• BilboBargains@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    r/libertarian became the home for r/the_donald refugees. These people do not ride bikes and are immune to logic.

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      Isn’t there some PM or something somewhere that famously rides a bike everywhere in a car-centric country?

      The idea of Trump riding around on a bicycle amuses me. Like a circus bear.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Biden famously takes the train.

        Dubya likes mountain-biking (but that’s recreation, not transportation, and thus doesn’t count).

          • grue@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Hmm… being clipped in implies recreational/sport cycling rather than utility cycling, though.

            • limelight79@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              Yeah, just wanted to clarify.

              Though I have commuted on my recreational/sport cycling bicycle, with clips. (My wife and I work at the same place, and she would play softball some afternoons - so I’d often pack the bike in the car, drive in together, then I’d ride home while she went to softball.)

              • grue@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Yeah, I’ve got some Crank Bros pedals on my utility bike that are flat on one side and clip-in on the other, and have clipped in while commuting. I’m well aware of how weird I am, though.

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      4 months ago

      A very similar post was on fuckcars, or something related, a few days ago.

  • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    Been banned from there. Basically only right-lib or ancap views are allowed there, left-lib (me) need not apply.

    • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      You think that’s bad? Heh Libertarianism is a leftist ideology. Not at all liberal. They HATE us.

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        4 months ago

        Libertarianism (traditionally) is on the bottom of the vertical (authority) axis on a traditional political compass, if you want to use that. It is neither left nor right. It can be either. The people who have taken the name are on the right. They’re anarchy-capitalists who don’t want to be ruled by government but want to be ruled by capitalists. Anarchists, for example, are libertarian leftists, using the terms properly.

        • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          A libertarian is a Republican trying to sleep with a Democrat. All the bloody graphs in the word won’t change what people are.

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          The political Compass is a joke. It’s more accurate than just left or right. But libertarian isn’t a state that spans from left to right at the bottom. Libertarianism as it was designed is strictly a left ideology. Oriented about social Freedom Above All Else. Economic liberalism. Is an ideology predicated on complete economic freedom. Economic Liberals are not libertarians. Never have been. Never will be. They have diametrically opposed ideologies.

          The problem with economic liberalism is that it puts the cart before the horse. You cannot have a free economy without a free society. Economic liberalism doesn’t care about Society in general. Just the free market. And they figure that magically a free Society will somehow follow. It never has but that’s the magical thinking involved.

      • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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        4 months ago

        Those downvotes are people’s way of telling you that your comment is so comically wrong it’s not even worth a rebuttal. I agree with them.

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Please explain. None of you can explain how that is. You just pretend it is. You just redefined things to mean whatever you want ignoring their original meaning. I can point to actual facts and evidence. I can point to history. All you can do is claim something and not back it up. Do you honestly think Joseph Dejacque would be accepting or abide a group of delusioned liberal nuggets? Do you even know who he is?

          • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Golly! Look at that. The Liberals were so confident that they were right. I mean if I’m so ridiculously wrong shouldn’t it be easy to prove me wrong? Kind of by definition even? Makes you wonder why they aren’t trying. I’m sure they will continue to pyrrhicly down vote regardless.

          • frog_brawler@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            “Libertarian” doesn’t mean the same thing today that it meant in 2001; it’s a far departure from what it meant in the 1800’s.

            • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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              4 months ago

              Who cares what right wing “libertarians” think words mean? You can’t steal and shit all over the meaning of a word from the group that made it.

              • frog_brawler@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                Who cares what right wing “libertarians” think

                Those of us that use the English language on a daily basis.

                • DragonTypeWyvern@midwest.social
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                  4 months ago

                  Your name is now Dipshit MCGee. You will be referred to as such by everyone at all times, or I’ll shit and piss myself while whining about linguistic positions I don’t actually understand.

                  We’ve all agreed, the ignorant dumbasses of the world, and if you don’t you don’t understand language.

          • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            You do know definitions and usage change over time, right? That’s like comparing an Eisenhower Republican to trump. There may be a few similarities, but overall they’re wildly different.

    • Wojwo@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Libertarianism is for the philosophically lazy,or people born into a super conservative family and can’t handle the cognitive dissonance caused by realizing that liberalism is the more Christian political ideology. Source: I’m from UT.

      • sparkle@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        I completely concur, I had personal experience with this. In my case, rural Georgia.

        Libertarians are ultra-edgy conservatives who realized that typical conservative talking points are far too easy to refute and find contradictions in, and that being a conservative makes you look bad. They’re people who are close to understanding the ways which authorities/the establishment work against the people, but are too brainwashed with conservative/anti-worker/bigoted propaganda to be able to adopt a more mature worldview – as long as they participate in/agree with culture war garbage like transphobia and anti-feminism/anti-SJW propoganda, they’ll never be able to “agree” with any sort of leftist ideology. Plus they’ve never actually had taxable income so they really buy into all the false information & propoganda about taxes.

