This week, I wrote about the Great Enshittening - the digital services we rely on becoming extractive piles of shit. It didn't result from the decaying the morals of tech leaders, but from the collapse of the forces that discipline corporations:



1/ locusmag.com/2023/11/commen…
A black-and-white photo of a nose-first zeppelin crash. The foreground has a huge Google 'G' logo. In the middle of it stands a choleric boss in a top hat, holding a giant money-bag and shouting over his shoulder at the disaster behind him. A bound and gagged figure has been thrown from the zeppelin and plummets towards the earth, his eyes full of terror.
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/25/mor…
The failure to enforce competition law allowed a few companies to buy out their rivals, or sell goods below cost until their rivals collapsed, or bribe key parts of their supply chain not to allow rivals to participate:



3/engadget.com/google-reporte…
The resulting concentration of the tech sector meant that the surviving firms were stupendously wealthy, *and* cozy enough that they could agree on a common legislative agenda.

4/
That regulatory capture has allowed tech companies to violate labor, privacy and consumer protection laws by arguing that the law doesn't apply when you use an app to violate it:



5/pluralistic.net/2023/04/12/alg…
But the regulatory capture isn't just *preventing* regulation: it's also *creating* regulation - laws banning reverse-engineering, scraping, and reconfiguring existing services to claw back value that has been taken away from users and business customers.

6/
This gives rise to @saurik's perfectly named doctrine of "#FelonyContemptOfBusinessModel," in which it is illegal to use your own property in ways that anger the shareholders of the company that sold it to you:



7/pluralistic.net/2023/11/09/lea…
Undisciplined by the threat of competition, regulation, or unilateral modification by users, companies are free to enshittify their products. But what does that actually *look like*? I say that enshittification is always precipitated by a lost argument.

8/
It starts when someone around a board-room table proposes doing something that's bad for users but good for the company.

9/
If the company faces the discipline of competition, regulation or self-help measures, then workers who are disgusted by this course of action can say, "I think doing this would be gross, and what's more, it's going to make the company poorer," and so they win the argument.

10/
But when you take away that discipline, the argument gets reduced to, "Don't do this because it would make me ashamed to work here, even though it will make the company richer." Money talks, bullshit walks. Let the enshittification begin!



11/pluralistic.net/2023/11/22/who…
But why do workers care at all? That's where phrases like "don't be evil" come into the picture. Until very recently, tech workers participated in one of history's tightest labor markets, in which multiple companies with gigantic war-chests bid on their labor.

12/
Even low-level employees routinely fielded calls from recruiters who dangled offers of higher salaries and larger stock grants if they would jump ship for a company's rival.

13/
Employers built "campuses" filled with perks: massages, gyms, daycare, gourmet food. They offered workers generous benefits, including having your eggs frozen so you could delay fertility while offsetting the risks normally associated with conceiving at a later age.

14/
But all of this was a transparent ruse: the business-case for free meals, gyms, dry-cleaning, catering and massages was to keep workers at their laptops for 10, 12, or even 16 hours per day.

15/
That egg-freezing perk wasn't about helping workers plan their families: it was about thumbing the scales in favor of working through your entire twenties and thirties without taking any parental leave.

16/
In other words, tech employers valued their employees as a means to an end: they wanted to get the best geeks on the payroll and then work them like government mules.

17/
The perks and pay weren't the result of comradeship between management and labor: they were the result of the discipline of competition *for labor*.

18/
This wasn't a secret, of course. Big Tech workers are split into two camps: blue badges (salaried employees) and green badges (contractors). Whenever there is a slack labor market for a specific job or skill, it is converted from a blue badge job to a green badge job.

19/
Green badges don't get the food or the massages or the kombucha. They don't get stock or daycare. They don't get to freeze their eggs. They *also* work long hours, but they are incentivized by the fear of poverty.

