Discussion:
[GNU/consensus] ZCash (lupa)
demos
2016-08-30 07:54:50 UTC
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1. ZCash (lupa)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Sun, 28 Aug 2016 12:40:05 -0400
Subject: [GNU/consensus] ZCash
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="windows-1252"
Hi all,
Do you know this project? https://z.cash/
What do you think about it ?
thanks!
Hi,
I've have two questions:

The pages says "hide the sender, recipient, and value of all
transactions on the blockchain"
How does zcash do it?
Does it use an anonymisation network like Tor?

If zcash was the only currency how could a country get its taxes to pay
for the streets, schools, universities, teachers, police, hospital, fire
fighters, ambulance, water supply (just think of Flint-
http://michaelmoore.com/10FactsOnFlint/ ) - public infrastructure?

I'd prefer to make it mandatory to give a certain percentage of the
received money to the public good.
Maybe with the choice or cut-up into pieces to give it to:
* one country of your choice (inter regional infrastructure)
* a public regional account (your nearby local infrastructure)
* your local community-commune/village/town
which are proven official accounts
Do you think the zcash-team is open to this ethical approach?
Since the website does not say anything about taxes, i've got the
terrible suspicion that it got built as a means of tax evasion/egoism. I
think here of the Panama papers. And the capitalist incentive to evade
regional legislation/regulations.
I personally think public accounts and its transactions should be
publicly visible. People of a democratic country deserve to know what is
done with their money in the most convenient way.
As well as a right of direct co-determination as it is technically
possible nowadays.

Code is law.
Dmos
--
https://projectedn.wordpress.com/
https://wiki.c3d2.de/EDN
Thank you for encrypting.
lupa
2016-08-30 19:55:40 UTC
Permalink
Post by demos
Hi,
The pages says "hide the sender, recipient, and value of all
transactions on the blockchain"
How does zcash do it?
Does it use an anonymisation network like Tor?
No idea. There are some link and information about zcash protocol and
things like that.
Post by demos
If zcash was the only currency how could a country get its taxes to pay
for the streets, schools, universities, teachers, police, hospital, fire
fighters, ambulance, water supply (just think of Flint-
http://michaelmoore.com/10FactsOnFlint/ ) - public infrastructure?
I'd prefer to make it mandatory to give a certain percentage of the
received money to the public good.
* one country of your choice (inter regional infrastructure)
* a public regional account (your nearby local infrastructure)
* your local community-commune/village/town
which are proven official accounts
Do you think the zcash-team is open to this ethical approach?
Since the website does not say anything about taxes, i've got the
terrible suspicion that it got built as a means of tax evasion/egoism. I
think here of the Panama papers. And the capitalist incentive to evade
regional legislation/regulations.
I personally think public accounts and its transactions should be
publicly visible. People of a democratic country deserve to know what is
done with their money in the most convenient way.
As well as a right of direct co-determination as it is technically
possible nowadays.
Code is law.
Dmos
This is very interesting point. You can try to contact and ask them.

Maybe taxes will have to make their own evolution according to the new
scenario.

Anyway, capitalism sucks and it still there and stronger than ever,
maybe we don't have to think on how will work taxing systems, and
instead something like: how humanity will better distribute all the
goods and resources, because now it's a mess.

From my point of view, Ethic Capitalism is an Oximoron.

cheers,
--
Lupa
---------------------------------
Diaspora*: https://diasp.org/u/lupa18
GNUSocial: http://elparque.faccionlatina.org/lupa18
openPGP ID: 45ED76E0
openPGP key: https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x58A5DBC345ED76E0
---------------------------------
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carlo von lynX
2016-09-01 06:17:27 UTC
Permalink
Ciao lupa
Post by lupa
Anyway, capitalism sucks and it still there and stronger than ever,
Yes, and making a cash system that bypasses the tax system means
that capitalism will be much harsher with zcash as it empowers the
rich to hide their riches and become richer and richer while the
poor just get a tool for exchanging digital value they don't have.
Post by lupa
maybe we don't have to think on how will work taxing systems, and
instead something like: how humanity will better distribute all the
goods and resources, because now it's a mess.
That's the purpose of the tax system. We have to improve and reform
it, but as a society we cannot function without taxes. Taxes serve
primarily the poor. It is capitalist propaganda to think taxes are
evil. It is only evil for the super-rich. Everyone slightly less
rich has more benefit than disadvantage from the tax system.
Post by lupa
From my point of view, Ethic Capitalism is an Oximoron.
If you define capitalism without redistribution by taxes, yes.
Also a well prepared unconditional basic income (there are plenty
which are bad, so it depends on who designs it) is factually a
kind of reform of the tax and labour payment system. A very
radical reform of the tax system, which we certainly need. But
it doesn't try to solve injustice by abolishing justice - that I
would guess is what Bitcoin and zCash try to do.

