Slashdot Mirror


Technology Is Making the World More Unequal; Only Technology Can Fix This (theguardian.com)

mspohr shares an excerpt from an article written by Cory Doctorow via The Guardian: The inequality of badly-run or corrupt states is boosted by the power of technology -- but it's also easier than ever to destabilize these states, thanks to technology. The question is: which future will prevail?" [The article discusses two sides to the issue:] Here's the bad news: technology -- specifically, surveillance technology -- makes it easier to police disaffected populations, and that gives badly run, corrupt states enough stability to get themselves into real trouble. Here's the good news: technology -- specifically, networked technology -- makes it easier for opposition movements to form and mobilize, even under conditions of surveillance, and to topple badly run, corrupt states. Long before the internet radically transformed the way we organize ourselves, theorists were predicting we'd use computers to achieve ambitious goals without traditional hierarchies -- but it was a rare pundit who predicted that the first really successful example of this would be an operating system (GNU/Linux), and then an encyclopedia (Wikipedia). [Cory also has a new novel, Walkaway , which explores these ideas further.] The future will see a monotonic increase in the ambitions that loose-knit groups can achieve. My new novel, Walkaway, tries to signpost a territory in our future in which the catastrophes of the super-rich are transformed into something like triumphs by bohemian, anti-authoritarian "walkaways" who build housing and space programs the way we make encyclopedias today: substituting (sometimes acrimonious) discussion and (sometimes vulnerable) networks for submission to the authority of the ruling elites.

145 comments

  1. Obligatory Homer mis-quote by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Here's to technology: the cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems.

    --
    #DeleteFacebook
    1. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by __aadota8673 · · Score: 0

      Riiiight. At the time of Homer, I don't think there was such a word as technology. If you had any kind of an education you would know this. Here - give it a read and educate yourself. I don't see this guy commenting on computers during his lifetime. Troll. http://www.ancient-literature....

    2. Re: Obligatory Homer mis-quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I think OP is actually referring to Homer Simpson. D'oh!

    3. Re: Obligatory Homer mis-quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you think stupid retard role model will be heard of 2000 years from now?

    4. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by gweihir · · Score: 2

      Naa, that would be alcohol! Technology only becomes important when the beer/wine runs out.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    5. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

      Ominpresent cameras are bad because they aid in a panopticon. On the other hand, what's good for the goose is good for the gander, and the corruption and dictatorships should start drying up as their bad behaviors are documented. This include everything from the top down to the local DMV guy who wants a $200 backhand donation or you can wait 5 years for your driver's license.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    6. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      The solution is to accumulate power at the highest levels, so that they can control the people's use of technology. Duh.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    7. Re: Obligatory Homer mis-quote by __aadota8673 · · Score: 0

      Homer Simpson is actually based on a laser scan of me done many decades ago when I was 5lb heavier. That was before I started I started my diet and workout. Now - think football player. https://www.cdreimer.com/image... And no, the OP was not talking about Homer Simpson. Homer simpson is a cartoon, so he cannot be quoted. Had the mis-quote been attributed to Matt Groening, it would have been Homer Simpson. It was Homer, the poet from Cyprus. BTW, here's some cottage cheese I just had for lunch. Delicious. http://nashaslittlepiggies.wee...

    8. Re: Obligatory Homer mis-quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Homer Simpson influences lives, and we get people like Creamer who model their lives after Homer. Then a special-ed child will see Creamer Sr Laptop Administrator destroying yet another chair and think it's cool, and model himself after Creamer. All grown, Creamer Jr Phone Mobile Workstation Administrator will destroy a space chair. A special-ed future kid will see him and think it's cool and grow up modeled after Creamer Jr.

      Alas, you are correct. This only goes 3 generations. In 100 years, a rocket will be designed with enough lift to take the Heavy Cream to space. There, unbound by gravity, the neck-tire of fat will lift up and cover the face of Creamer III in his sleep, and there will be no more creamer. He will calcify in the cold of space, and become Earth's second moon, causing minor tides around feeding time. He will still be taking it up the ass from slashdot though - from orbit.

    9. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      Naa, that would be alcohol! Technology only becomes important when the beer/wine runs out.

      People might think you're silly for stating such a thing but there may be a lot of truth to it. In the documentary How Beer Saved The World, there is a case being made that the demand for alcohol after we accidentally discovered it may have put pressure on improving agriculture technology. For those that don't know, (and this sounds just like humans) some human accidentally left a couple sacks of barley or wheat (can't remember) out in the rain. It fermented. When they rediscovered it, they weren't sure exactly what had happened but they smelled it and dared each other to drink it and of course there was one dude that took the dare. Fast forward to today, we have a booming alcohol business.

      If you do a Google search it's easy to find the documentary.

      --
      We'll make great pets
    10. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    11. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about Homer freakin' Simpson, you big-headed ignoramus! Nobody cares about some guy who died thousands of years ago!

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    12. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by __aadota8673 · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the guy who talks greek philosophy is teh ignoramus. Put down the remote and Read a book once in a while.

    13. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by zifn4b · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      You're welcome. Sometimes Truth is Stranger than Fiction :)

      --
      We'll make great pets
    14. Re: Obligatory Homer mis-quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      500 years ago, same issue with the printing press.

    15. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      Read a book? You mean like the phone directory?

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    16. Re:Obligatory Homer mis-quote by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      Sometimes Truth is Stranger than Fiction

      Oh, that was a neat movie.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
  2. What??? BeauHD? What??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.dictionary.com/browse/oxymoron

    Those that do not learn from the past.. are doomed to repeat it.

    Multiple paraphrases from multiple sources.

    http://www.answers.com/Q/Who_said_Those_who_do_not_learn_from_the_past_are_doomed_to_repeat_it

    https://youtu.be/Iwuy4hHO3YQ

  3. Consult World Leaders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has Trump called his compadres about this yet? #Covfefe #Magaing

  4. Only apps can app apps! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apps!

    1. Re: Only apps can app apps! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Do said apps use APKs HOSTS file?

    2. Re: Only apps can app apps! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not appy enough

    3. Re:Only apps can app apps! by gweihir · · Score: 1

      But what when your apps app apps app? Then you are really apped and have to app!

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    4. Re:Only apps can app apps! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      moo.

  5. Wrong tool for the job by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Technology solves the problems of those that create the technology, it just doesn't solve the problems of those that have different problems, it's the wrong tool for their job.

  6. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 0

    It's an oxymoron because it's full of shit.

    https://www.ted.com/talks/hans...

    If technology was truly making us all unequal, then none of what he says would be true.

  7. self-promoting nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cory Doctrow is not a soothsayer but a two-bit charlatan hack riding on the coat tails of others like Linux or Richard Stallman and passes it off as his own insight.

