Wednesday, May 25, 2022

Subprime Attention Crisis


This author gave a talk at HOPE in 2010ish about Twitterbots, long before they were a thing. In fact, he kind of made them a thing. Anyway, now he's talking about how online advertising doesn't really work, and that it's going to become too hard to ignore, and the industry will collapse, and it will take the entire internet with it. I hope he's wrong, but he makes quite the compelling argument.

Subprime Attention Crisis:Advertising and the Time Bomb at the Heart of the Internet
Tim Hwang, 2020

"Programmatic Advertising" is an important term in this book, and refers to the automation of buying and selling of ads, at mind-blinding speed and without any human intervention or oversight at all.

Distinction between direct response advertising (see it, buy it) vs brand advertising ("shaping the public's associations with a brand and differentiating it from its competitors) (p80)

Mesothelioma - one of the most expensive keywords to advertise against (p83, ft21)
-Jim Leichenko, "The Most Expensive Keywords on Google - Anniversay Edition," Kantar Media, Sep 4 2018

Data arbitrage - marketing agencies sign deals for discounted prices for ad inventory for publishers, then resell the inventory at a higher price to their clients (pocketing the difference) (p105)

Surveillance Capitalism - Shoshana Zuboff, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power. Public Affairs. 2019

Ad damage (harm) - relies on invasion of privacy, incentivizes manipulating user behavior and seizing user attention in ways that may be harmful to mental health and physical development (Zuboff), and incentivizes media supporting information of echo chambers (Eli Parsier, The Filter Bubble, 2012)

(Also re harms of advertising) - The broad range of expression that the internet might otherwise enable has been limited to ways of connecting that are consistent with the financial needs of advertising. Advertising is complicit in restricting the grammar of social interaction online. (p117)

In envisioning a platform totally anonymous, he says it might "degrade into a ---digital wall of bathroom graffiti--- in a few hours. (p118) [I find an uncanny resemblance between this and the Wall of Public Shame and Social Miscourse that Facebook has morphed into.]

Post Script - About the Image:
I tried to search images for "shopping addiction" but it's weird because they're all smiling. You can't get a picture of someone holding a shopping bag with a scowl on their face, it just doesn't work. Even the articles about how to recognize if you have a compulsive shopping disorder show pictures of people smiling. I'll admit, it's hard to communicate visually, something about the two things together that doesn't work visually. Gambling addiction, on the other hand, is all dejected people with their head in their hands. So I decided to go for "Black Friday", because that's what it looks like when your culture -- not any one individual but the entire culture -- has a shopping addiction. 

Tuesday, May 24, 2022

Profit Over Privacy


I'm reading this book along with a series of others about advertising, privacy, etc. The Naked Consumer (1992) takes us up to the pre-internet era, and Sub Prime Attention Crisis (2021) shows us the implications of propping up the infrastructure of the internet with advertising, specifically targeted instead of contextual advertising. 

Profit Over Privacy: How Surveillance Advertising Conquered the Internet
Matthew Crain, University of Minnesota Press, 2021

"Commercial monitoring" is the palatable name for surveillance advertising.

He calls Russia's 2016 interference an "ad system" (p3) -United States of America v. Internet Research Agency, LLC., No 18 U.S.C. SS2, 371, 1349, 1028A (n.d.)

Facebook is an ad platform - "data-driven influence peddling is their bread and butter" (p4)

The 2013 Facebook Like Study: Michael Kosinski, David Stillwell, and Thore Graepel, "Private Traits and Attributes Are Predictable From Digital Records of Human Behavior," PNAS 110, no. 15 (2013): 5802-5

Cory Doctorow's microtargeting: "How To Destroy Surveillance Capitalism," OneZero, Aug 26 2020.

Funny how the author is talking about lack of public access to high quality information, caused by digital ad ecosystems, yet low-credibility info is the fuel of digital advertising via engagement algorithms more likely to spread and instigate further engagement if they're extreme and novel, i.e., low-credibility.

The privacy market (which is now a free market with no rules) (p21)

"The fiction that advertising supports or makes possible the news, entertainment, or educational content has been a public relations mainstay of the commercial mass media" -Dallas Smythe, 1981: Dependency Road: Communications, Capitalism, Consciousness and Canada

Far from creating objective representations of the world as it is, consumer surveillance reproduces and often reinforces existing structural inequalities (p105)
-Noble, Algorithms of Oppression
-Jathan Sadowski, To Smart: How Digital Capitalism is Extracting Data, Controlling Our Lives, and Taking Over the World. 2020

The strategic communications campaign to pacify the public on privacy issues (p132)
-Inger Stole, Advertising on Tril: Consumer Activism and Corporate Public Relations in the 1930's. 2005 
-Molly Niesen, "The Little Old Lady Has teeth: The US Federal Trade Commission and the Advertising Industry, 1970-1973," Advertising and Society Review 12, no. 4 (2012)

Daniel Pope: The Making of Modern Advertising

The divergence between Google and Doubleclick (before 2007)
  • Google: Rather than collecting consumer info to target ads, they relied on users' search keywords to display "contextual advertising", and this was very successful
  • Doubleclick: Consumer data was the keystone for closing the loop between ads and sales
-Ken Auletta, Googled: The End of the World as We Know It, 2010

The central business proposition of social networks stemmed from their arguably superior capacities to collect and operationalize personal information, not from any significantly technical innovations in advertising practice (p140) [And so Facebook ultimately forced Google to abandon the context-approach completely ... Surveillance was too big of a business.]

