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  • Eric Danelaw wrote on a timeline

    Eric Danelaw wrote on a timeline.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-03-03 19:55:00 UTC

  • My answer to I’m liberal, but also concerned that a lot of Quora questions are p

    My answer to I’m liberal, but also concerned that a lot of Quora questions are phrased to make conservatives look f… https://www.quora.com/Im-liberal-but-also-concerned-that-a-lot-of-Quora-questions-are-phrased-to-make-conservatives-look-foolish-Is-there-something-going-on/answer/Curt-Doolittle?srid=u4Qv


    Source date (UTC): 2018-03-03 19:11:05 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/970013709753077760

  • (from elsewhere, To Alex Tabarrok, marginal revolution) I think the more operati

    (from elsewhere, To Alex Tabarrok, marginal revolution) I think the more operational answer is that all AI’s will be able to do is drastically reduce informational asymmetries, and predict reactions to them out to the first or second order. Just as money, accounting, and now digital accounting have drastically reduced asymmetries of information. However, people will also develop AI’s to outwit such AI’s for competitive advantage, and Human beings will seek Virtue Signals (Status signals) to outwit those predictions for social advantage. The principle example being fashion, which while cyclical is driven by technological innovation with a surprisingly small number of variables. We keep discussing AI in the context of a monopoly like the government without considering that Ai’s will seek to outwit AI’s just as traders and digital trading seek to outwit each other today. I don’t think AI’s are as much of a problem as finding a way to organize society when all the multiples of any meanning, require vast capital expenditures limited to very few. So just as the stock market provides a credit advantage that often defeats more meritocratic (and quality) advances, so will artificial intelligence. Conversely, it is far easier to starve machines of information than it is people. And while human organizations of all scales can degrade somewhat gracefully except in rare circumstances, mechanical networks degrade quickly. Just as we are one war away from ending the era of navies, we are one major conflict away from ending our over conficence in the instantaneous delivery of energy, and the unwise luxury of such velocity that we have only three hours of power, three days of water, and one week of food in ‘storage’.
  • (from elsewhere, To Alex Tabarrok, marginal revolution) I think the more operati

    (from elsewhere, To Alex Tabarrok, marginal revolution)

    I think the more operational answer is that all AI’s will be able to do is drastically reduce informational asymmetries, and predict reactions to them out to the first or second order. Just as money, accounting, and now digital accounting have drastically reduced asymmetries of information. However, people will also develop AI’s to outwit such AI’s for competitive advantage, and Human beings will seek Virtue Signals (Status signals) to outwit those predictions for social advantage. The principle example being fashion, which while cyclical is driven by technological innovation with a surprisingly small number of variables.

    We keep discussing AI in the context of a monopoly like the government without considering that Ai’s will seek to outwit AI’s just as traders and digital trading seek to outwit each other today. I don’t think AI’s are as much of a problem as finding a way to organize society when all the multiples of any meanning, require vast capital expenditures limited to very few. So just as the stock market provides a credit advantage that often defeats more meritocratic (and quality) advances, so will artificial intelligence. Conversely, it is far easier to starve machines of information than it is people. And while human organizations of all scales can degrade somewhat gracefully except in rare circumstances, mechanical networks degrade quickly.

    Just as we are one war away from ending the era of navies, we are one major conflict away from ending our over conficence in the instantaneous delivery of energy, and the unwise luxury of such velocity that we have only three hours of power, three days of water, and one week of food in ‘storage’.


    Source date (UTC): 2018-03-01 12:22:00 UTC

  • (from elsewhere, To Alex Tabarrok, marginal revolution) I think the more operati

    (from elsewhere, To Alex Tabarrok, marginal revolution) I think the more operational answer is that all AI’s will be able to do is drastically reduce informational asymmetries, and predict reactions to them out to the first or second order. Just as money, accounting, and now digital accounting have drastically reduced asymmetries of information. However, people will also develop AI’s to outwit such AI’s for competitive advantage, and Human beings will seek Virtue Signals (Status signals) to outwit those predictions for social advantage. The principle example being fashion, which while cyclical is driven by technological innovation with a surprisingly small number of variables. We keep discussing AI in the context of a monopoly like the government without considering that Ai’s will seek to outwit AI’s just as traders and digital trading seek to outwit each other today. I don’t think AI’s are as much of a problem as finding a way to organize society when all the multiples of any meanning, require vast capital expenditures limited to very few. So just as the stock market provides a credit advantage that often defeats more meritocratic (and quality) advances, so will artificial intelligence. Conversely, it is far easier to starve machines of information than it is people. And while human organizations of all scales can degrade somewhat gracefully except in rare circumstances, mechanical networks degrade quickly. Just as we are one war away from ending the era of navies, we are one major conflict away from ending our over conficence in the instantaneous delivery of energy, and the unwise luxury of such velocity that we have only three hours of power, three days of water, and one week of food in ‘storage’.
  • was referring to the common people not the individual who uses that alias

