Twitter: Private Business or Public Square?

Fail WhaleTwitter has again been the centre of controversy following their removal of verified status from a prominent but notorious right-libertarian journalist with a reputation for setting packs of followers on people who have incurred his displeasure. Arguments rage over whether this is appropriate punishment for a serial bully, or whether it signals Twitter is publicly taking sides in the increasingly ugly culture war.

As I’ve said before, Twitter needs to get a handle on the mobbing and abuse that’s blighted the network for a long time. But when Twitter has taken on the role of a public square, it’s dangerous for them to impose top-down speech policing in the service of anyone’s political agenda, and they are currently sending out very mixed messages on the subject.

If Twitter is to impose any kind of rules, which they need to, they do need transparency in how they’re enforced. With the best will in the world it’s difficult to know precisely where to draw the line between harassment and speaking truth to power, so much is subjective and dependent on context. It would not be a good thing if every long-established Twitter user risks a permanent ban for crossing some invisible line at the same time as a relatively junior moderator is having a bad day. If you can’t imagine that even happening to you because you’re one of the good people, I refer you to the famous words of Pastor Niemöller.

Despite some of the wilder claims, it doesn’t look as if the sky is falling on freedom of speech, at least not yet. But there is a danger of ceding so much of our virtual public square to one private business. It’s a single point of failure, and there is always the danger it may pivot and allow powerful political or corporate interests to suppress conversations they don’t like for reasons which are not in the wider public interest.

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15 Years of FATE

A tweet from Rob Donoghue was a reminder that it’s been almost fifteen years since he and Fred Hicks published the first edition of FATE as a free download.

Around that time there was a lot of discussion in the Fudge community on how to take the system forward, as more people tried pushing the envelope and starting hitting the limitations of Steffan O’Sullvan’s original design. At one point there was an attempt to create a next-generation Fudge by committee on the official mailing list. But it very rapidly got bogged down in fruitless arguments about what the standard attributes should be, and went nowhere.

It became obvious that what was needed needed was for one or two people with a clear and coherent vision to make their version of Fudge without interference from anyone else’s competing hobby-horses and sacred cows. Rob Donoghue and Fred Hicks went ahead and did this.

FATE addressed what for me had been one of Fudge’s biggest weaknesses, the ambiguous relationship between attributes and skills, something that was nevertheless a sacred cow for many in the community. But the very clever and elegant Aspects mechanic ended up more as a superior replacement for Fudge’s Gifts and Faults, and attributes were instead folded into skills. Skills became broad areas of competency, limited in number, thus avoiding the skills-bloat that bedevilled systems like GURPS. It really is a clean and elegant design, devoid of obvious cruft.

FATE has itself now gone through several iterations, but it has effectively become the next generation of Fudge we wanted fifteen years ago. It hasn’t entirely replaced Fudge, which is still out there and still has its adherents, but FATE, with its high profile licences has broken through to the gaming mainstream in a way Fudge never quite managed.

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David Bowie

All day my social media feeds have been pretty much nothing but tributes to David Bowie, who died just four days after releasing his final album.

You know you have a seriously doughnut-shaped record collection when one of the giants of 20th and 21st century music passes on and you realised don’t own a single one of their records. But his biggest hits were still stuck in my head this morning, “Life on Mars”, “Space Oddity”, “Starman”, “Heroes”. His standards are part of the air we breathe. And his artistic legacy is woven into the DNA of just about every genre of popular music that came after him. To quote Matt Stevens, he’s in the same league as Miles Davis and The Beatles.

Like Lemmy, David Bowie was a one-off who did it his way without following trends. One thing that made him unique was they way he stood outside and above narrow musical tribes; he simultaneously belonged to nobody and to everybody. He combined both ground-breaking style and genuine musical substance in a way unmatched by anyone else. He left whole genres in his wake; artists who based their entire sound around just one period in his ever-changing output after Bowie himself had moved on to something else. He also had great taste in musicians to act as a foil. Just look at the guitarists he worked with over the years; Mick Ronson, Robert Fripp, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Nile Rogers, Earl Slick.

Even though I’ve never been a hardcore fan, it’s difficult to imagine popular music without him. So enough of those who would police other people’s grief, whether it’s a snobbish disdain or some elitist claim of exclusive ownership as a “true fan”. It’s one of those times when if you have nothing positive to say, it’s better saying nothing. Music clearly never touched some people’s souls, even if when some of them started their writing careers supposedly as a music critics. Can’t they even sit on their self-righteous thinkpieces for a couple of days?

David Bowie was one of the true greats, whose work had a huge impact on music and on wider culture. Let us celebrate and remember that.