Accounting for the shift: Google's first privacy policy, created in 1999, sparsely explained that the company did not collect data on any individuals. Twenty years and thirty versions later, it now takes four thousand words to outline the company's extensive data collection practices across its array of websites, applications and partners. (p142) -Warzejl and Ngu in New York Times, 2019

On Opt-In: "Offering advertising on an opt-in basis goes against the economic model of the internet" [because you made it that way through decades of policy manipulation] (p143)
-Google spokesperson, in JR Raphel, "Google's Behavioral Ad targeting: How to Regain Control", PC World, 2009

Back to Politics: The history of surveillance advertising is not a story of disruption but rather one of continuity. (p145)

Further Reading:
-Matt Honan, "Google's Broken Promise: The End of 'Don't Be Evil'", Gizmodo 2012
-Tim Libert, "Exposing the Invisible Web: An Analysis of Third-Party HTTP Requests on 1 Million Websites," Int. Jour. Comm. 2015
-Julia Angwin, :The Web's New Godl Mine: Your Secrets", WSJ 2010
-FTC, "Cross Device Tracking: An FTC Staff Report", 2017
-Jennifer Valentino-DeVries et al., "Your Apps Know Where You Were Last Night, and They're Not Keeping It Secret", NYT 2018
-"Stat Oil", The Economist 2013
-John Cheney-Lippold, We Are Data: Algorithms and the Making of Oour Digital Selves, NYU Press 2017
-Gabriel Weinberg, "What If We Al Just Sold Non-Creepy Advertising?" NYT 2019

Monday, May 23, 2022

The Naked Consumer


AKA Big Datty Goes Shopping

This book was written in 1992, and exemplifies the reason why I like to read old books from a kind of anthropological or at least historical perspective. He says things that sound like they could have been written yesterday, and it shows you how much of what we call "new" or even "unprecedented" are actually just an extension of things that have always existed.

And a big part of me thinks that constantly re-naming and re-examining things is what holds us back from making more progress. We act like our problems just appeared yesterday, when in fact they've been around forever, and the things getting in the way of solving them --corrupt governance, greedy businesses, etc.-- are kept invisible to oversight and insulated from public outrage just as they always were. And we're kept chasing our own tails, making up new names for things and separating each other into different groups so that we can discuss and blame and even legislate our way into a conflated oblivion, without making much of a dent in the main source of the problem. I don't know, personal carbon footprint calculators comes to mind, for example. Pay no attention to the 500 pound elephant behind the curtain. 

Magazines, many of them but not all of them, are not real.

That is, they aren't what you think they are. You think they're a bunch of pictures and stories, gathered around some loosely related subjects for your infotainment pleasure. This author shows us that they are not that. Instead, a magazine is a ploy to get your name and address. That's it. The purpose is to create a list of all the people who have an interest in "x", and then to sell that list to people who want to sell people "x". That's it.

American Baby was a magazine in the 90's. I've never heard of it. But it was about babies, and aimed at new mothers. Articles about breastfeeding and thumbsucking and extra belly fat probably (because making a woman feel bad about her image is a sure way to get her to buy your shit). But the magazine wasn't made for its readers. It was made for the advertisers who buy the list of readers. And that's because new mothers are the number one most heavily targeted demographics on earth. And that's because young mothers are scared out of their minds, and will do anything you tell them to, especially if you scare them enough. 

You might be thinking GMOs or vaccines. And you'd be right, because a good network analysis done recently showed how alternative medicine and new mothers were the nexus of a global conspiracy network, linking other disparate groups and topics, and allowing for the spread of antivax disinformation to infect our population faster than a real virus ever could. 

That's the intro to the book -- the author pretends he's got a pregnant wife, submits a subscription to American Baby, and watches what happens next. His fictitious wife, and her miracle baby who doesn't exist, are from that day on bombarded with advertising that has been engineered to exploit your endocrine system at every stage of your baby's development, all the way into their own adulthood. The consumer surveillance system has been around forever, and still follows the same rules, and still uses the same arguments on our legislators, judges, academics and entrepreneurs. 

In spite of common sense, learning your history might be more impactful than threatening to boycott your favorite social media platform using said social media platform. 


The Naked Consumer: How Our Lives Become Public Commodities
Erik Larson, Henry Holt Publishers, 1992

He talks about noticing that his mail has intelligence, and later calls it "smart mail". He's referring to how the advertisers know he has a baby, and he does refer to this as the "consumer intelligence system" elsewhere in the book. I'm just saying, he was saying "smart"-things in 1992. 

Quoting a marketing executive, "Through psychographics, we become the friend who knows them as well as, perhaps better than, they know themselves" (p13). Sound familiar?

