Ecoer Logo

@vdeva

25

Engineer | Writer | Aspiring Social Entrepreneur

steemit.com/@vdeva
VOTING POWER100.00%
DOWNVOTE POWER100.00%
RESOURCE CREDITS100.00%
REPUTATION PROGRESS0.00%
Net Worth
0.041USD
STEEM
0.000STEEM
SBD
0.015SBD
Effective Power
5.001SP
├── Own SP
0.631SP
└── Incoming Deleg
+4.370SP

Detailed Balance

STEEM
balance
0.000STEEM
market_balance
0.000STEEM
savings_balance
0.000STEEM
reward_steem_balance
0.000STEEM
STEEM POWER
Own SP
0.631SP
Delegated Out
0.000SP
Delegation In
4.370SP
Effective Power
5.001SP
Reward SP (pending)
0.018SP
SBD
sbd_balance
0.000SBD
sbd_conversions
0.000SBD
sbd_market_balance
0.000SBD
savings_sbd_balance
0.000SBD
reward_sbd_balance
0.015SBD
{
  "balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "vesting_shares": "1027.202461 VESTS",
  "delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "received_vesting_shares": "7116.457345 VESTS",
  "sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "reward_sbd_balance": "0.015 SBD",
  "conversions": []
}

Account Info

namevdeva
id441460
rank1,427,950
reputation395678993
created2017-11-11T13:51:51
recovery_accountsteem
proxyNone
post_count3
comment_count0
lifetime_vote_count0
witnesses_voted_for0
last_post2017-11-12T05:19:30
last_root_post2017-11-11T17:49:06
last_vote_time2017-11-12T05:18:30
proxied_vsf_votes0, 0, 0, 0
can_vote1
voting_power0
delayed_votes0
balance0.000 STEEM
savings_balance0.000 STEEM
sbd_balance0.000 SBD
savings_sbd_balance0.000 SBD
vesting_shares1027.202461 VESTS
delegated_vesting_shares0.000000 VESTS
received_vesting_shares7116.457345 VESTS
reward_vesting_balance36.964961 VESTS
vesting_balance0.000 STEEM
vesting_withdraw_rate0.000000 VESTS
next_vesting_withdrawal1969-12-31T23:59:59
withdrawn0
to_withdraw0
withdraw_routes0
savings_withdraw_requests0
last_account_recovery1970-01-01T00:00:00
reset_accountnull
last_owner_update1970-01-01T00:00:00
last_account_update2017-11-12T05:14:36
minedNo
sbd_seconds0
sbd_last_interest_payment1970-01-01T00:00:00
savings_sbd_last_interest_payment1970-01-01T00:00:00
{
  "id": 441460,
  "name": "vdeva",
  "owner": {
    "weight_threshold": 1,
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM5k9oGBqcHHsqYHqC8icW7TtgsqeLMwGm4VsA8KDekDjjZPL6Vm",
        1
      ]
    ]
  },
  "active": {
    "weight_threshold": 1,
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM7GPiq3kdhaViMyTgrxZ3yjTVqvhp4E7GCnahzcifVM8NAJiJPY",
        1
      ]
    ]
  },
  "posting": {
    "weight_threshold": 1,
    "account_auths": [],
    "key_auths": [
      [
        "STM6z9WJ9D2Gmva75ksPWa2Y6iQjVbDFm4JzxxbDf8FR77joyKf6h",
        1
      ]
    ]
  },
  "memo_key": "STM5MFyfDHkf9Fi5zUbFM1KRhM6aXGjcnaUvcGRiLy6DKcidQTgkU",
  "json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"profile_image\":\"http://www.biznespreneur.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/t.jpg\",\"name\":\"Optimistic Prime\",\"about\":\"Engineer | Writer | Aspiring Social Entrepreneur\",\"location\":\"Worldwide\"}}",
  "posting_json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"profile_image\":\"http://www.biznespreneur.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/t.jpg\",\"name\":\"Optimistic Prime\",\"about\":\"Engineer | Writer | Aspiring Social Entrepreneur\",\"location\":\"Worldwide\"}}",
  "proxy": "",
  "last_owner_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "last_account_update": "2017-11-12T05:14:36",
  "created": "2017-11-11T13:51:51",
  "mined": false,
  "recovery_account": "steem",
  "last_account_recovery": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "reset_account": "null",
  "comment_count": 0,
  "lifetime_vote_count": 0,
  "post_count": 3,
  "can_vote": true,
  "voting_manabar": {
    "current_mana": "8143659806",
    "last_update_time": 1779090882
  },
  "downvote_manabar": {
    "current_mana": 2035914951,
    "last_update_time": 1779090882
  },
  "voting_power": 0,
  "balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "sbd_seconds": "0",
  "sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
  "savings_sbd_seconds": "0",
  "savings_sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
  "savings_withdraw_requests": 0,
  "reward_sbd_balance": "0.015 SBD",
  "reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reward_vesting_balance": "36.964961 VESTS",
  "reward_vesting_steem": "0.018 STEEM",
  "vesting_shares": "1027.202461 VESTS",
  "delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "received_vesting_shares": "7116.457345 VESTS",
  "vesting_withdraw_rate": "0.000000 VESTS",
  "next_vesting_withdrawal": "1969-12-31T23:59:59",
  "withdrawn": 0,
  "to_withdraw": 0,
  "withdraw_routes": 0,
  "curation_rewards": 0,
  "posting_rewards": 35,
