GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Will AI bring us utopia or destruction?
GeorgeOrr's comments
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Stop Saying Technology Is Causing Social Isolation
Overall, communication technology has made us more connected not less. What throws people is that those connections are no longer geographically bound. So that person you see staring at their phone isn't disconnected to those locally, they are very well connected to an international community.
Of course, one quibble. The author states:
"Maybe your friend has taken his smartphone out of his pocket because he has gotten a message that he needs to reply now. Or maybe it’s just that he feels a bit uncomfortable and is using his phone to try and avoid the awkwardness of the moment because he has social anxiety and you should respect that."
But I don't think it's neo-ludism to think it's rude to treat conversations you are in fact having locally as less valuable simply because they are local. Of course there are emergencies but when someone is constantly checking to see if there is a better interaction to be had, I'd still call it rude.
That aside, and I should point out the author concedes that there are rude people and situations involving technology, the points raised by the author are well stated and all to frequently missed.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: It’s completely ridiculous to think that humans could live on Mars
Good thing for us all that it isn't an either/or.
Fortunately some people can work on the good and needed. And some people can work on the hard, maybe even the too hard to see at first that it's even possible.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: It’s completely ridiculous to think that humans could live on Mars
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Investing or Gambling, What’s the Difference?
"In the short term the market is a popularity contest; in the long term it is a weighing machine."
So to answer the question posed, if you are trying to make money off guesses about who wins the popularity contest - that's gambling. If you are trying to asses which company to be a part owner of, to meet your own particular financial goals (income, growth, etc) - that's investing.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Did Humans Evolve to See Things as They Really Are?
"But how did the icon come to look like a snake in the first place?"
Sort of presupposes that it does look like a "real" snake. The icon doesn't necessarily have to look like anything ... we just have to evolve in a way that gets us to jump out of the way. It's the jumping out of the way that is adaptive, not the similarity to anything outside the system trying to survive.
To use Hoffman's analogy, it's like asking why do files on a desktop look like the files in the computer. They don't, they are useful interfaces however.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Judge tosses Wikimedia’s anti-NSA lawsuit because Wikipedia isn’t big enough
With all those groups, with all that's at stake, the decision essentially reads that no matter how much traffic they can't use statistical likelihood to overcome the bar to standing created by Clapper v. Amnesty.
In the end, this means the NSA will never have to face overview as long as they don't tell anyone what they are doing. If we can't in court say they are definitely capturing someones traffic, they can't even use the courts to conduct discovery on what is happening.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: The Lost History of Gay Adult Adoption
And after all the gymnastics, they and only they had to endure, they ended up with approximation of what heterosexuals were able to accomplish with a conversation at a Justice of the Peace.
The article details the patchwork quilt of rights, the limits, the variation among States, that resulted from this sort of "solution."
It only seems successful to those who didn't need to do it.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: The Lost History of Gay Adult Adoption
This is a great article to remind us how bogus that argument was.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Getting Over Uber
https://medium.com/@timoreilly/getting-over-taxis-79849b3a42...
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: The Psychological Case Against Tipping
My own experience is that service is more average when tipping isn't an issue. That is it's always OK, or even good, but very rarely excellent or horrible.
Where tipping is the norm, there is more variability. In both directions - sometimes excellent but sometimes horrible. Ok and Good are still the more common, but there are more experiences in those extremes.
I'm not sure why this is.
I couldn't tell from this article if the studies discussed caught that (or could refute it). That is, they all talked about average tips and service, did they measure volatility.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Adblockers say, “Find a better business model.” but can you really?
I took that as a moral case, but you are right, he never states the word morality.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Adblockers say, “Find a better business model.” but can you really?
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: This privacy activist has just won an enormous victory against U.S. surveillance
It must have been on the EU courts mind.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Scientists to nudge asteroid off course as practice for protecting Earth
No, actually not that funny.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: French data regulator rejects Google’s right-to-be-forgotten appeal
I hope so, because if it's EU wide or could be EU wide I have no idea what they would do.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Teen prosecuted as adult for having naked images – of himself – on phone
When people bring up criticisms of laws as over-broad, I often hear that prosecutorial discretion will keep such abuses from happening. People who suggest that the law as written will result in such injustice are often ridiculed for imagining that any prosecutor would act that way, or any Judge allow it.
Turns out, anyone suggesting that even the most absurd interpretations are not possible are the ones who should be ridiculed.
Remember this the next time someone proposes a law, no matter how well intentioned, and even if it happens to advance a cause you care about. The abuses will happen, and how will you feel about that cost if you are the subject of those abuses.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Even the LastPass Will Be Stolen
The insecurity comes from someone already having physical control of your machine, and if you had alowed saving of your master password (which Lastpass and anyone sane encourages against).
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: How DuckDuckGo Rode a Wave of Post-Snowden Anxiety to Massive Growth
I have a similar reaction to maps, and for that !maps does the trick.
GeorgeOrr | 10 years ago | on: Form for Drug Dealers to Snitch on Competitors Results in an Arrest
Isn't that sort of like setting up an official place to do swatting?
It will probably improve our lives in many ways, make them worse in many others. Complicate some things and simplify others.
In other words like every other technology.
Also like every other technology that has come out way in the past, there will be doomsayers who are wrong and there will be Utopians who are also wrong.