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FuturistSpeaker.com – The personal blog of Futurist Thomas Frey » Blog Archive » The Hornet Nest Theory
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The core premise of the Hornet Nest Theory is that wherever this is allowed to happen, it is a clear sign of system failure.
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Any municipality that develops the moniker of “speed-trap city” is putting their local businesses at a distinct competitive disadvantage. Each consumer represents a self-guided revenue stream, and given the freedom to self-direct, their decisions will be heavily influenced by ”where their money is wanted and where they feel well-treated”.
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The New Socialism: Global Collectivist Society Is Coming Online
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The frantic global rush to connect everyone to everyone, all the time, is quietly giving rise to a revised version of socialism.
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Instead of gathering on collective farms, we gather in collective worlds. Instead of state factories, we have desktop factories connected to virtual co-ops. Instead of sharing drill bits, picks, and shovels, we share apps, scripts, and APIs. Instead of faceless politburos, we have faceless meritocracies, where the only thing that matters is getting things done.
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Biting the hand that feeds. Or why all firms are snakes. « husdal.com
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- Partnerships do not exist, varying collaborative relationships do.
- Organisations do not trust each other, decisions are based on risk assessment.
- A relationship is a process, not an entity.
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dynamic here does not mean disbanding old relationships and forming new ones. rather does it mean to take existing relationships to other levels of dependency and certainty. As Cousins says in one of his final statements: ‘The issue is about choosing the correct relationship process to deliver the desired output.’
Political Crisis Deepens in Britain
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Now there is a deluge of non-stop revelations about MPs claiming money for second mortgages, swimming pool maintenance and all manner of luxuries, while they berate the unemployed for scrounging off the state.
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But to press on with their austerity cuts immediately will not save them either. It will push the working class onto the industrial plain and unleash a new stage in the class struggle in Britain
CULT OF THE DEAD COW: Road Trippin'
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Ten years ago I never would have headed cross country without an Atlas in the car. Now I set out cross country with no real sense of direction or plans ... just blind faith in a $99 device that magically guides (and occasionally scolds) me.
The Atlantic Online | May 2009 | The Quiet Coup | Simon Johnson
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As masters of their mini-universe, these people make some investments that clearly benefit the broader economy, but they also start making bigger and riskier bets. They reckon—correctly, in most cases—that their political connections will allow them to push onto the government any substantial problems that arise.
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foreign investors could not have been more pleased; all other things being equal, they prefer to lend money to people who have the implicit backing of their national governments, even if that backing gives off the faint whiff of corruption.
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Thwarting an Internal Hacker
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It's not possible to design a system without trusted people.
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In the end, systems will always have trusted people who can subvert them. It's important to keep in mind that incidents like this don't happen very often; that most people are honest and honorable. Security is very much designed to protect against the dishonest minority. And often little things -- like disabling access immediately upon termination -- can go a long way.
Three years undercover with the identity thieves | IDGNS | January 20, 2009 | Robert McMillan |
Backreaction: This is your economy on drugs
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Research has shown the reward circuit is not only a direct response that leads to the production of endorphins responsible for happiness. It is also coupled to the hippocampus, our learning and memory center, and the prefrontal cortex, relevant for our thinking and planning. -
Monetary reward in a gambling-like experiment produces brain activation very similar to that observed in a cocaine addict receiving an infusion of cocaine,
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Adventures in Ethics and Science: Peer review and science.
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Peer review and refereed journals are a good check on science, but they do not define the essence of science. Science is, at its core, a matter of attitude and procedure. The essence of science is looking at the world and saying "Huh. I wonder why that happens?" And then taking a systematic approach to figuring it out.
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To really trust our observations, they need to be observations that others could make as well. To really buy our own explanations for what we observe, we need to be ready to put those explanations out for the inspection of others who might find some flaw in them, some untested assumption that doesn't hold up to close scrutiny.
World Bank Besieged By Hackers, Or Not -- Network Security -- InformationWeek
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Citing unnamed inside sources, supported by World Bank internal memos, Fox News claims that servers in the World Bank's sensitive treasury unit were compromised by spyware in April and that unauthorized people had complete access to the rest of the bank's network for nearly a month in June and July.
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