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Chantel McGregor Tour Dates

Chantel McGregor has announced more tour dates, with an extensive trek across the UK through the next few months, beginning at Sedgefield on January 15th and Dorking on February 5th. The tour also takes in Norwich, Bingley, Harpendon, London, Southampton and plenty of other places. Full dates can be found on the tour page of her website.

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Black Metal goes Graham Kendrick

With very few lyric changes, this would work as a Christian worship song. In fact, somebody should do it. It would mess with a lot of minds.

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Cologne

Cologne Cathedral and Rhine Bridge

What happened in the German City of Cologne on New Year’s Eve is extremely troubling, especially if you’re on the liberal left. There was clearly a major failing of policing; the assumption has to be that with a high state of alert over terrorism they paid insufficient attention to other potential sources of trouble. It does prompt speculation over the shadowy hand of Islamic State. It’s been pointed out the perpetrators were drunk and IS are strict about that sort of that sort of thing. But I don’t think we should rule out agent provocateurs making good use of useful idiots. It does after all advance their malign agenda, and it was all clearly orchestrated by someone.

But there are big cultural and political issues for the whole of Europe too. The important liberal values of opposition to racism, and opposition to violence against women come dangerously into conflict. It’s hard to determine what lessons ought to be learned.

You should start by reading Maajid Nawaz’s piece in The Daily Beast. Maajid is both a Muslim and a genuine Liberal, and knows what he’s talking about in a way none of the ignorant blowhards can come close to.

Maajid Nawaz almost certainly knows far more about both radical Islam and Middle-Eastern cultures than you do, and when he talks about important and sensitive subjects you should listen even if you don’t agree with his conclusions. His background means he can speak uncomfortable truths which we white people frequently cannot.

There are also good pieces by Deborah Orr in The Guardian, and on The Rambling Infidel, the latter of which highlights some prominent left-wingers getting it badly wrong. But start with Maajid.

Obviously the white nationalist right will be exploiting this with all their might. It’s Kristallnacht come early for the worst of them. But it also exposes the failure of the iteration of identity politics adopted by large parts of the modern left. If you have to play Oppression Top Trumps before you can decide whether to condemn an atrocity or to blame the victims, your ideology is not fit for purpose and should be discarded. The Tweet from Laurie Penny highlighted in The Rambling Infidel’s blog demonstrates the sort of divide-by-zero error some of the left are experiencing.

The whole topic of immigration is a political hot potato few people other than right-wingers want to talk about. Yes, there have been plenty of pieces extolling the economic benefits, but the conversation we haven’t been able to have concerns the integration and assimilation of people from very different cultures. It’s something that, for all their own problems with structural racism, America seems to do better than Europe. It’s not an easy conversation to have, which is probably why some are so quick to shut it down with accusations of racism. But if we don’t talk about it, the racists will.

Ultimately we all, whether native or migrant, need to uphold the Western values of pluralism, tolerance and individual rights. As a civilisation, we cannot afford not to.

Comments are disabled on this post because I don’t have the resources to moderation the sorts of comments it risks attracting.

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Think metal is dead? That’s your fault

There’s a hard-hitting if somewhat sweary editorial in Metal Hammer about the conservatism of some metal fans. Those people who refuse to accept that generations of bands since they came of age are actually producing great music, even if it doesn’t sound exactly like their favourite band when they were 17.

On the Metal Hammer website we cover pretty much everything considered metal – from Babymetal to Burzum – but 90% of the time the younger bands are being slaughtered in the comments section for daring to have a haircut not approved by the High Priests Of Metaldom or for not recreating Rust In Peace. The bastards. Like, how dare a band in 2016 have the tenacity, no the ignorance, to sound like something other than Megadeth?

It’s pointed out in the comments that the loud people on the internet may well be an unrepresentative and self-selecting sample, but there’s no denying that these people exist, and there are plenty of them. And not just in metal either; the prog world is full of them. It’s why so many 70s bands can play to full houses trotting out the same dreary old greatest hits set that they’ve been playing for the past twenty years while vastly better bands play to a few dozen. Great bands get dismissed as “Not proper Prog” because they don’t sound exactly like Pendragon.

People like this are one reason why so many festivals, from the huge Download to the far smaller Cambridge Rock Festival frequently end up with such conservative lineups, with acts who are well past their prime topping the bill. Meanwhile far better bands who might excel if given the chance of a headline spot themselves go on at 3pm.  Why, for example, have Nightwish never headlined a major festival in Britain?

It’s got to the point where you can tell exactly which age group the biggest proportion of attendees of any given festival fall into by whoever is headlining.

Maybe it’s a mid-life crisis thing, when you’re young enough to think everything still revolves around your generation but not quite old and wise enough to have reaslised that actually it doesn’t. But once you get past the wrong side of 50 is starts to get a lot harder to pretend that the heroes from your youth are still as good live those a generation younger. Sure, at a big festival or an arena gig they can still make a big spectacle with large-scale production values denied to “lesser” bands. But in smaller venues there’s nowhere to hide, and there’s been more than one occasion when I’ve seen a younger and hungrier support band completely blow some old-stagers away.

