Archive for August, 2006

30
Aug

Why Do Good Men Do Nothing?

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

In his book Thoughts on the Cause of Present Discontents (1770), the British philosopher Edmund Burke wrote, “When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one.” This sentiment has survived as, “All that is necessary for evil to succeed is that good men do nothing.”

Why do good men do nothing in the face of evil, especially when evil aggressively invades their lives?

The question has red-hot relevance to those who value the tradition of individual freedom into which America was born — a tradition that includes freedom of speech, the right to bear arms and to demand due process. These traditional freedoms are crumbling under the wheels of a run-away government. Through dozens of ‘alphabet agencies’ — the IRS, BATF, CPS, DHS, DEA, et al — government aggressors enter the lives of good men who do nothing to protect themselves or their families.

Some people are paralyzed by fear; some by denial. But many others are immobilized by an apathy that strips away the emotional will to act in self-defense.

In psychological terms, apathy is a state of constant indifference that is generally associated with depression. Apathy leaves an individual unresponsive to the world and creates a disconnect between what he believes, how he feels and which actions he takes. For example, a man might fully recognize that food is necessary to live but, because he doesn’t care, he doesn’t eat.

Translated into political terms, he might realize that a gluttonous government is feasting on his liberty, his wealth and even on his children’s future but, because he feels only numbness toward government, he doesn’t act in self-defense. He obeys even when the command is self-destructive. The question of why people passively obey government has haunted the history of political discourse. In 1552, Étienne de la Boétie addressed what he called the most important problem confronting freedom: people consent to their own enslavement. His analysis of ‘why’ resulted in the world’s first book on non-violent resistance, ‘The Politics of Obedience: The Discourse of Voluntary Servitude’.

Modern historians ask the same question. During the mass arrests of Stalinist Russia, people reportedly slept in their clothing not in order to flee more easily but in order to be fully dressed when seized. In Hitler’s Europe, Jews reported on their own to deportation centers and to their deaths. Why? Part of the complex answer lies in what psychologists call ‘object specific’ apathy. That is, a person’s numbness is directed toward a specific situation and may not be manifested in other areas of his life. The same man who is passionate about music or his wife may feel impotent in the area of demanding or even wanting his own freedom. This response is a form of ‘learned helplessness.’ It is ‘learned’ because the response comes from relentlessly teaching an individual that he has no control over a situation and, so, his efforts are futile.

The original and now-famous experiment from which the term ‘learned helplessness’ derives involved shocking dogs with electricity until they developed the psychology of submission. When applied to human beings, ‘learned helplessness’ is most often used to describe people who have been institutionalized, for example, in prisons, mental institutions or orphanages. There, the regimentation strips an individual of the smallest choice and punishes the __expression of preference. In time, many institutionalized people accept the inevitability of their environment. Some of them lose all ability to feel their own preferences.

The depth of learned helplessness that comes from being institutionalized is rare. But most of us absorb a degree of this apathy through constant exposure to a society that attempts to control almost every choice in daily life: smoking, eating fast food, gun ownership, telling a rude joke at work, marriage and divorce, boarding an airplane, medical care, banking, making a phone call. It is difficult to find a choice that isn’t scrutinized by bureaucracy and covered by some form of government control. The message is clear: Conformity is rewarded; the ‘wrong’ choices are punished or otherwise
discouraged………..and the public school system is just one example of what could be called the institutionalizing or bureaucratizing of daily life.

‘The Castle’, a brilliant novel by Franz Kafka, offers a window into what happens to the psychology of a man who confronts bureaucracy. Due a mistake in paperwork, the main character ‘K.’ is summoned to work in a village as a surveyor but ends up as a janitor. The Castle is the summoning authority with which K. must, but cannot deal with because he cannot contact the proper official. K.’s long and agonizing exercise in futility reveals the impact that bureaucracy has upon the human soul: it deadens.

K.’s error was to accept the authority of The Castle in the first place.

The foregoing observation contains good news: bureaucracy and authority require consent. And, if that consent is learned behavior, then it can also be unlearned.

