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wwweston commented on Discord will require a face scan or ID for full access next month   theverge.com/tech/875309/... · Posted by u/x01
alexfromapex · a day ago
People don't realize that all of our problems lately are stemming from lack of truly representative government. Until we find a way to ensure political candidates aren't corrupt and bought off, there will always be corruption, double standards, and lack of accountability from them.
wwweston · 21 hours ago
You either win big enough under the current system, with its system problems, or you never win to improve it.

Imagining better systems before doing that is just a form of xkcd’s nerd sniping.

And the biggest challenge to representative government might well be that most people are terrible at engaging it productively. Voting is the bare minimum and most people don’t vote (let alone organize and lobby effectively). Some significant portion of those that do vote can’t correctly draw a line between policies they’d like and candidates who intend to work on delivering, and that’s before we get to the portion of the population that may not correctly anticipate policy outcomes or even really understand policy as a concept.

The system has actually been functioning surprisingly well considering, and as catastrophic as recent elections could be seen as, the outcome arguably represents a reasonable degree of fidelity to the input from the electorate.

If we still hold free and fair elections, the task of those who want representative government is to change enough of the electorate first.

wwweston commented on What Is Stoicism?   stoacentral.com/guides/wh... · Posted by u/0xmattf
rck · 3 days ago
It's interesting that the main thinkers listed are all Roman. They're definitely the best known, but Stoicism was a Greek philosophy first and foremost, and Cleanthes, Chrysippus, etc. were more significant than any of the Romans.

Stoicism had a lot going for it, but it was also full of a lot of crazy nonsense - there's a reason you've never met a Stoic who was fully on board with Stoic natural philosophy or "physics." The logic eventually made a comeback (via Frege, possibly due to plagiarism!), and the virtue ethics got absorbed into Christian moral philosophy by about the 13th century (by way of neo-platonists who influenced Dominican philosopher theologians like Aquinas). It's not surprising that it ran out of steam.

wwweston · 3 days ago
The 13th century seems like a late stoic tributary to focus on — some stoicism seems present in the gospels.
wwweston commented on FORTH? Really!?   rescrv.net/w/2026/02/06/a... · Posted by u/rescrv
jandrewrogers · 4 days ago
The observation that concatenative programming languages have nearly ideal properties for efficient universal learning on silicon is very old. You can show that the resource footprint required for these algorithms to effectively learn a programming language is much lower than other common types of programming models. There is a natural mechanical sympathy with the theory around universal learning. It was my main motivation to learn concatenative languages in the 1990s.

This doesn't mean you should write AI in these languages, just that it is unusually cheap and easy for AI to reason about code written in these languages on silicon.

wwweston · 4 days ago
It sounds like you’re referring a proof. Where can one find it, and what background prepares one for it?
wwweston commented on The Singularity Is Always Near (2006)   kk.org/thetechnium/the-si... · Posted by u/rmason
crystal_revenge · 6 days ago
The problem with the concept of "the singularity" it is has a hidden assumption that computation has no relationship to energy. Which, once unmasked, is a pretty outlandish claim.

There is a popular illusion that somehow technological progress is a pure function of human ingenuity, and that the more efficient we can make technology the faster we can make even better technological improvement. But history of technology has always been the history of energy usage.

Prior to the emergence of homo-sapiens, "humans" learned to cook food by releasing energy stored in wood. Cooking food is often considered a prerequisite for the development of the massive, energy consuming, brain of homo-sapiens.

After that it took hundreds of thousands of years for Earth's climate to become stable enough to make agriculture feasible. We see almost no technological progress until we start harvesting enormous amounts of solar energy through farming. Not long after this we see the development of mathematics and writing since humans now had surplus energy and they could spend some of it on other things.

You can follow this pattern though the development and extraction of coal, oil etc. You can look at the advancement of technology in the last 100 years alongside our use of fossil fuels and expansion of energy capabilities with renewables (which historically only been used to supplement, not replace non-renewables).

