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In Search Of …, Intelligent Life On The Internet |
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| Milton Roe |
Thu 3rd April 2008, 3:58am
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Known alias of J. Random Troll
        
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QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 3rd April 2008, 2:36am)  Another thing I've been wondering about lately is this — When exactly, and how exactly, did people go from being the kinds of footloose and fancy free, wild and wooly web surfers that I used know in the old days to locking themselves up in rotten stinking stifling rat cages like Wikipedia? What is that about? Jonny  Internet Explorer. You can't go anywhere on the net these days with it, without your computer getting herpes. Weren't you talking about Fromm's The Fear of Freedom?  Maybe that was somebody else. If you dump a cat off in a strange room in a strange house, will it sit in the middle of the floor and give you the evil eye? (I have a cat that will, but it's got attitude, and I think it's possessed). Most won't. Metaphorically, nor will most people. Where do you get your gas? Do you find yourself using the same two stations, over and over? And the same PUMP in that station, even? Be honest. Exploration and investigation is hard work and takes wetware processor power better used for thinking about your income tax return.
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| Jonny Cache |
Thu 3rd April 2008, 4:44am
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τα δε μοι παθήματα μαθήματα γέγονε
        
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QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Wed 2nd April 2008, 11:58pm)  QUOTE(Jonny Cache @ Thu 3rd April 2008, 2:36am)  Another thing I've been wondering about lately is this — When exactly, and how exactly, did people go from being the kinds of footloose and fancy free, wild and wooly web surfers that I used know in the old days to locking themselves up in rotten stinking stifling rat cages like Wikipedia? What is that about? Jonny  Internet Explorer. You can't go anywhere on the net these days with it, without your computer getting herpes. Weren't you talking about Fromm's The Fear of Freedom?  Maybe that was somebody else. If you dump a cat off in a strange room in a strange house, will it sit in the middle of the floor and give you the evil eye? (I have a cat that will, but it's got attitude, and I think it's possessed). Most won't. Metaphorically, nor will most people. Where do you get your gas? Do you find yourself using the same two stations, over and over? And the same PUMP in that station, even? Be honest. Exploration and investigation is hard work and takes wetware processor power better used for thinking about your income tax return. Fromm comes up from time to time. I keep being reminded of Alan Watts's's's' Wisdom of Insecurity. They just don't make 'em like that anymore. I remember that story about the Tar Baby from childhood … And don't forget Hermit Crabs … Jonny This post has been edited by Jonny Cache: Thu 3rd April 2008, 4:45am
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| Somey |
Thu 3rd April 2008, 6:06am
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Can't actually moderate
        
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QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Wed 2nd April 2008, 10:58pm)  Where do you get your gas? Do you find yourself using the same two stations, over and over? And the same PUMP in that station, even? Be honest. Exploration and investigation is hard work and takes wetware processor power better used for thinking about your income tax return. I suspect there's more to it than just brand-loyalty, force of habit, and fear of malware - though the all of those things are certainly involved... Participation in the building of a site creates (pseudo-)intellectual capital, even if the site isn't really a pseudo-academic enterprise. From the perspective of the site operator, MediaWiki's most significant feature is its ability to give people a means of easily displaying and measuring their intellectual capital, in the form of contribs pages, blue links, and so on. (IOW, if you're listing the articles you've written on your user page and most of them are red links, then your intellectual capital isn't doing so good.) Constant reminders of the amount of time and effort expended on the website already are crucial to getting people to keep coming back. There's also the matter of giving people a means to spend their intellectual capital in such a way as to win arguments, obtain greater privileges, develop political alliances, and so on. MediaWiki isn't as good at that as it could be, but it's good enough. If anything, it's to the credit of the MediaWiki developers that they don't add additional Facebook-like social-networking features, since then things would get much, much worse. (Of course, they generally haven't been adding any useful features whatsoever, so you can't give them that much credit.) You can't just pass it off as the effective use of software to encourage addictive behavior - it's probably true that there's some degree of addictive tendency in everyone, but it takes an extremely cleverly-designed system to hook people who are, by and large, smart enough to know better.
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| Jonny Cache |
Thu 3rd April 2008, 12:44pm
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τα δε μοι παθήματα μαθήματα γέγονε
        
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QUOTE(Somey @ Thu 3rd April 2008, 2:06am)  QUOTE(Milton Roe @ Wed 2nd April 2008, 10:58pm)  Where do you get your gas? Do you find yourself using the same two stations, over and over? And the same PUMP in that station, even? Be honest. Exploration and investigation is hard work and takes wetware processor power better used for thinking about your income tax return.
I suspect there's more to it than just brand-loyalty, force of habit, and fear of malware — though the all of those things are certainly involved … Participation in the building of a site creates (pseudo-)intellectual capital, even if the site isn't really a pseudo-academic enterprise. From the perspective of the site operator, MediaWiki's most significant feature is its ability to give people a means of easily displaying and measuring their intellectual capital, in the form of contribs pages, blue links, and so on. (IOW, if you're listing the articles you've written on your user page and most of them are red links, then your intellectual capital isn't doing so good.) Constant reminders of the amount of time and effort expended on the website already are crucial to getting people to keep coming back. There's also the matter of giving people a means to spend their intellectual capital in such a way as to win arguments, obtain greater privileges, develop political alliances, and so on. MediaWiki isn't as good at that as it could be, but it's good enough. If anything, it's to the credit of the MediaWiki developers that they don't add additional Facebook-like social-networking features, since then things would get much, much worse. (Of course, they generally haven't been adding any useful features whatsoever, so you can't give them that much credit.) You can't just pass it off as the effective use of software to encourage addictive behavior — it's probably true that there's some degree of addictive tendency in everyone, but it takes an extremely cleverly-designed system to hook people who are, by and large, smart enough to know better. Yup, I think that Somey is on the right trek here. It's like the orbits that e-lecturons fall into on their lazy-fairy low-energy days. They gravitate — excuse the mixed meta-φorce — to sites where they get to feel like Least Action Heroes in the Catatonic Imperative Crusade of the Grand Unifixation Church (GUC) without hardly lifting more than a singular finger at a time. And, not indecentally, it's just the sort of non-motive farce that feeds into that favorite hook of con artists everywhere — the Fantasy Of Getting Aught For Naught (FOG∃4Ø). Jonny This post has been edited by Jonny Cache: Thu 3rd April 2008, 12:52pm
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