        The conservative -> conservative libertarian -> ancap -> social/environmental libertarian -> socialist pipeline is VERY real, and it’s usually 1:1 with middle school -> early high school -> high school -> new-fledged adult -> experienced adult, for suburban white kids growing up in a conservative area. The less you’re shielded from reality, the more you start to agree with leftist ideas (even hardcore brainwashed conservatives completely agree with leftism in practice as long as they don’t know it’s leftism).

      • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        It’s just a smokescreen for selfish/embarrassed economic liberals. This was the man that coined and defined Libertarianism. Right wingers need not apply. The modern “libertarian” party is a necrophilic oxymoron.

        • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          He was surely aware of the Mormons getting the snot kicked out of them by the Army right? If they couldn’t make a special rules enclave for their religion, what hope does an Anarchic commune state have? Some things are just better as thought exercises to apply rather than actual goals.

          • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Such a mishmash of words that have no business together anarchiv commune state?! What the hell even is that. That’s not at all what anarchists Etc advocate for. Anarchists further are not passivists. And anarchist can absolutely organize for their self-defense. There’s nothing ideologically stating they can’t. Though it is ideologically opposed to becoming a state in the terms of nation states.

            Do you know what anarchism is beyond angsty teens and pejorative colloquialisms of Chaos?

        • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          The crazy part is how much politics has evolved since Libertarianism was founded. Now it’s flooded with a bunch of right wing social agendas with the worst economic policies.

          Grover Norquist should be who you link to now. He’s the guy who hates government so much he wanted one so small he could drown it in a bathtub. He’s also the reason their economic ideas are so embarrassingly bad the party never gets taken seriously.

          • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            He’s just an acolyte of Milton Friedman and Murray rothbard. Not all that special himself. But yes all the evolved “libertarians” evolved backwards.

    • hydroptic@sopuli.xyz
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      4 months ago

      They’re just conservatives who want to be able to smoke weed and fuck children.

      Actually scratch that; conservatives already want to do the latter.

  • ParabolicMotion@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Very appealing, but when the home-work-home commute is over 80 miles per day, it just isn’t going to happen on a bicycle.

    • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Even my modest home-work-home is about 35 miles. Assuming safe road conditions for me to bike, it’s a full hour and a half one-way, with nowhere for me to lock up my bike once I’m at work, and mostly unprotected bike lanes (or just regular road!) 3 hours round-trip added onto my workday, effectively. I could definitely bike to get groceries, or shop, or anything like that in my neighborhood, but better public transit needs to happen for me to ditch my car in my city.

      • Liz@midwest.social
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        4 months ago

        Or “just” move closer to work. I wanted to move to within 500 meters of the front gate of my old job, but roommate considerations moved the ideal location out of biking distance. Problem is that housing is artificially limited, so it’s harder to find the ideal home location.

      • e8d79@discuss.tchncs.de
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        4 months ago

        Honestly that sounds very doable when considering distance alone. With an e-bike you could cut that travel time down considerably. Personally, I think I safe time by cycling to work even if it takes a bit longer on paper because I don’t need to spent time doing any additional workout. I hope the bike infrastructure improves where you live. Commuting by bike is usually much more enjoyable than driving.

      • Moneo@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Sorry I might be confused but, are you calling an 17.5 mile commute modest? Or just modest in comparison to 40 miles?

        Not sure if this is obvious to the two of you but a huge part of urbanism is ensuring people can be housed near their jobs. Nobody advocating for bike infrastructure wants people to have to bike more than ~5 miles to work.

      • ParabolicMotion@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I feel the same way. Where I live, we don’t even have bike lanes. We don’t even have sidewalks. It would take about 15 miles of bike riding on narrow, rural roads, with broken asphalt, and no sidewalks just to reach an actual grocery store. The weather is also a factor. The high for next week is about 108F. Oh, and when I did try riding my bicycle, five years ago, for about 30 miles to a major city, I was chased by dogs.

        If I lived in some place like Salt Lake City, or San Francisco, where I could combine a bike ride with major public transportation routes, I’d be fine, but that isn’t the case where I live.

  • Kyrgizion@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The last point is incorrect. Here in Belgium if they take your drivers’ license, you can be stopped on a bike as well. Anything except foot traffic really. Chances of getting caught are astronomically low, but it does happen.

      • bitwaba@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Pretty much the only notable thing about south Belgium is the massive number of US military personnel due to the NATO presence. So yeah, you can probably make an argument about it being an unofficial American territory.

  • SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    Yeah and if not a bicycle then a Libertarian should at least go with an EV.

    Gasoline requires requires far away refineries supplied with crude oil that comes even further away. The government needs to maintain a large military to secure foreign oil to keep the global oil prices down because that’s the rate everyone has to pay in a capitalist system. Even then oilt prices are subject to regulation by OPEC, which is an international organization that we don’t have any say in.