20/
Tech giants went to great lengths to shield blue badges from green badges - at some Google campuses, these workforces actually used different entrances and worked in different facilities or on different floors.

21/
Sometimes, green badge working hours would be staggered so that the armies of ragged clickworkers would not be lined up to badge in when their social betters swanned off the luxury bus and into their airy adult kindergartens.

22/
But Big Tech worked hard to convince those blue badges that they were truly valued. Companies hosted regular town halls where employees could ask impertinent questions of their CEOs.

23/
They maintained freewheeling internal social media sites where techies could rail against corporate foolishness and make Dilbert references.

And they came up with mottoes.

Apple told its employees it was a sound environmental steward that cared about privacy.

24/
Apple also deliberately turned old devices into e-waste by shredding them to ensure that they wouldn't be repaired and compete with new devices:



25/pluralistic.net/2023/09/22/vin…
And even as they were blocking Facebook's surveillance tools, they quietly built their own nonconsensual mass surveillance program and lied to customers about it:



26/pluralistic.net/2022/11/14/lux…
Facebook told employees they were on a "mission to connect every person in the world," but instead deliberately sowed discontent among its users and trapped them in silos that meant that anyone who left Facebook lost all their friends:



27/eff.org/deeplinks/2021…
And Google promised its employees that they would not "be evil" if they worked there. For many googlers, that mattered. They wanted to do something good with their lives, and they had a choice about who they would work for. What's more, they *did* make things that were good.

28/
At their high points, Google Maps, Google Mail, and of course, Google Search were *incredible*.

My own life was totally transformed by Maps: I have *very* poor spatial sense, need to actually stop and think to tell my right from my left.

29/
I spent more of my life at least a little lost and often *very* lost. Google Maps is the cognitive prosthesis I needed to become someone who can go anywhere. I'm profoundly grateful to the people who built that service.

30/
There's a name for phenomenon in which you care so much about your job that you endure poor conditions and abuse: it's called #VocationalAwe, as coined by @Fobettarh:



31/inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2018/vocationa…
Ettarh uses the term to apply to traditionally low-waged workers like librarians, teachers and nurses. In our book #ChokepointCapitalism, @RGibli and I talked about how it applies to artists and other creative workers, too:



32/chokepointcapitalism.com
But vocational awe is also omnipresent in tech. The grandiose claims to be on a mission to make the world a better place are not just puffery - they're a vital means of motivating workers who can easily quit their jobs and find a new one to put in 16-hour days.

33/
The massages and kombucha and egg-freezing are not framed as *perks*, but as logistical supports, provided so that techies on an important mission can pursue a shared social goal without being distracted by their balky, inconvenient meatsuits.

34/
#SteveJobs was a master of instilling vocational awe. He was full of aphorisms like "we're here to #MakeADentInTheUniverse, otherwise why even be here?"

35/
On his infamous line to #JohnSculley, whom he lured away from Pepsi: "Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life or come with me and change the world?"

36/
Vocational awe cuts both ways. If your workforce actually *believes* in all that high-minded stuff, if they actually sacrifice their health, family lives and self-care to further the mission, they will *defend it*.

37/
That brings me back to enshittification, and the argument: "If we do this bad thing to the product I work on, it will make me hate myself."

38/
The decline in market discipline for large tech companies has been accompanied by a decline in *labor* discipline, as the market for technical work grew less and less competitive.

39/
Since the dotcom collapse, the ability of tech giants to starve new entrants of market oxygen has shrunk techies' dreams.

Tech workers once dreamed of working for a big, unwieldy firm for a few years before setting out on their own to topple it with a startup.

40/
Then, the dream shrank: work for that big, clumsy firm for a few years, then do a *fake* startup that makes a *fake* product that is #acquihired by your old employer, as an incredibly inefficient and roundabout way to get a raise and a bonus.

41/
Then the dream shrank again: work for a big, ugly firm for *life*, but get those perks, the massages and the kombucha and the stock options and the gourmet cafeteria and the egg-freezing.

