For a computer related one: Are you prepared for your baby daughter to seize and swipe randomly at the old Android smartphone playing lullabies and randomly open the menu, open the "low disk space clean up" notification, select all files, and initiate deletion?
There's so many holes in your defenses that you never even consider until you have children.
For instance did you know that your recliners are extremely vulnerable to AN ENTIRE CUP of chocolate milk being dumped down them into their dense machinery?
Parawork is work that happens outside of a formal workplace, and in particular some modern companies (like Facebook) are almost entirely built around capturing profit from parawork rather than traditional work.
I've been thinking about many things with this sort of theme recently.
I'm pretty good at playing the commerce game.
My mother is a successful small business owner and I helped her business get off the ground when it was in the startup phase. We talked shop for years.
The formula isn't actually that hard to understand, the difficult part is executing on it because you will have to deal with repeated failure, you will have to do things you don't want to do, and it's really high commitment.
Wife is currently at an art/craft convention. Wife: *Long story about how teacher at a class that was extremely privileged and mildly incompetent, but owns a valuable business resource and how my wife ended up talking with them anyway* Wife: Everything I've read about this says I should be forming relationships, but I really don't want to be friends with this person. Me: They mean business relationships. *Thinks about my own professional life* Actually, think of it more like forming alliances.
Since social media like Mastodon was built in the image of Twitter, it takes the orientation around extracting the parawork of the network's users along with it unintentionally, and the users bring the commercial ethic they've been taught by our society (and which drives them to participate in parawork without compensation) along with them as well.
One of the things I like about Fedi/Mastodon is that it's a social media platform where the main beneficiaries of my parawork on the platform are the other users of the network.
If I put my writings out on a more mainstream social media platform, then they'd be heavily exploited for financial gain of large companies.
I mean, I'm sure they're scraping this for their own gain anyway (and of course Facebook has Threads to exploit Fedi), but my parawork is not ONLY supporting a closed platform.
Anyway, my main point is that money doesn't have to be explicitly exchanging hands for someone to end up playing this commercial development game.
You can seek out and build something of value for others with or without being compensated for it, and most of us have been heavily trained to do this.
...and in fact, there's so much of this valuable parawork going on all the time that trillion dollar companies are built on top of it.
Do you want your account to be a SUCCESS? Well, you'll need to NETWORK. You'll need to write CONTENT that ENGAGES other users. You need to be CONSISTENT and build your BRAND. Find your consistent followers, your FANS and keep them hooked.
What's changed is that in my personal life I'm exhausted all the time right now by my workload.
As a result I'm unable to keep up with the stuff I built earlier and it inevitably has decayed, that's just the nature of the platform.
It's a less fun/engaging experience once you've fallen off the treadmill.
This was initially somewhat distressing, but then at some point veered into "why did I even build this in the first place?" Did I do this simply because that's what I was trained to do?
What I'm struggling with right now is re-evaluating this.
Up until recently, I've always felt like this is a good thing actually. Why object to people getting engaged by seeking out and creating value?
I mean, the parasitic nature of the big closed platforms is clearly negative, but fixing that is just a matter of getting people producing value in open platforms and cultures, right?
File transfer on open source: * rsync over SSH, it's fast, efficient, secure, unlimited, and you can transfer anywhere you have a user account available * If it's text, you can also use git and get even more efficiency and detailed historical tracking and restore
File transfer on proprietary systems: * AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
Son: *Is playing beam.ng, a car physics simulator* This bus needs gas in the tank. Me: *Looks over, the bus is a twisted wreck with the engine thrown free of the now spiral shaped bus body* I think this bus has bigger problems than an empty gas tank... Son: So anyway, help me find a gas station so I can fill the tank.
One question I have left unsettled since my libertarian days is the specific role (if any) the state should play in our lives. The natural progression of such a leftward shift from libertarianism would be towards anarchism, but I just wasn't sure how realistic it was.
I've been slowly settling into a belief that the key is to have a minimally complicated state. Along with other important attributes, such as democracy and sentient (human) rights, I think this will lead to the best outcome.
I just saw Ted Cruz giving a speech doubling down on the genocide in Gaza and calling Biden a traitor for merely threatening to cut off aid to Israel if Israel invades Rafah...
Java developer by day, Julia developer by night.Amateur philosopherSometimes funny...Working DadControversial things about me:Everyone: transhumanist, into AI (art)Right-wing: polyamorous (married), agnostic atheist, leftist, working class consciousnessLeftist: corporate drone by day, loyal citizen of the US (but a serious reformer), former libertarianI hope you can look past all that though, we people need to stick togetherLives with: Wife, T (son), and A (daughter).