    Meanwhile an EV can be charged by a wind turbine in your home town or even a solar panel on your roof. I suppose the lithium for the battery comes for further away, but once you own that battery you own it. You aren’t dependent of oil coming from very far away every week. Sure you’ll eventually have to replace that battery, but it’s way less frequent than having to gas up. And if it came down to it you could probably produce a battery more locally without lithium if you’re willing to sacrifice range.

    The fact is a libertarian utopia simply isn’t possible with a dependence on oil. Oil is the most international business in the world and requires the most support form the government to function. But with EVs it may be possible to have everything needed for a society to function within a small region. You need big government to get a reliable supply of oil, but with EVs and renewable energy, big government isn’t as necessary.

    And yeah bicycles are even better than EV in terms of libertarian ideals.

    • DogWater@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      The sentiment is nice, but you can replace all the issues with oil you stated with lithium and cobalt as well. The replacement is like once every 10 or 15 years, but it costs 20k for a battery.

      If we can invent new, scalable chemistries that don’t rely on a scarce mineral that lives deep down in specific parts of the earth it wouldn’t be as easily translatable. But alas…not yet.

      I’m a big phev proponent, and battery production is still better than oil production when comparing pollution, but there would be a lithium cartel just like OPEC if oil didn’t exist and it had been batteries powering cars since WWII.

      • jj4211@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Note that if doing a LFP battery, then you don’t have the Cobalt issue. Also, as I could most recently find, prices on LFP are such that currently it could be about $7,000 for a pack that can get over 200 miles in a typical EV. CATL claims they’ll have it under $4500 for that capacity battery pack by the end of this year. Analysts are suggesting that 2025 might see that battery pack go under $2800 or so. If that comes to pass, then it’s a slam dunk that an EV will incur less cost over a decade than the ICE maintenance and repairs, even ignoring gas vs. electricity costs.

        The price has been coming rapidly down, after the shortages have subsided. Of course, whether the supply chain and pricing of the big automakers reflect this… well we have to see. However, Ford at least proclaimed they “managed” to save $8,000 cost per unit of mach-e, and most of that is likely just the battery pack getting thousands of dollars cheaper (they also redid the rear motor and other touches, but the bulk of that number is probably just battery cost reduction).

        • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Gonna sneak in here and mention that the real trick to EVs is to make them smaller. It’s fucked up that we’re building EVs to make more efficient SUVs. It’s not hard to improve on the fuel economy of an SUV, and it really just kicks the can down the road. EV SUVs get like 93MPGe, and we really need smaller, more efficient cars that get in the 150-200 range.

      • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Ding ding ding! We have a winner. If Joseph Dejacqe were still alive. So called right wing libertarians would be the ones he was railing against.

          • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Nah, Grover is a nobody and not all that closely tied to the Liberals masquerading as libertarians. He was plenty up Republican asses as well. Milton Friedman and Murray rothbard share most of the blame. Along with the Koch brothers.

            • afraid_of_zombies@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              Found it amusing when Rothbard came out pro-immigration restrictions and worked so hard to explain why it wasn’t racist when he did it.

              • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                And that’s always a good thing. I just wish they’d realize that before their mortality was before them and they had no chance to make amends. Lifetimes of damage are hard to un do.

      • yboutros@infosec.pub
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        4 months ago

        My ideals are left lib, and I hope that social structure becomes feasible beyond small populations in the future. That said, leftism is centralized economics. And if you centralize that, you wind up with authoritarianism.

        I hope trustless and decentralized protocols make up for the inefficiencies in the long run, we’re just starting to see technology catch up to make up for the inefficiencies of decentralized economics

        • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          That said, leftism is centralized economics.

          <john cena> Are you sure about that? </john cena>

          You should tell that to the Democratic Socialists, or the Social Democrats, or Marxists, or actual Libertarians, or anarchists, or communists. Literally I think the only group on the left. That is significantly centrally organized are Marxist Leninist. Every group on the right however depends on a central authority to make their economy fesable.

          Either this is projection, or you don’t know what left is. Which if you are a fellow American is absolutely understandable. They did a lot to dumb us down and make us afraid to look to any groups that weren’t capitalist or fascist. To help us meet our needs. That red scare shit is still prevalent to this day. Though the Marxist Leninist did hand them the talking point on a platter post world war II. The rest of the left just got smeared with it unduly.

          • yboutros@infosec.pub
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            4 months ago

            I said it’s feasible for smaller populations - but to be comparable to the size and strength of a world power AND have that sort of left wing economics how many examples can you provide that don’t end up needing authoritarianism?

            By the way, I have nothing against the left or authoritarianism. Some geographic regions lead to power dynamics where authoritarianism is just a more sensible form of management since constraints on necessary resources make it easy for militant groups to seize control.

            • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              Everything is feasible in smaller populations. That’s why government should generally be smaller and more granular. It is also why businesses should be smaller still.

              Just because insecure bullies make something impractical doesn’t mean it’s wrong. Nor does it mean that they are right.

              • yboutros@infosec.pub
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                4 months ago

                Yes, (most) everything is feasible in smaller populations (not nuclear maintenance for example). But without technology, they’ve been isolated, uncoordinated, and easily bullied by those larger organized authoritarian bodies. There are billions of people, and narcissists make up about 1 in 5 of those billions of people. A smaller subset lack basic empathy, and an even smaller subset are intellectually competent. Multiply whatever that probability is by billions of people, and you have a guaranteed concern for every single government on the planet.

                I agree with wanting smaller businesses as well. Capitalism isn’t bad (communism is state capitalism after all), but corporatism is the emerging problem from right libertarianism that most people conflate as problems with capitalism

                My point being isn’t that I don’t like leftism, they are my ideals. I just don’t believe we live in an ideal world, so practically I follow a different set of beliefs. Thay said, I do think leftism is compatible with libertarianism in a way that it can compete in the global arena. And that starts off with solving how a decentralized governmental body “identifies” one and only one person to their “identity” (otherwise you get Sybil attacks)

          • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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            4 months ago

            Regardless of how you do decentralized economy you need a strong regulatory body to keep it that way. Otherwise you just end up right where we are now again.

            • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              Yes and Humanity has done it for thousands of years without a large centralized National body. Anarchism is not without an ability to regulate. What do you think anarchism is?

              • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                We also didn’t have a better way of doing math than an abacus for thousands of years. If Anarchy could regulate then we wouldn’t need all these laws about minimum wage, not using children as disposable machine tools, and not putting rat poison in their food products. Clearly there is some need for a body that can do that. And at that point, You’ve got a large centralized national body again because you’re going to need to vote for who you trust to do it, they’re going to need the physical capability to do it, there’s going to need to be taxes to keep it all going, and oh look. We have a national government again.

          • yboutros@infosec.pub
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            4 months ago

            No one, there are already plenty of protocols defined for distributed computing and are made open source. In a hypothetical lib left social network, If you want different networks, that’s fine, you just have to make your own protocol. It’s like how countries shouldn’t have borders, or how computing platforms shouldn’t lock you in or out of others (take apple/Mac OS as an example, versus Linux)

            Then it’s up to individuals to verify the source code and choose to be a node operator. Not everyone needs to be a node operator, just enough on that the common skilled worker can partake should they need to

            If you don’t like the “rules of governance” of whatever network you’re in, that’s fine, go to a different one you do like, or make your own with your own rules. If it’s actually a better system of “decentralized digital government”, you’ll attract people into your Network.

            Consumer grade tech is more than capable of achieving this. You don’t need cpus with 2nm transistors (which are heavily gatekept by oligarchs), there’s plenty of open software and hardware protocols/designs to prove not only this concept works, but has been done before by now.

            The only problem in the past was with solving the identity problem and preventing Sybil attacks, but that’s becoming less of a concern for other reasons (which I could elaborate further on)

            • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              That works for social media like Lemmy but what about tech for trading goods or keeping the lights on? What about the Internet infrastructure?

              This a great idea to build off of and advocate for rights. But it’s as possible in reality as the classical liberal “state of nature”.

              • yboutros@infosec.pub
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                4 months ago

                So, I emphasized trustless and decentralized in social organizations. “It just works for social media” isn’t exactly addressing what I was getting at. For example, Lemmy has a bot account problem. All that freedom makes it harder to prevent that problem.

                But if you’re talking about how a government is a system of voting bodies that authorize some action given state (policy), and authority is delegated by some means - say, voting - then the botting problem of Lemmy is not just “something that doesn’t work”, it’s a critical failure which would enable fraud.

                So, when I brought up Sybil attacks, I was trying to avoid a long winded digression including arguments from Microsoft on Decentralized ID. But the point being, it can be decentralized. Policy is action given state but action is delegated to people inevitably. But when you vote, would you rather trust a person to count those votes or a trustless automated system?

                • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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                  4 months ago

                  I’m talking about you said you want to use tech “to make up for the inefficiencies of decentralized economics”. It’s not about making open source software that works. That’s easy. The question is who controls the wires? We can already see where ISPs and countries can check everything passing through their system. What’s to prevent someone from gaining control of a critical mass of physical nodes and blocking traffic from anyone who doesn’t pay them a “fee”?

                  You’re talking about the software but you’re forgetting that it all runs on hardware somewhere in a windowless building. Even if you decentralize that, you’ve still got the problem of gatekeeping. How long before each node requires .1 pennies per packet? How good is long distance trade going to be when just making the offer costs a significant amount?