42/
Then it shrank again: work for Google for a while, but then get laid off along with 12,000 co-workers, just months after the company does a #StockBuyback that would cover all those salaries for the next 27 years:



43/pluralistic.net/2023/09/10/the…
Tech workers' power was fundamentally *individual*. In a tight labor market, tech workers could personally stand up to their bosses. They got "workplace democracy" by mouthing off at town hall meetings. They didn't have a union, and they thought they didn't need one.

44/
Of course, they *did* need one, because there were limits to individual power, even for the most in-demand workers, especially when it came to ghastly, long-running sexual abuse from high-ranking executives:



45/nytimes.com/2018/10/25/tec…
Today, atomized tech workers who are ordered to enshittify the products they take pride in are losing the argument.

46/
Workers who put in long hours, missed funerals and school plays and little league games and anniversaries and family vacations are being ordered to flush that sacrifice down the toilet to grind out a few basis points towards a #KPI.

47/
It's a form of #MoralInjury, and it's palpable in the first-person accounts of former workers who've exited these large firms or the entire field. The viral "Reflecting on 18 years at Google," written by Ian @Hixie, vibrates with it:



48/ln.hixie.ch/?start=1700627…
Hixie describes the sense of mission he brought to his job, the workplace democracy he experienced as employees' views were both solicited and heeded. He describes the positive contributions he made to a commons of technical standards that rippled out beyond Google.

49/
And then, he says, "Google's culture eroded":

> Decisions went from being made for the benefit of users, to the benefit of Google, to the benefit of whoever was making the decision.

50/
In other words, techies started losing the argument. Layoffs weakened worker power - not just to defend their own interest, but to defend the *users* interests.

51/
Worker power is *always* about more than workers - think of how the 2019 LA teachers' strike won greenspace for every school, a ban on immigration sweeps of students' parents at the school gates and other community benefits:



52/pluralistic.net/2023/04/23/a-c…
Hixie attributes the changes to a change in leadership, but I respectfully disagree. Hixie points to the original shareholder letter from the Google founders:



53/abc.xyz/investor/found…
In the letter they informed investors contemplating their IPO that they were retaining a controlling interest in the company's governance so that they could ignore their shareholders' priorities in favor of a vision of Google as a positive force in the world.

54/
Hixie says that the leadership that succeeded the founders lost sight of this vision - but the whole point of that letter is that the founders *never* fully ceded control to subsequent executive teams.

55/
Yes, those executive teams were accountable to the shareholders, but the largest block of voting shares were retained by the founders.

I don't think the enshittification of Google was due to a change in leadership.

56/
I think it was due to a change in *discipline*, the discipline imposed by competition, regulation and the threat of self-help measures.

57/
Take ads: when Google had to contend with one-click adblocker installation, it had to constantly balance the risk of making users so fed up that they googled "how do I block ads?" and then *never saw another ad ever again*.

58/
But once Google seized the majority of the mobile market, it was able to funnel users into apps, and reverse-engineering an app is a felony (felony contempt of business-model) under #Section1201 of the #DigitalMillenniumCopyrightAct.

59/
An app is just a web-page wrapped in enough IP to make it a crime to install an ad-blocker.

As Google acquired control over browsers, it reduced the self-help measures available to browser users who found ads sufficiently obnoxious to trigger googling "how do I block ads?"

60/
The apotheosis of this is the yearslong campaign to block adblockers in Chrome, which the company has sworn it will finally do this coming June:



61/tumblr.com/tevruden/73435…
My contention here is not that Google's enshittification was precipitated by a change in personnel via the promotion of managers who have shitty ideas.

62/
Google's enshittification was precipitated by a change in *discipline*, as the negative consequences of heeding those shitty ideas were abolished thanks to monopoly.

This is bad news for people like me, who rely on services like Google Maps as cognitive prostheses.

