[Plura-list] Monopoly so fragile; Noble Lies; Big Salmon's aquaturf; Past Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results

Cory Doctorow doctorow at craphound.com
Mon Mar 29 11:53:57 EDT 2021


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Tomorrow night, I'm helping futurist Brian David Johnson launch his new
book, "Future You" at an event hosted by Powell's Books:

https://zoom.us/webinar/register/5716148038801/WN_psgDGchIRfaUQOJyvLnvzw

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Today's links

* Monopoly so fragile: Sharpening the contradictions in the Suez Canal.

* Noble Lies: "Experts" aren't experts on when to lie.

* Big Salmon's aquaturf: Cheaper for fish farms to smear scientists than
to clean up their act.

* Past Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results: Podcasting my
Locus column on why machine learning won't lead to artificial intelligence.

* This day in history: 2006, 2010, 2016, 2020

* Colophon: Recent publications, upcoming/recent appearances, current
writing projects, current reading

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🧑🏽‍🎨 Monopoly so fragile

A big boat stuck in the Suez Canal, catastrophically disrupting global
logistics - it wasn't just predictable, it was inevitable. For decades,
the shipping industry has consolidated into just a few companies, and
ships got bigger - too big to sail.

As Matthew Stoller points out, in 2000 the ten biggest shippers
controlled 12% of the market, today, it's more that 82%, and even that
number is misleadingly rosy because of alliances among the megashippers
that effectively turn them into one company.

https://mattstoller.substack.com/p/what-we-can-learn-from-a-big-boat

The Suez crisis illustrates one of the less-appreciated harms of
monopoly: all of us are dunderheads at least some of the time. When a
single person wields a lot of unchecked power, their follies, errors and
blind-spots take on global consequence.

The "efficiencies" of the new class of megaships - the Ever Given weighs
220 kilotons and is as long as the Empire State Building - were always
offset by risks, such as the risk of getting stuck in a canal or harbor.

Despite this, a handful of executives were able to green-light their
deployment. Either these execs didn't believe the experts, or they
didn't care (maybe they thought they'd retire before the crisis) or they
thought they could externalize the costs onto the rest of us.

Running a complex system is a game of risk mitigation: not just making a
system that works as well as possible, but also making one that fails as
well as possible. Build the Titanic if you must, but for the love of
God, make sure it has enough life-boats.

Monopolies are brittle. The ideology that underpins them is
fundamentally eugenic: that there exists among us superbeings, genetic
sports who were born with the extraordinary insights and genius that
entitle them to rule over the rest of us.

If we let nature run its course, these benevolent dictators will usher
in an era of global prosperity.

This is catastrophically, idiotically, manifestly wrong. First, even
people who are very smart about some things are very stupid about other
things.

Charles Koch took over his father's hydrocarbon empire and correctly
concluded that the industry was being held back by a focus on short-term
profits. He made a series of long-term bets on new production
technologies and grew the business a thousandfold.

Being patient and farsighted made Koch one of the richest people in
world history - and one of the most influential. He pioneered a kind of
slow, patient policy entrepreneurship, investing in a network of
think-tanks that mainstreamed his extremist ideology over decades.

And yet, this man who became a billionaire and changed the character of
global politics with his foresight has managed to convince himself that
there is no climate emergency. That patience, foresight, and cool
weighing of probabilities have gone out the window completely.

Smart people are often fools (so are regular people). History is full of
them. Take William Shockley, the Nobel-winning inventor of silicon
transistors who failed in industry because he became obsessed with
eugenics and devoted his life to a racist sterilization campaign.

Moreover, fools sometimes succeed. Take Mark Zuckerberg, who justified
his self-serving "real names" policy (which makes it easier to target
ads by banning pseudonyms) by claiming that any attempt to present
yourself in different ways to different people is "two-faced."

That is a genuinely idiotic thing to believe: presenting yourself
differently to your lover, your parents, your toddler, your boss and
your friends isn't "two-faced," it's human. To do otherwise would be
monstrous.

But even when monopolists aren't idiots, they are still dangerous. The
problem with Zuck isn't merely that he's uniquely unsuited to being the
unaccountable czar of 2.6 billion peoples' social lives - it's that no
one should have that job.

Monopolists all have their own cherished idiocies (as do the rest of
us), but they share a common pathology: the ideology, popularized by
Thomas Friedman and others, that "efficiency" is the highest virtue.

The whole basis for 40 years of tolerating (even encouraging) monopolies
is the efficiencies of scale that come from consolidating power into a
few hands, and the shared interests that arise from a brittle
interdependence.

Who would go to war with the trading partner that controls the world's
supply of some essential item?

This was always, predictably, a system that would work well but fail
badly. Clustering the world's semiconductor production in Taiwan made
chips cheap and plentiful, sure.