  "proxied_vsf_votes": [
    0,
    0,
    0,
    0
  ],
  "witnesses_voted_for": 0,
  "last_post": "2017-11-12T05:19:30",
  "last_root_post": "2017-11-11T17:49:06",
  "last_vote_time": "2017-11-12T05:18:30",
  "post_bandwidth": 0,
  "pending_claimed_accounts": 0,
  "vesting_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
  "reputation": 395678993,
  "transfer_history": [],
  "market_history": [],
  "post_history": [],
  "vote_history": [],
  "other_history": [],
  "witness_votes": [],
  "tags_usage": [],
  "guest_bloggers": [],
  "rank": 1427950
}

Withdraw Routes

IncomingOutgoing
Empty
Empty
{
  "incoming": [],
  "outgoing": []
}
From Date
To Date
steemdelegated 4.370 SP to @vdeva
2026/05/18 07:54:42
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares7116.457345 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #106152600/Trx d19836d0e1675a8675034254d0da575912ac1e38
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "d19836d0e1675a8675034254d0da575912ac1e38",
  "block": 106152600,
  "trx_in_block": 0,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2026-05-18T07:54:42",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "7116.457345 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 2.705 SP to @vdeva
2026/05/13 10:55:45
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares4404.246940 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #106012930/Trx 892aa2931bb5c11fe20a6bc53adf567d5ddde4a8
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "892aa2931bb5c11fe20a6bc53adf567d5ddde4a8",
  "block": 106012930,
  "trx_in_block": 2,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2026-05-13T10:55:45",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "4404.246940 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 4.378 SP to @vdeva
2026/04/26 07:04:24
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares7128.973101 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #105520044/Trx b01c88c26fc54a099b1b104a68930813adbfbdaa
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "b01c88c26fc54a099b1b104a68930813adbfbdaa",
  "block": 105520044,
  "trx_in_block": 0,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2026-04-26T07:04:24",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "7128.973101 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 2.730 SP to @vdeva
2026/01/24 04:23:03
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares4445.793759 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #102876458/Trx 68663738c8ddbbc2010e5019cd6f52653fb453fe
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "68663738c8ddbbc2010e5019cd6f52653fb453fe",
  "block": 102876458,
  "trx_in_block": 0,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2026-01-24T04:23:03",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "4445.793759 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 2.831 SP to @vdeva
2024/12/17 23:31:48
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares4610.012956 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #91322655/Trx 36fbd7b33f1cc3e3f4342beb55896ebbeff7b7a1
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "36fbd7b33f1cc3e3f4342beb55896ebbeff7b7a1",
  "block": 91322655,
  "trx_in_block": 0,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2024-12-17T23:31:48",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "4610.012956 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 2.935 SP to @vdeva
2023/11/14 15:10:33
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares4779.146488 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #79876744/Trx 4942c5ed9fb9a2b761617e69e45af8665c06bca5
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "4942c5ed9fb9a2b761617e69e45af8665c06bca5",
  "block": 79876744,
  "trx_in_block": 13,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2023-11-14T15:10:33",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "4779.146488 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 4.738 SP to @vdeva
2023/09/22 12:18:15
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares7716.055274 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #78365152/Trx 1e893cdafebeee2f579b54c2b9eee5ceca71f088
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "1e893cdafebeee2f579b54c2b9eee5ceca71f088",
  "block": 78365152,
  "trx_in_block": 2,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2023-09-22T12:18:15",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "7716.055274 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 4.875 SP to @vdeva
2022/11/03 19:32:15
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares7938.106712 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #69122618/Trx 071b3de31475f85d19522dc4acc88b44651f3e01
