From: Steve Kinney <ad...@pilobilus.net>>> Also, anarchy seems to work best 
when everyone is more-or-less
>> equally powerful. Everyone has the same weapons, for example. In
>> science fiction, anarchist societies typically depend on some new
>> technology that eliminates states' power monopoly. Maybe it'll be
>> the Singularity.
> 
> The pathway to the solution was described in 1995-95, by me:
> https://cryptome.org/ap.htm
> "Assassination Politics".

"A couple of years ago, Forbes reported that 400 billionaires owned 1/2
the capital assets in the U.S."
First, I should point out that to the extent that this may seem to be a 
problem,part of the problem is that behind the scenes, governments actuallymay 
be _promoting_ income inequality, rather than reducing it.  I'veseen an article 
that indicates that considered over the entire world economy,income inequality 
may have peaked in the 1980's, and has been loweringsince then.  To a great 
degree, that is because of world trade, and the fact that we (America) are 
getting manufactured goods from foreign countries, to anextent far different 
than in the, say, 1960's.   This strongly contrasts with thekind of people 
(leftists) who selectively point to income inequality within a singlenation, 
saying it is increasing.
"In the face of this, I think AP may have a problem with scale:  How
many small investors does it take to redirect AP profiteers away from
targets chosen by factions among the ruling class, beginning with
anyone suspected of operating the AP infrastructure and/or promoting
it effectively to a wide audience of participants?"
It's hard to target people when you don't know who they are.  In today's 
political world, people try to make changes by being loud and 
complaining.Potentially, this makes them targets while AP is turning on.  But I 
believe thatin a smoothly-functioning 'post-AP-transition' world, people simply 
don't needto complain.Or, they will be able to do so anonymously.  Would a very 
rich person havesort of special advantage in an AP world?  Well, he'd have a 
lot of money, but that would be just about the only advantage he has.  AP would 
effectively shut down governments, not merely shutting down the need for 
government, but also making it virtually impossible to run a large,or 
oppressive (or both) government.  This means that governments won't be able to 
funnel money to those people who (in today's world) eventually 
becomebillionaires.
>If an AP lottery is not "fair and honest" by allowing anyone to be
targeted regardless of occupation or etc., how long until ones that do
allow any human to be bet on appear, with inflated bounties on
perceived enemies of the ruling class?"

Long ago, I realized that a fully-functioning, 'complete' AP system would 
eventually haveto somehow replace both the existing national defense system, as 
well as theexisting 'criminal justice' system. "Did somebody actually aggress 
on somebody else?" But initially, to get there, I think it would be sufficient 
to have an AP-organization with a much-simpler standard:  "Does the person 
named as the aggressor work for government atsome level?".    He's already 
aggressed.  No more proof is necessary.
If, hypothetically, I was running such an AP system, I knew that I couldn't 
stop anyone else fromalso running a different AP system, different rules.  I 
imagined that this wouldn't (couldn't) be a monopoly, it would amount to a 
competition.  Some organizations (I'll label them "unethical") would accept 
bets on anyone.  Others, such as my own, would initially just have the 
initial"does he work for government" standard.  Over time, I believe that the 
"ethical" organizationswould have advantages, so they could do the equivalent 
of offering lower prices:The amount of their awards could be lower.  The 
"unethical" organizations would "do" anybody, but it would cost much more.  
They would take higher profits, meaning that peoplewho had a genuine beef with 
someone else would tend to employ "ethical" systems.  "Business"would tend to 
shift.  Over time, the market will shift from "unethical" to "ethical". 
 Eventually, what amounted to "court systems" would be included, to decide 
whethera complaint was valid.  These "court systems" would, of course, be 
"voluntary",in the sense nobody would be required to appear, but the 
consequence of failure to appearwould be that 'bare AP' would operate:  If 
enough donations appeared to motivate somebody,that would happen.  

>Mind you, AP is a frightfully clever idea.
At the time I started writing the first part of AP in January-February 1995, I 
was entirely unaware  of the existence of the CP list, or documents such as 
Cyphernomicon:I had no direct access to the Internet, and the WWW.  In section 
16.4.2 of Cyphernomicon  is the paragraph:  
http://www.kreps.org/hackers/overheads/11cyphernervs.pdf
"The State will of course try to slow or halt the spread of this technology, 
citingnational security concerns, use of the technology by drug dealers and tax 
evaders, andfears of societal disintegration. Many of these concerns will be 
valid; crypto anarchywill allow national secrets to be trade freely and will 
allow illicit and stolen materialsto be traded. An anonymous computerized 
market will even make possible abhorrentmarkets for assassinations and 
extortion."
Despite my forming the idea essentially independently, even then I was not 
under any impression that I  was somehow inventing the concept of an  
"assassination market", which I assumed at the time to be obvious. 
 Rather, I believed that  what  would usually be thought of such a market would 
be a system where "Anonymous Person A could hire Anonymous Person B to kill 
Person C."  Certainly that was a sufficiently  fascinating idea in the early 
1990's to be worth discussing, but it occurred to me that if that was the only 
use made of it, few people want specific other peopledead enough to completely 
finance it themselves.  Far more interesting, the thing I really broughtto the 
table, would be the idea where tens, hundreds, thousands, or even millions of 
anonymous persons pool their donations, and offer to any number of potential 
assassins, such that the winning assassin gets his reward also anonymously.   
THAT, I thought and still think, was a new concept.  That is not merely 
quantitatively different than 'your father's assassination market', but in fact 
qualitatively different:  Combine enough donations, no matter how tiny the 
individual ones are, and that will be plenty to buy death.  Further, offer 
those donations to an unlimited number of people, and the target will have no 
idea from where the killing blow will strike.  Each potential assassin knows he 
competing with all the rest.
And once I thought of that idea, I've always believed that it was absolutely 
inevitable.  SOMEBODY
was going to think of this, eventually.  It just happened to be me.
              Jim Bell

  

Reply via email to