[kwlug-disc] Non-tech reference, but may be useful by tech co.
Mikalai Birukou
mb at 3nsoft.com
Fri Feb 26 09:50:07 EST 2021
>> It is an extreme idea, cause it deviates from common practice. It
>> may turn out to be a good idea. But you may be labeled an extremist. How do
>> you push back this ad hominem? Being nuanced about the term.
> Good question, but ultimately it is a distraction.
Let's remember somebody from the past, when we didn't have modern
understanding of human psyche to navigate around rough corners.
Ludwig Eduard Boltzmann. Committed a suicide. From wiki
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ludwig_Boltzmann
"""
After Mach's resignation in Vienna in 1901, Boltzmann returned there and
decided to become a philosopher himself to refute philosophical
objections to his physics, but he soon became discouraged again. In 1904
at a physics conference in St. Louis most physicists seemed to reject
atoms and he was not even invited to the physics section.
"""
Have you noticed 1904? Photo effect by Einstein will come out in 1905!
Refuting "philosophical" objections to physical arguments. I didn't
realize they had nonsense similar to our days? E.g. "20 Years Later"
post https://www.math.columbia.edu/~woit/wordpress/?p=12069
It is also easier to drive a nerd nuts, than a street-smart bozo. I
think Josha's words describe good general picture in
http://bach.ai/the-plight-of-nerds/
> If you change course
> and start fighting the label, you've left the original path that led you
> to your new ideas. Such distraction is useful to adversaries, and an
> easy mistake to make.
>
> As for the "howto" of how to push back, there was a recent kerfuffle
> in the AI community that may lend some useful lessons when under attack.
>
> https://quillette.com/2021/01/27/beating-back-cancel-culture-a-case-study-from-the-field-of-artificial-intelligence/
Somehow I put a need for ASLR (kernel Address Space Layout
Randomization) together with a need to see bs of pushed onto us logical
fallacies, packed even into terms like "extremist". I even see an
analogy between that many-steps hack, that takes lots of time to unpack
to describe (each step is simple, of course), and an elaborate ad
hominem usage of "extreme" labeling.
I completely agree that use of KASLR in linux is a "distraction" in a
world with no hackers. There were few nights I wept from realization
that I am not in that world. Never mind Santa.
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