Venkatesh Rao ☀️ pfp
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
I realized what bothers me about @vitalik.eth d/acc essay. Even though it is optimistic, it shares with the pessimist side a presumption that technology, as an evolutionary process, *can* be governed according to some notion of human intent. “Tech can/cannot be governed” is a bigger divide than optimism/pessimism
15 replies
12 recasts
54 reactions

Venkatesh Rao ☀️ pfp
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
The rare technologies we’ve been able to weakly “govern”, like nuclear have a) highly upstream proliferation choke points (fissile materials) without which knowledge is useless b) no real upside to small-scale/retail use/democratization. I want AI; I don’t really want a backyard or small-biz nuclear plant.
3 replies
0 recast
10 reactions

Venkatesh Rao ☀️ pfp
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
I think overall I fall on e/acc side because I don’t think meaningful governance is possible without large-scale authoritarianism. Culture is highly governable. Trump, Taylor Swift, MCU etc show how it can be done. Economics is weakly governable to ungovernable. Tech is near-pure anarchy.
2 replies
0 recast
11 reactions

Venkatesh Rao ☀️ pfp
Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Even apparent counterexamples are weaker than they look: Nuclear: Proliferation reaches North Korea Aviation: Drones!! Pharmaceuticals: Gray markets; India bucking western IP regimes If you were historically first mover, you can slow things a bit, that’s it https://warpcast.com/dwr.eth/0x6084cdcf
1 reply
1 recast
5 reactions

Nick Naraghi 🧢 ↑ pfp
Nick Naraghi 🧢 ↑
@nintynick.eth
Have you seen @hillis ‘s piece “Rousseau's breadcrumbs and the blockchain leviathan?” https://jon.mirror.xyz/Ur0cBdyFxoOWEyzx_ZVc8hBwTMDLprXYdXNQxKE2v14
1 reply
0 recast
2 reactions