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12:37 AM
Seems like cod is gonna be ruined
 
 
10 hours later…
10:27 AM
I don't think the merger is good for the industry, but I don't know how MS would ruin cod more than activision has
 
10:53 AM
I think MS will make some of the games more popular.
 
I don't know about that. I think they've shown themselves to have a little more restraint with their top IP. They didn't feel the need to put out a new Halo every year, and I think getting CoD of the yearly release cycle would be a positive
 
They can put a demo or trial version in every of their windows release for free, make people addicted, thus get more people to purchase the game.
 
they're just trying to put it all in gamepass, because investors get raging boners from recuring revenue numbers
 
 
3 hours later…
1:40 PM
There needs to be a law against rent seeking
 
nwp
That would abolish capitalism.
I'm all in favor, but it's not going to happen.
If we can't even make a global effort against covid we sure as hell won't make one against capitalism.
 
on the contrary, capitalism doesn't account for rent seeking
in fact it assumes that rent seeking isn't a thing
thus rent seeking is actually an anti-pattern in captialism
 
nwp
Welp, I guess my understanding of capitalism is wrong. Which, actually, is entirely reasonable.
 
capitalism just assumes a frictionless spherical cow and that if rents on planet earth are too high that you'd just move over to the next planet
 
nwp
It doesn't have to be about rents. It can also be, say Jeff Bezos grabbing a couple of cents on every Amazon order without doing any work for it. And for some reason society allows that and some people even think it's a good thing.
 
1:50 PM
capitalism in the Adam Smith sense assumes everything is 100% interchangeable commodities
thus the idea of something non-interchangeable isn't even considered, nor does it consider the cost to change. Thus capitalism is an extremely poor model for things like housing or healthcare
Hence why people that are true believers in capitalism believe the markets will always sort it out, because if things are really 100% interchangeable then competition will solve the problem. But if they aren't that won't work
 
nwp
Well, even in that framework there would be good competition and bad competition. Making a better product for less money would be good competition, paying off a politician to make a law that makes the competition illegal would be bad competition. Since we allow lobbying and donating to politicians and parties we straightup allow bad competition.
 
so yeah... it also assumes no monopolies
and thus no bad competition
basically capitalism assumes the cost for a good will be reduced the cost to next unit
 
nwp
Monopolies are not inherently bad in that framework. If someone makes the best possible product for the lowest possible price then they can maintain that monopoly indefinitely.
 
it doesn't account for research and development or any overhead beyond the cost to produce the next one
monopolies are 100% bad because the discourage market efficiency
The idea being that competition will force greater and greater efficiency and thus drive down prices towards zero
 
nwp
Well, in that theory, if the efficiency goes down a competitor can come in and make money by providing a better product for less money and the monopoly is broken.
 
1:59 PM
correct, because again it doesn't assume barriers to entry either
so if I didn't like what you were doing I could enter the market tomorrow with no startup costs
if it sounds like a hyper-flawed model... it is because it is
 
nwp
It doesn't even explain why companies try to maximize profit. They should aim to be non-profits in that model because it's the only viable survival strategy.
 
Profit is... an aberration in capitalism as best I can tell
 
nwp
CEO: "I'm sorry to announce that we failed the system by producing a surplus of 218 million dollars this year."
 
that 218 Billion is market inefficiency effectively
that's what profit is
 
nwp
Welp, let's make that illegal. 100% profit tax.
 
2:10 PM
now you've created an incentive for the government to allow for inefficient business
 
nwp
Eh, I don't think many businesses will feel like throwing money to the government.
If all the profit is lost forever, may as well reduce the price.
 
That's because you don't think like hollywood accountant
just don't make a profit
or make just enough to make the politicians happy and then siphon the rest off to a tax haven
long story short: The rabbit hole of international tax hiding... is completely Alice in Wonderland insanity
 
nwp
I heard Amazon went from paying almost no tax to technically paying negative tax.
They don't get that negative tax payed out, but it's still kinda amazing.
I feel like it doesn't make sense to try to tax companies. Just do everything with VAT. Though apparently that has unacceptably bad side-effects.
 
well VAT hits consumers, particularly low income consumers. It's no different than Toll roads impacting the people that can least afford them.
it also has the side effect of not being stable in income
 
nwp
It's proportional to what you buy, which is not quite what we want since we want to tax rich people with a higher percentage. You can compensate with a basic universal income.
And I don't see how that is not stable. It's tied to the economy which is somewhat unstable, but there is only so much money a government can take away from the economy before it collapses and they can decide that by adjusting the VAT percentage.
 
2:23 PM
I don't know about that, isn't marginal utility better addressed with marginal taxation? Trying to model that with just a simple step-up like UBI seems inadequate
 
nwp
Well, the upside is that it's a very simple system and very difficult to game. If you look at UBI as a tax free amount it nicely models how the more income you get, the less relevant UBI becomes and the higher your tax is.
Maybe it's not the curve you want.
It also nicely solves the problem of tax havens, I think. If you do business in country X you can't avoid paying VAT there.
 
well part of the issue with UBI is UBI in cali may not be enough but UBI in mississippi may be a fortune. So it's complicated
 
nwp
Yeah, I suppose you get massive migration issues.
 
the issue with UBI is that there is no universal cost of living
 
nwp
Though UBI in this scenario isn't meant to cover the cost of living, it is meant to manipulate the tax/income curve.
It also allows people to have negative tax (which actually gets payed out) which is probably a bad thing.
 
2:35 PM
well then it's not UBI
;p
 
nwp
We'll call it something else. "Basic Tax Return"
 
I'm not American, so I might be wrong, but isn't that kind of how their earned income tax credit works
 
nwp
I believe it is common to have some amount of tax freedom. The first x amount you make off buying low and selling high you don't need to pay tax for, mostly to allow regular citizens to occasionally sell some random item for more than they payed for.
It's different though. The tax-free amount or income tax credit depends on the tax you payed. You can't get tax back you never payed. That is not the case for BTR.
 
@PeterT pretty much but it doesn't help people that can't work
 
 
6 hours later…
9:13 PM
I always thought gnu's make utility was cleverly designed
turns out that in some cases doing make -j makes the build fail due to unmet interdependencies.
Very disappointing...
 
9:26 PM
@Morwenn Noooo...
We also lost Alexandrescu. Maybe it's a sign that C++ has peaked?
 
 

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