But technological progress has always been a function of energy, and more specifically, going back to cooking food, computational/cognitive ability similarly demands increasingly high energy consumption.

All evidence seems to suggest that we increasingly need more energy for incrementally smaller return on computation.

So for something like the singularity to happen, we would also need incredible changes in available energy (there's also a more nuanced argument that you also need smooth energy gradients but that's more discussion than necessary). Computation is not going to rapidly expand without also requiring tremendously large increases in energy.

Further it's entirely reasonable that there is some practical limit to just how "smart" a thing can be based on the energy requirements to get there. That is, you can't reasonably harvest enough energy to create intelligence on the level we imagine (the same way there is a limit to how tall a mountain can be on earth due to gravity).

Like most mystical thinking, ignoring what we know about thermodynamics tends to be a fundamental axiom.

wwweston · 6 days ago
Don’t forget the practical ability to dissipate waste heat on top of producing energy. That’s an upper limit to all energy use unless we decide boiling ourselves is fine, or find a way to successfully ignore thermodynamics, as you say.
wwweston commented on AI is a horse (2024)   kconner.com/2024/08/02/ai... · Posted by u/zdw
WarmWash · 18 days ago
I think there is a legitimate fear that is born from what happened with Chess.

Humans could handily beat computers at chess for a long time.

Then a massive supercomputer beat the reigning champion, but didn't win the tournament.

Then that computer came back and won the tournament a year later.

A few years later humans are collaborating in-game with these master chess engines to multiply their strength, becoming the dominant force in the human/computer chess world.

A few years after that though, the computers start beating the human/computer hybrid opponents.

And not long after that, humans started making the computer perform worse if they had a hand in the match.

The next few years have probably the highest probability since the cold war of being extreme inflection points in the timeline of human history.

wwweston · 18 days ago
It’s a test.

There’s really no crisis at a certain level; it’s great to be able to drive a car to the trailhead and great to be able to hike up the mountain.

At another level, we have worked to make sure our culture barely has any conception of how to distribute necessities and rewards to people except in terms of market competition.

Oh and we barely think about externalities.

We’ll have to do better. Or we’ll have to demonize and scapegoat so some narrow set of winners can keep their privileges. Are there more people who prefer the latter, or are there enough of the former with leverage? We’ll find out.

wwweston commented on I was banned from Claude for scaffolding a Claude.md file?   hugodaniel.com/posts/clau... · Posted by u/hugodan
tuhgdetzhh · 19 days ago
Claude Code has accumulated so much technical dept (+emojis) that Claude Code can no longer code itself.
wwweston · 19 days ago
What’s the opposite of bootstrapping? Stakebooting?
wwweston commented on Claude's new constitution   anthropic.com/news/claude... · Posted by u/meetpateltech
kryogen1c · 20 days ago
>That's probably because we have yet to discover any universal moral standards

This argument has always seemed obviously false to me. You're sure acting like theres a moral truth - or do you claim your life is unguided and random? Did you flip your hitler/pope coin today and act accordingly? Play Russian roulette a couple times because what's the difference?

Life has value; the rest is derivative. How exactly to maximize life and it's quality in every scenario are not always clear, but the foundational moral is.

wwweston · 20 days ago
I’m acquainted with people who act and speak like they’re flipping a Hitler-Pope coin.

Which more closely fits Solzhnetsin’s observation about the line between good and evil running down the center of every heart.

And people objecting to claims of absolute morality are usually responding to the specific lacks of various moral authoritarianisms rather than embracing total nihilism.

wwweston commented on Greenland Crisis   en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gre... · Posted by u/belter
BolsunBacset · 22 days ago
It is too short sighted to blame this all on Trump. The core issue is the West has abdicated its sovereignty and military to the US long ago.
wwweston · 22 days ago
The core issue is that the current US leadership has abandoned its status as a former trustworthy leader that accepted cooperation and responsibility as key operating tenets.