The 4 Laws of Data Dynamics
  1. The law of data coalescence - Data must seek and merge with complementary data.
  2. Data always will be used for purposes other than originally intended. 
  3. Data collected about individuals will be used to cause harm to one or more n=members of the group who provided the information or about whom it was collected, be it minor (short-term aggravation of a "junk" call during dinner) or major (the sorrow of getting a free sample of formula just after your miscarriage).
  4. Confidential information is confidential only until someone decides it's not. (p14)

Interesting take on Planned Obsolescence: Talking about a shift in marketing in the 1920's - "to more effectively woo consumers, manufacturers shifted their emphasis from function to style. Suddenly, consumers could buy Turkish towels in colors other than white; even toilets came in alluring new shades. Automakers began painting car different colors; in 1927 General Motors began making annual changes in body styles a practice that came to be known as "planned obsolescence." The stated mission of GM's research division was "the organized creation of dissatisfaction." (p20)

The radio is not a public place - you couldn't blatantly advertise on the radio in the 1920's because it was broadcast into people's homes, the "family circle" (p21)

The Census Bureau, cluster analysis, REZIDES (National Zip Code Encyclopedia (household income, education, home value, and occupation), PRIZMs (Potential Rating Index for Zip Markets); (circa p50)

The National Credit Hunters roster: 1.6 million people who applied for credit cards but were turned down, "these credit-hungry men and women are available for rental" ...you could get 400,000 names every two weeks for $70 per thousand... (p66)

Gay people are a very heavily-marketed group, because they are so easy to identify, i.e., via same-sex address matching, which doesn't work as well for females (~p68)

Jews - there is a database that scores your name's Jewishness, and why? Because "They're well-to-do and highly assimilated. They have a lot of disposable cash in the sense that their income is higher than the norm. There is a social tradition in Judaism toward charity. They tend to read more than the general public. There's only one group that has succeeded more than the Jews in terms of their economic and social assimilation into American society, and that's the Japanese." - Avram Lyon AB Data Ltd. Vice President (p69) 

[^Why are gay people not called Gays, yet Jewish people are called Jews?]

Copyright traps on lists! - To insure that list renters use names only as often as agreed (because they make money off use of the list, so you can't turn around and sell it to someone else), list managers routinely seed them with false names -- the names, for example, of pets and people long dead whose addresses, however, are actually addresses of living employees of the list managers. If these employees receive more than one letter addressed to a particular defunct consumer, they sound the alarm. (p70)

Also note they copyright their lists, despite the fact that "we consumers never gave them direct permission to use our names in the first place." (p70)

There's lists of people who are non-responders, so they can be eliminated from other lists; there's lists of recent mortgage holders who are likely to go bankrupt in the next 12 months, so they can be contacted again in 12 months... (p76)

"Synchographics" - (not synchro-) are timed milestones like puberty or pregnancy or homeownership (p81)

"There is no more elaborate consumer intelligence system than that set up to capture the gravid [pregnancy] status of women." (p82)

The Direct Mail List Rates and Data directory describes thousands of lists, their owners and managers, and the price they charge. Find this at your local library. (p83)

Toledo, Ohio water commissioner in 1952 realizes a sudden citywide pressure drop during the I Love Lucy commercial break. (p106)

Langbourne Rust - he's a spy basically - "No one every notices. Ever." Still, the main rule - "Never turn your face toward the person you're looking at. People have an extraordinary ability to notice from their peripheral vision that someone's looking at them." (p181)

In this book, written in 1992, the word "Dumpster" is capitalized. (p189)

Garbage - William Rathje, archeologist from the University of Arizona, turned "garbologist", started Le Projet du Garbage, wrote in Garbage magazine, and "punctured myths of human consumption" in America (p189) On Mexican American Garbage - "Ethnic Migration, Assimilation and Consumption", Journal of Consumer Research, Dec 1983 Melanie Wallendorf and Michael Reilly


WHO CARES and WHAT TO DO ABOUT IT

"The techniques of mass surveillance now allow marketers to find our vulnerabilities more efficiently ... Targeting has given them the power to worry us when we are not worried, to make us aware of our flaws when otherwise we might be content, to make us feel sorrow when moments before we felt only happiness. ... We expect to encounter voluminous advertising in our magazines and newspapers and have learned to ignore it." (p202-203) 

"Psychoactive Junk Mail" affects moods and thoughts a lot more than one might think, mostly in minor ways but sometimes dramatically. Suppose you are overweight... (p204)

Junk mail and junk calls are only superficial manifestations of the most troubling aspects of mass surveillance -- the fact of the surveillance itself. The surreptitious collection and coalescence of personal information constitutes nothing less than an assault on human dignity and the sanctity of self. If mass surveillance gives us the creeps, it is because the techniques intrude on ground we know to be sacred. (p206)

"At an instinctive level, many consumers feel that for a commercial entity to collect names, addresses and consumer characteristics and store it in a computer data base, without the consumer's knowledge or agreement appropriates some uniqueness from the consumer. It's a modern counterpart of the tribal native's belief that viewing photographed by the anthropologist captures and transfers some of the individual's essence ot the photo taker and could be used to manipulate him." ["Manipulate" being the key word here.] (p206) -Alain Westin in a 1990 Harris-Equifax survey