    The facts of the matter are that socialists have been using the same techniques for years in modern media and in traditional (brick and mortar sense) ways and merely expanded the same techniques from letter writing into on board commentary systems.

    The ONLY thing that makes social media even work is Facebook's omnipresent existence on the internet that you CANNOT avoid and intentionally used to sway public opinion for the highest dollar or power.

    That Cory Doctrow calls this "progressive" is an entirely (and dangerously) clueless misunderstanding of the concept. This way leads to fascism and dictatorship (witness Wikipedia, Facebook and Twitter censoring content they dislike based on their "rules" but surreptitiously ignoring similarly ignoring content that breaks the same rules they like...because...)

    Thought control is not progression. Firing people for wrongthink is not progression and all of these are used to increase government control of the populace in increasingly bolder moves.

    Bad times for all - But hey Cory's getting paid... buy his book to get his thoughts on it!

    1. Re: self-promoting nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All current sci-fi is a bitch of political correctness. There is fear to offend a stupid minority or a PC censor. Once a cultural phenomenon, now dead, just like American dream is dead.

      Future is stupid bearded sand n1ggers blowing up things, there is your sci-fi.

    2. Re:self-promoting nonsense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's a lefty, thats all the have at the Guardian. He talks about survaillance etc as if its bad, but like all lefties he ignores the fact that the UK now has some of the most draconian anti free specch laws and police in the world.

    3. Re:self-promoting nonsense by mspohr · · Score: 2

      I believe that Cory is looking to the use of social media to organize groups of people around an idea for action. This is different than the propaganda such as the fake news posted by Russian and alt-right operatives who use this to promote their fascist ideals.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  8. Taxes also help by jader3rd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A broad base, low rate, progressive tax structure also helps fight inequality.

    1. Re:Taxes also help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      may be in first, second world economy, but that doesn't help people who still live in huts.

    2. Re:Taxes also help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A flat 50% tax should be just about right.

    3. Re:Taxes also help by epyT-R · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not for the 99%.

    4. Re: Taxes also help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      About half of them -- say, 47% or so -- want the 1% to pay all the taxes. Worse, they think such a scheme will fund everything they want government to do.

    5. Re: Taxes also help by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Informative

      About half of them -- say, 47% or so -- want the 1% to pay all the taxes. Worse, they think such a scheme will fund everything they want government to do.

      Let's have the 1% actually pay their share, and then talk about it. They derive more than 3/4 of the benefit but pay less than 3/4 of the taxes.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re: Taxes also help by silentcoder · · Score: 2

      Yeah... the number is bullshit, just like it was bullshit when Romney cited it.
      The number of people in the USA who pay no taxes at all: 0. Since everybody pays sales taxes and the like at least.
      That was merely the number who don't pay federal income tax- and only a small fraction of that number are people 'not contributing'.
      A huge swath of that 47% are schoolgoing children. Another huge swath are retired elderly people. Another huge swath are active service members in the armed forces.
      These are all people who either will contribute in future or have already contributed significantly in the past.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    7. Re:Taxes also help by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Combine that with a tax credit of 50% the mean income and you're spot on. Average people pay nothing and get nothing, people below average get a hand up, people at the top pay for it.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    8. Re: Taxes also help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Active duty military most definitely pay federal income tax. Source: I am active duty military and I pay federal income tax.

    9. Re:Taxes also help by mspohr · · Score: 1

      The greatest reason for inequality in the US is that our tax structure has become less progressive. During the time of Eisenhower up to Reagan, the highest tax rate was 90% and there were fewer loopholes. Regan started the tear down this progressive tax structure and as a result, we have had steadily rising inequality. The current GOP administration is poised for another large tax break for those at the top so inequality will get worse.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    10. Re: Taxes also help by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? The 1% are the ones that need public schools? Social Security? Medicare? Welfare? A quick at the federal budget tells me the largest item consists entitlement payments. I doubt that's much benefit to the 1%.

      Personally, I hope the 1% are stockpiling Zyklon-B. With bloodsuckers like you around, they'll need it.

  9. Open Source causes poverty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    The industry of highly paid programmers working in silos has been decimated by this Open Source software not worth paying for.

    Although it only does an half-assed job, the low cost of Open Source software has lowered both the quality and expectations to create a new balance of acceptability.

    A new technology, the Public Cloud, remedies to this situation by allowing third parties to charge for open source software and keep the proceeds for themselves. In turn, a new industry of Cloud Architects has been born with the goal of replacing all IT professionals with outsourced services.

    1. Re:Open Source causes poverty by Narcocide · · Score: 2

      The sad thing is that I actually now believe these type of people you allude to really do exist; The type of people who see no math error in the notion that you can replace IT professionals by outsourcing to ... something that isn't just some other country's IT professionals??

    2. Re:Open Source causes poverty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poverty is Good. It means the GNU Manifesto has achieved half of the goal.

      In the long run, making programs free is a step toward the postscarcity world, where nobody will have to work very hard just to make a living. People will be free to devote themselves to activities that are fun, such as programming, after spending the necessary ten hours a week on required tasks such as legislation, family counseling, robot repair and asteroid prospecting. There will be no need to be able to make a living from programming.

      We have already greatly reduced the amount of work that the whole society must do for its actual productivity, but only a little of this has translated itself into leisure for workers because much nonproductive activity is required to accompany productive activity. The main causes of this are bureaucracy and isometric struggles against competition. Free software will greatly reduce these drains in the area of software production. We must do this, in order for technical gains in productivity to translate into less work for us.

    3. Re:Open Source causes poverty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are beyond scarcity in some ways but not yet in others. Internet access is practically free. Electricity and clean water are cheap. Food and housing are prohibitively expensive. What can self driving food trucks do about the cost of food? What can self driving tents do about the cost of housing? Imagine a world where everyone lives in shanty towns on wheels. Imagine people openly stealing from passing food trucks. Entertainment is free today in the sense of you can pirate movies on the internet and be reasonably sure to evade prosecution. What if tomorrow we feed ourselves similarly by simply stealing food and expecting not to be prosecuted for theft.

    4. Re:Open Source causes poverty by Chrontius · · Score: 2

      Personally, I aspire for "too cheap to steal".

    5. Re:Open Source causes poverty by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Free Open Source Software runs most of the Internet and has been proven to be of better quality than proprietary software. (How's is that Windows crapware working out for you?)
      It's great if you want to charge for OSS and if you'll provide real service, I'm sure you will be successful.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    6. Re:Open Source causes poverty by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      citation needed

    7. Re:Open Source causes poverty by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Excursion from beneath rock needed.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  10. tools empower people. by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The lesson to be learned here is that tools empower people be they good or evil. The more you understand the tools the more powerful and dangerous you are to established systems of power.

    --
    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    1. Re:tools empower people. by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Possible exception being vaccines. I don't really see a downside there.

