The real deadline isn’t when AI outsmarts us — it’s when we stop using our own minds.
It's awarded by Sweden's central bank, foisted among the five real prizewinners, often to economists for the 1% -- and the surviving Nobel family is strongly against it.
“There Is No Nobel Prize in Economics
Sweden’s Central Bank quietly snuck it in with all the other Nobel Prizes to give free-market economics for the 1% credibility. […] “Few realize, especially outside of economists, that the prize in economics is not an “official” Nobel. . . . The award for economics came almost 70 years later—bootstrapped to the Nobel in 1968 as a bit of a marketing ploy to celebrate the Bank of Sweden’s 300th anniversary.””
https://www.alternet.org/2012/10/there-no-nobel-prize-economics
Valerie's disappearance on South Australia's Kangaroo Island unleashed a 529-day hunt. She dodged rescue attempts and traps and had some wondering whether the sausage dog was mocking them and having the time of her life.
Inside the mission to rescue dachshund Valerie from wild 529-day Kangaroo Island ordeal
> Valerie's disappearance on South Australia's Kangaroo Island unleashed a 529-day hunt. She dodged rescue attempts and traps and had some wondering whether the sausage dog was mocking them and having the time of her life.
For years, I pressed Palestinian interests in peace talks. The response to Trump’s plan proves the international community hasn’t learned from catastrophe
"The 'peace process' became a magic pill rendering the occupation invisible to the west, disguising its metastisizing, omnipresent and ever more violent form. Palestine was now reduced to a subject of “negotiation” requiring concessions, with the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestine swept under the rug to be forgotten."
~ Diana Buttu
#Israel #Gaza #Palestinians #WarCrimes #genocide
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/ng-interactive/2025/oct/05/gaza-palestine-israel-trump-peace-plan
Big tech is divesting from user-centered design, and getting into hot water with the law.
Big tech is laying off user researchers in droves, because it believes that coercing its customers is more profitable than silly things like "making good products people want to buy."
But now the FAFO pendulum is coming around, with Amazon's $2.5B dark pattern settlement and #a11y lawsuits galore.
#UX #UserResearch #tech #software
https://productpicnic.beehiiv.com/p/ux-so-bad-that-it-s-illegal
Ken Parker, known for the Parker Fly, has turned his attention to making the archtop guitar an instrument that plays to the strengths of all genres. His designs use space age and traditional materials, with unique and as time honored techniques, to produce instruments that are sweeter, louder, more
How blue states can use their economic clout to stand up to Trump’s agenda—starting with California.
An analysis of historical crises over the past 2,000 years offers lessons for avoiding the end times.
Peter Turchin is a mathematical historian and has written a bunch of works about how societies reach crisis points and then either reform, descend into civil war, or collapse.
A recent summary is in
https://www.vox.com/the-highlight/462226/end-times-crisis-history-lessons-cliodynamics-collase-society
He describes how the formation of a wealth pump first concentrates wealth, and then concentrates political power, and then that creates an immiserated underclass.
The solutions that don't involve mass death involve weakening the wealth pump by things like imposing income and wealth taxes.
For example:
"The US was in crisis before the New Deal (1933–1938). But the New Deal instituted a broad array of redistributive policies: steeply progressive tax rates, strong labor rights, regulation of finance, large-scale investment in infrastructure and education, and the expansion of social safety nets. These reforms didn’t happen overnight. They were the product of hard-fought political struggles (beginning during the early decades of the twentieth century), often driven by mass movements and reform-minded segments of the elites who recognized that continued extraction risked systemic collapse. Social Democratic movements in northern and western Europe, such as Denmark, did an even better job of turning off their wealth pumps, over the same period of time."
He suggests we also need new stories about society: "But policies alone are not enough. The wealth pump is also sustained by narratives: the belief that extreme inequality is the price of progress, that markets always know best, that poverty reflects moral failure rather than structural disadvantage. These cultural frames must be challenged and replaced with a new ethic of social solidarity and reciprocal obligation. No society can thrive when it abandons the idea of a common good."
Edit: slightly improved flow of one sentance
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