But then the 1999 Taiwan quake shut down all the world's computer sales.
There are plenty of examples like this that Stoller lists: a single
vaccine factory in England shuts down in 2004 and the US loses half of
its flu vaccines.

Despite the increasing tempo of supply-chain crises that ripple out
across the world, we have allowed monopolists to "take the fat out of
the system at every joint," setting up a thousand crises among us and
yet to come.

Bedding makers can't make mattress for want of foam. RV manufacturers
can't get enough "air conditioners, fridges, furniture" to meet orders.
Often, the pivotal items are obscure and utterly critical, like the $1
"flat steel form ties," without which home construction halts.

"For the want of a nail, the shoe was lost." We've understood that
tightly coupled systems have cascading failures since the 13th century.
"Resiliency" is inefficient - but only if you ignore what happens when
brittle systems fail.

Every monopolist *necessarily* shares an ideology that elevates
brittleness to a virtue. They must, because monopolies are brittle. One
foolish mistake, one ship wedged in a canal, one delusive denial of
climate change, and we all suffer.

Every monopolist believes in their own infallibility. They must, because
to have someone as fallible as me or you in charge of the world's social
media or shipping or flat steel ties is otherwise a recipe for disaster.

Of all the dangerous things monopolists are wrong about, this belief in
their own inability to be wrong is the most dangerous.


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🧑🏽‍🎨 Noble Lies

Last June, Anthony Fauci admitted that he lied when he told Americans
that cloth masks wouldn't stop covid spread; it was what Noah Smith
calls a "noble lie," told to prevent a run on N95 masks needed by
front-line workers.

https://thehill.com/changing-america/well-being/prevention-cures/502890-fauci-why-the-public-wasnt-told-to-wear-masks

The lie was repeated by the CDC and WHO, who reasoned that any admission
that cloth masks worked would lead people to conclude that N95s worked
better and then all the N95s would be hoarded and the relief efforts
would grind to a halt.

On balance, this wasn't a good call. Much of the ongoing controversy
about masks can be traced back to this. We didn't go from "don't mask"
to "must mask" merely because of evolving scientific understanding.

That shift is also attributable to a tactical choice to start telling
the truth. But once the public understands that experts sometimes
deliberately lie to them, it creates an epistemological void.

Most of us aren't qualified to understand the ins and outs of masking,
so we trust the process - the neutral, truthful adjudication of
different expert theories by public bodies and scientific institutions
that do their best to get it right and admit when they're wrong.

If you can't trust that, you're left to "do the research" on every
technical life-or-death question, from food safety to construction
materials to the software in the 737 Max. Even if you're qualified to
resolve some of this, no one is qualified to resolve all of it.

The noble lie is the most destructive of all, because it erodes trust in
the system, shattering the only mechanism we have for arriving at a
common understanding of reality.

To understand how this plays out over the long term, Smith points to the
40 years' worth of economists' noble lying about free trade. While
nearly all economists agree that there are net benefits to trade, there
has been a concerted effort to oversimplify those benefits.

https://noahpinion.substack.com/p/yes-experts-will-lie-to-you-sometimes

Within economics, experts agree that trade produces winners and losers,
and the idea that trade makes us all better off depends on the winners
compensating the losers. But from NAFTA to the WTO and beyond, this has
been missing from the public discourse on trade.

This has real-world consequences: "Workers displaced by competition with
China after its entry into the WTO in 2001 tended to be permanently hurt
by the shock. Some went on welfare, some found jobs for half what they
used to make."

https://www.nber.org/papers/w21906

As Smith points out, no one who extols the benefits of trade for a
popular audience says, "Well, we're also going to make millions of
people permanently worse off unless we create a social safety net that
transfers the benefits of trade from winners to losers."

Economists worry that the public's biases - against foreigners, markets
and the elimination of "make-work" jobs - made them incapable of
handling the truth about trade, so they just skipped over the harms -
indeed, they insisted there were no harms.

This...didn't work out well. The first nationally successful campaign
that focused on the truth about trade was run by a belligerent, racist
fool, who was able to leverage the public's distrust of the expert
consensus to become president and kill half a million people.

As Smith says, being an expert on economics or epidemiology does not
make you an expert on when you should lie.


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🧑🏽‍🎨 Big Salmon's aquaturf

Salmon farming is a catastrophe: the deep, rectangular nets full of
close-packed salmon have all the problems of any feedlot: rampant
pathogen spread worsened by flushing of tons of shit into the ecosystem.

Mature aquaculture operations acknowledge this: new operations build
solid enclosures, siphon off the waste and sell it as a valuable
byproduct. But for existing aquaculture giants, it's cheaper to go on
destroying the environment and driving wild salmon to extinction.