Something within the human spirit seems to want to shake off destructive programming. Call it a survival instinct. Perhaps it is the inbred urge revealed by every two-year-old who yells ‘no’ over and over again for the simple joy of exercising veto over his own life.

Adults need to recapture the childlike joy and power of saying ‘no.’ The words most feared by those in authority are ‘I won’t.’ Individuals with the habit of obedience may need to start by saying ‘no’ on small matters like refusing to fill in racial information on application forms. They may be shocked by how difficult it is to say ‘I won’t’ even to petty demands. But the difficulty is a sign of how important it is. Only when a person is able to say ‘no’ can he say ‘yes’ and have the word mean more that the obedient response of a servant. ‘Yes’ is properly the affirmation of a free man.


“You measure a democracy by the freedom it gives its dissidents, not the freedom it gives its assimilated conformists.”

30
Aug

Three Questions for Lifelong Happiness

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

You already have everything you need to create a wonderful life for yourself. You know everything you need to know to be your own best friend, a gentle guide, a teacher and a helper to yourself so you can be truly happy and fulfilled.

You can learn how to become your own psychotherapist for life, and how to resolve the difficulties that stand between you and personal joy.

Be Honest With Yourself

The starting point of becoming your own best friend is for you to be perfectly honest with yourself and your relationships. Refuse to practice self-delusion or hope for the best. For example, when something is making you unhappy, for any reason, the situation will tend to get worse rather than better. So avoid the temptation to engage in denial, to pretend that nothing is wrong, to wish and hope and pray that, whatever it is, it will go away and you won’t have to do anything. The fact is that it probably will get worse before it gets better and that ultimately you will need to face the situation and do something about it.

Deal With Your Problem at a Higher Level

There’s an old saying that you can’t solve a problem on the level that you meet it. This means that wrestling with a persistent problem is often fruitless and frustrating. Rather, work on taking it up a notch and tackling the ‘problem’ on a (higher) level, something you normally wouldn’t consider.

Find the Right Job For You

Many people work very hard and experience considerable frustration trying to do a particular job. However, in terms of their own happiness, the right answer might be to do something else, or to do what they’re doing in a different place, or to do it with different people-or all three. Here are a few questions for you to answer in this arena of happiness. Write them down at the top of a sheet of paper, and then write as many answers to each one as you possibly can.

What Would It Take?

The first question is: “What would it take for me to be perfectly happy?” Write down every single thing that you can imagine would be in your life if you were perfectly happy at this very moment. Write down things such as health, happiness, prosperity, loving relationships, inner peace, travel, car, clothes, homes, money, and so on. Let your mind run freely. Imagine that you have no limitations at all.

What is Holding You Back?

The second question is a little tougher. Write down at the top of a page this question: “In what situations in my life, and with whom, am I not perfectly happy?” Force yourself to think about every part of your day, from morning to night, and write down every element that makes you unhappy or dissatisfied in any way. Remember, proper diagnosis is half the cure. Identifying the unsatisfactory situations is the first step to resolving them.

Determine Your Happiest Moment

The third question will give you some important guidelines. Write down at the top of a sheet of paper these words: “In looking over my life, where and when have I been the happiest? Where was I, with whom was I, and what was I doing?”

Decide What to Do

Once you have the answers to those questions, think about what you can do, starting immediately, to begin creating the kind of life that you dream of. It may take you a week, a month, or a year, but that doesn’t matter. Every single thing you do that moves you closer to your ideal vision will be rewarding in itself. You’ll become a more positive and optimistic person. You’ll feel more confident and more in charge of your life, and you’ll achieve true peace of mind.

23
Aug

ANONYMITY AS THE DEFAULT

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

“Anonymity should be the default” doesn’t say what I mean. Sorry to have put it badly. “Defaults” come to us from the software world where shipping software with the right options turned on can make or break a product. It may be that anonymity is the right default option for digital ID management software, but that’s not what I meant. And if it is the right default, it will be due to anonymity’s social, political and personal roles. Those roles are what interest me.

