Every site is trying to pull a Bonzai Buddy now.

“We need all your info for advertising, not you can’t opt out unless you make an account and give us your email. Oops, looks like I hid the opt-out under a subheader. Amazon is now profiling you.”

WE USED TO CALL THAT SHIT A VIRUS.

ITS EVERY. FUCKING. WEBSITE. NOW

“Hi I’m going to block this entire site until you give me your info, this is very cool and normal.”

Capitalism ruined the internet. The whole thing is malware now.

  • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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    11 months ago

    The English version doesn’t reference many things other than that book. The Russian version has a rather long list.

    but I’m not buying this pop history take about how bureaucrats were threatened by a cybernetic system that barely existed conceptually

    The whole history of USSR’s demise consists of various bureaucratic groups perceiving any change as a threat.

    • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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      11 months ago

      Vague historical truisms are not really useful to anybody.

      This was over 50 years ago. We’re talking about computers about as powerful as graphing calculators. Handing over planning to something like that is a ridiculous prospect. It wouldn’t have saved the USSR.

      The USSR had an overly hefty tribute going to administration and industry, industry was too focused towards military, this planning structure was inflexible for various reasons including external pressure. USSR applied too much external pressure in turn, it supported an unsustainable development policy where third world countries were supposed to be develop in the context of an imperialist financial system with USSR serving as a counterbalance. It’s because the USSR was so successful with parts of its planning that it was able to play this role IMO. Painting pretty broad strokes here.

      Maybe better computing devices would have helped them figure out their planning was not materialist, but semiconductors don’t appear out of thin air. These days require extreme metallurgy, precision engineered parts like X ray mirrors & the tables which move chips to carve circuits. They recycle hydrogen gas to keep impurities out.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        10 months ago

        We’re talking about computers about as powerful as graphing calculators. Handing over planning to something like that is a ridiculous prospect. It wouldn’t have saved the USSR.

        Let’s please not make such statements without some spreadsheets. They didn’t have to run DALL-E on those computers.

        That aside, those times had plenty of specialized (non-universal) counting machines, analog computers for engineering and planning purposes, and those were practically used, and in USSR too.

        It’s because the USSR was so successful with parts of its planning that it was able to play this role IMO. Painting pretty broad strokes here.

        N-no. It just had sufficient resources on start and, as you said, administrative inflexibility not to notice and not to react to the fact that it actually couldn’t.

        Maybe better computing devices would have helped them figure out their planning was not materialist, but semiconductors don’t appear out of thin air.

        You are overestimating the technology required to make such a system an improvement over what USSR really had.

        • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Let me give you a classic historical example of relatively good agricultural planning that still squandered its potential: irrigation with slightly salty Nile water destroying soil over time. Just a really broad analogy.

          Can’t be too good at industrializing the country and also incapable of basic planning to the point a graphing calculator changes everything. They were the reason we had a space race bruh

          • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            10 months ago

            They weren’t that good at industrializing the country. Large part of it had been done by foreign engineers, large part of heavy machinery still in operation in 70s had been bought in 30s for gold, and some “taken” from Germany after 1945 as reparations.

            And, eh, what a certain machine will or will not change requires technical arguments. I’m not making statements requiring such, you do.

            Also if I did say the opposite of what you say, that’d be sort of supported by existence, again, of computerized networked control systems in USSR not intended for economic planning and exchange.

            • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              Before we continue, you need to go read Wages of Destruction by Adam Tooze, a liberal historian who is still better than the dweebs you read.

              I’m not talking to someone who thinks the USSR needed to steal industry from the Nazis.

              The whole reason the USSR wiped the floor with them was their industrial production.

              Where did they get the tanks from?

              Did they buy all the tanks with gold lmao?

              • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                10 months ago

                than the dweebs you read

                How would you know whom I read really.

                I’m not talking to someone who thinks the USSR needed to steal industry from the Nazis.

                It obviously did. Only it was usually called trophies and reparations.

                Did they buy all the tanks with gold lmao?

