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Topic: 2013-11-18: Wired: You can't beat politics with technology - page 2. (Read 2223 times)

hero member
Activity: 727
Merit: 500
Minimum Effort/Maximum effect
I agree we are creating a new form of politics, A politics for the masses. We are all communicating, sharing our ideas, we just have to figure out how prevalent certain ideas are and what percentage of the community agree with certain things, how it evolves over time. At any given moment there are people behind those beliefs that act upon them moving it forward, as it evolves it will get better. More people, more minds, more hands, more resources acting independently with accurate data each person can act correctly upon those ideas to help create what they believe in.

What is government after all think of all the different type of government that we have had over the millenias.

Bands,Tribes

Chiefdoms, Feudalism, Monarchys, Empires

Oligarchys, Republics, Democracies


Most of these systems except the smallest communities have a central control to act and speak for the community.
What caused this to be necessary? The size of the community. The larger the community the more it frays at the edges with regard to constant exposure to cultural norms, information movement brakes down... this all changed when the internet was created.



legendary
Activity: 1526
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Sorry Mike, but I have to strongly disagree with that statement here.

You realise I was just quoting the article, right?

I find it relevant given recent discussions but don't have much opinion on it beyond that. I wasn't a fan of TPB though.
legendary
Activity: 3430
Merit: 3080
You can't beat politics with new technology all the time. Sometimes you have to actually make sure that politics are in line with what people want.

Sorry Mike, but I have to strongly disagree with that statement here. Not only is it impossible to make politics become "in line" with what people want. Politics is - in fact - the perfect opposite of what people want!

And technology IS the solution:

* The Gutenberg press freed humanity from the tyranny of the church.
* The combine harvester freed the slaves.
* And Bitcoin will free us from the tyranny of centralized coercion (the state).

^And this is the only thing that is guaranteed to "happen eventually".

Greets!

Add to that the widespread anecdote that the fax machine and early computer modems played a big part in bringing down the "Iron Curtain" in late 1980's communist Eastern Europe. The walled garden propaganda approach defeated by technology was the clear message there. Why so different now, when the shoe is on the other foot?

What sort of technology magazine argues against the paradigm of it's existential premise?
full member
Activity: 238
Merit: 100
You can't beat politics with new technology all the time. Sometimes you have to actually make sure that politics are in line with what people want.

Sorry Mike, but I have to strongly disagree with that statement here. Not only is it impossible to make politics become "in line" with what people want. Politics is - in fact - the perfect opposite of what people want!

And technology IS the solution:

* The Gutenberg press freed humanity from the tyranny of the church.
* The combine harvester freed the slaves.
* And Bitcoin will free us from the tyranny of centralized coercion (the state).

^And this is the only thing that is guaranteed to "happen eventually".

Greets!
legendary
Activity: 3430
Merit: 3080
He has a good point. As a fellow Scandinavian I can easily follow, but we don't have the governmental fear/trust-issues of Americans and Chinese, along with a bunch of other nations.
But we should have! It is a huge propaganda victory for the borderline totalitarian (but still comparatively nice!) nordic states that trust in those organisations is seen as a value in itself. And that the only right and proper way to change something in society is to manoeuvre the government into commanding the change.


Which society? Which government? The one that begins at the end of your street, or the one that ends at the EU border?

These are all just a bunch of lines on a map, why can't we decide to change where the lines are? The sort of people who decided where to draw the lines are the same incompetent rulers from history who make all the big mistakes: whoops millions dead in World War 1, whoops millions dead in World War 2, whooops 100 million genocide of native americans in North America, dear oh dear same mistake in Australia, whooops 100 million genocide in South America, whoops millions dead in Iraq war pt II, whoops 100's of thousands dead in Syria, whooops millions of dead Vietnamese, whoops millions of dead Koreans, whoops we told lies to establish the whole premise of going to war in Iraq, Syria, Vietnam, Korea, South America, and god knows how many more.

These clowns are making a lot of mistakes. Billions have fought or been plain slaughtered. Why can't we change something more substantial about how we govern ourselves? Apparently, direct democracy doesn't work, because "professional politicians think long term". Shut the fuck up with that bullshit. They have a good line in thinking long term death, destruction, torture, impoverishment, and, strangely, massive money/capital profits and entrenched entitlements for the corporate and political classes.

