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by akira2501
715 days ago
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> The sooner we can agree to behave accordingly People don't code out of a sense of duty, they do so to earn money, so there is no mechanism to enforce "behavior." > our prospects for ripping the reigns of society There are too many industries that take the mantle of improving society on their back. This is a mistake. There is no natural representative mechanism that ensures your actions are aligned to required outcomes. This should probably be left to congress. If you're concerned that they won't do it then that should immediately suggest the appropriate course of action to you. > of those whose only animating principles are avarice and exploitation. Short term thinking cannot lead to long term rewards without abject manipulation of the marketplace. |
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If software engineers united behind true ideals of freedom, we could automate the entire stack of "leadership" and raise the floor of society.
Open source implementations of:
Universal cryptographic identification
Decentralized voluntary anonymous voting, verifiable by every voter
Sovereign algorithmic monetary policy
Liquid representation
Complete digitization of all necessary information to audit any authorities, at any time
Full release of privacy for any "public official" -- service to society should be a burden, not a privilege
This, and much, much more can ALL be done with software. An entirely new paradigm of society, with freedom unalienably encoded into the fabric of the social machine.
Our rights digitized, our privacy, speech, and pursuit of happiness made into software.
I would say software may have an impact, and the thinking of this impact extends far beyond the next quarter of profits. This mindset can extend into a multi-planetary society and beyond. A continuously evolving, open source mechanism of human governance.