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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Steve Bosserman

Steve Bosserman

The Trump takeaway: It's time to pay attention to each other's realities - 0 views

  • Such explanations allow us the reassuring but misguided belief that politics is about Causes and Effects rather than an irreducible mess of factors. They produce an exaggerated and false sense of contrasts between people – the idea that everyone (except us and our Facebook friends) has gone crazy. And above all, they give us the misplaced idea that everything’s somebody else’s fault.
Steve Bosserman

What if jobs are not the solution but the problem? - James Livingston | Aeon Essays - 0 views

  • So this Great Recession of ours – don’t kid yourself, it ain’t over – is a moral crisis as well as an economic catastrophe. You might even say it’s a spiritual impasse, because it makes us ask what social scaffolding other than work will permit the construction of character – or whether character itself is something we must aspire to. But that is why it’s also an intellectual opportunity: it forces us to imagine a world in which the job no longer builds our character, determines our incomes or dominates our daily lives.What would you do if you didn’t have to work to receive an income?In short, it lets us say: enough already. Fuck work.
  • So the impending end of work raises the most fundamental questions about what it means to be human. To begin with, what purposes could we choose if the job – economic necessity – didn’t consume most of our waking hours and creative energies? What evident yet unknown possibilities would then appear? How would human nature itself change as the ancient, aristocratic privilege of leisure becomes the birthright of human beings as such?
Steve Bosserman

The Blockchain Energy System Is Going To Be Great For Consumers | Co.Exist | ideas + im... - 0 views

  • Martin argues that the decentralized blockchain system, with its string of trusted nodes all over the world, could align with the decentralized energy system to create something really new. Essentially, the blockchain could complete the job of solar panels in allowing people to sell energy at the price they want and maintain rights to their power whenever they need it. (We covered some other blockchain energy projects here).
Steve Bosserman

True AI is both logically possible and utterly implausible | Aeon Essays - 0 views

  • We should make AI’s stupidity work for human intelligence. Millions of jobs will be disrupted, eliminated and created; the benefits of this should be shared by all, and the costs borne by society.
Steve Bosserman

Is Social Media Disconnecting Us From the Big Picture? - The New York Times - 0 views

  • User-generated content, by and large, is not lucrative at a scale that satisfies investors, and as a result, most social-media companies are changing direction toward other revenue streams. One of the more significant shifts is the move into social messaging.
  • These new messaging features work to bind private groups tighter together, by making it more fun to talk to one another than to engage with the world at large.
  • We are more interested in locating alien species than understanding the humanity among the species we already live with
Steve Bosserman

Citizen science efforts should be scaled up - SciDev.Net - 0 views

  • For instance, research institutions may work with local communities to help monitor biodiversity on habitats and species that the volunteers care about such as forests, species they hunt for food, economic or cultural reasons; the locals often have good knowledge of the diversity where they live. Global apps, such as iNaturalist or eBird, for urban groups, park managers and tourists can be promoted to help capture photographic records and species in certain locations.
Steve Bosserman

Here's How Facebook Actually Won Trump the Presidency | WIRED - 0 views

  • Social media was Trump’s primary communication channel. It wasn’t a platform for broadcasting pre-planned messages but for interacting with supporters and starting new conversations—however controversial those conversations often were. Bleeker says one of the biggest lessons he’s learned from this election cycle is that social media is increasingly going to be part of any candidate’s so-called “earned media strategy”—that is, the coverage a candidate gets for free in the press. The President-elect has shown he can turn a news cycle in 140 characters or less; in a recent 60 Minutes interview, he said he plans to continue using Twitter as president. “He’s going to tell his side of the story from the digital bully pulpit,” Lira says. Whether fake news did or didn’t affect the election’s outcome, Facebook as a platform did. The winning candidate was not just willing, but eager to break with traditional models of campaigning. His team invested in new ways of using the digital tools and platforms that have come to dominate the media landscape. Anyone who wants to defeat him in the future will have to do the same.
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