So, I say again, which society? Which government? I think if we're so entitled to self-determination, then, I dunno, maybe we should be given the freedom to actual determine the boundaries of what we're permitted to determine ourselves.
db
sr. member
Activity: 279
Merit: 261
He has a good point. As a fellow Scandinavian I can easily follow, but we don't have the governmental fear/trust-issues of Americans and Chinese, along with a bunch of other nations.
But we should have! It is a huge propaganda victory for the borderline totalitarian (but still comparatively nice!) nordic states that trust in those organisations is seen as a value in itself. And that the only right and proper way to change something in society is to manoeuvre the government into commanding the change.
legendary
Activity: 3430
Merit: 3080
The "Pirate" movement is a bit bizarre really, there's a bit much of a contradiction in a political party for rebels of the status quo. Pirates don't vote!
hero member
Activity: 727
Merit: 500
Minimum Effort/Maximum effect
In my opinion, we are not really countering to anything. WE are creating this technology as a new business, why ask for permission to do something and be told if we can do it or not? It simply is not relevant, a better system is being built that requires the input of everyone; How are people going to remix this idea?

If this amazing new world is done the right way, it will provide relevant data to everyone without compromising anyones identity. and it's customizable so that you can add extra layers to it if you want extras, but the foundation is openness of information for everyone without compromising ones safety wherever you are.

people can safely do what they want to do without oppressive governments deciding what they should do, but the governments still get to remix the idea... but they cannot shut it down... they must convince us by choice to follow their leads; Now they have to be real leaders.

As I see it, we are simply doing what is natural, we are networking and self-assembling connections to one another, when would this reality of the internet be apparent? That the internet is acting as a Brain and each one of us is creating the web of knowledge that links us all together. We are just creating different networks to those of the governments, after all we are just talking peer to peer hear, why does there have to be someone in the middle to hear us speak?
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1003
He has a good point. As a fellow Scandinavian I can easily follow, but we don't have the governmental fear/trust-issues of Americans and Chinese, along with a bunch of other nations.

At the same time, as a co-founder of The Pirate Bay, he is guilty of double standards. The Pirate Bay was a service mainly used (and created for) illegal purposes and therefore would never be politically accepted, contrary to Bitcoin.



You cannot escape politics; TPB is heavily entrenched in politics and is accepted by the people who partake in politics.  If you don't believe me, just ask all the people who have downloaded or even listened to an MP3 without first having paid for the right; very few of us feel guilt for this illegal act, nor do we fine ourselves for it, proving that we do not agree with our own laws.

If we don't agree with our own laws, how do we define what is and is not illegal?  Apparently, the laws we agree on via democracy are very different from the laws we agree on in reality; if we generally agree that piracy is not illegal, otherwise we should all be incarcerated and would, at this moment, willingly turn ourselves in for what we've allegedly stolen (still hasn't happened but I'll be waiting on it), then we cannot put forth that TPB is neither legal or politically accepted, because it clearly is.  Even now we've all accepted Bitcoin is perfectly legal and many of us have concluded that, even if it was made illegal in some way by the powers that be, whether the currency itself or its usages, we would still use it in the ways we choose regardless.

All that said, the writer makes an excellent point; people really need to snap out of this daze where it's assumed healthy and beneficial to let other men lead you.  People need to be aware, informed and thinking for government to work; otherwise it just devolves into a few guys calling all the shots and nobody wants another Nazi party.  Technology cannot save a person from their own sheepishness; one cannot hide from embracing reality and still expect all to be well.
full member
Activity: 171
Merit: 100
He has a good point. As a fellow Scandinavian I can easily follow, but we don't have the governmental fear/trust-issues of Americans and Chinese, along with a bunch of other nations.

At the same time, as a co-founder of The Pirate Bay, he is guilty of double standards. The Pirate Bay was a service mainly used (and created for) illegal purposes and therefore would never be politically accepted, contrary to Bitcoin.

legendary
Activity: 1526
Merit: 1134
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2013-11/18/peter-sunde-hemlis-political-apathy

Quote
Pirate Bay cofounder Peter Sunde spoke to Wired.co.uk about the problems with the file-sharing website in its current form, the "imminent death" of peer-to-peer and the centralised services that leave us open to NSA surveillance. He also urges people to dispel their political apathy to prevent the emergence of a new Stasi-style era of oppression.

People who are disenchanted with politics and the financial system should try and engage with the democratic process rather than turn to technology for alternative methods of doing things, says Peter Sunde, cofounder of The Pirate Bay.

"You can't beat politics with new technology all the time. Sometimes you have to actually make sure that politics are in line with what people want. A lot of people are giving up on politics and thinking they can solve issues with technology. These kind of arrogant behaviours towards the rest of the society are a bit disgusting," Sunde told Wired.co.uk in a Skype interview.

His response was provoked by a question about Bitcoin, a technology that he thinks is "interesting" and has a fascinating story behind it, but one that he feels is symbolic of a depressing widespread lack of trust in politics.
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