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by yarvin9 3893 days ago
As I hope TFA makes clear, "republic" is not a synonym for "democracy." [1] If it's possible to build something useful and effective with "lots of online voting," I don't know of any examples.

Successful multipolar/federated systems (which are republican enough for me, anyway) have existed. Like Usenet.

As a Usenet veteran, I have a tough time with the idea that Google killed Usenet. Google bought DejaNews in 2001, and Usenet was already pretty dead in 2001. Yes, some Usenet groups survived and have become effectively Google groups, but without Google I suspect they'd just be dead.

The conventional wisdom, which seems right to me, is that Eternal September killed Usenet (with the assistance of alt.binaries). It would be interesting to see an argument against this theory.

You also seem to be suggesting that Usenet died because it wasn't profitable enough. I suppose it wasn't profitable enough to carry alt.binaries. But its costs, for regular text posts, didn't seem extreme even in the 90s.

In fact, not to get all commie on you, but one of the neat things about Usenet as a digital republic was that no one owned it, and no one profited from it. The positive social value of this principle is seen in a variety of institutions. Compare to Burning Man, for instance. Who would show up for burningman.com, a subsidiary of Ticketmaster?

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic

(edit: formatting)

1 comments

What is TFA?