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Let’s Go to the Slop!
Like some lethargic oversized pig swaying in the sweltering heat down towards the beloved muddy pit, we now look forward towards the summer doldrums, dragging our feet through the cooling water while keeping our head somewhat above water in order to keep a lookout on what might be coming up — whether from the depths below or rising up into the sky just above the horizon.
But we’re not quite there yet. I want to remind you of what’s just behind us, namely the spectre of ASS (artificially sentient slop) we were mentioning just last week — and which will probably still be haunting us for some time to come.
I recall my father liked to use the metaphor of how some huge ship on the water would be shipping along in this or that direction — but trying to get that thing to stop moving was much easier said than done. I feel some kind of analogy to the very popular movement of following ASS.
Many years ago, when I watched the movie about the “Woodstock” concert (which was actually NOT near Woodstock at all), I was amazed at how thrilling the appearance of the band Sha Na Na seemed as they sang a song which I thought of as extremely outdated, namely “Let’s Go to the Hop”.

Source: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/763923155526223139 Yet, very much like well-trained Pavlov dogs, consumers today will probably continue to flock towards their favorite ASS watering-holes throughout the summer, through many more seasons and perhaps (if they never manage to muster any more literacy skills than they’ve continued to slide along on up until now) for their entire lifetime (not exactly a guarantee, but still quite obviously observable BOOMER behavior). [1]
[1] See also: “Google can’t answer question about using Google (or NOT)” [ https://search.tech.blog/2025/06/10/google-cant-answer-question-about-using-google-or-not ]
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ASS: Artificially Sentient Slop
Anyone who has successfully graduated grammar school ought to know that the plural form of “Nostradamus” is “Nostradami”. The hyper-inflation in Nostradami today is unprecedented. [1]
The current flood of Nostradami is leading to rising levels of Doomsday books, for which we (of course) need ever more investments in artificial intelligence. One leading Nostradamus recently wrote:
I spoke with Jack Dorsey right after he left Bluesky’s board, and he made the case for an algorithm store. The algorithms that sift through content for us exist because the average person online is overwhelmed by the amount of information available, and doesn’t know how to find the content they actually want.
https://www.piratewires.com/p/slop-world
As the CEO of Wants [ https://wants.blog ], I feel I have a great amount of expertise with respect to what people actually declare they want. I regret to inform Mr. Solana and Mr. Dorsey that they are probably wrong. Or rather: barking up the wrong tree. [2]
As most users of the Internet have not even reached a level of literacy that would allow them to become aware of the fact that they make such choices all the time, let alone think rationally about whether the motivations behind the companies of the leading brand-name algorithms might be aligned with their own motivations (or NOT), the predictions of such Nostradami ought to be taken with a grain of salt (at least). Indeed, as I myself recently wrote: the visions of these leading brand-name providers are themselves not very visionary either (see “Google can’t answer question about using Google (or NOT)” [ https://search.tech.blog/2025/06/10/google-cant-answer-question-about-using-google-or-not ] ).
[1] I expect the more mathematically oriented among my readership may very well need to read that twice or thrice or even more times. 😉
[2] Please note that due to the rising flooding throughout all media (see also “What is Publicacy + Why does it Matter?“), Nostradami are in fact increasingly being observed to be barking up trees other Nostradami used to pee on, and this is leading to outbreaks of Nostradami taking the piss out of barking Nostradami, and also vice versa.
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Exploring Humanity: Clickbait Edition
I’ve been asked to be part of an event to highlight some music I find worthy of highlighting at a weekend soiree in a couple weeks, and I’ve chosen to focus my “feature” on a brief period in musical history (roughly 1980’s, yet also as far back as the 1950’s and also much later — even up to and including our own “era” of music) which has been strongly influenced by cinematography and is most widely known by the rapid surge of a new format commonly referred to as the “music video”.

Clay animation from “Inca Roads” (Frank Zappa) At the same time, I am also currently very inspired by a conversation between Alana Newhouse and Bridget Phetasy (see “Equality of Opportunity Rule” [ https://teaser.news.blog/2025/07/06/equality-of-opportunity-rule ] ) which also deeply explores a variety of aspects involved in the human behaviors related to information processing.
One of my favorite examples of this “thank you, next” principle (succinctly described by Alana Newhouse and quoted in the linked-to article above) is the web site pets.com which once had a website declared “forever dead” (or something like that) during the “dotcom bust” about a quarter of a century ago. Spoiler alert: pets.com remains alive and kicking address, apparently stronger than ever to this day (and most likely far beyond that, too).
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Supply, Demand and Making or Creating Meaning
If someone knocks on my door and / or rings my doorbell only to tell me they want to offer me new and improved meaning I will probably tell them to go … do something else.
I don’t need or want any interruptions in my life, thank you very much. I want to move forward, I want to progress and I know myself well enough in which directions I need to go in order to get it while I can.

