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[flagged] The Real Danger to Civilization Isn't AI. It's Runaway Capitalism (buzzfeed.com)
129 points by wallflower on Dec 18, 2017 | hide | past | favorite | 110 comments


"Runaway capitalism" means one big winner in each sector. This is the result of the "frictionless economy" - distance doesn't affect cost much, and organizations can scale to planetary size. It started with shipping containers and faxes, and continued to cloud-based services and the attention economy.

So we have Google, Facebook, and Amazon. (China has Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba, but they need the Great Firewall to compete.) The US is down to four big trillion-dollar banks. (Bank #5, the Bank of New York, is about a third the size of #4.) Telecom is consolidating to AT&T and Comcast.

These companies act like monopolies. They stop competing on price and influence government and culture instead. While organizations, rather than AIs, they optimize for size and shareholder value. That's runaway capitalism.


Ted Chiang as always is a joy to read.

I hadn't made the 'mirror' connection before and it's a great image, but pretty much the first time I heard Bostrom, Musk et al talk about this I really wondered how absent any issues of political or social tension was that they are fuelling.

Andrew Ng talked about this too. Instead of talking about how technological change is impacting our social, cultural and political life the tech industry lets their machinations lose on the world and everybody else can deal with the fallout.


The author touches on a salient point: capitalism has no market for social good. Social good does not equate to profit, in fact, it is usually an exorbitant cost.

Furthermore, capitalism has obvious logical limitations that most people who are in love with it seem to ignore. It runs on resource and energy extraction from the earth. All economic operations run on energy and materials. There will come a point where all resources are extracted from the earth, so no new wealth will be generated in that way.

At that point (likely much sooner), capitalism as we use it today will not function what so ever.


I wish the author dipped into accelerationist philosophy and its adherents. Most accelerationists nowadays seem to be into Bostrom-esque singularitarianism and the idea of marching forward with unabashed capitalism as an 'optimum resource allocation process' to allocate capital into AI technology efforts. Essentially: Bring the singularity faster, through more capitalism. They are pretty explicit about it, and I would bet the author would have a good time taking their ideas head-on instead of avoiding them entirely. See: Nick Land, Robin Mackay, Benjamin Noys.


This elegantly captures something I think I've always observed, but been unable to articulate, in all of the superintelligence literature and the AGI / AI safety line of thinking: There is an implicit set of unarticulated underlying assumptions, and biases, that form the foundation from which the rest of the argument is "logically" progressed or extrapolated/ inferred.


Could you elaborate what you think those underlying assumptions are?


That artificial super intelligences are not science fiction


I've seen similar arguments before (for example here -> https://thoughtinfection.com/2014/04/19/capitalism-is-a-pape... ) and I think it's a good analogy.

What I don't understand is how this gets presented as an argument against AI risk. If the "paperclip maximizers" we construct now out of humans, machines, institutional processes and legal codes already exist, are successful, exhibit runaway growth, are a danger and lack insight in Chiang's sense, isn't that actually evidence in favor of the viability of such entities? If they are already dangerous even with humans in the loop and relying on cumbersome institutional processes, isn't that all the more reason to think about how much more dangerous they can get as they become more autonomous and agile?


> What I don't understand is how this gets presented as an argument against AI risk

I took it that the author wasn't doing that. He was using the "AI Threat" argument and pointing it back at the tech entrepreneur's current creations: their companies.


> This scenario sounds absurd to most people, yet there are a surprising number of technologists who think it illustrates a real danger. Why? Perhaps it’s because they’re already accustomed to entities that operate this way: Silicon Valley tech companies.

This argument is not from technologists! The major proponents I'm aware of are Nick Bostrom, a philosopher, and Eliezer Yudkowski. Musk is simply repeating their argument, because he found it convincing. It strikes me as extremely dishonest to psychoanalyze an argument based on the celebrity who repeated it.


Stuart Russell is also a proponent of the idea. You'd be hard-pressed to say he's not technical.


He totally misunderstands the danger of runaway AI's. Even perfectly intentioned AI researchers living in his imagined utopia would be at risk of accidentally creating one. Aligning AI's with human values is a non-trivial technical problem, and there's no guarantee we'll find a solution before someone creates a super intelligent AI, regardless of how well we structure society.


Why not both?


Why not neither?

The greatest danger to Civilization, in my not-so-humble opinion is tribalism. My country is better. My religion. My political philosophy. My color. My sex. My gender.

And I'll riot and kill if you don't agree.

Capitalism? Socialism? AI? Those won't overcome the stupidity of large populations of humans.


Counterpoint: tribalism is what makes us do great things. The US went to space because we wanted to beat Russia. Spain re-discovered America because they wanted to beat the Portuguese. Rome built an empire because they wanted Romans to be wealthier, stronger, more civilized than everyone else.

I like to think of ancient China as the counter-example. China built a huge, self-sufficient empire. It had almost everything it needed and a stable trade network for the few things it didn't. It was well-protected by natural borders and had a large army for keeping the peace. It developed enough technology to lend it's people a relatively good standard of living. The end result was that China stagnated and lost the ~2,000 year head start they had over Europeans. China's goal was to provide stability, and it did that very well, at the cost of progress.


