@spritelyproject Probably needs a whole blogpost explaining the gravity of this current moment, and what this means is now open to us.
But in short: secure, distributed object programming in mutually suspicious peer to peer networks? Open for business!
Everyone, is it normal that I don't see any posts on @doctorow's profile page? (Even though the page claims there are ~84k posts) - is this a bug?
Can’t get this song about Putin’s secret aqua disco out of my head
when a society finds itself sunk-cost-fallacying about why bright youngsters must be denied access to the sum of human knowledge is when it may be time to take a deep breath and pull the bandaid off (change funding incentives)
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RT @alicemazzy
libgen/scihub are of such monumental social/moral worth that their illegality delegitimizes the law as a whole
https://twitter.com/alicemazzy/status/1220062740825415689
6/ addendum: the act of being aware might be heroic, but the resulting self-actualization is not. Any pathos we habitually associate with it is misguided. It is an attempt to escape the very thing itself. The meaning of life is as sacred as going to the bathroom. This is absurd.
5/ By choosing awareness, Sysiphos moves fate and meaning from a divine to a completely human sphere. The price for this is the infinite struggle with his rock. - it's *not* like awareness solves any problems! This is what makes him the absurd hero.
4/ Sysiphos' pointless struggle is thus a direct result of his awareness and his acceptance of the meaninglessness of the world. (Note the parallels to the expulsion from paradise, for instance)
3/ this shows us that we need to change our understanding of "punishment after death":
it is something that is implied *automatically*, necessarily, by his contempt for death and the gods.
"after death" is not temporal, but means "spiritually", "concerning the soul."
2/ sure, the gods might punish him for that (by terrible pain, say), but that would mean his punishment is actually different: choose between rock OR pain. But that's not what it was.
The AI revolution is here, episode #264:
Attempting to gesture-type "front-facing", Google came up with the word "Front-Fasching".
Translated literally as "front carnival", this seems to refer to the much lesser known mardi-gras truce of 1942, where Nazi Sturmtruppen and Soviet soldiers forgot the turmoils of war for a moment, dressed up in funny costumes, danced, and ate candy. 🧐