      (and no, overpopulation is not a downside. We have enough resources and are not at overpopulation, the population is showing signs of stabilizing, and the diseases being vaccinated against generally weren't killing enough people to keep the numbers down).

    2. Re:tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Over population is the root cause of just about every problem we face today. As populations grow he worlds natural resources will be consumed faster.

    3. Re:tools empower people. by fermion · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It is not that complicated. Long before it was predicted that computers would make the a world into a theorized utopia, it was predicted that computer would clean the house while astronavigation was done by hand by smart men, thus reinforcing the bigotry of the 1950's society.

      One imagines that the oppressive government was empowered by cheap paper and writing utensil so they could more easily keep files on citizens, but also that the printing press made the distribution of information related to the corruption in government equally easy.

      It is said that one of the major advantages of the Europeans that committed the genocide on the Americas was their ability to read and write, and therefore an ability to store, retain, and transfer large amounts of information.

      Today many of us consider a person who cannot write a sentence or speak in coherent thoughts an idiot. It is a marker of a education, culture, and basic ability to be a human. While this is not necessarily fair, someone can be born significantly differently abled, we realize that the inability to retain and communicate information still usually limits their position of power.

      What is, and always has, been a problem is the access to information, culture, and skills. PBS is hated by some because no matter how the family, no matter what color the family, Sesame Street teaches them basic facts, Lamb Chop(RIP) teaches them basic social skills, and a variety of cultural programs exposes them to art from around the world, creating the basis for a well rounded citizen.

      TV, fundamentally evil, provides a potential to maximize equity, but that potential is not realized if all one every watches is Fox News and ESPN.

      What we are seeing now is so many kids actively not being taught how to utilize technology to maximize their own goals. Too many teachers, brought up in the oppressive hierarchy, just teach safe social networking and video games, afraid of what students might be able to do if they knew how to use the computer as tool. God forbid they might learn how to code. Just look at how people around react when we suggest that every kids should learn how to code. Many people hear seem deathly afraid that everyone might know how to use a computer. It is like we are suggesting that every kid be sent to sex worker when they turn 13 so they can learn to do sex right.

      Back in the late 70's my parents spent scant resources so I was sat in front of a teletype machine and learn to code. In the mid 80's we spent a great deal of money buying me my first computer. Everyone laughed at us, happily spending their scant money on Atari video games.

      The thing is that I have mad skills, so I am not the one who can't get a job. The kids today are up shit creek because most teachers are simply too afraid, or can't, teach computers in the class room. Sure kids will waste time, but you know, no matter the technology we figured out how to waste time.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    4. Re:tools empower people. by dgatwood · · Score: 2

      Possible exception being vaccines. I don't really see a downside there.

      One possible downside is that the human species could gradually become weaker by not allowing the most susceptible to die off, and one day a superbug could kill us all. This is, of course, purely hypothetical (and will likely continue to be hypothetical unless and until it isn't), but antibiotic resistance could very easily just be the first salvo in the rise of the contagions.

      That said, this isn't a valid reason to stop vaccinate people, of course. The risk is likely low relative to the reward, and if you don't vaccinate people, there's a very real possibility that one of the people who dies unnecessarily as a result of one nasty bug would be one of the people (or the ancestor of one of the people) who otherwise would later discover the vaccine that prevents the superbug or whose natural immunity would allow the vaccine to be derived. So it would be a pretty silly thing to stop vaccinating people based on that fear. But it's still technically a possible downside. :-)

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    5. Re:tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is that I have mad skills, so I am not the one who can't get a job. The kids today are up shit creek because most teachers are simply too afraid, or can't, teach computers in the class room. Sure kids will waste time, but you know, no matter the technology we figured out how to waste time.

      You think you have mad skillz but you're close to reaching that age when you'll be unable to find work because you just don't have the skill to be young anymore. You'll be up shit creek real soon.

    6. Re: tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you suck at reading comprehension, or are you just trolling?

    7. Re: tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basic Income Now!

    8. Re:tools empower people. by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Not generally, but tools that anybody can manufacture (here: software) have that nature.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    9. Re:tools empower people. by gweihir · · Score: 1

      Vaccines can be used as a weapon and as medical experiments.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    10. Re:tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Possible exception being vaccines. I don't really see a downside there.

      Taliban might have disagreed at one point. Hopefully the CIA don't give them a reason to anymore.

    11. Re: tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Today many of us consider a person who cannot write a sentence or speak in coherent thoughts an idiot."

      So how covfefe he became president?

    12. Re: tools empower people. by silentcoder · · Score: 1

      Well certainly many people considered him an idiot. It's just that there are rather a lot of idiots in America, and the idiots were adamant about electing one of their own for once.

      --
      Unicode killed the ASCII-art *
    13. Re:tools empower people. by Immerman · · Score: 1

      >We have enough resources and are not at overpopulation

      How do you figure? Global consumption is currently estimated at roughly 150% of the sustainable ecological carrying capacity - i.e. we're "spending the capital" and reducing the carrying capacity every year.

      Now, if we eliminated the rampant waste we'd be fine, even have enough headroom to keep growing (though maybe not all the way to the 11 billion or so people that estimates are expecting us to peak at), but that's a hypothetical situation that has very little bearing on practical reality.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    14. Re:tools empower people. by Immerman · · Score: 1

      How exactly do you weaponize a vaccine? Even the medical experiments are mostly limited to "does this vaccine work" and "what are the side effects?"

      Now, *fake* vaccines are something else entirely, and there have been enough eugenics programs administered in the developing world (especially Africa) under the guise of vaccinations that it's hardly surprising that many of the locals no longer trust them. That might even be a contributing factor to do the anti-vaxxer movement in the developed world - nothing like a kernel of truth to give wings to a lie.

      --
      --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
    15. Re:tools empower people. by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      Not vaccines themselves, but the technology that produces vaccines is very useful for biological warfare.

    16. Re:tools empower people. by gweihir · · Score: 1

      That is the point: "mostly limited to". That is a statement about use, not about what _can_ be done with it. Also, fact of the matter is that it is extremely expensive to kill people with a real vaccine and you need some specific illness that is actually beneficial and saves their life. There are examples for that, but due to the price-tag and the difficulties to achieve the outcome I do not think that has been done.

      --
      Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
    17. Re:tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Population is not the problem population density is. Africa is a perfect example of this "save a starving child". Who ends up growing up to have 12 children of his/her own to live in the same environment that could not support the parent in the first place. Also those saved children migrating to large urban areas to add to the density in another area to compete for resources. Endless cycle till life ends up finding a way... oh wait we ended that way...

    18. Re:tools empower people. by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      No. Smallpox, flu, chicken pox... all the viruses we vaccinate against don't kill genetically "weaker" people, they kill off the elderly, infants, and a few immunocompromised individuals, and make anyone else mildly to seriously sick.

