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Ben Werdmuller

Ben Werdmuller

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Supreme Connections

"Every year, the Supreme Court’s nine justices fill out a form that discloses their financial connections to companies and people. Using our new database, you can now search for organizations and people that have paid the justices, reimbursed them for travel, given them gifts and more." Journalism

08 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Julia: A Retelling of George Orwell's 1984, by Sandra Newman

Not just a retelling but a complete recasting of 1984. It's helpful to consider this as a separate work: a response to 1984, in a way, rather than a layering on top or a direct sequel. It's a criticism, an extension, a modernization, and a deep

07 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Comics I Loved In 2023

Every single one of these titles looks beautiful: I'm excited to put them on my want-to-read list. I don't think I read a single graphic novel last year, and I love them. I'm grateful to Ritesh Babu for putting this list together. It'

07 Jan 2024

45 wishes

Previous birthday posts: 44 thoughts about the future, 43 things, 42 / 42 admissions, 41 things. This post is in partial answer to Matt Mullenweg’s birthday request for everyone to blog, which is a lovely idea in its own right - happy birthday to you, too, Matt. 2024 feels like

07 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Citation Needed has a new home

Molly White, who has been one of the most important voices on technology and society, has moved her newsletter from Substack to Ghost because of the Nazi problem. As she points out: "To be very clear, we're talking about Substacks that are using swastikas, sonnenrads, and photos

05 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

RIP: Software design pioneer Niklaus Wirth

Pascal was my first real programming language. I'd learned BASIC first, but I never built a full software application in it. Pascal allowed me to build and release software for the first time. It was magical. What I didn't know: Niklaus Wirth was from Winterthur, Switzerland,

05 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

An Unreasonable Investment

"Your career is not your job. It’s the humans you help along the way." I feel this in my bones. The people who have helped me in my career have made an outsize difference to my life, and I hope to make the same kind of difference

05 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Why Substack is at a crossroads

"Until Substack, I was not aware of any major US consumer internet platform that stated it would not remove or even demonetize Nazi accounts. Even in a polarized world, there remains broad agreement that the slaughter of 6 million Jews during the Holocaust was an atrocity. The Nazis did

04 Jan 2024

My favorite books I read in 2023

I don’t want to call these the best books I read last year: I read plenty of other well-written, worthy contenders. But these six titles are the ones that stuck with me and left me thinking about them long after I was done; they were, in that sense, my

04 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Tech Billionaires Need to Stop Trying to Make the Science Fiction They Grew Up on Real

Charles Stross on tech oligarchs trying to build the torment nexus: "SF authors such as myself are popular entertainers who work to amuse an audience that is trained on what to expect by previous generations of science-fiction authors. We are not trying to accurately predict possible futures but to

03 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Ban Facial Recognition in Stores

Among other things, this campaign site has a useful list of US retail stores that use facial recognition right now (for example, Home Depot) as well as some that are thinking about it - and some that definitely won't (thank you, Costco). "Your face should not be

03 Jan 2024

NotableLinks

Ambient Co-presence

I really like this exploration of what it might mean to build a sense of ambient togetherness on the web. "We currently have no visual, audible, tactile, spatial, or embodied awareness of one another. We also have no awareness of the other people reading this post, even if they&

02 Jan 2024
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Werd I/O explores the intersection of technology, democracy, and society. It's independently published by Ben Werdmuller, reader-supported, and always free to read.