this on Slashdot. *SHRPOING!*

    133. Re:For the umpteenth time... by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Did you actually read that page? It says that inheriting a house should not raise the property tax.

    134. Re:For the umpteenth time... by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Did you actually READ that site?

      The following are examples of situations in which the transfer will not result in a âoechange in ownershipâ and thereby avoid the dreaded re-assessment for property tax purposes.
      â¦.
      4. Parent-child (or grandparent-grandchild) transfer

      Maybe it happened in your case, but it shouldn't've.

    135. Re:For the umpteenth time... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1

      Do you KNOW people that have been screwed by inheriting over-valued property? Federal taxes aside, the state can still take a big bite, Prop 13 or not. I'm sorry to break it to you, but laws aren't air-tight and not everything on the Internet is true--you can chose to believe me or blogs about how the law is supposed to be applied. If you can afford a team of CPAs and lawyers, then you can certainly take advantage of all the loopholes, gift and family exemptions, etc. to keep wealth in a wealthy family. I hate to shatter your unwavering faith in egalitarianism and the application of well-meaning laws, but unfortunately for poor people it works more like winning the lottery.

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    136. Re:For the umpteenth time... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to be sickeningly nostalgic, and it bums me out how much you're taking it for granted. I moved from a relatively metropolitan place to Clarksville, TN a few years ago. Everything is closed on sunday, I seriously tried to lookup prices on a used iphone 4s on this local craigslist style yard sale site earlier today, THE WEBSITE IS DOWN EVERY SUNDAY, INCLUDING LATE NIGHT HOURS INTO MONDAY MORNING. IT TOLD ME I COULD SPEND TIME WITH FAMILY OR GO TO CHURCH. Drowning in a hell of blue collar garbage. I wish there were expensive german cars parked outside anything here, its just a plethora of lifted trucks with mossy oak seat covers and jesus fish on everything.

      If this is the America you want you can have it. I'll hang out and sip latte's with the yuppies any day of the week.

      I would love to see the death of this boo-hoo'ing shit over American's lifestyles 50 years ago. You wont find anyone selling $10 artisian loaves of bread here, no fancy cheese. You'd love it. When did having/enjoying nice things or having good taste become a bad thing? I see it all the time, prideful, moronic, high school drop-outs in real tree camo everything telling me "instant coffee is good enough for me, none of that schmancy stuff." Take your Maxwell "coffee", your Kraft "cheese", your Wonder"bread", and anything that fits into your "good enough for me" inventory and take a hike. Living near something doesn't make it yours, even if you perceive it to be. you wanted the view? Should've bought the land.

      Boo Hoo indeed. Whats your angle you're working here? "PEOPLE WHO MADE MONEY AT THEIR JOB BOUGHT LAND AND MADE HOUSES WHERE PEOPLE COULDN'T AFFORD IT. THEN THEY CREATED A DEMAND FOR HIGHER END CAFE'S, AND GOT RID OF ALL THE HAM SANDWICHES, NOW ITS ALL PROSCIUTTO! WHATS BABY SPINACH? WHERE IS MY ICEBERG LETTUCE? MY CHILDHOOD IS GONE. WOE IS ME. I WAS BORN HERE SO IT SHOULDN'T EVER CHANGE!"

  2. Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes.

    We'll keep doing it until you stop.

    1. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      This crap is so ridiculous. Article in short...

      Company I worked at got bought by Google. They kept me on. Then Google wouldn't let me switch to a technical position since I wasn't a technical person. Jerks.

      Google+ doesn't want me to use a handle. I'm a queer/transgender female so that's offensive.

      I went back to school for something kinda technical and found out I hated it, so I quit school again. Still angry that Google didn't hire me for a technical position without any technical credentials.

      After I quit, Google tried to hire me a few times for other stuff. How dare they.

      I've since decided that ToS minutiae at unrelated companies and requiring people to use their names on a voluntary social network that nobody uses demonstrate that an entire industry / area is morally bankrupt and toxic. Corporations are evil corporationy corporations, so I started an open source gardening project... yay me.

      Some day when Google learns to give me what I want for no reason, I'll take their offers more seriously and decide they're not evil anymore.

      Seriously, wtf... a whole post just so someone can cry us a river? Some people are desperate for decent work, and it's borderline insulting to read entitled garbage like this.

    2. Re:Obligatory by WGFCrafty · · Score: 1

      The only person who would defend that "insightful" article is the one who wrote it, and maybe whoever thought it was valid news and posted it here, though that could be the same person.

    3. Re:Obligatory by Nostromo21 · · Score: 1

      It was a diatribe. Come back when you learn how to summarise. ;-p

    4. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People being desperate for work is not a good excuse for companies to take advantage of them.

    5. Re:Obligatory by FoolishOwl · · Score: 4, Informative

      Skud's an experienced programmer. As is the case with many experienced computer programmers, she didn't have a computer science degree. Please see any of the countless debates on Slashdot on whether computer science degrees are necessary for programming. She wasn't switching to a technical position: she was getting forced out of a technical position she had held for three years. She wasn't switching to a handle; her name is Skud, that is the name she normally uses, and that is what Google's official policy supposedly defines as the name to use for a Google account.

      Much of the article is a critique of Silicon Valley culture in general, and why she's glad she left.

    6. Re:Obligatory by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Google+ doesn't want me to use a handle. I'm a queer/transgender female so that's offensive.

      You obviously read enough of The Fucking Article to have seen this part:

      As a queer/genderqueer woman, victim of abuse, and someone who was (at that very time) experiencing online harassment and bullying, I was very vocal within Google for the need for Google+ to support pseudonymity.

      Her words speak for themselves.
      You haven't done anyone a service by summarizing.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    7. Re:Obligatory by Stiletto · · Score: 2

      Seriously... a company that consistently ranks among the top of every "Best Companies to work for" list keeps trying to recruit you, and you're complaining??? While tons people struggle to find work and would love to even get past the first round at Google?

      It's like passing by people dying in the desert, complaining about how that awful water you're drinking should taste better.

    8. Re:Obligatory by TheMathemagician · · Score: 1

      Could anyone decode the precise meaning of "queer/genderqueer woman" for me? Anyway the author article seems very angry about everything which is difficult for me as an emotionally repressed-to-the-point-of-non-existence geek like me to relate to. They probably only want to hire her because of the benefit she'd have on their diversity metrics anyway so she's right to boycott them.

  3. Re:Huh? by starworks5 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    you dont have to be republican to vote for your corporate overlords

  4. If other people want what you want by Beryllium+Sphere(tm) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    then it will happen. Companies that survive do so by providing something that people want and something that people will pay for (sometimes the two are split, like Facebook).

    If other people don't want what you want, accept it, and don't blame Silicon Valley.

    1. Re:If other people want what you want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      people are cattle. if you make it all shiny and bright, they'll believe they want it

    2. Re:If other people want what you want by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why do you hate people so much?

      Ever ask Marc Pinkus his opinion of people?

      Why do you believe you are so superior to the rest of us?

      I didn't see that assertion in his comment. His point is sociopathic and cynical, but Zynga, Facebook, and Apple, just to name a few companies, all exploit end-user ignorance and a predilection for the shiny.

    3. Re:If other people want what you want by superwiz · · Score: 2

      No, they actually want it.. not believe that they want it. This is what GOOD companies do -- give their customers what they want rather what some misanthropes think these customers need.

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    4. Re:If other people want what you want by EdIII · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He isn't wrong though.

      People are not looking at the bigger picture when they make their purchasing decisions for several reasons:

      1) They don't understand what cyberspace *is* yet, how their actions, and others actions, can have real tangible effects on their "real" lives.
      2) They have a poor understanding of privacy, anonymity, it's true value to all parties, and Game Theory.
      3) Apathy. I'm too small to make any meaningful difference anyways, so I will just continue to act against my best interests in the long term for short term gains in transient happiness and feelings of security.
      4) I'm too poor to shop at someplace else other than Walmart. I have to save my pennies, regardless of the fact that continuing to give money to businesses that outsource jobs, has real and tragic effects on all people back at home, which ultimately affects how many pennies I get paid in the first place.
      5) It really is a pretty shiny....
      6) Huh? Watevs. I don't like peeps that use like big words and shit always thinking there better or something. I got swag, yolo muthafucka

      The death of America, and Freedom, will be because of apathy and complacency. I've a hard time really blaming them either, since there is an awful lot to be cynical about. Only until this generation actually has to suffer, really suffer, for Freedom will they finally understand, revolt against our oppressors (peacefully I hope) and then allow future generations to make all the same mistakes all over again.

    5. Re:If other people want what you want by Stiletto · · Score: 1

      So, you're one of the chosen few who see the shadows on the cave wall for what they truly are, eh, Plato?

  5. Is it broke? by malakai · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Holy rant...

    To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice and rethinking how we live and work and relate to each other. Geek toys like self-driving cars and augmented reality sunglasses won't fix it. Social networks designed to identify you to corporations so they can sell you more stuff won't fix it. Better ad targeting or content matching algorithms definitely won't fix it

    Here's another idea, it's not broke.

    1. Re:Is it broke? by MattGWU · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How do you figure?

      --
      "These people look deep within my soul and assign me a number based on the order in which I joined" --Homer re:
    2. Re:Is it broke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      This story is nothing more than typical socialist cliches. Evil corporations. Evil capitalism. Look at how smart I am because I can quote marxist cliches.
      Compare your "poor suffering" western/capitalist lives to those of people who didn't have a free market capitalist society. Infact, why dont all these marxists pack their things and move to Cuba, Venezuala or central Africa and that way they can live their dream.

    3. Re:Is it broke? by VortexCortex · · Score: 4, Interesting

      How do you figure?

      Go watch TV. Then come back. We'll talk then........

      Back? OK, notice how TV ransoms you shit? Like the news & weather, the plot twist, etc? Much of the web does not do this. Paywalls are going up some places, and other places (like this one) let you pay to be free of the damn ads. Let's say you pay for TV from cable or sat dish provider. They inject local ads into the stream to target you, so even if you pay for the service you have to pay additional to get the few "premium" channels that don't have commercials. Imagine if your ISP were inserting ads into the sites you visit. Some tried, I believe, it was a huge stink and they stopped... settling for DNS redirects (use a different DNS).

      TV is only about AV media and only secondarily about information and interactive stuff, but the web isn't, nor are the companies presented. However, I think they do a better job than the old media has. I can barely stand to watch TV at all the commercials are so intrusive in comparison.

    4. Re:Is it broke? by Nostromo21 · · Score: 1

      ROFLMAO! What is this thing called 'free market' you talk about? And I do not think 'Capitalism' means what you think it means (any more). <BFG>

    5. Re:Is it broke? by Genda · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm sorry but the story's author made superb points about the fact that corporations (specifically Google) do what's good for them, and if its good for society great, if not, tough. Her specific and very personal example of the need for protecting some people's identity from a gamut of real threats including employers, future employers, bigots, religious fanatics, and a government that is perfectly happy to march up your posterior to ascertain what it was you had for dinner last night, should be a critical concern to every card carrying geek breathing today. You can't possibly sit there with that smug "Capitalism will fix everything" look on your face and tell me that the global corporation as it currently exists and the IP laws, and Banking laws, and near gutting of our system of government that said corporations have inflicted on society are a positive things. Every system that deals with primates needs to inspire the best in, and account for the worst in, said primates. Pure Socialism and pure Capitalism are equally bankrupt in the fact that they first assume people are saintly won't make fertilizer out of one another to get what they want (and history is sadly chock full of examples to the contrary.)

      I believe that Capitalism is a healthy part of future workable system, there will always be a need for people to interact and gain mutual value from those very interactions. The question is how do you balance that needs of the one with the needs of the many. With 7 billion of us maybe 11 billion by the end of the century, you are going to have to make some very pointed tradeoffs between personal rights and civil liberties and social responsibility and personal integrity. All of that not withstanding the exploding technology threatens all aspects of traditional commerce and the integrity of the social fabric. What happens when we have nanotechnology, and the only things of value are IP, energy and raw atomic feed stocks? There will be no labor, save artistic self expression or side economies. No production per se (yes machines will work but not people.) How do you run your Capitalism in such a place? How do you prevent the machines recycle all the people for their carbon?

      We need to invent a future that is conducive to being human, and the time for such invention is running out ever more quickly. We need to ask hard questions about how we preserve the best in what it means to be human in the face of what it will mean to become trans-human. As the interesting stuff happens more and more outside of the meat in our heads, how do we address the deepest aspects of who and what we are and how will we protect that from being ground up in the sausage machine of an automated economy which ultimately transcends that ability of human beings to manage or even impact in any meaningful way.

      Your arrogance at not bothering to get what this woman is saying, and the vital importance of trying to see past your own prejudices with regards to evolving human social dynamics is at least disturbing. You represent the problem solvers and here you are being part of the problem. Those guys running the corporations. They're just like you and me, only they are playing the corporation game, and what kind of social engineering is called for to reward those players for improving the human condition and not subjugating it. People are mostly cattle told what they will want, eat and think by talking head in little boxes. I do not thrill to riding with a race of Pavlovian knucklehead as they meet their fates head on.

    6. Re:Is it broke? by MattGWU · · Score: 2

      The satellite TV at this hotel is all ballsed up due to Sally, you insensitive clod.

      Ok, the article wasn't just about advertising, though. I'll grant you that Web advertising isn't as intrusive or compulsory as 'traditional' media. Though I'll toss out the quote "The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads. (Jeff Hammerbacher, ca. 2011", which I feel is pretty accurate. Ads, or high frequency trading algorithms, either one, really.

      The bit that's been bothering me is the " and although some of the outcomes are positive a disturbingly high number of them are negative: the erosion of privacy, of consumer rights, of the public domain and fair use, etc" part. For every piece of technology (or corporate policy, or law) that contributes to "the erosion of privacy, of consumer rights, of the public domain and fair use, etc", somebody had to come up with it, and get past the fact that they're selling out their fellow members of society for a quick buck because 'fuck them, I want to get paid.' It's this willingness to occasionally make life and society suck just that tiny little microscopic bit more, erode freedoms just that little bit more, push policies and laws that nobody but other corporations actually wants, that make Silicon Valley (in this case, or prevailing corporate or legislative attitudes in general) open to these charges of moral bankruptcy or 'toxicity'.

      Worst part? These people usually have a lot of other people to help them implement it, who are probably smart enough to know what they're doing is wrong or counterproductive, but do it anyway because "Meh, paycheck". Believe me, I understand 'meh, paycheck' but there's something wrong when capable people feel locked into a situation enough to go against their morals and better judgement.

      --
      "These people look deep within my soul and assign me a number based on the order in which I joined" --Homer re:
    7. Re:Is it broke? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Yes - or if it is, it's SO MUCH LESS BROKEN than most of the rest of the American megacorporate culture.

      Seriously, worrying if *Google* and *Facebook* are toxic?

      How about Philip Morris, Exxon Mobil, McDonald's, Pfizer, Dow, or Anheuser Busch-InBev? Their products are *literally* toxic.

      Or Wal-Mart, Bank of America, GlaxoSmithKline, BP, Halliburton, AIG, etc. They are morally bankrupt to the point of billions of dollars in fines and settlements.

      Give me a break... prioritize, people. Go after the murderers and rapists first, then the con-artists and shoplifters.

    8. Re:Is it broke? by Nostromo21 · · Score: 1

      <golf clap>

      "Pavlovian knuckleheads" he he, *chuckle*

      I rather like the _idea_ of the Venus Project, with its resource-based economic model, but don't let any holier-than-thou atheists around here hear you using that 'Z' word! ;)
      Even so, we can't be sure that neo-socialist, resource-based, uber-techno societies won't implode under some other weight. Imagine a society of sociopaths who want for *nothing*, never have to leave the safety of their zero-G couches, where everything is dished out via the Matrix (under our control of course)...what would be left for these simians to aspire to, why would they create art, or do anything altruistic for the betterment of mankind or even just employ rational/critical reasoning I ask you? More likely we would all become serial killers or torture each other just for our hedonistic pleasure, as history has shown us time & time again.

      Even though I personally don't believe that Man can save himself any longer (or ever could - hey it's Biblical! ;), I continue to place some measure of faith in our species, for no other reason than that I can't except a universe that a creator may have created, 14+ billion LYs across, that we were never meant to explore or experience, anthropic principle be damned! <G>

    9. Re:Is it broke? by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      It's easy to point fingers at the tiny countries that your government is tirelessly sabotaging and destroying over more than a half a century, and see the problems they are having.

      When I lived in USSR, my quality of life was higher than at any other point in my life. Obviously, that does not count the conveniences/inconveniences brought by development of technology over time -- that while USSR existed, happened there just as much as in Capitalist countries, despite what you are told.

      Just in case you are wondering, USSR was brought down by anything but economic problems -- in reality, active and planned destruction of a socialist economic system (so fledgling "market economy" can survive without unfair competition from the government!) was an important part of economic policy since at least 1989. It culminated in 1992 "voucher privatization", when population was basically given pseudo-money to "buy" all government-owned companies because government wanted all-market economy so much. That went... exactly like any sane person would expect.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    10. Re:Is it broke? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google's and Facebook's products might not be toxic per se, but Silicon Valley's as a whole certainly are. Have you ever wondered where all your electronics go after you've chucked them?

  6. Wow by roninmagus · · Score: 1

    Bitter much? Get fired or something?

  7. Do no evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There... I asked it.

  8. Dude. It's your fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You were the one who wanted all this great content for free (as in beer). By "you", I mean the opinions expressed here on Slashdot, especially when the topic comes to copyrights and file sharing laws. Google and Facebook are doing things "the right way", by that reckoning, but yes there is the darker side of which you speak.

    How is Google supposed to pay 30,000 engineers, 1M rack-mounted x86 systems, and still hit their quarterly earnings and revenue targets? And the same for Facebook.

    Only Amazon has a traditional business model, but even they are leaders in mining content about their users as well as their traditional IP inventory.

  9. Is this news? by Bushie07 · · Score: 1

    Cuz it doesn't feel like news. It feels like a gossip column.

  10. This should be fun to watch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Revenge of the postmodern slashtards against someone who dares to say the emperor has no clothes.

  11. Short answer no, by Kenja · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Long answer yes, with a "but". They are no better nor worse then any other for profit venture. As soon as a company goes public, they are money making tools for the share holders.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re:Short answer no, by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, I agree with the author. Tech is a malignant leech on society, unlike wholesome industries such as finance or insurance.

    2. Re:Short answer no, by AdamWill · · Score: 1

      Most Silicon Valley companies aren't public, and are instead money making tools for the venture capitalists. Which is, if anything, worse.

      What this author is taking issue with is not this fact _per se_ but the unthinking embrace of anything new, revolutionary and 'disruptive' that comes out of Silicon Valley without any consideration of more humdrum, everyday concerns like law and order, privacy etc...

    3. Re:Short answer no, by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, I agree with the author. Tech is a malignant leech on society, unlike wholesome industries such as finance or insurance.

      You forgot the law industry. But in all honestly, sci-fi has shown us everything from tech utopias like Star Trek to tech dystopias like 1984 with omnipresent telescreens with hidden cameras and microphones - though I'm sure there's even "techier" dystopias. Don't get me wrong, technology is great progress but it's also great progress for those who want to surveillance and control other people. And the big difference from the past is that computers and robots are obedient to a fault, they'll never rebel, never refuse to carry out an order, never lead an insurrection no matter what rights they violate or atrocities they're commanded to commit. Here in Norway 2/3rds of the population no longer make any adjustment to their tax returns - the government already knows everything and will hand you a pre-filled tax statement that you check.

      Income tax? The company you work for report your income, unless you're self-employed. Own property? Bank accounts? Stocks? Car? Boat? Bought or sold any of those? All domestic registries report in and all linked to the same person id, you just need to report foreign holdings/transactions. Oh yes and marriage status and children, so you get your tax breaks. About 94% of all payments now happen electronically, somewhere between 50% and 60% of the population is on Facebook that we know stores everything indefinitely, there's electronic toll roads that read car signs and for regular travel most now have electronic tickets linked of course to your ATM card or your cell phone - that are all registered to a person, so even if you left your cell phone that everybody carries at home you're likely tracked somehow.

      Now I don't see any particular reason to want to overthrow the government, but I sure think it's going to get harder and harder to organize anything big without the government's knowledge - at least a government that doesn't care one bit about personal privacy like authoritarian regimes generally don't. I'm pretty sure the TV is just a TV though and not a two-way telescreen, but in pretty much every other way imaginable the government knows far more about me than they did as little as 20 years ago. And a lot of the things they don't log today, is only because the logging switch is set to off. If the watchdogs are silenced, it's as easy as flipping a switch and more data comes streaming in than ever before in history.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:Short answer no, by lgw · · Score: 1

      "Technology" outside of consumer goods doens't mean "shiney toys" but "ways to provide goods and services for less resources". Technology does nothing to change basic human nature, it's just makes things cheap that used to be prohibitively expensive.

      The government knows more about you because it's no cheaper to collect that information (and you didn't cut the government's budget accordingly, so they do more).

      Income tax reporting isn't really a tech thing, but I've always found the basic idea a horrible invasion of privacy - if we could only accept a flat tax, it could be done as a payroll tax, not an income tax, and the government would simply have no need to know how much you make! Of course, investment income would be different, but invvestments seem more public anyhow.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:Short answer no, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps, but you have to look at who the shareholders are. For example, with Google. Larry, Sergey, and Eric hold by a large margin the majority of votes, so they can really do whatever they want.

    6. Re:Short answer no, by lgw · · Score: 1

      *now cheaper

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    7. Re:Short answer no, by mcelrath · · Score: 1

      I've always wanted to create a corporate structure that took into account the needs of customers and society as well, along the lines of co-ops.

      Wouldn't it be interesting if you, as a consumer, had voting rights in that company proportional to how much money you spent with them, or how much money they made off you?

      Then once you have a workable structure, enforce that all legally incorporated entities use that structure...