      If superflu or ebola is coming, it won't be because we have let such "weaker" individuals live. The elderly die off on their own, and infants of course grow out of susceptibility. Getting rid of them wouldn't have strengthened the human population any. Quite the opposite, it would have weakened us.

    19. Re:tools empower people. by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Disagree. Virology as a field must progress if we want to avoid global pandemics. Manufacturing techniques for viruses aren't that different from biological research in general. Weaponizing them is the difficult part and has nothing to do with vaccination tech. Terrorist use of biological warfare doesn't require such technology either, all they'd need to do is find a smallpox or other pathogen sample and walk into an airport.

    20. Re:tools empower people. by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      You're wildly uninformed. Nigeria is the most dense country on the african continent. Number 73 worldwide. Well below several US territories. And hunger worldwide is falling dramatically. At least until climate change fucks everything up again.

    21. Re: tools empower people. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well certainly many people considered him an idiot. It's just that there are rather a lot of idiots in America, and the idiots were adamant about electing one of their own for once.

      OK, so that's funny. However, I really wish that it was funny & untrue. Unfortunately, it's funny & true (& sad & ...).

    22. Re:tools empower people. by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      No. Smallpox, flu, chicken pox... all the viruses we vaccinate against don't kill genetically "weaker" people, they kill off the elderly, infants, and a few immunocompromised individuals, and make anyone else mildly to seriously sick.

      We also vaccinate against influenza, and some forms of that disproportionately kill certain groups of people based on how their immune system responds; people whose immune systems exhibit a sufficiently severe cytokine storm die, whereas people with a less aggressive immune system don't, and genetic factors are believed to play a significant role in that difference. And those deaths are among people of roughly breeding age, which means that virus will have a very real effect on the genetic makeup of the population in future generations, which means they will be less susceptible to similar viruses in the future.

      But again as I said, it would be incorrect to assume that such a susceptibility qualifies as "weaker", because those precise immune mechanisms that cause death in that case are also likely responsible for conferring extra protection against any number of other illnesses. Part of what makes a species robust is its genetic diversity.

      Unfortunately, we can't absolutely rule out the possibility that some random genetic fluke could become disproportionately common in the gene pool because we protected those people against hard-to-spread viruses that killed a few people at a time, nor the possibility that some future virus could take advantage of that to wipe out an unusually large percentage of the population. It is unlikely, but not impossible.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  11. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If technology was truly making us all unequal, then none of what he says would be true.

    Ah, but it is true. If I have a Colt 45 and you don't, one of us is more unequal than the other.

    You see, it works every time!

    That means, of course, that we will only be balanced if both of us have a Illudium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator.

  12. Technology boosts corrupt states? B.S. by Verity_Crux · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    The inequality of badly-run or corrupt states is boosted by the power of technology
    I call B.S. on that. Technology is the only thing keeping the poor man in the game. Technology is the only thing keeping inflation from running out of control.

    These things boost the corrupt states and increase the gap between the rich and the poor:
    1. Apathetic populaces.
    2. Fiat money payment requirements.
    3. Central banks that can inflate at will (that also loan money).
    4. The ability of corrupt nations and dictators to borrow money from said banks or other overly-anxious capitalists (who probably have elitist bankers as parents).
    5. Laws that make investing money difficult or elitist.
    6. Minimum wage laws.
    7. Governments that pay off the money they borrow with more borrowed money.

    1. Re:Technology boosts corrupt states? B.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      You don't get out much, do you?

      Apathetic populaces arise from wealth. It's a positive feedback loop.

      Minum wage laws are an attempt to establish gross salary inequities, not its cause.

      Corrupt dictators and their fiscal abuses are unavoidable in general. Preventing them requires consistent policies by their political and fiscal sponsors, which is incredibly difficult to avoid.

      Local banks inflate at will, too.

      Laws that make investing money difficult are balances against potlach, and founded in attempts to take money *out* of inequitable reserves and get it back into the economy.

      The list goes on, and on.

  13. I don't feel one bit empowered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a powerful server standing in a DC. I have excellent coding skills in that I can do "reasonable stuff" myself. I have every means to create "anything" and have anyone in the world be able to access it instantly. It's just that they won't and don't. Everyone else also has access to these things, so they are no longer worth anything. Marketing is a nightmare. I'm very much struggling to survive, and I don't feel one bit "empowered" by any technology. Only trapped and harassed. This new world sucks.

    1. Re:I don't feel one bit empowered. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You coded a shitty webapp that nobody wants to use? Me too! We should exchange info and totally not use each others shitty apps.

  14. Why is inequality bad again? by mveloso · · Score: 0

    Humanity was unequal for the vast majority of its history. The current fad for equality is, for the most part, a historical blip. What ever happened to "respecting other cultures and their preference for inequality?"

    1. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nice to know you aren't starving. Myself I only eat one meal per day. The truth is I can't even afford to eat, but when the alternative is dying, I have no choice. Tell me again when Trump is going to MAGA so I can find work anywhere.

    2. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Humanity was unequal for the vast majority of its history. The current fad for equality is, for the most part, a historical blip.

      Catastrophes tend to improve equality, because the rich have lot more to lose than the poor. One of the biggest levelers in history was the Black Death of the 14th century. The elite had most of their wealth in land, which collapsed in value because there was no one left to till it, while the poor saw their incomes soar since labor was scarce and valued.

      The 20th century had 3 catastrophes in row: WW1, the Great Depression, and WW2. These all served as levelers, and by 1945, Western society was more level than ever. So people that grew up during the decades that followed, came to view the prevailing equality as "normal". Things are now regressing to the mean.

    3. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The 20th century had 3 catastrophes in row: WW1, the Great Depression, and WW2. These all served as levelers, and by 1945, Western society was more level than ever. So people that grew up during the decades that followed, came to view the prevailing equality as "normal". Things are now regressing to the mean.

      You ignore the Cold War, which leveled the top off of the rich by making them pay for military and scientific competition between superpowers. Catastrophe was not enough. It was nationalistic competition which created equality through high taxes. A decade after the Cold War ended, tax cuts to the rich caused a regression toward inequality and the inevitable Great Recession.

    4. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      if you only eat one meal a day how can you afford to post on slashdot? Perhaps you should cancel your network access and buy some more food.

    5. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Internet access is free. Maybe you've noticed there's free wifi everywhere?

    6. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      or he could be posting from the public library

    7. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      seing as we have been farming for 10,000 years and we were in hunter gather groups for about 40,000 years before that, i would say that you are wrong.

      In fact inequality simply couldn't have happened until we were able to store enough food that human beings were able to live in cities and do things other than work for their food.

      so given that we really could have only moved into cities for 1/5 of the time that humans have existed i would say that Humanity has been equal for the vast majority of its existence and Inequality for the most part is a recent fad and will eventually be a historical blip. Mostly because we are about to kill the planet and the only way to really save it is to focus on equality.