63/
@elizlaraki, one of the original Google Maps designers, has published a scorching critique of the latest GMaps design:



64/
Laraki calls out numerous enshittificatory design-choices that have left Maps screens covered in "crud" - multiple revenue-maximizing elements that come at the expense of usability, shifting value from users to Google.

65/
What Laraki doesn't say is that these UI elements are auctioned off to merchants, which means that the business that gives Google the most money gets the greatest prominence in Maps, even if it's not the best merchant.

66/
That's a recurring motif in enshittified tech platforms, most notoriously Amazon, which makes $31b/year auctioning off top search placement to companies whose products aren't relevant enough to your query to command that position on their own:



67/pluralistic.net/2023/04/25/gre…
Enshittification begets enshittification. To succeed on Amazon, you must divert funds from product quality to auction placement, which means that the top results are the worst products:



68/pluralistic.net/2023/11/06/att…
The exception is searches for Apple products: Apple and Amazon have a cozy arrangement that means that searches for Apple products are a timewarp back to the pre-enshittification Amazon.

69/
The Amazon of the days when the company worried enough about losing your business to heed the employees who objected to sacrificing search quality as part of a merchant extortion racket:



70/businessinsider.com/amazon-gives-a…
Not every tech worker is a tech bro, in other words. Many workers care deeply about making your life better. But the microeconomics of the boardroom in a monopolized tech sector rewards the worst people and continuously promotes them.

71/
Forget the #PeterPrinciple: tech is ruled by the *Sam* Principle.

As #OpenAI went through four CEOs in a single week, lots of commentators remarked on #SamAltman's rise and fall and rise, but I only found *one* commentator who really had Altman's number.

72/
Writing in @todayintabs, @fka_tabs nailed Altman to the wall:



Altman's history goes like this: first, he founded a useless startup that raised $30m, only to be acquired and shuttered.

73/todayintabs.com/p/defective-ac…
Then Altman got a job running #YCombinator, where he somehow failed at taking huge tranches of equity from "every Stanford dropout with an idea for software to replace something Mommy used to do."

74/
After that, he founded OpenAI, a company that he claims to believe presents an existential risk to the entire human risk - which he structured so incompetently that he was then forced out of it.

75/
His reward for this string of farcical, mounting failures? He was put *back in charge* of the company he mis-structured despite his claimed belief that it will destroy the human race if not properly managed.

76/
Altman's been around for a long time. He founded his startup in *2005*. There've always been Sams - of both the Bankman-Fried varietal and the Altman genus - in tech. But they didn't get to run amok.

77/
They were disciplined by their competitors, regulators, users and workers. The collapse of competition led to an across-the-board collapse in *all* of those forms of discipline.

78/
That revealed the executives for the mediocre sociopaths they always were, and exposing tech workers' vocational awe for the shabby trick it was from the start.

eof/

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More from @doctorow

Nov 27
The #OpenAI soap-opera hijacked the attention of millions of productive people and nonsensually crammed the fine details of the debate between #EffectiveAltruism and #EffectiveAccelerationism into them, a genuinely absurd debate that was allegedly at the center of the drama.

1/ A giant glowing green Cartesian plane, receding into the distance. In the foreground are Tenniel's illustrations of Tweedledee and Tweedledum, pulling their hair in rage. Each has a glowing HAL9000 eye from Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey' on his belly. In the background, Tenniel's Beamish Boy confronts the Jabberwock, whose eyes have also been replaced with HAL9000's eye.   Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg  CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/27/10-…
Very broadly speaking: the Effective Altruists are doomers, who believe that #LargeLanguageModels (AKA "spicy autocomplete") will someday become so advanced that it could wake up and annihilate or enslave the human race.

3/
Read 51 tweets
Nov 24
Before the term "ecology" came along, people didn't know they were on the same side. You care about owls, I care about the ozone layer - what does the destiny of charismatic nocturnal avians have to do with the gaseous composition of the upper atmosphere?