I don't disagree... "us vs them" has lead to some great races (and Super Bowls).

The problem is the extreme version that ends in Nuclear War.

We can survive quite a few races - race to the stars. Race to solar. Race to the Super Bowl.

We can only lose the Nuclear Arms race once.

And North Korea ai'nt lookin pretty.


Tribalism has been around for the entire course of civilization, and has decreased over time since we got the idea that it's a bad thing. So if civilization seems like it's in trouble now then it seems unlikely that tribalism is the cause.


Tribalism is not a bad thing, neither is nationalism, it is only a problem when it turns sour. Just like everything else. It's horribly limiting to think in only black and white.


If an AI subscribes to the tribalism of its creators, then it could be the AI vs. everyone. That sounds (potentially) dangerous to me.


Extremism of any sort is the actual threat. People as a whole seem repulsed by moderation and centrism, happily sailing the seas of entropy to the extremes.


Runaway capitalism, oh shit. So that does that mean:

- Global poverty will continue to decrease

- We'll get a variety of options to choose from whenever we want to buy something

- We'll get to choose how to spend our own money

- We'll get quick and diligent service

- If we don't like something, we can choose to stop buying it or working for them?

The horror!!!!!


We'll also get highly optimized algorithms that sell us things we don't need through the use of psychology and the exploitation of human nature.

We'll also get rampant misspending of scientific research funds, which will go to boner pills and hair replacement techniques, rather than curing malaria or exploring space.

We'll also have the end-game for all capitalist nations be leadership that is completely bought and paid for.

We'll also have workers treated as useless and interchangeable cogs, while public markets sway back and forth, removing jobs, pushing mergers, cutting pay.

We'll also get things like McDonald's and Coca-Cola, two of the largest companies in the world, both of which are literally, 100% dedicated to selling addictive foods that are diabolically unhealthy.

Capitalism ensures people get what they want most. The problem is, people are fucking horrible, and what they all want most is cheeseburgers, soda, angry Facebook rants, fake news, and bigger dicks.

Sure, society wants much more than this, but at the individual level, these are the second-to-second motivations, and capitalism's atavistic psychic mining project always ends up down on this dopamine level of reaction in all things.

Humans can be wonderful and do good things. The problem is capitalism is a race to exploit the worst in human nature, effectively heading off those better instincts with porn, fast cars, and lap band surgery.


And what would your solution be? Because I imagine it would be government control on what we're allowed to spend money on. You are a totalitarian, and while it might be a "good" thing in some situations, that kind of power is quickly and easily corrupted. How long do you think you can last before regulatory capture happens? How long can you last before you're persecuting people for thoughtcrimes?

I'll take the "people can spend money on what they want" dystopia before I take yours. Because the capitalism dystopia to presented can be fixed by people changing their minds and changing their spending habits. Your dystopia can't change without deaths.


The government controls a LOT of what we can buy already. Sex work is highly regulated, and you can't buy people. You also can't buy endangered animals, ivory, or nuclear weapons.

In terms of people spending money on what they want, people spend lots of money on opioids and it ruins their lives, or kills them. Should doctors and pharmaceutical companies not be bound by any regulatory body? Should people just be allowed to OD on fentanil because they want to spend their money on it?


Lol, you're using the opiod argument because you think it's a slam dunk.

People who use drugs are not harming anyone with force or fraud. And if drugs were decriminalized, they'd be far cheaper, and drug addicts wouldn't have to turn to crime to pay for their drugs. The drug war is a massive failure and a huge civil rights violation.

I would also hope that, when drugs are decriminalized, the drug addict would choose a safer opiate, like simple morphine or heroin. Yes, they are very addictive, and they can cause overdoses, but if people could buy their drugs in a legal market they could actually get good dosage information and it wouldn't be cut with shit like fentanil.


Please provide proof for or source:

1. Boner pills or hair replacement is worse or better than curing malaria or exploring space.

2. That the end game for every capitalist is leadership that can be paid for and bought.

3. That treating workers as useless and interchangeable cogs provide more profit than treating them fairly (assuming profit is the goal).

4. That abuse of McDonalds and Coca Cola being worse than abuse of literally anything else (Water in big enough quantities will kill you too).

5. That people are 'fucking horrible' and their second-to-second motivation is horrible.

You sound like every extreme socialist I envision. It sounds like you want a totalitarian government (made of humans) that dictate what exactly what people can do, eat and what not. It absolutely frightens me that you can condemm the entirety of the human race and also have the ability to vote.


I wanted to add my two cents regarding the algorithms selling us things we don't need. In my opinion, it in large part contributes to the global poverty and income inequality with the help of social pressure that haves put on have-nots who in turn try to catch-up any way possible, further adding pressure on themselves to be "successful".


There are an infinite number of alternatives between communism and unregulated corporate capitalism.


You might read this: http://www.americanteeth.org/2015/06/21/why-i-m-a-capitalist...

When I think of the word capitalist, I think: "using markets to allocate resources & products". When you use that word, you think of... well I'm not sure, but it's some kind of boogeyman that you think is self-evident.

