Douglas La Rocca on Thu, 5 Dec 2013 10:16:58 +0100 (CET) |
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Re: <nettime> Stephen Foley: Bitcoin needs to learn from past |
> As an anti-capitalist and precarized content producer now I wonder As a Marxist (more or less in agreement with the 2nd International), I have to say these two recently popular concepts on the Left need to be critically evaluated. For "anti-capitalist": this would be considered in Hegel-speak a "simple negation" and doesn't specify much at all. The so-called "precariat" is a recent invention that repeats the post-60s habit of searching for the "new revolutionary subject," i.e. something other than the proletariat. I'm not challenging it as a sociological description but rather as a political category. It is nothing more than a rebranded "lumpenproletariat," currently being pushed by outfits such as the ISO which are floudering quite badly at the moment (having failed to consolidate any decent energy post-#Occupy). -dl On Wed, Dec 4, 2013 at 3:42 PM, Jaromil <jaromil@dyne.org> wrote: > On Mon, 02 Dec 2013, Florian Cramer wrote: > > > Another way of looking at Bitcoin is to consider it an unintended > > privacy nightmare in the making. Bitcoin is based on the concept that > > money is stored in anonymized accounts ("wallets") whose transactions > > are publicly viewable; that is, all Bitcoin transactions ever made by > > anyone, permanently archived. > > Yes, it is basically a chain of contracts, triple-signed... > > How funny that justicialist detractors have so far fought it as a > criminal tool, while even the most financially coercitive apparata have > never managed to put in place such a formidable device for financial > control and disintermediation. <....> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org