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AuthorSpencer Chen

How We Got to “Unhoused” [Freddie deBoer]

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  • The use of the term “unhoused” as a euphemism for homelessness is becoming increasingly popular in progressive circles, but it is a mistake.
  • The term “homeless” should be used instead, as it conveys a whole world of social and cultural and economic information that we have spent a lifetime processing.
  • Avoiding the word “homeless” is ostensibly a matter of avoiding stigma, but homelessness should be stigmatized in order to generate a solution to the problem.
  • The solution to homelessness is to end it, not to avoid talking about it in stark terms.

Click HERE for original. Published December 15, 2022

An Interview with Gregory C. Allen About the Past, Present, and Future of the China Chip Ban [Ben Thompson, Stratechery]

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• Gregory Allen is the director of the AI Governance Project and senior fellow in the Strategic Technologies Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
• CSIS is a research institution and think tank that provides analysis of public policy issues and works to improve the quality of the public policy debate.
• The defense industry and the commercial technology industry have undergone a multi-decade divorce, with the majority of defense spending now going towards specialists whose primary customer is the U.S. national security community.
• There are disadvantages to this structure, as the defense bureaucracy is not well-suited to developing disruptive technologies that could potentially put the U.S. at a strategic disadvantage.
• The early success of Silicon Valley was largely due to government funding, but the visionaries of the time recognized that the story would end in mass commercial adoption.
• The globalization of semiconductors was a conscious policy decision made by the U.S. to strengthen Japan’s economy and technology industry, and it was largely successful.
• We are now at an inflection point where the current policy towards China is out of gas, and a new policy must be developed.
• The U.S. and China have had a long and complicated relationship, with the U.S. attempting to integrate China into the global economy in the 1990s.
• The U.S. and China have had a strained national security relationship since the Taiwan Strait Crisis in 1997.
• The U.S. Chamber of Commerce began to express concern over China’s Made in China 2025 policy, which sought to replace Western joint venture partners in China.
• This lack of guardrails on the relationship between the U.S. and China has led to a breakdown in diplomatic relations and an increase in tensions.
• The path from the 2015 Made in China 2025 response to the 2022 chip ban announcement was marked by a shift in U.S.-China trade policy, a realization of Chinese technological sophistication, and a hostile Chinese national security posture.
• Donald Trump’s election and his focus on tariffs further shifted the Overton window, and the U.S. government’s punishment of ZTE for violating Iran sanctions revealed the power of export controls as a strategic tool.
• This led to a shift in Chinese national security policy, with a focus on self-reliance in the semiconductor industry and an understanding that their tech giants were vulnerable to U.S. sanctions.
• China has been pushing for self-sufficiency in semiconductor technology for some time, but the ZTE incident in 2018 caused a step change in the conversation.
• The U.S. has implemented export controls to limit China’s access to cutting-edge semiconductor technology, but this is a risky move as it could lead to the U.S. being isolated from the global semiconductor industry.
• The U.S. is relying on its allies to back its export controls, and China is hoping that the Netherlands and Japan will be persuaded to betray the U.S. and provide China with the technology it needs.
• Germany is the most challenging ally to get on board, as it has the most sophisticated semiconductor technology and could provide China with the essential components it needs.
• The Biden administration’s October 2020 export control policy is a major reversal of 25 years of U.S. government policy on trade in technology towards China.
• The policy is designed to restrict the sale of advanced AI chips and semiconductor manufacturing equipment to China, and to degrade the status quo of technology in China.
• The policy is a response to China’s civil-military fusion and is designed to prevent the Chinese military from accessing advanced AI technology.
• Secretary of State Anthony Blinken has described the policy as being at an “inflection point” in the post-Cold War world, and the policy could potentially lead to a new Cold War between the U.S. and China.
• The US government has recently implemented a ban on the export of semiconductor chips to China, in an effort to prevent the Chinese military from gaining access to advanced technology.
• The ban is enforced by the Department of Commerce, which uses lists of prohibited entities and technologies to identify and prevent illegal exports.
• The ban is designed to prevent China from accessing the latest technology, but it also creates incentives for China to attempt to evade the export controls.
• The consolidation of the semiconductor industry has made it easier to enforce the ban, as there are fewer companies to monitor and fewer technologies to track.

Published December 15, 2022. Visit Stratechery to read Ben Thompson’s original post

Cryptocurrency is the Segway of finance [Matthew Yglesias, Slow Boring]

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  • Cryptocurrency is not a revolutionary technology, but rather a cool toy that ultimately is not very useful.
  • Trusted intermediaries are very useful for conducting digital transactions, as they provide peace of mind and security against fraud.
  • Crypto is best known for its use in speculative trading, and its primary use case is for committing crimes.
  • Crypto can be useful in some cases, such as for people in countries with weak banking systems, but it is not a transformative technology. A good analogy is the Segway, which is nifty but ultimately serves only very marginal niches.