      Hunter gather groups are inherently equal which is something we have learn not only through excavations but from dealing with some current hunter gatherer groups. Changing history to suit your narrative is rather foolish

    8. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by Dorianny · · Score: 1
      Inequality exists even among primates that have no concept of material possessions. It simply comes down to the most important element in animals with a social structure and that's the status in the social hierarchy. High ranking chimpanzees get "benefits" such as offerings of food, extra grooming, etc while low ranking ones are often bullied and abused.

      The small hunter-gatherer groups are quite possibly the most unequal of all societies as the leader or leaders have essentially absolute authority over the other members of the group

    9. Re:Why is inequality bad again? by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Only those at the top have a preference for inequality.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  15. The Circle of Tyranny. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    1) 3rd world dictator uses technology to oppress and slaughter millions of dissidents
    2) Terrorists/Freedom Fighters (depending on whose side America is on) use snapchat to organize a revolution.
    3) Country erupts into civil war, killing millions.
    4) Terrorists/Freedom Fighters install their own oppressive dictator, perhaps with the masquerade of a rigged election.
    5) If new dictator is smarter than the old one and bans or heavily restricts private internet use, then break; else goto 1;

    All that's really changed is that all the assorted terribleness is much more efficient now.

    1. Re: The Circle of Tyranny. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So far down for someone to point out the obvious.

      Destabilizing "corrupt" regimes has only made matters worse recently. Arab spring, Maiden...

  16. The Human Condition by InfiniteZero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no escape from the human condition. Technology merely amplifies it.

    The internet was supposed to break down barriers and make the world a global village. But instead, for better or worse, we now have virtual enclaves of like-minded people who would never have found each other without the internet and social media.

    The future is uncertain. Will it turns out to be an utopia, or dystopia? Your answer reflects your own worldview.

    1. Re: The Human Condition by Entrope · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Bullshit. The global poverty rate has plummeted over the last 40 years. It's increasingly possible for poor citizens in Third World countries to own a cell phone that is more powerful than the fastest PCs from 20 years ago. Most of the developed world is dealing with the problem of having too much food rather than not enough.

      There will be limitations and conflicts as long as we are Homo sapiens, but for the most part, we're doing pretty well at escaping what people 50 or 100 years ago thought was the inevitable "human condition".

    2. Re:The Human Condition by antdude · · Score: 1

      For me, it was better since I have disabilities. I can't talk, hear, drive, etc. Internet made my communications much better like this post. ;)

      --
      Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  17. disaffected populations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like the mentally ill?

  18. Economics, not technology by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The problems of wealth inequality come from economics, not technology.

    Allocate an array of reasonably large size, say a million entries, and fill each cell with the value 1.0

    Next, choose any cell at random using a probability based on it's normalized value: Add all the cells together (the total) and make the probability of choosing any cell equal to it's cell value divided by the total.

    Increment that chosen cell by a portion of its value; for example, increase the chosen cell value by 1%.

    Repeat this process (select, increment) many times.

    What you will find is that inevitably some cell values will increase exponentially, outstripping all other cells. Eventually one cell will become largest, outstripping all other cells.

    Reset the simulation and rerun it, and the same thing will happen, only to different cells.

    This is the model of our economic system. Compound interest is exactly this type of exponential increase, and will cause this same behaviour in simulation by itself. Other factors, such as getting better rates the more money you have, paying less in taxes the more money you have, will amplify this effect.

    And which cell values get amplified is simply due to chance. In the beginning, it's being in the right place at the right time.

    It's a math problem and easy to prove.

    The human inability to identify, understand and control exponential increase is what leads to wealth inequality.

    Not technology.

    1. Re:Economics, not technology by mentil · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Modify the algorithm so that the larger the disparity between the largest cell and the others becomes, the greater the chances that the surrounding cells will join together to loot and destroy it. I'm guessing the endgame of that is that a backstabbing nobility class surrounds the old warlord's corpse, and a new 'king' comes into being where the warlord was; the wealth is distributed just barely enough (i.e. to the nobility class) that the cells surrounding the nobles won't be able to gather enough power to destroy all of the nobles at once. Sure you get minor skirmishes at the fringes but not organized enough to upend the nobles. The nobles still gradually drain the serfs of wealth, and the king gets assassinated every now and then.

      Add in a rule that cells can use some wealth to reduce the likelihood that neighbors will attack them, and you've coded in propaganda and danegeld.

      --
      Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
    2. Re:Economics, not technology by ezdiy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Btw, posts above me talk about Sugarscape. One interesting thing about sugarscape is that no matter how complex the social rules, you always end up with pereto distribution (popularly known as rich get richer, poor stay the same at best, get poorer at worst).

      Fancy rules can only slightly vary the skew of the curve, because winner-takes-all and win-lose point accumulation law is universal - as long you design the system as darwinist and competetive that is.

    3. Re:Economics, not technology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post hints at some things that I don't think would happen. Call me jaded, but I can easily see a rich person surrounding themselves with people who are not quite capable of overthrowing them. When one gets just enough power to be perceived as a threat, they are disposed of (destroyed or killed) and replaced by another strong weakling.

      If you think my pattern is a bit harsh or unrealistic, I invite you to read the book "The Prince." Since this was described as an ideal situation hundreds of years ago, and you failed to consider it, I believe you don't know very much about the topic you are talking about. (If it is a consolation, I don't know enough about it either, but at least I read a few books).

  19. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1

    If technology was truly making us all unequal, then none of what he says would be true.

    When Americans say "us all" or "everyone", they mean all Americans, not all humans. Yes, the world is becoming more equal, not less, and prosperity is increasing the most for the people at the very bottom, but if you exclude 95% of humanity from your calculations, and only look at Americans, then that is no longer true.

  20. NONSENSE! May as well use dynamite to put out a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    FIRE!

  21. Re:Fuck Equality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Young Republicans are soooooo cute!

  22. Techno-Adhocracy by mentil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Soviet Union was notorious for paying or otherwise turning huge swathes of the population into agents and informants; social media flagged posts being forwarded directly to the Secret Police can make any movement stillborn. There's an old Russian saying: "When three men sit down to discuss revolution, two are government agents, and the third is a fool." No new surveillance tech is needed for agents and informants to kill uprisings, although the internet makes casually passing info along to the Powers That Be much easier. The internet can make organizing easier, flash mobs for example; I seem to recall some of this happened during the Arab Spring, however look at what happened afterward: how good a job is internet organization doing at stopping ISIS militants in the middle east? So much for toppling badly-run states.

