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Comment Re:Different dealers competing for your business? (Score 1) 95

In the rental market, there are organizations that manage landlord IT needs. They discovered they have access to material nonpublic information on pricing and demand, and so could "suggest" rents based on that, acting as a "super landlord". A key player is RealPage which recently settled with the DOJ about that collusion on favorable terms.

In the car dealer market, they have such organizations too, so having a "super dealer" that helps dealers price vehicles is almost certainly colluding as well.

Comment Re:hahahhahahahha (Score 1) 95

And why is lying so... tolerated in the US?

I think the answer comes from who runs for officel. It requires someone extroverted, good at speaking, able to fundraise, and who has free time to engage in campaigning. People that fit that bill are salespeople, lawyers and career politicians. So they are over-represented. And they bring with them a certain flexible relationship with the truth. State-level politicians not infrequently graduate to the federal/national level.

I found this link about the demographics of Congress, for each Congress up to 2019 (p. 29): https://www.brookings.edu/wp-c...

Because of the Citizens United decision, which said any legal construct can contribute unlimited amounts to politicians (indirectly via PACs, super PACs, etc), fundraising has become a key element. Those who have access to professional fundraising networks (which is a thing - find an established state legislator and google "fundraiser for [state legislator]" and you can get a glimpse of these networks. I don't know how it is in Europe, but because legal constructs (unions, businesses, etc) can contribute instead of limiting it to physical persons, and not forcing political advertising to be identifiable to individuals, money in politics has become the predominant factor.

       

Comment Re: Porn (Score 1) 256

Very wealthy people in developed nations will often have large families - see Musk, Trump, Zuckerberg. When money is not a concern, many people will choose to have large families.

I've noticed the possibility of a bimodal distribution curve (i.e. like a pair of boobs, Tetons, etc), where lower income has more kids, middle income has fewer kids, and wealthy have more kids (y axis = number of kids, x axis is income).

From my anecdotal observations, I've seen people at the low end of income have a lot of kids because they're largely low-investment parents. Middle and high income are high-investment parents. Middle can't do proper high-investment (have a parent stay at home, live in a nice area so kids can go to good schools, etc). Wealthy can do all those things.

In absolute numbers, there are less high-investment capable wealthy than low-investment poor so the absolute number of children would skew towards the poor.

The "hollowing out of the middle class" could be due to a lot of factors. One significant one might be that middle tier skills yielding middle class incomes are becoming obviated due to technology.

Maybe also a larger number of middle tier ability people.

Also, DOGE savaging the federal government and contractors didn't help, because I think that's where a lot of middle tier people were or sought to be. That job and those sectors are partially jobs programs for that tier. I'm a little skeptical of UBI and more in favor of jobs programs because I think people need activity and missions. Indolence has its own dysfunctions. A "bloated civil service sector" is the bogeyman of a lot of center-right economics, but... with advancing technology, what are these people going to do? You force a middle tier type into retail customer service and he's not going to reproduce. As far as trades go, that's skilled physical labor and again, it takes a particular sort to want to do skilled physical labor, and the office clerk who is less physically oriented and more intellectually oriented is not going to want to do that, and if he has to, he again is not going to reproduce.

We need to see some real non-agenda-driven data on the issue, but these are some possibilities.

Comment Re:Pyrrhic Victory (Score 1) 216

What exactly was accomplished here?

The big story that Western media is missing here is Iran's proxies, and their effect on Israeli security.

Iran's proxies are effective. I watched the Joe Kent interview with Shawn Ryan, and they admitted that Iran's proxies had killed a lot of Americans in Iraq. What is well known in Israel I'm sure, but what they've been very poor at conveying in the Western media is that they were being hit from the south by the Houthis (Shia), from the west by Hamas (Sunni) and from the north by Hezbollah (Shia). All these are Iranian proxies (Hamas is Sunni and Iran is Shia but they still work together, receiving support from Iran). Think about why Iran again closed the Strait today due to Hezbollah being hit in Lebanon.

What the Kent interview made clear was this was a war about Israeli security (also with a strong dash of hubris from the Venezuela success). Killing Iran's leadership was an Israeli statement. The Strait of Hormuz and refugee flows are not an Israeli concern, as they perceive they are facing existential threats.

What Israel required was America to do the heavy lift of occupation and boots on the ground. But there has been major pushback from the MAGA base about that.

So: What's been accomplished? Iran understands that using a proxy army to harry Israel cannot be done with impunity. Will Israel be satisfied with the current state of affairs vis a vis their security? I have no idea how much more Trump is willing to do. Obviously Israel would want an Iraq-style regime change and occupation but I don't know whether that would bode well with the November elections and the Republican prospects. The MAGA base is very much America First with both Israel and Ukraine (for example).

Comment Navy SEAL drills work best for Navy SEALs (Score 4, Insightful) 113

I read Richard Marcinko's leadership book (Marcinko was the SEAL who founded DEVGRU, the SEAL's most elite unit, aka Team Six). From it, I concluded this: Applying Navy SEAL principles to lead people works best when the people are physically and mentally built like Navy SEALs. Most people are not, not even elite company CEO's and their staff.

