2021-02-17 ------------------------------------------------------------------ Continuing from where my last post, "Dimensions of Government", left off... To what extent is a person "responsible" for partaking in society? Fifty years ago, even twenty years ago, we might have started with the expectation that people are inherently "active" in society. The basic state of a person is to be doing something that connects to the system around them. This is not true anymore if we focus on the legally most relevant system, namely the nation state. People have been separated from the nation state quite deeply. Partly this is due to the americanization of culture. I mostly think in English even though it is not an official language in my country. I am using digital services developed by Americans. I am more aware of cultural movements in the US than those in the EU. Most of the propaganda I consume is produced by multi-national corporations. To what extent I can be said to be a part of the legal frame provided by my country? At the same time, the definition of "being active" has changed a lot from the "innocent" days of post-WW2. People's muscles stopped being important and increasingly their brains are being obsoleted by scalability of solutions. When something is highly scalable, it doesn't need many people to run it, compared to the previous, hierarchic system that needed secretaries, aides, coffee makers, cleaners, etc. As people were phased off, they were turned into information consumers and an abstract frontier of memetic control. They became a medium through which money and other resources could be siphoned. Some of these resources are votes, public opinion and so on. At the moment the social medias are quite untethered from physical reality, while excercising incredible mob force that has large effects on the noosphere. A result of these changes is that while an individual is clearly more empowered to deliver a message to a larger amount of people than ever before, at the same time their economic value first as a worker and now as a customer has gone down. A person's basic state of existance is not one of economic activity any more. The power is still being dealt within the economic sphere and the classical political sphere, though. The people have been baited into the memetic landscape while the real power stays largely immune to it. Furthermore, the noospheric control by the mob is not a regenerative force, but a censoring force, further stifling and confusing the landscape. It is no surprise that universal basic income seems to be coming a reality fast. For the megacorporations this is a way to funnel the government money through the people into the corporations. If people are not making money by their activity, they have to be given money, so that the corporations can keep competing. This has to stop somehow, though. I doubt that the memetic fist will be able to gather enough momentum to mortally damage any big corporation. If it did, that would mark an end of an era. It seems that the corporations are fighting back hard at the moment, with all the talk about getting rid of encryption in private messaging. If I had to guess which of the above is more likely, it is the latter. The elevator pitch is that the power symmetry is so skewed that there would have to be an enormous revamping to keep nation states relevant at all. Why do they have to stay relevant? Because of law. Law as it relates to individuals is the weakest link, since it is being bypassed by basically all the big forces. The mob is cancelling people with no process whatsoever. The corporations will not even pick up the phone when a small country comes complaining. While torrents were pushed down into obscurity, youtube keeps offering content it has no rights to. There have been countries that "banned" content on youtube, but it never had any effects. I think Denmark tried to protect Danish copyright holders on youtube. To bring the symmetry more equal, a private person of limited means should be considered an anarchic component, while a multi-national corporation should be considered as responsible to the planetary future as the UN or WHO. With power should come responsibility, but obviously the more lawyers you have the more freedom from responsibility you can buy. As the digital technologies are especially prone to turn to monopolies due to scalability, it would make sense to create intentional loopholes, or anarchic wormholes to suck the usability of technology into public space. Copyright should allow for siphoning the most relevant innovation back to the public. As implied before, the separation of private, government and public is crumbling, but only the largest players have the capability of using the law to their advantage. Copyright should have a cannibilizing feature for the biggest successess. What can be gained as far as the civilization is concerned by letting facebook get bigger? All the advantages are already gained while the company will actively stifle any new advantages at this point of it's life cycle. It should be eaten up by smaller companies. Just add a protocol that allows intermessaging to and from facebook and let's see who comes up with the best UI. Anarchy is never going to work in the way hierarchy sometimes can work. There should be protected spaces for anarchy. At the moment people are kept in consumer mode in relation to information. They are not encouraged to think, they are disencouraged from connecting with others unless it is in the confrontational way. We need areas where people can be productive without hierarchies, and we need people right next to these spaces collecting solutions that will be tested and built into the public domain. Most desperately we need some social technologies comparable to the laws that we are losing fast. ------------------------------------------------------------------