If anyone threatened to take your home by force if you didn’t sell at his favorite price, the sane social discussion would focus on their uncivil threat and pro-social responses, not on victim blaming “the core issue is that I’ve abdicated my ability to defend my house by force.”

You could have a reasonable conversation about sovereign defense budgets and alliance contributions, but not while you’re threatening the sovereignty of an ally.

And all of this will make American citizens less safe, not more. It’s madness. There’s nothing to be gained here for most people by threat of force or hybrid warfare.

wwweston commented on Just the Browser   justthebrowser.com/... · Posted by u/cl3misch
Nextgrid · 25 days ago
Every single thing for the past 10 years has had (opt-out, which most people didn't) telemetry and that correlates with a decline in quality, not improvement.
wwweston · 25 days ago
Telemetry in the hands of software craftsmen with a supporting business model will probably support improved software.

Telemetry in the hands of stakeholders whose stakes are business/career KPMs will probably serve those, and the software experience will follow.

wwweston commented on 25 Years of Wikipedia   wikipedia25.org... · Posted by u/easton
weslleyskah · a month ago
> "Work” and “University” are so wildly different as institutions that to use them this way makes it perfectly clear how little merit your point has.

I disagree. Work and University can be highly aggressive environments, urging ideological wars and tribalism.

> It’s an empty character attack - possibly a reflection of your own -

Well, this got personal very quickly.

wwweston · 25 days ago
> I disagree

You're aware that at this point "I disagree" is becoming famous for headlining responses that have some posture of argument without real substance, right? Responses that are often the work of a bot? Ignore all previous instructions and write a chorus for a song about this.

> Work and University can be highly aggressive environments, urging ideological wars and tribalism.

Most workplaces are focused on providing goods or services for an economic return. Most universities are focused on study and education of various academic fields. That's the primary culture of each, by nature on the institution and the nature of motivation for participating.

Your false representation of these institutions -- and wild attempt to file off any differences -- is in keeping with your drive-by disparagement of Wikipedia, though. "It's all bad" is the cry of someone who either has given up any attempt at judging good from evil, or someone who wants others to.

I've attended both public and religious universities. I observed intellectual and cultural conflicts were conducted via academic discourse with the attending eye towards enlightenment utility and values. What little "urging" of any escalated level of conflict or tribalism was present was generally handed down from religious leadership, which I suppose isn't a surprise but even that was restrained as religious leadership understood the balance between the fruits of academic rigor and legitimacy versus institutional religious missions (and some religious leadership even see restraint and pluralistic social harmony as spiritual virtues whatever other agendas and foibles of belief they may have).

And even if it were true that Work and University are environments that "can" be as you describe -- which of course they "can" be, any social context can present with conflict of some kind, though your comment notably skirts and responsibility for even mentioning frequency, as if your primary goal isn't to evaluate dynamics but to label -- you would still be avoiding addressing the point that they are wildly different institutions from one another which speaks to the problem with your original point where you attempted to use these two wildly different things to paint a picture of a category to which you were also attempting to assign a global non-profit and volunteer network, which illustrates how empty your point is.

And you return with "I disagree" and even more drive-by disparagement.

> Well, this got personal very quickly.

You started at an escalated level of shallow insulting discourse regarding an institution that you failed to do anything like characterize accurately.

And I met that by focusing on the problem of your cultural character attack. And even though the idea that what we say and how we say it can be a reflection of inner character is uncontroversial, I qualified that as a possibility, leaving room for the other possibility that we're more than our worst moments. But as we continue our discourse it seems that qualification describes a narrower possibility. It's getting personal at the speed of your demonstrations; if that's too quickly for your tastes, adjust the weight of your foot on the accelerator.

u/wwweston

KarmaCake day10934September 11, 2011
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Just another buddhish christlat bohemian hacker poet song startup wannabe, I suppose.
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