    was referring to the common people not the individual who uses that alias


    Source date (UTC): 2018-03-01 05:03:07 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/969075539930689537

    Reply addressees: @prince_borgia

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/969018706859823104


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    Original post on X

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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/969018706859823104

  • Well the data is correct. But I like to …. agitate … in order to create disc

    Well the data is correct. But I like to …. agitate … in order to create discussions now and then. And this is one of those times. 😉 My point was simple: it’s better to have few defects than to have any exceptional avantages. (A lofty intelligence does not make you happy.)


    Source date (UTC): 2018-02-28 02:58:52 UTC

    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/968681881301602305

    Reply addressees: @Depopulator83

    Replying to: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/968676649502986240


    IN REPLY TO:

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    Original post: https://twitter.com/i/web/status/968676649502986240

  • When Was A The White Man Made, And By Whom?

    Whiter skin developed gradually beginning about 20k years ago.
    White People (West Eurasians) developed in ‘generations’ or ‘waves’.

    In our current form (genetic composition), ‘Whites’ (ethnic europeans) developed between west ukraine, and southern russia north of the black and caspian seas, when they combined Horse, Bronze, and Wheel.

    As whites moved westward they almost entirely replaced peoples.
    As they moved eastward they were able to settle or conquer, but were eventually outbred and have disappeared.

    3500–2300 Yamnaya (Pit Grave Culture)
    2900– 2350 Corded Ware Culture

    Corded Ware Culture encompassed most of continental northern Europe from the Rhine on the west to the Volga in the east, including most of modern-day Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Belarus, Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Switzerland, northwestern Romania, northern Ukraine, and the European part of Russia, as well as coastal Norway and the southern portions of Sweden and Finland.

    In this sense, whites are a fairly ‘new’ people.

    (While it’s impolitic, some of us consider humans were in the process of speciation outside of africa and that this process was incomplete due to the development of metalworking -which rapidly accelerated informational, technological, and social evolution.)

    https://www.quora.com/When-was-a-the-white-man-made-and-by-whom

  • Do You Like The ‘hand You Were Dealt’ In Life?

    I am proud of what I have done with my life – which is far more than most people can imagine even trying. And that is the only question we must ask:

    What have I done with the resources at my disposal?
    Not to fantasize about impossibilities.

    https://www.quora.com/Do-you-like-the-hand-you-were-dealt-in-life

  • Why Do So Many Businesses In Seattle Decorate With Severed Heads And Other Hunting Trophies? In Conservative Rural Areas It’s To Be Expected, But In Such A Large And Liberal City, It Seems Like It Would Alienate More Customers Than It Would Attract.

    Seattle was a small sleepy town until fairly recently. In the 1970’s there were streets full of boarded up homes, and the east side was where you went camping.

    I had a small house on Lake Sammamish and it was worth $110k – and that wasn’t that long ago.

    Seattle is now an island of happy-nice-(foolish)-urbanites surrounded by a vast agrarian territory constituting the majority of the territorial united states. It is a very unnatural economy (spoken as someone who built multiple tech companies there).

    It has also peaked. If it didn’t peak in the 90’s. Living in seattle in the 90’s was probably only matched by London in the 1890’s and Paris in the 20’s. It was one of the greatest quality of life experiences a person could live through.

    WHy does it have hunting trophies? The same reason other regions have ‘tokens of our more simple past’ – pasts we escape to when we understand we are on a treadmill for the excitement of it – and the benefit of others we know not of.

    https://www.quora.com/Why-do-so-many-businesses-in-Seattle-decorate-with-severed-heads-and-other-hunting-trophies-In-conservative-rural-areas-its-to-be-expected-but-in-such-a-large-and-liberal-city-it-seems-like-it-would-alienate-more