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "071b3de31475f85d19522dc4acc88b44651f3e01",
  "block": 69122618,
  "trx_in_block": 2,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2022-11-03T19:32:15",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "7938.106712 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 5.010 SP to @vdeva
2022/01/18 00:34:39
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8158.214313 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #60825677/Trx c68c3231bd19420782115e8b85bfac86e8c1f5de
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "c68c3231bd19420782115e8b85bfac86e8c1f5de",
  "block": 60825677,
  "trx_in_block": 11,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2022-01-18T00:34:39",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "8158.214313 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 5.123 SP to @vdeva
2021/06/14 07:41:30
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8342.408601 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #54615916/Trx e2a50e2636867e7e87063e9f4ebc26d3ced34b68
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "e2a50e2636867e7e87063e9f4ebc26d3ced34b68",
  "block": 54615916,
  "trx_in_block": 6,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2021-06-14T07:41:30",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "8342.408601 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 5.238 SP to @vdeva
2020/12/11 17:52:15
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8529.830575 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #49363127/Trx 44a20fe515a5239828986d9472f513322dcdd0e9
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "44a20fe515a5239828986d9472f513322dcdd0e9",
  "block": 49363127,
  "trx_in_block": 3,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-12-11T17:52:15",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "8529.830575 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 1.174 SP to @vdeva
2020/12/06 11:27:21
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares1912.543513 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #49214639/Trx 5a283f4a6a6c8c25f1424dc79243a4dc5012d964
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "5a283f4a6a6c8c25f1424dc79243a4dc5012d964",
  "block": 49214639,
  "trx_in_block": 1,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-12-06T11:27:21",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "1912.543513 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 5.242 SP to @vdeva
2020/12/05 21:30:06
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8536.038429 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #49198212/Trx 208e389fc411ad09a70b4ad15e072c3987d5bbd0
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "208e389fc411ad09a70b4ad15e072c3987d5bbd0",
  "block": 49198212,
  "trx_in_block": 2,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-12-05T21:30:06",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "8536.038429 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 1.179 SP to @vdeva
2020/11/03 05:39:42
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares1920.017158 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #48274311/Trx f8b39c37710854778c94a4cb6d722b334da41eab
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "f8b39c37710854778c94a4cb6d722b334da41eab",
  "block": 48274311,
  "trx_in_block": 1,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-11-03T05:39:42",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "1920.017158 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 5.366 SP to @vdeva
2020/05/09 12:31:57
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8738.843788 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #43224994/Trx db91024bba21ba245cfa83715d3d4eff58427fb6
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "db91024bba21ba245cfa83715d3d4eff58427fb6",
  "block": 43224994,
  "trx_in_block": 3,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-05-09T12:31:57",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "8738.843788 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 1.200 SP to @vdeva
2020/05/08 17:09:15
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares1953.311140 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #43202285/Trx d436315f6baeec614dbf181e40a3111441d1aaff
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "d436315f6baeec614dbf181e40a3111441d1aaff",
  "block": 43202285,
  "trx_in_block": 8,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-05-08T17:09:15",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "1953.311140 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
steemdelegated 5.374 SP to @vdeva