That cost-benefit analysis holds even when you factor in the expense of
smearing and terrorizing the scientists who explain how they are
poisoning the oceans and endangering a food-web that stretches all the
way from salmon to orcas.

The woman on the receiving end of that aquaturf smear campaign is
Alexandra Morton, a scientist whose Google results are a long run of
astroturfed articles accusing her of being some kind of shill for Big
Nature, a thing that does not exist.

https://www.alexandramorton.ca/

Today on Canadaland, Jessebrown interviews Morton, talking about the
weird, shadow-media empire that exists to make scientifically dubious
claims about the safety of farmed salmon and to question Morton's sound
science.

https://www.canadaland.com/podcast/364-fake-news-from-fish-farms/

Central to that campaign is Sea West News, whose founding editor, Fabian
Dawson, runs a PR consultancy that develops "issue-related and
fundraising campaigns and delivers measurable results for organizations
like the BC Salmon Farmers Association."

https://www.fabiandawson.com/projects

As Canadaland reports, the forerunners to Sea West News were a series of
Facebook posts by Dawson, including claims that Canadian
environmentalists and First Nations activists were a front for a
conspiracy of US monied interests.

"Money from America flows unabated to Canadian eco-activists and
disparate First Nations groups to disrupt everything from sustainable
salmon farms to pipelines"

Dawson reposted articles claiming protests against salmon farms were "US
funded...fake-news tactics of hired protesters."

https://www.canadaland.com/salmon-farm-industry-seawestnews/

Brown adds that Dawson benefits from federal subsidies in his role an
immigration reporter for the Local Journalism Initiative-backed New
Canadian Media.

The harassment that Morton faces is by no means limited to online
trolling. Her field research at Marine Harvest's massive farms has been
dogged by crew boats with blacked-out windows registered to a
consultancy called Black Cube.

https://alexandramorton.typepad.com/alexandra_morton/2018/08/

The Tel Aviv-based Black Cube are some of the blackest black-ops
corporate spooks in the world - if they sound familiar, perhaps it's
because they were the ones that Harvey Weinstein hired to stalk his
victims and neutralize them.

https://www.theguardian.com/film/2020/jan/30/harvey-weinstein-black-cube-new-york-times

Or maybe you're thinking of the time that the cyber-mercenaries at the
NSO Group (whose tools were used to entrap Jamal Khashoggi), hired them
to infiltrate the academic human rights research group Citizen Lab.

https://citizenlab.ca/2019/04/dubious-denials-scripted-spin-spyware-company-nso-group-goes-on-60-minutes/

Marine Harvest - who are involved in high-stakes ligitation with Morton
and BC First Nations - admits they hired Black Cube, but insist that
this is a *different* Black Cube.

Weird flex but ok.

Some of BC's salmon runs are down by 99.9%, and Morton makes a
compelling - peer reviewed, scientifically sound - case that this is the
result of aquaculture giants whose profits would be lessened if they
contained parasites and waste from their floating feedlots.

Despite this, Brown's interview with Morton ends on a hopeful note:
thanks to action from BC First Nations and the BC provincial government
and courts, the noose is tightening around companies like Marine Harvest.

Morton has just published NOT ON MY WATCH, a book documenting her
decades-long struggle to save the salmon and the ocean, which earned her
the appelation, "the Jane Goodall of Canada."

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.ca/books/623054/not-on-my-watch-by-alexandra-morton/9780735279667

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🧑🏽‍🎨 Past Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results

This week on my podcast, I read my November 2020 Locus column, "Past
Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results," about ML and AL, and
the fallacy that improvements to statistical inference will someday
produce a conscious, cognitive software construct.

Theory-free statistical inference can do some amazing things, but one
thing it absolutely cannot do is understand. While there's no widely
accepted definition of "intelligence," understanding features heavily in
all the different debates.

https://locusmag.com/2020/11/cory-doctorow-past-performance-is-not-indicative-of-future-results/

Adding more data or more compute-power to machine learning doesn't make
it capable of comprehension - no more than improvements in
horse-breeding will someday produce an internal combustion engine.

