ada & zangemann
November 2023 in review / Récap de novembre 2023
Yes, men are losing rights in the age of feminism
That’s the pesky asterisk in “men are losing rights*”. And it’s a different argument than “ha ha ha LOL shut up you haven’t lost any rights.” Men have lost rights. Unpacking why, and whether we shoud’ve ever had them to begin with, is a different conversation, and one I think we need to be willing to have if we are to deconstruct the weird entitlement of the manosphere.
My default apps in 2023
Taking opportunities to connect
LLMs also, through their very design, conflate frequency with quality. It will drive you to the same books everyone else reads. The bestseller list is already self-reinforcing, and algorithms double down.
This example was pretty specifically about book recommendations, but I fully agree with it.
a slice of the early trans internet has been retrieved
1000 articles Wikipédia plus tard
Cette semaine, j’ai publié mon millième article sur Wikipédia en français. (C’était en fait probablement plutôt mon 1002 ou 1003e article : je n’ai pas compté les quelques pages supprimées entre-temps par débat d’admissibilité.) Avec 6 ans et demi de Wikipédia dans les pattes, un rôle d’admin depuis un peu plus d’un an, et d’autres…
Salt Crystals by Cristina Bendek
Fastest, Highest, Strongest: A Critique of High-Performance Sport by Rob Beamish & Ian Ritchie
Explores the use of drugs and other performance-enhancing practices in sport, tracing the development of the situation through its socio-political history. This work presents a critique of the use of athletes as representatives of political regimes, and the constant striving for medals that has altered the ethos of the Olympic Games.
This was an interesting and thought-provoking read on high performance sport and mostly on doping. Doping is a highly emotional issue and going through its history with a new lens took me out of my comfort zone − and it was fascinating. Beamish seems to have a very clear opinion that anti-doping policies are a…