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by seethishat 2 hours ago
My main concern is transparency. How do we know that the ruling/governing class is not abusing these monitoring systems and exempting themselves from monitoring?

If we are all subject to the same monitoring and there are no exceptions, that would be fair. However, if some people are exempt from monitoring because of their connections, relations, etc. then that would be unfair.

And if some people are allowed to harass and stalk others based on some attribute (race, religion, nationality, etc.) because they are in a monitoring position (while others are not) then that would be unfair as well.

We need full transparency.

7 comments

> We need full transparency.

A couple years ago I would have tended to agree with you, transparency would be a good first step. But then I have recently seen demonstrated that transparency just proves that you do not need to hide corruption as long as a powerful bloc of voters actually agrees with your corrupt position. I think what we really are going to need is consequences defined ahead of time, along with an enforcement mechanism not easily corrupted itself. This is hard. But it is a topic we will hopefully be spending quality time working out over the next few years anyway.

Transparency doesn't matter without consequences. Many of the currently ruling governments have demonstrated that already.
You're wrong, it still matters. It's the first step, and it's an important step in maintaining fairness.
>You're wrong

As a rhetorical trick this is generally ineffective.

Unfortunately not when convincing a large populace..
> it's an important step in maintaining fairness.

When there are no consequences, it by definition isn't.

Well there can be no consequences at T=0, but thanks to transparency, consequences can happen, by a collective decision, at T=1. Therefore having transparency is important on its own, it facilitates change towards fairness.

And that's what I am saying - we should still ask for transparency even in the environment of no consequences.

It's also possible that people are not sure about the lack of consequences, and again, transparency then prevents them doing bad thing even if actually there are no consequences.

But of course tautology is tautological by definition. (I am almost 50 and kinda tired of these eristic games on the Internet.)

If we're in a position to ask for something, I would rather ask for consequences. We already know what bad stuff is being done: more transparency has marginal utility, under the circumstances.
transparency is knowledge, and is a prerequisite for accountability
> exempting themselves from monitoring

Wasn’t that in the Chat Control proposal? i.e. politicians and other important individuals are exempt

Of course. The lobbyists don't want to be called bribed people, so they only want to monitor the peons. Slavery 2.0.
>Slavery 2.0.

Chat control is a lot of things, but Slavery 2.0 is not one of them. The hyperbole only hurts your position.

Slavery isn't a single mechanism, rather a system of many things that keep it all running smoothly
> If we are all subject to the same monitoring and there are no exceptions, that would be fair.

Not everyone is an exhibitionist. Some people thrive when they are very public about their life. Some prefer a much more private life.

"Fair" doesn't always mean according to everyone's preferences. I might want to have a full cake but getting a slice is fair.
some people need "more calories" than others

fair != equal

>How do we know that the ruling/governing class is not abusing these monitoring systems and exempting themselves from monitoring?

Ah, so except for THE ENTIRE FUCKING PROBLEM, this is fine.

>And if some people are allowed to harass and stalk others based on some attribute (race, religion, nationality, etc.) because they are in a monitoring position (while others are not) then that would be unfair as well.

Yes, we wouldn't want racial profiling in our Orwellian hellscape. That would truly put it over the edge.

They are 100% abusing until proven otherwise. Naive to think otherwise.
> If we are all subject to the same monitoring and there are no exceptions, that would be fair.

It might be fair, by some definition, but it would still be wrong. The government shouldn't be monitoring us to the extent required to implement age verification on the 'net.