Something about this is eerily familiar in 21st century as social media platforms become the pinnacle of consumer advertising and at the same time a wholly unregulated and indefensible channel through which the whole society under its all-seeing eye becomes an eager receptor for instigatory potential, at times to nefarious ends: "The consumer marketers have installed the most sophisticated mass intelligence system in history. Despite its banal current uses, it constitutes the infrastructure of invasion, ready to disrupt the lives of millions of Americans but restrained from doing so only be reasonably benign political climate, the absence of an overwhelming national enemy, and the good judgement of the system's corporate masters. But technology, as Jacques Ellul, the French technophilosopher, argued in The Technological Society, advances along a path of its own choosing, exhausting every conceivable application along the way until restrained by law of obsolescence. By Ellul's reasoning the infrastructure of invasion will be used one day to cause most harm across the land. "History," he wrote, "shows that every technical application from it beginnings presents certain unforeseeable secondary effects which are much more disastrous than the lack of technique would have been." (p210-211)

Introduction to Chapter 12: What to Do: New Laws for a New Age: "The real danger is the gradual erosion of individual liberties through the automation, integration, and interconnection of many small, separate record-keeping systems, each of which alone may seem innocuous, even benevolent, and wholly justifiable -U.S. Privacy Protection Study Commission, 1977. (p231)

Video Privacy Protection Act of 1988 - passed with blinding speed by legislators after a Washington weekly City Paper "obtained and analyzed records of the movies rented by Judge Bork", shocked by the "brazen invasion of the sanctity of the man's cinematic tastes." (p235) [Fixing this problem sounds pretty easy all of the sudden.]

"Recombinant data" - a whole new strain of information created by cybertechnologies

Thursday, May 19, 2022

Primatologists Are Primates Too


AKA Anthorpomorphomania
AKA Cultural Panthropology

I heard about this book in an interview with Hamilton Morris, who you might remember from Hamilton's Pharmacopeia on Vice. He was talking about his other book, Neuropsychedelia, but I was hooked when I heard Hamilton utter "meta-primatology" in a moment of confusion as he tried to describe what the hell this book was. He's studying people who study primates. I think I'm more interested in his wordporn than anything else. Goldmine. 

Also, if you think that's a picture of just any gorilla, you're wrong, because it's Harambe.

Chimpanzee Culture Wars: Rethinking Human Nature alongside Japanese, European, and American Cultural Primatologists
Nicolas Langlitz, Princeton University Press, 2020
  • To my familoid
  • Multiculturalism to include apes
  • Field vs lab, Euro-American vs Japan
  • "Apes have culture but do not know that they do" -Thibaud Gruber, Klaus Zuberbuhler, Fabrice Clement, Carel van Schaik, Comparative Psychology 6:91, 2015
  • Primatologists are primates too (p19)
  • Non-genetic transmission of behavior in the wild -- Imanishi's Koshima, one ape learns to wash sweet potatoes in the stream, and others naturally pick up the behavior, because one of the humans decided to offer gritty, sandy sweet potatoes to the moneys to get them familiar with humans... . It was usually very young animals who first invented or adopted [the new food habits] and then passed them to their mothers. Some older individuals, especially the males, would never take them on.(p34)
  • Anthorpomorphomania (p54)
  • Cultural panthropology (p94)
  • Living conditions and natural selection: Under the heading "Culture and cognition in chimpanzees," Boesch compared the histories and living conditions of three captive groups at the University of New Iberia, Ohio State University Chimpanzee Center, and Liepzig Zoo to explain behavioral differences these communities had shown in experimental tests.
  • On the origin of Random Controlled Trials: via R. Mundry, Ronald Fisher proposes, "Randomisation relieves the experimenter from the anxiety of considering and estimating the magnitude of the innumerable causes by which his data may be disturbed."  (p188-189) -Ronald Fisher, Statistical Methods for Research Workers (1925) and The Design of Experiments (1935)
  • On Salvage Primatology, Salvage Anthropology - via Darwin's emphasis on the importance of ethnographic research in the face of rapidly disappearing races, Levi-Strauss called the study of this disintegration not anthropology but entropology. -Levis Strauss, Tristes tropiques (1955) 1974
  • "Anthropocene Blues" (p313)

Tuesday, May 17, 2022

The Lifecycle of Hype Cycles


This is one of the craziest scifi books I've ever read. I am totally swallowed-up by it, but I feel like someone in the 1950's reading about nuclear energy and space travel -- it's all so new and unfamiliar that you could say anything and I'd be into it. This guy is talking about intelligent entities (digipets) and quantum computers (prisms) in a way that has me totally sold. I highly recommend that everyone read it, at least twice:

Exhalation
An Anthology by Ted Chiang, Vintage, 2019

The Lifecycle of Software Objects
I've been waiting for this to come out in print for years. One of the main ideas is that in order to make a robot more like a person, you need to let it be a person; you can't just pump it full of if-thens. This is part of the idea that we will not be able to create artificial olfaction without artificial bodies to experience it first.
"She wants to tell them that Blue Gamma was more right than it knew; experience isn't merely the best teacher, it's the only teacher. If she's learned anything raising Jax, it's that there are no shortcuts, if you want to create the common sense that comes from twenty years of being in the world, you need to devote twenty years to the task. You can't assemble an equivalent collection of heuristics i less time; experience is algorithmically incompressible." (p163)