The author of the post is himself a social-democrat or some sorts, and supports redistribution, but he still recognizes the basics of how well markets work.


Please show me a country where unregulated capitalism exists.


Cartel Mexico?


The fact that the nominal government isn't the de facto government of every part of the country doesn't mean that unregulated capitalism rules.

(Of course, unregulated capitalism is an oxymoron; capitalism involves active government intervention to enforce a very specific model of property rights; it is a particular application of regulation, not it's absence.)


  - Global poverty will continue to decrease
  - We'll get a variety of options to choose from whenever we want to buy something
Well, except global poverty is most probably decreasing despite capitalism, not because of it.

May I also point out that beating poverty and making more consumerist products available, are not two goals with equal value? Same goes for the rest of the list in your comment.


Many of the things you just listed have improved because of constraints placed on capitalism not runaway capitalism.


Thanks for the "centrist" perspective, but over here in reality we are experiencing the negative effects of runaway capitalism, including the existential threat of global warming. But I'm glad you're getting quick service at your local fast food chain.


Yes, consumption is paradise! :D


I would be interested to see Mr. Chiang (I have enjoyed his other stories) separate the effects of government capture from capitalism. Part of what he warns against is the distortion of capitalism by power/captured government.


Hint: It has frequently been suggested the United States of America has never practiced real capitalism....


Significantly decreasing intergenerational mobility is very concerning. Especially for those who aren't wealthy already.


An exquisitely fine balance of gnawing dissatisfaction held at bay by suffering


Maybe the Corporatocracy is inevitable, only with stupid names instead of Weyland-Yutani or OmniCorp.


It's runaway capitalism It's runaway socialism It's runaway what-ever-ism

As always it's hard to take anything from buzzfeed serious when they are so obviously biased in everything they post. What ever thing can 'runaway' is a threat to civilization, from pollution to propaganda in the news.


While generally I'd agree, this is a pretty respected (guest?) writer.


capitalism is easier to fix than AI gone rogue, probably


Nicely done Buzzfeed.

Billionaires like Bill Gates and Elon Musk assume that a superintelligent AI will stop at nothing to achieves its goals because that’s the attitude they adopted.

Kind of reminds one of Ex Machina. If amoral profit maximizers design AI, it's very possibly gonna be an amoral profit maximizer.

It still irrationally bothers me after 30 years of shitty MS products and Gates literally preventing technological progress so he could make money, he's one of the good guys. It's like if you donate enough to the church you can earn penance. The new versions of Gates don't seem much different.


But he's not donating to the church for "penance". He's helping save lives from malaria, and working on other projects to help the developing world! You can't dismiss that, and he's giving away so much of his money that it can't be considered a "fee". He's gonna 90% of it away by the time he's done.


Of course and you can't knock him for doing that. It's good, good for him. We could at least acknowledge that others didn't accumulate that wealth because their standards for business were higher than his.


Gates is doing this because in a few short years he went from America's darling super rich success story, to the monopolistic Satan most of us tech people remember. He was not prepared for being vilified so quickly and completely during the anti-trust years.

Same thing as Andrew Carnegie: After the violent putting down of steel worker strikes, Carnegie was seen as the devil himself. He was so upset that this would be his legacy, Carnegie went about doing charitable work to change his image. You probably have a library he built within 50 miles of you, no matter where you live in the US.

Gates is doing the same thing. He does not want his legacy to be that of a businessman, but rather, that of a philanthropist.


The Carnegie library I grew up near is the reason I am where I am today in life. If I hadn't had access to all the books I spent my childhood and teenage years reading from that library, I'd be a lesser person.


There’s a few Carnegie libraries around Ireland too [0] and as a child I fully benefitted from my local one. In fact I obtained my first Linux distro from there all the way back in 1997 when I was supposed to be studying for my high school finals .. it was a pivotal moment in my career

[0] http://www.historyireland.com/20th-century-contemporary-hist...


What about all the other enormously rich families that don't have the spotlight shined on them to hold them to a higher standard?


They won't need to give 90% of their wealth away to make sure they don't get villainized.


>and he's giving away

Gates was born too early for immortality to be achievable. Could it be that he has come face to face with his mortality, and having enough money to get anything he wants in the word that is for sale, he is effectively buying a positive legacy to be remembered by, as that is the closest thing to immortality that is currently on the market?


I think if you were on the receiving end of one of the Gates Foundation projects you would feel very different.

"Preventing technological progress" -- so because of M$ shenanigangs perhaps rich kids got their toys a year or two later? (Big perhaps.) Still think the world as a whole was better off with Bill Gates in it.

You have to be rich to give the same moral weight to providing tech toys and providing medicines.


>"Preventing technological progress" -- so because of M$ shenanigangs perhaps rich kids got their toys a year or two later? (Big perhaps.) Still think the world as a whole was better off with Bill Gates in it.

TIL protocols and operating system technologies that could make life better for millions is just some rich kid's toy.


I am glad you understood my statement...

If you can display how "better operating systems" and "make life better for millions" fits together I may change my mind.

Basically anything that is not providing for basic human needs are "rich peoples toys" in my book (in the context of evaluating Gates' moral standards). Operating systems are just not in the same playing field as peace, food, health.

