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Comment Re:Well, as long as the summary is trolling (Score 1) 422

The problem is that in any system, regardless of the incentives for actions that benefit everyone, the psychopaths will always look for other ways to gain only for themselves. Two things will happen: they will find an exploit or they will misunderstand how to gain the most from the working system and instead gain less but harm others.

I thnk we'll need to come to grips with psychopathy and other mental conditions in the same way we've done for physical disabilities. We want to provide access to the good things in life, but we don't want people with disabilities to put others in danger. The example in the article of no blind pilots is quite apt. No psychopathic leaders seems sensible, the trouble being the measuring of the psychopathy.

Comment Only 5-10% reinvestment? (Score 1) 112

Why such a low reinvestment? Is that for external developers only? I would total up support costs, etc compare to licence fees and then reinvest 80% of the "savings", especially if it was 70% internal reinvestment (paid staff) and 10% external developers. Save yourself some money, but if you want to future effeciency and capabilities invest as much as you can.

Comment Not WYSIWYG - Live Reload (Score 1) 300

I recommend against WYSIWYG editors and instead work with tools that provide "live reload", refreshing your page in the browser without hitting the refresh button. Google for it but there are plugins and and bunch of projects on github for various editors and frameworks.

For editors, my personal choice is Sublime: http://www.sublimetext.com/ But Redcar http://redcareditor.com/ was a runner up and I used to use Eclipse.

Comment Re:No he doesn't (Score 1) 231

That is a strange quote from Jobs, who is known for successfully giving us what he wants. "What we want" isn't always what is good for us, which isn't depressing, but simply our genetic/cultural legacy. Culture is our tool to deal with much of that legacy. The goal for a truly profitable business is to find, multiply and distribute the stuff that we want that makes us all richer, and by enriching those around you they will enrich your life. If you exploit others around you you may temporarily gain personally but a poorer culture will never deliver the riches that a rich one can, even to the wealthiest amongst them. That is why designing and making things that you want, that make you richer for having it in you life, is a good bet to make others richer as well.

The media "conspiracy" certainly isn't the one imagined, but it is seems common for "smart" executives think that other people are stupid and thus present them with material that makes them stupid. This has a lot of synergy with getting people to worship idols, buy things they don't need, and making other stupid decisions that are profitable for the executive. This synergy can be mistaken for conspiracy, but it is just a detection of a poorly designed/functioning market.

Markets with too little competition and too large competitors (i.e. plagued by dictatorships, risk aversion, bureaucracy, NIH, status quo, etc) are problems. In a healthier market those "smart" executives would have enough competition to wipe them out or displace them to the role of parasites preying on the most vulnerable.

Comment Re:Let the users choose... (Score 3, Interesting) 178

Exactly. The only sane way to resolve conflicts like this is to let the users choose (and provide smart defaults).

By "smart" I mean something that doesn't disadvantage any of the choices.... off the top of my head, an interface something like the Humble Bundle, perhaps equal or random distribution of money to start and randomize the order of choices. Then record (anonymously) the choices of anyone who adjusts the defaults and start setting the defaults according to general community preference once enough samples are taken. That can be gamed, but it seems like too much work for *way* too little gain. :)

Comment Re:Software freedom is the solution. (Score 3, Interesting) 244

Access to source isn't necessarily a red herring, although you are right the bigger issue is trust. But source opens up markets for trust.

If you/someone you trust had access to the source of all the software on your phone/device you could use trusted services that compare your phone's software (binaries) to a trusted compile. (Trusted binaries could be provided by proprietary software creators, but I'd rather not trust the software creators and have it independently compiled by a company whose business is security/trust.) Transparency and source are the first steps towards building a functional trust market where you have real choices of businesses that offer services that increase the trust you have of your devices. Extending trust to your network is certainly problematic, but I would hope eventually network providers would have their networks independently audited by security/trust companies, but that would require enough demand (and potentially redundant networks so that you could choose to only use those that you deemed secure enough).

People haven't really groked that the physical things in their life that run software may actually be controlled by someone else. That is a pretty foreign concept, but I'm hoping that once it really sinks in we'll see some real businesses that specialize in keeping your software working for you (not just anti-virus). At that point free software will have an insurmountable advantage over proprietary.

Comment Artists are fans of their own work (Score 1) 425

This entire fan vs artist argument makes no bloody sense. How is an artist not a spectator and fan of their own work? If fans are the true owners then so too are the artists. I suppose I can see an argument where no individual (artist or fan) is an owner of something that has is perceived to be collectively owned, but that is a far older debate. :)

From a free software perspective, the only problem here is when Lucas stops others from "forking" his work or tries to prevent people from distributing their favourite version (his own first version included). Everyone, including Lucas, should be free to do whatever they want with Starwars.

The argument that he must provide a digital copy of the original film is an interesting one. I'd say that anyone should be able to pay to have it digitized, but he certainly doesn't need to provide one - unless he restricts access to the "source" film.

Comment Re:Capitalism isn't in itself flawed... (Score 1) 1271

In Canada only personal contributions to politicians are allowed and they are capped at a very low amount (approx $2200). http://www.elections.ca/content.aspx?section=pol&document=index&dir=lim&lang=e

It is entirely possible for bribery to occur in an illegal way (and there are many scandals like that) but the legal influencing of politicians is limited. This does seem to help, and the goal is not perfection, just improvement.

Comment Re:Real Estate (Score 1) 835

What I don't understand is how they managed to learn to use a fax machine in the first place. :)

I nearly went insane when I went through this recently with a number of professionals who routinely handle confidential documents: electronic doc -> print -> sign -> scan (to lossy jpg no less) -> email -> print -> sign -> scan (to lossy jpg) -> repeat until all is illegible. :|

Whatever cultural demon has prevented strong encrypted emails, etc must be purged for great justice.

Comment Re:Well that's a new record (Score 1) 312

What if I make a game that shows how games like Warcraft and Farmville exploit people's weaknesses for profit? Or a game that rewards you for getting your friends to stop playing any of that genre of game.

Remember, what Alex Peake and a lot of the Gamification people are talking about are games that have an awareness that bringing the player out of the game environment and into other environments is part of the goal of the game. You are specifically encouraged to stop playing (temporarily) and get involved in other things. Likely Peake would want an AI that recognized that the player was growing too dependent on it and would create challenges to build an interest and attachment to other things and people.

The disgusting zombification (learned dependence, ignorance, apathy and misinformation) inherent in the mediums and products of those that seek to exploit others is not really present in the mediums and work with free software-like philosophy. That is why free software is so important. I personally would be very reluctant to have my child interact heavily with any AI that wasn't completely free software. Give me 30 minutes and I think I could convince most any parent of the same.

Comment Re:Movie (Score 1) 175

Agreed, this is a tragic mistake of an experiment.

What they were looking to test can't be found in a prisoner/guard role-playing session. Considering that none of the guards or inmates had any actual experience in a jail (and the guards had no training before starting the experiment) they were basing all of their role-playing of their roles on entertainment... by definition full of conflict and drama. Like reality television, those involved quickly started competing for attention, fending off boredom and simply pushing the bounds of "the game".

Comment Re:"the end" (Score 2) 622

There is another possibility: that bitcoins could become a very big thing; that right now might be some of the critical challenges/successes and other news sources are missing the story. The existence of a decentralized electronic currency that works well and is accepted as payment in as many places as a credit card would drastically change the world economy. Bitcoin may fail and disappear, but even in that case it is worth watching so we can learn from its failures.

In any case, many of my other news sources are talking bitcoin, so it certainly isn't just slashdot.

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