Ran Prieur http://ranprieur.com/#9a417fe513f58988c3b5b1e84cfc57397194a79b 2025-11-25T13:30:16Z Ran Prieur http://ranprieur.com/ ranprieur@gmail.com November 25. http://ranprieur.com/#11478fc5d447d3cf6746886c51ef66e6471903fc 2025-11-25T13:30:16Z November 25. A few happy links. From Ask Reddit, What's a company that didn't succumb to enshittification? The thread includes this amazing long comment about what it's like in Morton salt mines.

An archive of a NY Times piece, Iowa City Made Its Buses Free. Traffic Cleared, and So Did the Air.

And a book recommendation. The Book of I by David Greig just came out this year. It's a short historical novel about three people living on a tiny Scottish island after a Viking raid in the 800s.

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November 21. http://ranprieur.com/#6a1aeeeb20df72ab90088de77006f06f83b13660 2025-11-21T21:50:04Z November 21. I've been meaning to make a political playlist, and I finally put it together. As usual I tried to favor obscurities: for Neil Young I didn't pick Ohio or After The Gold Rush, but Welfare Mothers and the de-censored This Land Is Your Land. But I did pick some very popular songs, including Iron Maiden's Run To The Hills, Bob Dylan's Hurricane, and Kaiser Chiefs' I Predict A Riot. Most obscure are Metropes by Orphans and Vandals, Eleanor McEvoy's superior version of Eve of Destruction, and a beautiful song about social breakdown, Johanna Rose's Eat the Rich. I found five different original songs with that title, and decided to use four of them (sorry Aerosmith) so that's what I called the playlist: Eat the Rich

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November 19. http://ranprieur.com/#c2b60c238c3b8fa8186cee31be64be5033c12590 2025-11-19T19:30:47Z November 19. How to Stay Sane in a World That Rewards Insanity. This is similar to the link I posted Monday, in that the first half is a good explanation of a problem, and the second half is unremarkable advice about what to do about it. The problem:

We talk a lot about polarization as if it were a disease that infected society, but we're missing a key data point: polarization is a growth hack, and it works. It delivers results. When you pick a side and commit to it wholly and without reservation, you get things that moderate positions cannot provide. You get certainty in an uncertain world. You get a community that will defend you. You get a simple heuristic for navigating complex issues.
...
You end up in a world where changing your mind becomes impossible because you've built your entire identity around being right. Where admitting uncertainty is social suicide. Where every conversation is a performance for your tribe rather than an actual exchange of ideas.

The author doesn't mention how this is all being hyper-charged by social media and the money magnet of Silicon Valley. A key comment from the Hacker News thread: "I found it weird that this person has multiple friends that were able to 'make bank' by having polarizing opinions. I know a ton of folks with polarizing opinions and none of them are monetizing it. What kind of world is this author living in where their social circle includes so many influencers that are cashing in on social media?"

From the post: "The writer who says 'this issue has nuance and I can see valid concerns on multiple sides' gets a pat on the head and zero retweets." You know how else you can get zero retweets? Stay off of fucking Twitter. But I'll admit, I went down this road myself back in the days of web 1.0, writing essays with the goal of being inspiring and slaying dragons. I got hundreds of dollars in donations, and there were two or three different online communities based on my writing, that all became toxic. People got mad at me for not being the person in their head, and at some point I decided to start filtering my audience, intentionally writing stuff that's less inspiring and harder to think about. This decision was easier because I have a psychological aversion to being fawned on and sucked up to. It makes me feel dirty, otherwise I might have become a cult leader. But here's my advice: Practice being less of a warrior and more of a scout. Instead of trying to beat the enemy, try to actually figure stuff out.

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November 17. http://ranprieur.com/#241927af1554238f98b3b5345a446519454a5575 2025-11-17T17:10:45Z November 17. Continuing on bad technology, thanks Roger for this link, An open letter to all those building AI in 2025. The first half is a concise critique of technological progress as we know it. For more of this kind of thinking, read Ivan Illich.

Long gone are the days when the Internet was a fun novelty that we could choose to use or not. We don't experience childlike joy each morning when we see it up and running, but we certainly panic if it's down. That's because the Internet has sunk into the foundations of our life as infrastructure, without which we are now disabled. It doesn't guarantee security, or - in itself - make any of us joyful or empowered. Having the Internet, or electricity, or a smartphone, simply means each of us gets to fight another day, and to not be left behind by all the others trying to claw their way to illusory security in an ever-changing market.

Loosely related: Seattle, like NYC, has just elected a young progressive mayor. Her name is Katie Wilson, and the weirdest thing about the campaign was that the incumbent made an issue of Wilson's mother paying for daycare for Wilson's daughter. It's weird because under what value system is this bad? Not conservatism. Conservatives love the family and are all about family members helping each other out, so that the government doesn't have to. Meanwhile liberals want the government to help people out so that we're not dependent on family.

What value system is opposed to both government, and the family, helping people out? Capitalism, because if we're all atomized individuals, we all have to work in the Amazon warehouse in the holy project of sucking all the money to the top of the pyramid and calling it growth.