There are some hundred million people living in utter despair. If you mildly inconvenience others in order to help these, you are taking from the rich and giving to the poor.


>If you can display how "better operating systems" and "make life better for millions" fits together I may change my mind.

The entire world runs on computers. Better and faster operating systems means a better computer.

>There are some hundred million people living in utter despair. If you mildly inconvenience others in order to help these, you are taking from the rich and giving to the poor.

Is... Is this supposed to be you not understand communism, or Robin Hood? There's a good chance you're better off than I am, should I send you my Paypal?


The world runs on computers: True.

A faster operating system means a faster computer: True.

World would be better with faster computers, to the degree that you can compare the negatives Gates has done with the positive: Ridiculous. During paste decades speed as increased orders of magnitudes while Gates is to blame for...how much? Javascript has done far more to remove performance than MS ever did.


"If amoral profit maximizers design AI, it's very possibly gonna be an amoral profit maximizer."

The argument from those concerned about AI is richer than that. Any AI, and indeed, any Intelligence in general can be viewed as maximizing its results along a certain gradiant, no matter how complicated that gradient may be. If an AI determines that improving itself would help it achieve its goals, and there isn't some sort of natural limit to intelligence that would stop it, the first one to develop will improve itself until it is exceedingly good at maximizing that metric, whatever it may be. Even if someone quite altruistic comes along and programs this first AI to "maximize the happiness of humans", and gets even a slight bit sloppy with their gradient, they may create an AI that optimizes the universe for human happiness by converting the entire universe into human pleasure centers being stimulated at the maximum possible rate, and nothing else that you might be concerned about, such as your forebrain or visual center or anything else that you may think makes you human, but the highly altruistic and very well-meaning AI programmer neglected to specify in their definition of human.

Here's another way of looking at the AI concerns: Let us stipulate a magical force in the universe that constrains AIs to be "fairly benevolent". Can you, right now, mathematically specify what a human is, and mathematically specify the best thing for humanity, in such a way that you are willing to 100% commit yourself and all humans to those definitions, rigidly, and for all time? And are you comfortable with the fact that it probably won't be you deciding?

For context, I'm not necessarily a big believer in this argument, but that doesn't mean it isn't worth at least thinking about, and characterizing correctly.


I disagree with the idea that microsoft is somehow blocking progress. Personally I'm an Arch Linux guy, but that's what works best for my job.

Many people who critisize microsoft are doing it from a chair that was designed on a Windows machine, and likely assembled in a factory with machines running windows embeded. It's a good product for what it's good at.


The US government ruled that MS was a monopoly, and for the US government to do that, you're really pushing things.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Microsoft_Cor....

Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson issued his findings of fact on November 5, 1999, which stated that Microsoft's dominance of the x86-based personal computer operating systems market constituted a monopoly, and that Microsoft had taken actions to crush threats to that monopoly, including Apple, Java, Netscape, Lotus Software, RealNetworks, Linux, and others.[15] Judgment was split in two parts. On April 3, 2000, he issued his conclusions of law, according to which Microsoft had committed monopolization, attempted monopolization, and tying in violation of Sections 1 and 2 of the Sherman Antitrust Act. Microsoft immediately appealed the decision.[16]


If amoral profit maximizers

Such as websites run on ad clicks? Buzzfeed itself is the problem, and things like it. Not tech, not capitalism.


re shitty MS products: There still isn't a spreadsheet either commercial or open source that is as good as Microsoft Excel.

Second, you can accuse him of preventing technological progress, but he was responsible more than probably any other person for bringing personal computing to the masses. I think he said his goal was a personal computer on every desktop and he pretty much achieved his goal.

Finally, the Gates foundation's work on malaria and maternal mortality has and will do more good for more people than many thousands of the "disrupt the world for good" startups ever will.


Imagine a Ferengi/HAL9000 hybrid: "I've still got the greatest enthusiasm and confidence in this quarter's projections."


Capitalism is danger for civilization? Writes who? A buzzfeed. A very, very leftist media site.

How we end up in situation when huge portion (if not majority) of hacker community turned out to be die hard socialists? (nowadays they call themselves social-democrats)

I remember when I lived in Uzbekistan and I didn't have access to internet, I got floppy disk with saved copies of Eric Raymond articles. Once I've read "How To Become A Hacker", it influenced me a lot. I would say it was the most influential article I've ever read in my life.

I imagined "a hacker", an individualist person, who likes to find non-standard solutions to problems, who thinks out of box, who don't blindly follow authority, who likes decentralisation as opposed to centralisation. "A hacker" is a person who almost by definition right-libertarian.

Latter I found this article of Eric Raymond:

http://www.catb.org/esr/writings/libgates.html

Years later, I found articles of Paul Graham. It was amazing to read him. And he also turned out to be on free-market side:

http://paulgraham.com/wealth.html

I like his quote:

> This is why so many of the best programmers are libertarians.

Now, what I've see is disappointing, I don't like this and it shouldn't be like this at least on Hacker News. We have more than enough people in the world who wants more government, more authority, more religion.