Anxiety is the Dizzyness of Freedom
Quantum computers are real and they open portals to parallel universes where we can communicate with our para-selves as they separate further and further from us with every decision we make, and then we get either jealous or schadenfreude at their lives in comparison.
"She switched to video mode, and the text on the screen was replaced by a grainy image of her own face looking back at her. Her parallel self nodded at her and said, "Mic test."" (p271)

The Truth of Fact, the Truth of Feeling
On recording everything and then going back to check.
"We don't normally think of it as such, but writing is a technology, which means that a literate person is someone who's thought processes are technologically mediated. We became cognitive cyborgs as soon as we became fluent readers, and the consequences of that were profound." (p226)

Friday, May 13, 2022

Reading at Home


I read this during the pandemic of 2020, trapped in my own house.
At Home: A Short History of Private Life
Bill Bryson, 2010

  • Confetti GPS: Guests at Wentworth Woodhouse, a stately pile in Yorkshire, were given silver boxes with personalized confetti, which they could sprinkle through the corridor to help them find their way back to, or between, rooms. (p138)
  • Dude so cheap that he refused to dot his i's when he wrote, to save on ink (p213)
  • Another dude so rich, he owns two houses side by side, one to live in, and one to redecorate over and over (p335-6)
  • The London Necropolis and National Mausoleum Co. and the Stiff Express Railway, 1854 (p390)
  • The track transported mourners and coffins to two private stations within the cemetery: the Brookwood Cemetery South station served the Anglican sections, whilst the North station served the nonconformist sections. The London terminus, which opened in 1854, was specially built to perfectly meet the needs of its primary purpose, with waiting rooms for mourners and funeral services, storage for coffins, and a hydraulic lift to raise the coffins to platform level for their transport to the Cemetery. Brookwood Cemetery and the London Necropolis Train [link]
  • The railway was operated by the London Necropolis Company, who offered three different classes of funerals. First class funeral parties were offered private waiting rooms and carriages, and could gather to watch the coffin being loaded into a first-class compartment. Third class parties shared a communal waiting room; however, Brookwood offered each body an individual plot, granting a level of dignity to the “pauper class”, as most other cemeteries continued the practice of mass graves for the poor. Brookwood Cemetery and the London Necropolis Train [link]
  • Society for the Rescue of Boys Not Yet Convicted of Any Criminal Offence (p591)
  • Not YET [Homer Simpson]

Thomas Barnardo's Fake photographs of 1858 (p595)

After his first homes for orphans began to open in the 1870s, Barnardo used photographs of his rescued children to use in adverts for fundraising - of which he was a master.

"Before" and "after" pictures would be taken, showing orphans in a state of neglect immediately after they had been rescued from the street, and then afterwards, all scrubbed clean and full of promise.

But in 1877 Barnardo found himself accused of artificially staging the photographs, alongside other allegations that he enriched himself with charity money and that children were physically abused in his homes.

In a pamphlet entitled Startling Revelations, the minister said: "[Barnardo] tears their clothes, so as to make them appear worse than they really are. A lad named Fletcher is taken with a shoeblack's box upon his back, although he never was a shoeblack."

In July 1877, Barnardo admitted in court the artistic license he took with the photography, claiming that he never intended to make particular portraits but rather wanted to depict individuals as representative of their "class".

The case was so important because the status of photography was, at the time, a medium by which some kind of visual "truth" was supposed to be revealed. The idea that Barnardo had staged many of his photographs destabilised a Victorian notion of what it was to be an "authentically" poor child.

[It's still being done in 2002, for the foundation he started, and nobody seems to mind anymore, because the intent is good.]

-The Echoes of Barnardo's Altered Imagery, Mark Oliver and Zeta McDonald, The Guardian, Oct 2002

Thursday, May 12, 2022

The Inevitable


I'm not sure if this picture is supposed to be a joke - it seems to be a chronology of the evolution of a Nokia phone. If you don't get the joke I won't explain it, but the idea of technology evolving as if it were another form of life, that's Kevin Kelly's idea, or at least he gets lots of credit for popularizing it. (Dawkins coined memetics a long time ago.) This idea comes from his book What Technology Wants (2010).

Here's another book by Kelly, not as impactful for me, but it did have a couple points of interest:

The Inevitable: Understanding the 12 Technological Forces That Will Shape Our Future
Kevin Kelly, 2016

  • Magnus Carlsen is deemed the most computerlike of all chess players, trained by AI (p41-42)
  • Preventing Consciousness: We don't want our AI to be conscious, we just want it to be smart. "We might have to engineer ways to prevent consciousness in them." (p42) "And consciousness-free might become the new thing in AI services.
  • Firechat - decentralized wifi radio, used during the Hong Kong protests of 2014
  • Paying for emails - Esther Dyson, the asymmetry of emails, you should charge senders for reading your email (p186)
  • Prices head to zero? "There has been a downward trend in real commodity prices of about one percent per year over the last 140 years." International Monetary Fund, 2002
  • Recording in a diary is considered admirable. Recording in a spreadsheet is considered creepy." -Gary Wolf (p250)
  • Surveillance: a one-way panopticon, or mutual, transparent "coveillance" where other watchers watch the watchers (p259)
  • Holos - an artificial global cortex made of the network of billions of phones and computers, our brains are not doubling in size every few years, the Holos mind is. Who writes the code? We do. We think we're merely wasting time, but each time we click a link we strengthen a node somewhere in the holos mind, thereby programming it by using it, teaching the holos what we thing is important. (p292-293)

