Infra-Fred is no more

This fabulous, ancient sign has been taken down. I am beside myself with grief. I rode by this thing damned near every day, and every day I looked up and thought, "Hey there, Infra-Fred! Looking sharp!"

Infra-Fred always replied, "FINISH HIM!"

I don't know what the new business on this lot is, but I do know that if they have no room for Infra-Fred in their hearts, and more importantly, on their pole, then they are no friends of mine.

RIP, Infra-Fred. Ride eternal, shiny and quartz.

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Cloudflare really wants that sweet, sweet Nazi cash to return

Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince hated cutting off service to the infamous neo-Nazi site the Daily Stormer, and he's determined not to do it again.

Cloudflare runs a popular content delivery network that specializes in protecting clients from distributed denial-of-service attacks. The Daily Stormer published a post mocking a woman who was killed during the white supremacist protests in Charlottesville, Virginia in August. That had made a lot of people angry at the Daily Stormer, attracting massive attacks on the site.

The Stormer was a Cloudflare customer. Cloudflare had ample technical resources to battle DDOS attacks. The problem was that other Cloudflare customers started calling and threatening to cancel their service if Cloudflare didn't cut the Daily Stormer off.

Gee, it's almost like the Free Market has decided that if your company takes Nazi money to help literal Nazis further their Nazi cause, then other, non-Nazis might choose to take their business elsewhere.

Isn't this the Libertarian Ideal?

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Silicon Valley Is Turning Into Its Own Worst Fear

Ted Chiang: "When Silicon Valley tries to imagine superintelligence, what it comes up with is no-holds-barred capitalism."

Insight is precisely what Musk's strawberry-picking AI lacks, as do all the other AIs that destroy humanity in similar doomsday scenarios. I used to find it odd that these hypothetical AIs were supposed to be smart enough to solve problems that no human could, yet they were incapable of doing something most every adult has done: taking a step back and asking whether their current course of action is really a good idea. Then I realized that we are already surrounded by machines that demonstrate a complete lack of insight, we just call them corporations. Corporations don't operate autonomously, of course, and the humans in charge of them are presumably capable of insight, but capitalism doesn't reward them for using it. On the contrary, capitalism actively erodes this capacity in people by demanding that they replace their own judgment of what "good" means with "whatever the market decides." [...]

There are industry observers talking about the need for AIs to have a sense of ethics, and some have proposed that we ensure that any superintelligent AIs we create be "friendly," meaning that their goals are aligned with human goals. I find these suggestions ironic given that we as a society have failed to teach corporations a sense of ethics, that we did nothing to ensure that Facebook's and Amazon's goals were aligned with the public good. But I shouldn't be surprised; the question of how to create friendly AI is simply more fun to think about than the problem of industry regulation, just as imagining what you'd do during the zombie apocalypse is more fun than thinking about how to mitigate global warming. [...]

There's a saying, popularized by Fredric Jameson, that it's easier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism. It's no surprise that Silicon Valley capitalists don't want to think about capitalism ending. What's unexpected is that the way they envision the world ending is through a form of unchecked capitalism, disguised as a superintelligent AI. They have unconsciously created a devil in their own image, a boogeyman whose excesses are precisely their own.

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