> How we end up in situation when huge portion (if not majority) of hacker community turned out to be die hard socialists? (nowadays they call themselves social-democrats)

They've grown up. They've come to understand that the biggest problems humanity faces all come down to them not being able to coordinate shit. They've learned that governments, bad as they are, are the natural and one of the few working mechanisms to coordinate at scale. And in particular, they've realized the folly of libertarians who ignore the fact that free markets have stupidly obvious and dangerous failure modes that come from insufficient or invalid coordination.

They've also been observant. They've noticed how private industry took over and utterly corrupted computing. They've noticed that it's private companies who create apparatus of the totalitarian dystopia they feared. They've seen how the market abused people, and they themselves have been disappointed by the market, which left them behind and continued to create shitty computing toys for the masses instead of useful tools to build the future with.

They comprehended topology, discovering that decentralization can be more robust, but is usually also less efficient - and sometimes a situation calls for more efficiency.

But hey, there's plenty of decentralization-loving, government-hating anarchist "hackers" out there. They're busy trying to cook us all on this planet by worsening climate change with cryptocurrencies.


Your worldview is common, but doesn't really understand where left-wing, pro-democratic socialists are coming from. Like you, we are driven by a deep mistrust of power. We hate absolute authority, like decentralization, and are especially interested in out of the box thinking.

Right now, the box we find ourselves in is a capitalist society where capitalist ideology is completely pervasive. The most powerful and dangerous authorities are corporations and excessively rich individuals. The best hopes for decentralization lie in genuinely decentralized solutions that give power back to workers, like worker cooperatives, democratic labor unions, and political protest.

What we reject is the idea that capitalism has any of the right answers here. To the left, capitalism is the primary agent of centralization of wealth and power and authority. I don't expect you to agree, but I hope you better understand where we are coming from.


> Like you, we are driven by a deep mistrust of power. We hate absolute authority, like decentralization, and are especially interested in out of the box thinking.

> The best hopes for decentralization lie in genuinely decentralized solutions that give power back to workers, like worker cooperatives, democratic labor unions, and political protest.

All of these "solutions" have been tried. They all failed at your stated goal; instead they ended up leading to enough centralized power to kill tens of millions of people.

The only way to decentralize is to empower individual people. As soon as you form a group, any group, based on any interaction except mutual affection or trade, you are centralizing, whether you realize it or not. That's the hard lesson the 20th century taught us; unfortunately many people have not learned it.


Socialist governments killed tens of millions of people in the 20th century. They acquired power far more completely than any company has.

Big companies come and go. They may have power, but it's temporary, and there's nothing violent when they start losing their footing.

I'd rather have Amazon delivery my groceries than live in Venezuela.


> I'd rather have Amazon delivery my groceries than live in Venezuela.

This is an either-or logical fallacy, acting like the only two options are either pure capitalism or pure socialism.

Many countries in the world manage to have some basics like socialized healthcare and education, yet they manage to not be hell-holes. Germany managed to enforce anti-trust legislation in their country to such an extent that Walmart left the country, yet "tens of millions of people" haven't been killed in the process.

Any ideology taken to a violent extreme is bad. That includes both communism and capitalism. Market failures are real, and the increase in socialist tendencies in the US is because most people recognize that those market failures need to be corrected.


That's why most modern socialists don't want an authoritarian government with a planned economy.

As the parent comment says,

> The best hopes for decentralization lie in genuinely decentralized solutions that give power back to workers, like worker cooperatives, democratic labor unions, and political protest.

These are bottom-up solutions that can work just as easily in a democratic state.


This article does not say that capitalism is a danger to society, it says that Runaway Capitalism is a danger to society. I think there is a lot of evidence out there of the damage that too much free market causes, just as there is a lot of evidence for that damage that too much centralization in an economy causes.

I don't disagree with you in some of these points, but I do disagree (as someone who thinks that the author of this article makes some good points) about being a "die hard socialist". Wanting universal healthcare, funded education, infrastructure spending, and corporate oversight does not make me a socialist. Or if we've moved so far to the right that it does make me a socialist, so be it. I'm not moving.


*> the damage that too much free market causes

This is an unfortunate misunderstanding of the term "capitalism". While many people who call themselves capitalists would like everyone else to think it means a free market, the capitalists themselves don't mean that. They mean simply that they acquire control of more capital, by hook or by crook. If they can most easily acquire control of more capital in a free market, they will support a free market. But historically, most capitalists have acquired more capital by buying monopoly privileges from the government, usually because they have failed in the free market and so turn to plan B: outlaw your competition.

What seems to be new about companies like Google and Facebook is that instead of buying monopoly privileges from the government, they are acquiring them, and hence control of more capital, by exploiting bugs in the human cognitive system to get people to take actions that satisfy short term needs but have potentially disastrous long term consequences. In one sense this is still a free market, since people voluntarily choose to use Google and Facebook. But in another sense it erodes a free market, by eroding trust. Unfortunately, I don't see the buzzfeed article engaging with this aspect at all.


Looking at how the free market works, in many cases I would seriously reconsider what we mean by "voluntary" here. Just because a transaction wasn't made at gunpoint, doesn't mean it wasn't coerced, or that one party wasn't duped into it through scam/advertising.