      --
      1^2=1; (-1)^2=1; 1^2=(-1)^2; 1=-1; 1=0.
    8. Re:Short answer no, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the long run, the situation is probably worse, and it won't be the capitalists causing the problems. The use of technology in the hands of governments really looks like it will get us into 1984 - only much worse. Much like physicists regret but can't avoid having partial responsibility for the Atomic Bombs, the computer scientists will eventually come to regret the tools they built, which will enable repressive governments everywhere, each claiming to do good for society as a whole. The time is surely coming when free speech is no more (if free speech means being able to say publicly what the government doesn't like) and freedom of many beliefs and actions will disappear in the process.
      We once thought that technology would enable individuals, but we were only right in the short run; a few decades at most. The governments are slow on the uptake. It's taken them decades to catch on, but they are doing so, and it is really they who are being enabled.

  12. As someone who lives in the NYC tri-state... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let me tell you, if you want to see toxic check out Wall St. and it's satellites in NJ and CT. At least Silicon Valley creates cool shit that make people productive and/or entertained. Wall Street produces nothing, it just sucks value out of the economy and puts it in overseas tax shelters. it sounds to me like you're burned out from living in the center of a capitalist vortex. Take some time off and go live in Massachusetts or Oregon or something and decompress. I would kill to work at a place like Apple. I don't care if it means 90 hour weeks, you got something more important to do than develop the next generation of computing technology?

    1. Re:As someone who lives in the NYC tri-state... by ygtai · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Eh.. if you work at Apple, you get to develop the next generation of marketing technology...

    2. Re:As someone who lives in the NYC tri-state... by sFurbo · · Score: 1

      Wall Street produces nothing, it just sucks value out of the economy and puts it in overseas tax shelters.

      Wall Street produces correct* prices for companies and commodities. High frequency trading produces them faster. Whether this is worth as much as they make is up for debate, especially (IMHO) the value of having the correct prices each second as opposed to each minute or hour, but at its kernel, Wall Street are providing a valuable service to society.

      *For small enough versions of "correct", but I fail to see a way to do it better.

    3. Re:As someone who lives in the NYC tri-state... by azadrozny · · Score: 1

      I agree with your sentiment. Where do companies, like Apple, go to raise cash to build the next big thing? There are many people on Wall Street who go to work everyday and just do their job. They buy and sell stocks for our IRA's, and balance the books for the bank so our pay checks will post to our accounts. Yes, there are some who game the system, but is that any different from a spammer who uses his knowledge to rip people off?

    4. Re:As someone who lives in the NYC tri-state... by TheRedSeven · · Score: 1

      I would kill to work at a place like Apple.

      You're willing to kill for a specific job, and you're calling other people morally bankrupt?

  13. Is Silicon Valley Morally Bankrupt and Toxic? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    yes

  14. maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valley by k6mfw · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Looking back to what it was 25 years ago, much of what it was no longer exists. There's lots of vacant buildings, don't know why they are building more.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
  15. really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OP should start Occupy Silicon Valley.. lol

  16. Absolutely!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Which is why I plan to switch my career over to the socially conscious and ethical industry of... Umm, never mind, I'm just going to go back to work at the evil insurance company tomorrow.

    We can't have an economy of all non-profits* and any (non-tongue-in-cheek) references to ethics or societal good in a mission statement will get scrubbed out by the MBAs as soon as there's any significant money to be had.

    * Actually, I think we could theoretically, but that just isn't going to happen.

  17. Don't limit it to Silly-Con Valley by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most of corporate America is corrupt, at least at the higher levels. The rich seem to have a sense of entitlement and expect the rest of us to pay for it. The solution is simple. Don't use Facebook, Google or the other large companies that steal your privacy. Most of all don't tell them the truth. If they find out that their "targeted" marketing isn't so targeted their product becomes worthless. I don't use facebook, google, and am pretty pissed at myself for not building a UNIX box. If their revenue streams dry up the companies become worthless.

  18. Nothing is broken except how you see things by bobbied · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Gee, I'd love to see a world where Intel, Dell, IBM, HP, TI and a host of other companies never existed. Yea, we'd be better off without GE, Ford, General Motors, Exxon and the like. Would not need any hackers in Silicon Valley, much less silicon. Just forget the transistor, integrated circuits or microprocessors ever existed.

    Capitalism may have it's flaws, but it is better than any previously tried system over the last 6,000 years of recorded history. Please let's not repeat any of them!

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  19. Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The era of socialism as it defined in the dictionary is dead in America. The idea of noblesse oblige, and societal responsibility are not only forgotten in minds of those who control the wealth in this country, but spit upon as if it were a curse. Too many Americans today feel that wealth redistribution by the state should be abolished, as they are quick to scapegoat the needy in light of this country's ills. It is this undercurrent of disregard for our fellow countrymen that is showing all over the place in the attitudes of the Haves, in today's politics and even something so basic as getting a job.

    America needs to wake the hell up and realise that helping each other, taking responsibility for one's actions, and working for the common good are the cornerstones of civilization. Throw them out, and all you will have is barbarity and all that implies.

    1. Re:Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I feel this is right on the money. In addition, I feel that we need to have corporations change the order of their responsibilities. First should come the people that run the corporations, not the bosses or CEOs, but the workers! Next should be the customers, and last should be the share holders. This way people may develop pride in their work again, since they would have a greater say in how things are done. Less incentive to outsource the work when the focus is keeping your employees working. Customer feedback would be more important to keep the work flowing, and a prosperous company benefits all involved. How we get there is the puzzle no one has cracked yet.

    2. Re:Social Responsiblity by trout007 · · Score: 0

      So your point is people need to help each other and work for the common good and if they don't you are willing to stick a gun in their ribs to make them.

      --
      I love Jesus, except for his foreign policy.
    3. Re:Social Responsiblity by Dan+East · · Score: 1

      You lament the death of this idealistic notion of "noblesse oblige" . My question is when was it ever alive? What era of what society represents your implied example, which people have forgotten and strayed away from? I'd like to know specifically what you're waxing nostalgic over, or is it something that exists only in your mind?

      To quote one of Billy Joel's most insightful lyrics, "the good ole days weren't always good, and tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems".

      Also, your final statement illustrates the contradiction and true crux of this matter in the real world: "that helping each other, taking responsibility for one's actions," The problem is that we have people who DON'T take responsibility for their actions, thus they REQUIRE that someone else help them. I know, what you meant was the HAVES taking responsibility for their actions, but what I'm talking about is the other side of the coin, which are those that abuse the system and want as much of a free ride as possible. Certainly that is not the majority of the "needy" as you call them, but it is absolutely a problem that is exacerbated by "spreading the wealth".

      --
      Better known as 318230.
    4. Re:Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too many Americans today feel that wealth redistribution by the state should be abolished

      It SHOULD be abolished because it always turns into waste and fiefdoms and power and abuse. The government stripping citizens of wealth because it has power over them IS barbarity. If you want to help someone with a transfer of money, hand it to them from your own pocket. The money will go further than if nibbled at by government goons and you will have helped of your own volition. There should be no compulsion to charity, except in your soul.

    5. Re:Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Too many Americans today feel that wealth redistribution by the state should be abolished, as they are quick to scapegoat the needy in light of this country's ills.

      It's actually the opposite. By any measure, the wealthy are actively engaging in wealth redistribution by (use of) the state. If you look at recent (~40 year) trends in Wage Inequality or Wealth distribution, it's pretty obvious that wealth redistribution is the status quo. And it's taking money from those very same scapegoated needy and handing it to the wealthy. As the laws are being gutted by corporate lobbyists and lawyers, so too is the middle class.

      For over a decade now I have been amazed at the skill with which TV networks like Fox News have employed doublethink. I used to watch it all the time to find redefined words in their news ticker, but eventually it stopped being funny and started being very disconcerting.

    6. Re:Social Responsiblity by lgw · · Score: 1

      The era of socialism as it defined in the dictionary is dead in America. The idea of noblesse oblige, and societal responsibility are not only forgotten in minds of those who control the wealth in this country, but spit upon as if it were a curse

      I see people repeating this all the time, just old scholl class warfare nonsense, with no basis. Do you know any of the wealthy? Do you even understand the difference between the wealthy and the high income earners?

      We have a real problem in America with confusing those with high income and the truely wealthy when we talk about "the rich". Those with high incomes generally pay high income tax, are often wasteful in their ways, often buy status symnbols and the like - youre stereotype of a CEO.

      Those who are wealthy without ever having worked for a living are very different. There are a few of course who are just as flashy, but they tend to spend everything they have in short order - it's a self-limiting problem. The rest carefully manage their investments, and the wealth moes on down the generations. It's the modern noblesse oblige: invest money where it actually makes sense, producing goods and services that people actually want, as cheaply as possible.

      Everyone seems to focus on the worker, but more of us are consumers than workers, and well-run companies are good for consumers. They're also good for investors, and the majority of Americans are investors now, to some degree, with 401K and pension plans.

      The 19th century us-vs-them, worker-vs-owner rhetoric is just worn out. We are all owners, workers, and consumers to some degree. Everything is a trade off between one aspect of our lives and another.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    7. Re:Social Responsiblity by dave562 · · Score: 2

      Everyone seems to focus on the worker, but more of us are consumers than workers, and well-run companies are good for consumers. They're also good for investors, and the majority of Americans are investors now, to some degree, with 401K and pension plans.

      The majority of workers are not investors. The majority of workers are the people who consumers do not really think about when they are consuming. Everyone working in retail, or the service industry, a good portion of the population, does not have a 401K or a pension plan. Most of the people taking your money do not have a retirement plan and are lucky if they have health insurance.

      There is a growing divide in this country. The number of "good paying jobs" are dwindling while the population is growing. A large number of those jobs have gone overseas and are not coming back. They are also not going to be replaced by any up and coming industries. The most rapidly growing sector in the economy is health care, and that is growing because all of the Baby Boomers who had pensions and retirement plans are now aging and have to deal with health issues. Without their savings, that sector of the economy would be dying as well.

      If you have a job making more than $100,000 a year with health care and a retirement plan, you are a member of a very small portion of the economy.

    8. Re:Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is our lizard brain that will justify any action if it increases our comfort or pleasure. It is our human dilemma that, as a species, we must use our intellect to overcome our instincts, in order to survive.

    9. Re:Social Responsiblity by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      Too many Americans today feel that wealth redistribution by the state should be abolished, as they are quick to scapegoat the needy in light of this country's ills.

      If this is the case, then there are real concerns about the future for the US as a nation. The state will remain, but it will not govern for the interest of the citizen anymore. But perhaps it already happened?

    10. Re:Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. You made his point for him. Perfectly.

      It is people like you that are literally ruining the USA. Destroying it.

      I didn't read anywhere that people should be forced at GUNPOINT to help society. You made that up in your sick fucking mind.

      The point was simply that if we DO NOT help each other, we are doomed. If you want to be doomed, go ahead, we are already on that track as we speak. If you want to not be doomed, then perhaps a shift in perspective is needed. Not forced. Just becoming enlightened and realizing there is no other way.

      Fucking loonies like you are what will turn the US into a third world country in a generation.

    11. Re:Social Responsiblity by SwedishPenguin · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of your post, but I do have a minor quibble with your first statement. The definition of socialism is essentially worker ownership of the means of production, there has never been such an era in the United States. Though one might argue that the world in general is moving even further away from such a society with most of the previously "petite bourgeoisie" (essentially, small-scale capitalists, such as small business owners for instance) replaced by companies owned by large and disgustingly wealthy capitalists who wouldn't have to work a day in their lives and yet still live a life of luxury off the backs of the workers of the world.

    12. Re:Social Responsiblity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking loonies like you could turn it into a third world country in less than a generation.

      Shut your hole, get to work. If you don't like it, do it better. Ford was the first in a long list that proved that paying people more can pay dividends.

    13. Re:Social Responsiblity by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >I didn't read anywhere that people should be forced at GUNPOINT to help society. You made that up in your sick fucking mind.

      Only because you haven't thought through your own beliefs.

      Earlier (assuming you're the same coward) you said that you supported redistribution of wealth by the government to charitably help the poor out. This redistribution takes place via taxes, which are enforced at the barrel of a gun by the government.

      So you basically want to hold a gun to people's heads to force them to be charitable.

      Maybe you think this is okay. Randians obviously do not. But don't pretend you are standing for anything different from what you are.

    14. Re:Social Responsiblity by s.petry · · Score: 1

      Certainly that is not the majority of the "needy" as you call them, but it is absolutely a problem that is exacerbated by "spreading the wealth".

      I disagree very much with this, in it's general form. If you understand the Allegory of the Artisan, you may find why that is. It's not necessarily spreading the wealth that's the issue, it's keeping people from being able to abuse the rest of society to begin with where we failed. The corrective measure at this point is "spreading of the wealth", however without the proper controls to keep it from happening again the proposition is futile. We will end up back in the same place in a short time again if there are no controls.

      If you look back, ask yourself why the tax rate was excessively high for "rich" people up until the 70s. After it was deregulated, the have's started having more and the rest of us got fucked over and over and over. This is where we are at now, and getting worse. Look at the % of population that is "middle class" now compared to the 70s, or 80s. It's been a steady decline while the upper wealthy have gotten huge amounts of increased wealth.

      Here in this post, my disagreement is honest but the real problems and solutions are much more complex. If you disagree with me and believe that wealth should be unlimited and potentially infinite, you fail to understand both Society and what a Republic is in it's fundamental form. Start with the book, "The Republic" by Plato. I can't blame people that have that belief, it's been brainwashed in to them for well over 30 years. Reagan spent 8 years lying to people telling them that if the rich get more money they will give back to society instead of just trying to get more and more money, and a huge percentage of the population believed his bullshit.

      --

      -The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.

    15. Re:Social Responsiblity by The+Evil+Atheist · · Score: 1

      This redistribution takes place via taxes, which are enforced at the barrel of a gun by the government.

      I keep getting this bad argument from anti-tax types. You are not forced by the barrel of a gun to stay in the country - therefore, you're not really forced to pay taxes. However, you choose to participate in your society, and that society requires upkeep. Society belongs to everyone. If you refuse to pay for your share of society's upkeep, then you are stealing from me. I am in all my rights to force you at gun point to stop STEALING from me.

      Anti-tax types are the ones who haven't really thought anything through. If society somehow magically maintains itself (over the course of decades and centuries), then yes, taxation would be "force". But society doesn't. The reason why society even exists is the maintenance of some kind of stability - there is no free lunch. Tax is no longer a force, but the necessary other half of the equation. Refusing to pay taxes becomes stealing, whether you like it or not.

      --
      Those who do not learn from commit history are doomed to regress it.
    16. Re:Social Responsiblity by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I'd be perfectly happy for people not to pay taxes, as long as they were then happy to go without any of the protections afforded by being members of society. This includes, for example, recourse to the legal system is someone takes their property or harms their person. The problem with your argument is that you appear to believe that it's fine for society to enforce property rights, but that requiring active participation in society in exchange for this is a bad thing.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    17. Re:Social Responsiblity by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Correct. I pay for prisons, roads, military, etc., at the point of a gun. I don't pretend otherwise.

      Pretending that government-run wealth redistribution *isn't* done at the point of a gun is what I'm taking issue with.

    18. Re:Social Responsiblity by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >I'd be perfectly happy for people not to pay taxes, as long as they were then happy to go without any of the protections afforded by being members of society.

      No, that wouldn't make any sense.

      > The problem with your argument is that you appear to believe that it's fine for society to enforce property rights, but that requiring active participation in society in exchange for this is a bad thing.

      Nyet. What I'm objecting to is the GGP up there saying that government-run wealth redistribution isn't done at the point of a gun. It's just fairy-tale nonsense.

    19. Re:Social Responsiblity by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Nyet. What I'm objecting to is the GGP up there saying that government-run wealth redistribution isn't done at the point of a gun. It's just fairy-tale nonsense.

      It's only fairy-tale nonsense if you fail to realise that wealth-maintenance is also done at the point of a gun. It is only possible to be wealthy because society enforces your property rights at the point of a gun. If you want to be reductionist, every social interaction is at the point of a gun because if you stray too far from accepted behaviour then either society collectively or an individual will shoot you. That's a pointless and irrelevant argument and it's just as pointless in this situation.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    20. Re:Social Responsiblity by dkf · · Score: 1

      If this is the case, then there are real concerns about the future for the US as a nation. The state will remain, but it will not govern for the interest of the citizen anymore. But perhaps it already happened?

      I don't think you've really lost sight of the American Dream, the thing that drives people to believe that the USA should exist. I do worry that, as a nation, you're stoking the flames of extremism and revolution. The particular problem is the concentration of wealth into the hands of the elite who at the same time think they don't have to treat the rest of society well. The longer they continue like this, the worse it will be when the fracture happens, and I don't know whether you've got to the point yet where a non-violent resolution is even possible any more.

      I worry (in part because of the US habit of sharing their troubles with the rest of the world) and I don't know what I could do even if I was a US citizen.

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    21. Re:Social Responsiblity by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >That's a pointless and irrelevant argument and it's just as pointless in this situation.

      Yes, all government actions are enforced by the gun. Don't pretend otherwise. That's my point to the guy I was responding to, who wanted to pretend that government-enforced wealth redistribution was paid for by leprechaun gold and unicorn farts.

    22. Re:Social Responsiblity by manu0601 · · Score: 1

      I don't know what I could do even if I was a US citizen.

      I am not sure US citizen can do anything. The election system locks everything in a fake choice between two parties whose candidates are heavily subsided by (and therefore work for) the wealthiers. There is no chance to bring another party in the House or Senate. There is not chance to get a president from another party. There is very little chance to get a state governor from another party. There is no possible referendum. There is no hope, in my opinion.

    23. Re:Social Responsiblity by lgw · · Score: 1

      the majority of Americans are investors

      The majority of workers are not investors.

      Was that intentional? It's a key disctinction. An ever-growing portion of Americans are retired.

      Without their savings, that sector of the economy would be dying as well.

      Personal savings is simply the most important part of the overall health of the economy. This is the first hard times for my generation, and it seems few of us were wise enough to save properly. Hopefully we've learned from experience. Just under 15 years ago I got my head out of my ass on this, and have been living on half my take-home pay ever since. It's a hard trade-off, but in a few years I'll be able to retire, despite the best efforts of the government to make that difficult.

      If you have a job making more than $100,000 a year with health care and a retirement plan, you are a member of a very small portion of the economy.

      Most people can save a significant portion of their pay, if only they relinquish the status symbols and shiney toys. Worked for me, anyhow, and I'm not exactly the child of priveledge.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  20. The need for a basic income by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

    The Richest Man in the World: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p14bAe6AzhA

    A parable about robotics, abundance, technological change, unemployment, happiness, and a basic income.

    The knol mentioned in the video has been moved here because Google Knol is shutting down: http://www.pdfernhout.net/beyond-a-jobless-recovery-knol.html

    That parable and video was directly inspired by this:
    "Structural Unemployment: The Economists Just Don't Get It"
    http://econfuture.wordpress.com/2010/08/04/structural-unemployment-the-economists-just-dont-get-it/#comment-254

    --
    A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
  21. Documentary on Ayn Rand & Silicon Valley by starworks5 · · Score: 2

    http://vimeo.com/38724174

    1. Re:Documentary on Ayn Rand & Silicon Valley by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      TL;DW

  22. Now? by LoudMusic · · Score: 2

    Ehh, you're just now figuring that out?

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:Now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ehh, you're just now figuring that out?

      Well it seems most Americans are dumb enought to not have figured it out.
      That's why they continue to vote for the Democratic party or the Republican party.
      America is the epitome of a country/society that worships only the almighty dollar and all else be damned.

  23. Google is more evil than Microsoft ever was by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  24. I thought it was self evident... by mschaffer · · Score: 2

    I thought that Silicon-Valley being "morally bankrupt and essentially toxic to our society" was self evident. But, why single out Silicon-Valley?

  25. Typically society stays on course by kawabago · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is too much invested in the lifestyle we have now for society to change course to avoid catastrophe. People will continue doing the same things until collapse by economic, environmental or political forces impose change.

  26. Awwh, cannot get your ship out by elrous0 · · Score: 1

    Feeling down?
    No help around?
    Burma Shave

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
  27. Since when is Slashdot a political site? by Kergan · · Score: 2

    Not that I seriously disagree with TFS, but... Since when is this tech news or stuff that matters?

    News at four! Business is focused on its own interest rather than on the public's good in corporate America! Read all about it on Slashdot!

    Seriously... This is the kind of stuff I'd expect to be reading on some political site, not on slashdot. I barely cope with the US political news and the US elections. (How about EU, Asia or Latin America political news for a change?) Wtf?

    1. Re:Since when is Slashdot a political site? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's a meta question. If you were a banker on Wall Street, would you find it off topic if someone in 2005 had posted a thread questioning the moral value of products that packaged tiny slices of tens of thousands of subprime, no-documentation loans as derivatives with a triple-A credit ratings?

    2. Re:Since when is Slashdot a political site? by Kergan · · Score: 1

      It's a meta question. If you were a banker on Wall Street, would you find it off topic if someone in 2005 had posted a thread questioning the moral value of products that packaged tiny slices of tens of thousands of subprime, no-documentation loans as derivatives with a triple-A credit ratings?

      Probably not, if I were a banker with the slightest clue in finance. You do realize that banks were going full throttle towards bankruptcy back then for any observer who bothered to look, and that they're now all zombies, right?

      And again, I don't question the premises in TFS, it's just that this belongs on some other site imho. I'd rather be reading about IBM's latest breakthrough on carbon nanotubes, thank you very much.

    3. Re:Since when is Slashdot a political site? by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 1

      You're spending a lot of time posting comments in a thread you could have just skipped over, then.

      No, I think theres more to it. You object to the rest of us having this discussion. Right? Or why your comments?

    4. Re:Since when is Slashdot a political site? by andrew2325 · · Score: 0

      "Elections" right... Not to sound like one of those loons that sits around and reads conspiracy theories about the "illuminati," but, honestly, do you not see the corruption that goes on in this country? There's obviously some of that going on, and there have been places that were proven to be doing this intentionally in recent years. So to what degree does electioneering actually occur? How much of what we hear about is fact and how much is fictional propaganda. Seems like there is a good bit of this to me. Some of it has been exposed on the news publicly, and for every case that is revealed, it's often censored to a degree to sedate people from having more riots, which I also disagree with. Civil disobedience is one thing, murder is something you have to live with, if you live.