I probably should have said “norm” instead of “default.” In fact, it’s helpful (I think) to put this in moral terms. Philosophers have the useful concept of the prima facie. (If you disagree with how I describe the prima facie, then skip the phrase and go straight to the concept.) Something is prima facie good if you don’t need a special justification to do it, but you do need a justification to do its opposite. Telling the truth is prima facie good because you don’t need a special justification to do so, but you do to tell a lie. Likewise, anonymity is prima facie good in our culture: We don’t need a special reason not to ask you to identify yourself and we do need a special reason to ask you to whip out your drivers license. There are places and contexts where this doesn’t hold, e.g., entering a nuclear facility or the Nebraska State Twine Museum (on Homeland Security’s Vulnerable Sites list) these days. But still, in general, anonymity is prima facie good and is the norm.

I don’t want that to change on line. Here’s why.

While obviously what we do — and who we are — on the Net keeps surprising us, we would be fools not to learn from our experience as selves in the real world. So, here’s something I think the real world teaches us. The term “anonymity” has a bad connotation because it’s used primarily where there’s an expectation of identification. We don’t say that someone entered a movie theater anonymously unless we’re implying that the person had reason to hide her identity, even though, in truth, anyone who pays cash for a theater ticket is entering it anonymously. So, because we use the term “anonymous” mainly where identification is expected, this may lead us to think that being identified is the usual state — the default state — in the real world. In fact, the rarity with which we use the term actually indicates that the opposite is the case: Anonymity is the norm in the real world.

That of course doesn’t mean that we’re always anonymous. There are zones where being identified becomes the norm by law or policy. And, in a small-ish town or within a work community, we may expect to know who everyone is. But, even so, the people in the small town are not entitled (by law or custom) to demand to see a drivers license of a visiting aunt walking down the street. You need a special justification (in the real world) for demanding ID, but you don’t need special justification for not demanding ID.

Of course that doesn’t mean that anonymity should be the default online, just as e-commerce sites shouldn’t replicate the real world experience of waiting on check-out lines. But, it’s worth looking at the real world in this case because it can help undo anonymity’s bad reputation, so that we can make a better judgment about what we want online.

Anonymity (including pseudonymity) does much good online. It also allows bad things to happen, but so does free speech. Before we tinker with the defaults, we ought to at least recognize what we may be giving up in the realms of (1) the political, (2) the social, and (3) the personal.

1. Anonymity allows people to say and do things that those in power don’t like. It enables dissidents to speak and whistleblowers to blow their whistles.

2. Anonymity allows people to say and learn about things from which social conventions otherwise would bar them. It helps a confused teen explore gender issues.

3. Anonymity (and especially pseudonymity) enables a type of playing with our selves (yes, I know what I just said) that may turn out to be transformative of culture and society.

Anonymity also allows some awful things to happen more easily, but we can’t fairly decide what we want to do about it unless we also acknowledge its benefits. Just as with free speech.

Some of these issues have to do with privacy. Since I’m interested in norms, I don’t want to stipulate definitions of “privacy” and “anonymity,” which is probably the only way to make their relationship crisply clear. The fact is that the two terms, as we use them in the real world, are murky alone and in relation. Roughly, when we talk about anonymity, we generally mean not knowing who I am, whereas when we talk about privacy, we generally mean not knowing things about me. (Logically, privacy includes anonymity since who I am is something to know about me, but in practice we use the terms separately.) In many instances, a strong right to privacy confers the benefits of anonymity. But, the real not-knowing of anonymity may be required in some regimes for people to feel free to speak. And it may have a subtle, liberating effect on the selves we’re building in the new connected public.

Worse — at least if you insist on clarity — both terms are complex and gradated. Privacy is obviously something we can parcel out in dribs and drabs; that’s what the new digital identity management systems enable. Anonymity sounds more binary, but because “who we are” is complex, so are the ways in which we can hold back information about who we are. An anonymous donor has probably identified herself to the organization that has agreed to withhold her name. An anonymous author may disclose that she has twenty years experience in the trade she’s writing about. An anonymous stranger who runs after you with the wallet you dropped makes no effort to hide her face, even if she refuses to give her name. And the range of ways in which we are pseudonymous is enormous.