> Just because a transaction wasn't made at gunpoint, doesn't mean it wasn't coerced, or that one party wasn't duped into it through scam/advertising.

Of course coercion doesn't have to be at gunpoint. That doesn't mean "coercion" is not a reasonably well-defined term. Similarly, giving someone false information to induce them to buy something you're selling isn't a free market, it's fraud.

That said, I agree that the definition of "voluntary" has to be made with care. I said basically the same thing in the second paragraph of the post you responded to.


You make a very good point about capitalism vs. free market. I would only amend my comment to say that I think there is evidence that too much of either capitalism or free market can be damaging. For instance (and to use your definitions -- which I like -- if I understand them correctly), Comcast is the result of runaway capitalism, and the US healthcare system is too much free market.

I also like your point about acquiring a monopoly by exploiting bugs in the cognitive system. I think in that sense it's a monopoly on attention and time, which results in both an economic and information monopoly. The information monopoly is especially scary to me. At least Standard Oil didn't also control what news the country read.


> the US healthcare system is too much free market.

It most certainly is not. The US health care system is basically a hodgepodge of somewhat free markets and draconian government regulation, which combines the worst features of both. It is nothing like what an actual free market in health care would produce.

To name just one important difference: in the US health care system, people purchasing health care services have no idea what they actually cost (because most of the cost is borne by their health insurance), and therefore have no idea whether those services are worth their cost. Yes, if you need a lifesaving operation you basically don't care what it costs; but most health care is not lifesaving operations but routine services like annual physical exams, immunizations, visits for simple ailments like a cold or flu, etc. Since people using these services don't see their actual cost, they don't know if they're getting proper value received for the cost. That means the most important mechanism of a free market, the ability of consumers to choose the best value for their money, can't work.


It is absolutely way too much free market. Every healthcare system that is better than ours has way less free market and way more government control.


> It is absolutely way too much free market.

Not with the correct definition of that term. You can't have a free market if the customers don't know the cost of what they're getting.

> Every healthcare system that is better than ours has way less free market and way more government control.

Which systems are these that are "better"? Many have lower costs, but that's not the same as "better" since many outcomes and metrics (such as wait times for services) are also worse.


> I imagined "a hacker", an individualist person

You _cannot_ build a society on individualism. We have shared needs that only scale with our shared contribution. We also have _plenty_. We have the resources to ensure the health and well-being of every human being on the planet.

We need capitalism to innovate and respond with agility to market forces (when THERE'S ACTUALLY A FREE AND TRANSPARENT MARKET), but we need socialism to check their power, as a corporation is wont to become singular, which, as you've stated, a singular, centralized power is no good either.


> You _cannot_ build a society on individualism. We have shared needs that only scale with our shared contribution.

And the only way to scale that shared contribution without leading to all the problems with centralization that you refer to is to do it based on interactions between individuals--i.e., individualism. So you _have_ to build a society on individualism: nothing else works.

> We have the resources to ensure the health and well-being of every human being on the planet.

Who is this "we"? There is no single "we" that has all the resources. Nor should there be; that would be centralized power.


> Capitalism is danger for civilization? Writes who? A buzzfeed. A very, very leftist media site.

No. Capitalism is good. However, runaway winner-take-all capitalism will destroy our planet and lead us back to feudalism. The great success of the United States has been its' ability to restrain unfettered capitalism with social responsibility, while not hampering the progress of the former. That contract has begun to break down, and it is causing the horrors we now see.


Socialism is not necessarily authoritarian. The other side of socialism is anarchism, or libertarian socialism, which has a long tradition on the internet. In fact IETF is an anarchist organization originally, with a motto along the lines of "no kings, no presidents, no voting, consensus and running code". The whole Free Software movement, to which ESR more or less belongs (though he created more liberal "open-souce" branch), is also socialist. Neither free software nor open source is individualist, it is impossible for a lone "hacker" create anything significant without using a vast amount of Free Software. W3C has mostly followed IETF style governance (consensus), and switching to more formal voting procedure has only led to adoption of DRM as a web standard.

Fun fact, there is an RFC stating that the Internet is a cooperative anarchy: https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1726.txt

For an introduction into IETF-style anarchy see: https://www.wired.com/1995/10/ietf/

On W3C: https://cyber.harvard.edu/archived_content/people/reagle/reg...

Murray Rothbard even said in his books that the word "libertarian" was used by "libertarian socialist" first. It is only recently that capitalist and extremely individualist views became popular among hackers. Hackers were always anarchist, but only recently anarchy started to mean extreme liberalism, essential point of which is absolute private property, including copyright.

For more on anarchist view on "libertarian" views, read Anarchist FAQ. Ironically, you can install it with "apt-get install anarchism" on any Debian-based distro.


Politically I would think anarchism fits better with the hacker mindser as you describe it. And anarchism has a long leftist tradition. Also, to bridge the gap between ideologies a little; in my mind leftism dosnt dislike creative freedom or progress, they just think that large corporations are more at risk of stiffling it than regulations.


> Now, what I've see is disappointing, I don't like this and it shouldn't be like this at least on Hacker News. We have more than enough people in the world who wants more government, more authority, more religion.