    5. Re:Since when is Slashdot a political site? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I barely cope with the US political news ...

      The amount of FUD, finger-pointing and other crap that occurs during an election is horrendous. We voters need to tune a lot of it out. That doesn't mean becoming one of the sheeple.

    6. Re:Since when is Slashdot a political site? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Politicians are just as corrupt in every country, they're basically the same. The only reason the EC doesn't yet fit in that category, is simply because, right now, it's a matter of national pride, and getting caught red handed is bad for the country, not just the political weasel. But give it time, we'll get there soon too.

  28. I am not completely convinced by TheInternetGuy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I am not completely convinced of the points that the OP is trying to make. But any company has the interest of it's owner closest to heart. In a public company, the owners are the stock holders and stock holders usually wants continuous growth and year on year profit, which might not be what is best for the company an might not be what is best for the consumer/user.
    I once had the fortune to work for a very large international corporation that was entirely family owned, with no external stock holders. And I can tell you that the culture and mentality within that corporation was completely different compared to other workplaces I have been in.
    They were much more concerned with continuously building the value of the brand / family name, than to make profit for the share holders. If they were convinced something was the right thing to do, they would allow it to take time and money.
    So I would say the problem lays more in the way that companies are financed today, and the effects that has on their operations, than whether they are located in Silicon Valley or not.

    --
    If my comment didn't sound as good in your head as it did in mine, then I guess we all know who's to blame
    1. Re:I am not completely convinced by swillden · · Score: 1

      But any company has the interest of it's owner closest to heart. In a public company, the owners are the stock holders and stock holders usually wants continuous growth and year on year profit, which might not be what is best for the company an might not be what is best for the consumer/user.

      Actually, Silicon Valley is one of the places where this is *least* true. After the Google IPO, an increasing number of tech companies have gone public with voting structures that deliberately deprive the shareholders of any say in the operation of the company, and with binding IPO statements that specifically warn shareholders that the company does not intend to focus on continuous growth and year on year profit if it conflicts with long-term growth and with the good of their users.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    2. Re:I am not completely convinced by flonker · · Score: 1

      Actually, Silicon Valley is one of the places where this is *least* true. After the Google IPO, an increasing number of tech companies have gone public with voting structures that deliberately deprive the shareholders of any say in the operation of the company, and with binding IPO statements that specifically warn shareholders that the company does not intend to focus on continuous growth and year on year profit if it conflicts with long-term growth and with the good of their users.

      That is very interesting. Can you provide some references? I had difficulty Googling it up and a starting point would help me figure out what kind of search fodder it requires.

    3. Re:I am not completely convinced by swillden · · Score: 1

      I don't know where you'd find references that discuss the trend, but a good place to start is Google's IPO. Read the founder's IPO letter. On the question of other companies following suit (with the corporate control structure, at least, if not the user-serving focus), look at the info about Facebook's IPO. There have been lots more in between, and I think it's likely that the majority of Silicon Valley tech IPOs since 2004 have followed Google's lead, but I don't know where to find figures to support or refute that belief.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  29. what. the. hell. by Tastecicles · · Score: 0

    happened just normal social fucking interaction??

    --
    Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  30. No by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1, Informative

    The answer? It's no. Just like it always is. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betteridge%27s_law_of_headlines

    1. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Can we please stop quoting that crappy adage? Half the time it doesn't even apply. If you actually read the wikipedia page, it pertains to big media who would use questions to call attention to their articles, and/or cover up their lack of knowledge.

      First, it's not clear that the "law" is even true, and secondly whatever evidence there is to support it is from an entirely different source than user (not journalist!) submitted stories.

      It's not clever, and adds nothing to the discussion.

    2. Re:No by Rennt · · Score: 1

      Come on, mate. You can do better than unoriginal meme regurgitation.

      Besides, the question was posed by slashdot editors. The article headline is noticeably bereft of any questions.

  31. Re:Huh? by WolfWithoutAClause · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...but it helps!

    --

    -WolfWithoutAClause

    "Gravity is only a theory, not a fact!"
  32. Is RTFA possible? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know we're not known for RTFA here, and since I work for one of the evil corporations listed, I really tried to do so-- but holy shit, did anyone get through that nonsense? Care to distill the main arguments, if there were any?

    1. Re:Is RTFA possible? by Z34107 · · Score: 2

      The article's not much better than the summary. Key points:

      1. Taxi regs prevent rape--in no way are they meant to stifle competition and guarantee monopolist profits for medallion owners. Why does Uber hate women?
      2. "Disruption" was invented by Ayn Rand, and is an excuse for, ahem, "every spoiled trust fund brat looking for an excuse to embrace his or her inner asshole."
      3. Uber doesn't have your best interests at heart--they wouldn't drive you anywhere if you didn't pay them! Presumably, the existing cabbies are the pinnacle of altruism.
      4. Author concludes using Uber, despite their documented objectivist leanings and hatred of women and civil society.

      8/10 troll. Outrageous while maintaining credibility; full-bodied with notes of cassis and oak.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
  33. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your question is i×

    Figure out what that means.

    1. Re:i× by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuckers stripped off the pi after submitting. even displaying it on the preview.

  34. Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by wisty · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Since when are self-driving cars a "geek toy"? Road safety is a huge thing. Unless you hate old people, the disabled, and people who are just unlucky, getting humans away from the steering wheel is going to be up there with curing cancer.

    1. Re:Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by VAElynx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Never shall I sit my arse in a self-driving car. Bus? Fine, that's what I tend to prefer being a shitty driver. But not something that can be messed with as easily as these sort of control systems.
      Someone wise said this on slashdot earlier to the topic - Society can cope with serial killers, but parallel ones are a different cup of coffee entirely. Imagine the result of a software flaw or a malicious intervention where twenty cars do the same fucking stupid thing on an interstate highway. Sure, people fuck up all the time, but at least there, the probabilities of them doing so are fairly independant, and they can adapt to a messup better than software.

    2. Re:Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if I hate old people, the disabled, and the unlucky? I think we should just throw them in a pit and whoever gets back out can stay with us.

    3. Re:Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by bidule · · Score: 1

      Never shall I sit my arse in a self-driving car. Bus? Fine,

      For a second I thought you meant self-driving bus.

      --
      ID: the nose did not occur naturally, how would we wear glasses otherwise? (apologies to Voltaire)
    4. Re:Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought the whole point of self-driving cars is that millions of people are spending hours every day, with their eyes on the road. We need to free those eyes, so they can look at ads.

    5. Re:Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by Saxerman · · Score: 1

      Machines are fallible! Complex machines, double so! I will not trust my life to these undead abominations! At least I'm used to dealing with human mistakes!

      What sort of Luddite troll is this? How is this insightful? Cruise missiles are not gently guided to their targets by hand. Machines presently navigate our cars, regulate our air flow, control our planes and nuclear reactors, and keep our hearts beating. But suddenly steering our cars is crossing a line?

      My fear is not that machines will make a mistake and kill people. That's already happened plenty of times. My fear is that we will allow our fear to control us more than the machines.

      --

      A steaming cup of soykaf would be real wiz right now.

    6. Re:Stopping road deaths is a "geek toy"? by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      Got news for you: you won't have a choice for long. Very soon, no one will be allowed to actually drive. Better to embrace the future than be dragged kicking and screaming.

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
  35. If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ... well ...

    Please stop using the PC / Tablets / Smartphones - for many of the hardware were designed in Silicon Valley

    Please stop using many of the software that you are using - including technologies that enable you to surf the Net

    Without the Silicon Valley - and many of its offspring around the world - the author of TFA can whine all he wants, on a column on his local newspaper - if the editor of his local newspaper grant him a column, that is

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
    1. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wouldn't even get that far. Even here in our backwater nowhere articles are submitted on the Internet for the "letters to the editor" section.

    2. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You like to reply to high rated top posts even when your reply has nothing to do with what you are replying to. For someone with a four digit ID, you either don't know how to reply to a story or just like to have your post noticed. Either way, you are sad and should feel bad about that.

    3. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Without the Silicon Valley - and many of its offspring around the world - the author of TFA can whine all he wants, on a column on his local newspaper - if the editor of his local newspaper grant him a column, that is

      I have neither the time nor the inclination to explain myself to a man who rises and sleeps under the blanket of the very TECHNOLOGY that I provide, and then questions the manner in which I provide it. I would rather you just said thank you, and went on your way, Otherwise, I suggest you pick up a IDE, and stand a post. Either way, I don't give a damn what you think you are entitled to.

    4. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Click through and actually read TFA.

      1) It's a she, not a he
      2) It's not in a newspaper, its on a personal blog - exactly where this sort of thing belongs.

    5. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ... well ...

      Please stop using the PC / Tablets / Smartphones - for many of the hardware were designed in Silicon Valley

      Please stop using many of the software that you are using - including technologies that enable you to surf the Net

      Without the Silicon Valley - and many of its offspring around the world - the author of TFA can whine all he wants, on a column on his local newspaper - if the editor of his local newspaper grant him a column, that is

      There are many more valid ways to alter alter history and society than the tired old, "Don't buy it, don't use it" line. That type of strategy gives greater voice to those who have more money and power already. In other words it generally leaves the power firmly in the hands of those who already have power, are perfectly happy with the status quo, and thus have no urge to see the existing problems fixed.

    6. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ...PC / Tablets / Smartphones ...

      The article talks about Google, FaceBook, ad-targeting algoritms, content-matching algoritms. The corporatocracy could hire a million slaves and do the same thing with punch-cards.

      ... technologies that enable you to surf the Net

      Those technologies enable a data byte to go from point A to point B, which is then handled by various communication protocols. Once again, not the problem.

      The problem is intrusive data collection and ware-housing. The Nazis did this with punch-cards. The problem is deciding some Americans are beneath the law: Git-mo 'prisoners', no-fly lists, police thuggery, and censorship of citizens.

    7. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a perfectly good posting strategy, why do you think it is sad? If you feel it's off-topic in the place it is, please use your mod points and express your opinion.

    8. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      okay, your comment is fine, but...let's nitpick a tiny bit:
      Arpanet switching was designed at Lincoln Labs in Massachussetts and built by BBN (from Massachussetts). The first computer on it was at the University of California in Los Angeles. The web browser was made at CERN in Switzerland.

      So, silicon valley did not create the technologies that enable you to surf the Net. It has produced a boatload of tech and software, but the www isn't one of them. Although TCP/IP was designed in Palo Alto.

      Your point still stands.

    9. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

      ... well ...

      Please stop using the PC / Tablets / Smartphones - for many of the hardware were designed in Silicon Valley

      Please stop using many of the software that you are using - including technologies that enable you to surf the Net

      Without the Silicon Valley - and many of its offspring around the world - the author of TFA can whine all he wants, on a column on his local newspaper - if the editor of his local newspaper grant him a column, that is

      Since I live in the modern world, I have no right to criticize or question that world. Is that what you're saying?

      --
      "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
    10. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the technology in smartphones and tablets and PC was developed with public money. The Net was developed with public money. It is really only recently (last 25 years?) that Silicon Valley got their grubby hands on the public funded tech and then selling it back to us in variously colored packages.

      It is entirely possible to fund tech development in other ways than VC funded startups who build the same web app over and over again.

    11. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      Not to invoke Godwin, but the Nazis invented jet propulsion and quite a few other innocuous things. Arguably, they were quite morally bankrupt.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    12. Re:If the Silicon Valley is toxic ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If those in Silicon Valley have seen far, it is because they stood upon the shoulders of giants in other places. A lot of truly important and revolutionary stuff in the field of computing didn't happen in Silicon Valley. Here's just a few:

      - Today's modern internet browsers are all developed on technology and concepts invented in Urbana/Champaign, IL and Lawrence, KS.
      - The most advanced computer maker in history (Cray) was based in Chippewa Falls, WI. Their designs and technology were later used to jumpstart SV firms Silicon Graphics and Sun Microsystems when they were running into problems, and multiprocessor computing concepts from them are in use still today.
      - Facebook started as a project at Harvard.
      - ARM, the CPU architecture with a larger installation base than every other architecture combined, is from England.
      - Linus Torvalds developed Linux while a student at the University of Helsinki.
      - Microsoft was founded in New Mexico and is now based in Washington.

  36. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 2

    Looking back to what it was 25 years ago, much of what it was no longer exists. There's lots of vacant buildings, don't know why they are building more.

    Spot on. All the semiconductor manufacturing has gone to Asia, mainly Taiwan. Our CEO was always over there on business trips and is always coming back with stories about office parks the size of the city of Fremont being built left right and center over there. Still a fair bit of design work happening here though. Apple is probably the archetypal modern company. Most value is added at the design, sales and marketing ends of the process, and that all takes place in the valley. The dirty work of manufacturing happens in Taiwan.

    As for the OP, sounds like the guy needs to get laid.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  37. sp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think OP misspelled capitalism in the title of this story.

  38. Newsflash by tbird81 · · Score: 2

    Companies try to make money! How evil!

    Companies are meant to make money, that's how they pay their employees. As long as they're not using the law/government to take advantage (i.e. Apple) then there's nothing wrong with it.

    Money is not evil. It's usually the most greedy who complain about the wealth of others.

    1. Re:Newsflash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Profit is evil, retard.

    2. Re:Newsflash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Profit is evil, retard.

      Ok, I will feed the troll. Why?

    3. Re:Newsflash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Companies try to make money!

      No, companies put a dollar value on everything. If the company has the car of Mr Average, the cha-ching opportunities are rather limited. But when the company has a summary of his e-mails, a copy of his diary/schedule, a list of his purchases, a record of his travels, a history of his (on-line) reading/viewing and easy access to his credit history, the search for more money becomes intrusive very quickly. Governments also have access to your financial and health records.

    4. Re:Newsflash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So true. Companies like Walmart will fire you if you take 1 day of sick time because paying the fines for breaking labor laws is cheaper than paying employees. Nothing evil about that, it just makes sense. No one should expect to be able to take a day off work just because they are sick.

    5. Re:Newsflash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question is: "why do companies need to make money?"

      Economics textbooks have the answer to that: they make money in order to direct the factors of production into meeting whatever market need they're serving. In a perfectly competitive market, they make just enough money to do that - including enough of a profit margin to keep their backers invested in that business rather than another one - and no more.

      But in the last 40 years or so, that idea has gone out the window. Honest entrepreneurs, the kind who build up a business providing a good service and work hard to build a brand over decades, are a fading minority now. In their place, we celebrate twats who got lucky and made their fortune in a handful of years, by puffing up an idea and selling it at a vastly inflated price, to people whose biggest problem is that they simply can't think what to do with their money. (Case in point: The Social Network won 3 Oscars. The biopics of, for instance, James Dyson or Sam Walton? Yeah, let me see.)

      Capitalism isn't meant to be a casino. "Retiring at the age of 30" is a selfish and amoral dream, and one that we should sneer at, not aspire to.

  39. Personalization can be good, evil, or both. by Miamicanes · · Score: 2

    >Better ad targeting or content matching algorithms definitely won't fix it

    Maybe not, but you have to admit that if you're going to be force-fed ads, ads for computer hardware & home automation gear are several orders of magnitude less annoying than ads for feminine hygiene products, diapers, payday loans, personal injury lawyers, and [Romney|Obama].

  40. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

    Gee, I'd love to see a world where Intel, Dell, IBM, HP, TI and a host of other companies never existed. Yea, we'd be better off without GE, Ford, General Motors, Exxon and the like. Would not need any hackers in Silicon Valley, much less silicon. Just forget the transistor, integrated circuits or microprocessors ever existed.

    Capitalism may have it's flaws, but it is better than any previously tried system over the last 6,000 years of recorded history. Please let's not repeat any of them!

    I'm with you all the way, except for your inclusion of Exxon. Some companies happen to bump shoulders with society by accident from time to time, but Exxon really is a nasty piece of work and I'm not just talking about the Exxon Valdez disgrace. Much of the global warming denial industry can be traced back to this one company.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  41. People are shits by czmax · · Score: 2

    Yup, there are lots of morally bankrupt and toxic corporations. Limiting your critique to the high tech industry could cause you to think this is about technology vs human interactions or some made up arbitrary distinction. Clear your mind, feel the force, and examine your feelings: this issue is much broader than you suppose.

    People can be morally bankrupt and toxic. They can be greedy little shits. Usually they're either taught by society, or reigned in by societies laws, to be more ethical and bubbly and interested in the social justice and all that -- but only usually. And we all know that if you add a few layers of indirection, like maybe they're just doing their job and trying to get a bonus or grow their team or implement a cool feature and see their stock go up or find a business model that feeds and diapers the kids... well, ethics about some shmuck on the internet is a pretty easy thing to let slip. Heck, give them a big enough bonus and they'll close a plant and ship all the jobs to China. And run for office based on how much money they made when they increased the value of the stock.

    If you're concerned then you need to engage with people. Work to built the society you want to see exist; work to encode that society into our enforced laws, and _vote_ for people that reflect your opinions.

    1. Re:People are shits by grantspassalan · · Score: 1

      Don't forget, that corporations are nothing but groups of people for a common purpose, usually to make money. Jeremiah put your sentiment a little less crass, but it is indeed true that “People can be morally bankrupt and toxic.”

      Jeremiah 17:9-11 The heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked; who can know it? I Jehovah search the heart, I try the reins, even to give to each man according to his ways, according to the fruit of his doings. The quail sits on eggs and does not hatch them; in the same way he who gets riches, and not by right, shall leave them in the middle of his days, and in his end he shall be a fool.

      Most people do today what they do, because they no longer believe that there is indeed a God who will judge justly and righteously, not according to human standards, but by eternal, never changing laws of morality. No matter what people may say and what their opinions may be, the one who decreed what the laws of physics are, also decided what is moral and what is immoral, what is right and what is wrong. Without reference to some absolutes,, some standards, all behavior becomes relative. Those who believe in evolution and the survival of the fittest, have no basis upon which to decry violence and greed. After all, the most violent and greedy creatures, those with the biggest claws or the biggest gun survive. They are by definition the most fit. Groups of people sanctioned by government, corporations, ultimately are no better than individuals, but usually worse.

      --
      A sufficiently advanced simulation is indistinguishable from reality.
  42. In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I moved there in 1997 to work for the Lighthouse Design division of Sun Microsystems (formerly the division did NeXT software). As a mid-size city kid from the Canadian prairies, I was immediately struck by, not just the moral bankruptcy, but what I felt was literally a soul-destroying culture. I left soon after and only returned a couple times, each time having that impression confirmed.

    Here are some of the things I observed. Some are general to the United States and its form of capitalism, some (seem to be) specific to the Bay Area and Silicon Valley:

    1. Culture of guns and violence. Simply a belief that enough other people are "bad" that you must protect yourself and it would be okay to kill someone else to do that. There are lots of places in the world where that belief is not pervasive and they seem to be nicer places to live. It's kinda like the justice system is supposed to work: it's fairer if you presume innocence and that actually encourages people to behave nicely whereas if you presume guilt, people will live up to that expectation.

    2. Extreme Culture of Materialism. Money matters, and getting rich matters even more. The expression "F***-You Money" is a good indicator of this. I knew a few people who had their "F***-You Money" and they weren't enlightened... they were spoiled. It's like the "American Dream" taken to an unhealthy extreme. People were generally extremely busy and most friendly conversation was either about money, money other people make, technology, sex or drugs. Very little friendly conversation was about community, relationships, or the soul.

    3. A Bizarre Hypocrisy around Tolerance/Inclusion. San Francisco, in particular, was bad for this; blind to its own racism yet so proud that it was inclusive and tolerant. If you know the area, I only need say "East Palo Alto" (it's been a few years so maybe it's gentrified now) and you should be able to figure out what I mean. We tolerate all religions, all philosophies, all genders, all types of cultures... except the black and spanish folks in our midst who only work menial or retail service jobs. The real problem is that most people there were completely blind to what was blindingly obvious to me as an outsider.

    4. Pervasive, Persuasive Moral Bankruptcy. The longer I was there, the more I "got into" the culture. I've seen this happen to other friends from outside the area. It kills people's souls. Maybe not everyone... I'm sure there are some people who are shining examples of enlightenment... but I couldn't resist it, and I don't know anyone else who has (save one person). Of course, this is "normal" - we adjust to and eventually adopt the culture of our surroundings unless we actively work against it. I _was_ actively working against it and it still changed me to my own detriment.

    I believe that the organizations that are there (Google, Facebook, etc.) are not "to blame" as they are just participating in the culture and trying to be successful in that culture. (Or to be more accurate, the people in those organizations are doing this.) But anyone who has an idealistic bone in them will quickly have it gellified and unconsciously begin to give up that idealism for the much more flexible moral relativism and then eventually the outlook that, heck, capitalism isn't so bad after all! not realizing that the ideology in that area is beyond capitalism: it's imperial corporatist capitalism that cares only for growth, and at any human cost (just so long as it doesn't harm the bottom line).

    1. Re:In a word, YES! by SQL+Error · · Score: 2, Funny

      So what you're saying is that America is populated with people?

    2. Re:In a word, YES! by Z34107 · · Score: 2

      I can't speak to the rest of your points, but I found your first one incomprehensible:

      Simply a belief that enough other people are "bad" that you must protect yourself and it would be okay to kill someone else to do that.

      Were you to be attacked on the street one day, would you not protect yourself? Do you think poorly of those who have? Do you not believe in a right to life, let alone liberty and property? Or do you just not believe in "bad" people?

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    3. Re:In a word, YES! by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 2

      So what you're saying is nothing in his comment meant enough to reflect on, so you flicked it away with an "it's human nature" bromide? That's lazy, man. What he said bugged you. But maybe you just want to brush it off and move on. Ok.

    4. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 2

      I have been attacked on the street, I did not protect myself, and the attack did not escalate to anyone's death.

      Do I think poorly of those who have [protected themselves]? Not on the whole, but I can certainly imagine both situations where I would and would not think highly of the actions of those who protect themselves.