source: https://catlintucker.com/2024/02/meaning-making I consider this matter so important that I have featured it on the homepage of Wants.Blog [ https://wants.blog ] — and yet you can also save yourself that one extra click by going directly to “Inter-Reliance, Self-Dependence & Responsibility“.
Not only do I demand meaning — no, no, no, no, no! I also supply it.
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Cavities, Spaces, Pigeon Holes and the Tunnel-Vision through the Channels in Between Work and Life
This week, I’m living (and working) according to a little bit different time schedule than most weeks.
Just a few days ago, I had a marathon movie viewing bout — I think I watched 4 movies in an 8-hour time frame. They were all very different, and one of them I chose mainly based on the title of the movie alone: “Turtles All the Way Down” (which is a famous quote I myself also alluded to a couple weeks ago — see “Relational Data-Based Logic & Meta-Physical Constraints” [ https://socio.business.blog/2025/06/01/relational-data-based-logic-meta-physical-constraints ], specifically my point about “it’s fiction all the way down (or up, or sideways or whatever)”).

Source: “‘Turtles All the Way Down’ Review: Isabela Merced Is Spectacular in Heartfelt YA Drama” [ https://collider.com/turtles-all-the-way-down-review ] While this movie seems to be about a person who is very much “in their own head“, it also involves media in between people (as shown above) … and therefore also seems to harken back to another popular movie named “The Social Dilemma” (2020), about which I also wrote a post on another blog at that time — see “Herding Millennials — a new agenda for tech?” [ https://connect.data.blog/2020/09/16/herding-millennials-a-new-agenda-for-tech ]
I feel all of this is closely related to something I have also sort of discovered this week: increasingly, people seem to be commuting back and forth inside highly insulated channels in sort of tunnel-vision experiences in between their work life and home life experiences. And for many people across the globe (at least in the industrialized world) their home life experiences are strongly “mediated” by immense media conglomerates (and therefore for many people, much of their home life experience is likewise insulated from other people they might occasionally come into contact with).
As a result, there is a growing threat of an almost complete communication breakdown between people.
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How Censorship Can Be Particularly Damaging to Open Source Projects
Upon returning from a WordPress Congress last week (namely WordCamp Europe 2025 in Basel, Switzerland), I had some reservations concerning in the WordPress community’s evolving cultural norms.
This week, these reservations became even more rampant as I became aware of signs that some of my own views may be being censored. Censorship is always a problem, but I feel that open source projects may be particularly severely damaged if and when an aspiring censor steps into the arena. Since open source projects rely heavily on the contributions of people who share ideas freely, any attempts to stifle that sharing of information can quickly and easily bring contributions to a standstill.

“Appearing in search Q & A” [ https://search.tech.blog/2025/06/10/google-cant-answer-question-about-using-google-or-not ] During the congress, I raised a question during a Q&A period. The speaker asked me to ask the question at another time, in another setting. I was open to the request and agreed to avoid postponing the discussion any further, as the speaker had already gone overtime with his talk. Yet when I had later written up my ideas (see “Google can’t answer question about using Google (or NOT)“), I noticed that I was unable to share these on the post dedicated to the talk. Even if I left the corresponding link absent from my comment, the comment was simply not published. I began to wonder if perhaps I was being censored.
It has already been an entire week since the original post was published. My comment is nowhere to be seen. The repercussions of such an action (of censorship) would indeed be dire. I am shocked to be even considering this possibility. I find my trust has been gravely impacted, and it is causing me to worry about the associated questionable future of the entire project.
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Losing the plot
I was at an event over the last few days which I will probably write a lot more about over the coming weeks, but there were a few interactions I had with others which have prompted me to write about this topic — and in particular the way I see it.
In my humble opinion, it is possible for someone to “lose the plot”. It is also possible for entire communities to “lose the plot”. Maybe even all of civilization, humanity, and all the members of homo sapiens (whether on the planet earth, or even if they’re floating somewhere in space).

This is some more or less random image from slang.net. I am including it here because of this text (sourced from https://slang.net/meaning/lost_the_plot ): “This page explains what the slang term “Lost the plot” means. The definition, example, and related terms listed above have been manually compiled and written by the Slang.net team.” Note that the text appears to be referencing itself — as if I were to say of myself “I am a successful person” ( LOL ). -
Relational Data-Based Logic & Meta-Physical Constraints
When I as author of a text choose a title for that text, then I become an author on a different level. The descriptors I choose describe other descriptions. On a gut level, we feel this by being aware that the choice of a title feels more significant than the choices of commas or similar punctuation throughout the subordinate text. When we get into the “flow” of writing, we are able to turn off that “meta-” mind more easily.
One thing that is truly mind-boggling is that there seems to be something like an unwritten rule that titles and subordinate texts need to be composed using the same language, the one we presumably share with our more-or-less fictional audience, which we assume also belongs to our own linguistic community.
To cut to the chase: What is all too easy to lose sight of is that it’s fiction all the way down (or up, or sideways or whatever). Every meta is just as fictional as the one above it, below it, next to it, in front, behind or whatever as we walk to wherever we are going. There is no there — neither here nor there nor everywhere nor anywhere for that matter. There is no truth, there is only opinions or at best educated guesses, which may very well be better or worse depending on whose opinion it is we happen to be relying on at the moment.