I hate mailing lists that default to single person reply, as if
that was a realistic social behaviour.
carlo von lynX
2016-09-01 08:27:56 UTC
Permalink
Post by carlo von lynX
Yes, and making a cash system that bypasses the tax system means
that capitalism will be much harsher with zcash as it empowers the
rich to hide their riches and become richer and richer while the
poor just get a tool for exchanging digital value they don't have.
Maybe I can find more accessible words:

Markets are a natural part of human societies. Wherever people meet,
even when there is no police and no justice system in sight, they
will trade goods and establish social norms. I've seen it in the
outer edges of Indonesia, it's anarchy in the good sense of the word.

Well, some lucky people will come up with something to sell that
everybody else wants. Take Michele Ferrero who invented the Nutella
for example. The normal tendency in an unregulated market for such
a person is to get richer and richer.

I think no person on Earth should have more than a hundred times
what the poorest person has. My ethical vision however does not
become reality merely by talking about it. It has to be democratically
decided and imposed by a government-like authority,* which you could say
is also a gesture of anarchism if an anarchist assembly decides to do
so, but that would mean that democracy is simply an evolution of anarchy,
which I presume it is.

So Michele deserves to be among the richest people on Earth, but we
need to take excessive amounts of money away from him and redistribute
to the poor that deserve a right to exist.

This kind of redistribution cannot be implemented if the cash system
is completely unaccountable to society.


*) See also the works of Nobel prize winner Elinor Ostrom.
She found out that a Commons can only succeed if somebody
ensures the rules are respected. A kind of (self-)government.
Michael Rogers
2016-09-01 09:50:38 UTC
Permalink
Post by carlo von lynX
Post by carlo von lynX
Yes, and making a cash system that bypasses the tax system means
that capitalism will be much harsher with zcash as it empowers the
rich to hide their riches and become richer and richer while the
poor just get a tool for exchanging digital value they don't have.
In my opinion your original words were great!
Post by carlo von lynX
Markets are a natural part of human societies. Wherever people meet,
even when there is no police and no justice system in sight, they
will trade goods and establish social norms. I've seen it in the
outer edges of Indonesia, it's anarchy in the good sense of the word.
Well, some lucky people will come up with something to sell that
everybody else wants. Take Michele Ferrero who invented the Nutella
for example. The normal tendency in an unregulated market for such
a person is to get richer and richer.
I think we should be careful not to equate an unregulated market where
individuals buy and sell their personal possessions with the sort of
"unregulated" market where an inventor becomes a billionaire. Free
market ideology equates the two but they're actually polar opposites.
The market that allows an inventor to become a billionaire is entirely a
legal construct - it couldn't exist without regulation.

First of all it depends on property rights, in the Marxian sense of
property - that is to say, not property meaning my toothbrush that
nobody else is allowed to use, or my farm where I work to grow food that
I sell, but property meaning my factory where others work on the
condition that whatever they produce belongs to me. Naturalising this
second type of property and confusing it with the first type is one of
capitalism's greatest ideological achievements.

Second, the billionaire's market depends on intellectual property. You
can't build a fortune from an invention unless others are prevented from
copying it (copyright), or forced to give you a share of their profits
if they do so (patents), or forced to use a different name for their
version (trademarks). Personally I think trademarks provide significant
benefits to society - capitalism would be even worse without them - but
there's no denying that they're a form of regulation.