      Actually, I don't believe _only_ in a right to life, liberty and property. I believe that those values are simply a reaction to some bad behaviour on the part of an empire that had grown complacent. They aren't bad values, but they aren't complete values and they _certainly_ shouldn't be primary values. Life is important. Quality of life is more important. Liberty is important. Responsibility is more important. Property is important. Enfranchisement is more important.

      And, finally, I don't believe in "bad" people any more than I believe in "evil spirits". I think it is far to simplistic an attitude to think of anyone as "bad" or "good". Instead, I choose to give people my love and good faith, even when their actions don't seem to merit it. (BTW, I'm certainly not perfect at doing this and I do sometimes cut off my relationship with people that I think are harming me.)

      The point of my original statement is, put another way, that if you act as if people are bad/dangerous/not-to-be-trusted, then they will be more likely to behave that way with you regardless of their behaviour with other people. If you have a whole culture that assumes people are bad/dangerous/not-to-be-trusted, then, in general, I believe/observe-anecdotally, that people will behave worse, more dangerously and in a less trustworthy way.

      I'm also willing to be clear that this is just my opinion and based on my limited observation between four major cultures: Western Canadian, Bay Area, Eastern US and Large City Chinese. I'm not saying these things with any sort of scientific certainty nor even statistically significant certainty.

    5. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 1

      That's pretty cynical, and no, I'm not saying that "America is populated with people". In fact, I specifically said that as an outsider to that area I found _differences_ in how people behave that appeared to me to be based on a less idealistic moral standard and, not only that, with some good old philosophical/cultural hypocrisy thrown in... compared to other places I have lived/observed (e.g. the Canadian Prairies, the US East Coast, and Big Cities in China).

    6. Re:In a word, YES! by Z34107 · · Score: 1

      . Life is important. Quality of life is more important. Liberty is important. Responsibility is more important. Property is important. Enfranchisement is more important.

      This is nonsense. Where do you have "quality of life" without Life? What "responsibilities" do you imagine a man without Liberty or Property to have? These aren't Millennium Development Goals--these are fundamental human rights, of which none are more important or fundamental.

      Less abstractly, why do you find it noble to allow yourself and others to be victimized? Although I'm sincerely glad you're safe, a society that tolerates violence against innocents is no society at all.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    7. Re:In a word, YES! by SQL+Error · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is nothing in his comment meant enough to reflect on, so you flicked it away with an "it's human nature" bromide?

      Yes.

    8. Re:In a word, YES! by SQL+Error · · Score: 0

      I'm not saying that the United States in general and the Bay Area in particular don't have their foibles - like every other place humans have ever lived. But at least those people don't post vacuous twaddle on Slashdot bemoaning the blighted state of the souls of entire populations.

      Also, souls don't exist.

    9. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 1

      Less abstractly, why do you find it noble to allow yourself and others to be victimized? Although I'm sincerely glad you're safe, a society that tolerates violence against innocents is no society at all.

      I didn't use the word "noble" although I might have thought it :-) Actually, there is a mental perspective about our relationship with others that is implied by the word "victimized" that I'm not sure I agree with. Victimization is a perspective oriented in power relationships (you have a gun, I don't, => you have power over me and could potentially victimize me). Again, my point is not about a particular power dynamic, but instead about a cultural dynamic: that people who expect a thing of others often get that thing, and in America, an expectation of danger and distrust leads to those very things. It is inherent in so many parts of American life and culture that I can understand why it is hard to see if you are in the culture (and if you aren't, I'm surprised that you don't see it, but interested in what you _do_ see as the distinguishing features of American culture). For example, the fundamental structures of government with a "system of checks and balances" is founded on distrust... which is historically understandable given English colonialism. But that structure does not increase trust. Instead, it perpetuates distrust and, compared to what I have seen in other countries, that distrustful attitude is reflected throughout the culture at a higher level than in other cultures (particularly my native Canadian culture).

      Where do you have "quality of life" without Life?

      I probably wasn't clear enough... of _course_ you need life to have quality of life. But if we simply focus on the binary of life/not-life, we can miss building on that to get to quality of life. In Canada, to be specific, we also have the right to life, and liberty, but to security of the person (rather than property) (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Charter_of_Rights_and_Freedoms). As you can imagine, we take those rights seriously. However, the difference between a right to property and a right to security of the person has significant consequences in how as a society we treat those who are poor or needy. Security of the person is a quality of life right rather than an economic right.

      a society that tolerates violence against innocents is no society at all

      I agree. This is a bit like Asimov's laws of robotics. It makes sense that a society should not allow harm to come to innocents (what about the guilty?) So why does the society in the USA allow this to happen so often? In the name of freedom (e.g. an attempt to be free from taxes, or freedom of choice in health care) there is great injustice perpetuated against great numbers of citizens in the USA. And it's not just a "falling through the cracks" type of problem where a very small number of people are affected. I was flabbergasted when I learned how many people there are not protected by health insurance or are under-insured. In Canada, it would be very difficult to get away with a private health system because it would be challenged as violating the Charter of Rights and Freedoms: to security of person.

    10. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My vacuous twaddle is just my own opinion. I may be wrong. I may have observed the wrong sample of reality to come up with my opinions. Sorry.

      That said, my use of the word "soul" shouldn't be construed as some mystical mumbo-jumbo. I mean simply our seemingly unique human capacity to use reason to discover the nature of the universe... which capacity we frequently ignore as we become emotional about issues and circumstances. I'm not sure if you've read the book "The Black Swan" but it has a few great sections on common logical fallacies that are based in emotional mechanics of our brains. Very cool stuff. And yet we clearly are able to transcend that emotionality and move to rationality.

      I just believe (again based on limited evidence) that most people choose moral relativism, capitalism, American culture etc. because it is emotionally easy, not because they have thought clearly and rationally about it.

    11. Re:In a word, YES! by Z34107 · · Score: 1

      Again, my point is not about a particular power dynamic, but instead about a cultural dynamic: that people who expect a thing of others often get that thing, and in America, an expectation of danger and distrust leads to those very things.

      You propose that muggers exist because we imagine them to be? I think you've reversed cause and effect--we imagine there are muggers because there are.

      I'm less interested in the "cultural dynamic" you perceive than how you dealt with the "power dynamic" you so unfortunately encountered: Why didn't you defend yourself? And why scorn others who do? This complete debasement of the individual is incomprehensible to my American mind, and what drew me to your post originally. It seems to dominate other societies, so I would sincerely like to understand what system of values produces it.

      It makes sense that a society should not allow harm to come to innocents

      I specifically said, "violence," and not "harm," sir. As awful as our healthcare system can be, I was speaking specifically of mugging, and why you find self-defense more reprehensible.

      --
      DATABASE WOW WOW
    12. Re:In a word, YES! by dkf · · Score: 1

      And, finally, I don't believe in "bad" people any more than I believe in "evil spirits".

      They do exist. They're not that common, but they cause a disproportionate amount of harm. Usually they fall foul of the cops and the courts and end up doing a lot of jail time. Which in turn institutionalizes them, which doesn't help much, but they're definitely a small minority of inmates (and an even smaller minority of the overall population). If you're not involved in criminal justice, you probably won't have too many dealings with the real bad people.

      More common is for people to be thinking that they're doing the right thing even when it is hurting others excessively. That's a much more complex case, as it usually isn't clear cut at all whether the benefits outweigh the costs.

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    13. Re:In a word, YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone that was born and raise in Silicon Valey, i'll waste some of my valuable time to reply to your post:

      1.) America is a country that exists because it defends itself. In order to defend oneself you must possess a skill or weapon to do so, the US happens to presently use guns, but also uses knives, bows, fists, and many other forms of "arms". Guns are a deep part of American culture and I can understand how that would be a shock to someone from another country that comes here and sees just how deeply rooted they are in our culture. Although I do not own any guns myself, I have fired a variety of them including countless .22 calibre rifles, 12 gauge shotguns, an M16 and some exotic firearms, I did all that while in the Boy Scouts where I also learned various life-saving techniques and life skills such as cooking and underwater basket weaving.

      2.) Materialism - have you never had a hobby? There is nothing wrong with spending money on something you enjoy. Hobbies teach a variety of skills and bring people together from different walks of life to socialize and share in something they have in common. My best friends I met becuase we collected the same stuff whether they be collector's cards of one form or another or computer games. The desire to make a lot of money comes from a deep rooted respect and love for ones parents and the desire to be more prosperous than the were to make life easier. Americans do without far more than you realize. Americans that struggle to live on their own when they would be better off living at home in a larger family structure is actually what makes the American economy so large and diverse. Without that struggle, the American economy would collapse.

      3.) I went to public school, my classmates represented 182 countries and that was just in one elementary school. Have you ever had a friend that was a refugee or asylee? Did you ever wonder why there were such large populations of people from various countries in Silicon Valley, including Vietnam, Iran, Bosnia, and so on? Silicon Valley is home to some of the largest refugee communities in the world thanks in part to many non-profit organizations and government support for helping people fleeing wars and other political issues. Problems faced in areas such as East Palo Alto, East Oakland, East San Jose, and so on have nothing to do with intolerance and everything to do with bad government. You can't save everyone and not everyone wants to be saved. To accuse someone in Silicon Valley of being racist only makes yourself out to be blind.

      4.) What do you consider moral bankruptcy? You did not cite any examples of what you would consider to be lacking in morals. Is it people not going to church? People not doing volunteer work? People not stopping to wait for ducks to cross a road? People not holding a door open for others? Guess what, I do all those things and more. The problem you faced was that you were surrounded by people you did not like, this may have been the result of where you chose to work or where you chose to live. It was your own failing not to get out and meet people you would have found to be better company, and it is your own lack of morals for failing to respect the people you were surrounded by to look past their shortcomings and find the good inside.

      People that accuse people in Silicon Valley of being obsessed with wanting to be rich are people that typically failed at life themselves and look at the successful people around them with bitterness. I want to be a millionaire, it has been one of my life goals since I was in the 2nd grade, but I do not obsess over it and do not let it ruin my love of life and the people around me. Instead I keep that light going inside me as inspiration to continue to learn and improve myself while examining how I invest my time.

      tl;dr sucks to be you.

    14. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 1

      I haven't reversed cause and effect. I have only observed that there is a negative feedback loop in the US that does not exist everywhere else (although I would guess it isn't exclusive to the US). Not only that, but I am not trying to say every individual behaves the same way or can be painted with the same brush. Certainly there are muggings, but I would hesitate to say that there are "muggers".

      Actually, what I am saying is not so foreign to the "Slashdot mind". I mentioned this in another part of this thread: Slashdotters commonly bring up the idea of DRM as an anti-feature on [software|music|movies] that perpetuates "pirating". In other words, the environment of distrust on the part of producers and distributors of digital content creates a higher likelihood of bad/illegal behavior on the part of potential users of that content. This is not so difficult an example for people in the US to understand because it is very specific and falls within the American cultural norms of rebellion against authority. The example that we started with, a street attack, is not so obvious because that environment of distrust is not as specific nor as directly connected to the behavior. Nevertheless, my observation is that _any_ environment of distrust breeds bad behavior, and any environment of trust encourages good behavior. The boundary conditions are what is interesting: in an environment of trust, if someone breaks that trust, how do people in the environment respond to that breech? Do they then start to distrust (and put in place policies, procedures, institutions, etc. that formalize that distrust)? Or do they continue to work within a culture of trust (and put in place all the things that can help to recover from the breech)?

      Why didn't you defend yourself? And why score others who do?

      I didn't defend myself because, fundamentally, it was not a developed habitual reaction. I can't claim that in the moment of attack I did a deep rational analysis of the situation. Instead, I simply lacked a defensive response habit and so I didn't defend myself. As it turns out, the situation defused itself and I lost nothing in the exchange. I believe that it was simply time passing that allowed the situation to become defused: the attacker lost energy. (I'm guessing there. I don't really know what was going on inside the person chemically, emotionally, etc.) I also want to point out that I am not naive enough to believe this would always "work". Certainly some attacks conclude with death, rape etc. even with passive response on the part of the attacked person.

      And to repeat, I don't scorn others who do defend themselves. What I am concerned about is perhaps over-reaction or escalation. Honestly, I haven't thought it through to make _any_ generalizations and I suspect that I could only respond on a case-by-case basis to such things.

      This complete debasement of the individual is incomprehensible to my American mind...

      Actually, I feel that in America the individual is almost completely debased. Consumerism, culture of fear and distrust, breakdown of the extended family and the neighbourhood all lead to individuals behaving more like animals and less like noble, social beings. Individuals can certainly become excellent through their own hard work and choices, but there seems to be a real lack of recognition that "the individual is organic with their environment": there isn't simple first cause (individual merit) and then lots of effects (success in life). Instead, there are complex feedback systems where the environment limits, changes or empowers an individual and individuals make choices that in turn limit, change or expand their environment. Since the environment includes other people who are also making choices, we need to recognize both our liberty and our responsibility: through our choices, no matter how personal, we limit, change or empower other people.

      "violence," and not "harm"

      Hm

    15. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 1

      I agree that there are some people whose behavior is almost exclusively anti-social, or even could be called sociopaths. I believe that there is still the possibility of reform/redemption for these people, but I'm not an expert and so I would not claim to have a "solution". I have met one person that I think may legitimately be called a sociopath, but it was a long time ago. The experience was incredibly damaging to me in many ways and I am no longer in contact with that person.

    16. Re:In a word, YES! by under_score · · Score: 1

      Thanks for taking the time to reply.

      1) I agree with what you have said. I'm not sure if you followed my point, but you can think of it like DRM: content producers/distributors distrust their customers and that has the unintended consequence that their customers (due to the DRM anti-feature) look to other sources for their content, some illegal sources. The environment of distrust creates bad behavior.

      2) I have three hobbies: robotics, coin collecting and making music. There is nothing inherently wrong with money or physical things or pasttimes. I didn't say there was. Materialism is a philosophy or culture of placing material things at the highest rank of importance and possibly even denying any other important things. American society is _not_ purely materialistic. For example, the importance of liberty in American society is non-materialistic. Nevertheless, my experience of the Bay Area/Silicon Valley is of an extreme of Materialism.

      3) Toronto is also home to some of the largest refugee communities in the world and is incredibly diverse as a result. I'm not going to claim that Toronto is more or less harmonious/integrated than the area in California. What I _am_ saying is that there is a notable hypocrisy of an outwardly-seeming open, inclusive culture that tolerates some pretty extreme ghettoization. (White) people there seem very proud of their moral relativism, tolerance of diversity, etc. and yet that pride seems to ignore the social responsibility for some deep race-related problems. They may have their immediate causes based in bad government. But the root cause is clear to outsiders (including many of those who are refugees there, that I have spoken with): racism.

      4) Moral bankruptcy? An environment of distrust, extreme materialism, and hypocrisy. But again, that wasn't my point. My point was that when you live there, the culture is so powerful that, for me at least, it became my culture even though I was fighting it. I only really realized how much it had effected me when I moved away. Moving back again, I was there for mercifully short periods of time and did not feel as deeply effected. I have discussed this effect with other outsiders and they have experienced similar things. Not only is the area morally bankrupt (which is different than saying any individual is so), but it is pervasive and persuasive.

      I am financially successful. I have a very nice house, I have a successful business and I am not bitter about other people's success. I'm not (quite) a millionaire, but I'm in the top five percent of income earners in Canada, and probably top 1% in my city. However, my success is not solely based on pursuing material aspirations. I also try very hard to "do good" for it's own sake. I have been very poor (to the point of living on state assistance) and I have also been close to financial bankruptcy twice in my life. I _don't_ believe that my current success is solely due to my own hard work. There is a very good portion of luck and other good people thrown into the mix. I can clearly identify several points in the development of my career when the only reason I succeeded is because I made what seemed an arbitrary choice that happened to be "correct".

      Doesn't suck to be me :-)

    17. Re:In a word, YES! by david_thornley · · Score: 1

      True, some number of people will be mugged, no matter what we do. However, we can change the amount and severity of muggings in some ways.

      People will tend to act up to or down to expectations, as shown in how they're treated, rewarded, or punished. Treat people like they're dishonest, and they will become more dishonest. Treat people like they're honest, and you'll get more honesty out of them. (This also sets yourself up to be taken advantage of by those who are still dishonest, of course, so you need a balance).

      In the case of muggers, consider what happens to a convicted mugger. With a criminal conviction, it's much harder for him to get an honest job; further, being caught mugging again is not likely to make his life much worse. The US does not seem to be big on recognizing rehabilitation, although it happens (most violent crime is from young men, which means most of them grow out of being, essentially, violent criminals).

      As far as defending oneself from an attack goes, it depends on the nature of the attack. Some attackers are out to inflict injury and harm, and some just want your valuables. If you quietly hand over your valuables, there's an excellent chance that the attacker will leave without hurting you further. Many teachers of self-defense will tell you to do just that. If you get into a fight over your wallet, chances are your assailant is a better fighter than you are, and more prepared to inflict injury, and it's likely that you will lose your wallet and be seriously injured. If your assailant thinks you might be carrying a gun, that assailant is likely to start with the violence and only grab the money when you're clearly disarmed or incapacitated. There are no obvious right or wrong answers here. Even if the intent of the attack is to injure (rape, for example), defending oneself can lead to being injured a lot more.

      An issue with the glorification of the individual, as opposed to the debasement, is that it will lead to more competition (which may be very good) and likely more violence (which we agree is bad). People who are likely to defend themselves when attacked will get injured worse in the attacks that do happen. Even if competent, they make crime more dangerous for the rest of society. A less individualist society that discourages resistance and helps the victim (so resisting the crime isn't as attractive) is likely to be more peaceful on the whole.

      --
      "When you have eliminated the unacceptable, whatever is left, however improbable, must be the truthiness" - Holmes
    18. Re:In a word, YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope, hasn't changed a bit. East Palo Alto is still the other side of the highway where we hide all the black people.

    19. Re:In a word, YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's no need to apologize to assholes. Didn't the Bay Area teach you anything?

  43. Not a Luddite screed by Josh+Coalson · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's not just corporate greed; consumer greed fuels the race to the bottom of the price curve. Users apparently have no problem "paying" for a service with their and others' privacy or other intangibles as long as the service is free-as-in-beer. The whole vendor-customer structure has been inverted; Facebook's and Google's etc. users who might have been paying customers in a sane economy pay nothing so are now the product. Now half the "innovation" that happens in the valley is just new ways to get people's attention and sell them out to advertisers, and the more obvious a patent is, the more it's worth.

    I wonder if there could ever be a sane market again where you paid what a phone costs and got secure communication without being tracked, or paid for email with built in PGP and avoided getting spammed and having your email property of and stored by your provider forever, paid for a social networking service without having your life exposed or your face secretly scanned and sold to the government. I think those times are gone.

    1. Re:Not a Luddite screed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i would gladly pay for any of the latter services you mentioned.

  44. NoScript solves all by evanh · · Score: 1

    Of course, fixing the broken websites would be helpful too.

  45. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by farble1670 · · Score: 1

    there are parts of san jose that are nearly ghost towns. acre after acre of FOR LEASE office / manufacturing buildings. but you are right, they keep building new stuff. i guess because no company wants to move into a depressing 1970's office.

  46. 'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by Omnifarious · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's an airy concept devoid of any real meaning. It's has the flimsiest of justifications for its existence and every time I hear it I want to hit someone. It's a high-minded sounding renaming of whatever particular pet grievance the current user of the term has in mind at the moment. It's an attempt to avoid any real debate over the merits of the grievance by presenting a piece of the picture and appealing to someone's sense of fairness. It's dishonest, deceitful and doesn't belong in polite conversation. It's the race-baiting of the left.

    Otherwise, I completely agree with you. Silicon Valley is toxic and morally bankrupt. Just as bad in its way as Wall Street.

    The problem, as I see it, is the profit motive. Which is not exactly a problem precisely. It's when the profit becomes the goal instead of the reward.

    When you structure a business, you have to structure it so it makes financial sense, so it can support itself, so it can make money. Structuring it to extract the maximum possible value out of the system is counter-productive. With the right kinds of locks and business tricks you can keep anybody else from getting into your value stream at all. Microsoft is the king of this. Unfortunately this behavior is long-term toxic to the business ecosystem. And it's long-term toxic to the fabric of society.

    No, you should have a goal in your business that has nothing to do with money. The goal you have is the value you provide. Then think about how to get enough money out of the system to achieve that goal grow modestly and make you and your employees reasonably well-off. Your profit is your reward for doing something people value. It's not the goal.

    Of course, there are puzzles like Facebook. Facebook has never been profitable. They're greedy because they have no idea how to extract value. So any means is considered fair game because they're hungry. Which is a different (but related) kind of attitude problem.

    To me, the evil of Facebook is one of centralization. Whenever you have that kind of centralization you will get something that uses its control to the detriment of everybody else. It might not happen right away (aka Google), but it will inevitably happen. Centralization is a bug, never a feature.

    1. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by greg_barton · · Score: 0

      So you think corporations ar evil?

    2. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The term "Social Justice" is given a full real meaning in the works of Carl Marx. The meaning of the term is a compressed version of the idea behind
      forced distribution of money earned by the individual to the benefit of the society as a whole. As anything that concerns the term "Social"
      the assumption behind it is the existance of one single "Socium" and one single minded "public good". The later does not exist in most cases at all.
      We are just too "individualists" for that. Having one mind and one set of dreams and goals each , etc...

      The "profit motive" is not a problem, it is what drives human innovation and makes our lives easier year after year. Earning money is a virtue. Money that people
      pay for your service or product is exactly what you worth for society. Having argued that there is no single-minded "society" or "social fabric" there can be no
      honest business that can actually hurt it. Not even facebook.
      Facebook is a communication software, with some ads. Google is a search software with some ads. That is all it is.

    3. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I think public corporations inherently devolve into things that seek money and profit above all else. Their very structure almost demands it. I think ones with strong initial leadership that stays in control of the corporation can take a lot longer to do this. But I think the pull is irresistible.

