If the solution to "bad" algorithms is "good" algorithms by people who set themselves up as the arbiters of good and bad, we're right back where we started, having to decide whether or not we trust makers of algorithms. Checks and balances are nice, but there are no saints here.
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This is what increasingly pisses me off: the presumptive, holier-than-thou patronizing assumption that "we know better than you who is good and evil, and let us, the good guys, play policeman and rein in the capitalists, the bad guys, who only want your $ and engagement"
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This makes complete sense, although I don't quite share the pissed-off reaction. All I’m truly, selfishly interested in is whether graph mind is going to help my kids live their best life or not. If it will, I feel good participating, cos I enjoy doing so! If not, I feel icky.
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And that's really all you need to navigate graph minds. It's not an alien superhuman monster that is mind-controlling you. You already have much of the agency required to manage your use of these services.
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For sure. I mean, I'm not afraid of being mind-controlled, simply of contributing IQ to a collective that is working away indifferently on a plane in which people truly don't/can't matter. Agency+power+idiotic indifference frightens me a little. That fear maybe misplaced here?
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I think the point that both you and the harsher critics are missing is that YOU have the opportunity to try and grok where the graph mind is headed and looking for ways to generatively participate. The indifference has 2 sides to it. If you genuinely see nothing there, walk away.
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Why would you assume that where the graph mind is headed is necessarily of no interest to you? If a starship is about to launch for Alpha Centauri and you're given a seat by default, yes you can get off. But perhaps you should consider that going to Alpha Centauri might be fun.
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A very good point. maybe it's a consequence of truly naive 38-year old ennui (40 < 40). I pretty much know where my individual/real life is going and it's nowhere special. I'm going to try to have fun on the way…
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…but I spent my childhood in Superior National Forest and I loved it, so making the decision that my kids will be on Alpha Centauri instead feels kind of hard?
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I think the choice is your kids' not yours. Your job as a parent is probably to make sure they make no irreversible decisions too early as they experiment and figure it out. Ie, help them keep their optionality open as long as possible.
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