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Human, Dustcake, Engineer
Doing my best to make the world a little better every day.
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A very de Tocqueville analysis! Thanks for your outsider perspective on American society.
As noted even back then, the consequences of slavery would have long-lasting effects on this country. It still resonates in the generations as modern day jim crow, in the built-landscape through redlining, and still used as a tool to pit the working class against each other.
The enduring myth of the rugged individualist and endless frontier also lives to this day. Our movies condition us to expect superheros to save us, and our politics never demands collective sacrifice. Even simple mask mandates are seen as affronts to liberty.
I believe if you burrow a little deeper I think you'll find the community you seek. The further down the ladder the more interdependent people are on each other. The upper levels have the luxury of living an independent life, those less so, not so much.
In many ways we are two societies, one of Doordash deliverers and receivers. Those that control the system, and those that are controlled by it.
It was a blistering July day in Las Vegas, with temps hitting 109. Inside the SIGGRAPH 91 convention hall Yello's Rubberbandman looped on the speakers. On each chair: a red/green paddle.
I was a student volunteer, stamping the finest hands in Computer Graphics. Those hands (and my own) each controlled those paddles. Then 5000 people looked up and saw a Pong Game appear on the screen.
And then.. the machine started playing us.
In response to visual stimuli we changed the color of our paddle. The ball moved left, then right. The crowd shouting "red red red", "green!" and cheering as the game played on.
The rules of the game and the feedback loops directed our actions. It was a complex adaptive system with emergent behavior.
And luckily there is some footage of this moment. Watch this excerpt from "Machines of Loving Grace" that talks about this moment in history:
Loren Carpenter Experiment at SIGGRAPH '91 from Zachary Murray on Vimeo.
Loren Carpenter cofounded Pixar. Check out the TurboGopher appearance at the 5:00 minute mark.
Today the simple pong game is now the multilayered technological environment we interact with on a daily basis. Instead of red/green paddles with 1 bit of data we carry phones that generate a wealth more. These devices also provide the aural/visual and haptic stimuli. With that our collective actions power all kinds of "games" today:
As technologists we need to remember that by controlling the game, we are indirectly controlling the players. The choices we allow (and forbid) define the behavior. The game "plays" the player. And often the only way to be free is to not play at all.
Except that is if maybe, just maybe, the people start playing a different game than the one we designed. In the giddy demonstration it was assumed that people wanted to win at Pong. But we didn't play long enough for abuse or scheming. It would have only taken a few people to cross over to sabotage the other side, or for trolls to have changed the outcome.
Finally this level of power and control demands great responsibility. The only thing worse than control used for malicious purposes is control wielded without thought, without thinking of the consequences. So the next time you're designing a product think about the whole system and all the inputs and ask "who's really in control?".
h/t to the General Intellect Unit podcast and their Machines of Loving Grace episode for reminding me of this unsung moment in history.
Great read. I'd also recommend listening to the latest "This American Life" which discusses how your destiny is predicted by where you live. The details on the creation of the fair housing act and riots in the 60s were especially eye opening.
And all of this is especially apropos with the recent Thanksgiving holiday.
Originally shared by Ade Oshineye
"There’s an old saying: ‘with great power comes great responsibility’. There’s a degree to which it’s true, and it certainly seems that the current lot of powerful people are thoroughly irresponsible. I’d like to add another – though it’s deeply wishful thinking. With great privilege should come great humility. Those of us who are privileged – like me, and like Boris – should be able to find that humility. To know that we really don’t know what it’s like to live without our privilege. We can try to imagine – but we’ll never really succeed. And we should know that we’ll never really succeed – and be far, far more willing to listen properly to those who do know it. Most of all, though, we should know when not to talk as though we had all the answers. We should know when to shut up."
Even better than the "Hatch Eats Kittens" ad Patty Posted: Sock Puppet ads for District 6 in San Francisco!