@lanodan
Anarcho-capitalism was created as a "bridge" between the "New Right" (classical liberals, Objectivists, etc) and the "Old Left" (left-anarchists). The idea was that all human association and institutions should be voluntary whether that be from privately owned companies, self-employeed individuals, worker co-ops, or non-profit organizations. There were originally people on both sides who were on board, but things feel apart when Rothbard sided with the Paleo-Conservatives, later in his life.
Though due to the fact that some people believe that it's contradictory to anarchism, some instead go for terms like Voluntaryist or Autarchist (rule of self).
>Like you'd replace police with private milicia, and from there they can claim they own everything between each others.
Ancaps believe that property can only be obtained either by trading or applying labor (or having someone voluntarily applying the labor for you) to unclaimed property, unlike the state which can claim whatever property they want as long as they have the means to take it and defend it.
>For example open marketplaces and other kind of bazaar would be essentially gone.
Not necessarily. You can still have collectively owned property if a group of people decided to apply labor to unclaimed property and declare that it is collectively owned. So you can still have open markets that nobody actually owns but anyone can set up a stand.
The so called "left-rothbardians" believe that any property that was owned by the state (think public parks and plazas) should belong to everyone if the state is abolished.
@lanodan I think he's an ancap. Ancaps and other right-libertarians don't believe in copyright because to them, they are state sanctioned monopolies.
@lanodan You are making Eric S. Raymond very angry right now.
@gabriel I'm wondering what it would take to make something like DoorDash or UberEats, but decentralized. I see most restraunts have tablets dedicated for receiving orders. I wonder if those tablets can run as servers and you just have a simple protocol for placing orders. However, I think things might be too complicated for restaurant owners/managers to handle.
Unveiling the World's First Open Source Android Radio | ComJot CJ-1
https://odysee.com/@hamradio2dot0:6/unveiling-the-world's-first-open-source:5
Watch out #Canada
> Bill C-26 empowers government officials to secretly order telecommunications companies to install backdoors inside encrypted elements in Canada’s networks. This could include requiring telcos to alter the 5G encryption standards that protect mobile communications to facilitate government surveillance.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/article-ottawa-wants-the-power-to-create-secret-backdoors-in-our-networks-to/
“The [USDA] will provide up to $1,500 to any farm that implements a biosecurity plan…although it is unclear exactly what those measures are.”
This is fucking ridiculous.
By federal law, milk companies pull a sample from every bulk tank on every farm every time they pick up, to screen for antibiotics residue among other things.
Adding bird flu to that panel is logistically trivial.
Why are they putting out a vague call to action aimed at FARMERS with a bullshit offer?
https://mastodon.social/@COVID19_DISEASE/112521778111150352
The FBI/DHS/CDC were dictating censorship guidelines to Twitter at this time. That is a violation of the 1st amendment and is unconstitutional. It was, and is, illegal.
I opposed his banning and still do
Not all libertarians are retarded
Just the ones we run for president are
@PurpCat @coolboymew There are a few Videoway boxes out there in the wild, but they are expensive and non-functional, unless you find a way to feed teletext data into it.
@PurpCat I just want to talk about my hobbies, but now communities are either tranny hug-boxes or TND edgelords.
@coolboymew
If only someone was clever enough to have hacked their terminal to dump whatever was on their RAM back when the service was still in operation.
"Le fou du roi" seems to be the most interesting because Lost Media Wiki says that it was a Zelda/Pac-Man hybrid.
The closest thing I had to Videoway was GameLounge which was a DirectTV channel that provided games streamed to your satellite box, but they were the quality of Java feature phone games, and even then you still had to pay an extra fee to play the full game, except on certain "free weekends". Most of the stuff on there was Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network themed. Dish had something similar, but for Disney games.
It just pains me that there are absolutely zero preservation efforts for these games that were streamed via non-Internet means. I think they represent a unique and obscure part of gaming history. I NEVER hear anyone talk about it outside of the Satellaview and Sega Channel. Not even the Video Game History Foundation mentions them. I feel like if people are more vocal about it, then it would be more likely that these games will be leaked or even officially re-released in some form.
@coolboymew Too bad they are just recreations. The source code to these games are rumored to still exist. There have even been attempts to emulate the Videoway hardware but it's pointless given that it relies on teletext data that is no longer available.
This shit is arguably more obscure than the Satellaview. It's fucking insane.
https://lostmediawiki.com/Videoway_(lost_Canadian_cable-box_games;_1990-2006)#Emulation_Attempts