h is a user on social.coop. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse.

Decent technologies should leverage the fall of intellectual "property".

CJDNS, IPFS, Dat, SSB, et. al. are paving a way to a parallel crisis for propertarians as Automation is paving one for proletarians / lumpen proletarians.

@fabianhjr how does automation create a crisis for the proletariat? automation will make the propertarians obsolete and liberate the proles!

@gc as long as they remain dispossessed of the means of production, specially including automated means of production, they would be increasingly pushed towards the lumpenproletariat.

@fabianhjr @gc Also proles kept out of the loop of finance, logistics, and everything that goes in the data centre. Which is why decentralisation is so important.

The workers may control the real economy, but they can do little with it if they don't control the means of information.

@h @fabianhjr agreed, power is logistic these days. which is why I think it's so frickin important that we own our servers, btw. if mastodon has slayed fb and birdsite and reigns supreme 20 years from now, it won't mean shit if all the instances are hosted on aws

@gc @fabianhjr Also making our own computers will become more relevant as unencumbered general purpose computing gear becomes increasingly difficult to find.

@h @fabianhjr what??? there are so so so so many unused, perfectly good general purpose computers already lying around and just going to waste that it's not even funny. most people already own several, at least in america. making our own processors is an incredibly difficult thing to do and turning an old desktop into a server is not, so let's save ourselves the trouble and worry about that once/if we run out of all the processors we already have.

@gc @fabianhjr Firstly, that's not easily reproducible for most people. Refurbishing and rehabbing a server to a reliable and useful state takes some specific know-how that is in short supply. Not everybody has the ability or desire to become a sysadmin, and that's perfectly fine, just as most people aren't car repair technicians. But everybody needs, with increasing urgency, to get their own information sorted and under control.

A computing of the people that works for the people is needed.

h @h

@fabianhjr @gc Secondly, no one lives in complete isolation. The demands of performance and accuracy, and the standards of QoS established by big corporations create difficulties for independent/coop workers. In a few years more, the combination of finance, logistics, and artificial intelligence will be reshaping business as we know it. Workers don't and can't currently own comparable computing power, they can only rent it from capitalists, so they are in clear disadvantage. Again.