The problem, as Edward O. Wilson said, is that we have a combination of 
“Palaeolithic emotions, medieval institutions and god-like technology.”


> On 07-Jan-2022, at 1:02 AM, Jon Lebkowsky <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I did a lot of web consulting and project management for years, and that 
> definitely became boring work. But I suppose when things become truly useful 
> they also become boring - Bruce once gave a talk where he said that we'd know 
> solar tech had arrived when it became really boring to consider.
> 
> On Thu, Jan 6, 2022 at 12:30 PM carl guderian <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> And speaking of flashbacks, doesn’t Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta, a catalog of 
> online activities imagined long ago by others but now to be mediated by 
> not-Facebook, sound awfully like Bill Gates’ vision of the Internet as a 
> collection of 1970s- and 1980s-era electronic services channeled through 
> Microsoft, in “The Road Ahead”?
> 
> But I can live with boring. I’ve had a 25-year run (probably wrapping up) in 
> “the cyber” working as the equivalant of an industrial plumber. The pay was 
> very good, the hours agreeable, and the hype minimal. In good times and bad, 
> toilets gotta flush.
> 
> Carl
> 
> 
>> On 6 jan. 2022, at 18:46, Jon Lebkowsky <[email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> What does it say about me that I find that boring?
>> 
>> On Thu, Jan 6, 2022 at 10:45 AM Bruce Sterling <[email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> *It's a recent screed from the current editor of WIRED magazine.
>> 
>> *If you're enough of a greybeard nettime OG to remember nettime's vague feud 
>> with WIRED and its techno-libertarian principles, this is likely to be one 
>> of the funniest things you've read in quite a while.
>> 
>> *If you've never heard of the "California Ideology," that prescient work of 
>> distant 1995, well, I happened to archive it, because, as the guy who was on 
>> the cover of the first issue of WIRED, why wouldn't I.
>> 
>> https://bruces.medium.com/the-californian-ideology-by-richard-barbrook-and-andy-cameron-1995-c50014fcdbce
>>  
>> <https://bruces.medium.com/the-californian-ideology-by-richard-barbrook-and-andy-cameron-1995-c50014fcdbce>
>> 
>> Bruce S
>> 
>> 
>> ****
>> 
>> In the next few decades, virtually every financial, social, and governmental 
>> institution in the world is going to be radically upended by one small but 
>> enormously powerful invention: the blockchain.
>> 
>> Do you believe that? Or are you one of those people who think the blockchain 
>> and crypto boom is just a massive, decade-long fraud—the bastard child of 
>> the Dutch tulip bubble, Bernie Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, and the wackier 
>> reaches of the libertarian internet? More likely, you—like me—are at neither 
>> of these extremes. Rather, you’re longing for someone to just show you how 
>> to think about the issue intelligently and with nuance instead of always 
>> falling into the binary trap.
>> 
>> Binaries have been on my mind a lot since I took over the editor’s chair at 
>> WIRED last March. That’s because we’re at what feels like an inflection 
>> point in the recent history of technology, when various binaries that have 
>> long been taken for granted are being called into question.
>> 
>> When WIRED was founded in 1993, it was the bible of techno-utopianism. We 
>> chronicled and championed inventions that we thought would remake the world; 
>> all they needed was to be unleashed. Our covers featured the brilliant, 
>> renegade, visionary—and mostly wealthy, white, and male—geeks who were 
>> shaping the future, reshaping human nature, and making everyone’s life more 
>> efficient and fun. They were more daring, more creative, richer and cooler 
>> than you; in fact, they already lived in the future. By reading WIRED, we 
>> hinted, you could join them there!
>> 
>> If that optimism was binary 0, since then the mood has switched to binary 1. 
>> Today, a great deal of media coverage focuses on the damage wrought by a 
>> tech industry run amok. It’s given us Tahrir Square, but also Xinjiang; the 
>> blogosphere, but also the manosphere; the boundless opportunities of the 
>> Long Tail, but also the unremitting precariousness of the gig economy; mRNA 
>> vaccines, but also Crispr babies. WIRED hasn’t shied away from covering 
>> these problems. But they’ve forced us—and me in particular, as an incoming 
>> editor—to ponder the question: What does it mean to be WIRED, a publication 
>> born to celebrate technology, in an age when tech is often demonized?
