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bitpunk.fm is typing
_@bitpunk.fm
npub1f49t...zpez
A low-fi audiozine that puts the punk back in cypherpunk.
Just sat in on a live show where all we did was read the boostagrams from everyone who supported the satellite skirmish. This is the loop of value-for-value-for-value. What a nice community, thanks for having me.
The war against stamps! I got my first cassette package rejected today, sorry to whomever requested it! I just mail things to whatever address you gave me. I guess I can still use stamps if I just drop it off in person. Ironically the package is more expensive to mail with just stamps than using the label. But for those of you that make an attempt to keep your privacy via the postcard protocol, I try to respect it. Or maybe my FM radio kits and samizdat cassettes are just too radical for the post office!! I'll get this back out in the mail soon.
This introduction is 🔥. This is what podcasting 2.0 does to a T. The T being transparency with the multitude of artist splits. image
New book. The cost of a perfect playlist is a postcard and a stamp, sent to me, with you LNbeats tracks. Which will be returned to you on a type 1 cassette.
Watched another Adam Curtis documentary called the Trap. The trap being a concept of liberty called "negative liberty." It's a difficult concept for me to explain but negative liberty is the idea there should be no restrictions on ones life. This is I think, the ideals of many here. Positive liberty, is, well, I don't have a good grasp on it, seems to be more about the idea of being free to choose a path that pursues a goal or a purpose. So it's less about a concept of complete lack of restrictions. This might be the difference I'm noticing in the podcasting 2.0 community versus the pure bitcoin community. The former seems to focus more on a positive, purpose driven community. The later seems to be a loose collection of people who don't want things in their way. Both of these characterizations are not completely true however. The film really makes you question if negative liberty is a good thing or not though. I'd recommend this film to everyone here. These documentaries were recommended to me by Amir Taaki, which I find interesting given his current projects.
Still on tape 1 but this was clearly ahead of its time. Robert Bly has such a dynamic range, going from biting criticism to such soft, beautiful descriptions. image
I watched yesterday Adam Curtis' documentary All Watched Over by Machines of Love and Grace. It talks about how in the 1960s people tried to create communes of leaderless, decentralized, communes and how these all miserably failed. One of the reason it fails is because strong personalities actively bullied others and there was built in rules that prevented political type factions from organizing and pushing back. Nostr sometimes feels like these failed communes of digital utopia. It's not quite the same, but there is lots in common. But then there certain individuals that make it very interesting. I think we have this saying wrong though. "Protocol > platform." I think it's "people > protocol."