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November 14. http://ranprieur.com/#9b277ca6a5526e4499bc7549a226693266cf5379 2025-11-14T14:41:50Z November 14. Quick update on enshittification: I decided to pay five bucks for DeepAI pro, and it's worse. It unlocks the "Genius" level which makes the images prettier but not more interesting, and I'm limited to 60 a month which is nothing. Worst of all, every time I change the style, it resets to Genius to make me buy more, and I have to switch it back. I was hoping it would at least make the regular images generate faster but it does not. The user experience is actually better if I'm logged out.

What I'm seeing here is that there is no comfortable level of engagement with the monetized internet, no point of balance where you can spend a little and just hang out. Whatever it is that you want, either you find a way to get it for free, or you're marked as a rube, and the system becomes predatory.

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November 14. http://ranprieur.com/#8728818235a5f85e1df326dc04a241d8928c89b6 2025-11-14T14:40:08Z November 14. No ideas this week. This is a nice link about urban transit, What If Every City Had a London Overground? It's about how much more enjoyable surface trains are than the subway. "The Overground has become more than the sum of its parts, as it prompts people to make journeys they likely wouldn't have made before the improved experience made it comfortable and easy." It's a good bet that one day every city will have an Overground, because humans are not going extinct, and we're not going to get so primitive that we forget how to do trains; but we don't have the resources to keep doing cars.

Related: World's Largest Cargo Sailboat Completes Historic First Atlantic Crossing

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November 10. http://ranprieur.com/#532cfc05ce33db183efbaaba1d8ffb2870693c73 2025-11-10T22:00:00Z November 10. Stray links, mostly optimistic. The health benefits of sunlight may outweigh the risk of skin cancer. On the same subject, from 2019, Why It's Better to Get a Tan Than Wear Sunscreen

How a radical experiment to bring a forest into a preschool transformed children's health. "Scientists think one of the reasons so many people now have allergies is because they were not exposed to microbes that occur naturally in the environment at a young age."

Also from the Guardian, I gave up small talk for a month - and the world came alive

And catching up on a great infrequent blog, The Whippet, with Whippet #187 from August. There's cool stuff about brain weirdness, the high quality of ancient tattoos, and some practical advice to use the word "conditioning" instead of "trauma", because "you avoid getting hung up on the label, and move on to actually working on the problem itself."

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November 7. http://ranprieur.com/#b30335add7ce87f94431f7d25d95cca273a396ee 2025-11-07T19:30:19Z November 7. New video! I'm still having lots of fun using images that nobody respects to illustrate songs that nobody likes. This is the third video I've made from a 2014 album that I'm surely the number one fan of, Country Space Junk by an Australian band called Wireheads. The first two songs were illustrated with human-made art, but I ran out of good stuff, and I was happy to discover that AI slop contains nuggets. It's like a video game, except instead of "one more turn", it's "one more image", and there's always a chance that the machine will spit out a good one. It's like gambling, except that what I win is beauty, and what I spend are the world's last nonrenewable resources.

I must have looked at almost a thousand images, all made with the DeepAI generator. Something I mentioned in the interview is that AI is not the artist, it's the palette. It's not the woodworker, it's the wood, and with every video I'm getting better at working with it. For example, I learned that if you put the word "sonic" anywhere in the prompt, you're likely to get Sonic the Hedgehog, so I had to avoid that. In certain styles, "fly off in a spaceship" consistently gave me a house fly, so I substituted the word "zoom". DeepAI has a bunch of styles that are good at different things, and I got the Cave Painting style to make lunar landscapes, by asking for a white plain and black starry sky. You can't say the word moon, or the AI will put the moon in the sky: Wireheads - Sonic Spaces Blues

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November 4. http://ranprieur.com/#2bb90b25555ef1d2ff4b81724f95d247fd273f08 2025-11-04T16:00:48Z November 4. Pretty good article, Why do we think hard work is virtuous? It's mainly about Max Weber's book The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.

What was new, Weber thought, was the moral stance: that working hard, living frugally and accumulating wealth weren't just practical skills for succeeding, but inherently virtuous forms of behaviour.... Over time, these behaviours detached from their religious roots. You didn't need to believe in predestination to feel the drive to work endlessly, or to prove your value through success. The idea of a "calling" lingered on, but hollowed out. Eventually, it looked less like a vocation than an obligation.... Weber's point was that the moral energy that once drove the Protestant ethic has drained away. What remains are mere behavioural patterns, which have become reflexes. People still work obsessively; they still chase success as if it had ultimate meaning. The difference is that now they're unsure why.

Two more stray links. This strange phenomenon could unlock the secrets of the mind. It's about feeling a sense of awareness "without thoughts, images or even a sense of self." You can find it in ancient philosophy, and now researchers are finding it in sleep studies.

And a cool thread from the Ask Historians subreddit, about Ninjas and what they were really like. "Ninja to samurai are what Special Forces units are to the regular infantry today." Only low-level ninjas were assassins. Mostly they were spies and scouts. There's also some stuff about Kunoichi, or female ninjas.

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