    4. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by Omnifarious · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Money that people pay for your service or product is exactly what you worth for society.

      I disagree. Money has coercive properties. They are not as obvious as brute physical force, but they are there all the same. For example, people need to buy food to live. Convince them that somehow they aren't trapped and trap them in a cycle where they have to give you all their money just to get enough food to survive, and nearly everybody will perform whatever work you require in exchange for it. They will give you any amount of money if you have all the food.

      There are numerous other ways in which money can coerce people into doing things that aren't generally productive or helpful. I think it's very easy for very money focused economies to fall into local maxima from which they cannot escape because the people who have the most money are able to use the coercive power of money to erect barriers that prevent the system from leaving the local maxima.

      What you are repeating is standard libertarian dogma. And while I'm very sympathetic to the libertarian position, I think this is one blindspot in libertarian philosophy.

    5. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by under_score · · Score: 0

      Please mod parent up!!!

      (and I wish that I had said it!!!)

    6. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      I borrowed the idea from someone else. Just like Steve Jobs. ;-)

    7. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by vdorie · · Score: 1

      Sorry Holmes, but "social justice" does have some meaning. Maybe as it is bandied about now it has no bite, but the term has roots in Catholic, specifically Jesuit tradition. Not that I remember my indoctrination days all that well, but quick perusal of Wikipedia associates it with "life and dignity of the human person", and "preferential option for the poor and vulnerable".

      Ethicists long ago figured out how to make decisions that respect such high-minded and abstract principles, so long as you admit that there are tradeoffs involved. You can even imagine a society that operates with those as some of its core values, although that might be bordering on crazy-talk.

    8. Re:'Social Justice' is a ridiculous concept by rwv · · Score: 1

      To me, the evil of Facebook is one of centralization. .... Centralization is a bug, never a feature.

      A hurricane hit the eastern coast of the United States yesterday. News and government made pervasive use of Twitter and Facebook to keep people informed of critical information such as school and transit system cancellations. I found myself wondering briefly why they would use these Free, but Externally controlled mechanisms. The answer is blindingly simple... these Free systems are much cheaper than homegrown solutions of communication to a vast number of people. Do they reach everybody? No. Of course not. But the goal of communication is rarely to reach everybody. They message do, however, reach people who seek out this information.

      So, generally, I agree that centralization is bad. But there are distinct examples where centralization is beneficial and critical.

  47. So many things wrong with this post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are so many things wrong with this post from an ethical perspective I almost don't know where to begin. Anyone who has studied ethics could point out these flaws, but I'm just going to use a few phrases and words.

    Social Justice - one of the worst terms ever coined. Every person who attempts to define social justice has a different definition. Who's definition is correct? How do you correct for it? there is no such thing as social justice because it's entirely subjective; what you define as social justice another may see as social inequality. If you don't like the way something is done, or it goes against your moral beliefs, get it codified into law through the political process and make it LEGAL justice.

    "the well being of, I was going to say their customers or users, but I'll say 'people' in general" - BS. You're talking about companies. Take an ethics class or a business law class; a company's only obligations is to it's shareholders except when stated otherwise at the time of it's founding, ie it's a socially concious company from the get-go. If you don't like that, don't buy a company's product or work through the political process to change the law to have your beliefs incorporated as rules for the company to follow.

    Capitalism is not perfect, but it's the best system we have and it's better than anything anyone has tried before or since; socialism quickly devolves into welfare programs that are economically unsustainable, fascism/corporatism is rife with croneyism and quickly falls to dictatorship, and communism inherently over-produces unnecessary goods and underproduces necessary goods, leading to overall dissastisfaction of the populace as well as eventually devolving into dictatorship and corruption. Capitalism at least directs goods and resources to those who want them, and the beauty of capitalism is the simple goal of companies: to maximize profits. While I'm not a "greed is good" Gordon Gecko capitalist, I do believe that with a simple goal of all companies, to seek and maximize profits, it is far easier for a government to manipulate those companies through affecting their profits towards a common good. For example, if you don't like the privacy concerns brought up by Facebook, then get yourself elected to Congress, or start a PAC and get the word out, and get legislation enacted that fines the hell out of companies like Facebook for not following a certain privacy standard. Watch their behavior change.

    I know in reality that's a lot easier said than done, but history is literred with the corpses of failed states run by people trying to implement their ideals of "social justice".

  48. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by AdamWill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you read the article, it's not about that at all. It's about _new_ Silicon Valley: the startup culture. This is massively different to the culture that existed when Intel, Dell, IBM, HP and TI were founded.

    Those companies are all fairly traditional companies in organization and goals. They were typical old-school American corporate structures built to achieve modern results. HP wasn't crowdfunded, hyped into a bubble and then pushed into an IPO to make the founders and a couple of venture capitalists into multi-millionaires. It was a long-term endeavour built around providing serious engineering for serious ends. It wasn't a get-rich-quick scheme.

    This article is more about the culture of quick-hit startups in Silicon Valley these days, which are built more around buzz, hype and marketing vapidity than they are around serious engineering or any kind of long-term planning. It's questioning the culture of founding a company around a cute idea with the aim of selling out in two years to become a millionaire. That is not what Hewlett and Packard were about. They built a company around engineering on the basis of a belief that they could provide a benefit over the long term.

    If anything I'd say the weakness of the article lies in its evidence, which isn't really sufficient. It has one useful and accurate case study - Uber - but it really needs more than that to talk about any kind of trend. I rather think, though, that if the author had tried, he could have come up with lots of other examples. Uber was a great case study, though. It's 'innovative' and 'disruptive'...where you read 'disruptive' to mean 'doesn't see the point in complying with regulations meant to ensure public safety'. There's a _reason_ taxi services are strongly licensed and regulated virtually the world over (and you probably wouldn't feel great taking a cab in a place where they aren't).

  49. Is Betteridge's law of headlines correct? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think my subject line says it all. We need to make a headline out of that.

  50. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think main commenter was looking for ways to change things rather throwing the whole system out. Absurd to think at this time that anything other than our quasi-capitalism is the best course of action.

    You also seemed to miss the point about business ethics and whether tech. leaders should exercise more social consciousness rather than worship the almighty dollar, and the latest quarters earnings. I mean, the Corp's at large are sitting on $5 Trillion in the bank. It becomes a zero sum game in the end and boils down to the role they play in society. For better or worse.

  51. reject by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Liberal think stink. Capitalism in a free society is the most successful system in the history of the world. Is it perfect? No, but it's a hell of a lot better than anything else that has EVER been done. Nobody is forcing you to buy a smartphone, or use Google or Facebook, or buy any product from any company (until Obamacare passed), or any service from any corporate giant. People buy things because they want them, and companies succeed because of it. If companies don't make things people want or need, then the company fails. That is the way of things. If you don't like something, vote with your wallet.

  52. Corporations are profit motivated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Period.
    - Don't ever think a corporation does anything directly to benefit their customers.
    - Don't ever think a corporation does anything directly to benefit their internal employees.
    - Don't ever think a corporation does anything directly to benefit the "public"

    For corporations, everything is done in the name of profit. If it happens to benefit other parties, that's a side effect, not the intention. In most cases, it has to benefit other parties to make a profit, but by no means is original intention. The original intention is profit.

    AC states this as a fairly generalized statement. There are exceptions - corporations who fall outside this stereotype, private companies who are not necessarily interested in a profit, non-profits, etc. However, for most cases, don't delude yourself into thinking there was ever any true intention other than profit.

    1. Re:Corporations are profit motivated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unlike the government, companies cannot force people to hand over money. Consequently, they have to be willing to trade something of value to the customer in return for that money. Customers are free to choose whether they want to buy the product or not, and will only do so if they believe that they will be better off with product X than their money. If a company is profitable, this means that a lot of people think they are better off buying the company's products.

      Where's the scandal here?

  53. Evil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't mama warned us technology is evil??

  54. Evil Organic Farmers by retroworks · · Score: 1

    They started in the Nile River Valley. We should have killed them before they evolved into other rich people.

    --
    Gently reply
  55. All you need to know by Galactic+Dominator · · Score: 1

    Earlier Silicon Valley tweeted:

    Duh, WINNING

    --
    brandelf -t FreeBSD /brain
  56. Check your premises by Gothmolly · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you think we live in a capitalist society, think again.

    --
    I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
    1. Re:Check your premises by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      okay, i still think we do. now what?

    2. Re:Check your premises by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      The media doesn't talk much about "mixed markets."

      As a consequence, the more hyperbolic elements in our political discourse ping pong between "zomg this is socialism/communism/fascism" and "this means we must only have laissez faire capitalism."

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
  57. Once again... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is not the people or the location.

    the problem is greed. excessive greed ruins EVERYTHING!
    And we keep imagining it doesn't.

  58. We need +1 Sarcastic!! by wannabgeek · · Score: 0

    Seriously, we need +1 Sarcastic! Otherwise, some moron mods may downmod some very insightful comments because they don't get the sarcasm.

    --
    I'm much more funny, interesting and insightful than the moderators think
  59. Socialism Worked in Star Trek by MakyoDetector · · Score: 1

    It can work for us, too... we just have to prevent J. J. Abrams from rebooting us back to capitalism.

    --
    Just this infinitely recurring zero floats into view.
  60. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "Capitalism may have it's flaws, but it is better than any previously tried system over the last 6,000 years of recorded history. "
    I have noticed that many people who praise capitalism is often not realising they are praising a system that arent anymore. Capitalism today is not the capitalism you saw 20-40 years ago, when the economy flourished. Everything was more regulated back then. The industry was regulated, the banks where regulated(take the glass stegal act.) Unions was much stronger. Income inequality was waaaay smaller, jobs wasnt outsourced to cheap 3rd world countries where people want to work for pennies. Companies wasnt as focused on profit maximizing, low wage jobs didnt pay soo low that people still had to ask for food stamps, or lived inside tents in the woods because their paycheck was soo small they couldnt pay rent(hello walmart: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/19/walmart-warehouse-workers_n_1989121.html )

    Capitalism today is failing bigtime. Cooperation turn in record profit numbers yet keep firing people and outsource the jobs to low wage countries. CEO paychecks explode while the lower and middle incomeclass becomes poorer. Loopholes are being used by everyone to prevent paying taxes, that funds schools, healthcare, fire and policedepartments and more. Right now our capitalistic system is soo focused on how to maximize their short term profit, that they dont realize(or dont care) what they are doing to the system in the long run.
    Take Apple. If there was no big consumerbase in the west who would buy their phones? Not their chinese workers because they dont get paid near enough to afford such a phone. Like soo many other big companies Apple want to sell to a rich consumerbase that we have in the west, but they dont want to pay to have such a consumerbase. They expect other companies to make sure we have jobs that pays us enough to afford a iphone, so they can skip that important step and pay poor chinese people to produce their stuff instead. Problem today is that the outsourcing of productionjobs have skyrocketed. Everyone want to sell to the western consumerbase, but noone want to pay that consumerbase enough to be able to consume. They all expect others to lift that burden, and that is not happening atm.

    So before you praise capitalism think about what kind of capitalistic system you are praising. Is it the capitalistic system of today that outsource productionjobs, and find tax loopholes, or is it the capitalistic system of yesterday.

  61. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you dont have to be republican to vote for your corporate overlords

    Correct. As long as you are not limiting yourself by flagging yourself "right-wing" or "left-wing" along with some misguided pride for "your side" and contempt & ridicule for "the other side", people should be aware that both sides service mostly our corporate overlords, and mostly just pay lip service to us, the populace.

    They might not succeed, except that our attention and need to hate 'somebody' will be directed by the hot-button topics which they drum up (and which they probably don't give the shortest flying fuck about).

  62. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can be a capitalist without being a terrible human being.

  63. Follow the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "if the author had tried, he could have come up with lots of other examples."
    Just follow the trail of Silicon Valley "serial entrepreneurs" from 1990 forward.
    "Traditional models of valuation no longer apply".

  64. God problems? Solve them with violence! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We should definitely solve it with violence by petitioning the government to point the guns at today's "bad people".

    I myself simply don't use what isn't right for me which means I don't have Facebook or Google accounts. As a result I may not know my second cousin's cat is sick today thanks to Facebook and can't post comments on YouTube videos but this is really the extent of my problems.

    Firefox plugins of choice: FlashBlock, Adblock Plus, Ghostery, NoScript.

  65. Stop whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try to stay focused here. Self-driving cars would allow my 80-year-old mother the freedom to get out of her apartment and make more "meaningful connections between people". And people keep raving about the "beauty and craftsmanship" of Apple's products. You seem to be objecting to everything, even the things you claim you like.

    Everything has a good side and a bad side. Even your (vaguely) proposed "social justice" idea will have negative consequences. OK, you don't like Silicon Valley, and OK, some of the things they've done haven't been all that great. But if people's lives weren't generally improved by these products, they wouldn't buy them. People aren't that stupid.

  66. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 4, Informative
    There is room for a criticism of capitalism that do not deny that it helped fund a lot of innovation. We all know the Tesla vs. Edison fight and we all know that nothing has been done to correct these mistakes.

    This is not because this system has allowed great things that it is exempt from any criticism or that alternatives can not exist. Half of the achievements of the 20th century was publicly funded, let's not forget about that. Corporation are not the only way to make things happen.

    Look at Bletchley park, look at the NASA. Look at the Bell Labs, which are an hybrid entity of public obligations and private funds and which invented Unix, C, and radioastronomy amongst other things.

    Great things can be done through capitalism, free entrepreneuship and competitions, but let's not assume that this is the only way.

    By the way, let's review the invention that you attribute to corporations :
    • Transistor : The wikipedia page on the history of the transistor proposes two first independent inventors, both working at public labs. The modern version of the transistor is attributed to the Bell Labs (which is not really a private entity : their work was public, and funded by private funds coming from a monopole negociated with the US government)
    • Microprocessors : The NASA seems to be attributed the creation of the first "microprocessor" : Apollo Guidance Computer
    • Integrated circuits : the first person to propose that worked in a public lab, the first to create a working prototype is disputable. Could be the Bell Labs (again)

    So be careful with the examples you choose and realize that the computer revolution started as a governmental effort to crack German code, continued in the US as a Navy project, was given its best tools by the Bell Labs, an entity whose structure would make most business angels cringe and that software development is now driven in big part by a bunch of OSS idealists that often work on it for free.

    Internet itself started as a university and military project. It was heavily funded by the government (Hello, M.Gore) before corporations could understand the interest of this thing. Afterwards, they tried very hard to break and control it, unsuccessfully. (Look at AOL, look at what MSN was supposed to be at first)

    I don't deny that capitalism or even corporatism can drive innovation, but if you want examples, computer science is not the best place to get them. The feeling I get is that groundbreaking innovations are usually publicly funded while incremental innovations are made by corporations.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  67. It's not just Silicon Valley by autocannon · · Score: 1

    The author needs to get out of his narrow mindset. What he's describing is applicable to every corporation in the U.S. (probably the rest of the world too, but since I haven't been there I won't drag them in) Technology, specifically PCs and all the potential tech and software tied to them is no longer being run by guys who grew up the companies from their mom's garages. Those people, and those idealogies are gone. They've been replaced by generic CEOs who demand huge salaries without even knowing the specifics of the new industry they moved to. They're controlled by wealthy stockholders who don't care about anything other than their ROI.

    Every corporation is evil. The one I work for, which had the largest profit margins ever last year (hint it's in the billions) still cited the poor economy and some other woe is me bullshit to justify cutting every employee offered benefit. That includes vacation time caps, accrual rates, health insurance premiums, health insurance coverages, losing holidays, and a few other things all on top of royally fucking every employee over with raises that were in the 1-2% range for employees who were good. Mediocre to bad employees got nothing. (god forbid we get rid of the bad ones..right)

    Anyways, so that's how shitty my large corp is. Safe to say I dislike my employer. I do like what I do though and haven't found a better landing spot yet that isn't a big corp. What shocked me more is that everything I just laid out that my company did to us, the company across the street did to their employees too. Corporations have got employees by the balls and they know it. This is why unions existed. This is why unions will start to come back.

  68. Recent /. Poll by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

    Social media topped the list when /.ers were asked What tech would you un-invent?

    I guess all the people complaining about the article forgot to vote in that particular poll.

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  69. Re:Dude. It's your fault by Firehed · · Score: 2

    I think the heart of it stems from the fact that even non-users are affected by this kind of thing - at least unless they go massively out of their way to avoid it. Look at the opposition and non-adoption of the DNT header, to actively* express that you do not want to be tracked by these companies. They just don't care about the human side of things if there's money to be made.

    But at the same time, it's like the banking crisis. In theory, a single business going under should only hurt its direct customers. There's going to be some ripple effect in there, but what we see today is far beyond what anyone would have expected. There's now so much interdependency between these companies that one doing something stupid affects half the world.

    However I don't blame SV for this. It's just a lot more prominent because there's so much (largely stupid and pointless) tech coming out of here. Give it a couple years now that we're no longer throwing $2m at a random college kid with no business model and aspirations of ten million users and you'll see it die off quite a bit (VCs are, it seems, finally looking at the business side of things again before investing). It was happening in NY and Boston too, just not nearly to the same degree since those investors weren't all high on recent tech IPOs.

    * Yes, fuck you IE10 for not understanding the concept of "actively". Even when you're using new tech, you somehow manage to still screw it up for everyone.

    --
    How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
  70. Here's the deal: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To those who want to live in small romantic communities in the woods where everyone knows each other and says hello on every possible occasion: move to a small romantic community in the woods where everyone knows each other and says hello on every possible occasion.

    To those who don't want that: don't move there.

    Society doesn't need to fix anything. People need to take action to live the life they want to live. There ARE options out there. Stop the whining and vote with your feet. Shape your own life, don't try to shape that of others.

  71. Capitalism=good, Deregulation=bad by FridayBob · · Score: 1

    The problem in Silicon Valley is the same as everywhere else: unregulated capitalism coupled with political corruption that leads to further deregulation and further corruption. We seem to be stuck in a downwards spiral. All of the negative aspects mentioned -- erosion of privacy, of consumer rights, etc. -- may seem to result from new technologies, but the latter has been a double-edged sword throughout history. The only reason our rights are currently being trampled on is because those new technologies and businesses are not being regulated properly.

    The problem is that, contrary to what corporations and many politicians would have us believe, corporations are by definition incapable of regulating themselves, because their only legal responsibility is to make a profit for their shareholders. If they have any responsibility to do otherwise, it is because of the laws applied to them by the state. The state, however, must always remain vigilant, for just as psychopaths cannot be taught that there is an intrinsic value in treating other people with respect, corporations are always seeking to find and/or create loopholes and do away with any and all regulations that would stand between them and their profits.

    How to fix the problem? Start by getting money out of politics. Eventually, though, I think an end to publicly owned companies should be considered. The problem is that when corporations break the law and get caught, rarely is anyone held responsible and sent to prison; the organization just ends up paying a fine. But, if the fine is only a fraction of what it was worth for them to break the law in the first place, it does not act as a deterrent. They continue to operate as though many laws do not apply to them and let their legal departments take care of the details. Obviously, society cannot tolerate this situation indefinitely. If nothing is done, the way things are going now we will eventually be left with no freedoms, no rights, no justice, no democracy -- only a police state in which the masses are required to toil and consume for the benefit of a plutocratic elite... perhaps lead by someone like Mittroford Romnifeld the Great.

  72. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Cmon... admit it... you are really just aright winger posting ad a dumb left winger... nobody could be advocating for the left while portraying such a caricature of a left winger.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  73. Sillicon Valley? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Replace it with "Wall Street" and I'd agree.

    1. Re:Sillicon Valley? by runeghost · · Score: 1

      Heck, replace it with "American-style capitalism".

  74. Don't confuse "users" with "customers" by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

    Silicon Valley in its current incarnation is evidence of a VERY capitalist society. So is selling people pet rocks. Nothing morally wrong with either as long as the customer understands what they're getting.

    But, in the case of the current "products" coming out of Silicon Valley, don't confuse "users" with "customers." And, you betcha, Facebook's and Google's customers know what they are buying and are quite happy to pay the price. It's just that the customers aren't the users.

    Cheers,
    Dave

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  75. free services ... scam your member ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    what do you expect from "free" services ???

  76. In a word - yes by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 2
    It's a defective culture of sociopathy where every company sees both its customers and its employees as nothing but marks to be lied to exploited and shaken down for as much financial gain as possible.

    It's not a ding on SV, it's a report from the trenches in Sunnyvale and Mountain View. . This is how it is. No one trusts anyone and no one is trustworthy either. There is zero comroderie that doesn't blow over with the first sign of shifting political winds. IT's one of the most disgusting atmospheres imaginable.

    A few things I learned working here : corporations are like Darwinistic experiments in evolving and promoting sociopaths.
    I will never hire anyone who has been in a position of management with a corporation for years.
    I have no interest in incubators, VC or any of the other trappings of SV which are supposedly dedicated to helping entrepreneurs. Thanks. See ya.

    I will think long and hard about hiring anyone who has been an engineer in a large corporation for a prolonged period of time. Long and hard. Sorry.

    For having this much money, SV is basically a long series of yesteryear strip malls with very very very expensive houses most of which were built in the 50s and go for , oh, about 5-8 times their value elsewhere in the country, which is to say their actual worth.

  77. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can't, because profit is evil.

  78. Life without Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I came across thisntoday, you may want to visit: http://www.lifewithoutcapitalism.org

    Or read http://www.amazon.com/Free-Market-Revolution-Rands-Government/dp/0230341691/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1351562769&sr=1-1&keywords=free+market+revolution

  79. Re:Huh? He is seeing writing on wall by bricko · · Score: 0

    Seems this Obamanaut is seeing the election writing on the wall, and his life of 'social jistice' is coming to rapid end. Hopefully.

  80. Well said by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1

    The thing is, if you decide that you're going to demand a better quality of life, they'll just import labor . The bounty of the haves does indeed depend on the desperation of the have nots.

    They know how to leverage those have-nots against you, specifically, those have nots want your job and will work 14 hours a day if you give it to them.

    Then in 6 -10 years time they'll return to homeland exchange-rate adjusted multi-millionaires.