2020/04/16 04:11:42
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8751.731236 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #42570199/Trx 6cc438690b1168af322274920ec2034f3b2cdeb4
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "6cc438690b1168af322274920ec2034f3b2cdeb4",
  "block": 42570199,
  "trx_in_block": 21,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2020-04-16T04:11:42",
  "op": [
    "delegate_vesting_shares",
    {
      "delegator": "steem",
      "delegatee": "vdeva",
      "vesting_shares": "8751.731236 VESTS"
    }
  ]
}
2019/11/11 15:07:30
parent authorvdeva
parent permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
authorsteemitboard
permlinksteemitboard-notify-vdeva-20191111t150730000z
title
bodyCongratulations @vdeva! You received a personal award! <table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@vdeva/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table> <sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@vdeva) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=vdeva)_</sub> **Do not miss the last post from @steemitboard:** <table><tr><td><a href="https://steemit.com/steemfest/@steemitboard/steemfest-meet-the-stemians-contest-the-mysterious-rule-revealed"><img src="https://steemitimages.com/64x128/https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmasWw4jQHwxng82DKxY6Q6tVg9mWcto4xcDURs8knFgCa/image.png"></a></td><td><a href="https://steemit.com/steemfest/@steemitboard/steemfest-meet-the-stemians-contest-the-mysterious-rule-revealed">SteemFest Meet The Stemians Contest - The mysterious rule revealed</a></td></tr></table> ###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!
json metadata{"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png"]}
Transaction InfoBlock #38084377/Trx 85ab5c0bbbcd281ed7f229d225188bbe99e4b2f1
View Raw JSON Data
{
  "trx_id": "85ab5c0bbbcd281ed7f229d225188bbe99e4b2f1",
  "block": 38084377,
  "trx_in_block": 13,
  "op_in_trx": 0,
  "virtual_op": 0,
  "timestamp": "2019-11-11T15:07:30",
  "op": [
    "comment",
    {
      "parent_author": "vdeva",
      "parent_permlink": "why-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible",
      "author": "steemitboard",
      "permlink": "steemitboard-notify-vdeva-20191111t150730000z",
      "title": "",
      "body": "Congratulations @vdeva! You received a personal award!\n\n<table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@vdeva/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table>\n\n<sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@vdeva) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=vdeva)_</sub>\n\n\n**Do not miss the last post from @steemitboard:**\n<table><tr><td><a href=\"https://steemit.com/steemfest/@steemitboard/steemfest-meet-the-stemians-contest-the-mysterious-rule-revealed\"><img src=\"https://steemitimages.com/64x128/https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmasWw4jQHwxng82DKxY6Q6tVg9mWcto4xcDURs8knFgCa/image.png\"></a></td><td><a href=\"https://steemit.com/steemfest/@steemitboard/steemfest-meet-the-stemians-contest-the-mysterious-rule-revealed\">SteemFest Meet The Stemians Contest - The mysterious rule revealed</a></td></tr></table>\n\n###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes!",
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steemdelegated 5.494 SP to @vdeva
2019/05/12 21:19:27
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares8947.348049 VESTS
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2018/11/11 14:29:36
parent authorvdeva
parent permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
authorsteemitboard
permlinksteemitboard-notify-vdeva-20181111t142935000z
title
bodyCongratulations @vdeva! You have received a personal award! [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@vdeva/birthday1.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@vdeva) 1 Year on Steemit <sub>_Click on the badge to view your Board of Honor._</sub> **Do not miss the last post from @steemitboard:** <table><tr><td><a href="https://steemit.com/steemfest/@steemitboard/steemfest3-and-steemitboard-meet-the-steemians-contest"><img src="https://steemitimages.com/64x128/https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmeLukvNFRsa7RURqsFpiLGEZZD49MiU52JtWmjS5S2wtW/image.png"></a></td><td><a href="https://steemit.com/steemfest/@steemitboard/steemfest3-and-steemitboard-meet-the-steemians-contest">SteemFest3 and SteemitBoard - Meet the Steemians Contest</a></td></tr></table> > Support [SteemitBoard's project](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard)! **[Vote for its witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1)** and **get one more award**!
