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I've been posting comments frequently on Hacker News recently, mostly on threads related to ChatGPT.

I find myself incredibly impressed with ChatGPT, even the 3.5turbo version (aka Mar 14) currently available at chat.openai.com. It is an incredibly useful tool that surprises me regularly with amazing responses. I completely understand why so many people anthropomorphize it, and ascribe reasoning skills to it!

It also completely fails on a near-daily basis in my testing, and in odd ways, reminding me regularly that it's mathematically-driven spicy autocomplete.

If you're a skeptic, set your skepticism to the side for long enough to try it out, and see if you aren't impressed.

If you're a true believer, step back a bit. I think you're falling into a very human trap, one which ChatGPT probably won't, ironically.

If you're fearful, don't be! These are impressive tools, but they still need to be used by someone, and you can be that someone. If people end up losing their jobs because of ChatGPT, it will be because oligarchs decided to cut costs, not because spicy autocomplete took your job.

I bought a 2023 Chevy Bolt EUV, and it's fantastic. One of my favorite things about it is Carplay, which I use daily. Today I learned that future Chevy EVs will not include Carplay, making this the last Chevy EV I will buy. Just an amazingly stupid move by GM!

Apparently they want to collect more and more data from people who buy their cars, which in an amazing coincidence is something I very much DO NOT WANT.

Fortunately, I now have two EVs, so I won't be in the market for quite some time. Maybe they'll have reversed themselves again by then.

theverge.com/2023/3/31/2366481

If you're trying to find music that is engaging without being disruptive, music you can play during creative work that won't take you out of your flow state, I highly recommend music in a language you don't understand.

parannoul.bandcamp.com/album/t

I stumbled on this album thanks to @cambraca earlier this week, and it turns out Korean shoegaze is exactly the genre I needed, and Parannoul is exactly the band to give it to me. I have no idea what they're saying, because I refuse to click the links on the Bandcamp site to show me the English translation of the lyrics. The tone and energy of the music is all I want to know right now. I mean, the first song is called 아​름​다​운 세상, which I'm told means "Beautiful World." That's fine, that's all the info I need.

It's been my background music during work, my driving music, and I've sent this link to a few people already. Now I pass it along to all of you. Happy Friday! Spend your weekend enjoying this excellent Korean shoegaze album from 2021, and maybe next week I'll check out one of the two albums they've put out since--or maybe not.

I can’t stop thinking about something @pluralistic said to @adamconover in this one-minute video clip.

youtube.com/clip/UgkxyH968O4_s

To paraphrase, optimism and pessimism are both rooted in fatalism, because they presume that nothing we do matters.

Instead we choose Hope. We do things to make life better at every opportunity, to move toward the world we Hope to see, and what we do matters whether it lines up with a big-picture plan or not. We move forward in Hope, and then we see new ways to move forward in Hope, and then we do it again and again.

What else can we do?

I read an essay last week so bizarre I can't even classify it as "wrong." If I didn't recognize the author, I would have thought it parody, but it had none of the hallmarks of good parody other than being consistently ridiculous. On a scale of right to wrong, it runs perpendicular to the scale. It is orthogonal to the concept of truth.

Most of all, it seems to have aged incredible poorly since it was published nine days ago.

pmarca.substack.com/p/why-ai-w

Anyone who has read about the Luddites knows that they were right, so using them as an example of silly fears sets the wrong tone from the start. Claiming that outsourcing and automation were also examples of things people feared needlessly begins to build the foundation for something so bizarre and counter-factual it must be the result of a dare.

But all of that fades away to background noise when the author charts a collection of things that have gone up in price against things that have gone down in price and claims, absent evidence or reason, that the difference is government control. Average hourly wages rising since 2000? Government control! (Reality: the last federal minimum wage increase was in 2009) Housing prices? Government control! (Reality: a decrease in regulation led to the 2008 housing crisis) Food and beverages? Government control! (Reality: Huh? Is he mad about... food safety laws?)

Oh, how I wish for such government control as he imagines!

Meanwhile the price of ephemeral things like cellphone service and software are down, along with the sorts of things that are built via outsourcing and automation, like TVs and toys. And while toys and electronics are more regulated in the US than, say, food and beverages, or childcare and nursery school, somehow the color-coding says otherwise. Beware the government control boogeyman!

Anyway, I don't know nor care whether AI is going to cause unemployment. I mean, sure, it clearly is going to replace some jobs while creating others, generally shifting still more options out of reach of a certain class of workers, so the comparison to outsourcing and automation is apt, but really, that's not the point of the essay.