So I don't think we should treat the unlimited accumulation of wealth
via markets as a natural phenomenon or a human universal. Markets exist
everywhere, but not all markets are alike, and a truly unregulated
market would look nothing like the legal constructs that enable
capitalist accumulation.
Post by carlo von lynX
I think no person on Earth should have more than a hundred times
what the poorest person has. My ethical vision however does not
become reality merely by talking about it. It has to be democratically
decided and imposed by a government-like authority,* which you could say
is also a gesture of anarchism if an anarchist assembly decides to do
so, but that would mean that democracy is simply an evolution of anarchy,
which I presume it is.
I see it the other way round - anarchism is (or would be) an evolution
of democracy. But evolution has no up or down, so maybe we're saying the
same thing.
Post by carlo von lynX
So Michele deserves to be among the richest people on Earth, but we
need to take excessive amounts of money away from him and redistribute
to the poor that deserve a right to exist.
Property rights plus intellectual property rights plus taxation is one
possible set of legal constructs, but let's not forget that there are
infinitely many other possibilities, most of which it's hard for us even
to imagine from our current position.
Post by carlo von lynX
This kind of redistribution cannot be implemented if the cash system
is completely unaccountable to society.
Agreed.
Post by carlo von lynX
*) See also the works of Nobel prize winner Elinor Ostrom.
She found out that a Commons can only succeed if somebody
ensures the rules are respected. A kind of (self-)government.
A commons can exist on a small scale without regulation, just like
markets can. The question for anarchists is either how to make such
structures scale without authority, or how to do away with the need to
scale.

Cheers,
Michael
carlo von lynX
2016-09-01 11:21:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by Michael Rogers
Post by carlo von lynX
Post by carlo von lynX
Yes, and making a cash system that bypasses the tax system means
that capitalism will be much harsher with zcash as it empowers the
rich to hide their riches and become richer and richer while the
poor just get a tool for exchanging digital value they don't have.
In my opinion your original words were great!
Thank you. Honoured to hear such words from you.
Post by Michael Rogers
Post by carlo von lynX
Markets are a natural part of human societies. Wherever people meet,
even when there is no police and no justice system in sight, they
will trade goods and establish social norms. I've seen it in the
outer edges of Indonesia, it's anarchy in the good sense of the word.
Well, some lucky people will come up with something to sell that
everybody else wants. Take Michele Ferrero who invented the Nutella
for example. The normal tendency in an unregulated market for such
a person is to get richer and richer.
I think we should be careful not to equate an unregulated market where
individuals buy and sell their personal possessions with the sort of
"unregulated" market where an inventor becomes a billionaire. Free
market ideology equates the two but they're actually polar opposites.
All the markets need to be "free" in the sense that people figure out
themselves where to buy and who to sell to to be efficient, but I think
in essence it is still the same problem, that an unregulated market will
not scale up well and introduce social injustice, so when I say "regulated"
I mostly mean social redistribution.
Post by Michael Rogers
The market that allows an inventor to become a billionaire is entirely a
legal construct - it couldn't exist without regulation.
But as absolutely correctly point out, there can also be regulation
with the opposite effect of creating even more inequality. That is
one of the challenges of democracy, getting regulation right. I'm
only saying that without regulation we're even worse off - because
even the most basic social justice depends on it.

That's why I participate in "research" for better democracy.
Post by Michael Rogers
First of all it depends on property rights, in the Marxian sense of
property - that is to say, not property meaning my toothbrush that
nobody else is allowed to use, or my farm where I work to grow food that
I sell, but property meaning my factory where others work on the
condition that whatever they produce belongs to me. Naturalising this
second type of property and confusing it with the first type is one of
capitalism's greatest ideological achievements.
Yes, and blockchain won't solve that. Political misguidances need to be
fixed by political will - by the democratic coalition of the indebted -
and the problem the Internet has introduced is that opposition is no
longer capable to coalesce freely under the five eyes of big brother.
So the precondition for democracy as defined by the philosophers of
Illumination has been undermined since 1995. If they say this isn't
democracy we are living in, we should think of how to restore democracy.
Post by Michael Rogers
Second, the billionaire's market depends on intellectual property. You
can't build a fortune from an invention unless others are prevented from
copying it (copyright), or forced to give you a share of their profits
if they do so (patents), or forced to use a different name for their
version (trademarks). Personally I think trademarks provide significant
benefits to society - capitalism would be even worse without them - but
there's no denying that they're a form of regulation.
The problem isn't society agreeing on certain norms aka regulation.
The problem is the corrupt process that it's not really society
making up regulation. I obviously agree with the points from the
Pirate manifesto you just listed. ;)
Post by Michael Rogers
So I don't think we should treat the unlimited accumulation of wealth
via markets as a natural phenomenon or a human universal. Markets exist
everywhere, but not all markets are alike, and a truly unregulated
market would look nothing like the legal constructs that enable
capitalist accumulation.
Well then let's take Faceboogle as an example. They can impose
their monopoly because everybody is already using them, because
the code people are addicted to like Nutella is not free but
either in binary form, or even better, out of reach on cloud
servers. They need none of those legal constructs to subjugate
humanity and cause immense inequality of wealth, right?