Click HERE for original. Published December 15, 2022

Why Twitter Really Banned Trump [The Free Press]

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  • On January 8, 2021, Twitter permanently suspended Donald Trump’s account, the first and only time a sitting head of state has been kicked off the platform.
  • Despite Trump’s tweets that morning not violating Twitter policies, the company decided to ban him due to pressure from employees, many of whom had been calling for his ban for months.
  • World leaders expressed their concerns, citing the precedent it set for freedom of speech and democratic rule.
  • Twitter had long resisted calls to ban Trump, citing their mission to provide a forum for people to engage their leaders directly.
  • Ultimately, Twitter’s decision to ban Trump raised questions about the power an individual or corporation has over public conversations.

Click HERE for original. Published December 15, 2022

When Should You Brush Your Teeth? [Emily Oster, ParentData]

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  • Brushing your teeth is an important part of oral hygiene to remove food debris and plaque, which can lead to cavities and tooth decay.
  • Highly acidic foods can soften enamel and make it more easily worn away by brushing.
  • If your breakfast is not highly acidic, brushing after is fine.
  • If your breakfast is highly acidic, brushing before may be better, and flossing or rinsing can also help remove food debris.

Click HERE for original. Published December 15, 2022

Twitter’s Secret Blacklists [Bari Weiss, Abigail Shrier, Michael Shellenberger and Nellie Bowles, TFP]

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  • Twitter secretly suppressed the visibility of accounts or subjects deemed undesirable or dangerous without informing users.
  • Twitter denies shadow banning, but executives prefer the term “visibility filtering” which is used to suppress posts by conservative or non-woke thinkers.
  • Prominent figures such as Stanford’s Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Turning Point USA Executive Director Charlie Kirk, and right-wing talk-show host Dan Bongino were all targeted.
  • Twitter’s Site Integrity Policy-Policy Escalation Support team (SIP-PES) was responsible for making the biggest, most politically sensitive decisions.
  • Twitter CEO Elon Musk believes the platform was sending civilization in a bad direction and is open to ideas to prevent censorship.

Click HERE for original. Published December 15, 2022

UPDATES: FTX’s dirty money [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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  • Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried was arrested in the Bahamas on Monday after being charged with multiple crimes by the Department of Justice and the SEC
  • The SEC alleges Bankman-Fried used misappropriated customer deposits to make large political donations
  • 26 politicians and two PACs have pledged to donate or return money from FTX execs
  • Major recipients of FTX cash, including the House Majority PAC, Senate Leadership Fund, DNC, NRCC, and DCCC, have not responded to requests for comment

Click HERE for original. Published December 15, 2022

The Staff Engineer’s Path: You’re a Role Model Now (Sorry) [Gergely Orosz, The Pragmatic Engineer]

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  • The Staff Engineer’s Path is a book written by Tanya Reilly, Senior Principal Engineer at Squarespace, which provides a type of manual of how to thrive at the Staff level.
  • The book covers two paths: the manager’s path and the staff engineer’s path.
  • The staff engineer’s path is less defined and expectations of the job vary across companies.
  • The book attempts to answer the question of how to start on the staff engineer’s path.
  • As a staff engineer, you’ll be a role model and people will assume you know what you’re talking about.
  • Being a role model doesn’t mean you have to become a public figure, be louder than you’re comfortable with, or throw your weight around.
  • Start small and think of leadership as a skill to build.
  • Be the best engineer and the best colleague that you can be and do a good job so others can see it.
  • Anticipate what you’ll wish you’d done and telegraph what’s coming.
  • Tidy up and keep your tools sharp.
  • Create institutional memory and expect failure.
  • Optimize for maintenance, not creation.
  • Make it understandable and keep it simple.
  • Build to decommission and create future leaders.
  • The metric for success is whether other people want to work with you.

Published December 14, 2022

Visit The Pragmatic Engineer to read Gergely Orosz’s original post

Kavanaugh parties with the far right [Judd Legum, Popular Information]

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  • Matt Schlapp is a far-right operative who is chairman of the American Conservative Union and runs the Conservative Political Action Committee events. He hosted a holiday party attended by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, Rep. Matt Gaetz, Stephen Miller, and other powerful people.
  • Stephen Miller runs America First Legal, which is involved in several cases currently pending before Kavanaugh and the other members of the Supreme Court.
  • The ACU has also been involved in several Supreme Court cases with Kavanaugh on the bench.
  • Chris Geidner detailed the Supreme Court cases that America First Legal is actively involved in.
  • Reverend Robert Schenck claims he was informed of the result of Hobby Lobby weeks in advance by a donor who dined with Justice Alito.
  • Senator Sheldon Whitehouse and Congressman Hank Johnson have introduced legislation that would require the Supreme Court to adopt a binding code of conduct.

Click HERE for original. Published December 14, 2022

The midterms should be a stake through the heart of the mobilization myth [Matthew Yglesias, Slow Boring]

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  • Swing voters are real and mobilization theory is not a viable way to win elections.
  • Democrats won key races in the 2022 midterms by persuading a small number of Republicans to vote for them.
  • Democrats need to appeal to swing voters in order to win in states like Ohio, North Carolina, Florida, and Texas.
  • There is no tradeoff between trying to maximize turnout and trying to appeal to swing voters.
  • Political advocacy involves trying to convince people to change their minds and create new possibilities.

Click HERE for original. Published December 13, 2022

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