    'Open source will create a shadow economy, routing around the existing corruption' is a fancy as well. Sure, if everyone had their own universal constructor and people were downloading pirate designs with cracked DRM, this might be possible. However, barring that, the incumbents can simply lobby for laws to be passed that restrict usage of open source/shadow economy tools. Look at laws that prohibit municipal wifi/fiber, or mandate govt. usage of MS Office/Oracle, or restrict or ban usage of Bitcoin. Doctorow's ideas here remind me of the phrase "The solution to the problems of Democracy, is more Democracy." As in, direct democracy can route around the corruption in a representative democracy. However, with propaganda, and how willingly people will sell their vote, this is arguably not as conclusive a solution as one would think, just a temporary rerouting of the problem. Imagine how many millions of poverty-level people would vote for the USA SAVE PUPPIES Act, because they love puppies right? And because the sponsor loves puppies SO MUCH, they're paying $100 to ensure they make the right choice and don't give in to the immoral temptations of the Act's opponents. Doing the right thing should feel good, ya know? And the act is being fast-tracked through referendum and is 900 pages long and noone has time to pore over it to find the evils it hides; and it's log-rolled so that individual clauses can't be stricken later once discovered without undoing the entire law which contains a myriad of other, actually-desirable things. Propaganda can get people to oppose net neutrality or countless other things that would be to their own benefit, thinking doing so will help them more (indirectly, once it trickles down... any day now...) and thus democracy dies to thunderous applause.

    Sure we can get Wikipedia and Linux, but there was LOTS of hubbub at one time about how unreliable Wikipedia is, because it can be edited by anyone, until several studies found it to be as or more reliable on average than respected encyclopedias. Remember the Get The Facts campaign by MS about Linux, and FUD about backdoors being hidden in the Linux source because, again, anyone can edit it, and corporations using Linux being liable to be sued by SCO etc. for patent infringement? Bitcoin has been thoroughly associated with drug trafficking, ransomware, and money laundering in the public eye, not completely unwarranted. The problem is corruption tends to have money, which can buy propaganda, which can fool people into supporting the status quo; about the best I hope for is that principled people will obtain money, then use counter-propaganda. Knowledgeable people who don't fall for the propaganda can use the open-source stuff... but only when the sheeple don't go along with the plot to make it illegal. That's what we should really be afraid of here, and no ad-hoc tech group is going to get around that any better than The Pirate Bay has. How many of its operators are in prison now?

    --
    Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
    1. Re:Techno-Adhocracy by Visarga · · Score: 1

      Your argument seems to rely on the presumption that society will remain as it is. We're going through massive changes now, maybe in 20 years we will have replicators (universal 3d-printers) and be post scarcity.

    2. Re:Techno-Adhocracy by mentil · · Score: 1

      Yes, thus why I said "Sure, if everyone had their own universal constructor and people were downloading pirate designs with cracked DRM, this might be possible." I remember the RepRap promising an inexorable technological drive towards this, although AFAIK we still don't have 3d printers that can completely print 100% of their own components. My understanding is that 3d printer technology has been held up due to patent litigation as well, proving my point.

      --
      Corruption is convincing someone that the selfless ideal is the same as their selfish ideal.
  23. Re: What??? BeauHD? What??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No room, too tight. The American bigotry's already in there.

  24. Wikipedia's hierarchy by Antiocheian · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Long before the internet radically transformed the way we organize ourselves, theorists were predicting we'd use computers to achieve ambitious goals without traditional hierarchies -- but it was a rare pundit who predicted that the first really successful example of this would be an operating system (GNU/Linux), and then an encyclopedia (Wikipedia).

    Wikipedia is a very poor example of a non-traditional hierarchy. It has a very traditional and very solid hierarchy upon which it maintains its desired pro-Western establishment bias. Want an example ? Take a look at the cited sources for en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syrian_Civil_War and try to find a Syrian source among them. This isn't an accident. They want this bias and enforce this bias through their administrative hierarchy by making sure that any source that doesn't conform to the Reuters, BBC, NYT, WSJ etc point of view should be tough to include.

    As for Linux, I think it became relevant when IBM and Canonical streamlined it for businesses and the general public but I may be entirely wrong here.

    1. Re:Wikipedia's hierarchy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for Linux, I think it became relevant when IBM and Canonical streamlined it for businesses and the general public but I may be entirely wrong here.

      You forgot Red Hat..

    2. Re:Wikipedia's hierarchy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      same thing with the isreali military genocide. edit an article to correct the wholesale theft of lands, murder of civilians, historical facts, and/or cultural appropriation, and jewish editors will roll back your edit. even when the article itself, lays the foundation (in their own "selective" cites).

      the world, is about influence, and influence peddling. wikipedia, right or wrong, is the goto for most of the uneducated masses.

      stupid people, rely on stupid resources. smart people, think. there will always be a wikipedia to propogandize the masses. there is a lot of money, in having the uneducated, buy your particular line of bullshit. so long as the crooks control the infrastructure, the end result will always be the same.

  25. Re:Fuck Equality by Z80a · · Score: 1

    Equality is actually a quite noble goal to strive for, equality of opportunity, that is.
    But seems like the two sides of "that fight" don't actually want it.

  26. US propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... topple badly run, corrupt states ...

    This is little more than US exceptionalism packaged as war-mongering sound-bytes; "We'll bring you freedom and democracy" or "Our might will liberate you".

    Remember the French reign of terror, the US war of independence, the feudalism of post-Russia Afghanistan or post-Arab-spring Libya? It's easy to call a government corrupt; it's difficult to topple that government; it's fucking exhausting to build a new government that doesn't mimic the old government.

    The USA is noteworthy because they had gentry that survived the revolution and was allowed to form government. Americans, once again, think they can export their good luck to other countries.

    ... ambitious goals without traditional hierarchies ...

    The USA government was designed to be the ultimate in self-regulation: Look at the power the federal branch has over ordinary citizens via FBI/DHS/BAFTE/NSA plus the departments of Education and Interior: That ideal has been severely corrupted. Later nations, like Australia, copied the idea of separating the federal government from other levels of government and made sure it stayed separate. Growing populations meant their provinces and states had to co-operate more, not the federal government had to steal power from member states.

    ... catastrophes of the super-rich ...

    What catastrophe? The only catastrophe for the super-rich is the government failing to protect their wealth and their property. That tends to happen when they've been so greedy and so selfish that the middle-class and the starving poor combine to kill them.

    ... the ambitions that loose-knit groups can achieve ...

    AKA crowd-sourcing: It works when there's an executive authority, like in KickStarter or GitHub projects. It's a dismal failure when everybody supplies 2 cents of labour, like in Twitter, Reddit, Facebook, or even Slashdot.

    ... opposition movements to form and mobilize ...

    Using "loose-knit groups" allows the opposing authority to radicalize policies, to spread disinformation and dissent, to conduct false-flag operations. Any group without a strong figurehead will be destroyed from the outside and within.

  27. Obsessing over "equality", wrong plan by petes_PoV · · Score: 2
    Equality does not measure what people think it does

    We could all be equal by being destitute. By having short, brutish, lives that end violently, in childbirth or starvation. That would be highly "equal", but extremely unpleasant.