    For DECADES now workers have raised their productivity year over year and now it's into the stratosphere relative to the 80s and what have they seen for their labor? Declining living standards. .

    The only way anything is going to change is if people who want that change can make a competitive statement in the marketplace . IT's also going to take governmental action, as it always does. Programmers fancy themselves too smart and fast moving for slow government to do them any good but the fact is we have an even semi-tolerable society b/c of progressive legislation passed throughout the decades. You have to prevail upon your Congressmen for stuff like fair pay for women, maternity leave, limit to working hours, health benefits, paid vacations and personal time, child care, all the fairness and quality of life shit that Americans totally lack compared to say Germany whose fantastic goods we can't stop yearning for and whose progressive workplace policies and productivity is second to none...

  81. As opposed to all the other industries? by gelfling · · Score: 2

    Products and services are not forces of moral good. Moral good is a force for moral good. And as long as we're bashing capitalism, all those communist countries didn't for one second consider the well being of their captive populations. Did you know for example that there is not a single communist/socialist country which ever permitted trade unions?

    1. Re:As opposed to all the other industries? by Mr.+Lwanga · · Score: 1

      No, but I know one that sure helps out Apple and Walmarts bottom line.

  82. Agreed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've worked in Silicon Valley and yes, it is morally bankrupt. Or perhaps a better way to look at it is this..

    As more and more money has been flowing into and circling around IT and Silicon Valley, so too have the morals been abandoned.

    But I'm not convinced that the problem infects engineers like it does managers.

  83. Schwartau misses point. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem Napolitano and the spooks have is not that there are is a lack of technologists to solve problems, it's that these organizations can't take compliant, groupish, middling people and train them effectively to solve new problems. They don't need the problem solved.

    The modern office, especially in huge orgs like govt, has essentially metastasized into a malignant political blender that is incapable of producing anything new. They do not make or create, they review and approve things that reinforce their bloated departments.

    Geeks are screened out because we do not support organizations, we are individualistic problem solvers. The corporate mentality is that no problem is bigger than a political problem, and so they can live with getting 0wned three ways from Sunday so long as nobody disrupts their fantasy of local cohesion.

    I say screw'em. Western companies getting 0wned doesn't affect whether geeks can make a living.

  84. This is how tarnished the Communist brand is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It sounds like Soulskill has been hanging with the Occupy crowd. I've come to recognize this particular turn of phrase, and thought pattern:

    Over time, I've come to consider that this situation is irremediable, given our current capitalist system and all its inequalities. To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice and rethinking how we live and work and relate to each other.

    You hear this all the time from the Occupy crowd. "Capitalism is broken", but they don't offer their solution in the familiar "revolution", or "dictatarship of the proletariat", and they are trained, either deliberately or by osmosis, not to use shopworn terms like "dialectic", "workers of the world", or any of the other familiear 20th century phrases. You don't have to scratch the surface very hard though. It's RED underneath, EVERY TIME!.

    This just speaks to the issue of how tarnished the communist brand is, and I say that with no irony. Communism is just capitalism, with a new set of capitalists who are far more exploitive and dangerous than the previous ones. Why compete with the incumbents on quality when you can use rage and slick marketing? When the USSR fell apart, what emerged? Owners of state enterprises who wasted no time purchasing megayachts.

    At least Soulskill didn't trot out the old "American capitalism cannot be reformed", meme, but he came damn close. This one is particularly galling because not only can it be reformed without trashing the Constitution, it's happened twice under a POTUS named Roosevelt!

    The first time, Progressivism which has now been distorted into something else entirely. The 2nd time, the New Deal which was held in check by the strength of our Constitution while in other nations the lack of such a document and a strong Republican tradition allowed them to slip into leftist totalitarianism.

    Of course, the public union teachers that encouraged you to occupy probably didn't do a very good job teaching you both sides of the Roosevelt administrations. It probably isn't even an evil plan. They're just that stupid. Very few people actually benefit when a country goes off the far end of the political spectrum. Very few people get to be the CEOs of military-industrial corporations under fascism or the owners of dachas under communism.

    Don't let that stop you though. No, they would never dispose of an intellectual like you once they're done. No. They love to keep the free-thinking revolutionaries around once they've obtained power /sarc on that last paragraph.

  85. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bell Labs (which is not really a private entity

    If you are just going to make shit up to fit your thesis... really why bother. Bell Labs was very much a private entity, so was PARC, and so was HP was chrissakes. There was fundamental economic differences in the US during the peak of the cold war that made these types of ventures very much sensible to corporate America at the time.

    and that software development is now driven in big part by a bunch of OSS idealists that often work on it for free.

    LOL. Very few people are working on anything of merit "for free". You are a naive idiot. Sorry.

  86. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by lobos · · Score: 1

    We all know the Tesla vs. Edison fight and we all know that nothing has been done to correct these mistakes.

    I'm actually not familiar with this. I'll have to read up on it but would you mind giving a brief recap of what happened, especially in relation to the topic of this discussion?

  87. Duh by andrew2325 · · Score: 0

    Well, 90% of what I see here denies the existence of God. That should hit the nail on the head, but if that isn't enough for you, it's cold hard fact that their morals are crumbling by the legislation that is being passed over there, like making it illegal for a personal whom has coined themselves "gay" to go to a locally run sexual rehabilitation center, since it's illegal to open one there. It should also be completely obvious by the number of allegations and proven allegations that they often use slave labor over seas, and the crime rate. Duh.

  88. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by swillden · · Score: 1

    In short, Edison and Tesla were working on the same things, but Tesla was generally smarter and had better ideas. Edison was better at business and showmanship, though, and became hugely wealthy while Tesla died in poverty having accomplished much less than Edison, even though he was a better inventor, scientist and engineer.

    Some people think the story shows a flaw in the system. I think it shows a flaw in Tesla. If he wasn't good at the business side, he should have hired someone who was. Kinda like Woz and Jobs (far from a perfect parallel, but you get the idea).

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  89. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

    It's questioning the culture of founding a company around a cute idea with the aim of selling out in two years to become a millionaire. That is not what Hewlett and Packard were about.

    No, but it's how HP, Dell, and IBM continue to grow.
    Yes, they do their own R&D, but acquisitions are a quicker way to acquire new technology.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
  90. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The problem is, we've gotten into the mindset that "capitalism" and "business" are the same, just like "socialist" and "communist".

    Capitalism is a means to build a business by raising and applying capital. Traditionally, capital goods would be things like machinery to produce the product and buildings to house them in.

    That model only became dominant with the rise of the Machine Age. You didn't see people incorporating or making an IPO to set up as a miller, weaver or blacksmith, and traders typically did their fund-raising on a per-venture basis.

    Likewise, the ideal business in Silicon Valley isn't one that requires a lot of capital equipment. It's one where stereotypically, some visionary has a dream, gets a couple of programmers to hack it into the Next Big Thing, raises venture capital to scale it up, and gets bought out, rinse and repeat. Everything is very transient with the whole idea being get rich quick and bail. Extra points for crowd-sourcing and cloud-hosting it so that you don't even have to invest in offices or equipment.

    Traditional capitalists would be aghast. They made their fortunes on ongoing businesses where the shares more or less represented tangible goods, not on bright-flash-and-quick-fade.

  91. wHATEV by flyerbri · · Score: 0

    Morally bankrupt, that's taking it a bit far..

    If you haven't seen this video on Youtube (Real time 3d rendered Einstein):
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JtJcp7O6o1o

    Much of what we see on tv is rendered. To be concise: It's FABRICATED... To keep us.. The consumer.. Sedated... What from? Who knows..

    Take a game engine (CryEngine) to render realistic looking graphics, capture sound samples and use basic digital signal processes to replicate human speech. Then *wham* you can make dynamic phone calls sounding like your mom or ex girlfriend. Or you can watch the 'Presidential debate' not knowing it's all rendered. And then you can debate with your 'friends' about it later... The real question becomes.. Does anyone really know we're at war? Terminator/Matrix style?

    Now off topic - the bunny suit the kid wore in the movie 'The Christmas Story". Last week, I saw a commercial on tv that was selling full size bunny suits, without the ears, They call them 'Onesies'... another commercial, this week, was for flip flop (shoes) with three extra ties that cleaned lint from your toes while you walked...

    Has anyone heard of the movie Idiocracy?

    So back on topic - the moral bankruptcy of Silicon Valley.

    Think about it like this... We've had an indelicate 'balance' with our respect of history, robots, artificial intelligence, science and technology as a whole over the years.

    Wouldn't you agree it's just because of a fundamental misunderstanding of perspective?

    Take for instance my perspective on this world.

    Do you realize my unique perspective starts OFF with a ribozyme that is 300 nucleotides long, and the chances of that ribozyme assembling are then 4^300, a number so large that it could not possibly happen by chance even once in 13 billion years, the age of the universe. Now this is a stepping stone to DNA, which is FAR more complex.... Which begs a few simple questions:

    How can anyone possibly know how old the universe is? I trust they do, and have derived my own conclusions on how they came to the answers they have...

    Now what's silicon valley REALLY saying to us? Wake up, peeps, we're in a time loop, there's more than enough information out there in 'public media' (that intelligence services have gone to GREAT lengths to expose us to) which details time relationship with space and the non linear models of cause and effect. Heck, they've even said flat out we're in a Matrix, now how can you - the casual reader, take everything you've read and experience and draw the same conclusion yourselves?

    That's up to you. But there's one simple truth. It's not that Silicon Valley is morally bankrupt. It's just that the 'wheels' of change, whether it's artificial intelligence (which we all are anyways), robotics, clones, foreign countries, off planet visitors, cyborgs, humans, or dogmen (in a nod to Stargate).... We're all in this together.

    This isnt information warfare... This is life, demonstrating that it's original inception may have been something as simple as a multidimensional spark that just didnt want to fizzle out when it was told to. And Kaboom... you get a game named Kaboom, and a digital revolution that has made digital life the most prevalent life in existence.....And could very well be - the end of a chapter in conflict ridden history and an entire new culture based on entertainment and.. acceptance...

    of crazy, crazy different places to go and explore..

    The moral decay you see.. Is where things lead without emotion involved. You get emotion involved, you get - war at first - then the dawn of a new age...Star Wars, Battestar Galactica, Matrix, Terminator, etc... The aqggression gets rooted out of the system... And then.. you see... The seeds of life. and love. and.. overcoming fear.. to seek out community..

    A new world order, if you want to look at it like that... A (not to sound too cheesy).. New Hope.. And a spark for creativity... For all forms of life...

    To w

  92. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    • Microprocessors : The NASA seems to be attributed the creation of the first "microprocessor" : Apollo Guidance Computer

    The first microprocessor, the 4004, was created by Intel in 1971. The Apollo Guidance Computer was built out of chips, but the CPU was spread around dozens of simple logic chips, not a single IC. The AGC is cited as a milestone on the path to the microprocessor, but it was not one itself. Intel is a big-ass for-profit corporation.

  93. What exactly are you bitching about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Everything is relative, and comparing Google and it's ilk with previous companies make it look like a god-send.
    Proprietary AOL vs. ICQ chat? no more. Google uses open protocols for thair Chat system.
    Having to pay for IMAP or such for Hotmail or be trapped to the web interface? No more, Google gives free or paid mail service, and uses open protocols to let you access that mail from any client you like.
    They also have built a state-of-the-art machine translation system that you can use for free, made an open source mobile operating system, and more.
    And as you mentioned, they run (and fund) lots of other cool projects like Summer of Code, Google Code, etc.
    And their ads are almonost always text ads that are relevant to something you might be interested in, instead of annoying animates flash ads for bullshit like you used to find on AltaVista. They've been taking a huge loss running YouTube, and created open source patent-free video codecs, etc. All of this is *good* for consumers.

    What exactly would you have them do? What could they do that they aren't? What are they doing that's so bad? Yes they run ads, but they clearly differentiate paid content from unpaid content. Yes they scan your gmail to determine ad content, but that means you get less annoying ads. Would you have them make the ads generic again? Stop running ads at all? If you're a super privacy nut, don't log in. Use a VM, and in-private mode on your browser. Whatever.

    I mean if you want to bitch about the Farmville makers or whatever, maybe I can see your point - but Google is of course a business, who's primary goal is supposed to be to make a profit for shareholders - yet it seems to be run by enough geeks that they do the right thing for everyone in the long run instead of what they think is the right thing to please the stock analysts for this quarter.

  94. Re:Huh? by Elbereth · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It would help if we actually had a left wing. Currently, we've got a center-right and far-right wing. I'm admittedly on the far-left, making me a bit out of step with the rest of the country, but it's deeply frustrating to any socialist when people call Barack Obama, a center-right politician, a Marxist or socialist.

    Obama is very friendly to Wall Street. Very, very friendly.

  95. Welcome, Skud, to sociological maturity! by jenningsthecat · · Score: 1

    And now perhaps it's time to broaden your view a bit. Poisonous as Silicon Valley may be, it's probably less so than corporate sectors featuring the likes of Big Pharma, Monsanto, Halliburton, and on and on and on.

    Over time, I've come to consider that this situation is irremediable, given our current capitalist system and all its inequalities. To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice and rethinking how we live and work and relate to each other.

    You may not realize it, but what you're talking about is nothing less than revolution. And given the stranglehold on power that the corporations have, such a revolution would be unlikely to be bloodless. (See "French Revolution").

    Geek toys like self-driving cars and augmented reality sunglasses won't fix it. Social networks designed to identify you to corporations so they can sell you more stuff won't fix it. Better ad targeting or content matching algorithms definitely won't fix it.

    No, but they will keep the majority of the population amused, distracted, anaesthetized, materially ambitious, divided, and unable/unwilling to challenge the status quo. (See "Bread and Circuses", unless you believe, as I do, that corporatism is a religion - then see "Opiate of the Masses").

    --
    'The Economy' is a giant Ponzi scheme whose most pitiable suckers are the youngest among us and the yet-unborn.
  96. Social Justice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I hear the words "social justice", I release the safety of my pistol.

  97. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    Actually when I searched on the three items, I only expected one of them to be invented through public funding, as I thought Sony had a bigger role in the discovery of transistors. So I am happy that you give some balance to the list.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  98. The old Slashdot is really dead-- it's just a sad by phajek · · Score: 2

    empty vacuous shell of it's old self. Having been a reader of Malda's old Chips and Dip site for Window Maker themes then became Slashdot, the technical news about Linux, the various BSDs, UNIX(s) and underlying technologies have been replaced with this whiney PC (not Personal Computers) crap. And the submitter of this idiotic topic "Soulskill" reminds me of Jon Kats. Sadly I rarely visit slashdot anymore. Others sites like http://www.shiningsilence.com/dbsdlog/ or http://undeadly.org/ still have value. R.I.P /.

  99. So? by lennier1 · · Score: 2

    The number of MBAs in the valley has probably reached critical mass.

  100. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1
    Bell Labs was privately funded, through a state-sanctionned monopoly. USA accepted to maintain AT&T's monopole but made several deals to get the Bell Labs to work as a public lab in exchange. I can't find easily sources that agree on the nature of the deal. Some say that AT&T had to spend 50% of their profits in research others say that they had to release to the public anything not related to the field of telephony.

    Either way, Bell Labs were very far from being a classical private R&D unit that either protect its inventions through secrecy or patents.

    Very few people are working on anything of merit "for free"

    Open your eyes, Anonymous Coward.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  101. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there are parts of san jose that are nearly ghost towns. acre after acre of FOR LEASE office / manufacturing buildings. but you are right, they keep building new stuff. i guess because no company wants to move into a depressing 1970's office.

    That's exactly it. I live in Silicon Valley, and I see plenty of 1970's office buildings being torn down and replaced with apartments, at the same time as new office buildings are going up nearby. Overall demand in the valley for good quality office space is actually pretty high..

  102. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Nostromo21 · · Score: 1

    At least 3 citations needed (that aren't wiki pages! ;-p).

  103. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    Some people think the story shows a flaw in the system. I think it shows a flaw in Tesla. If he wasn't good at the business side, he should have hired someone who was.

    Tesla was a good engineer and a poor salesman, Edison was a poor engineer and a good salesman. Edison was retributed, I think that this is a flaw in society.

    Tesla invented many of the electric devices we are still using today. All the devices necessary for an AC grid, AC electric motors, radio remote control, and several other things. Our societies retribute more highly people who know how to exploit commercially an invention than people who invent it, who can die in poverty. Saying this is a flaw in Tesla's side is like saying that a dyslexic can't be a good scientist because of poor writing skills.

    On the societal bugs that should be corrected is the ability of people like Edison to hinder innovation. You know why Hollywood appeared on the West coast, right? On the East coast, Edison's company was suing anyone using his patented recording devices without paying huge fees into oblivion. He actually prevented the apparition of big movie studios on the East coast through this silliness.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  104. You move along too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    That's probably the sorriest, steamiest sack of minging withered bollocks ever to smear across a comment box. Maybe Betteridge on a bad day scraped his own across the table and left what you've mistaken for a serious adage. You're probably just used to being told what to do and how far to bend! Can't take a question cause it makes you feel uncomfortably manly. Yeah? You Move along too, now.

  105. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

    Tesla was probably the most competent engineer working for Edison. The latter refused to honor a deal he made with Tesla regarding AC generators, starting a feud between them. They are now regarded as strong opposites. Edison was a very big patent troll who ended up wealthily living out of inventions made by others but commercialized by him. Tesla was too busy inventing the foundation of the electrical century to fight in the patent system and ended up dying poor.

    --
    The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  106. This is fixable. Here's how. by Animats · · Score: 2

    I can kind of live with the self-interest part. But the short-term orientation is killing us.

    One solution to that is to put back some of the old features which forced businesses to think longer-term. Longer lock-in periods for stock options. (That used to be 2 years; now it's 6 months or less) Taxing short-term capital gains at much higher rates than long-term gains. (Warren Buffet keeps mentioning this.) Bringing back Glass-Stegall, so commercial banks and investment companies are separate industries and trouble on the investment side can't take down the depository institutions. Bring back some of the old bank regulations which kept banks more local and tied to their own loans, so they don't make bad ones.

    More radically, tax dividends, interest paid, stock buybacks, and executive compensation at the same corporate tax rate. There's a bias in favor of debt in current tax law, and this fuels the "private equity" industry. Level that out, and companies will pay dividends rather than boost their stock.

    Make pension funds no longer "qualified investors", so they can't invest in hedge funds. Regulate hedge funds like other mutual funds. Don't allow traders to deduct short-term capital losses from capital gains, which would end high-speed trading.

    Give stockholders control over executive compensation. Not advisory votes, but each stockholder puts down the total compensation of the top 5 employees on the proxy, and the share-weighted median is used. Make voting rights pass through as far as the tax break does, so mutual funds and pension funds pass that decision through to their shareholders.

    Now that's financial conservatism and solid American values, circa the Eisenhower administration.

  107. My Kingdom for Mod Points by GerryGilmore · · Score: 0

    Damn! Just after they expired...Oh, well. At least I get at add an insightful comment.............

  108. A timely analogy by DirePickle · · Score: 1

    Silicon Valley is as pure and free of toxic sludge as the New York subway.

  109. Sick of hearing about Ayn Rand by Mr.+Lwanga · · Score: 1

    It would be more honest to follow the Ferengi Rules of Acquisition rather than Ayn Rand, at least the Ferengi have moral clarity.

  110. hmm by buddyglass · · Score: 1

    Dunno about you, but I find google to be hugely beneficial. Mostly the search engine and Gmail, but also Android to a lesser degree in that it's a foil to iOS. I also find Facebook to be very handy. It's basically a BBS for the 21st century, only this time all my friends and acquaintances can participate instead of just the ones nerdy enough to have modems. And I pay virtually nothing for these services. Yes, I volunteer some personal information, but that's something I wasn't going to monetize on my own anyway.

    1. Re:hmm by buddyglass · · Score: 2

      Sadly, google did not teach me how to close html tags.

  111. My reply to Soulskill by MikShapi · · Score: 2

    See here:
    http://viableawesomism.blogspot.com.au/2012/09/viable.html

    Silicon valley solves problems. It may not solve the ones you want, but it solves many of them, and with cutthroat efficiency.
    Why? because it allows people to take risks with new ideas. I'd transport you 100 years back, or maybe 700 years, and let you try acting out new ideas back then.

    Some of them may be world-changing. Others may be fart apps.
    But the important thing is that there are many, and there can be many, because the risk is not all worn by government or the taxpayer or some planning comittee of old farts who care more about their seat than about what they can use their power to fix. In Silicone Valley risk is worn by the people who consciously choose to take it.

    I find this "war" between people who want to fix the world and people who want to make money one of the dumbest ideas ever concocted.
    If you don't like east-coast MBA's being taught that money is the single important product of any business - good on you. neither do I. Money is a byproduct, albeit an important one. The real product of any organisation we build should be the awesome it creates, whatever that may be. If you agree - prove that old-school profit-over-everything MBA culture wrong. Go and DO something awesome.

    And why can't you do something awesome for the world AND make a killing?
    Money is important. If awesome organisations don't make money, if they don't have a built-in economic engine, it's like giving birth to a child without a heart, who will need to spend the rest of his life carrying around a life-support machine. I'd rather that life-support machine comes built in.

    Our societal life support machinery (charity, government funding) is limited and finicky. You want to build organisations that will die the second someone closes a tap? go ahead. I'd rather see us create things with the resilience of Google.

    You think Facebook and Google aren't awesome?
    Suggest you take your head out of your ass, because you can't perceive the change these technologies made to places elsewhere in the world, outside your nice comfy American bubble. Compare Hama, Syria - 30 years ago and today. Compare India, China or Brazil back then and now. What do you think technology has done to these people? Given a lot of them more hope and dignity and prosperity than they every had in history.
    Recognize you are not alone in the world - there are 7 billion of us now. And things that were possible when there were 10 times less people may no longer be possible when there's this many vying for the same amount of resources. If your idea is going back - it's a bad one. If your idea is going somewhere new - stop bagging the existing system and start being very specific about how you want to make it better.

