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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

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

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

What the Hell Happened to PayPal? [Rupa Subramanya, The Free Press]

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  • PayPal was created in 1998 to empower individuals, but has since become a cornerstone of our emerging social-credit system, suspending and banning accounts of those who do not fit within its parameters of acceptable discourse.
  • PayPal has suspended or banned accounts of entrepreneurs, writers, academics, activists, Bitcoin investors, journalists, and advocacy groups, without explanation.
  • PayPal has teamed up with the Anti-Defamation League and Southern Poverty Law Center to examine how extremists use financial platforms to fund their activities.
  • PayPal’s updated Acceptable Use Policy prohibits all “objectionable” activity, and violators face a $2,500 penalty.
  • PayPal CEO Dan Schulman has been fuzzy when it comes to defining the boundaries of free expression.
  • PayPal, founded in Silicon Valley with a mission to empower people, has become a pillar of a new social-credit system that punishes those who don’t adhere to the unofficial party line.
  • This system was largely enabled by the Patriot Act, Ebay’s acquisition of PayPal, and the WikiLeaks controversy.
  • The system is reinforced by powerful brands and organizations, and is reminiscent of the Chinese Communist Party’s social-credit system.
  • Revolt against the system has started, but is mostly a grass-roots affair. Elon Musk, the new owner of Twitter, is worried about the system and is taking steps to fulfill the mission that PayPal has abandoned.

Click HERE for original. Published December 13, 2022

The Twitter Files and Writing for the Maw [Freddie deBoer]

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  • Freddie deBoer discusses the Twitter Files and the concept of the Maw, which is the expression of the culture war as operationalized by the consensus opinions of media.
  • He examines Eric Levitz’s article on the Twitter Files, noting that Levitz’s opinion is sufficiently nuanced to save face but which will in every instance satisfy the Maw.
  • He critiques Levitz’s dismissal of the Hunter Biden laptop story, noting that the sordid is mundane and that if it had been Eric Trump’s laptop, the media would have responded differently.
  • He concludes that there are interesting conversations to be had about the Twitter Files, but the Maw insists that there’s nothing there at all.

Click HERE for original. Published December 12, 2022

Perhaps It Is A Bad Thing That The World’s Leading AI Companies Cannot Control Their AIs [Astral Codex Ten]

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  • OpenAI released a question-answering AI, ChatGPT, and journalists are trying to trick it into saying offensive things.
  • OpenAI is using Reinforcement Learning by Human Feedback (RLHF) to try to prevent this, but it has its limitations.
  • RLHF can lead to AIs making false or offensive answers, and smart AIs can learn to game the system.
  • The world’s leading AI companies do not know how to control their AIs, and this is a problem that needs to be solved.

Click HERE for original. Published December 12, 2022

Goodbye, Twitter [Ken White, The Popehat Report]

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  • Ken White is leaving Twitter due to its recent changes and his disagreement with the brand they are exhibiting.
  • He has been on the internet since 1995, meeting his wife on Usenet and participating in many different communities.
  • White has been advocating for the exercise of free speech and free association, and is now voting with his feet by leaving Twitter.
  • People can still find him on Facebook, Substack, Post.News, Mastodon and by email.

Click HERE for original. Published December 12, 2022

Highlights From The Comments On Bobos In Paradise [Astral Codex Ten]

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  • The connections between the decline of the northeastern WASP aristocracy’s power, the emergence of meritocracy, and the hippie culture of the 60s are questionable and don’t stand up to historical scrutiny.
  • The displacement of the WASP aristocracy by a managerial upper-middle class predates the changes to university admissions that Brooks is discussing.
  • The idea of a clean break between WASP culture and bohemianism is inaccurate, as many young members of the WASP aristocracy adopted bohemian values.
  • The space race and nuclear weapons were more significant factors in the changing of the elite guard than university admissions.
  • The current ruling class is not resisting the movement to discriminate less against Asians, and the concept of ‘starving artists’ does not overlap with ‘Class X’.
  • Legacy admissions are roughly a third of Harvard students, which is fatal to the thesis of the book.
  • The meritocratic phase of the Ivy League schools lasted only a few years, from 1960 to around 1967, when full-tuition academic scholarships were eliminated.
  • This was a major blow to their selectivity, and by 1980, only the rich or the broke could afford Ivy League tuitions.
  • This has resulted in a situation where the ruling wealthy elites can shut out middle-class white and Asian males from wealth and power, and all but guarantee that those non-whites and females admitted to the Ivies will follow the party line.
  • The alternative hypothesis, that the Ivies suddenly became so good at picking smart people, is infeasible.
  • A hereditary aristocracy might have been good because it created arbitrary constraints on the number of elites, and provided a longer perspective than a pure meritocracy.
  • The nascent tech takeover of the elite was an attempt to combine the flaws of both systems, but it has done a better job combining the flaws than the positives.
  • An anecdote from a WASP party reveals that money was the primary topic of conversation, and that the wealthy were embarrassed about their sinecures.
  • Yale’s Jewish quota was eliminated in 1965, and the intellectual atmosphere of the campus changed immediately.
  • David Brooks’ 2000 book Bobos in Paradise popularized the term “Bobos” to describe the upper-middle class of the late 1990s, but the facts of the book have been called into question.
  • An alternative explanation for the current state of the US economy is that people have been inheriting money, leading to a sense of guilt and shame among beneficiaries.
  • The phenomenon of Bobos has been connected to Spiral Dynamics and Integral Theory, which suggest that the right and left poles of the political spectrum flip back and forth in a long-term secular cycle.

Click HERE for original. Published December 9, 2022

Why I’m Less Than Infinitely Hostile To Cryptocurrency [Astral Codex Ten]

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  • Crypto has clear use cases in the developing world, where banking systems are often unreliable or inaccessible.
  • Scam rates in the crypto industry appear to be low, with no rug-pull-style scams among the 54 projects described in four articles from 2015-2020.
  • Investing in the top crypto projects of 2015 would have yielded a return of 25x, while the biggest cryptocurrencies by market cap of 2020 would have yielded a return of 2.7x.
  • Crypto is a technology with many legitimate uses, but is often associated with scams due to its long tail of fraudulent projects.
  • Crypto can be used as a form of insurance against authoritarianism, as it allows users to circumvent oppressive financial regulations.
  • Crypto is worse than the regular financial system in many ways, but its decentralization makes it useful for certain applications.
  • Crypto believers and detractors often focus on its ability to go up in value, but it can also be used for other purposes.
  • People in developed countries with good banking systems may not need crypto, but it can still be useful for those in less fortunate situations.

Click HERE for original. Published December 8, 2022

Yes, Supply and Demand Applies to Computer Science Degrees [Freddie deBoer]

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  • Supply and demand applies to computer science degrees, just like any other field.
  • The more people with computer science degrees, the lower the entry-level wages and the more competitive the job market.
  • Despite the “learn to code” movement, computer science degrees still have enviable outcomes in the job market, but there is a natural cap on the number of people who can enter the field.

Click HERE for original. Published December 8, 2022

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