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steemdelegated 5.617 SP to @vdeva
2018/05/17 03:34:36
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares9146.863141 VESTS
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steemdelegated 18.137 SP to @vdeva
2018/04/21 20:54:51
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares29534.965487 VESTS
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steemdelegated 18.262 SP to @vdeva
2017/12/12 22:21:21
delegatorsteem
delegateevdeva
vesting shares29738.797539 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #18032610/Trx 1e47937436d41e0efcac8b5687c36699c7b3b069
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2017/11/19 05:19:30
authorvdeva
permlinkre-sammarkjames-nepal-or-earthquake-or-part-11-20171112t051917488z
sbd payout0.015 SBD
steem payout0.000 STEEM
vesting payout36.964961 VESTS
Transaction InfoBlock #17350106/Virtual Operation #3
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2017/11/15 22:53:21
votersmartonelegal
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
weight100 (1.00%)
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2017/11/12 09:33:18
votersammarkjames
authorvdeva
permlinkre-sammarkjames-nepal-or-earthquake-or-part-11-20171112t051917488z
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #17153610/Trx c5000915b1574778c54ab8b01b51d41e13e53b6b
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2017/11/12 06:35:27
parent authorvdeva
parent permlinkre-greenrun-solar-power-as-an-alternative-source-of-power-in-africa-some-pictures-of-a-friend-s-installation-which-he-did-this-past-weekend-20171112t050942385z
authorgreenrun
permlinkre-vdeva-re-greenrun-solar-power-as-an-alternative-source-of-power-in-africa-some-pictures-of-a-friend-s-installation-which-he-did-this-past-weekend-20171112t063525380z
title
bodyYeah, people do implement it daily and many more would like to implement it if not for the cost constraints. Welcome to steemit. I hope you have an amazing journey. The name on your profile reminds me of the movie *Transformer*. Have an awesome day.
json metadata{"tags":["technology"],"app":"steemit/0.1"}
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2017/11/12 05:19:30
parent authorsammarkjames
parent permlinknepal-or-earthquake-or-part-11
authorvdeva
permlinkre-sammarkjames-nepal-or-earthquake-or-part-11-20171112t051917488z
title
bodyLoved the writing *and* the photography. Hope to see more from you!
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2017/11/12 05:18:30
votervdeva
authorsammarkjames
permlinknepal-or-earthquake-or-part-11
weight10000 (100.00%)
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vdevaupdated their account properties
2017/11/12 05:14:36
accountvdeva
memo keySTM5MFyfDHkf9Fi5zUbFM1KRhM6aXGjcnaUvcGRiLy6DKcidQTgkU
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2017/11/12 05:11:39
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Transaction InfoBlock #17148377/Trx 16f3727b01afa3db3cb2b43ad9a96c87c2c56d5c
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2017/11/12 05:09:57
parent authorgreenrun
parent permlinksolar-power-as-an-alternative-source-of-power-in-africa-some-pictures-of-a-friend-s-installation-which-he-did-this-past-weekend
authorvdeva
permlinkre-greenrun-solar-power-as-an-alternative-source-of-power-in-africa-some-pictures-of-a-friend-s-installation-which-he-did-this-past-weekend-20171112t050942385z
title
bodyThis is fascinating. It's one thing to hear that solar is the future from tech leaders, but another thing entirely to see someone on the ground implementing it for their own use. Great work documenting this!