Here's the podcast episode:

https://craphound.com/news/2021/03/28/past-performance-is-not-indicative-of-future-results/

Here's a direct link to the MP3 (hosting courtesy of the Internet
Archive, they'll host your stuff for free, forever):

https://archive.org/download/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_382/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_382_-_Past_Performance_is_Not_Indicative_of_Future%20Results.mp3

and here's the RSS feed for my podcast:

https://feeds.feedburner.com/doctorow_podcast

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🧑🏽‍🎨 This day in history

#15yrsago Yahoo could stay in China and stop sending its users to jail
https://rconversation.blogs.com/rconversation/2006/03/yahoo_abominati.html

#15yrsago GOP hopeful’s photo of “peaceful Baghdad” was really Istanbul
https://web.archive.org/web/20060405225546/https://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1002274257

#10yrsago Senior London cops lie to peaceful protestors, stage mass
arrest
https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2011/mar/28/cuts-protest-uk-uncut-fortnum

#5yrsago Surveillance has reversed the net’s capacity for social change
https://journals.sagepub.com/stoken/rbtfl/1jxrYu4cQPtA6/full

#5yrsago As criminal justice reform looms, private prison companies get
into immigration detention, halfway houses, electronic monitoring,
mental health
https://www.ozy.com/the-new-and-the-next/private-prisons-fight-back/66970/

#5yrsago Cuba’s free med schools are the meritocratic institutions that
America’s private system can’t match
https://www.wired.com/2016/03/students-ditching-america-medical-school-cuba/

#5yrsago Top Trump strategist quits, writes an open letter warning
America about him
https://web.archive.org/web/20160328211452/http://www.xojane.com/issues/stephanie-cegielski-donald-trump-campaign-defector

#5yrsago Turkish government tells German ambassador to ban video
satirizing president Erdoğan
https://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/tuerkei-verlangt-offenbar-das-extra-3-video-zu-loeschen-a-1084490.html

#1yrago California's missing medical stockpile
https://pluralistic.net/2020/03/29/grifters-gonna-grift/#austerity-kills

#1yrago Andrew Cuomo is not your woke bae
https://pluralistic.net/2020/03/29/grifters-gonna-grift/#comparative-virtue

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🧑🏽‍🎨 Colophon

Today's top sources: Memex 1.1 (https://memex.naughtons.org/).

Currently writing:

* My next novel, "The Lost Cause," a post-GND novel about truth and
reconciliation. Friday's progress: 536 words (121016 total).

* A cyberpunk noir thriller novel, "Red Team Blues." Yesterday's
progress: 1031 words (43611 total).

Currently reading: Analogia by George Dyson.

Latest podcast: Past Performance is Not Indicative of Future Results
https://craphound.com/news/2021/03/28/past-performance-is-not-indicative-of-future-results/

Upcoming appearances:

* Launch for Brian David Johnson's Future You (Powell's Books), Mar 30,
https://zoom.us/webinar/register/5716148038801/WN_psgDGchIRfaUQOJyvLnvzw

* All the Teachable Things I Know About Writing, Apr 13,
https://www.changinghands.com/event/april2021/virtual-writing-workshop-cory-doctorow-all-teachable-things-i-know-about-writing

* Interop: Self-Determination vs Dystopia (FITC), Apr 19-21,
https://fitc.ca/presentation/interop/

Recent appearances:

* The Right to Repair Movement, Monopolies, and Solarpunk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmosdDCrL-4

* The surveillance state, digital monopolies, and why we should be
worried (Podsongs)
https://anchor.fm/podsongs/episodes/Cory-Doctorow-on-the-Surveillance-State--digital-monopolies--and-why-we-should-be-worried-eso43k

* Conspiracy Theories (Utopian Horizons):
https://soundcloud.com/utopianhorizons/conspiracy-theory-w-cory-doctorow

Latest book:

* "Attack Surface": The third Little Brother novel, a standalone
technothriller for adults. The *Washington Post* called it "a political
cyberthriller, vigorous, bold and savvy about the limits of revolution
and resistance." Order signed, personalized copies from Dark Delicacies
https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1840/Available_Now%3A_Attack_Surface.html

* "How to Destroy Surveillance Capitalism": an anti-monopoly pamphlet
analyzing the true harms of surveillance capitalism and proposing a
solution.
https://onezero.medium.com/how-to-destroy-surveillance-capitalism-8135e6744d59
(print edition:
https://bookshop.org/books/how-to-destroy-surveillance-capitalism/9781736205907)
(signed copies:
https://www.darkdel.com/store/p2024/Available_Now%3A__How_to_Destroy_Surveillance_Capitalism.html)

* "Little Brother/Homeland": A reissue omnibus edition with a new
introduction by Edward Snowden:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250774583; personalized/signed copies
here:
https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1750/July%3A__Little_Brother_%26_Homeland.html

* "Poesy the Monster Slayer" a picture book about monsters, bedtime,
gender, and kicking ass. Order here:
https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781626723627. Get a personalized, signed
copy here:
https://www.darkdel.com/store/p1562/_Poesy_the_Monster_Slayer.html.

Upcoming books:

* The Shakedown, with Rebecca Giblin, nonfiction/business/politics,
Beacon Press 2022

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"*When life gives you SARS, you make sarsaparilla*" -Joey "Accordion
Guy" DeVilla

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