vanschelven 12 hours ago

Keep Control of Your Computing, So It Doesn't Control You!

from https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/keep-control-of-your-computin...

  • 0x445442 10 hours ago

    For all his idiosyncratic traits, Stallman was remarkably prescient about many things.

    • fipar 8 hours ago

      Absolutely, though I think sadly his idiosyncratic traits played against his message (and I say this as a big rms fan).

      I think it's similar with the original post. Regardless of how I feel about present-day computing, I think comparing it with war devices designed to maim and kill people, and that can (and do) keep maiming and killing people long after a war is over isn't going to be very effective.

    • roughly 4 hours ago

      Prophets are often more than a bit idiosyncratic. It’s a lot easier to really see society from the outside.

    • thomastjeffery 6 hours ago

      It seems like most of those traits stem from an overall consistency in ethical perspective.

      I think Stallman figured out early on how much he valued collaboration over competition, and liberty over authority; and moved on naturally from there.

      • roughly 4 hours ago

        There’s enough stories about Stallman’s “eccentricities” that aren’t the result of ethical choices. The man’s hygiene is sort of legendary at this point. None of this is to say he’s wrong or argue against his ethical consistency or the admirable fidelity to which he holds to his ethics, but the dude is odd for reasons beyond his choice of email client.

        • thomastjeffery 4 hours ago

          Choosing not to manage hygiene is a pretty common anti-authoritarian move.

          Sure, I would argue that good hygiene is a useful tool for liberal collaboration, but that doesn't make his behavior ideologically inconsistent.

  • theK 11 hours ago

    Gold point! But, the real world is so far gone by now that fully GPLed computing isnt realistic right now. I would first try to push for more users of non corporate OSes for the beginning, let's say more /e/ more lineage more graphene OS users. And maybe cool alternatives to Maps applications like OSMand

  • scarface_74 5 hours ago

    And this is why geeks don’t understand why the “Year of the Linux desktop” doesn’t happen - most people don’t care (and neither do I on my phone).

    I want the least friction possible when using my computer. As a user, the biggest complaints I have about the App Store were not being able to buy an ebook directly from the Kindle app and other restrictions on buying digital content from the app because of Apple’s rules. That’s a least temporarily been fixed in the US because of the judge contempt order.

    As far as the 30%? It came out in the trial that 90% of in app revenue is coming from pay to win games. Why should I care about them?

    The small Indy developers are paying 15% - the very few who exist and are successful

    • antod 3 hours ago

      I think the difference with geeks is that they're/we're willing to put up with up front one-off friction to avoid ongoing friction.

JohnMakin 6 hours ago

I am just quite old enough to remember the late 90's/early aughts dotcom craze. The vibe in software feels very similar to me - back then I remember ad-riddled pages that'd spam you with popups and sometimes malware, all in the same fever pitch to eek out every possible penny so they could show revenue for their overpriced valuations. The web was seen as a gold mine that if you weren't pillaging, you were actively losing - until it all imploded.

The look and feel of a lot of web pages today (invasive ads taking up disproportionate amount of the page) reminds me a lot of that time, even without going to the dotcom parallels we have with the current hype cycle.

  • api 5 hours ago

    It did not take long after the Internet went mainstream for a borderline (or not borderline) malware industry to evolve around getting predatory crap onto peoples' computers. I remember uninstalling shit like "Bonzai buddy" and the various toolbars and other trash that would come with dodgy installers or sometimes on new installs if you bought a cheap machine.

    Still, those computers were still PCs. They were still holdovers from the era when computers were mostly designed for their users, who were the customer. The old PC culture was very anti-spyware and pro-privacy, owing in part to the old cyberpunk/hacker ethos of the 1980s and 1990s. The political zeitgeist would best be described as "left-leaning libertarian" with a smattering of more radical ideas like anarchism.

    It was the mobile revolution that fully mainstreamed a computer as a device to spy on you and manipulate your dopamine system and only incidentally to help you. It didn't start this way, but that's where it went pretty fast.

    Social media also rapidly went this way. It started as a way to stay in touch with your friends, and has evolved into a chum feed with a UI/UX modeled after a slot machine.

    It's interesting to me how this shift has coincided with a shift away from liberal, libertarian, and small government conservative type ideas and toward every kind of authoritarianism. It's as if our politics echoes the permission and control structure of our computing devices, or vice versa. I'm not sure which way the arrow of causation goes-- maybe both ways.

    • scarface_74 5 hours ago

      > The old PC culture was very anti-spyware and pro-privacy

      Let’s not romanticize the old PC culture - most running Windows with some combination of viruses, bundled software when you were trying to install something else, many people had 10 tool bars on IE that were all tracking your browser history

      • nartho 4 hours ago

        I forgot about that. I feel like everybody had an uncle or parent that would have so many toolbars that there was barely any space left for the page. That was mainly the results of using software that had those installers where you had to actively refuse the toolbars (and of course they just accepted everything)

      • api 5 hours ago

        I'm not talking about the maturity or quality of the software but the zeitgeist of the ecosystem. Vendors mostly made software for the user, who was the customer, not for themselves or advertisers to sell the user as a product.