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vdevacustom json: follow
2017/11/12 05:08:48
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2017/11/12 05:07:57
votervdeva
authorgreenrun
permlinksolar-power-as-an-alternative-source-of-power-in-africa-some-pictures-of-a-friend-s-installation-which-he-did-this-past-weekend
weight10000 (100.00%)
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2017/11/12 05:05:18
votervdeva
authorkharrazi
permlinkair-bubbles-are-useful-for-construction-materials
weight10000 (100.00%)
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2017/11/12 04:59:57
votervdeva
authoredward.maesen
permlinktravel-photography-boy-at-temple-in-kathmandu-nepal
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2017/11/11 20:35:00
voterevochka.majko
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
weight10000 (100.00%)
Transaction InfoBlock #17138045/Trx 9625850e1a468c1896f5f703822e6207e5eb2e1b
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2017/11/11 20:35:00
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2017/11/11 20:35:00
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2017/11/11 20:34:57
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2017/11/11 20:34:54
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2017/11/11 20:34:51
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2017/11/11 20:05:27
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bodyCongratulations @vdeva! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) : [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x80/http://steemitboard.com/notifications/firstvote.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@vdeva) You made your First Vote [![](https://steemitimages.com/70x80/http://steemitboard.com/notifications/firstpost.png)](http://steemitboard.com/@vdeva) You published your First Post Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about SteemitBoard, click [here](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard) If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word `STOP` > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)!
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2017/11/11 17:53:42
parent author
parent permlinklife
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
titleWhy I hope Time Travel is never possible
body"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!" Humanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it. We looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*. And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively. **Fire** This was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.) *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.) **Agriculture** Although we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life. *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war. **Gunpowder** The history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won. Maximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected. Maximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time. The bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.) **Nuclear Weapons** When the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. Maximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow. **Time Travel** The cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why. Any modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. Humanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. I guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. Somehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.
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      "body": "\"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!\" \n\nHumanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it.\n\nWe looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*.  And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively.\n\n**Fire**\nThis was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.)\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.)\n\n**Agriculture**\nAlthough we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life.\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war.\n\n**Gunpowder**\nThe history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won.\n\nMaximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected.\n\nMaximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time.\nThe bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.)\n\n**Nuclear Weapons**\n\nWhen the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. \n\nMaximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow.\n\n**Time Travel**\nThe cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why.\n\nAny modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. \n\nHumanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. \n\nI guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. \n\nSomehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.",
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2017/11/11 17:53:36
parent author
parent permlinklife
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
titleWhy I hope Time Travel is never possible
body"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!" Humanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it. We looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*. And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively. **Fire** This was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.) *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.) **Agriculture** Although we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life. *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war. **Gunpowder** The history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won. Maximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected. Maximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time. The bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.) **Nuclear Weapons** When the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. Maximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow. **Time Travel** The cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why. Any modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. Humanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. I guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. Somehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.
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      "body": "\"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!\" \n\nHumanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it.\n\nWe looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*.  And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively.\n\n**Fire**\nThis was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.)\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.)\n\n**Agriculture**\nAlthough we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life.\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war.\n\n**Gunpowder**\nThe history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won.\n\nMaximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected.\n\nMaximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time.\nThe bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.)\n\n**Nuclear Weapons**\n\nWhen the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. \n\nMaximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow.\n\n**Time Travel**\nThe cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why.\n\nAny modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. \n\nHumanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. \n\nI guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. \n\nSomehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.",
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2017/11/11 17:52:51
parent author
parent permlinklife
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
titleWhy I hope Time Travel is never possible
body"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!" Humanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it. We looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*. And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively. **Fire** This was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.) *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.) **Agriculture** Although we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life. *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war. **Gunpowder** The history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won. Maximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected. Maximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time. The bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.) **Nuclear Weapons** When the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. Maximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow. **Time Travel** The cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why. Any modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. Humanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. I guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. Somehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.