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

On Addiction


In preparing a series of posts about advertising, surveillance, privacy, and consumer culture, I tried to find a picture to visually represent "shopping addiction"; thinking maybe it's an example of the harms that could come from an economy founded on consumer behavior. Anyway, it's hard to find a good picture of "shopping addiction". Mostly it's hard because it doesn't communicate well, in a visual form. For some reason, you can't say "shopping" and "personal problem" at the same time. But for another reason, maybe our culture is supported by an economy that would collapse if we got too good at connecting shopping with anything bad.

(For those that don't remember, the President of the United States, in his first words to the American people following the 9/11 attack, was to go shopping. If that doesn't tell you how important it is to the survival of a nation, well I'm sure there are other examples.)

Moving on, I uncontrollably fell into one of my favorite past times, pretending like I can glean prescient knowledge about contemporary culture by comparing keyword image search results. I listen to muzak on purpose, and have located and downloaded songs to my playlist. It's the anti-music, or the ur-music, because it cross-cancels all to differences to make the most representative sample. It's the same reason I like to look at stock photography -- to see how people want to see things. Or at least to see how artists and photographers think we want to see things.

How do I set up a shot for "shopping addiction"? Lots of shopping bags, usually a woman. The problem is, they're always smiling. Either articles about shopping addiction can't find enough stock photos, so they use "shopping" instead (without the "addiction"), or they go with a picture of a woman with her head in her hands, surrounding by shopping bags, which just doesn't seem to communicate very well what they want to say.

In case you're wondering what other addictions look like, I've already done the work for you. Make your own interpretations.

shopping addiction

gambling addiction

drug addiction

video game addiction

alcohol addiction

nicotine addiction

porn addiction

eating addiction

yoga addiction

Bonus:
"Google Addiction"
Cherelle vs Google - Rob Browne Wales Online - 2021

'I had a life-destroying addiction but it wasn't to alcohol, drugs, or gambling - it was to Google'
Apr 2021, Wales Online

"For Cherelle, her obsession with Google coincided with the birth of her daughter ... As time passed, Cherelle's obsession with one disease moved on to another, and then another. In that time, however, one thing didn't change - her ability to reach into her pocket and search not only the illness itself but treatment, survival rates any other relevant piece of information until there was nothing else to do apart from re-read those same links over and over again."

As you would expect -- first time mothers are the most heavily targeted demographic on Earth (which is a problem for all of us)

"Specifically, we show how mainstream parenting communities on Facebook have been subject to a powerful, two-pronged misinformation machinery during the pandemic, that has pulled them closer to extreme communities and their misinformation."
-How Social Media Machinery Pulled Mainstream Parenting Communities Closer to Extremes and Their Misinformation During Covid-19, N. J. Restrepo, et. al., in IEEE Access, vol. 10, pp. 2330-2344, 2022, doi: 10.1109/ACCESS.2021.3138982. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9663381

This study examined 3218 advertisements from the two parenting magazines...Nearly one in six (15.7%) of the advertisements contained example(s) of non-adherence to American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations, ... Categories ranked by overall share from most to least include: non-Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved medical treatments, ...
-Compliance of Parenting Magazines Advertisements with American Academy of Pediatrics Recommendations. Pitt, Michael B et al. Children (Basel, Switzerland) vol. 3,4 23. 1 Nov. 2016, doi:10.3390/children3040023. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5184798/

Post Script:
No Resluts




Body Problems


Drunken solution to the chaotic three-body problem
Dec 2021, phys.org

This one is a real mind-bender.

Two objects orbiting each other like the Earth and Moon, can be precisely predicted. Newton helped with that one. Add a third, and all hell breaks loose. It's called the three-body problem, although it's also called chaos, and the best we can do is to say that the future trajectories of these bodies is essentially random. 

We know that at some point, the third body will be ejected into space. When, where, how fast, etc, we can't know; it's too chaotic. But these researchers model this using the theory of random walks (or the "drunkard's walk") --

This series of close encounters could be regarded as a drunkard's walk. Like a drunk's step, a star is ejected randomly, comes back, and another (or the same star) is ejected to a likely different random direction (similar to another step taken by the drunk) and comes back, and so forth, until a star is completely ejected and never returns (akin to a drunk falling into a ditch).

And --

Instead of predicting the actual outcome, they calculated the probability of any given outcome of each phase-1 [chaotic] interaction. While chaos implies that a complete solution is impossible, its random nature allows calculation of the probability that a triple interaction ends in one particular way rather than another. Then, the entire series of close approaches could be modeled by using the theory of random walks, sometimes called "drunkard's walk." 