1/ A boardroom scene in which executives are ranged around a table, their focus fixed on a figure standing at the table's end. That figure has been replaced with a family in 1950s-era clothes - a mother, father and daughter. On the wall behind the executives is an analog clock whose 12 position has been replaced by a terrified pig wearing a top hat; the hour-hand sweeping toward the pig has been replaced with a saber. Also on the wall, descending on the scene, is an anarchist black cat, claws extended.
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/24/coa…
But as @ThePublicDomain has written, the term "ecology" welded together a thousand issues into a single movement.

3/
Read 25 tweets
Nov 22
My latest @LocusMag column is "Don't Be Evil," a consideration of the forces that led to the Great Enshittening, the dizzying, rapid transformation of formerly useful services went from indispensable to unusable to actively harmful:



1/ locusmag.com/2023/11/commen…
Image
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/22/who…
While some services have fallen harder and/or faster, they're *all* falling. When a whole cohort of services all turn sour in the same way, at the same time, it's obvious that something is happening *systemically*.

3/
Read 42 tweets
Nov 20
Economists tell us that the market can remain irrational longer than we can remain solvent, but how long can *economists* remain irrational? Judging from the inflation scare we just lived through, the answer appears to be "longer than you can remain solvent."

1/ A vintage postcard of the Federal Reserve building by night, a full moon overhead. The building is spattered in blood. In the foreground is a medieval woodcut of two doctors bleeding a patient. The patient's head has been replaced with that of Uncle Sam. The doctors' heads have been replaced with those of Larry Summers and Jerome Powell.   Image: mosaic36 (modified) https://www.flickr.com/photos/mosaic36/14231376315  Chatham House (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Larry_Summers_%286357735111%29.jpg  CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/20/blo…
Experts of all description are prone to enduring folly in which the failure of some cherished intervention triggers *more* of that intervention. This is the famed "doing the same thing but expecting different results" and it's a grand American tradition.

3/
Read 38 tweets
Nov 18
Happy Saturday! As is often the case, I've finished the week with more stray links that will fit on my blog, so it's time for a #linkdump, assembly of an assorted assortment. This is my *tenth* such linkdump - here are the previous installments:



1/ pluralistic.net/2023/11/05/var…
Cranberry trail mix with cranberries, peanuts, raisins, walnuts, almonds, sunflower seeds, pepitas in the Franklin Farm section of Oak Hill, Fairfax County, Virginia.    Image: Famartin https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2021-01-06_12_15_43_Cranberry_trail_mix_with_cranberries,_peanuts,_raisins,_walnuts,_almonds,_sunflower_seeds,_pepitas_in_the_Franklin_Farm_section_of_Oak_Hill,_Fairfax_County,_Virginia.jpg  CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/18/col…
While nostalgia is a toxic impulse (h/t @hodgman), there's no denying that there once existed an old, good web, and that it has given way to the #enshitternet. I don't want to bring the old, good web back, but I would welcome a *new*, good web.

3/
Read 96 tweets
Nov 15
Almost no one knows it, but last June, a 90-car train rolled off in #Hernando, MO, going 3 miles, through two public crossings, a #BombTrain with *47* potentially explosive propane cars. It didn't crash or derail, so #GrenadaRailroad/#GulfAndAtantic didn't have to report it.

1/ A 1927 photo of a train derailment near Heads, MO, in which a train car protrudes over empty space with a collapsed bridge beneath it. It has been altered to add an image of an impatient, suited man looking at his watch while holding some papers, looming over the train.
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2/pluralistic.net
pluralistic.net/2023/11/15/saf…
This is just one of many terrifying near-misses that are increasingly common in America's hyper-concentrated, #PrivateEquity-dominated rail sector, where unsafe practices dominate and whistleblowers face brutal retaliation for coming forward to regulators.

3/
Read 40 tweets

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