  • scarface_74 5 hours ago

    Why are you even seeing ads on web pages? Don’t you use an ad blocker?

    • JohnMakin 4 hours ago

      I usually avoid meta-commentary like this, but this comment has been re-iterated 500,000 times on this site any time this topic comes up. The reason I'm replying is that it's become offensive at this point the idea that anyone needs to install 3rd party software to (sometimes) avoid being barraged by advertisements and data miners. It also doesn't work as well or at all for mobile applications with ads built into them, like facebook, or even sometimes my OS these days. This type of comment is often used to dismiss complaints about ads in general, and is a really weak soft-defense of it in my opinion. Ad blockers existed in the 90's/00's too. This is a critique of the entire ecosystem, not one person being like "aw i hate seeing all these ads and don't know how to fix it." That's an overly simplistic view of my comment.

      Regardless, this is a commentary on the state of the web, not my personal usage of it. The vast majority of people do not block ads, otherwise they would not make money. If everyone did this, these sites wouldn't even work in the first place at least in the way the web is currently designed, which is part of the entire problem.

      • scarface_74 4 hours ago

        It’s not useless. It’s like complaining about why am I having trouble breathing while I’m holding my head underwater. The commercial web has always been a cesspool of ads since the “punch the monkey” banner ads and the X11 pop under ads.

      • DrillShopper 4 hours ago

        I usually avoid meta-commentary like this, but this comment has been re-iterated 500,000 times on this site any time this topic comes up. The reason I'm replying is that it's become offensive at this point the idea that anyone needs to wear a cup while playing baseball to (sometimes) avoid being barraged by baseballs and people kicking me in the dick.

        • JohnMakin an hour ago

          The only way to make this analogy work is if the entire premise of the game of baseball was predicated on the fact that not only do 99% of players not wear cups, but them getting hit in the nuts is required for the game to even continue at all.

        • wizzwizz4 3 hours ago

          I don't go on the web to have ads lobbed at my head; whereas high-speed baseballs are very much a part of the game Baseball.

    • caulkboots 5 hours ago

      Not GP, but some of us have family members who refuse to even consider using uBlock Origin, for reasons they're never quite able to articulate.

fmajid 12 hours ago

Not a good term. Anti-personnel mines do exactly what they are intended to do. These devices/software do something against the interests of the user in the process of doing something the user actually wants (otherwise why would the user even get them?).

Perhaps "Faustian computing"?

  • ygjb 6 hours ago

    Well, anti-personnel mines should function as expected for the primary user. The classic "Front Toward Enemy" is the basic UI that illustrates who the primary user is. The secondary users may want to file a ticket about the user experience.

    That said, I think more lovecraftian horrors that have taken on their own life, aided by the human creation of corporations...

    I don't recall where I first saw it, but this is fairly apt :P

    ---

    Did anyone notice how quickly the internet turned into a Lovecraftian horror scenario?

    Like we’ve got this dimension right next to ours, that extends across the entire planet, and it is just brimming with nightmares. We have spambots, viruses, ransomware, this endless legion of malevolent entities that are blindly probing us for weaknesses, seeking only to corrupt, to thieve, to destroy.

    Add onto that the corrupted ones themselves, humans who’ve abandoned morality and given up faces to hunt other people, jeering them, lashing out, seeing how easy it is to kill something you can’t touch or see or smell. They’ll corrupt anything they think could be a vessel for their message and they’ll jabber madly at any who question them. Their chittering haunts every corner of the internet. They are not unlike the spambots in some ways.

    Add on top of that the arcane magisters, who are forever working at the cracks between our world and the world we made. Some of them do it for fun, some of them do it for wealth, others do it for the power of nations unwise enough to trust them. There are mages who work to defend against this particular evil, but they are mad prophets, and their advice is almost never heeded, even by those who keep them as protection.

    • wizzwizz4 3 hours ago

      That one's from asterCrash (via Tumblr). Canonical URL: https://astercrash.tumblr.com/post/157419046864/did-anyone-n.... Full text below.

      ---

      Did anyone notice how quickly the internet turned into a Lovecraftian horror scenario?

      Like we’ve got this dimension right next to ours, that extends across the entire planet, and it is just brimming with nightmares. We have spambots, viruses, ransomware, this endless legion of malevolent entities that are blindly probing us for weaknesses, seeking only to corrupt, to thieve, to destroy.