We don’t have to sort this out entirely. Privacy, anonymity, publicness, responsibility, shame, freedom, self, community…these and other core terms are properly in a royal stew of meaning.

Before we have all this clear, we’re going to have to make some decisions. My fear is that we are in the process of building a new platform for identity in order to address some specific problems. We will create a system that, like packaged software, has defaults built in. The most important defaults in this case will not be the ones explicitly built into the system by the software designers. The most important defaults will be set by the contingencies of an economic marketplace that does not particularly value anonymity, privacy, dissent, social role playing, the exploration of what one is ashamed of, and the pure delight of wearing masks in public. Economics will drive the social norms away from the social values emerging. That is my fear.

I have confidence that the people designing these systems are going to create the right software defaults. The people I know firsthand in this are privacy fanatics and insistent that individuals be in control of their data. This is a huge and welcome shift from where digital ID was headed just a few years ago. We all ought to sigh in relief that these folks are on the job.

But, once these systems are in place, vendors of every sort will of course require strong ID from us. If I want to buy from, say, Amazon, they are likely to require me to register with some ID system and authenticate myself to them…far more strongly and securely than I do when I pay with a credit card in my local bookstore. Of course, I don’t have to shop at Amazon. But why won’t B&N make the same demand? And Powells? And then will come the blogs that demand I join an ID system in order to leave a comment. How long before I say, “Oh, to hell with it,” and give in? And then I’ve flipped my default. Rather than being relatively anonymous, I will assume I’m relatively identified.

Does that matter? I think it does, for the political, social and person reasons mentioned above. Don’t make me also argue against being on one’s best behavior and against being accountable for everything one does! I’m willing to do it! I will pull this car over and do it! Just try me!

The basic problem is, in my opinion, that the digital ID crew is approaching this as a platform issue. Most places on the Web have solved the identity problem sufficiently for them to operate. Some ask for the three digits on the back of your credit card. Some only sign you up if you confirm an email. Some only let you on if you can convince an operator you know the name of your first pet and the senior year season record of your high school’s football team. Sites come up with solutions as needed.

Good. Local solutions to local problems are less likely to change norms and defaults. But the push is on for an identity management platform. It’s one solution — federated, to be sure — that solves all identity problems at once. Because of Microsoft’s market dominance, its building identity management into the operating system is an important plank in the platform. Even the sprouting of multiple identity management systems results in a platform because they will make it possible for vendors to expect you to use one.

If you want to change a social default, build a platform. That’s not why they’re building it, but that will (I’m afraid) be the effect. It’s not enough that anonymity be possible or permitted by the platform. It’s about the norm, the default. If the default changes to being naked at the beach, saying, “Well, you can cover up if you want to,” doesn’t hide the fact that wearing a bathing suit now feels way different. Yes, there’s something wrong — and distracting — about the particulars of this analogy. But I think the overall point is right: We’re talking about defaults, not affordances.

There are serious problems caused by weaknesses in current identity solutions. Identity theft is nothing to sneer at, for example. But are we sure we want to institute a curfew instead of installing better locks?*

1. Anonymity isn’t just for criminals and terrorists.
2. You’d have to change the entire computing environment — hardware, software, operating systems, the network, the way Internet cafes work — to prevent bad people from operating anonymously.

This post is me blurting out that first point. The ground has shifted under the second point, however. Joho originally wrote a description of all you’d have to do to make it impossible for sufficiently motivated evil doers to act anonymously on the Net. The idea was that the list was obviously absurd. Now it is not. It is in fact the shape of the computing environment being imposed on us: Hardware with identifiers burned into it, operating systems that lock users out of their own computers in order to keep the computers “secure,” US government requirements for backdoor access to all software that talks on the Net, policies such as requiring showing a photo ID to use an Internet cafe (as I experienced in Italy).

