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Comment Don't rely on such accounts (Score 1) 46

Same for Microsoft or Google. If you need to depend on their accounts, chances are you will get shafted at some time. Hence do not let that need arise. Yes, that is difficult. But they can throw you out for basically any reason and you can do nothing.

In a similar fashion, lots of YouTube-dependent creators have gotten stabbed by Meta recently. The whole thing is broken and there needs to be legal recourse and penalties for platforms that get this large.

Comment Re:Your Body is Your Most Sincere Intellectual Pro (Score 2) 18

Unfortunately flattery doesn't feed the kids or pay the rent.

One of the more appalling things I've seen in the US on this stuff is people saying "Well actors are so well paid why should we care". The thing is theres a very very tiny number of actors that are paid well, the stars. But the vast majority, and the ones currently being sold by the AI firms as being replacable by AI, are background actors and bitpart actors and these are the guys who MIGHT be getting $30K a year if they are in regular work, and more likely far far less (The mean wage for actors is around $56K but its heavily skewed by a small number of very highly paid star actors so in reality its down around the $40K wage. Burger flipper wages.

And thats not even touching on the majority of workers in film, the crew, who have been getting fucked on ever since covid, worse in LA where large numbers of crew have been struggling with the fallout of the fires.

Comment Re: Imagine what we could do with that money (Score 1) 32

Do you know that Gemini shares your economic assumptions? But after arguing with it for 20 minutes, how satisfying is it to get it to back off from your typically mainstream view of money and its relation to real resources and labor?

Gemini (after a long argument citing Hicks, shadow banking, derivatives, etc.):

"while the total net worth of the planet is physically limited by resources, the financial claims on those resources (via credit) can and do exceed them during periods of expansion, [...]"

Comment Re: How much water is that, anyways? (Score 1) 27

"That's the problem with inflation, it's grand theft"

Since we all acknowledge that markets can remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent, why stick to quaint old fairy tales like the quantuty theory of money, especially as there was practically no inflation, despite mainstream predictions by the Fed itself, after the 400% increase in base money?

Remember Fischer Black in "Noise"?

"the price level and rate of inflation are literally indeterminate. They are whatever people think they will be. They are determined by expectations, but expectations follow no rational rules. If people believe that certain changes in the money stock will cause changes in the rate of inflation, that may well happen, because their expectations will be built into their long term contracts."

If inflation is just psychological noise, do you think utilities would find some other excuse to pressure government regulators to let them increase retsil rates? Would they manufacture another crisis over bitcoin, EVs, or video games to justify why they have to create a scarcity?

And, if inflation is just noise, not a rational price signal, why not index it away (i.e. print money faster than prices rise), as has in fact been happening (Fed has increased base money over 600% since 2008 while cumulative inflation over that same period has been maybe 50%)?

Comment Haven't we seen this before? (Score 2) 27

Anyone remember the big hullabaloo about the IE icon installed by default on Windows computers?

Gemini:

"The "hullabaloo" about the Internet Explorer (IE) icon on Windows computers was centered on major antitrust lawsuits in the late 1990s, where Microsoft was accused of leveraging its Windows operating system monopoly to unfairly dominate the web browser market."

For all the anti-trusters out there, how'd that work out?

"In the late 1990s, Microsoft began including IE as a default, non-removable part of Windows 95 and 98. [...] Microsoft executives testified that removing even a simple desktop icon would violate their rights to deliver a complete product and was akin to "butchering" the operating system."

The more things change, eh?

Comment Re: just run to corrupt SCOTUS (Score 1) 23

Im actually not a fan of the AGPL at all. I think its intention is noble, but in practice it tends to get used as a shareware license instead of a free software license.

The GPL is very clear about its mandate. You can do whatever you want with this code, as long as you dont go distributing it, and if you do distribute it, here are your responsibilities.

The AGPL however violates GPLs freedom 0 , the right to USE the software however you wish (as long as you dont distribute it without source and a few other distribution requirements).

That means , for a start, its not compatible with GPL2 (GPL3 has a waiver for this). But to my mind the bigger issue is how its used. I have found very few examples of AGPL3 being used without an option of "dual licensing" (aka "shareware"), and since the AGPL3 pretty much prohibits almost any commercial useage as part of a web service, the end result is a license that effectively say "You cant test this, but if you use it for real, you must pay up".

Its a shareware license, not a free software license.

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