Or let's think of rural island markets where government is
mostly absent. Someone figures out how to grow more food and
gets richer. In theory others could try to steal his method,
but let's assume they don't understand how it works and so
this subject gets richer and richer and can afford to pay a
little army of thugs. They can now protect the space where
the food is grown, take over more space and start bullying
their neighbours. Ultimately they become the ruler of the
island. That's roughly how things go, if you let them go
unregulated. It has happened millions of times in human
history, I would assume.
Post by Michael Rogers
Post by carlo von lynX
I think no person on Earth should have more than a hundred times
what the poorest person has. My ethical vision however does not
become reality merely by talking about it. It has to be democratically
decided and imposed by a government-like authority,* which you could say
is also a gesture of anarchism if an anarchist assembly decides to do
so, but that would mean that democracy is simply an evolution of anarchy,
which I presume it is.
I see it the other way round - anarchism is (or would be) an evolution
of democracy. But evolution has no up or down, so maybe we're saying the
same thing.
To me anarchism is what humans do if you remove all the rules and the
government. Some people would like to think that anarchism is also a
set of cultural values and behavioural norms, but I reject that as it
is a deviation from human nature. Humans will not accept values and
norms just because somebody thinks they should. That has already failed
with socialism, and will fail again. If humans agree on values and
norms to the point that it becomes culture, then it is a sociological
premise that somebody has the role of making sure the norms are
respected. My essential takeaway from Ostrom's wisdoms is that an
anarchic assembly can only make meaningful decisions if it also empowers
somebody to ensure they will be respected and implemented. To me that
also means that Separation of Powers according to Montesquieu is the
least bad system of justice philosophers could come up with.
Post by Michael Rogers
Post by carlo von lynX
So Michele deserves to be among the richest people on Earth, but we
need to take excessive amounts of money away from him and redistribute
to the poor that deserve a right to exist.
Property rights plus intellectual property rights plus taxation is one
possible set of legal constructs, but let's not forget that there are
infinitely many other possibilities, most of which it's hard for us even
to imagine from our current position.
So in the case of the thug army on the island, when there is no
regulation at all we will see that intellectual property or such
would simply be imposed by physical strength.

So I agree that we have to fix regulation regarding many things,
but it is completely wrong to think anything can function entirely
without regulation. And no, I highly doubt there are infinitely
many other possibilities. Especially regarding deregulated anarchy
or capitalism, the resulting effects we see are always the same.
Post by Michael Rogers
Post by carlo von lynX
This kind of redistribution cannot be implemented if the cash system
is completely unaccountable to society.
Agreed.
Post by carlo von lynX
*) See also the works of Nobel prize winner Elinor Ostrom.
She found out that a Commons can only succeed if somebody
ensures the rules are respected. A kind of (self-)government.
A commons can exist on a small scale without regulation, just like
On a small scale means small enough that no individual was motivated
to figure out a way to sabotage the project, because if they try and
no measures of prevention have been taken, they will succeed.
Every time. I could mention Tor, but I imagine you can come up with
half a dozen examples yourself.
Post by Michael Rogers
markets can. The question for anarchists is either how to make such
structures scale without authority, or how to do away with the need to
scale.
That is the problem they have failed to solve in past millennia.
But of course you can always spend more time trying. From my
understanding of centuries of philosophy is that such a solution
is not in sight.

The second option is certainly impossible. We live on a finite planet
which is in the process of collapsing. We need the ability of scaling
up humanity's common will, or the next generations will inhabit a
profoundly broken planet.

So the first option remains, Ostrom thinks authority cannot be done
away with. I think the best answer that philosophers found is to
decentralize the powers of "authority" and have them control each
other. Montesquieu. Seperation of Powers.

The problem of checks & balances is the way it is combined with
representative democracy which implies potential for corruption.