      Add onto that the corrupted ones themselves, humans who’ve abandoned morality and given up faces to hunt other people, jeering them, lashing out, seeing how easy it is to kill something you can’t touch or see or smell. They’ll corrupt anything they think could be a vessel for their message and they’ll jabber madly at any who question them. Their chittering haunts every corner of the internet. They are not unlike the spambots in some ways.

      Add on top of that the arcane magisters, who are forever working at the cracks between our world and the world we made. Some of them do it for fun, some of them do it for wealth, others do it for the power of nations unwise enough to trust them. There are mages who work to defend against this particular evil, but they are mad prophets, and their advice is almost never heeded, even by those who keep them as protection.

      All people know several spells to use the internet. Facebook asks you for the magic words to log in, so does your email, so does your twitter and on and on. The spells are words or a gesture with the hand, some use the colour of your eyes, or the shape of your finger. Our chief of security joked about requiring users to give a drop of blood before they could log in. Many do not understand the humour of mages.

      The cracks between the two are breaking. IP cameras filled our world with eyes and the magisters learned how to open almost all of them. We all carry magic slabs of glass that if you hold it up to your ear can sing to you with a loved one’s voice, but if you look at it with your eyes, can show you a corrupted human with bleeding orange skin scream the profane with a thousand voices. The other day I saw someone hack a moving vehicle. At one point they made it stop. At another they made it so it couldn’t stop. Some of our best and brightest are going to create an army of four winged bats hovering throughout every city and we are going to connect them directly to the dimension where the nightmares live.

      I’m not saying it’s all bad, but I am saying Cthulhu lies deathless dreaming in this web we built him and he is waking up.

  • Zambyte 11 hours ago

    Anti-personnel computers also do exactly what they're intended to do. The interests of the subject are not considered a priority, just like with mines.

    > otherwise why would the user even get them?

    Why does a moth fly into a flame?

    • Modified3019 6 hours ago

      Moths (and other insects) evolved to use transverse orientation to fly level at night by using distant bodies of light (stars, moon), essentially trying to fly perpendicular to light above.

      Sources of light which are physically close disrupt this instinct.

      https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-44785-3

      • jazzyjackson 4 hours ago

        An apt metaphor as humans evolved to orient themselves based on information (in the strict sense of novel data) and so all it takes to trap a human in a continuous cycle of hitting themselves against a wall is to create a wall of continuously novel information

  • patcon 8 hours ago

    Thinking of the complex systems terms of "coarse-graining" (moving up into higher level systems/astronomical/above scale) and "fine-graining" (moving down into human/biological/below levels).

    Utility of anti-personnel mines is at system level of state war (no human-level participant meaningfully "wants" its effect on another human).

    Utility of anti-personnel computing is the same -- compute resources used to benefit of system, but to detriment of human actor below.

    The difference is we don't equally understand the battle damage we take to our minds the way we understand battle damage to our biology. This might change though

    EDIT: but yes, there are some differences thru this lens that make the metaphor a bit strained

  • bestouff 9 hours ago

    This is because you got the "user" part slightly wrong. The real users of your smartphone are countless ads companies, media giants or even some government services.

    • webdoodle 7 hours ago

      Yep. Big tech is the user, you are the product. The smartphone is just the interface.

  • red_trumpet 10 hours ago

    > Anti-personnel mines do exactly what they are intended to do. These devices/software do something against the interests of the user in the process of doing something the user actually wants

    Actually, I think you got it backwards: Anti-personnel mines are highly problematic especially when they are not needed anymore. They often linger in the ground for extended times after a conflict and are a cause of death and injuries in civilians, who just want to live their lives. Contrary to this, anti-personnel computing is problematic in the times when civilians are incentivized to use it.

    • liotier 9 hours ago

      > Anti-personnel mines are highly problematic especially when they are not needed anymore

      When immediate survival is at stake, the future is heavily discounted. Slow and channel the attacker now, and consider the demining cost later - if you survived the war.

  • rixed 11 hours ago

    At the contrary, to me the term evoked exactly what the author meant. And after the series of detonations of the communication devices in Lebanon some time ago, the analogy with anti-personnel mines takes an even more concrete and sinister meaning.

  • sifar 7 hours ago

    I was discussing this with my son the other day. We have a Faustian bargain with technology in general, not just computing.

  • cess11 11 hours ago

    Where in this do you see the connection to worldly, scientific, knowledge?

    • fmajid 10 hours ago

      As in "Faustian bargain"

  • SilasX 3 hours ago

    I'm just ... dumbfounded at why it isn't "anti-personal computing". Like, as a riff on "personal computer/computing".

    Related: the scene in Bojack Horseman:

    "And this time, it's personnel!"

    'Uh, shouldn't the line be, "It's personal"?'

    "No, because it's like, he's saying it's an inside job, so, personnel."

praptak 9 hours ago

I prefer "antifeatures" as more precise.

https://www.fsf.org/bulletin/2007/fall/antifeatures/

  • thomastjeffery 6 hours ago

    The word antifeature can describe a feature that the designer doesn't want. That's usually the scenario I experience it in, and it's a good fit for it.