The point of the essay is to argue that government control is The Problem™, literally days before Silicon Valley Bank went under and had to be rescued by the government using government control of the banking industry. One of SVB's biggest clients? The author of the essay. I guess he's pretty glad of government control today!

It was bizarrely, weirdly Wrong with a capital W, T, and F the day he published it, and it has gotten even more Fd in the days since.

You would think the author would have better things to do than write such nonsense, like try to get some kind of return on the $400 million he invested into the recent purchase of Twitter with seemingly zero due diligence or common sense. But hey, he's rich, and there are two different economies, apparently.

I don't have well-polished arguments for anything related to the fediverse, but I have some impulses and instincts. They might be wrong, of course. But I see fears and concerns popping up that seem to be borne from some common fallacies, so I suspect those fears and concerns are not well-founded.

One example I keep seeing is resistance to large mastodon instances, that they're antithetical to federation, that it is just re-inventing centralized social media to use them. We'd all be better off, some claim, with single-user instances! In this case, I get the concern about concentration of control, truly. Google seems to have damaged email as they've grown to more than a quarter of email use. That said, the nature of federation is complex, and it is not clear that very large instances are going to cause more problems than the fediverse already has. Which is not saying they won't cause problems, just that avoiding them hasn't helped avoid problems.

Already some of the largest servers around are blocked by a large number of smaller servers. For example, mastodon.social is the largest server currently, and it's widely blocked. There are even a couple of well-known mastodon servers out there that make no attempt to federate with others whatsoever, for which most people are grateful. As I've posted before, some server admins are very, very quick to block and very, very unwilling to ever consider the possibility that they've misjudged a server. That's their right! It's frustrating to people aware of the issue, but has no known effect on people unaware of the issue, so that's the system working as designed.

Let's consider two hypothetical futures. One is a future in which the fediverse grows to more than 100 million active users, but no server has more than 200,000 active users, a number I picked as slightly higher than mastodon.social's current active users. In this potential future, most people are on very small servers, even individual servers. There are at least a half-million servers, maybe millions. Each of them federates with... well, only with servers used by people someone follows, right? Which would make timelines seem desolate, since that's the weakness of smaller servers. In fact, very smaller servers often rely on relays to deliver the wider fediverse, instead of having to rely solely on the follow list of a few users, or one. Of course, that puts quite a bit of load on the relay servers, making them somewhat expensive to operate, so I suspect there would be only a few very large relay servers, operated by larger organizations, and... wait a minute! Doesn't this just shift the problem of control and concentration to the operators of relay servers? I think it does. What they choose to relay or not becomes near-synonymous with "what is mastodon," and the fact that some smaller servers use smaller relays, or eschew relays altogether, won't matter. Once the majority of servers uses relays, relays are the norm, and once one of those reliable and well-moderated relays grows to, say, 25% of servers, that's the same position Google is in with email now. Call that scenario 1A.

The alternative scenario 1B might be that even with most of us on smaller servers, we don't use relays. Instead, every server relies solely on federation with other servers. Of course, since popular users are spread around many different servers, that means each smaller server federates with a long list of popular servers, which eventually results in articles written in breathless tones about how mastodon has finally eclipsed pirated and adult content in terms of bandwidth, because now there are thousands of copies of all popular posts and images and videos, tens of thousands! The scaling issue and administration work involved would be incredibly limiting, with an obvious solution at hand: relay servers. Now we're back to scenario 1A again, and back to similar issues to what we face today, with some relay servers attempting to provide every possible post from every possible server, while others are essentially opt-in and very focused, with a variety of relay servers in between the two extremes.

There's another future, though! The future that some are afraid of is that companies like Medium and Mozilla and worse come along and build up gigantic servers. That more than 100 million active users means not 5 million servers, but 50,000 at most, with more than 10 million users each at a few of the biggest servers. To support more than 10 million users takes a lot of resources, so only large companies can afford that, and now, in scenario 2, we have most users using one of Google, Yahoo, Microsoft, Medium, and Mozilla. Together they support more than half of the 100 million active fediverse users, giving them outsize control over the fediverse. What they say goes. It's a disaster, right?