>> 
>> To me, the answer begins with rejecting the binary. Both the optimist and 
>> pessimist views of tech miss the point. The lesson of the last 30-odd years 
>> is not that we were wrong to think tech could make the world a better place. 
>> Rather, it’s that we were wrong to think tech itself was the solution—and 
>> that we’d now be equally wrong to treat tech as the problem. It’s not only 
>> possible, but normal, for a technology to do both good and harm at the same 
>> time. A hype cycle that makes quick billionaires and leaves a trail of 
>> failed companies in its wake may also lay the groundwork for a lasting 
>> structural shift (exhibit A: the first dotcom bust). An online platform that 
>> creates community and has helped citizens oust dictators (Facebook) can also 
>> trap people in conformism and groupthink and become a tool for oppression. 
>> As F. Scott Fitzgerald famously said, an intelligent person should be able 
>> to hold opposed ideas in their mind simultaneously and still function.
>> 
>> Yet debates about tech, like those about politics or social issues, still 
>> seem to always collapse into either/or. Blockchain is either the most 
>> radical invention of the century or a worthless shell game. The metaverse is 
>> either the next incarnation of the internet or just an ingeniously vague 
>> label for a bunch of overhyped things that will mostly fail. Personalized 
>> medicine will revolutionize health care or just widen its inequalities. 
>> Facebook has either destroyed democracy or revolutionized society. Every 
>> issue is divisive and tribal. And it’s generally framed as a judgment on the 
>> tech itself—“this tech is bad” vs. “this tech is good”—instead of looking at 
>> the underlying economic, social, and personal forces that actually determine 
>> what that tech will do.
>> 
>> There’s been even more of this kind of binary, tech-centered thinking as we 
>> claw our way out of the pandemic. Some optimists claim we’re on the cusp of 
>> a “Roaring 2020s” in which mRNA and Crispr will revolutionize disease 
>> treatment, AI and quantum computers will exponentially speed up materials 
>> science and drug discovery, and advances in battery chemistry will make 
>> electric vehicles and large-scale energy storage (and maybe even flying 
>> taxis) go mainstream. If you want to see a gloomy future, on the other hand, 
>> there’s no shortage of causes: Digital surveillance is out of control, the 
>> carbon footprint of cryptocurrency mining and large AI models is expanding, 
>> the US–China tech arms race is accelerating, the gig-work precariat is 
>> swelling, and the internet itself is balkanizing.
>> 
>> This tug-of-war between optimism and pessimism is the reason why I said this 
>> feels like an inflection point in the history of tech. But even that term, 
>> “inflection point,” falls into the binary trap, because it presumes that 
>> things will get either worse or better from here. It is, yet again, a false 
>> dichotomy. This kind of thinking helps nobody make sense of the future 
>> that’s coming. To do that—and to then push that future in the right 
>> direction—we need to reject this 0-or-1 logic.
>> 
>> Which brings me to the question of what WIRED is for.
>> 
>> Fundamentally, WIRED has always been about a question: What would it take to 
>> build a better future?* We exist to inspire people who want to build that 
>> future. We do it not by going into Pollyannaish raptures about how great the 
>> future is going to be, nor dire jeremiads about how bad things could get, 
>> but by taking an evenhanded, clear-eyed look at what it would take to tackle 
>> the severe challenges the world faces. Our subject matter isn’t technology, 
>> per se: It’s those challenges—like climate change, health care, global 
>> security, the future of democracy, the future of the economy, and the 
>> dizzying speed of cultural change as our offline and online worlds mingle 
>> and remix. Technology plays a starring role in all of these issues, but 
>> what’s clearer today than ever is that it’s people who create change, both 
>> good and bad. You cannot explain the impacts of technology on the world 
>> without deeply understanding the motives, incentives, and limitations of the 
>> people who build and use it. And you cannot hope to change the world for the 
>> better unless you can learn from the achievements and the mistakes other 
>> people have made.
>> 
>> So I think WIRED’s job is to tell stories about the world’s biggest 
>> problems, the role tech plays in them—whether for good or bad—and the people 
>> who are trying to solve them. These aren’t all feel-good stories by any 
>> means: there are villains as well as heroes, failures as well as successes. 
>> Our stance is neither optimism nor pessimism, but rather the belief that 
>> it's worth persisting even when things seem hopeless. (I call it “Greta 
>> Thunberg optimism.”) But whatever the story, you should find something to 
>> learn from it—and, ideally, the inspiration to make a positive difference 
>> yourself.