                They did buy the “means of production”, the actual production lines to make those tanks, equipment of those, with gold.

                Also engineers who would instruct Soviet engineers.

                Mostly, there would be some industrial equipment really produced in USSR and really used, but Soviet heavy industries relied on pre-war American and German equipment till 80s or something. Well, no piece of equipment can last forever.

                Why are you arguing about that really? What’s so shameful in buying stuff? You think a mostly agrarian country can just build modern industries from scratch? Well it can’t.

                About WWII:

                They would receive industrial equipment through lend-lease as well, and materials, even steel. Not just cars or canned food or rubber.

                • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  Being able to organize those technology transfers while developing a backwards tributary state is awesome I hope we can agree

                  It’s the stalin sell grain buy factory build tank meme, I can’t find it

                • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  Why are you arguing about that really? What’s so shameful in buying stuff? You think a mostly agrarian country can just build modern industries from scratch? Well it can’t.

                  No that’s ridiculous I just don’t understand why that means they “weren’t that good at industrializing really” lmao

            • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              I bet you’re like three times my age and you still have Barnes and Noble browser history knowledge because you’re rummaging around for political talking points about communism like “they squandered all the resources of great mother russia, the tsar would be so sad” “they couldn’t industrialize, they bought all the equipment with gold, and were given it as pity after the USA singlehandedly defeated Hitler” like lmao

                • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  Also re: strawmanning each other for fun & educational purposes. I’m not mindlessly defending the USSR, far from it.

                  I just don’t see the further networking of communication centers in the USSR as being a solution to the problems with their planning.

                  They were aware of how they were straining the agricultural base. Hard to ignore food imports etc. Does that clarify my argument? But it would be flat out wrong to say the USSR didn’t push the boundaries of agricultural development, communal gardening, scientific achievements like growing fruit in Siberia for the lulz.

                  Again don’t take the pings as pressure, but claiming USSR industry is shamed by technology transfers is bizarre. This strikes me as similar to the arguments made to discredit Chinese industrialization lately, just to get even higher on my high horse.

                  The USSR was not able to withstand financial pressure from abroad. It was able to withstand military pressure. Some soviet military infrastructure is still whipping ass.

                  We’ll talk about the world buying Russian oil & all the pressure that entails in 6-8 hours 😴🥱💤

            • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              They weren’t that good at industrializing the country. Large part of it had been done by foreign engineers, large part of heavy machinery still in operation in 70s had been bought in 30s for gold, and some “taken” from Germany after 1945 as reparations.

              Delusional and shifting the goalposts to boot. They weren’t good at industrializing, they stole it, so it didn’t count 🤣. What are you basing this off of, I wonder?

              And, eh, what a certain machine will or will not change requires technical arguments. I’m not making statements requiring such, you do.

              eh smuglord

              You don’t talk to people. Nobody talks like this.

              I actually just gave you later examples of how computerized planning means jack shit in the face of external pressure, which is what the USSR was unable to withstand.

              • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                10 months ago

                It can be all of that simultaneously and it is.

                By the way, about German industrial equipment taken as reparations, that knowledge happens to be also part of my family history. My grandmother’s brother (EDIT:uncle) was stationed in Germany post-war and busy in that very process. Not that any Russian would argue with that obvious truth anyway.

                Also you are arguing in bad faith (everybody thinking a discussion can be perceived as a duel does).

                You don’t talk to people. Nobody talks like this.

                English is not my first language, Russian is. So solely by virtue of having grown here I already know a lot of things about USSR which you don’t.

                I actually just gave you later examples of how computerized planning means jack shit in the face of external pressure, which is what the USSR was unable to withstand.

                If by external pressure you mean half the world buying its oil …

                • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  You shouldn’t have learned Reddit English then. Yes you already mentioned you are a Russian speaker first I’m not trying to bash your grammar I’m just being a dick.