I think to answer that question, it might server to explain what's wrong with Google's outsized impact on email. It has definitely made some things easier! For example, a gmail address is so common that "@gmail.com" is an option on some kiosks. I don't have to repeat or spell out anything after the at sign with a gmail address. People know what I mean. Google keeps most spam at bay, although the junk mail that sneaks through ebbs and flows, despite Google's extensive efforts. They deliver a decent service that most people don't have to think about, and they do it at no out-of-pocket cost to most users. Of course, there are downsides. If Google decides your mail server doesn't take spam seriously in exactly they way they do, no more and no less, they may decide not to deliver your email to any gmail user. You're a peer, but not *really* a peer, since Google is so much larger. If Google decides they don't like you as a user, you're hosed. You lose access to everything, not just your email, and there is basically no recourse or appeal. You do have alternatives, of course. You can start over with a yahoo.com or hotmail.com address, for example. Or you can upgrade to fastmail.com or take a step sideways with hey.com. But it's not pretty, and the more services they bundle together, and the more users they have, the uglier it gets.

So if Google's hypothetical future mastodon server decides your server doesn't do something in exactly the way they want, no more and no less, they may silence or block your server, so your posts don't reach any "@gmastodon.com" user. If Google decides they don't like you as a user, on either this or any other service they offer, you are very thoroughly hosed. You lose access to everything, email and mastodon included, without recourse or appeal. It's really ugly.

But.

But you do still have alternatives. If your favorite mastodon server focused on artists blocks the Google mastodon server, and they definitely would, you can create an account directly with that favorite mastodon server focused on artists, or any other non-Google mastodon server they don't block. You can switch every time they block a server you're on, and they do love to block servers.

This is how the fediverse is unlike single companies such as twitter, or facebook, or even spoutible. Even large servers aren't re-inventing centralized social media, not as long as federation still exists. If the owner of twitter decides you don't belong on twitter, that's it. The same is true of facebook or spoutible. Some might be more or less likely to kick you off, but once you're kicked off, that's it. In contrast, there is no owner of the fediverse, nor of mastodon. If the primary developer of mastodon decides you don't belong on the server he controls, then you're kicked off of mastodon.social. But you have currently tens of thousands of other options, and you can spin up a new one just for yourself at any of a number of hosting companies for around $6 or €5 per month. I could even install one on the NAS in my house, and might eventually. That will still be true even if the server you're kicked off of serves more than 20% of the entire fediverse. That still leaves another nearly 80% for you, which is 80% more than you have with a centralized option.

I fear less a future in which big companies operate big fediverse servers, and more a future in which mastodon growth is limited by scaling issues with network bandwidth (in the case of too many servers trying to federate) or human bandwidth (because server moderation is a thankless job, and currently largely unpaid), or both.

Bring on the big players. I will probably stick with smaller servers that federate with the big players. The good news is that you have a choice! If you hate the very idea of the fediverse being for everyone, and want it to stop growing already, you can easily block any new servers that come online and start to grow. You can use your server-wide blocklist to maintain a tiny little bubble not much larger than those of gab or the server associated with the insurrectionist former POTUS. You can make your view of the fediverse as small as you want it to be, but you can't stop others from making it ever-larger. It's a great wide world out there, and I'm looking forward to seeing it.

I observe without additional comment that my two most-downvoted recent comments on Hacker News are first, a suggestion that a commenters complaint about Tik-Tok showing him underage girls is related to a common desire to idealize youth but avoid illegal or troublesome activity, and second, a statement that kindness never goes out of style.

Anyone keeping track of the puzzle-solving adventures at my house, I did eventually finish all 2000 pieces.

I think Google's current behavior is finally enough for me to commit fully to the @fastmail account I've been using for years now. I've been using @DuckDuckGo for years as well, and everything sent to my gmail address ends up in my Fastmail account, but email still goes through their servers first, because that's the address I give people to reach me.

The thing that's hard to give up is Google Docs. Buying Writely and XL2Web, then extending both products, they seem to be far and away above all competition in the space. But my loathing for Google keeps growing, maybe I'll accept less to avoid them completely.

In case anybody was worried after I posted on Wednesday about trying to assemble a brightly-colored jigsaw puzzle on a brightly-colored tablecloth, we did remove the tablecloth later that evening.