The irony is that this will stop almost everyone from being anonymous except the people we’re trying to catch.

http://www.hyperorg.com/blogger/mtarchive/anonymity_as_the_default_and_w.html

23
Aug

The Organic Automaton

   Posted by: AUDIOMIND   in Random

When will computers become living, sentient beings? In movies, it is commonly depicted as an abrupt, unforeseen epiphany. Ray Kurzweil has predicted (in our pages and elsewhere) that personal computers will be able to run real-time, full-up simulations of the human brain by the 2020s. But life and consciousness are matters of degree. Neuroscience case studies show how very basic ways of perceiving the self can be knocked out, slowly degrading consciousness. Research on the origins of life suggest there is a spectrum between life and not-life. By analogy, computers will start to come alive gradually, and it seems likely they have already started, almost unbeknownst to us. Where can we look for signs of the transition?

People have criticized the Kurzweilian vision on the grounds that Moore’s law doesn’t apply to software. Few things bring out one’s natural eloquence more than the opportunity to complain about buggy, unstable computers. One of my favorite quotes, from a decade ago:

Software can easily rate among the most poorly constructed, unreliable and least maintainable technological artifacts ever invented by man — with perhaps the exception of Icarus’ wings.

People keep predicting software is at a breaking point and that radical steps to fix it are inevitable; we just won’t stand for it anymore. Offered little more than some belated mea culpas and incremental improvement, we have basically stood for it.

But I’d like to offer the puckish thought that software unreliability does not hinder the development of living machines, but advances it.

[More:]

To be alive, you have to be capable of dying. And computers have gotten better at dying — not just break down, but die in the same way organisms die of old age. Cellular machinery appears to be capable of lasting almost forever; the limiting factor is the DNA, be it shortened telomeres, accumulated DNA rings, or mutations in the wrong place. Similarly, solid-state computer hardware hardly ever dies anymore; the limiting factor is the software. Systems get so gunked up with corrupted files that it’s cheaper and faster to buy a whole new one than to try to root out the problem. Charities won’t even accept donations of computers with outdated OS’s, even if all they need them for is a simple application such as word processing.

The baroque complexity of software is another telling sign. Time was when a software engineer could fully grasp what was going on in the processor. As one user commented recently on Ed Foster’s blog at InfoWorld:

…many projects are now beyond the scope of a single individual to comprehend – meaning that ‘minor’ changes in one are can’t possibly be correlated to effects in some other area because no one person understands the relationships.


Is software really “designed” anymore? Ideally, a team sits down with specifications and writes code, but often the specs are incompletely thought out, and even when they are not, the subsequent development process resembles evolution more than creation. It is said that Microsoft has tried to rewrite Word from scratch and found it was too hard. The programs head into unpredictable environments and enter into a web of relationships, some of them malevolent (as in the case of viruses). To understand their behavior from first principles is close to impossible.

One school of thought for improving software reliability is to make computers more like computers — to design and test them more rigorously, so that their correct operation is as preordained as the solution to an equation. Another school, however, is to make computers more like organisms — to ensure that when they fail, they fail gracefully, stumbling along despite their imperfections. As I wrote in 2001, machines can be built from cell-like components that can be killed when they go awry, as some surely will. A 2003 article in our pages argued that the key is not to prevent crashes but to recover from them quickly and cleanly.

IBM has been promoting autonomic computing, which goes a step further and seeks to make machines self-aware, so they can monitor and fix themselves. Some people advocate getting away from a mechanistic approach to software (namely, the algorithm) in favor of a more organic one, like Rodney Brooks’s subsumption model for robotics, in which concurrent processes react to stimuli rather than follow a definite set of procedures. The machine’s behavior is not deterministic, but emergent.

Computer scientists invoke biological metaphors so frequently that maybe they aren’t just metaphors. Dystopian futurists used to predict that people would become more like machines, but the reverse is happening. The next time you’re waiting on the spinning color wheel or hourglass, spare some thought for the creature struggling within.

- Posted by George Musser
http://blog.sciam.com/index.php?author=11&display=bio

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