    We could also engineer a society where everyone had equal opportunities. But that would still give us people with great wealth and others who had nothing. Simply because some are driven (whether that is healthy, or not - a different issue) to attain power, wealth, knowledge, whatever and others are happy to sit around all day doing the bare minimum. Some people make good decisions - short term vs. long term, while others are impulsive, gullible and easily led.

    We cold also have a society where everyone does the same sort of job and earns the same sort of money. (Since "equality" only seems to be about what you earn.) That would score highly on most measures of equality, like the Gini coefficient. But if a trillionaire moved to that "equal" country, the measure of equality would immediately be skewed and the country would show up as being highly unequal - even though none of the non-trillionaires were any worse off than before.

    What technology has done is given us all more opportunities. Some seize them, others are too lazy or uneducated, or don't recognise it, or are looking the wrong way, or value other things. Some people just happen to be in the right place at the right time and buy into the right startup. Others are unlucky and go bust. But for the average individual, technology gives us all more. Whether you are a high-speed trader making millions (but who will soon be out of a job when an AI takes your seat), or a farmer in Kenya who gets up-to-date produce prices on their phone - you benefit from technology. You might have less equality, but you are better off, healthier, will live longer and be better educated.

    In the end, that is what matters. Not whether the guy next door has a $1m yacht and you don't. That is just greed and envy, not equality.

    --
    politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
    1. Re:Obsessing over "equality", wrong plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Petes,
      I like the way you put the message about some people driven to attain power...
      Thanks,

    2. Re:Obsessing over "equality", wrong plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about "fairness"?

    3. Re:Obsessing over "equality", wrong plan by Tempest_2084 · · Score: 1

      Who decides what's fair? Fairness is usually in the eye of the beholder.

  28. Re:Fuck Equality by Phillip2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The distinction between equality and equality of opportunity is a relatively false one, unfortunately. The idea is that inequality is okay, so long as it distinguishes between individuals on the basis of their merit.

    That's fine, but how do we define merit, in a way that is not tautological or otherwise meaningless. If, for example, we leave in an environment where personal income is largely defined by your access to capital, rather than your labour, then this is a meritocracy, so long as you define "merit" as having lots of cash. This is largely the society we live in now. If you look back 200 years ago, then we leaved in a meritocracy, so long as you defined merit in terms of having lots of land (at least in Europe, it was less true in the US because there were fewer people and lots of land). If you go back 1000 years, then being good with hacking and slaying was more the thing.

    We often see this problem when we look at CEOs with very large salaries. Well, it's said, we have to pay them that because its the market rate. Or, in short, they have merit because they get paid a lot, and we pay them a lot because they have merit.

    At heart, we have to strive for some level of equality, and equality of opportunity just clouds the issue. The levels of inequality that we have now are, I think, not sustainable. In the past, the main mechanisms for solving this problem have been the union or other social movements. Or war. Let's hope it's not the latter again.

  29. Incorrect title by MistrX · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "People are making the world more unequal; Only people can fix this".
    Technology is inherently neutral. It's the person or people that wield it that give it colour.

  30. what this is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We all realize this "article" and discussion is an advertisement for one of these "elites" to sell us his novel, right?

    Social engineering as entertainment is part of the problem, more so than technology development.

  31. Weird fraudulent topic/headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a nonsense headline: "Technology Is Making the World More Unequal; Only Technology Can Fix This"

    Sound as fraudulent as: "Violence Is Making the World More Unequal; Only Violence Can Fix This"

    Best case for this headline: Being pointless(!)
    Worse case for this headline: Being fraudulent

  32. Uhh by easyTree · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't it be "wash repeatedly with water?"

  33. Re: NONSENSE! May as well use dynamite to put out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dynamite has been used to put out oil well fires. :)

  34. Why expect a journalist to be original? by dbIII · · Score: 2

    Cory Doctrow is not a soothsayer but a two-bit charlatan hack riding on the coat tails of others like Linux or Richard Stallman and passes it off as his own insight.

    Why do you expect someone who writes about what others are doing to be original? Where is he passing it off as his own insight instead of something that he has observed others doing?
    As for his fiction - is he supposed to actually invent the things he writes about instead of just loosely describing them?

  35. those in power... by sad_ · · Score: 1

    ...can ban the technology that endangers them.

    --
    On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.
  36. It's a Conspiracy ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Didn't you hear? All this technology is a FSB/CIA conspiracy to destroy the rule of law and process! Duck on a spinach sauce and cover with mushroom tarragon! Sheeples roasted on sticks, pushed between the cogs of the system! Wine!

  37. BUY MY BOOK!!1!1one! by The123king · · Score: 1

    Well this is a thinly veiled plug. Surely articles like this should have an advertisement warning

    --
    If you gave me a choice between a printer and a giraffe with explosive diarrhoea, i'll get my ladder and my raincoat
  38. Re:Fuck Equality by Z80a · · Score: 1

    Well, ideally your merit should be measured on how much profit you do generate for the company etc, rather than the profit you make personally, but there are several, several, several ways around it.
    But instead of trying to solve by this side, many people try to solve the issue with the direct equality of outcome measures, in ways that work more about leveling down the ones that succeeded rather than increasing the chances of the ones that didn't.

  39. Fixing a typo by Shoten · · Score: 1

    "People Are Using Technology to Make the World More Unequal; Only People Can Fix This"

    There, fixed that for you.

    Technology doesn't do anything by itself. It has no animus of it's own (yet). It's a tool...and like any tool, it can be used in good ways, bad ways, stupid ways and ineffective ways. The difference between the choice of ways is, and always has been, a question of people, not of the technology in question. And addressing problems with bad choices remains, as ever, a people problem.

    --

    For your security, this post has been encrypted with ROT-13, twice.
  40. Cashless Crypto Currency by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A Cashless Crypto Currency will enable governments and people in hig positions to further violate rights and freedoms. Everybody needs to stand against BitCoin and the like, until we one day have one that is truely anonymous, and not under the control of government or corporations or capable of easily falling under their control.

  41. Overrated mod, last refuge of the idiot by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    If you had a valid objection, you'd have made it, temporarily embarrassed millionaire.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  42. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah youth!

    You realize America is barely even a teenager relative to the rest of these nations... Right? Where on earth (oh wait, that's the answer) do you think America learned it from?

