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> No privacy is valued other than their own, and they will always use "think of the children" as an excuse.

Until they lose an election using "think of the children", they'll always continue to use it. In terms of political weaponry, it's currently unstoppable.


> 1) it's not hard to do your own research. If you're here, I assume you know how.

Assume the opposite direction. If you don't bring the data, then you're not doing your part to convince others on your position. Assumption of "default data" is a significant contributor in the breakdown of communications.

> 2) does that answer satisfy you?

No, in fact it leaves open more questions than before. From the article provided (https://archive.is/fZ9CN):

>> The $48 million annual budget for the observation network was small compared with the value of the data it collected for understanding the oceans and the climate, Dr. McLean said.

- Why didn't aligned charities step in to plug the gap? Billions flow through charities each year, and yet none have stepped in? One or 2 stepping in and still not being able to plug the gap, I can accept. None at all?

- If the data is that important, then there should be multiple efforts in collecting it, not just one. Why did everything get lumped into a single basket?


> ... “removal of all in-water infrastructure” belonging to the Ocean Observatories Initiative at sites along the coasts of Oregon, Washington, Alaska, and North Carolina, and in the waters between Greenland and Iceland.

...Why is Europe reliant on the US for monitoring oceans between Greenland & Iceland, i.e within European territory & therefore European monitoring? Shouldn't they have their own infra to work from?


That stretch of ocean is closer to Canada than it is to mainland Europe.

All the more reason as to why it should be Canada monitoring that portion of the ocean.

What should we be spending tax money on? The only thing this admin seems interested in paying for is killing Iranians and paying off J6th protesters.

The tax money shouldn't have been collected in the first place. It should've stayed with the people.

Then stop using the roads and everything else that tax money paid for. If you keep using things that's been paid for using taxes the government will only feel more entitled to collect it.

They aren’t. The US built monitoring infrastructure there because it’s our project, and that’s where the science needs to happen.

It’s the same reason that many more countries than just Argentina built the Pierre Auger observatory, or that the Vatican built the Pope Scope in Arizona.


...Unironically in complete agreement.

If the data is economically valuable, mbgerring, then the private market and aligned states/charities should be the ones shouldering the costs.


The capability isn't there yet. Some of it is there, but not to the level of reliable reverse engineering.

https://programbench.com/


I beg to differ I've done this already. This is a harness issue not a model issue.

It won't be identical, but as long as the A->B test loop can be closed I've had 100% success rate.


> the author lost me when he implied socialism is synonymous with authoritarianism.

To enforce the socialist cause at the 100+M level, a stricter level of enforcement is required in order to forbade a breakout of inter-party bartering & thus the subversion of the socialist cause.

Such bartering is allowed under capitalism as it is considered arbitrage for at least one of the parties involved, but under mainstream understandings of socialism, such value surplus is disallowed to be kept to the private parties involved as it should be given out to the benefit of the wider population.

Caveat: There are variations of socialism that still allow for private bartering & exchanges, but they're typically disallowed at larger scales as they allow for the subversion of the socialist cause through the accumulation of private means of production, even if the "private" means "my town, not yours"


Whenever someone talks about forking/rebuilding the web, I'll always link to my favorite Dylan Beattie talk about such a hypothetical alternative:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8JOD1AQGqEg


> I don't see how orbital datacenters will ever be able to compete with terrestrial.

An orbital DC makes fiscal sense when the cost to launch one to space is lower than the cost to build one on Earth.

Key point: The cost of building on Earth will inevitably trend upwards as more restrictions & costs are (~80% rightfully) placed onto Earth-bound datacenters.


More restrictions and costs are going to have to be placed on satellites, too.

At present it's like railroad building across the Wild West; get some notional national 'permission' and then chuck them up there into a globally-shared space. That's not sustainable as the important orbits become crowded.


And that will never be true, so it’s meaningless.

It would also be cheaper to build one on the moon, if it was free to build them on the moon.


> And that will never be true, so it’s meaningless.

The math is simple: The total cost for building on Earth is X, the total cost for building in space is Y.

If X > Y, building in space makes fiscal sense.

To say that it never happens, MagicMoonlight, requires X to always be less than Y, which cannot hold true forever. Eventually, X will grow to be more than Y, simply due to (rightfully placed) increased regulations for building on Earth.

> It would also be cheaper to build one on the moon, if it was free to build them on the moon.

Arguably, that should be the original goal: Build the DC on the moon.


> The earlier F2I scheme instead had a contest where the party that is the most ambitious in fabricating lab notebooks to backdate their invention gets the patent.

The implementation of F2I is then the issue. It should be the first to fulfill all of the following requirements:

(1) physically show at least 2 patent clerks the invention,

(2) that the invention works & operates as outlined, with the clerks being the ones to operate the machine, and

(3) a detailed step-by-step guide to the clerk about how the machine works

The date that the patent is awarded should be the date where the last of the 3 actions occurred.


That's first to file with a particular (and onerous) set of requirements for filing, not first to implement.


Forks need to be normalized again.

Logistically & brand-wise, they're messy to deal with, but they result in a "filter" of sorts that the original project can pick & choose to upstream back into their code.


> Forks need to be normalized again

No one's going to be trusting forks or new projects for a while. The bar for merely generating new code is now too low to give a meaningful signal. Reputation and longevity will likely be useful metrics, hence the AI pull-requests will continue to be opened against high-reputation projects that have strong brands. Not unlike Ethereums the switch from proof of work to proof if stake


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