>> 
>> Of course, that’s not all we exist to do. WIRED has also always been a home 
>> for ambitious, farsighted ideas—sometimes prescient, sometimes wild, 
>> sometimes both at the same time. (Fitzgerald again!) We shouldn’t get 
>> carried away by hype; too many of our covers in the past promised that this 
>> or that invention would “change everything.” But we shouldn’t shy away from 
>> pushing the envelope either, stretching people’s minds and showing them 
>> possible futures that they might not otherwise dare to imagine. We’ll be 
>> critical but not cynical; skeptical but not defeatist. We won’t tell you 
>> what to think about the future, but how to think about it.
>> 
>> Finally, we exist to do the basic hard work of journalism—following the 
>> important news, explaining how to think about it, and holding power, 
>> particularly tech power, accountable.
>> 
>> Over the next few months, you should see our coverage starting to coalesce 
>> more clearly around those core global challenges—climate, health, and so on. 
>> Because these issues are indeed global, you should also start to see a more 
>> international range of stories: One of the less obvious but very big changes 
>> is that we are merging the US and UK editions of WIRED, previously two 
>> entirely separate publications, into a single site at WIRED.com 
>> <http://wired.com/>. (If you’re a regular visitor to the site, you may have 
>> noticed that we recently launched a new homepage, designed to make it easier 
>> for us to showcase the work we’re most proud of and for you to find stories 
>> that interest you.) We’ll still publish two separate print editions, though 
>> they’ll share many stories. Our US and UK newsrooms are already working as 
>> one, and you’ll see all their journalism here on this site. With more 
>> writers making up a single team, we’ll be able to go deeper into some of 
>> these key areas.
>> 
>> Above all, we’ll continue to do what WIRED is best at—bringing you 
>> delightful, fascinating, weird, brilliantly told stories from all around the 
>> world of people taking on extraordinary problems. Our founder Louis Rossetto 
>> wrote that WIRED was where you would discover “the soul of our new society 
>> in wild metamorphosis.” The wild metamorphosis continues, and while its 
>> mechanisms may be technological, the soul behind them is deeply and 
>> unavoidably human. Where the human and the technological meet: That’s where 
>> WIRED lives, and it’s where we aim to take you, every day.
>> 
>> Gideon Lichfield | Global Director, WIRED
>> 
>> Note: I owe a big debt of gratitude to Tom Coates, who was pivotal in 
>> helping me think about the history of WIRED and see the opportunity for the 
>> role it can play today.
>> 
>> #  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
>> #  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
>> #  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
>> #  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l 
>> <http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l>
>> #  archive: http://www.nettime.org <http://www.nettime.org/> contact: 
>> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>> #  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:
>> 
>> 
>> -- 
>> Jon Lebkowsky (@jonl)
>> Cofounder and Cohost, Plutopia News Network <https://plutopia.io/>
>> Website <https://weblogsky.com/> | Twitter <http://twitter.com/jonl> | 
>> LinkedIn <http://www.linkedin.com/in/jonlebkowsky> | Facebook 
>> <http://www.facebook.com/jonlebkowsky> | Tumblr 
>> <http://weblogsky.tumblr.com/> | Wikipedia 
>> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Lebkowsky>#  distributed via <nettime>: 
>> no commercial use without permission
>> #  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
>> #  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
>> #  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l 
>> <http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l>
>> #  archive: http://www.nettime.org <http://www.nettime.org/> contact: 
>> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>> #  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:
> 
> #  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
> #  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
> #  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
> #  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l 
> <http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l>
> #  archive: http://www.nettime.org <http://www.nettime.org/> contact: 
> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> #  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:
> 
> 
> -- 
> Jon Lebkowsky (@jonl)
> Cofounder and Cohost, Plutopia News Network <https://plutopia.io/>
> Website <https://weblogsky.com/> | Twitter <http://twitter.com/jonl> | 
> LinkedIn <http://www.linkedin.com/in/jonlebkowsky> | Facebook 
> <http://www.facebook.com/jonlebkowsky> | Tumblr 
> <http://weblogsky.tumblr.com/> | Wikipedia 
> <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Lebkowsky>#  distributed via <nettime>: no 
> commercial use without permission
> #  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
> #  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
> #  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
> #  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
> #  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to