The problem is not authority. It is the corrupt representative system.

So the only concept and technology that I know, that really
addresses the problems we are confronted with is liquid democracy.
It scales up, it empowers the many and it is resistant to corruption.
It produces an authority of the collective, and it needs officers
to execute its will, but they take no decisions, so they are easier
to keep in check.
--
E-mail is public! Talk to me in private using encryption:
http://loupsycedyglgamf.onion/LynX/
irc://loupsycedyglgamf.onion:67/lynX
https://psyced.org:34443/LynX/
hellekin
2016-09-02 09:35:45 UTC
Permalink
On 09/01/2016 11:21 AM, carlo von lynX wrote:
I'm very glad to read political contents on this list. Some hackers
come out as 'apolitical', which mostly means they missed the point of
both hacking and technologies production (& politics as well.)

So far I refrained from intervening, I'd have so many things to say
against the approach taken that it would take too long. So instead,
I'll pack my remarks into a single question and a 'positive' reading
grid to highlight where I think it fails.
Post by Michael Rogers
Post by carlo von lynX
for example. The normal tendency in an unregulated market for such
a person is to get richer and richer.
I think we should be careful not to equate an unregulated market where
individuals buy and sell their personal possessions with the sort of
"unregulated" market where an inventor becomes a billionaire. Free
market ideology equates the two but they're actually polar opposites.
[snip]
Or let's think of rural island markets where government is
mostly absent. Someone figures out how to grow more food and
gets richer. In theory others could try to steal his method,
but let's assume they don't understand how it works and so
this subject gets richer and richer and can afford to pay a
little army of thugs. They can now protect the space where
the food is grown, take over more space and start bullying
their neighbours. Ultimately they become the ruler of the
island. That's roughly how things go, if you let them go
unregulated. It has happened millions of times in human
history, I would assume.
**Why would someone 'get bigger', hire thugs, and bully others in the
first place?**

You know very well that competition in that context would most probably
be overcome by fruitful cooperation, as it "has happened millions of
times in human history."

Part of the "corrupt process" is to assume competition prevails over
cooperation, whereas Elinor Ostrom, since she was cited earlier,
demonstrates with her account of, e.g., Balinese water temples, that
communal management of the commons lead to better outcomes, to speak in
capitalist terms. (See Financial Times' author Tim Harford on this
topic: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/83df61cc-caf2-11e1-8872-00144feabdc0.html)

Applying Elinor Ostrom's 8 principles for managing a commons, as a
reading grid for lynX's hypothetical story, we can draw a number of
conclusions:

## 1. Define clear group boundaries.

We're considering a "rural island", so the boundary is 'naturally' given.

## 2. Match rules governing use of common goods to local needs and
conditions.

The drive for the defector is to grow. We can imagine he wants to export
goods (so as to get richer, otherwise the assumption makes no sense, as
he cannot but sell to his fellow islanders who won't allow him to grow
beyond the existing market.) So, we can imagine social pressure from a
foreigner (a colonist) to feed the already capitalistic 'external'
market (accumulation engine).

## 3. Ensure that those affected by the rules can participate in
modifying the rules.

By hiring thugs, the growing party prevents this rule from working,
assuming the others, who already can't reproduce the growing system by
lack of understanding (ahem), also can't fight back thugs.

## 4. Make sure the rule-making rights of community members are
respected by outside authorities.

The 'colonist' had no direct interest in keeping production at
pre-contact level since they want the surplus to feed their own system.
Destructive consequences on the local community may or may not show up
immediately, and when they do, repression seems to be the norm, rather
than understanding. A rational 'economic agent' would nurture the colony
rather than destroy it, contrary to what human history shows. But now
that we know how it fails, we have an opportunity to work towards
respecting the 8 principles to avoid a Tragedy of the Commons (Garrett
Hardin).

## 5. Develop a system, carried out by community members, for monitoring
members’ behavior.

AKA. don't let him hire thugs, acquire land, and generally break
sensible local community rules: use direct democracy.

Or, if you omit Ostrom's ontology for the Drama of the Commons: use
global surveillance (but then limit how many "community members" can use
the results, or the scope of the 'global' coverage. Such
_restrictionist_ view would erect the fifth principle into a dogmatic
rule to justify an otherwise broken model: implementing a rule that
makes sense in theory, but ignores the real context where it makes no
sense, or worse: reverse the meaning of the rule.