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      "author": "vdeva",
      "permlink": "why-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible",
      "title": "Why I hope Time Travel is never possible",
      "body": "\"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!\" \n\nHumanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it.\n\nWe looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*.  And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively.\n\n**Fire**\nThis was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.)\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.)\n\n**Agriculture**\nAlthough we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life.\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war.\n\n**Gunpowder**\nThe history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won.\n\nMaximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected.\n\nMaximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time.\nThe bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.)\n\n**Nuclear Weapons**\n\nWhen the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. \n\nMaximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow.\n\n**Time Travel**\nThe cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why.\n\nAny modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. \n\nHumanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. \n\nI guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. \n\nSomehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.",
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2017/11/11 17:52:24
parent author
parent permlinklife
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
titleWhy I hope Time Travel is never possible
body"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!" Humanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it. We looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*. And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively. **Fire** This was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.) *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.) **Agriculture** Although we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life. *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war. **Gunpowder** The history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won. Maximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected. Maximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time. The bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.) **Nuclear Weapons** When the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. Maximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow. **Time Travel** The cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why. Any modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. Humanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. I guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. Somehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.
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Transaction InfoBlock #17134793/Trx bf5462c8d2fcda775c91ca865436b0015d09aeea
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      "title": "Why I hope Time Travel is never possible",
      "body": "\"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!\" \n\nHumanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it.\n\nWe looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*.  And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively.\n\n**Fire**\nThis was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.)\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.)\n\n**Agriculture**\nAlthough we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life.\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war.\n\n**Gunpowder**\nThe history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won.\n\nMaximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected.\n\nMaximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time.\nThe bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.)\n\n**Nuclear Weapons**\n\nWhen the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. \n\nMaximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow.\n\n**Time Travel**\nThe cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why.\n\nAny modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. \n\nHumanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. \n\nI guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. \n\nSomehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.",
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2017/11/11 17:49:06
parent author
parent permlinklife
authorvdeva
permlinkwhy-i-hope-time-travel-is-never-possible
titleWhy I hope Time Travel is never possible
body"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!" Humanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it. We looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*. And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively. **Fire** This was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.) *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.) **Agriculture** Although we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies. *Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life. *Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war. **Gunpowder** The history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won. Maximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected. Maximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time. The bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.) **Nuclear Weapons** When the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. Maximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow. **Time Travel** The cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why. Any modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. Humanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. I guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. Somehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.