So they use probability and work their way backwards from there?

via Technion - Israel Institute of Technology: Yonadav Barry Ginat et al, Analytical, Statistical Approximate Solution of Dissipative and Nondissipative Binary-Single Stellar Encounters, Physical Review X (2021). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevX.11.031020

Image credit: On the Way to Paradise, Dainbramage on Fractal Forums, 2017

Post Script:
A three-qubit entangled state has been realized in a fully controllable array of spin qubits in silicon
Sep 2021, phys.org

via RIKEN: Kenta Takeda et al, Quantum tomography of an entangled three-qubit state in silicon, Nature Nanotechnology (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41565-021-00925-0

Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Raised by Wolves


Off-world colony simulation reveals changes in human communication over time with Earth
Nov 2021, phys.org

Scientific reports from Russia are rarely on our radar here, so we are excited to see this:

In 2017 and 2019, two isolation experiments dubbed SIRIUS (Scientific International Research in Unique Terrestrial Station) were conducted across periods of 17 days and four months, respectively, in a facility in Moscow, Russia using international, mixed gender crews. These missions studied the effects of isolation and confinement on human psychology, physiology, and team dynamics to help prepare for long-duration space exploration beyond Earth.

The crews' communication with the outside world in these experiments not only diminished over time, but caused friction initially, and eventually resulted in cohesion.

"The crews in such missions tend to reduce their communication with mission control during isolation, sharing their needs and problems less and less," said Dr. Dmitry Shved, of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the Moscow Aviation Institute, as well as an author of the study.

"The rare bursts of contacts were seen during important mission events (eg landing simulation). Also, there was a convergence of communication styles of all SIRIUS crew members, and an increase in crew cohesion in the course of their mission. This happened even though the crew composition was diverse by gender and also cultural background, with pronounced individual differences."

"Our findings show that in autonomous conditions, the crews undergo psychological 'autonomization', becoming less dependent on mission control.

"Also, the crews in such conditions tend to increase their cohesion when crew members become closer and more similar to each other, despite their personal, cultural, and other differences. So, these phenomena look promising for future solar system exploration — or for any teams living and working in isolation on Earth."

via Russian Federation State Scientific Center, Institute of Biomedical Problems of the Russian Academy of Sciences and Moscow Aviation Institute at National Research University, Russia: Natalia Supolkina et al, External Communication of Autonomous Crews Under Simulation of Interplanetary Missions, Frontiers in Physiology (2021). DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.751170

(not the guitarist from Jane's Addiction)

Monday, May 9, 2022

Dataversal Sensitivity


Raspberry Pi system can detect viruses on other devices without use of software
Jan 2022, phys.org

A Raspberry Pi, an H-field probe and an oscilloscope.

Software generates electromagnetic waves -- which basically means that every piece of software has a unique fingerprint of wave patterns that can be used to detect it. But guess what, so do viruses. So as long as we know what the virus is beforehand, we can put its fingerprints (waveprints?) on file, and match against it. 

No downloading required -- this new approach only needs to be close enough to the computer to detect the waves, from outside the machine.

It's not directly related but this does remind me of the neural networked doppler vibrometer that can inventory all the mechanical equipment in your house by the minute, subtle vibration patterns they make on your ceiling. 

via Institute of Computer Science and Random Systems in France: Duy-Phuc Pham et al, Obfuscation Revealed: Leveraging Electromagnetic Signals for Obfuscated Malware Classification, Annual Computer Security Applications Conference (2021). DOI: 10.1145/3485832.3485894



Using artificial intelligence to find anomalies hiding in massive datasets
Feb 2022, phys.org

It's network science -- 

It learns to model the interconnectedness of the power grid using Bayesian-networked, normalizing flow, deep-learning model.

Rule-based systems, even empowered by statistical data analysis, require a lot of labor and expertise, but this is easier to apply in real-world situations where high-quality labeled datasets are often hard to come by. Their method is especially powerful because this complex graph structure does not need to be defined in advance — the model can learn the graph on its own, in an unsupervised manner [no labels required]. Their methodology is also flexible. Armed with a large, unlabeled dataset, they can tune the model to make effective anomaly predictions in other situations, like traffic patterns. They also want to explore how they can efficiently learn these models when the graphs become enormous, perhaps with millions or billions of interconnected nodes.

via MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab: Graph-augmented Normalizing Flows for Anomaly Detection of Multiple Time Series, Enyan Dai, Jie Chen. openreview.net/forum?id=45L_dgP48Vd

Saturday, May 7, 2022

You Too Can Live Forever


Worms fed a natural plant extract fatten, live 40% longer
Mar 2022, phys.org

I hear them lining up already.

A diet of the wormwood plant Artemisia scoparia made C. elegans live longer. You've got 12 months tops before Gary Null, Joe Rogan, and Fox News start selling the crap out of this stuff. 

via Louisiana State University Department of Biological Sciences: Bhaswati Ghosh et al, A fat-promoting botanical extract from Artemisia scoparia exerts geroprotective effects on C. elegans lifespan and stress resistance, The Journals of Gerontology: Series A (2022). DOI: 10.1093/gerona/glac040


Friday, May 6, 2022

Collective Behavior


Genetic changes can affect collective behavior
Oct 2022, phys.org

If you think pandemic lockdowns are crazy, just wait.

Genetic changes in individuals can not only alter the behavior of groups, but can also provide a methodological approach for testing existing models of collective behavior experimentally.

