𒀭𒂗𒆠 つん(でれ/どく) Profile picture
Sep 19, 2020 17 tweets 3 min read Read on X
So, survellance capitalism doesn't trade in actually good predictions. You know, first hand, that ad-tech is (on average) bullshit. You are not an outlier: ad models don't work much better on anybody else. They trade on the statistical illusion of ad targeting.
This illusion is tenuous. Click-through rates fall as users become more canny, & click-throughs are the best metric anybody has for ad success (even though most clicks don't turn into sales & most sales are not the results of ad clicks).
This doesn't mean the ad-driven revenue model has no effects. It has massive effects: as folks double down on whatever tricks can still con investors, and apply those tricks at scale, we end users are pushed into behaviors that are of no use to anybody, let alone us.
What it does mean is that the promises that make these strategies profitable are lies, and as soon as the illusion becomes untenable, the bubble collapses, taking facebook/twitter/google with it.
(Amazon is not here, because amazon is not dealing in ad tech per-se: they know what sells and what gets returned. Their recommendation system is as shitty as the rest but it's based on real data instead of simulacra)
So, what do we do?

Ad-tech accelerationism

The adnauseam plugin clicks on every ad, while hiding it. It hastens the fall of adtech.

At the same time:

Privacy weasel & privacy possum block trackers. Other plugins will spam them with flak data.
At the same time, we can counteract trendism (the primary behavioral result of ad-tech-oriented media) by sorting by new on social media, and by adding random noise to our reccomender-oriented systems (youtube, netflix, spotify). There are apps to show random entries.
Or, better yet, random entries with zero views.
Basically, we need to sabotage the illusion that ad-tech is profitable while protecting ourselves from its fallout.

Nobody will do this for us.

Writing, and then printing, produced massive disruption until social technologies were developed to tame them.
Writing in sumer ushered in the cultural supremacy of the akkadians, and printing the gutenberg bible ushered in first the protestant reformation and then widespread secularization, and eventually, night-universal atheism.
Social tech around social media will be no better to ad-tech than the printing press was to catholicism. We can accelerate this process.
'The algorithm' is stupid. The algorithm thinks you want more of the same. It is easily tricked. Consume things you don't like occasionally and it's absolutely lost.
Here's the thing.

We, as users (technical or nontechnical) don't own or control the computing devices we rely on.

We don't control them because it is more profitable to keep the important parts on remote servers.

It's profitable because the ad-tech bubble hasn't burst yet.
I'm not gonna tell everybody to move to SSB, though that would be a good start.

We spent decades with proprietary software, and open source only took off when it could be locked up behind corporate firewalls & the important decisions about YOUR allowed actions limited to elites.
Bursting ad-tech is not a panacea, nor is it totally inevitable. The divine right of kings, despite being obvious bullshit, lasted a thousand years. We need dual power. Create small-computing alternatives to big-computing behemoths. Make them ready for the fall.
Anyway this has been my extended subtweet on The Social Dilemma

Instead of watching it, read my books on the subject.

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More from @enkiv2

Oct 6, 2021
I think this is a vital insight.

Online culture for the past ~8 years has been basically -- what if a bunch of roller coaster fans have been, simultaneously, punched in the face by a roller coaster?
People test their own boundaries of discomfort constantly. It's a component of many forms of media (heavy metal, horror, comedy) but also other cultural expression (like food -- spicy/bitter/sour, alcohol, many drugs). It's been drafted into hustle culture.
It's a part of growth, a part of individuation, and a part of trust. (Think BDSM!) And when you find you can't trust one source to help you test your boundaries safely, you switch to something else, & become more vigilant.
Read 10 tweets
Oct 5, 2021
On the one hand, some nerds definitely already knew this. (Like, chaos magick was all over usenet. ESR used to be a fluffybunny wiccan.) Bitcoin taught it to other kinds of nerds (the kind who normally 'believe' in money), and changed the existing community members too.
As somebody who has been socially adjacent to the cryptocurrency scene since before bitcoin was invented: these guys were mostly good-faith political radicals of a right-libertarian persuasion -- i.e., the kind of person who'd be a mutualist without anti-soviet propaganda
When valuation got so high that btc became a commodity instead of a medium of exchange, not only did you get an influx of stuffed suits building the institutions we now have in that space, but you also saw people shift to a more cutthroat attitude.
Read 8 tweets
Sep 22, 2021
I'm always suspicious of "young people don't understand X" narratives because frequently they're overstated & even when they're not, it's often a matter of pure exposure & telling them about something once is enough to solve the problem.
That said, our sense of the adjacent possible matters, and tools have moved away from directory structures (and names in general) often without actually providing a good alternative. GUIs were the first phase of this, but mobile interfaces are worse.
Everything on your phone *has* a path but you need to install a third party app to see path and file names. If you do most of your computing on a phone without a file manager app, it may not occur to you to think in terms of paths, even when they're the right tool.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 22, 2021
Last Drive In drastically increases the ratio of Joe Bob footage to movie footage vs Monstervision, & it really improves the enjoyment factor. I hope we get more Elvira too. We didn't on 13 Nights Of Halloween, but that still was sort of working on TV logic.
Horror hosts were originally sugar to help the medicine go down -- to make people willing to watch the crappy movies that the network already had the rights to due to package deals. (Same deal as MST3K)
Last Drive In has the opposite dynamic to Monstervision in this way -- Last Drive In is a huge draw for Shudder, and they use it to promote the breadth of their catalog, but they also get movies specifically for the show.
Read 14 tweets
Aug 1, 2021
Discordianism has already become 'historically important', because of its impact on major geopolitical events.

As pope, I declare: discordians have a sacred duty to create 'textual chaos', and extend the 'textual chaos' present in the variations of the PD.
Future historians, being servants of the season of bureaucracy, are our comrades and we must operate in solidarity with them by ensuring that they have plenty of employment. This happily coincides with our own desires: archive fever and confusion of tongues.
Some examples of praxis:
- referencing a mix of actual and imagined other texts (the more obscure, the better)
- attributing quotes to works that do not contain them
- creating unrelated texts with the same name
- creating texts named after the imaginary texts named in other work
Read 6 tweets
Mar 10, 2021
Why are pop culture zombies so strongly associated with communication & communications technologies?
Like:
There are several apparently-independent books/movies where cell phones turn people into zombies (and, as far as I am aware, none where cell phones turn people into vampires or werewolves).
There's stuff like Pontypool (book & film) or Hyenas (book), where zombieism is either spread by language or created by the absence of language.
Read 16 tweets

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