I agree, HN discussions should be more than just saying "I don't like this and it shouldn't be like that", don't you think?

> I imagined "a hacker", an individualist person, who likes to find non-standard solutions to problems, who thinks out of box, who don't blindly follow authority, who likes decentralisation as opposed to centralisation. "A hacker" is a person who almost by definition right-libertarian.

That's a huge jump you made there, from someone "who doesn't blindly follow authority" to a "right-libertarian". Your whole "argument" hinges on your perception and interpretation of what "hacker" means.


> How we end up in situation when huge portion of hacker community turned out to be die hard socialists?

It must be all those years of reducing marginal costs of production to tiny fractions of their previous values and then seeing absolutely no benefit from it going to our friends and family.

Not that I'm a socialist. I used to be right-libertarian. Now I'm more of an anarchist, but pragmatic about it. I simply don't believe that the problems caused by concentrated power can be adequately solved by believing in concentrated power. I also don't believe that anything I say or do can have any noticeable impact on global politics. That frees me to do the best I can do in my local arena, without the rest of the world somehow being my problem to solve.

As I see it, the onus is on the wealthy to distribute the fruits of the economy that they have taken, far in excess of what they can use themselves. If they don't, the rest of us will eventually murder them. Maybe not you or me, but someone. We can suggest fixes like UBI, debate their merits, and provide detailed, foolproof plans that might avert that bloody and grisly demise, but the cycle repeats until someone that has the power elects to diffuse it permanently. Otherwise, the challenger just claims the one ring and becomes the new tyrant. From my perspective, either some key elements of socialism happen, or I may have to join a torches-and-pitchforks mob, storm the castle, and maybe kill someone. Maybe the survivors get what they want immediately, or maybe they have to wait for the pigs to start walking around on two legs, and then try again.

I don't really want to kill rich people, but I'm sure there are a few of them out there that could be vastly improved by a good murderin', and I could probably live with the guilt of it, so long as they're enough of an asshat. I can rationalize a whole lot against someone who thinks people earning $7.50/hr shouldn't have access to affordable health care. Or even houses or food.


Liberterianism !== Anarcho-Capitalism. And Socialism !== Centralized Authoritarian Communism.

There's not just the one polar spectrum of political ideology that's demonstrated by modern politicians and its far extremes.

You can hold both Libertarian and Socialist value axioms at the same time, they aren't mutually exclusive.


If you don't believe that unchecked capitalism can be a danger to civilization, you've completely disconnected from reality. Also worth noting: your Paul Graham-inspired libertarianism is funny to all of us who are still connected.


>> Capitalism is danger for civilization? Writes who? A buzzfeed. A very, very leftist media site.

Well? So what? And you very obviously speak from a libertarian point of view- but that doesn't mean that your comment must automatically be dismissed as worthless by those who have different political affiliations.

What's important is what someone is saying, not who is saying it, or how similar it is to something someone else has said. I'm pretty sure we should not have to point this out, anymore.


A lot of "hackers" also have a min/max mindset where they have to optimize everything, including society. And min/maxing society means solving problems like wealth imbalance, causes of death, etc. And from a purely analytical standpoint, it seems that increasing government authority is the only viable solution to a lot of those things.

FWIW I am a right leaning libertarian type, but I think I understand why a lot of hackers/intellectuals lean left. Feel free to correct me.


Wealth inequality leads to a form of centralization of power. One could even say that libertarian inspired deregulation of the past few decades has accelerated this centralization of power. So it shouldn't be surprising if people are looking for other political systems to decentralize power.


I only know a few die-hard libertarians personally, but the few I've talked seemed to be primarily motivated by the opportunity to ruthlessly and amorally exploit their fellow citizens. Maybe they're fringe, but they were the "living in a walled compound protected by their private militia" type libertarians.


I wouldn't consider the best "hackers" to be the best programmers. To me, a hacker is almost a specific type of programmer, and not everyone embodies the manifesto.


>people in the world who wants more government, more authority, more religion

Strange characterization of an author pointing out a form of authoritarianism.


[dead]


There is a whole raft of writers who made their bones writing about runaway capitalism in capitalist Britain. The most famous story by perhaps the English language's greatest writer, Charles Dickens, is a morality tale about a hardhearted and greedy boss whose underpaid staff is practically starving to death.

The French revolutionary thought that inspired our own government was energized by the plight of the French poor in 18th century laissez faire France.

And that's all if you stop at the 18th century. Dig on further back into antiquity and there's even more going on.

I am not surprised this argument merited the use of a throwaway account.


> "capitalists" think of "capitalism" as just a thing that happens when property is respected and contract law works

"Just a thing" is a conveniently abridged version considering capitalists can only own anything physical in the first place because their government took it from someone else under threat of (or actual) physical violence. The only way anyone can own anything they had no hand in creating is by planting a flag and saying "I'll shoot you if you step over here".

It's still (IMHO) the best system we have. Doesn't mean I have to be blind to its problems.


> "Just a thing" is a conveniently abridged version considering capitalists can only own anything physical in the first place because their government took it from someone else under threat of (or actual) physical violence

But it's not really wrong, it just ignores that the same is just as true of other economic systems, what differs is simply the model of property rights.