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      "body": "\"Skeptics said the same about Nuclear fission, and look how well that turned out!\" \n\nHumanity has always been a well of creativity. We differ from other animals, not in our ability or physicality. In ways, some animals are keener and smarter than we ever will be. We differ because we have a deep, unsatisfied need within us. A need to explore the world and understand it.\n\nWe looked at the night sky and named far-away points of light. We looked at our rivers and understood seasons. We touched gunpowder and sculpted the surface of our planet, quite literally. But one thing that has been consistent is not only our ability to improve, but also our ability to improve *exponentially*.  And that last part is what should concern us. Let's try to break it down by assigning Maximum Impact of a technology on people when wielded both positively and negatively.\n\n**Fire**\nThis was probably the first technology that we understood. When harnessed well, it could feed a small group of people.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 20 people (Cooking, scaring away wild animals, campfires, etc.)\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ 50 people (Making sharper weapons and arrows, lighting homes on fire, etc.)\n\n**Agriculture**\nAlthough we don't consider agriculture a technology, it changed human lives in profound ways. Allowing bands of nomadic hunter-gatherers to settle down in one small area and cultivate their own food and be in complete control of their own food supplies.\n\n*Maximum Positive Impact* ~ 100 - 1000 people. Large-scale farms weren't a reality until around ten thousand years ago. But, previously, the food produced on small farms could feed a small town or a village easily. This allowed groups of humans to coexist in one place, which was never possible before the advent of agriculture because a large population of humans in one area would make the hunting of local wildlife and gathering of resources unsustainable. So tribes lived a largely isolated and nomadic life.\n\n*Maximum Negative Impact* ~ There were maybe no direct consequences of agriculture on people. But since it enabled the concentration of large populations of people, it marked the beginning of large civilizations to flourish and thrive, while also sparking the possibility of creating an army of a scale never witnessed before by man. Effectively, roles were dealt out to people. To put it simply, farmers created food and armies were fed and sent out to war.\n\n**Gunpowder**\nThe history of gunpowder is a long and convoluted one that will take us across many continents and countries -- China, Southern India, Europe -- but let’s look at a summary of the facts. When gunpowder was effectively harnessed, it increased the range of attack of armies, which previously were limited by how far their strongest men could throw a spear or operate a bow. Catapults came into use only around two thousand years ago and they were large, bulky equipment that didn’t make for easy transport. Cannons and Rockets changed the game. They were compact and packed a punch. And any civilization that used them against one without, won.\n\nMaximum Positive Impact: Probably the only positive measurable impact that they had was to speed up construction. And while that saved man-hours and increased productivity, it’s hard to judge how many people that affected.\n\nMaximum Negative Impact: 10,000 - 100,000 people in a short time.\nThe bow and arrow could reach a range of up to 500 metres (Mongol Recurve bows). But what early guns couldn’t make up for in distance or sheer power, they covered for in compactness and ease of use. They came in a small package and were transported easily. Artillery and dynamite changed the landscape further, by nullifying the impenetrability of large fortifications. This would mark the first time when humans weren’t limited by large, physical structures blockading their way. They could eliminate now them with ease. With the advent of the industrial revolution came machine guns and rifles, and massacres became more common and could be inflicted by a small group of technologically advanced people on a larger population (read colonies.)\n\n**Nuclear Weapons**\n\nWhen the atomic bomb was born, humanity stepped into a new era. For the first time, we had in our hands a way to destroy all of humanity, and indeed, we still do. Previously, even if all the explosives in the world had been used in an instant, we’d be fine -- a little shook, but Earth would live on. But now, for the first time, we had enabled ourselves to wipe out humanity from the face of this planet. We live now in a state of unstable equilibrium, because no nation wants to be destroyed and so, holds back its nuclear weaponry, if not out of compassion, then out of fear. \n\nMaximum Negative Impact - Hundreds of millions of people overnight, and more in the days that would follow.\n\n**Time Travel**\nThe cutting edge of any field has always been facilitated by a super-power, be it a government, or a large corporation. And so, when time travel is made possible, it's reasonable to assume that the technology would be in the hands of a small group of powerful individuals. Maybe they could be responsible, and maybe they regulate its usage, but I doubt it. Here’s why.\n\nAny modern technology is developed in an arms race. Take Artificial Intelligence for example. Governments and companies are racing each other in a bid to create the world’s first Artificial General Intelligence, but they’re not stopping themselves to try and evaluate the cost of their actions. Even a stark indicator such as the abuse of big-data social-media technology to influence the elections of the world’s most powerful country has barely left a dent or led to regulations to slow the growth of the industry. We don’t understand how the most basic of deep learning neural networks come to their conclusions and yet we forge ahead, determined to implement these systems in our physical world. \n\nHumanity is like a kid in a candy shop. By the time the parent comes to find and reprimand the child, the kid has food poisoning. We have no control over ourselves, and we need to understand that. **If time travel and the ability to travel into our pasts became a reality, it would only take one person to eliminate our world.** We’ve all read enough science fiction to imagine how that would go. \n\nI guess, when I think about it, my beef is not primarily with time travel. It’s with how irresponsible we’re being with advanced technology, in every area you can think of. How we don’t comprehend the power we have over the lives of countless others and yet, we wield it to our own, indiscriminate advantage. My disillusionment with corporations arises from their single-minded focus on money -- human cost be damned. Corporations are not evil, but they’re not good either. They’re just tools and entities that serve humanity. They're literally designed to create profit, and as long as humans control them, that would work. But now, they’ve taken on a life of their own. It’s as if their human leaders don’t matter, their employees don’t matter -- they’re all replaceable by metrics and cutting-edge algorithms. \n\nSomehow, somewhere along the way, we became the tools, and they our masters, and we never even noticed.",
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2017/11/11 16:17:39
votervdeva
authordroucil
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Witness Votes

0 / 30
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[]