## 6. Use graduated sanctions for rule violators.

There's no sanction in lynX's story: the bully wins. I think it's
missing, since it evacuates politics altogether, and only considers
'economic' conditions, in the precarious classical pseudo-rationalist
capitalist framework.

## 7. Provide accessible, low-cost means for dispute resolution.

Ditto.

## 8. Build responsibility for governing the common resource in nested
tiers from the lowest level up to the entire interconnected system.

As lynX's story evacuates politics, and considers a winning top-down
approach, the context doesn't apply to this rule. Somehow I have the
impression that the analysis is correct, but the burden of our
militarized-repressive global society chokes imagination away from
singing the beauties of what's coming next--given there's a 'next' and
we don't obliterate ourselves out of the picture. Contrast with the
succeeding municipal federalism being implemented by the Kurds in the
Rojava region of northern Syria.

==
hk
carlo von lynX
2016-09-02 10:31:39 UTC
Permalink
Post by hellekin
So far I refrained from intervening, I'd have so many things to say
against the approach taken that it would take too long. So instead,
I'll pack my remarks into a single question and a 'positive' reading
grid to highlight where I think it fails.
I wished I had the discipline to refrain from exposing and explaining
and rather ask the right questions.. ;)
Post by hellekin
**Why would someone 'get bigger', hire thugs, and bully others in the
first place?**
Because it is in the human genome, that a certain percentage of people
will do this. Even though it seems to be a minority, it is a successful
minority because the assumption of the majority that everyone will be
cooperating and well-behaved creates the power vacuum that they jump
onto and strive in. Haven't all ideologies that refuse to believe that
a certain percentage of people will not be cooperative failed? Only
systems that *assume* some people will be antisocial have been realistic
enough to function in the real world. Specifically, democracy. The only
IMHO truly humanistic design, because it doesn't expect humans to be
what they should be - it accepts them with all their weaknesses, like
being antisocial, egotistic, corrupt at times.
Post by hellekin
You know very well that competition in that context would most probably
be overcome by fruitful cooperation, as it "has happened millions of
times in human history."
Fruitful cooperation only works if somebody has the authority to ensure
that the antisocial minority has to abide by the rules. In some cases
it *appears* like there is no such authority just because some leadership
figures have so much personality that nobody dares to challenge them.
But still it is a benevolent leadership kind of model, combined with
physical presence aka physical ability to intervene in case of trouble.

Either you have democratic governance, or benevolent leadership. In the
latter case there is always a slippery slide towards less benevolence
or simply inability to exercise justice out of lack of understanding
of new issues (like old leaders not comprehending new developments).
Post by hellekin
Part of the "corrupt process" is to assume competition prevails over
cooperation, whereas Elinor Ostrom, since she was cited earlier,
demonstrates with her account of, e.g., Balinese water temples, that
communal management of the commons lead to better outcomes, to speak in
capitalist terms. (See Financial Times' author Tim Harford on this
topic: http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/83df61cc-caf2-11e1-8872-00144feabdc0.html)
So in the end you too didn't make it to leave it at just a question. ;)