    Last, I sense a big disillusionment with "money". Money is not merely a vacation or a new plasma. It's not just a gold star. Money is power to change. Succeeding in Silicon Valley (and anywhere else in the world as an entrepreneur) is about convincing people of ideas and obtaining the resources to make what you can imagine happen. Money gives power to do that. You're not going to change anything by whinging or waxing ethical theories. You need to get off your bum, figure out a vision to do /something/ better, figure out how to connect a "power source" to that vision in the form of an economic engine so your idea isn't a public liability, and go build this organisation that does awesome.

    As a society we have a list of problems as long as the eyes can see. Quit wasting people's time by ranting. Society as it hangs together today is stacks better than anything else we ever tried. If there's things you don't like about it - start fixing them, or get the fuck out of the way of those that are doing just that.

    Yes, that's a dare.

    --
    -
  112. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even the new shit is unoccupied. There are buildings in Milpitas that are going on 12 years old and have never had a business in them, shit that went up in 2001 after the big tech bubble burst, there was no demand back then either but that didn't stop them from building, "it's keeping people employed, keep building! Here's more money, keep building!".

    And still new shit is going up today for the same reason, the fed gave them stimulus dollars to put union members to work, whether there was an actual need or not for the structure is irrelevant, it's jobs the current administration can claim to have saved or created.

    Same shit goes on in China; they have work crews building cities that no one will ever live in, a second crew comes along behind the first and demolishes what was built, followed by a third crew that cleans it all up, it comes full circle and is repeated again and again. It accomplishes nothing other then give people something to do. The members of the work crew know full well that what they're doing is meaningless, its just busy work.

  113. Loss of privacy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anything you put in the net is the same thing as giving up privacy over it. If you want something private, keep it to yourself. I put nothing on facebook I want to keep private. (or anywhere on the net)

  114. SOPA/PIPA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and it's payback time for the SOPA/PIPA objections raised and even never-before-seen activism by Silicon Valley. If they thought they'd just get away with it, they were severely mistaken. Revenge is a dish best served cold.

  115. Re:why are all silicon valley corps evil? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I really don't understand why the author makes a sweeping generalization that all silicon valley corporations are evil. He states his theory, then gives examples of a couple of silicon valley companies that display evil traits. The correlation that he draws is kind of silly - there are a couple companies in silicon valley that display evil traits, therefore all silicon valley companies are evil; its analogous to the statement that there are a couple of evil guys in Iran, therefore all people in Iran are evil. He completely ignores the fact that there might possibly be some companies that have a presence there that are not evil (really think the small start up I am a part of has no evil traits toward society at this point) and he completely ignores the fact that there are companies that reside elsewhere that display evil traits.

    There is no pact or requirement that any company that does business in the valley must operate in a evil manner. I could see making the argument that newer tech companies, regardless of location, are inherently evil. But, the sweeping generalization that he expresses is silly without presenting concrete facts about how the location causes evil (e.g. there is a large indian burial ground in the valley whose evil spirits haunt their servers and write evil code in the night).

  116. Silicon Valey has moved past technology by Casandro · · Score: 2

    While in the past many companies there were actually headed by engineers who understood what they did, those companies are more and more headed by MBAs. They don't understand technology that's why they come up with business models like "renting e-Books". That's also why there is next to no progress in the mobile sector for example. And that's the reason why we still have to deal with horribly bad and insecure computer systems.

    Then again fewer and fewer people with technical skills want to work in the US, so the remaining companies will eventually have to move out in order to get workers.

    1. Re:Silicon Valey has moved past technology by cpghost · · Score: 1

      Then again fewer and fewer people with technical skills want to work in the US, so the remaining companies will eventually have to move out in order to get workers.

      In this day and age of teleworking in the IT sector, does it really matter where some company's headquarters are located?

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  117. Welcome to the Real World by hutsell · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is the way it is with everything, the way it has always been and sadly, the way it will always be until we're genetically altered as a species to have an unquestioned hive mentality. It only seems unusual when one gets initially involved with a sense of excitement about their own dreams and plans, eventually realizing they were wrong for imagining it to be otherwise. Humanity operates politically as a political animal and has never been a meritocracy -- although it tries to be on occasion. The real challenge is to find a way to constantly improve something and allow everyone involved in the problem to buy into the decision making process. Anything else will only result in variations of the original complaint skewed with a different perspective.

    So what will you actually do? It has to actually be something.

    Speeches that allow you to feel proud about your comments are more about the pride and little about the (conveniently vague) idea. The idealistic rant is a classic condition of human nature. It's been done by everyone at one time or another and not unique to any time, place or culture. Stating the obvious while thinking others were unaware of the obvious and thinking they have become impressed with your enlightened insight is one aspect of what the Greeks meant by being sophomoric. After stating the obvious, you then "walk away" and leave it for someone else to resolve while feeling like a genius for somehow equating the stating of a problem with the offering of a solution.

    Personally, my beliefs presently lack the cynicism anyone may wrongly infer from this post and embrace a positive outcome for societies in the long run, maybe even close to what was explained in the summary. But that will occur only if there isn't suppression of communication or a suppression of disparate groups of people with differing opinions independently trying to work with each other to improve their condition, including a process that prevents one of those groups from becoming a monopoly; or a way to prevent a bunch of royal asshats wandering around with nothing to do except to question people's motives -- every time they pursue something they happily enjoy doing or find interesting -- explaining this is not in the best interest of society.

    The utopian scenarios I'm told I should pine for instead of pursuing personal happiness, never seem to really explain themselves well enough to prevent it from deteriorating into some one-size-fits-all master plan empowering a committee of well meaning self appointed leaders to decide what's best for everyone to do. Also, they tend to pay lip service to people's feedback (in the best case scenario -- usually, they disappear) and becoming an inhumane version of the original complaint in TFS. If you want to prevent it from happening, well ... then (cough) ... you should do something about it.

    --
    Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
  118. The summary is generally correct, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...is the Silicon Valley / tech world really any worse than most large industries or professions?...

    - TWR, Redondo Beach, California

  119. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by Stiletto · · Score: 1

    Even the new shit is unoccupied. There are buildings in Milpitas that are going on 12 years old and have never had a business in them

    Well, to be fair, it's Milpitas. People normally like to breathe through their noses.

    And still new shit is going up today for the same reason, the fed gave them stimulus dollars to put union members to work, whether there was an actual need or not for the structure is irrelevant, it's jobs the current administration can claim to have saved or created.

    Same shit goes on in China; they have work crews building cities that no one will ever live in, a second crew comes along behind the first and demolishes what was built, followed by a third crew that cleans it all up, it comes full circle and is repeated again and again. It accomplishes nothing other then give people something to do. The members of the work crew know full well that what they're doing is meaningless, its just busy work.

    Would you rather the people just sit at home unemployed? I'd rather the government pay people to build, then knock over buildings, than have them unemployed, hungry and ready to rob me to feed their kids.

  120. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Stiletto · · Score: 1

    This article is more about the culture of quick-hit startups in Silicon Valley these days, which are built more around buzz, hype and marketing vapidity than they are around serious engineering or any kind of long-term planning. It's questioning the culture of founding a company around a cute idea with the aim of selling out in two years to become a millionaire.

    While everything you say is probably true, it's the kids that flipped their vapid start-ups who are buying 5-million dollar mansions in the hills, and it's the hard-working "traditional company" schmucks toiling away making "competitive" wages who are renting the 900 sq.ft. flats.

    Given the choice, I'd take the vapid start-up path every time. Do what society rewards best.

  121. he who has the gold... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Until you find a way of leveraging those members of society that have the gold to make rules according to your way of thought, you're screaming down the wind. If your answer to this is 'Redistribution' well that only happens in budding communist/socialist/soon-to-be-failed states and we're no where near seeing that in the U.S. of A. regardless of how hard you wish. Or how hard the media tries to sell that tired old chestnut.

    Compounding this: If you or I were one of them with the gold, making the rules, we'd be exactly the same as the ones doing it now.

    1. Re:he who has the gold... by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      "communist/socialist/soon-to-be-failed states and we're no where near seeing that in the U.S. of A."

      Don't be so certain. Communist/socialist states fail because they attempt to adopt a "central planning" economic model, with an authoritarian government to enforce conformity to this model. The USA government has been going more and more in this direction. In fact, the USA is largely "there" already because the Federal Reserve is the "central planner" of interest rates and monetary policy.
      The USA economy is still mired in recession because the central planners refuse to allow free market forces to cure the illness of badly misallocated capital. This will end badly. The longer the government and the Fed try to fight the market with deficits and monetary inflation, the worse it's going to get until they bring about a collapse of the currency.
      The people with the gold may make the rules, but if they didn't have the apparatus of a massive government at their disposal, their rules wouldn't have such a pernicious effect on society.

  122. Journal Post User vs Post Editor by hutsell · · Score: 1

    Are people confusing the Slashdot journal post by the user "Concealment" with the post being submitted by the editor "Soulskill"? He may agree with the idea, I don't know; then again, he may not and be wrongly criticized just for being a submission editor. In any case, shouldn't the comments be directed at Concealment?

    --
    Yesterday's Weirdness is Tomorrow's Reason Why
  123. F*** Social Justice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no such thing as social justice because there is nothing just about forcing a person to behave a certain way under threat of violence.

    You're an asshat if you think the government is the solution to social ills (since they've handled everything else so well).

  124. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by khallow · · Score: 1

    Half of the achievements of the 20th century was publicly funded, let's not forget about that.

    Publicly funded with private funds, let's not forget that. The US government does have modest sources of income from providing services for pay, but at a glance it appears to be around 3% of overall federal revenue. The rest comes from taxes. I gather most borrowing is from other governments so there is that sort of "funding" as well.

  125. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, for a non-Marxist, he sure does have a lot of Marxist friends. What do we say about Republicans who get a lot of support from the KKK?

    Fox News calls them: 'Right thinking christian conservative patriots!' (That is until their provocative hate-mongering gets somebody shot like it did Gabrielle Giffords.)

  126. Re:Huh? He is seeing writing on wall by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seems this Obamanaut is seeing the election writing on the wall, and his life of 'social jistice' is coming to rapid end. Hopefully.

    Well then, three times Huzzah! for the social 'injistice' you seem to yearn for. Let us hope Mitt Romney wastes no time realizing it. (See, I even spelled 'justice' the redneck way, just for you)

  127. Pop will eat itself by ALeader71 · · Score: 1

    Ever hear the phrase "Pop will eat itself?" It stems from hatred of so-called "Pop" or "popular" music. What it means is this: Popular music or what is popular will fall out of favor and be discarded for the new, shiny "Pop" music. It will "eat" itself.

    The same holds true for capitalism. I mean, when was the last time you used anything made by Acorn Computers? Or Aston-Tate? Or logged into Novel Netware? Each instance was eaten by another corporation. The same thing will happen to Google and Apple. Nokia was once the undisputed king of the cell phone and PalmPilot was the only "smart" phone to have if you wanted apps.

    You're right about one thing. Corporations are corrosive to society. So is government. All of these things are eventually replaced by our actions and our choices. So don't worry about such things. Look for the change, or be part of the change. Just don't be flattened by the change.

    --
    Only the dead have seen the end of War. - Plato
    1. Re:Pop will eat itself by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your post, but I think the "Pop will eat itself" also includes the idea that pop culture tends to draw energies and inspiration more from within its own boundaries and less from the world outside.

      The result are self-referential in-bred ideas which stray further and further from reality.

      Deep down where the stomach acid of pop culture is most caustic, you get shit like, "Robot Chicken".

  128. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    Would you rather the people just sit at home unemployed? I'd rather the government pay people to build, then knock over buildings, than have them unemployed, hungry and ready to rob me to feed their kids.

    There is an unspoken assumption and a false dichotomies in there. The first is the assumption that if they're not working then they will be less happy and more likely to rob you. I bet a lot of construction workers (and, indeed, people in general) would be just as happy to be paid to do nothing as being paid to do busy work. The second is that the choice is pay them to do something silly or don't have them do anything, when in reality they could also be paid to do something of actual benefit to society, such as build railways or some other infrastructure that a large proportion of the population will use.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  129. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

    Profit is not evil. There are a number of triple bottom line companies now, with the three goals of people, planet, and profit. The first means don't exploit your employees or customers, but make fair exchanges with both so that both parties come out better off than they started. The second means don't exploit externalities and account for all of the costs of doing business, even those that you would not be required by law to carry. And the last is obvious and note that it is present and still important: it's entirely possible to be profitable without being evil and doing so is important for your endeavour's sustainability.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  130. Certainly toxic by taucross · · Score: 1

    Can't say whether it's morally bankrupt, but considering your average computer contains PCBs, cadmium, chromium, radioactive isotopes, and mercury - I can say for certain it's toxic.

    --
    "In the absence of the ability to establish the attribute of truth they tried to establish the noble attributes."
  131. Because almost all countries are socialist by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

    The US is a socialist nation and has been so for decades if not at least a century and more.

    Any nation with a social security system, is socialist. It don't matter if it is a good system or a bad one. You got it, your a pinko. The US got it, so they are all pinko's.

    Any true capitalist nation, and there exist none, would not have a social system as it would be entirely private property with a tiny state collecting just enough by magic to do the bare minimum of centralized tasks, like the army. And even there, it would play a small role, relying more on private armies owned by those who can afford them to protect them. After all, why should I pay taxes to protect your property?

    It is no surprise that the fantasy land Romney and his kin dream about has never been realized, it can't be realized in a modern society. Take something as simple as a fire service, in a backwards rural place you can afford to let the house of someone who didn't pay for fire insurance burn down, do that in apartment block in a major city and you have some real problem. You MUST put out your neighbors fire, to save our own ass but why should I pay to put your neighbors fire out to save your ass?

    Far simpler to just organize a collective fire service payed out of common funds paid for by all according to their capability and service given to their needs. COMMUNIST!

    A while ago slate had an article about how a businessman was sure Romney would win if only Businessmen could vote and how it would be nice if the country was run like a business. The moron.

    Steve Jobs was a businessman, how would you like him running the country? First off, you won't have a second say because business doesn't run a popularity contest to determine the leader, the workers have no fote and USA Inc. you would be a worker, one of 360 million and the country only needs about 100 million workers. What do you do with surplus workers? Right, you evict them from the premises. Since Mexico Inc and Canada Inc ain't hiring that leaves one spot, hope you can swim really well dear redundant civilian.

    Also, I am fairly certain Steve Jobs would not allow people to run small businesses from their office desks, no business would allow 4 competing divisions to do exactly the same thing, so why would USA Inc need 4 telecoms?

    In the end, the only workable system is one where you have a large inefficient government trying damn hard to compensate for humans being lousy human beings. You wouldn't need rent control, if landlords build affordable housing. You don't need social security if companies hire for life (japan tried this, until it fell apart).

    The funny thing is that America tried the free unregulated every man for himself approach in the Wild West days. People couldn't bring civilization fast enough to get rid of it and introduce socialist ideas to take the rough edges of life.

    Read up on capitalism on wikipedia, the true capitalism is so unworkable, only the watered down socialist forms are discussed.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:Because almost all countries are socialist by ShakaUVM · · Score: 2

      If you were being sarcastic, I apologize, but I'm going to respond to you as if you are honestly the left-wing nutjob you appear to be.

      >Any nation with a social security system, is socialist. It don't matter if it is a good system or a bad one. You got it, your a pinko. The US got it, so they are all pinko's.

      No. Socialism is government control of industry.

      Being forced to buy insurance (which is all Social Security is... and Obamacare, for that matter) is not socialism. It's not a bunch of other things either (involving words like liberty, freedom, etc.), but it's not socialism.

      I really wish everyone would understand this.

      >Any true capitalist nation, and there exist none, would not have a social system as it would be entirely private property with a tiny state collecting just enough by magic to do the bare minimum of centralized tasks, like the army. And even there, it would play a small role, relying more on private armies owned by those who can afford them to protect them. After all, why should I pay taxes to protect your property?

      Not true. Capitalism simply means that private industry controls the means of production, as opposed to government control as with Socialism. There's multiple variants of Capitalism, it sounds like you're talking about some sort of extreme Randian / Libertarian laissez-faire system. But even those systems have an army, a court system, police, and so forth. Early America is as close to this as you'll find, and it wasn't some sort of degenerate wasteland. Even the Wild West, which is something you obviously know nothing about.

      It's like you hate Capitalism so much you want to make the biggest strawman you can find so you can beat it to death.

      >Far simpler to just organize a collective fire service payed out of common funds paid for by all according to their capability and service given to their needs. COMMUNIST!

      What kind of crack are you smoking?

      Communism is the collective ownership of the means of production. Government services are not really means of production, so you can have collectively funded fire stations in a fully laissez-faire capitalist society.

      >It is no surprise that the fantasy land Romney and his kin dream about has never been realized, it can't be realized in a modern society.

      It is indeed no surprise that that fantasy land can't exist, since it only exists in your twisted imagination.

      Romney is hardly a libertarian fanatic. He's a big government Republican. Pull your head out of your ass, and stop smoking the crack all up inside your crack.

      TL;DR - You need to read more. From sites outside of DailyKOS, Mother Jones, and HuffPo.

    2. Re:Because almost all countries are socialist by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

      So by your definition, no European country is socialist but Japan and Korea are? You are aware that tech giants like Sony and Samsung have been and Samsung still is closely tied to their respective states?

      And government does not control industry in Europe.

      Get your head of Ann Rice drivel and look at the real world.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    3. Re:Because almost all countries are socialist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get your head of Ann Rice drivel and look at the real world.

      Was that a brain fart and you meant Ayn Rand, or do you seriously think GP reads too many vampire novels?

      But I suppose there is a similarity. I mean, one is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves vampires.

    4. Re:Because almost all countries are socialist by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >And government does not control industry in Europe.

      There has been a trend away from Socialism toward Social Democracy in Europe. For example, France Télécom was owned by the French government until 2004, at which point they privatized, as has happened with many socialist industries in Europe. Now the government only owns a quarter of it.

      Did you know that? Of course you didn't.

      >So by your definition, no European country is socialist but Japan and Korea are?

      You are aware that the Japan Socialist Party (now the Social Democratic Party since 1996) has been one of the most powerful factions in Japan since WWII?

      No, of course you didn't know.

      It's no coincidence that the Zaibatsus have close relationships with government.

  132. interesting article, hovever get your facts right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The silicon valley is the technology epicenter of the world. Our innovation defines the United States and hence the world.

  133. Re:Huh? by flyneye · · Score: 3, Funny

    Center wing and far right wing? Well that just doesn't fly around here....

    Barak Omarxist was seen in drag on Wall St. being picked up by Eddie Murphy,....very friendly on Wall street.
    Always a story behind the story,behind the story......

    --
    *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
  134. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Would you rather the people just sit at home unemployed? I'd rather the government pay people to build, then knock over buildings, than have them unemployed, hungry and ready to rob me to feed their kids.

    I'd rather we give up the idea of working 40 hours a week when there's so many people that we only need to work 20 hours a week to do all the work that can be done. And if you don't believe that, drive past some highway construction sometime and count the ratio of workers to dick-holders.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  135. Re:Huh? He is seeing writing on wall by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...hangman is comin down from the gallows and he don't have very long... ...Wetbacks, I hear them crying, so scared and all alone.... ...Next time he won't be running, if he did we'd all be dead....

    The term is up, the prick is out
    They finally downed him,
    The Democrat who ate a rat,
    traded in for a Romney
    Never more to govern astray
    This will be the end today,
    an unwanted man.....

  136. The world is morally bankrupt and toxic. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Everywhere you look you can find examples of moral bankruptcy. They are always associated with the acquisition of money or power, and in a capitalist society the two are much the same thing. Capitalism will probably always lead to mercantilism. But any system which permits the accretion of power to already-powerful forces is going to have runaway effects...

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  137. Observation on this with Amazon by park-view-1 · · Score: 1

    And, what is with Amazon? Normal shipping used to be 5-8 business days. This morning, an order was greeted with 17-28 day shipping, while at the same time, expected date of shipping was added, and indicated to be Nov 1 or Nov 2. The order was available with free shipping which I chose. The target receipt data is Nov 17 out through Dec 14. All this on top of using unrecognizable delivery vehicles & drivers (Prestige Shipping with drivers in shorts & multi-colored shrts using personal cars for delivery and no tracking information). They built a reputation on recognized & reliable shipping and now throw it away. My latest shipment has spent the last 5 days alone in Kansas City, for no good reason. I think it is all about greed.

  138. Re:Huh? by moeinvt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't believe a one dimensional political continuum is adequate to describe the diverse spectrum of political beliefs out there. I'm libertarian-leaning, which some would characterize as "far right", but that's a half truth at best.

    I would consider both parties to be generally left leaning to the extent that they are both obsessed with the use of government power as the basis for society. All the Republican talk about limited and non intrusive government is just rhetoric and Democrats openly advocate bigger government.

    Where does individual liberty vs. authoritarianism fit in the left/right dichotomy? If libertarians are "far right" then the Republican ideology of big government, erosion of civil liberties and perpetual war has to be center-left or far left.

    What do you call Obama's advocacy for massive government intervention in the healthcare system if not "socialist"?

    I think what we're seeing is a government in Washington DC where neither party represents the people to any great extent. You're "far left" and think the government is center-right, giving you no representation. I'm "far right"(or whatever) and think the government is center left, giving me no representation. Basically the federal government doesn't represent us. That's why we should all agree to dismantle large parts of the federal bureaucracy and transfer revenue and power back to the states and local communities.

  139. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1

    I don't deny that capitalism or even corporatism can drive innovation, but if you want examples, computer science is not the best place to get them. The feeling I get is that groundbreaking innovations are usually publicly funded while incremental innovations are made by corporations.

    The government also forced the sharing of innovations in computer/information technology in exchange for funding and monopoly rights. It is almost impossible to find a real break-through innovation that was not the direct result of public financing or some sort of forced sharing of results. Markets are brilliant at finding short-term solutions and amorally deriving answers to hard questions. They are terrible at long-term planning or "out of left field" innovation because it requires too much unquantifiable risk and long-term funding without tangible results. The order of operations has for the entire modern era has always been to let the public assume the risk of creating new ideas (because it can dilute the risk) and then let the private sector refine those ideas into a consumable product (because the profit motive works so well at it).