source: https://quotesgram.com/yertle-the-turtle-quotes It can be very liberating to approach the more or less artistic work as merely up to the “whim” of the author, such as how George Orwell must have felt when he came up with “1984” (which, ironically, seems to be written in a way that transcends language).
When we thrust our attention towards such meta-physical aspirations of logic and truth into the realms of tagging systems such as “tags” and “categories” (and other such menus of “lions, tigers and bears”), we force ourselves to acknowledge that we all simply appear to be in the same boat, speaking the same language, when in fact we truly know nothing at all.
Perhaps the greatest irony of all is that we don’t tend to become dizzy or uneasy on our feet until we look down and realize that we are indeed afraid of heights.
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Spoken vs. Written Language
Writing this week’s blog post has been difficult, because I have experienced significant trauma related to the topic of this post. In graduate school, I wrote an essay on the differences between written and spoken languages in a course called “diachronic linguistics”, in which I came to the conclusion that it is impossible to study the development of spoken languages over time. The professor who oversaw my work failed to understand my point, and I refused to budge. I got such a poor grade in that one course that for that reason I was not able to earn a master’s degree in linguistics. I decided that didn’t matter, because no one would ever hire me for a linguistics degree, and I still earned my master’s degree in information science anyways (though few people seem to be very impressed with that degree, too).
I do not wish to go into great detail about the differences between written and spoken languages here. Instead, I want to point out something that has changed in the intervening decades. Back when I wrote my essay, I already pointed out that sound recordings are actually a form of written language. Yet in the intervening years, the fidelity and data storage capacities of recording systems have increased vastly. Gone are the days of grainy recordings! Today, humans are probably unable to distinguish between sound recordings and actual spoken languages.
And there’s even more! Today it either is feasible or it is rapidly becoming feasible for data processing companies (such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon or probably a dozen more so-called “tech giants”) to track what their users like … and so they can not only make any voice sound real, they can make it sound very much like a beloved voice. Perhaps this need not even simply be the voice of a beloved person. They can probably monitor which voices, which intonations and similar speech patterns users find the most agreeable. They can thereby create entire new personas which are better than the mere flesh and blood persons we experience “in real life”.

source: https://archive.org/details/tobacco_meo23e00 Written language has come a long way, baby — and it also shows no sign of slowing down any time soon.
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Are You Experienced?
I’m a huge fan of Jimi Hendrix — I guess he must have been rather funny. This title of his (“Are You Experienced?” was the so-called “title track” song from his debut album) was obviously meant to be provocative, at least to people who are open to actually hearing and listening to the words … and most of all to think about what they say (or ask). It doesn’t require much thought to reach the conclusion that it’s impossible to be both alive and to be completely lacking in experience — every living being experiences something.

source: adapted from https://www.authentichendrix.com/products/jimi-by-janie-hendrix-by-john-mcdermott [via https://www.jimihendrix.com ] This weekend, I had a few experiences I don’t regularly have and so I experienced what I don’t regularly experience. None of these experiences was particularly exceptional, on the contrary they were probably all quite ordinary for many or even most people. I realize that my own life is rather exceptional — in the sense of being not ordinary.
I did not really experience any propaganda or manipulation until after I left school and academia. Perhaps I only became aware of it because it affects my “bread and butter” work in such a significant way. For most people living “ordinary” lives, it is also quite ordinary to not become aware of the degree of propaganda and manipulation bombarding their lives on a daily — no, a constant — basis every day of their lives. This is not because they are insensitive or unresponsive to it. It’s simply so ordinary that it’s phased out — perhaps like fish might be unaware that they’re swimming in water.
I think our everyday experiences shape our extraordinary experiences in a significant way. We perceive something as extraordinary or atypical because it contrasts what is typical or ordinary. Many people seem very willing to accept pavlovian conditioning sessions simply because they have been introduced as ordinary. They are as neat, right and salutary as communion. Such rituals cement people’s notion of “ordinary“, regular and “common sense”. The more people get on the bandwagon, the thicker the cement, the stronger the wall against any potential opposition. What a fine example of this the so-called corona virus (“CoViD”) pandemic was.
When it ended, I thought surely people must have now woken up to the propaganda and manipulation they are swimming in constantly. But I guess the way the pandemic was declared as “exceptional” and the world afterwards somehow smoothly went “back to normal” … the repetition of manipulative messaging after the pandemic was over is now comparatively somehow miraculously less manipulative, and so it’s also “back to normal”. Thus, conditioning through repetitive massaging of false narratives and propaganda is now again accepted as completely ordinary.