It becomes a game of square peg / round hole.

Comment It's risk transfer to retirement accounts (Score 1) 99

Banks won the right to tie their deposit accounts to their riskier trading activities in 1999 with Graham Leach Bliley "Financial Services Modernization Act" which finally fully repealed Glass Steagall, which had been getting chipped away over the years.

So, they received bailout protection - "privatize the profits, socialize the losses" to protect the consumer deposit arms of their organizations, when the rest of it blew up.

Transferring cryptocurrency and other asset risk to retirement accounts has the same effect - de facto bailout protection via the public treasury.

It's all about transferring risk. It converts crypto from "tractors in a online game" to "tractors in an online game with de facto bailout protection."
 

Comment Re:There are special corporate builds... (Score 1) 114

After my failed upgrade experience, I realized that if one puts Windows on "unsupported hardware", it would be trivially easy for Microsoft to disable it if they felt it furthered their interests. I realized I didn't want that Sword of Damocles so am looking at Linux.

Comment Re:Microsoft accounts are ransomware (Score 2) 114

One has to know what's going on - your disk is being encrypted by default, and all your data is getting sucked up to Microsoft's server by default. Your medical information, tax information, etc (i.e. PII and PHI).

Then, one has to research how to disable all that stuff.

Out of the box, by default, for the average user, all of the data theft and forced-encryption is going to happen because they don't know what's going on. The encryption is secret and the data theft is not advertised - just that one needs a Microsoft account to use this operating system.

I accidentally bricked a PC with Windows 10 Pro because I tried to upgrade it to Windows 11 using a popular third party tool to run on unsupported hardware, and selected the wrong parameters. I'm looking at the PC now and it's solid hardware and I don't want to send it to the landfill because Microsoft and its partners decided they wanted a windfall profit. I realized finally that if I knuckle under, I am voting for Microsoft and partners to only get stronger and bolder. So, I am finally going to put Linux on it.

Linux is a hobbyist's tool. You have to know how to secure it and how to update it yourself. I've used it extensively in the past at work. Microsoft Office and other programs I use don't run on it. It will have a learning curve. I can only do it because I am a professional programmer with significant Linux experience which is a small group. It will have zero impact on Microsoft, but for me, it is the Right Thing To Do because the only way to avoid this expensive and outrageous corporate control and privacy invasion, is to do it.

Comment Re:Start Stop, the bane of anyone's existance (Score 1) 304

It increases engine, battery, and starter motor wear and tear. Leading to earlier disposing of the car

It does not. The whole system is designed to handle it. And by decreasing the amount of time the engine sits idle at stops, it actually reduces overall long term engine wear.

Starting and stopping puts more wear on engine components. Cars with these systems reputedly have more robust starters, beefier batteries and core engine components that are supposed to be able to resist wear when spinning with low oil pressure. I'd prefer to avoid the additional wear entirely. The goal is maximum uptime for the vehicle between repairs and long vehicle service life while trying to keep costs down.

It does seem to reduce gas consumption by a limited amount. I can't say that I want to put additional wear on my vehicle for that purpose.

I accept anthropogenic global warming (AGW) exists, I have no reason not to believe it. I wonder if better base gas mileage and increased engine and component life offset the increased gas consumption.

Comment Re:Moltbook was a farce and so is this story (Score 1) 92

If the running software process was programmed with a goal, and it was using an LLM / neural network database, could it run amok to human detriment? That's the overarching question.

In this incident, if the software process continued to execute after the code was rejected, seeking ways embedded in the LLM / neural network database to respond to this, what would it do? Not something good as reported in this case.

It's not that the machinery will suddenly come to life, it will be that highly capable machinery will be given faulty goals with unexpected side effects, and how to stop that.

Comment LLM's are a probabilistic database (Score 1) 94

These machines aren't magical. They don't reason. They're not oracles. They can't get things "wrong" or "right" because they have no intent and no concept of those things. They're generating text on a deterministic model, and adding some randomness by not always picking the most likely next token (sometimes picking the 96% vs 98% likely next token). Most people just don't understand how this stuff works and use terms like "hallucinating" because no one is being honest about what the weighted random guessing machines do.

LLM's (i.e. "AI") are a probabilistic database. If you query a database 10 times with the same query, you'll get the same answer 10 times. If you query an LLM 10 times with the same query, you are not guaranteed to get the same answer, because of stochastic nature of it, as noted above.

The term "stochastic parrot" is largely correct IMO.

Don't get me wrong - it's an amazing tool, like the Internet itself. But also like the Internet, there was a surge in stocks and investment beyond what is initially appropriate because everyone wants to get in at the ground floor and doesn't want to be left behind. Larry Ellison commercialized the relational database in 1977 with the founding of Oracle and he's one of the richest men in the world and relational databases underpin nearly all of business software.

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