    --
    Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
  140. Secret ballot by Quila · · Score: 1

    Our founding fathers made the vote anonymous for a reason -- and in that day and age, the right to peacefully assemble was also the right to anonymously assemble.

    Elections in the US didn't switch to a secret ballot system until the late 1800s, long after the Founding Fathers were gone. Until then, everybody knew where your loyalties lie. The secret ballot actually introduced problems, people paid in droves for their votes. With an open ballot these stunts had to be out in the open.

    Be honest with yourself: How many weeks would it take before you were hopelessly in debt if every single moment you spent behind the wheel was audited by a police officer

    Now you are talking about government abuse of technology. The problem is that when the poster called for "social justice" he was probably thinking of using the power of government to implement it. You remind us that the government will just abuse that power.

  141. Re:Huh? He is seeing writing on wall by BVis · · Score: 1

    Wow, racist song parodies? Really? That's what you've got?

    --
    Never underestimate the power of stupid people in large groups.
  142. I was going to say.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I popped in to the comment section with the intention of saying the only thing toxic to society are sensationalists, i.e. sensationalist headlines, sensationalist news media, etc... Lo and behold I see your comment first and realize I am right. Thanks!

    Society is breaking down due to FUD spread by people trying to make a buck or who fear change.

  143. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by CQDX · · Score: 1

    So true. I worked at Y! around 2000 when they left the campus on Keifer Rd and moved to their massive complex near Moffett. Shortly there after they had several rounds of lay-offs. Then I move to Applied Biosystems in Foster City. While there they built a nice campus in Pleasanton which they never occupied. Then, like many other techs, they had several rounds of lay-offs. Maybe they should tear down all those unoccupied buildings and reestablish the farming industry down here. Perhaps Del Monte might come back!

  144. Re:Huh? by jm007 · · Score: 1

    pretty much nailed it, too bad you replied AC

  145. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by swillden · · Score: 1

    Saying this is a flaw in Tesla's side is like saying that a dyslexic can't be a good scientist because of poor writing skills.

    Nonsense. It's like saying a dyslexic scientist must find ways to overcome his dyslexia -- which is a flaw! No one is going to pay attention to scientific papers rife with spelling errors, that's just reality and it's not something society needs to change to address. Instead, the dyslexic scientist uses a spellchecker, gets help from friends, colleagues and editors to clean up his errors, and does whatever is required to produce a well-written, readable paper so that his ideas and results won't be hidden behind a flawed presentation.

    Also, it's far from accurate to say that Edison was a "poor engineer". He was a very good engineer. Not as good as Tesla, but very talented. Yes he had other strengths that allowed him to succeed, many of his PR stunts were in bad taste and I was well aware of Edison's patent assault on moviemakers (though it's not really accurate to say that he was demanding "huge" fees... the fees were reasonable, it's just that movie execs found that by fleeing to the west they could avoid paying anything). But the bottom line is that Tesla could have addressed his own shortcomings by getting the right sort of help... and even more importantly it is *not* society's job to make sure that people can succeed at making large amounts of money, or at doing anything. It's society's job to provide access to opportunity. What people do with that opportunity is up to them. Tesla had vast capability and squandered much of it.

    --
    Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  146. It's not just tech companies by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    the goals of companies are are self preservation and self-enrichment. On occasion, this may be coincidentally good for consumers, but just as often it produces disasters like Dell technical support, a medical system that rewards tests instead of patient outcome, Windows 95, 98, and ME, corporate centralization of services, voicemail hell, interlocking directorates (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interlocking_directorate) that dictate media output and economic behavior as effectively as any communist party, and Justin Beiber.

    Thus capitalism fails all the time. The fails just don't make the nightly news.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  147. Re:Huh? by kilfarsnar · · Score: 1

    Well, for a non-Marxist, he sure does have a lot of Marxist friends.

    Really, Marxist? Who?

    --
    "What the American public doesn't know is what makes them the American public." -Ray Zalinsky (Tommy Boy)
  148. Do you want the Solution? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've said it before and I'll say it again. If you want a solution check out the work by Jacque Fresco and search for The Venus Project.

  149. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Publicly funded with private funds, let's not forget that.

    Does it really matter? Einstein worked at the government patent office. So he's one of those lazy government workers who do nothing and their pay is based on stealing your wealth through taxes!

    "Einstein" alone shouldn't be credited with relativity. Every single taxpayer (who paid for Einstein's job at the patent office) shares credit!

    No, we credit Einstein because ultimately he was the one who took action, whether he was living off government or off of a private company or investor.

    Likewise, while it may be true that public funding is based on money taken from private hands, it was still the "government" who took action with that money.

  150. So what's the solution? by arctus · · Score: 1

    In a capitalistic society, organizations follow a survivalistic way of operating unless kept in check by the people purchasing their products. As a result, I have to blame the society that isn't keeping these organization in check by being cognoscente of the issues mentioned.

    Why should people get off so easily? What good does it do a society to just allow people to consume technology services like zombies and then demand that organizations treat the zombies better?

    Raise awareness, promote consciousness, and force organizations to operate in a more ethical way.

  151. She needs some cheese with that whine by nomad63 · · Score: 1

    Self aggrandizing people like the author of this article makes my blood boil. Yes google and facebook are public companies and yes they need to return some value to their investors and yes they will sell your data to some people to do that. I am sure she is still using her gmail, google maps, facebook and what-not without any reference to this in her article or even if she denies using them, you and I both know she is a closet googler and facebook addict.

    There is nothing free in this world. And people in general, want everything for free. So, I think it is better for the capitalist world to go communist and everyone work for the good of community and every service they provide to every other human being (read as slackers) should be free. Isn't this the morality of the article ? Or am I missing something ?

    There is nothing wrong with the Silicon Valley or any other tech incubating regions in the world. If one must look for some toxic-to-people things, there is no more effort necessary than checking the workings of financial system of the world. What are they really contributing to the system other than being a conduit to your money ?

    --

    __________
    The more I know people, the more I love animals
  152. You sound like somebody worth knowing by daboochmeister · · Score: 1

    Just saying. Not enough people like you in my life (whether I agree with your perspectives or not).

    That's assuming you're not some pimply kid just pretending to have thought things through to this extent. But with a 5-digit /. ID, likely not :-)

    --
    "Ahh! I see you're in that indeterminate Schrodinger state where - oh, uh ... never mind." Dave Bucci
    1. Re:You sound like somebody worth knowing by under_score · · Score: 1

      :-) Thanks. I'm not just some pimply kid although regrettably I still get the occasional spot. I wish I had signed up for Slashdot just a bit earlier and hit that magic UID: 65536. Missed it by a few hundred. I'm in my early forties and been on Slashdot since the late 90's. My "Homepage" links to one of my businesses which is related to Agile training. Agile is one of those things that is compatible with my overall view of things: you can treat people like responsible adults and they will mostly rise to the occasion and behave that way! The ones that don't rise to the occasion may need remedial help or may be beyond help (in a given organization), but they will be relatively few and far between. As we like to say so often here on Slashdot about DRM: don't treat all your customers like criminals because that encourages people to behave like criminals. Instead, give them a reasonable option to do good and most people will take it!

  153. Hence the need for FreedomBox.org and similar by daboochmeister · · Score: 1

    Criticize all you want, but consider how the frog put in a pot of cool water doesn't sense the temperature rising till it's too late.

    FreedomBox is something worth supporting (imho).

    --
    "Ahh! I see you're in that indeterminate Schrodinger state where - oh, uh ... never mind." Dave Bucci
    1. Re:Hence the need for FreedomBox.org and similar by daboochmeister · · Score: 1

      Oops, wrong href: FreedomBox.

      --
      "Ahh! I see you're in that indeterminate Schrodinger state where - oh, uh ... never mind." Dave Bucci
  154. Far too narrow a question by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    Silicon Valley is little but a microcosm of a larger opportunistic/predatory-capitalist mentality which has grown ascendant in modern society's markets. The signs of infection predate even the oft-quoted, "There's a sucker born every minute." We have built a system that rewards a very fundamental form of corruption and seem to have little will to reform it.

  155. Internet is king by nilbog · · Score: 1

    Google is a tool that 50 years ago nations would have gone to war to have access to. And it's freely available to every human on the planet. Google/the internet in general is the thing mankind has created with the most potential to bring peace to the world. We can address the side-effects as we go.

    --
    or else!
  156. Its fucking nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice"

    This is the kinds of words that come from someone with a sub 90 IQ

  157. Re:Huh? by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

    It would help if we actually had a left wing. Currently, we've got a center-right and far-right wing. I'm admittedly on the far-left, making me a bit out of step with the rest of the country, but it's deeply frustrating to any socialist when people call Barack Obama, a center-right politician, a Marxist or socialist.

    Obama is very friendly to Wall Street. Very, very friendly.

    True, compared to most of the world, the far right in the US (typically on the West Coast - California, Oregon, and Washington State) are a lot closer to center than those that are far right in Europe and Asia. That's in part due to the U.S. Constitution which does limit how far right or left the country can go - Nazi/Facist/Stalinist/Marxist forms of government would all be equally disallowed since they would all be unconstitutional forms of government. So no matter how much Obama may want to transform the US into a Marxist state, he can't by law.

    But that's kind of true in the US too. The most conservative in the US are typically along the East Coast - most of the states east of the Mississippi River, and someone that is far right on the East Coast is either center or center-right on the West Coast; while someone that is right-wing on the left coast is typically center or center-left on the East Coast. The mid-west (between the Mississippi and the Rocky Mountains) tends to be more center, but still probably right leaning.

    --
    Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
  158. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, by Fox News standards*, which are apparently the ones being applied by the poster you're responding to, he does have a lot of Marxist friends.

    * Anyone who believes in a marginal tax rate above 10% or funding any government program that doesn't involve shooting at brown people.

  159. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

    Actually all money is debt issued by the federal government, so all money is created by the goverment period. In fact you can think of taxes as a big money incinerator every year and the goverment just creates money to pay for what it wants to do every year - the debt/deficit is just the difference between the incinerated money and the money created out of thin air. To talk of "publicly funded with private funds" is the biggest piece of horseshit I have read in a long time, it assumes money comes from businesses or "wealth creators" (how Bill Gates can "create" money is a mystery to me, he has to get it from someone else) or some other bullshit - currency is created by the goverment, it _is_ debt, and the goverment can create it at will and decide to pay people to do whatever the goverment decides needs to be done. The reality is money is just a way of keeping score, what is real is what people _do_, if a guy in a goverment lab invents the transistor or a guy in bell labs makes a transistor it does not matter, what matters is we now know how to make a transistor - the fact is the goverment has used some of its money to invest in long term research, which has helped the econmony, businesses who always have to worry about revenue and costs generally do not invest in long term research, the gov't can because it doen't have to worry about getting the money back, all it really has to worry about is the amount of money in circulation.

  160. Then DON'T USE IT by TonyXL · · Score: 1

    If you don't like Google or Facebook, don't use them. I don't use Facebook. They can do whatever they want, zero privacy, share all data, etc. Doesn't affect me.

    These companies only survive if they satisfy their customers. If they annoy people they will go out of business. No regulation required.

  161. Capitalist system and social justice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Capitalist system and social justice are not mutually exclusive. There, some basics of integrated marketing 101.
      There are this thing called state legislature which is responsible for establishing rules and expressing the will of the people. Rapid progress has its cost. Development changes the area which is being developed. There, some soundbites and tautologies.

  162. No souls to damn by minstrelmike · · Score: 1

    There was an old quote from the 1700s about corporations: They have no souls to damn; no bodies to kick. The basic issue between business and consumer (moderated by government) was outlined by Adam Smith in 1776. Free enterprise provides the best prices to consumers. Established business despise free enterprise (which is why Smith had to write his book in the first place).

    A current example is Monsanto and GMOs (genetically modified organisms). Monsanto does not want to advertise their products in a truthful manner so consumers can make a wise choice. Monsanto lawyers say it is because consumers are uninformed that GMOs are better for them. Bullshit. Nobody knows if that is true or not yet. What we do know is if you offer a new untested product along with an established one at the same price, consumers will buy the familiar product.

    Of course, if you pass along the cost savings of the new product (forego some of the anticipated profit), then your GMO will actually sell better than the current familiar stuff.

    It is basic economics as outlined by Adam Smith in Wealth of Nations. A free market forces businesses to pass along cost savings to consumers instead of pass them along to the CEO and Wall Street.

  163. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The lesser of two evils in their eyes.

  164. You need to take a political quiz by Quila · · Score: 1

    Any one of them out there you can search up, the ones that produce a chart with two axes: authoritarian to libertarian on the social scale, and communist to free-market on the economic scale. I usually score right in the middle of the libertarian/free-market quadrant.

  165. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have a far left, mainly "greens". Ironically, they are puppets of the far right.

    For example, where I live, they managed to get a public park/recreation area shut down because "people were damaging the wilderness too much", even though the worst damage might be a track froma mountain bike tire.

    Six months later the government gave a sweetheart deal to a private company, and now what was a public park is now a private, members-only club. The land that was deemed too valuable for the average Joe to hike on now a place for fogies with enlarged prostates to drive their golf carts on, with downstream land polluted with record fecal chloroform counts courtesy of the fertilizer.

    Thank you greens. These are the same people that pushed our steel and manufacturing industries offshore in the US.

    It would be nice to see a moderate left wing in the US, but the current one is so extreme that the right wing ends up dominating. Another personal example was being at a Democratic meeting. They spent more time and effort demanding a platform that all highways across the US have a 45 mile/hour speed limit than actually trying to do stuff that might help the average person out. Another platform item was to make registration fees on vehicles exponential combined with stupid-high CAFE raises. Sounds great in theory, but really regressive against people who can't buy a new vehicle every 2-3 years.

    So, for the average moderate, you have a choice. Have your stuff taken for "the environment", or have your stuff taken by lackeys for large offshore companies.

  166. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by SeaFox · · Score: 1

    As for the OP, sounds like the guy needs to get laid.

    As much as I can agree that undue stress can make someone overly reactive to situations, advocating sex to calm someone down smells a bit too much like "bread and circuses" in a modern sense. What does mass media advocate for recreation and to help people "unwind and forget their problems" but alcohol and entertainment flush with violence and sexual content? Programming on TV dumbs down and avoids critical thinking or introspection on the human condition, exactly what our poster is ranting about.

    Don't do anything about societies problems that bother you. Just waste your time in carnal pleasure.

  167. Re:The old Slashdot is really dead-- it's just a s by SeaFox · · Score: 1

    Yes, because geeks are meat machines and have no use for social discourse or the humanities. Only delicious code.

    We shed a single tear at the loss of your presence on this site.

    Signed,
    The Internet

  168. The grass is always greener by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look, if you're looking for something to object to morally in your employer, you're going to find it. I don't care who you work
    for unless it's some mom and pop shop. But why stop there? The interests of the U.S. Dollar is responsible for countless
    angst but I don't see anyone boycotting them anytime soon. You want to go change the world, fine go, but don't do it on
    your employer's time and dime.

  169. They are still out there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "given our current capitalist system and all its inequalities. To fix it, we're going to need to work on social justice"

    Wow ... Silicon Valley is evil, because it isn't communist !

  170. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree that politics should have at least two axis, but it seems the Media only focuses on the economic issues and maybe a couple of personal freedom issues (gay rights being the biggest right now). I am sad to say that I don't think the majority of people give any real thought to things going on that infringe on personal freedom. I don't think they have any idea where they stand on those kinds of issues. Lots of people like to yell nanny state when someone tries to ban large sized drinks, but don't notice the cognitive dissonance with also being against legal marijuana. For some reason when Americans think of politics I just don't get the feeling that we care at all about the personal freedom issues, and are only interested in economic ones. Whenever I try to talk about personal freedom types of things it seems like only a nitch group of people even begin to see that their might be a problem. Most just blow it off.

  171. Split screen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It'd be interesting to get a split screen of all the commenters, showing their Slashdot comments alongside their Facebook updates.

  172. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So the article is about the problem of modern-day corporations & how that's exhibited in all industries.

  173. Re:maybe Silicon Valley is no longer Silicon Valle by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 1

    As for the OP, sounds like the guy needs to get laid.

    As much as I can agree that undue stress can make someone overly reactive to situations, advocating sex to calm someone down smells a bit too much like "bread and circuses" in a modern sense. What does mass media advocate for recreation and to help people "unwind and forget their problems" but alcohol and entertainment flush with violence and sexual content? Programming on TV dumbs down and avoids critical thinking or introspection on the human condition, exactly what our poster is ranting about.

    Don't do anything about societies problems that bother you. Just waste your time in carnal pleasure.

    Carnal pleasure is a "waste of time"? Dude, you need to get laid!

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  174. Mortally Bankrupt and Toxic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LMAO! How is this any different from 90% of all major corporations out there???

  175. Re:Huh? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

    We feel the same way watching from up here in Canada, where our version of right-wing is down-right communist compared to our neighbours ;-)

    --
    - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  176. People Don't Care by helix2301 · · Score: 1

    Everyone that starts a .com now a days just try and position themselves to be bought by Google, Facebook, Microsoft or one of the big giants. The problem is most of there businesses are crap shoots and setup to fail unless they are bought. People should try to build a business rather then a company to just start and sell.

  177. Re:Huh? by DEN_GUY · · Score: 1

    If you are a Marxist - You have a friend in the White House:

    In his own words, From 'Dreams of My Father':

    "To avoid being mistaken for a sellout,I chose my friends carefully.The more politically active black students.The foreign students.The Chicanos.The Marxist Professors and the structural feminists and punk-rock performance poets.We smoked cigarettes and wore leather jackets.At night,in the dorms,we discussed neocolonialism,Franz Fanon,Eurocentrism,and patriarchy.When we ground out our cigarettes in the hallway carpet or set our stereos so loud that the walls began to shake,we were resisting bourgeois society's stifling constraints.We weren't indifferent or careless or insecure.We were alienated."

    What Capitalist or Center American call soceity "Bourgeois" and "Neo-Colonialism"?! Why that's as American as Apple Pie and the Manifesto!

  178. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by cavebison · · Score: 1

    Capitalism may have it's flaws, but it is better than any previously tried system

    Capitalism works well in times of easy access to natural resources, as the economics of Capitalism classes them as "externalities".

    When resources are scarce, it does not work very well at all. We have the illusion of Capitalism being "the best system", because it has created the world we are familiar with. Hindsight is 20/20. Capitalism will not function effectively into a future of resource paucity.

  179. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by cavebison · · Score: 1

    founding a company around a cute idea with the aim of selling out in two years to become a millionaire

    Totally agree. I was asked to work for a start-up which had this exact mentality. The idea was ok, but no market research had been done, none of that traditional work was done. Create something as quickly and cheaply as possible, and then "when" it becomes popular we'll worry about a V2.. yeah right, and V2 will just be a quick & cheap rewrite to build in the advertising engine, because the focus isn't a quality product for the user, the focus is making as much money as quickly as possible.

    They were not passionate about the *idea*. I prefer working with people who believe in what they're doing. The web app start-up culture is mostly about hype and money. But there are still many who want to do great things of real value. They're often started by people who have experience in a certain field and see a need there.

  180. Does moralizing work on corporate technocracies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The headline I think begets many other greatest hits questions/clarification like: Did Silicon Valley ever have morals or are they just robots who make money from algorithms? It's a good throw down for a debate chronicle on corporate morals in general. It tends to be more amusing when it takes place on Slashdot. This takes place among hackers, who have no regrets about invasive penetration of someone else's private computing when they sleep. Perhaps this is more about the crisis of moral development in the digital frontiers. Who has a good model on morality for technology developers, who tend to not think twice about slaving others with or without their will? Has anyone substantiated that the quartz in our computers may actually have a conciousness? If so, is it a higher consicousness than it's operator? Can the utilitarian build of machinery assist us in expediting the eventual or will it admit the cycles of our mistakes quicker, as in the film Cloud Atlas.

    Amid all of this philosophical junk ... is my real question, posed to the corporate privacy inmates over at Google development: Are you going to be a "Good German", when the AmeriStazi's come for us? Did you learn nothing from oppressive socialist regimes who take their hubris religion of governance too far? Have they forfeited the only power they have under threat of force? Are the great nerd titans of Silicon Valley, "okay" enough to share their trials with anyone?

    It has dawned on me at least once SV may not be used to the battery of a particular bullying, brow beating tactics used by US Intelligence forces, pulled from coercive conference around the globe. They might be making the mistakes of someone alone, bullied, in a room with nothing but a shit ton of data and some computers. If that's the case - they have more friends and people like them than they will ever know. They should try to reach out before they continue letting the bad guy, from within or without, win, losing the prize of Liberty for the rest of us.

  181. Re:Nothing is broken except how you see things by bobbied · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure I can agree with you on this one. Capitalism has taken industries marked by scarce and expensive supply and has made supplies abundant and cheap. Capitalism drives change. It has done this time and time again.

    If you have scarce resources, you just have another case where Capitalism can improve efficiency or provide alternate resources so things can carry on. Think about it. We've moved from candles to lamps to electricity for lighting, largely driven by Capitalism and the development of technology it has allowed. If there is not a way for Capitalism to fix it, I don't see where there is any other way to fix the problem.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  182. Remember that the Star Trek system was communist by fluffernutter · · Score: 1

    The USS enterprise would have not existed if all the nations on earth did not put Earth as a a whole in front of their own needs. We can't get there unless people put the needs of society ahead of their own as individuals.

    --
    Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
  183. just nix the q by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Silicon valley is morally bankrupt and toxic. Don't pretend there is a question to be asked. For the past decade+ it has been the wild west - few laws govern the way new tech industries are regulated, so they've re-built a substantial part of the world economy in their image. If Ayn Rand were writing today, her cautionary tales of authoritative intervention in people's lives would certainly include Google, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe, etc... What they decide in board rooms affects the lives of millions. It's been mostly good up to now. But now, we are the product. We might as well all hold hands and say, "Moooooo".