To address the (unfortunately dead, because while wrong it's a point of view which is common enough that its worth correcting, and not present in an inappropriate way) grandparent post:

> Given that "capitalism" is a word used by socialists to describe the absence of socialism

No, it's not. It's true that capitalism was coined and defined by socialist critics, but it doesn't refer to the mere absence of socialism. (Marx distinguished capitalism as much from the feudalism that preceded it as from the socialism he saw following it.)

> ("capitalists" think of "capitalism" as just a thing that happens when property is respected and contract law works),

The only difference between that and, say, the Marxist view is that Marx recognizes that the capitalist system of property rights is a specific view of property rights distinct from other historical and conceivable views of property, while capitalists are prone (as you just did) to confuse their model of property with the general concept of property. Feudalism (and for that matter socialism) is just as much a thing that happens when a particular system of property rights is established, enforced, and respected, and contracts consistent with that model of property are given weight.


That's an interesting point: if I had to guess at an explanation, I'd say that "runaway capitalism" makes people miserable and in well-franchised societies the people will always demand that the government step in (see: so much of US history, the fact that this article was written).

However, if the people of a country are asking that too much be "given" to them (I.E. more than the country actually has), who's going to stop that? It surely won't be the same people that supported the bad administrators to start with. The only people who resist this bad end are the fiscal conservatives that always keep an eye on the budget, and if they aren't there to start with (preventing the monetary crisis from starting in the first place) then, well, nobody's going to rally the "radical fiscal conservative revolutionary front."


> However, if the people of a country are asking that too much be "given" to them (I.E. more than the country actually has), who's going to stop that?

The external actors from whom such goods must come will, as historically they always eventually have.


Which leads to a destroyed economy, see Venezuela and Greece.


Sometimes, sometimes not; it's pretty much the story of every empire that falls, too, and some.of those are spectacularly disastrous for the metropole, some not.

Venezuela and Greece are cases not only of dependence on outside actors to meet internal demands but also of the state in question being weak in comparison to the individual outside actors involved (not just the aggregate of the outside actors involved.) That probably makes a good outcome harder to achieve.


Unethical crony capitalism can destroy capitalism through the accumulation of wealth and centralization of power. What's the difference between 5 robber barons running the show and 5 members of the party vanguard?

I'd suggest if you are a serious fan of capitalism, you take the arguments seriously.


Historically speaking, the US has survived robber barons, but Venezuela qua Venezuela has not survived its party vanguard.

Likewise, I have a hard time taking anyone seriously advocating for socialism who is unwilling to grapple with the fact that, yes, Venezuela is a valid data point, as are the hundreds millions of deaths socialism is directly responsible for, and spending at least a few moments contemplating whether or not they'd be one of them if they did manage to get socialism going in their local polity. If you care enough about people to want to gift them with socialism, you ought to care enough about people to spend some time considering the possible dangers it carries with it.

The party faithful do well in socialism. The almost-just-barely-not-quite-faithful, the ever-so-slightly-not-quite-in-step, the ones who agree with their leadership in principle but differ ever so slightly on matters of how to implement or who should implement... their death rate is pretty rough. Guaranteeing you're in the first group is harder than it may first appear.


Did robber barons have as much political power as corporations do today? This is an honest question. I'm not an expert, but my speculation is that the level of control that lobbying gives those "winning" capitalism today over the laws that are supposed to be keeping them in check is a new thing and will take us into uncharted territory.


>Historically speaking, the US has survived robber barons

Because of socialist policies.


Every war in the middle east was caused by run away capitalism. Strong evidence that Venezuela was caused by interference from a runaway capitalist state (USA). The establishment media is an example of runaway capitalism, reporting the propaganda necessary to perpetuate the story.

However I think the true problem is runaway sociopathy. For sociopaths and psychopaths, the promises of socialism and capitalism are just a nice story to get what they want. You can't look at Venezuela, Soviet Russia, Modern Russia, and the Military Industrial complex in the USA without seeing sociopaths. There's millions dead in the middle east and you're pointing at socialism in Venezuela.

I've seen several TV crime shows on psychopaths and sociopaths where they'll remark, in passing, that sociopaths are often CEOs or surgeons, not just murderers. I offer this, not as evidence that its true, but as evidence that we've just absorbed that information as "just how it is". The #MeToo movement is taking a stand against such sociopaths and I hope it succeeds. I'd like to see what society could look like if we didn't tolerate sociopaths. If we simply managed to educate people that sociopaths exist, and that if someone can smile at you, and tell you everything you want to hear, then they might be a nice person, but they might also be a sociopath. And if 4% of the population are sociopaths and psychopaths, is that 4% spread evenly? Or would it congregate in places of power?


and why do you think people keep turning to socialism? could it be because capitalism has a tendency to run amok?


Not surprising from a publication who has editors that openly support "full communism"[0].

Buzzfeed "news" is the last place I look for an objective article.

[0] - http://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/the-wrap/article/BuzzFee...


It's not an article. It's an essay by a science fiction writer.


I question the biases driving which essays they choose to publish.




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