Diary (January 29, 2021): Difference between revisions
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=== Cory Doctorow on stock markets === | === Cory Doctorow on stock markets === | ||
[[File:Cory Doctorow on stock markets.png|thumb|Cory Doctorow on stock markets.]] | |||
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First you need to understand the underlying mechanics of the story. Stock markets are fundamentally a way of making bets, including bets on the outcome of other peoples' bets, and bets on the outcomes of THOSE bets. | First you need to understand the underlying mechanics of the story. Stock markets are fundamentally a way of making bets, including bets on the outcome of other peoples' bets, and bets on the outcomes of THOSE bets. |
Revision as of 06:10, 29 January 2021
Online diary of Karl Jones for Friday January 29, 2021.
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Diary
Gnomon Chronicles origin story
My answer to the social media problem is, everything I write that I truly value, I post to the Gnomon Chronicles.
It's fair to say that the Chronicles have mutated several times.
My original intent was to use MediaWiki as a kind of linked-up word processor, a medium where I would draft fiction for later print publication.
Soon I realized that I like the wiki as a medium for its own sake, and began treating the wiki as the vehicle of my fiction.
Then, since I was making absurd fictional statements about real historical people, I added (nonfiction) pages, which I treat as Wikipedia-like, straight-up encyclopedic, no spoofing.
*Then* after a while I started writing work that is "non-fictional" in the sense that I am writing soberly about real-world events — say a movie review. I categorized these as fictions, and not (nonfiction), on the principle that by "fiction" I mean that I wrote it, the words are in my personal voice, and not the Encyclopedic voice.
From there it was a short step to essays, poetry, autobiography, and pretty much everything I might care to say in public.
- Comment @ Facebook
Cory Doctorow on stock markets
First you need to understand the underlying mechanics of the story. Stock markets are fundamentally a way of making bets, including bets on the outcome of other peoples' bets, and bets on the outcomes of THOSE bets.
All this complexity creates lots of exploitable opportunities. Some of these opportunities are considered legitimate and are given respectable names like "arbitrage." Others are considered illegitimate, and are called disreputable things like "stock manipulation."
A hypothetical Martian observing all this through a telescope could not tell you which kinds of bets were honest and which were dishonest, because the difference isn't about any objective standard, but rather, about power.
The strategies of powerful people are legit, while the strategies of their would-be dethroners are not legit. Sometimes, even outright frauds are OK if they're done by people with enough power.
If your scam pays out quickly enough, you can sometimes parlay the resulting cash into retrospective legitimization, so even the strategies of the out-group can end up being retconned as legit, if they're successful enough.
That's why Amway isn't illegal: Betsy DeVos's father-in-law was simultaneously the boss of Amway and head of the US Chamber of Commerce, and Gerry Ford was his Congressman, who was then elevated to president in time to legalize its business model.
- Post by Cory Doctorow @ Twitter