    Anti-personnel describes more precisely, the perverse prioritization of a 3rd party's goals over the end user's goals.

Tepix 13 hours ago

It's all in the software. Avoiding systems that work against you is harder than ever. Even our brains betray us, falling for the dopamine rushes expertly assembled by the exploiters.

An unchecked drive for profit maximisation is often at the source of this evil. Cory Doctorow has expertly described the phenomenon in his essays¹ about enshittification, a term he coined. He has raised a lot of awareness, yet we're still in a timeline where non-profit, decentralised services have small market shares. Perhaps the Leidensdruck, i.e. the degree of suffering, is not yet great enough?

--

¹ https://www.wired.com/story/tiktok-platforms-cory-doctorow/

  • aleph_minus_one 9 hours ago

    > Even our brains betray us, falling for the dopamine rushes expertly assembled by the exploiters.

    I had this discussion with other people who deleted their account at some website that can be considered "social media" in a broader sense. They told me that the reason why they deleted their accounts was that they realized that these bursts of dopamine rush that they got from the respective site was not good for them.

    I, on the other hand, have never felt this kind of dopamine rush, even though I was a likely even more active user on the respective site. My reason for really wanting to delete my whole account was "purely logical" (I hated a lot of decisions that the respective company made).

    What I want to tell with this story is that I thus see strong evidence that the "sensitivity" of people for dopamine rushes from websites/games varies a lot between people (and I am very likely one who is at least "mostly" immune to them).

    Really: if I had to name one thing that gives me dopamine rushes that are so much more intense (I would say: "multiple magnitudes more intense") than any dopamine rush that I got from any social media site that I visited, then I would say "understanding deep mathematical proofs and strongly simplifying them" (but I agree that these dopamine rushes are earned much more toughly :-) ).

    • benzopaladine 16 minutes ago

      Self-control is a factor too. Some people might get a big rush but have strong frontal lobes, other people might get a smaller rush but have low self-control and still end up consuming a lot / having their behavior reinforced.

      I think susceptibility to negative emotion is relevant too. Not all of the addictive content feels good. Lots of companies have figured out how to make negativity addictive.

  • flobosg 8 hours ago

    > the Leidensdruck, i.e. the degree of suffering

    A literal translation (the pressure of suffering) sounds more meaningful to me.

pjc50 13 hours ago

Eh. I think "user hostile" or "hostile architecture" (like unsleepable benches) is a better analogy, reserving anti-personnel for those cases where computers are used in genuinely dangerous ways. Like the Chinese ethnicity-recognizing security cameras.

keisborg 11 hours ago

I love term how it plays on the words and the negative association we have with anti-personell mines

If we could have a ban on anti-personell computers…

DonHopkins 5 hours ago

The original Mac would pop up a dialog with a threatening icon of a bomb with a lit fuse, whenever it crashed!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bomb_(icon)

>The Bomb icon is a symbol designed by Susan Kare that was displayed inside the System Error alert box when the "classic" Macintosh operating system (pre-Mac OS X) had a crash which the system decided was unrecoverable. It was similar to a dialog box in Windows 9x that said "This program has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down." Since the classic Mac OS offered little memory protection, an application crash would often take down the entire system.

Unfortunately, the Mac's bomb dialog could cause naive users to jump up out of their seat and run away from the computer in terror, because they though it was going to explode!

And Window's "This program has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down" error message was just as bad: it could cause naive users to fear they might get arrested for accidentally doing something illegal!

casey2 10 hours ago

anti-personal computing: data collection, closed ecosystem, dark patterns, opaque programs, central control

anti-personnel computing: the use of a computing system to target, harm, control or neutralize individuals

6510 4 hours ago

I hear part of the Chinese miracle of central planning is that they have almost full knowledge of everything everyone is doing in the economy. In contrast, in the west, where we optimize for personal gain, you can get a lot done by throwing up barriers and creating friction. We also pretend/believe our governments use all data against us.

My gut tells me that cryptography and clever use of time and location can be used to use public data for specific purposes alone.

You could for example construct security cameras with sufficient encryption that only a judge can request access to a specific chunk of time and has to provide a specific case number.

It might even be possible for the judge to request a specific thing from the footage like time stamps and licenseplate numbers not from people living there or even similar faces and devices seen around similar crimes.

I don't want the specific time stamps and locations made available buy I don't see great value in keeping my annual toilet paper purchases secret or how many km I need to travel to purchase shoes.

Maybe (when seeking) we should get proximity push notifications for job offers that fit our resume.

I mean, we should explore the boundary between anti-personel computing and useful application. Maybe things are worse than we think, maybe they can be made mutually beneficial.