@pluralistic@mamot.fr
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pluralistic

@pluralistic@mamot.fr

By Cory Doctorow (GPG 0xBF3D9110957E5F4C)
@doctorow.

Archived at pluralistic.net

I post long threads. If you don't like these in your timeline but want to read them, I suggest unfollowing me here and subscribing to my RSS, or my newsletter, or any of my various long-form feeds. Links at https://pluralistic.net.

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pluralistic, to random
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In 1997, Jorn Barger coined the term "web-log" to describe his website "Robot Wisdom," where he logged his journeys around this exciting new digital space called "the web." Two years later, @peterme shortened "web-blog" to "":

https://peterme.com/archives/00000205.html

--

If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/05/02/wunderkammer/#jubillee

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pluralistic,
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This isn't just "stop talking to each other and start buying things" - this is "stop doing billions of dollars in volunteer labor keeping our users safe, and start paying us for the privilege." Good luck with that, Reddit.

Hey! The Hollywood writers are back on strike! The Guild is a shitkicking, take-no-prisoners, radical union with massive solidarity:

https://www.theverge.com/2023/5/2/23707813/wga-hollywood-writers-strike-2023-streaming-ai-wages-contract

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pluralistic,
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They want to know:

  • Workers’ firsthand experiences with surveillance technologies;

  • Details from employers, technology developers, and vendors on how they develop, sell, and use these technologies;

  • Best practices for mitigating risks to workers;

  • Relevant data and research; and

  • Ideas for how the federal government should respond to any relevant risks and opportunities.

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

This doesn't just make me want to stand up and salute - it makes me want to build a barricade (or a ).

On to "Reddit Data API Update: Changes to Pushshift Access," a thread where the volunteer mods are discussing another move: Reddit's pre-IPO API shut-down that has broken all the mod tools that volunteers use to shovel out Reddit's Augean Stables, getting rid of spam and catfishing and fraud:

https://old.reddit.com/r/modnews/comments/134tjpe/reddit_data_api_update_changes_to_pushshift_access/

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Sticking with labor for a moment: the Biden administration is investigating the use of - the spyware your boss uses to monitor your driving, keystrokes, web usage, location, hand-movements, facial expressions, even your eyeballs:

https://gizmodo.com/remote-work-surveillance-software-workers-rights-1850392911

The 's Request for Information solicits your experiences with bossware:

https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/050123_OSTP_RFI_PREPUBLISH_.pdf

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

> The internet was supposed to have pockets, to have enchanting forests you could stumble into and dark ravines you knew better than to enter. The internet was supposed to be a place of opportunity, not just for profit but for surprise and connection and delight. Instead, like most everything American enterprise has promised held some new dream, it has turned out to be the same old thing—a dream for a few, and something much more confining for everyone else.

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pluralistic,
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In the same week, 7,000 writers - even the ones who weren't getting screwed - fired their agents, and demanded a return to the 90/10 split and a ban on agencies owning studios. The agencies say nfw. The writers stayed on the picket line.

There's a whole chapter on this in , 's and my book on creative labor markets and monopoly. One of our sources was , who led the strike:

https://chokepointcapitalism.com/

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pluralistic,
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They're , using gimmicks like shorter seasons and running their own streaming services to dodge the wages the writers are owed. As the union says, the studios "created a gig economy inside a union workforce."

I live in Burbank, where many of these studios are located. I'll see you on the picket line.

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pluralistic,
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Here, then, is the first-ever Pluralistic Jubilee Linkdump Backlog Bankruptcy!

First up:

"The Internet Isn't Mean To Be So Small," Kelsey McKinney's crie-de-coeur for :

https://defector.com/the-internet-isnt-meant-to-be-so-small

This is part of the canon that includes @catvalente 's unmissable "Stop Talking to Each Other and Start Buying Things":

https://catvalente.substack.com/p/stop-talking-to-each-other-and-start

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pluralistic,
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But I miss the linkblogging! For the past 14 months, Pluralistic has featured a little section called "Hey look at this," where I post three short links, bare-bones pointers to interesting stuff online:

https://pluralistic.net/2022/03/01/reit-modernization-act/#linkdump

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

If you're living under bossware's yoke - say, if your boss has transformed "work from home" into "live at work," then you know what to do: melt the switchboard!

One more labor story: a reminder that labor rights are a marathon, not a sprint. A group of drivers won a $30/hour contract through their union, the . Even more importantly, the contract lets them refuse to work under unsafe conditions (it's never just about money):

https://www.vox.com/technology/2023/4/27/23667968/amazon-contractor-delivery-union-teamsters

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pluralistic,
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These links pile up in my todo.txt file, ebbing and flowing. Some days, I've got nothing for the section. Some days, I've got a backlog. These days, I've got a massive backlog - enough links for many, many editions. I am drowning in linkblog debt, and the interest is compounding. It's time for a :

https://pluralistic.net/2020/03/24/grandparents-optional-party/#jubilee

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pluralistic,
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McKinney's money-shot:

> It is worth remembering that the internet wasn't supposed to be like this. It wasn't supposed to be six boring men with too much money creating spaces that no one likes but everyone is forced to use because those men have driven every other form of online existence into the ground.

