Content pfp
Content
@
0 reply
0 recast
0 reaction

fredwilson pfp
fredwilson
@fredwilson.eth
Hi Casters. USV stopped at the gas station last year and now that we've turned the new engine on, we thought we'd share that news https://blog.usv.com/2024-usv-core-fund
3 replies
67 recasts
156 reactions

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
“If we all owned our own data and could make it completely portable, what would we do with it?” Two category errors here. First, the propertization of data. Property is a concept developed for rivalrous resources. Data / information are ripe with anti-rivalrous potential.
1 reply
1 recast
3 reactions

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
Second, portability invokes stocks that might be moved. Data can only become useful information however in the context of it flowing, when it’s in motion, and very frequently in transcontextual intermingling.
1 reply
1 recast
3 reactions

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
In short, thinking of data in a computer science paradigm doesn’t get us anywhere near as far as being inspired by information in nature. For more, I invite you to check out https://cyborg.social
2 replies
0 recast
3 reactions

Mike | Abundance 🌟 pfp
Mike | Abundance 🌟
@abundance
Wholeheartedly agree that data "ownership" is a category error. My question though is how would you create the incentive structures needed to be able to treat data as part of a flow system (without others simply extracting value from the "data" you create for this system)?
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
Thanks for the question @abundance. My reply can only be biomimetic, for what other heuristics might we more reliably rely upon when interfacing with natural systems? None. But we can get there by starting where we are. 1/n
1 reply
0 recast
2 reactions

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
The GDPR doesn’t make any reference to propertizing data, fortunately. Indeed, the late Giovani Buttarelli (European Data Protection Supervisor) likened the possible emergence of markets for personal data with markets for live human organs, i.e. not a good idea. 2/n
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
Now we have our first mismatch of regulation and natural systems. The concept of personal data is definition to the GDPR and similar regulations, and yet out here in the real world we only have interpersonal data. That alone offers up a different lens to the corresponding section of the @usv thesis simply because you could say there’s a whole heap more value for everyone in interpersonal data than can be found in maintaining the fiction of personal data. 3/n
1 reply
0 recast
2 reactions

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
Lawmakers and software companies share a reductionist framing. By this I mean an unwarranted and frankly unhealthy binary regard for ‘them and us’, e.g. large corporate and its customers, government and its citizens, the client-server architecture. Glen Weyl refers to such reductionism as Atomistic Liberalism and Objectivist Naive Epistemology (ALONE)! 🤣 4/n
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
But this is not how natural systems work. The mutualism inherent to any sustaining system is definitionally reliant upon mutual value within the multilevel paradigm of generalized Darwinism (see David S Wilson). 5/n
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction

Philip Sheldrake pfp
Philip Sheldrake
@sheldrake
Our legal and technical code today lacks the requisite complexity required for a healthy system, and this has allowed a parasitic infection to take hold, i.e. including the value extractors to which you refer. When the parasite takes hold in one codebase (per Lessig), it is readied to jump to and infect through other codebases, as we’re seeing play out right now. 6/n
1 reply
0 recast
1 reaction