Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Been thinking a lot about integrity, moral compasses and such in tech. I’ve always felt that tech has had a deep-seated moral compass, somehow rooted illegibly in the Great Truth of Moore’s Law. But as the law has weakened the moral compass has too.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Biggest tell is people falling for Great Man theories post Steve Jobs 2.0 post 1997. Toxic waste coast Welchianism turned into tech Great Founderism. The harder and wobblier Moore’s Law got the more people started trusting the virtue promises of fallible humans.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Jobs was exceptional in many ways no doubt. But morally he was exactly as much a mediocrity as people who came before or after. Not a saint. That’s not the problem. The problem is tech-stans validated and rewarded saintliness performances. And then it got worse and worse.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
I like Samo Burja’s writing and thinking, and he’s an astute observer of stuff, but I’ve always felt his big intellectual commitment to Great Founder theory was a mistake. A historical cyclical phenomenon mistaken for a fundamental principle.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
In the last decade, even as the Moore’s Law moral compass wobbled, tech repotted its cultural roots in tenuous philosophical rationales for Great Founderism. Hence the infatuation with Girard, scapegoat-martyrdom larps, Straussianism, Noble lies etc. I think we’re seeing the results.
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Venkatesh Rao ☀️
@vgr
Crypto is fascinating because it provided the *best* shot at redemption: Blue pill: Find a new true north in asymmetric cryptography, requiring a difficult world-building aka Ethereum Red Pill: Eagerly install the *pseudonymous* Satoshi as yet another Great Founder despite his own wise attempts to forestall that
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