Michael Leunig, Australian cartoonist, dies aged 79
I hope those memorialising him remember his recent comments and attitudes as well as his earlier work.
Michael Leunig, Australian cartoonist, dies aged 79
I hope those memorialising him remember his recent comments and attitudes as well as his earlier work.
I read more for pleasure this year than usual. Reading more widely led to some genuine surprises - and a few punishing tomes. Rachel Kushner’s Creation Lake was the definite standout.
To give up one’s very self, to think only of others, that is the true meaning of Christmas.
I’m dealing with generative A.I. use in assessment a lot at the moment. This is a good summary of the issues, but also describes the pressures and anxieties that students face as well as the structural drivers.
Climate change may have driven Homo sapiens to extinction in Europe before we were helped by Neanderthals. The Nature article provides more details.
I often wonder if the right species survived.
A wonderful article on how you might go about digitally storing something for 100 years:
What is consistent about these examples is that they all involve groups who care. The most enduring decentralized efforts don’t owe their success to technological or organizational innovation, but rather by having enlisted generations of people with an emotional and intellectual investment in their worth. For both cloud storage services and distributed storage schemes, the question is whether they can provoke the necessary level of passion and watchfulness. Are they and their technologies empowering those who care, or setting them up to fail?
Century Scale Storage by Maxwell Neely-Cohen, via Molly White
He’s half right. Manipulation by recommendation engines and algorithmic oppression is an extant threat that’s changing our relationships and our politics.
But social media - interactive technologies that facilitate the networked sharing of information - can be emancipatory. It can expand our worlds in real ways. That sounds Pollyanna-ish until you recall that we’ve experienced that potential ourselves. Made new friends. Seen things in new ways.
One of my kids was recently quizzing me about Mastodon, and he pulled me up when I said I like the chronological feed.
“What does that mean? If there’s no algorithm, how do they know what you want to see?”
I realised he’s never known a chronological social media feed. Twitter, Instagram and Facebook abandoned theirs before he was born. The idea that all I see are the accounts I follow, and that I see everything they post, in the order they post, broke his brain a bit. He didn’t like it.
But the recommendation algorithms aren’t working like they used to either (if they ever really worked at all). Instagram is allowing you to “reset” your recommendation algorithm. Even though they have hundreds of thousands of data points about you, they’re recommending things that you’ve already long-forgotten. Or worse, that you wish you could forget.
Beyond blocking or unfollowing accounts, there aren’t many ways for us as users on algorithm-driven platforms to control the slop we’re fed. In fact most platforms are doubling down on the slop, serving up content from accounts you never followed in an effort to drive up fake engagement metrics. I don’t know if you’ve checked Facebook lately, but the dead internet is real and your relatives are trapped in it.
That highlights a tension we all experience. We all know our privacy is being invaded and our data linked by these recommendation algorithms. We don’t like the idea that we’re living in filter bubbles where something else decides what we see, but we can’t imagine anything else possible.
This also made me consider a major upside of the fediverse that we don’t promote enough: the best recommendation algorithm is another human, and on the fediverse that’s all we have.¹ There are still human-driven ways to encounter novelty, and to escape the flattened world served up to us by algorithms.
These are some of the ones I use:²˒³
These options often have a cost in money or time, essentially because they involve work instead of harvesting your data and mining your attention. If you look at Facebook, TikTok or YouTube you can see that what appears to be free has a cost.
A slop-free existence is possible, but it takes a bit of work.
Fascinating chart about Spotify’s increasingly granular (and bizarre) music genres, via Simon Elvery
The Lennox Street bridge underpass is an example of the old local government planning proverb: revenge is a dish best served via permanent signage.
This is wonderful. Unearthing video snapshots of life between 2009 and 2012.
Dancing, toddlers walking, soccer games, holidays, video messages. Surprisingly sweet insights into the recent past. via MeFi
An old photo I took in Mildura, found during a clean out
Data collated by the tertiary education union has revealed there are 306 university executives who earn more than their state’s premier.
I love Law & Order and I heard Noam Chomsky is a fan too. I tried to find a source - according to this 2003 profile, he is:
When Chomsky and Carol are in Cambridge, they usually watch an hour of television at night—“Law & Order” or some other cop show. Carol makes sure that they go to bed right afterward, and they wake up around eight.
I dunno about this. Clapback read-a-book energy.
“Australian authors group give every federal politician five books to encourage nuance in Middle East debate” via hamonryen
Interesting open access article from Abby Smith, Seema Mihrshahi, and Becky Freeman on Exploring small retailers’ perspectives on selling tobacco after the tripling of Tasmania’s tobacco licence fee.
It retrospect I should have recognised this as a warning about the quality of the takeaway pizza I’d just ordered.
Interesting and unusual to see the South China Morning Post discussing legalised vaping’s cost to the Malaysian health system.
If no control measures are taken against the use of electronic cigarettes or vapes, this treatment cost is projected to rise to US$82 million annually by 2030.
Malaysia’s healthcare system faces US$82 million vaping bill - SCMP