21 lines
1.2 KiB
Markdown
21 lines
1.2 KiB
Markdown
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---
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layout: post
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title: "A new way? nineteenth of March 2018: Night"
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---
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When did it become an assumption that I have to have a password on the
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Internet or even my desktop-computer? I was inspired to think if
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something has gone wrong, in the design of Internet-and-computer
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technologies, when I realised that an engineering problem - how to
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display certain information on a web-site - could possibly be solved by
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letting users run commands on the server (as opposed as viewing data on
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a client) Passwords, levels of privilege, 'admininistrator-rights' -
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don't all these scream 'I don't trust you. I don't trust others' Now is
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that what I want in my life, I ask. Do I want to indirectly say 'I don't
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trust others' every time I use a technology. Or do I want to spend time
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building (trust in) relationships that arguably are made and broken by
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(mutual) trust. Does using technology necessarily mean that I have to
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give up on trust and/or trust-building. Is it possible we could find a
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new way to use technology so that we find the satisfaction (and
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intimacy) that comes from a rewarding relationship with a something. A
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god. A business-partner. So on and so forth.
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