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pluralistic,
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Two years after that, I started blogging, when @frauenfelder made me a guest-editor on @boingbot:

https://boingboing.net/2001/01/13/hey-mark-made-me-a.html

I've now been blogging for 23 years, nearly half my life, a near-daily discipline that forms the spine of my writing practice. I take everything that seems important, and, in summarizing it for strangers, embed it in my own mind, and then find connections that turn into essays, speeches, stories and novels:

https://doctorow.medium.com/the-memex-method-238c71f2fb46

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

Instead, they're . "" because - like poultry farmers - they are totally controlled by a monopoly buyer that dictates every part of their business to them, dribbling out just enough money to roll over their loans and go deeper into debt.

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pluralistic,
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It's what let them trounce the talent agencies - hyper-concentrated to just four companies, two owned by ghouls - over a 22 month strike:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/11/23/opsec-and-personal-security/#monopsony

The talent agencies had rigged the system so that instead of getting a 10% commission on the writers' earnings, they were taking as much as 90% out of every dollar - and were about to make it worse, building their own studios, so they could negotiate with themselves on behalf of their clients.

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

But over the months and years, it's turned into a place where I write long essays, sometimes six or seven per week, trying to pull on all those threads that I've cataloged over the decades, weaving them together into big, thoughtful pieces, often to great and gratifying notice and even a little fanfare:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/01/21/potemkin-ai/#hey-guys

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pluralistic,
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But there's a catch: these are Amazon drivers, but they don't work for Amazon. They drive Amazon-branded vans, specced down to the last rivet by Amazon. They wear Amazon vests. They deliver Amazon packages. But they work for "Delivery Service Partners," a kind of pyramid scheme created by Amazon that tricks workers into thinking that paying Amazon for the privilege of working for a trillion-dollar company makes them "entrepreneurs."

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pluralistic,
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For the past 3+ years, I've been blogging solo on my Pluralistic.net project. It started off as a "link-blog," in the Robot Wisdom vein - short hits summarizing interesting things:

https://pluralistic.net/2020/02/19/pluralist-19-feb-2020/

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pluralistic,
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"," because they're the inverse of the theorists' idea of a "," that is, a computer-assisted human. Instead, they are human-assisted computers, with their every last move scripted to the finest degree by that they have to pay for:

https://pluralistic.net/2021/03/19/the-shakedown/#weird-flex

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

David hosted our LA launch, where he told us, "We thought the agencies had all the power. We learned that they only had as much power as we gave them. You can make a movie without an agent. You can't make one without a writer."

The new strike is about the same thing as the old strike: shifting money from labor to capital. The studios have figured out how to use streaming to avoid paying writers.

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pluralistic, to random
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My latest @locusmag column is "The Swivel-Eyed Loons Have A Point," about all the ways that I agree with the Right's paranoid fringe, whom I mostly disagree with:

https://locusmag.com/2023/05/commentary-cory-doctorow-the-swivel-eyed-loons-have-a-point/

--

If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2023/05/03/paranoid-style/#eat-bugs

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pluralistic,
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The protesters had a raft of objections to the plans, including a complex system for limiting cars' access to the center of town. This plan rationed vehicular access to the narrow, clogged, medieval roads in town, allowing each resident a few trips through town every week but otherwise requiring them to use transit, or take the ring road that detoured around the city center.

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pluralistic,
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On the one hand, something has to be done. Oxford can't support the vehicle traffic it experiences today, and the amount of traffic is climbing. On the other hand, the protesters worried that the automatic license plate recognition () system would just be the start, and that the British state would eventually use its ubiquitous network of traffic cameras as a system of totalitarian control.

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pluralistic,
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The impetus for the article was a widely reported, bizarre protest against the plan to create a in Oxford, England. A 15-minute city is a city where planning strives to ensure that you can walk or bicycle to all the things you need - shopping, leisure, school, work, healthcare - within 15 minutes. It's been the source of unhinged conspiracy theories from the far-right fever swamp, on both sides of the Atlantic.

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pluralistic,
@pluralistic@mamot.fr avatar

The protest in Oxford was especially bizarre since it's already basically a 15-minute city - not only is it a college town (most college towns are 15-minute cities), it's a medieval college town, and olde timey people laid out their cities for the convenience of pedestrians (for obvious reasons).

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