This is SUPER fucked up.
China is gamifying patriotism among it's people with a program called Sesame Credit. This program does things like monitor all of your net traffick, lowering your score when you report on tragedies and corruption in the country unless it's from state sponsored sources, in which case it will raise your score. It examines all your social media activity and you get perks for towing the party line (or rather lose them if you don't)... but you can also lose them by being connected to people with low scores. It essentially makes being a "good citizen" a game but your actions can affect the people you know. They are hoping to use Sesame Credit to stem revolution by making it impossible to avoid punishing your family for your actions.Can someone give the short of it? At work, can't watch videos, etc.
Imagine if Big Brother put out a social media game.Can someone give the short of it? At work, can't watch videos, etc.
Insurance companies do it too ("What is YOUR step count today?") but they also offer you rebates if you walk enough. This does the opposite: makes patriotism (or at least obedience) a REQUIREMENT for a sustainable life. You won't be able to buy certain things without a alarge enough score. You won't be able to get into certain schools if you or your parents don't have a large enough score. And you can be denied opportunity by a low score.Problematic, but highly effective and intelligent. Gamifying household chores for XP was already a thing and I know some employers are moving towards similar systems to incentivize working late, doing things by the book, etc. It only makes sense. Games, especially mobile ones, have shown how easy it is to make people want to be part of a skinner box experiment.
I've always had a hard time recognizing the practical differences between the two.I used to think the Communist government of China was in it's last age before forming a new government but now I'm forced to consider that system might be fascism.
There was a "social experiment" type reality tv show on here this season, called "Dictator" - a bunch of young people willingly subject themselves to the rules of a dictatorship, and the one who best "plays along" and/or rats out the others, and whatever, won. There was an accompanying mobile app game. The tag line was "Do you want to experience life in a dictatorship too?". It was one of the most popular games in Belgium in the past months. I don't understand why anyone would want to live in a dictatorship. And in case you're wondering, part of the game was, indeed, things like "you must wear blue pants today" or "you must comb your hair on the left side today", and you could "report" other players who didn't follow the rules.Imagine if Big Brother put out a social media game.
Roleplaying is fun. Deriving enjoyment from obedience to an external authority is not an uncommon personality trait. Having additional in-groups feels great, even if membership threshold is low.There was a "social experiment" type reality tv show on here this season, called "Dictator" - a bunch of young people willingly subject themselves to the rules of a dictatorship, and the one who best "plays along" and/or rats out the others, and whatever, won. There was an accompanying mobile app game. The tag line was "Do you want to experience life in a dictatorship too?". It was one of the most popular games in Belgium in the past months. I don't understand why anyone would want to live in a dictatorship. And in case you're wondering, part of the game was, indeed, things like "you must wear blue pants today" or "you must comb your hair on the left side today", and you could "report" other players who didn't follow the rules.
Yeah, I'd be curious to get her take as well. I heard from her a little under a month ago. She's "relatively OK" and wishes she was back.Reading that post made me miss Amy.
Well that's good to know at any rate. I was going to ask next time we talked on Vent or Steam.Yeah, I'd be curious to get her take as well. I heard from her a little under a month ago. She's "relatively OK" and wishes she was back.
You would know, Punchy. You would know."This is the behavior of a sociopath" Shkreli was heard screaming.
For his part, Shkreli’s lawyer was unmoved by his client’s complaint. “Compared to what he pays for an hour of Wu-Tang Clan, sixty thou is a bargain,” he said.
Oh I know. But it's fun to think of none the less. I sometimes wish we had a political humor thread for this kind of thing.It's satire, but I wish it were not.
[Picture of Fry, his eyes narrowed]Oh I know. But it's fun to think of none the less. I sometimes wish we had a political humor thread for this kind of thing.
[Temba, his arms wide][Picture of Fry, his eyes narrowed]
[Shaka, When the Walls Fell][Temba, his arms wide]
--Patrick
Without access to this information, it is far more difficult to organize an on-the-ground campaign in the few weeks left before the primary. This database is supposed to be available to all Democratic candidates. Wasserman-Schulz demands proof that the Sanders campaign "doesn't have their data".Debbie Wasserman-Schultz said:"That is the only way that we can make sure that we can protect our significant asset that is the voter file and its integrity," Wasserman Schultz said on CNN.
She said "multiple staffers" from the Sanders campaign downloaded information that they did not have the right to collect.
"They not only viewed it, but they exported it and they downloaded it," Wasserman Schultz told CNN's Wolf Blitzer. "We don't know the depth of what they actually viewed and downloaded. We have to make sure that they did not manipulate the information."
If 6 bullet points isn't short and condensed enough for someone supposedly interested in politics, I fear for the future of our nations. An elaborate explanation with all links and points would be 20 pages.that version wasn't short at all