The Indonesian have a very strong culture of not creating trouble and
rather staying quiet. I am sure, if you dig in-depth, either they
created some structures of governance, or, more likely, they quietly
submitted to an authority figure who benevolently ran the show.
Post by hellekin
Applying Elinor Ostrom's 8 principles for managing a commons, as a
reading grid for lynX's hypothetical story, we can draw a number of
## 1. Define clear group boundaries.
We're considering a "rural island", so the boundary is 'naturally' given.
All the Indonesian societies I experienced are based on the idea that
it's a small world, so if you treat me bad, a lot of people will know
and that is bad for you. I wonder how that scales up in Jakarta. And
it certainly gives an advantage to tourists who are treated like they
have a reputation to lose when actually they don't need to give a shit.
In Bali and Lombok the atmosphere is shifting. I presume they are
getting adapted to asshole tourists.
Post by hellekin
## 2. Match rules governing use of common goods to local needs and
conditions.
The drive for the defector is to grow. We can imagine he wants to export
goods (so as to get richer, otherwise the assumption makes no sense, as
he cannot but sell to his fellow islanders who won't allow him to grow
beyond the existing market.) So, we can imagine social pressure from a
foreigner (a colonist) to feed the already capitalistic 'external'
market (accumulation engine).
## 3. Ensure that those affected by the rules can participate in
modifying the rules.
By hiring thugs, the growing party prevents this rule from working,
assuming the others, who already can't reproduce the growing system by
lack of understanding (ahem), also can't fight back thugs.
Correct, that's why the principle on having rules respected is
ultimately the most important IMHO.
Post by hellekin
## 4. Make sure the rule-making rights of community members are
respected by outside authorities.
The 'colonist' had no direct interest in keeping production at
pre-contact level since they want the surplus to feed their own system.
Destructive consequences on the local community may or may not show up
immediately, and when they do, repression seems to be the norm, rather
than understanding. A rational 'economic agent' would nurture the colony
rather than destroy it, contrary to what human history shows. But now
that we know how it fails, we have an opportunity to work towards
respecting the 8 principles to avoid a Tragedy of the Commons (Garrett
Hardin).
## 5. Develop a system, carried out by community members, for monitoring
members’ behavior.
AKA. don't let him hire thugs, acquire land, and generally break
sensible local community rules: use direct democracy.
And how do you enforce that? If hiring thugs is not permitted,
he can simply do it in secret.. a kind of corruption. Strangely
many people in the community will then be in his support. Why
is it a he now? I had used the genderless they in my examples.
Matriarchats can be just as nasty. ;)
Post by hellekin
Or, if you omit Ostrom's ontology for the Drama of the Commons: use
global surveillance (but then limit how many "community members" can use
Global surveillance inhibits honest unmanipulated democracy
and doesn't itself enforce any rules.
Post by hellekin
the results, or the scope of the 'global' coverage. Such
_restrictionist_ view would erect the fifth principle into a dogmatic
rule to justify an otherwise broken model: implementing a rule that
makes sense in theory, but ignores the real context where it makes no
sense, or worse: reverse the meaning of the rule.
Haven't understood what this is about.
Post by hellekin
## 6. Use graduated sanctions for rule violators.
There's no sanction in lynX's story: the bully wins. I think it's
Yes, of course. My story was about how it typically goes if you
don't employ principles such as Elinor's. You are discussing the
solution while I was describing the problem. I personally participate
in only one organization that honours Ostrom's principles. All those
that do not have recently failed: Tor, Cryptoparty, Piratenpartei.
Post by hellekin
missing, since it evacuates politics altogether, and only considers
'economic' conditions, in the precarious classical pseudo-rationalist
capitalist framework.
Which is what I criticize about simplified anarchist models. The
idea things work out by themselves. No they don't. And that's also
why zCash doesn't work out. It pays no attention to the lessons
learned by the philosophers and Nobel prize winners.
Post by hellekin
## 7. Provide accessible, low-cost means for dispute resolution.
Ditto.
Another point that our western democracies are pretty bad at.
Sigh. But at least they try. On an Indonesian island you
frequently have to accept receiving some injustice in exchange
for saving your "face", your reputation, your ability to continue
being a respected member of society. So both models are imperfect
and even in the culturally most well-intended societies justice
does not necessarily prevail when left at anarchist mechanisms.
Post by hellekin
## 8. Build responsibility for governing the common resource in nested
tiers from the lowest level up to the entire interconnected system.
As lynX's story evacuates politics, and considers a winning top-down
approach, the context doesn't apply to this rule. Somehow I have the
impression that the analysis is correct, but the burden of our
militarized-repressive global society chokes imagination away from
singing the beauties of what's coming next--given there's a 'next' and
we don't obliterate ourselves out of the picture. Contrast with the
succeeding municipal federalism being implemented by the Kurds in the
Rojava region of northern Syria.
In the light of the basic misunderstanding we had, do we
have any disagreement at all?

The thug story was my example to illustrate how we need
democratic structures and have them respected. Ostrom to
me paints a picture how such structures can be self-organized
rather than coming from a community too large and too buggy
to identify with. And my experience in the Italian Pirate
Party shows me how self-governed democracy can work, although
we are only one year into it, so I can't call it a success
model yet. We certainly learned from the hard lessons of the
five years before - replaying the events in our heads, seeing
how the new structure would have impeded those things from
occurring.
--
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