I know, Black History Month is the most behind us now of the three times I've said so. That said, I posted a lot of YouTube playlist links last month, and it's possible someone missed one. So here they are again, all together now:

Black History, by One Mic History
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFA
Unsung Black Heroes, from Quentin R. Jiles
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLuX
Black History Music Playlist
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLMG
Moments in Black History, from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLD-
Black History for White People
youtube.com/@blackhistoryforwh
Black History Audiobooks
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLnk
Crash Course: Black American History, with Clint Smith
youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8d
Celebrating Black History Month At The Tiny Desk
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLy2
Black History Matters, from the National Abolition Hall of Fame and Museum
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjV
Hidden Figures: Black History, from TED-Ed
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJi
Black History in Two Minutes or so
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLsB
Black American History, by Extra Credits
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLhy
Black History, from Untold History
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLqq
The African Lofi Project
youtube.com/playlist?list=PL52
Celebrate Black History Month with Sesame Street
youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8T
Black History Month, from Biography
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRl
Black History Year, by PushBlack
youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2X
Eyes on the Prize, from PBS
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1

That ought to keep anyone busy and entertained both.

I know, Black History Month is even more behind us now than it was a few minutes ago. Still, I recommended a bunch of people to follow, and I'm not sure whether every post got the same amount of attention. Tomorrow is Friday as I type this, but my company is giving workers Friday and Month off as a "Wellness Weekend," so today feels like Friday to me.

Here, then, is the complete list of recommended follows, each and every one of which will make your home timeline better (shuffled from the order in which I originally posted them):

@airadam Air Adam
@majorlinux Marcus Summers
@kyra_davis Kyra Davis
@BigAngBlack Ang Black
@DHS Darker Hue Studios
@carnage4life Dare Obasanjo
@KFuentesGeorge Prof Kemi FG
@liberate The Way of Accountability
@popcornreel Omar Moore
@daryl Daryl G. Wright
@Adam_Cadmon1 Adam F. Lawton
@midnightcommander@linuxrocks.online midnightcommander
@victoriomilian Victorio Milian
@Atmvn Atman
@Shells@mastodon.world Michele
@AshBeardguy Ashton
@JMadFour@blacktwitter.io Jay Madison
@Deglassco D. Elisabeth Glassco
@dtgeek Anthony Dean
@mekkaokereke Mekka Okereke
@venitamathias Venita
@jamieBGN Jamie Broadnax
@NoraBurns Nora Burns
@Diva2022 Diva2022
@jentrification jenifer daniels
@eosfpodcast Rod Faulkner
@sonyasteele Sonya Steele
@VoiceM Voice M
@zhivi zhivi
@nadinestorying she who weaves stories
@TlanetteRoget BovaryCee
@stephen Stephen Anfield
@kingsley kingsley
@Maggie Maggie
@seanalan Sean Gonsalves
@nataliedavisgdread@newsie.social Natalie Davis
@Jaden2@mstdn.social Jaden
@Onemeatball One Meat Ball
@onlymeindc Sherri G., PhD
@BenCisco Ben Cisco
@DiasporaDiamond Diaspora Diamond
@funcrunch Pax Ahimsa Gethen
@hipcinema Nadine Patterson
@rosanita Rosanita
@black_intellect blk_intellect
@anxiousrage Abeni

I know, Black History Month is behind us now. Still, I want to do just a little bit of housekeeping and follow-up. After all, I didn't boost every single one of @mekkaokereke's excellent threads, and I could have. So now, here they are, all in one place:

Feb 1: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 The Statue of Liberty
Feb 2: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Generational Wealth
Feb 3: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Racism Everywhere
Feb 4: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Swimming (and Drowning)
Feb 5: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Abraham Lincoln
Feb 6: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Veterans
Feb 7: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 "High Crime Neighborhoods"
Feb 8: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 U.S. National Anthem
Feb 9: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Education
Feb 10: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Driving
Feb 11: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Crime
Feb 12: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Early Adopters
Feb 13: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Cowboys
Feb 15: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 "Where Are You From?"
Feb 16: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Southern Strategy
Feb 17: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Black Panthers
Feb 18: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Anti-Asian Hate
Feb 19: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Black Music
Feb 20: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 OJ Acquitted
Feb 21: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Gender Pay Gap
Feb 23: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 BMI
Feb 25: hachyderm.io/@mekkaokereke/109 Discovery and Inventions

That's the lot of them, and every one worth a re-read.

Dear Sunday pwinn, I appreciate that you decided to start a 2000-piece Ravensburger jigsaw puzzle as a way to take your mind off of Things™. But could you not have first removed the Christmas-themed tablecloth from the table? Signed, Mid-week pwinn

It's the end of Black History Month, but never the end of Black history. One way to think about why we spend only one month focused on Black history is that we spend one month looking back so we can spend the other eleven looking forward, always and forever keeping our eyes on the prize.

youtube.com/watch?v=8cVJmwSStL

That's the legendary Mavis Staples, from 2007. It was also the theme of a PBS documentary.