                  I don’t care about your family history, I’m disputing your ridiculous historical claim that the USSR was bad at industrializing and stole it all from Nazi Germany, and that technology transfers are “cheating” at industrialization. Your family history doesn’t even come up because again they industrialized a backwards tributary monarchy rapidly to the point the allies viewed them as a massive threat. You claim they were just handed industrialization when the rest of the world invaded them, & was barely diverted from pressuring them by WWII. Allied with the Nazis postwar to fight against them. Lmfao. I wonder why they had inflexible administration and high military spending.

                  Why would I be sending you cool books and movies and shit if this were a duel? I’m saying you’re making an ideological case that doesn’t line up with the actual history.

                  Trying to act aloof doesn’t mean anything when you’re spouting “dad history” straight out of the History Channel. What’s next, Hitler’s secret Microwave Weapon?

                • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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                  10 months ago

                  Again I’m totally down to exchange sources & I’m happy to explain like Tooze’s ideology and shit. Good book tho. Just disagree with him on a lot

        • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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          10 months ago

          Okay so I have to back up my statements with spreadsheets, but you get to use vague historical truisms. I love talking to people online about history.

          • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            10 months ago

            I’m just saying that USSR had systems capable of processing data necessary for centralized control of air defenses and nuclear missiles, in operation.

            And Soviet planning was sufficiently rough for computerization of that kind to be absolutely beneficial for it.

            Anyway, it’s not even about processing, which would require machinery, because that could be done in large part by humans still, it’s the idea of such an open exchange of data between institutions and ministries etc, which shot it down.

            A purely administrative reason.

            • voight [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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              10 months ago

              I think you are overestimating how powerful the computing systems needed to operate air defense back then were. Some of that shit was pretty analog. Cybernetic systems are all about inputs & outputs, more complicated than just needing processing power. Go watch Eyewar 😎🦾⚙️👀🤩🤖!!!

              Chile is a later example that was visibly not saved by interest in cybernetics either. US Chicago School economists pushed for an intervention to overthrow Allende, rape and torture as many people as possible, then their moronic laissez faire economics that don’t even understand what money are face planted. Chilean right wingers and modern Chicago Boys try to ignore that lol

              The thing abt it purely being lack of information transparency between different USSR organs resulting in inefficiencies doesn’t strike me as a great historical approach, more trying to fit whatever you’re talking about to a conclusion, in this case that bureaucratic obstruction alone led to the USSR being dissolved. The USSR was too good at industrializing.

              Again maybe seeing better statistics about agriculture may have hypothetically convinced them they need Maoism.

              Trying to boil everything down to a few interpretations of politics within the USSR is really missing the forest for the trees.

              Totally down to keep exchanging information about it long term as long as you don’t say anything weirdly reactionary and get booted from this instance.

              Can’t wait for your “N-no.” smuglord response because you don’t actually give a fuck about history, you want to keep inbox notifications at bay. Prove me wrong tho.

              You can always cite these examples you know instead of just linking to a Wikipedia article.

              You know Wikipedia is highly ideological and has major sourcing issues?

              Did you know many of your sources for information about the USSR are literally compromised by NATO intelligence? Simon Sebag Montefiore is in Jeffrey Epstein’s contact book.

              • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                10 months ago

                because you don’t actually give a fuck about history, you want to keep inbox notifications at bay. Prove me wrong tho.

                Why, you’re right, it’s a reflex.

                Simon Sebag Montefiore

                Not that guy, please. My classmate 12 years ago advised me to read him and I tried, this almost made her less cute for me.

                You can always cite these examples you know instead of just linking to a Wikipedia article.

                I can’t (don’t have time to look for sources), because it’s of the “common knowledge” area. I live in Russia, many people in my family worked in rather big projects as engineers.

                I think you are overestimating how powerful the computing systems needed to operate air defense back then were. Some of that shit was pretty analog.

                The precision of Soviet planning allows for use of analog computers.

                And I’ve said already in another comment that it wasn’t about computing power, there actually were computing centers for the purpose of planning belonging to different ministries and organizations, just they didn’t cooperate with each other, it’s about openness of data.