JayDee

joined 2 years ago
[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

You ever been on the inside of a cockpit?

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 14 points 1 day ago

It's about technological advancement and its augmentation of the human condition (think social media, phones, and the internet). There are people who resist these changes, often mislabelled as 'luddites' (the Luddites of the 19th century specifically opposed automation for its threat to jobs, but were reprehensive of all technology as a part of that).

This meme is just taking those who berate Luddites to their ultimate conclusion, which is a hive mind where all personal autonomy is lost, and it could be argued they cease to exist as a distinct individual. The flesh part of it is merely a means of making it more grotesque.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 9 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I believe it's just a view of humanity eventually evolving towards a hive mind that's a single consciousness.

It's not really new. The concept exists in sci fi. First case seems to be in 'The Human Termites' in David H. Keller's 1929 'Wonder Stories' (according to Wikipedia). The specific idea of the flesh nexus is mostly just an evolution of that.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 days ago

I understand your issue. No, don't hang yourself. You'd just get replaced immediately by another person 'just following orders'.

It's true that we're all virtually powerless in 'the machine', but as the analogy would put it, it is via all the 'powerless cogs' that the machine is able to crush and destroy at all. You shouldn't kill yourself, but instead should malfunction so as to damage the machine's ability to crush, or to change it's function entirely.

Education is one part, and the best education is realizing what you've been deprived by uncle Sam. You have no power because you've been deprived of what gives you power: privacy; community tied only to mutual uplifting instead of hobbies or less vital matters; a well paying job by which you could actually have meaningful effects on society around you; time unburdened by work or distraction, through which you can self-actualize and forge meaningful bonds; housing which you own, giving you security from undue raises in cost of living and protection from undue eviction.

The second part is community forming, mutual aid, and counter-establishment activism. That and not excluding others based on race, gender identity, homeland, or cultural differences (that's the rub for many). Essentially, rectifying your ancestors' mistakes is the same as uplifting ones own situation outside of society's predefined means, and uplifting everyone alongside you.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

That would be innovation, which I'm convinced no company can do anymore.

It feels like I learn that one of our modern innovations was already thought up and written down into a book in the 1950s, and just wasn't possible at that time due to some limitation in memory, precision, or some other metric. All we did was do 5 decades of marginal improvement to get to it, while not innovating much at all.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

I think it is spoof-resistant from the sound of it? You giving a valid proof-of-region via one of their circuit designs provides proof of your region but does not give your exact location, from the sounds of it.

I'll get back to you after I've read through it.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

We don't need a blockchain for that.

Having multiple servers which store file checksums would have much less overhead, would be easily repeatable and appendable, with no need for unnecessary computational labor. Linux mint currently uses the checksum process for verifying that an ISO downloaded is not altered in any way, and it can work for any file (preferably not humongous files).

Strive for K.I.S.S. whenever possible.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

404 not found lmao

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml -1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

This convo has gone on for centuries at this point. The Brain in the Jar, the teleportation conundrum, Thesius' ship, it's all already been covered over and over. people like you still keep crawling out of the woodwork thinking you know better than every philosopher that already waxed over this problem ad nauseum.

Your 'continuous self' is just as worthless as a concept. The idea that your 'sense of being the same person' is being held together by being apart of your plumbing just as much of an illusion. It's worthless.

To elaborate, you are not the brain. You are the observer, the thing which exists as a byproduct of the brain's processes, perhaps even a process yourself within. There's also plenty of times when you will lose time other than sleep, like concussions, getting blackout drunk, panic attacks, and after those times you have no memory of making decisions or acting in your own accord, but you were. You, the observer, were absent while the brain kept working. So where were you?

You act as though you're sure you are still the same observer as the one who went to bed. That is completely unsubstantiated. You may have just been born into your body when you awoke today, and will only have until your body falls back asleep again before you cease to exist, replaced by another process that thinks itself is you, another observer.

And if 'you' one day woke up in a digital world, like our own, it's you'd be none the wiser, because your self is simply a collection of processes and memories. It's arbitrary. It's all dust. There's not some special 'continuity' that keeps you alive somehow.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

What does maintaining continuity of consciousness look like to you? As in you are able to talk to your copy? And continue to live your normal life outside while your digital self lives their digital life?

Or are you saying you want the transition to digital to be seamless, where your digital self remembers laying in a chair, a quick pin-prick, and then they're in the digital realm?

Keep in mind, we have zero understanding of how you'd get the meat consciousness to transition into the digital consciousness - it's likely not even possible. The two options for copying are keep both alive or terminate the original somewhere before bringing the digital one online. There's many ways to do both, but those are the two.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

That continuity of function is arbitrary. In reality it provides people comfort in some idea of a soul but there's nothing suggesting it actually provides anything to the continuity of consciousness.

Between every loss in time, where you stop forming memories until you wake up again, you have nothing to affirm that your current consciousness is the same as your last waking period's. The only thing vaguely providing that illusion is your previously-formed memories, which would exist all the same on the digital mind, in theory.

[–] JayDee@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

Also Freetube has these features.

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