Eyes on the Prize, from PBS
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLI1

That playlist is a bit jumbled, but there are several excellent documentaries from public broadcasting there.

Fellow wypipo, Black people don't disappear on March 1, and the challenges unique to Black people don't either. We all face struggles, it's the American variation on the human condition, but this country reserves some challenges for those with more melanin, and we shouldn't forget that.

History doesn't end. Tomorrow's history is today's news coverage, and the news isn't great. Former cartoonists and current politicians are making openly-hostile statements against Black people and Black culture, preying on ignorance and lack of understanding, hoping an uncritical audience will take their statements solely at face value, ignoring the nudges and winks and high-pitched whistles. In some cases, they're even saying the quiet parts out loud. They won't stop tomorrow, and neither can we.

Black history is American history, and American history is Black history. Black lives matter. Recognize and celebrate Black excellence every day of the year.

I’ve been critical of Siri in the past, but over the last few days I’ve had several interactions with Siri that impressed me.

While driving, I asked Siri who owns Fiat. I expected to be told it couldn't display information while driving, but instead Siri audibly told me that according to Wikipedia, Fiat is owned by FCA. When I asked, with an eyeroll, who owns FCA, Siri further explained that it’s a joint European-American company, Fiat-Chrysler Automobiles.

Later I said something like, “Hey, Siri, give me directions to 13353, no, wait, I meant 13553...” It was a foolish act of faith that I even finished giving the address, rather than aborting the process, but It rewarded my faith when it responded by giving me directions to the corrected address.

I just checked Wikipedia, and apparently FCA has been absorbed into Stellantis, so Siri's version of Wikipedia is slightly out of date. Still, Siri was tracking context enough to know that when I asked about FCA, I mean the one it had just told me about, not any one of the other dozens of things those initials could stand for.

More importantly, I've had negative experiences related to both of those use-cases in the past, so there have clearly been recent improvements to Siri's language-parsing.

The remaining area in which I get the most hit-or-miss results is playing music. Sometimes I am very clear: "play the song with the lyrics 'correct lyrics,"" for example. Sometimes I give incorrect lyrics, and it's usually okay with that, too. But every now and again I'll ask for a particular song or album and it will offer up something that suggests that Siri occasionally imbibes in recreational drugs to excess. Just bizarre responses, not at all what I asked for, presumably related by some tangential path via lyrics in songs I don't know. I haven't been asking Siri to play things for weeks now, after a particularly-frustrating exchange, but perhaps I should give it a shot.

It's a common joke, but also a bit frustrating that Black History Month is the shortest month of the year--by two days. The good news is that we are allowed to talk about Black history the rest of the year, too! In fact, given that Black history is American history, and given how much Black history is suppressed and rewritten and denied even today, let alone for the last 400 years, I think it's worth sticking with the subject into March and beyond.

youtu.be/aYVZ5GMyzS4

Black History Year, by PushBlack
youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2X

Instead of short videos, PushBlack delivers longer deep-dives into subjects for Black History Year, a 40-minute podcast. I'm linking YouTube, because that's what I've been doing this month, but you can subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts. The YouTube videos are chapterized, which is nice.

If 40 minutes is too long for you, PushBlack also delivers a short, byte-sized series of videos.

2 Minute Black History, by PushBlack
youtube.com/playlist?list=PL2X

There are 68 and counting of the short videos. Of course, I recommend both.

Apparently many people believe that if a person picks up a gun and points it at you and takes your stuff, that is theft, obviously, but if that same person picks up a government, and points law or policy at you and takes your stuff, that's just how the world works. Nobody is to blame. Billionaires are totally normal. You had a choice between taking that job and dying in the street, so it was your choice as much as the billionaire's that led to the status quo.

The Venn diagram of these people and those who believe that "taxation is theft" overlaps quite a bit.

What better way to prepare for a week of work than to watch videos from Biography?

Black History Month, from Biography
youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRl

There were 17 short videos in this list until I sat down to type up this text and post the list, and suddenly, less than an hour ago, there are 17 short videos and one long one. I guess it's time for me to learn all about WWE Superstar wrestler Booket T!

Or everybody else. I might save that one for last, but that's just me.

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