  43. I fear equality more by dracovolans · · Score: 1

    As person who remember state forced equality, with was imported to Poland on the bayonets of red army "liberators" I know how hard is to fight to gain right to be unequal. We should be equal under the law, we should have equal right. But, finally - humans are not equal at all. We had different views, imperatives, needs (as long as basic needs are fulfilled - an no, there is nothing like equality of stomach). Progress of entire human race is fueled by personal greed and lust of being "more than average". With forced equality there is no impulse to do more, to innovate, to pursuit new direction - as there is nothing to win. Innovation in communist (as communism forces "equality" at all cost) was usually driven by fear and slavery (yes, slavery - scientists were nothing more than asset to use) - or (what a surprise) by giving to valuable individuals extra benefits, freedom, and rights (and there "equality" ends). Yes, we should fight for equality - but in the good meaning - equality under the law, equality of freedom and right. But i fear that "equality" most people now thing is something more like equality seen in the past in the communist countries - witch is evil, fearful way to enslave all for the benefit of the even smaller (than right now) few. America has his power, rich, and influence not by forcing equality on all its population. No, United States of America was a country where any single person has equal right to be unequal - pursuit his chance to grove above the average. That was the reason that in the past people leave Europe ruled by closed aristocratic cliches - and hard work to win only one true prize. That was the reason that people enslaved by communist equality (as many people here were saying: "equality to have equally nothing") finally stand up and fight. As for technology - people are different. Smart and not. Tell me, if you will enforce equality - what will be the reason for smart people to do anything with that perk? If I - IT pro and businessman - will have nothing to earn "extra" for my effort, knowledge and work - what is the reason for me to work long hours 7 days in the week?

  44. Wrong - Obligatory Dilbert by zifn4b · · Score: 1

    "I found the root cause of all of our problems. It's people. They're buggy."

    My work here is done. I'll leave this as an exercise for you all: The solution to this problem is ____________.

    --
    We'll make great pets
  45. Obligatory Chief Wiggum Quote by skirmish666 · · Score: 1

    No, no, dig up stupid!

    --
    Sigger than your average
  46. Same for the wealth gap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Socialism widens the wealth gap, and only socialism can fix it.

  47. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

    We are equal. Born Equal in value as a human being. Not in Abilities, drive, skill, mental abilities. VALUE.

    Technology helps smooth over the rough edges of abilities if made available to those with less ability, and more drive. A paraplegic can plow a field today, because of technology not available 130 years ago. His value as a human being remains unchanged.

    But that isn't exactly how we view others. We don't value them as humans, but only as a complex calculation based on what they can do for society. We are trained that our value is based on how we contribute to society, when the reality is, we should be trained to see the innate value of each human by themselves.

    This is how you produce true Liberty

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  48. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

    I hate to break this to you, but humans are, for the lack of a better term, evolved into social constructs that are tribal in nature. It is built in.

    Unless you don't believe in Evolution, there is no way to change millions of years of family unit pods.

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  49. Re: What??? BeauHD? What??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Awww, you are still an idealist, how cute!

    Truth is, nature is violent, brutal, and completely uncaring. Sympathy
    and compassion are brand new inventions that only came about in maybe
    the past 100,000 years, and has still a very long way to go to gain any
    real significance in the world (natural/manmade)..

  50. Fiscal Inequality is Chosen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fiscal inequality is mostly the result of personal choices, not some technological boogeyman. I live in the rural upstate of SC near a large college. There are a lot of high income earners here at the college and in many of the local manufacturing plants that also do in-house R&D, and of course in medicine. But, the majority of the population are lesser-educated, blue-collar working families.

    The most challenging part of my job as a financial adviser is convincing my pro bono clients that they cannot afford to emulate the lifestyles of their wealthier counterparts in the area. A two-earner family that brings home $40K/year cannot afford a $50K diesel pickup truck and a $50K boat, and they cannot afford $500 home game ticket packages or $1000 tailgate parties. Many of these households are up to their eyeballs in debt as the result of trying to live out their envy.

    The second hardest part of my job is convincing my more well-heeled clients that they do not need to be living an ostentatious lifestyle. Even many of them have very little saved for retirement, owing to the expensive lake house, truck, and boat. They're presenting this lifestyle that their peers cannot afford to emulate, and that they can barely afford themselves. They're setting a bad example and others are going bankrupt trying to follow it.

    I try to help people to understand that being content with what they have is important. The relentless pursuit of material success causes all kinds of problems, on both sides of the coin.

  51. Re:What??? BeauHD? What??? by mspohr · · Score: 1

    One of the major advances in human evolution was the ability to understand abstract concepts such as the nation state or religion and to recruit individuals to support these ideas. This freed humans from the limitations of small family/tribal units.
    More advanced societies have adopted concepts such as democratic socialism which allows governments to take care of less fortunate individuals. This is manifest to a small degree in the US where we have unemployment insurance, food stamps, limited welfare and limited health care. Other countries such as Scandinavian countries have taken greater steps to ensure that their less fortunate citizens don't fall too far behind.

    --
    I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  52. Re: What??? BeauHD? What??? by mspohr · · Score: 1

    Yes, lower forms of animals are violent, brutal and uncaring. Some human societies have evolved to be supportive and caring of all members. Scandinavia probably does the best job at this... the US, not so much.

    --
    I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  53. Re:Fuck Equality by Phillip2 · · Score: 1

    How much profit you earn for a company is not the point, how much of the company you own is the point.

    Inequality in our societies comes only to a small extent from the value of your labour (i.e. how much profit you earn), and to a much larger extent from inequalities of capital. If we live in a meritocracy, then, merit is not the work you do, the things that you think, it's how much you own. The more you own, the more merit you have.

  54. Re:Fuck Equality by Scroatzilla · · Score: 1

    Is "salary" really how you believe society measures merit? You don't believe that talent, skill, and/or productivity are naturally championed by civilized society? And that pay/profit/salary is a reward for this merit? Are you a self-hating Marxist elitist who is guilty about your wealth? Or, are you an impoverished prole who is envious of others' success and wealth?

    Equality of opportunity is the correct equalizer, in my opinion, for any civilized society's progress. The best ideas rise to the top, with success as an incentive. This obsession with others' wealth, especially in a conversation about equality, is at best naive; and, at worst, an excuse for the poor to steal from the rich.

    There will never, ever be an equality of outcome for human beings under any system, ever. Any mechanism that attempts to achieve this would necessitate the complete destruction of human nature. (The same human nature that drives technologists to press on with their work.)

  55. Re:Fuck Equality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good point. If you look at the things we think are laudable qualities, they often boil down to wealth.

    Having a good job? Based on contacts and upbringing.
    Contacts? Based on parents contacts and education.
    Upbringing? Based on parent's being around and education.
    Parents being around? Based on parents money.
    Education? Based on parents money and location.
    Location? Based on parent's money.

    Being physically attractive? Based on good nutrition, good genetics and access to medical care, and working out.
    Good nutrition -> parent's money and parent's education
    Access to medical care -> parent's money
    Good genetics -> parent's attractiveness -> grandparents money
    Working out -> Free time, willpower
    Free time -> Good job
    Willpower -> Upbringing

    Although it is certainly possible to work your way up from a bad situation, it takes a lot of luck. For every person who manages it, a hundred don't.

  56. Sim City by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The headlines look more and more like something out of sim city.