Researchers used the CRISPR-Cas9 technique to edit specific genes in individual larvae. In doing so, they were able to show that mutations of the genes scn1lab and disc1 altered the individual behavioral responses of the mutated animals to visual stimuli and, consequentially, the behavior of the group.

The zebrafish larvae with the scn1lab mutation kept a greater distance between themselves and others than their peers without the mutation. [I hear social distancing for example]

via University of Konstanz: Roy Harpaz et al, Collective behavior emerges from genetically controlled simple behavioral motifs in zebrafish, Science Advances (2021). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abi7460

Thursday, May 5, 2022

Neutrino Art


This sculpture from Japan is sensitive to neutrinos and lights up when they fly into it. Not sure how I ever came across this, but it does remind me of the radiation photographs by Peter Shellenberger. And for your own entertainment visual fascination, just run an image search for neutrino art. 

Tom Na H-iu, Teshima, Kagawa, 2010:
The colossal glass object standing in the middle of the pond surrounded by a bamboo grove is linked to the Kamioka Observatory (Super-Kamiokande) in Hida, Japan, by a computer, interactively glowing when it receives data of neutrinos generated by supernova explosions (the death of stars).

Watching this sculpture projecting the light of neutrinos - the soul of the universe - onto the water surface, we will feel that we are linked to the universe, or indeed that we are ourselves the universe, relating our living in the eternal ow of time to Tom Na H-iu.

The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Climate Remediation vs Climate Mitigation


In Science magazine, scholars call for more comprehensive research into solar geoengineering
Nov 2021, phys.org

They use the term "climate mitigation" which is interesting in comparison to the former "climate remediation" that is now going out of favor. These terms are used almost interchangeably in the industrial hygiene and environmental health profession, but to remediate means you can completely remove the hazard, whereas to mitigate means to make it less worse. 

Three themes presented in the papers:
  • Assessing and quantifying the costs and benefits of SG (solar geoengineering), and the potential for risk-risk trade-offs associated with its use.
  • Understanding the "political economy of deployment," including the incentives for unilateral deployment and the potential multilateral governance of SG decision-making.
  • Evaluating how SG may fit in a portfolio of policies, such as emission mitigation, and adaptation, to combat climate change, including closer study of public and expert perceptions of SG.

via Harvard University: David W. Keith, Towards more constructive disagreement about solar geoengineering, Science (2021). DOI: 10.1126/science.abj1587. 

Also: Joseph Aldy, Social science research to inform solar geoengineering, Science (2021). DOI: 10.1126/science.abj6517.

Keeping track:
Here's a couple Google ngrams charts comparing common and not so common climate-related words:


Post Script:
Perhaps more importantly, let us not forget that during the pandemic, the year 2020-2021 (the pandemic is one big year by the way, don't try breaking it up), the world's two foremost science fiction writers, unbeknownst to each other, both wrote a book about solar geoengineering, and with at least one of them being credited with creating a new genre called non-fiction science fiction and also cli-fi. 

If you're trying to do some existential mitigation on yourself prior to the planetary apocalypse, read these books:
Termination Shock, Neal Stephenson, Nov 2021 (Harper Collins)
The Ministry for the Future, Kim Stanley Robinson, Oct 2020 (Orbit Books)

Falsely related image credit: That's not a picture of a planet, but it does look like it. Instead, it's two thumbnails in a row, one about cells and the other about neutrinos. I started collecting the accidental positioning of successive similar thumbnails. It's the small things that keep you going while you watch the downfall of traditional science journalism in the face of high-frequency algo-powered news aggregator feeds. 

Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Kentucky Fried Consumerism and Cross Cultural Comparisons


KFC is the largest restaurant branch in China. This is a picture of the first KFC to debut in China, right near Tiananmen Square, in 1987. [no source on the image, taken from this site]

KFC faces boycott in China over meal toy promotion
Jan 2022, BBC News

Cultural comparisons -- this statement below, from the China Consumers Association, would sound outright ludicrous if made in the United States:

KFC "used limited-edition blind box sales to induce and condone consumers' irrational and excessive purchase of meal sets, which goes against public order, good customs and the spirit of the law", the state-affiliated CCA said in a statement.

This is literally the main business strategy of every publicly traded business in the United States -- to make people lose their minds (first) and then buy as much crazy and unnecessary shit as they can possible afford (I'm looking at you air fryers). I imagine this kind of admonition would not go over well in this neck of the woods.

Note, however, this outrage is mostly aimed at the waste of food that such panic creates:

The "Clean Plate Campaign" came against the backdrop of growing concerns about food security during the pandemic.

The campaign saw online influencers being banned from binge eating on social media platforms, while restaurant-goers were urged to not order more than they could eat.


Post Script:
KFC in China has its own Wikipedia page here.

Sunday, May 1, 2022

The Serendipitous Bubble Pics Post

Supermassive Supernova Explosion - K-J Chen from ASIAA Taiwan

This happened by itself. My archive of cool pictures are categorized alphabetically, and they just lined up like this.

Sweet Ant by René Redzepi

Test - Fractal Forums 2017

The Molecule Machine - Fred Zwicky - 2022