Anyway, go and read that Metal Hammer piece. And take a look at yourself and think about whether you are part of the problem.

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Driverless Cars and Predicting the Future

There is a lot of hype about driverless cars swirling around the interwebs at the moment, but this piece of pseudo-utopian nonsense is ridiculous by any standards.

When he simultaneously talks about wholesale destruction of industries employing millions of people while declaring it’s a great time to be alive, it really does speak volumes about the combination of utopianism and sociopathy that Silicon Valley is notorious for. He does come over as someone who’s read way too much Ayn Rand.

For starters, the idea that driverless cars will make existing mass-transit obsolete and “release the prime real-estate occupied by bus stations for other purposes” suggests the author has not experienced any kind of urban environment other than the low-density suburban sprawls typical of much of North America.

The truth is that nobody really knows how soon this technology will be mature enough for widespread adoption, and what sort of economic impact it might have. We’ve had the technology for fully-automated trains for almost half a century now, but it’s not been adopted beyond a very small number of closed systems. Perhaps the evangelists for self-driving cars ought to investigate why?

Predictions of the future when potentially disruptive new technologies emerge usually turn out to be wrong.

The most ridiculous thing I’ve ever read on the subject has to be the idea that driverless vehicles will open up the industrialisation of sub-Saharan Africa through columns of automated trucks trundling across the Sahara delivering African-made goods to Europe. It never seemed to occur to them it would merely replicate what was feasible using 19th century technology in the shape of a railway. But no trans-Saharan railway has ever been built or seriously proposed, because there’s never been enough economic demand for one. It’s far easier to ship goods from Africa to to the nearest port and send it by sea.

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Cameron, The Saudis and Human Rights

Just in case anyone thinks I spend too much time criticising Labour and not enough time scrutinising what the Tories are up to, a reminded the Cameron & co don’t exacly occupy the moral high ground when it comes to relationships with unsavoury elements in the Middle East.

From The Independent.

David Cameron has been urged to “come clean” over the role the UK Government played in voting Saudi Arabia on to the UN Human Rights Council in an alleged secret deal.

The Saudi Government executed 47 people on Saturday causing outrage across the Middle East and sparking renewed concerns over its human rights record.

In response, the leaders of the Liberal Democrat and Green parties have demanded a public inquiry into whether Britain was involved in a secret vote-trading deal in 2013 to secure both countries a place on an influential UN panel.

Diplomatic cables released by Wikileaks last year purported to show that the UK initiated secret negotiations by asking Saudi Arabia for its support ahead of a ballot.

Sometimes Saudi Arabia comes over as ISIS with better PR and vast amounts of money. The Saudi royal family have more in common with a Mafia clan than the leaders of a modern nation. The Saudis, rather that America’s wars, are the biggest single cause of what’s wrong with the Middle East, destabilising nation after nation in brutal proxy wars with their regional rival Iran. And that’s before we even start on their decades long oil-funded proselytising their intolerantly sectarian version of Islam across the Middle East and Europe that will take a generation to undo.

They have one of the world’s worst records on human rights, yet they chair the UN Human Rights Council.

And they got that with Britain’s help.

Words fail me.

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The Reshuffle Omnishambles

The omnishambles of the Shadow Cabinet reshuffle has laid bare what many of us have been thinking for a long time; Jeremy Corbyn is completely useless, and is quite out of his depth as Leader of the Opposition. It makes me wonder what proportion of those who voted for him as leader are now themselves wondering what on earth they were thinking at the time.

He’s neither a natural leader nor a deep political thinker. His principled leftism is little more than simplistic dogmatism that’s unable to cope with any kind of out-of-context problem. He is probably an honourable man personally, but he’s nevertheless surrounded himself with awful people like Seamas Milne, doctrinaire Stalinists who behave as though they consider the moderates of their own party rather than the Tories are the real enemy.

As long as this goes on, it’s hard to imagine anything other than a deeply-divided party going down to catastrophic defeat at the hands of the Tories at the next election. For us Liberal Democrats, the only silver lining might be a Liberal revival filling the vacuum left by the disintegrating Labour party. But even then we face the prospect of a Tory administration with a thumping majority, as happened during the 1980s.

There is one thing even worse, though unlikely. It’s Corbyn somehow managing to beat a Tory party that imploded after Cameron’s idiotically ill-advised EU referendum. If you think Corbyn is disastrous as Leader of the Opposition, imagine how bad he’d be as Prime Minister.

Meanwhile, while the media focuses of Labour, the Tories can do what they like without opposition or scrutiny.

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