Philo_and_sophy

joined 9 months ago
[–] Philo_and_sophy@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

So again, we are not facing inflation as much as corporate greed.

The thing is that any grace extended to these companies will be exhausted by the time we get to actual inflationary drivers (water and food scarcity, disrupted supply chain from crumbling infrastructure, etc.)

And since Democrats continue to gaslight Americans in service to these corporations, there is a broad opportunity to organize the disaffected

This lightly suggests that Google is somehow concerned over its complicity in genocide, but after numerous firings and actively silencing dissent...

fuck em πŸ€·πŸΏβ€β™€οΈ

Even if this did work, there isn't a woman on this planet who would trust a man to be diligent enough in their usage to prevent her pregnancy

Steins gate, 13 sentinels, etc. All of them contain romance, but they all have larger narratives that are on par with Fata Morgana

And if you want a political VN, consider Suzerain

...is this up vote farming?

The video immediately pivots to racist talking points of anti Asian sentiments in the black community

I didn't wait for the end of this ai generated propaganda video, so I hope I'm wrong

[–] Philo_and_sophy@lemmygrad.ml 15 points 3 months ago

We live in a classist society that pivots shame from those bourgeoisie individuals who silently benefit from hoarding opportunity to those who struggle and are exploited the most

Might be a time to really grasp the history of those who have struggled before you so that you realize are one part of a long lineage of human liberation

You might want to ask it to break it's work down into steps, then ask it to double check it's work for each step

Not perfect, but you'd be surprised how much asking the questions in the right way will improve performance

[–] Philo_and_sophy@lemmygrad.ml 11 points 4 months ago (1 children)

"DSA can support a Revolutionary movement"

Press X to doubt

Please read this with the intentions of maintaining this as illuminative disagreement rather than another inane internet argument

Historically, serfs are bound to the land, produce collectively for their own consumption and are "taxed absolute authority over that land, secures it through his own personal militia, and neither party significantly engages in commerce for their social reproduction.

I think we can agree that all of these criteria are confirmed with my initial point except taxation.

Ex. your data is bound to the service provider, users produce content collectively for their own consumption, a private militia via security teams, and that users and the corporation do not use commerce for social reproduction (at least from each other in this case)

Imho, I'd argue that the taxation is in the form of attention, which is also commodified by the corporation to sell targeted ads as per your point about surveillance capitalism

[–] Philo_and_sophy@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Respectfully, I think you're missing a great deal of labor value in the cloud.

One branch is the developers who are creating the cloud infrastructure and the algorithms that keep us hooked, the other branch is us as users (or serfs more accurately) who are training these algorithms endlessly via social media consumption

I don't know if you're in the tech industry or have exposure to the level of engineering as well as the value of processed data harvested from users, but the massive valuation of tech companies in Western stock markets vs the rest of the society should be a reasonable indicator

Both of these forms of labor power create the underlying value of cloud capital (as well as the all of the upstream workers, but they are not novel forms of value to your point)

Secondly, there seems to be a meaningful incongruence regarding influencers. I think we agree that their form of labor pales in comparison to the other labor inputs noted above.

Technofeudalism isn't concerned with influencers at all, and it's a red herring to suggest so imho

But to your closing point, while I agree this comes from a global north perspective, its consequences are universal in that serfs from the global South are tilling the land of cloud capitalism for free just as much as folks from the global north

[–] Philo_and_sophy@lemmygrad.ml -1 points 4 months ago (7 children)

...Are we following the same economist?

Yanis has been very clear that this stage of capitalism could still be considered capitalism, but he's specifically meaning this period as technofeudal because the relationship of worker to the mode of production has meaningfully shifted with the owners of cloud capital

Say what you will about capitalists owning the railroads, utilities, etc., I and most people reading this don't work for these companies for free and therefore give these companies egregious valuations

The workers under cloud capitalism (the other name for this shift) are better described serfs as they are not wage labor and will never be

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