Other Life

Justin Murphy

Adventures in the humanities and social sciences.

  1. 17 APR

    The Information State: Politics in the Age of Total Control with Jacob Siegel

    Jacob Siegel is author of The Information State: Politics in the Age of Total Control. We discuss his thesis that the U.S. has shifted into a new form of governance where digital protocols and data infrastructures have displaced traditional legal and institutional sovereignty. Drawing on his experience as a U.S. Army intelligence officer who used Palantir in Afghanistan, Siegel describes what he calls the "paradox of information": these systems appear omnipotent but routinely fail to deliver their intended political outcomes, as illustrated by Vietnam, Russiagate, and the Biden-era censorship apparatus. The conversation covers Palantir's seductive but misleading graphical interfaces, why progressive/positivist epistemology is structurally predisposed to information control, AI's dual trajectory toward both planetary-scale power consolidation and intimate personal influence, Elon Musk's DOGE initiative and the possibility it served as a data-harvesting operation for Grok, the Anthropic-Pentagon standoff, Tablet Magazine's editorial model, AI's role in professional writing, and the removal of a positive review of Siegel's book from The Baffler following apparent pressure from disinformation researcher Renée DiResta. The Information State: Politics in the Age of Total Control by Jacob Siegel- Order from Amazon- Order from a local bookshop 0:00 Intro2:11 Vietnam as the laboratory for surveillance and automation4:23 Does Palantir actually work?10:38 Will AI tip the scales toward/against government control?13:29 Why progressivism is predisposed to information control17:27 Anthropic vs. Hegseth, Grok and the government20:11 Planetary capture: AI as a winner-take-all competition22:19 AI will re-personalize technology23:06 Why DOGE failed27:30 Crypto and Andreessen on Rogan30:15 The overreach-backlash-entrenchment cycle36:34 What makes Tablet Magazine work40:10 AI and professional writing46:42 The Baffler pulls a positive review of the book53:56 Clint Watts and the revolving door59:15 Closing thoughts

    1 hr
  2. 21/05/2025

    Urbit, Nockchain, and the Current State of Sovereignty Technology

    In this episode, I review the state of Urbit and my history with this ambitious project to rebuild the internet. I explain why I stepped back, detailing what's happened with the network in the past few years, including the challenges faced by startups attempting to build on the platform and the surprising return of founder Curtis Yarvin. I take an honest look at how my initial timeline expectations were off, and other mistakes I made. This period taught me a lot about technology, market sentiment, and cognition. I share how the experience has shaped my current thinking, as well as my current work with Zorp, a startup from the Urbit ecosystem now building Nockchain. I discuss the attraction of zero-knowledge proofs and why I've adopted a more patient attitude in my relationship with radical technology projects, now preferring to work behind the scenes if I really believe in something. This is my first update on what I've been doing with Nockchain over the past year, helping to build their audience. 01:21 Discovering Urbit02:44 Involvement with Urbit04:44 Challenges and Reflections05:38 The Independent Scholar06:57 Urbit's Market Dynamics15:31 Urbit Startups and Setbacks22:49 The Rise and Fall of Urbit23:38 Orbit's Struggles and My Realizations24:54 Current State and Future Potential of Urbit31:42 The Promise of Zero Knowledge Proofs35:18 Introducing Nock Chain38:31 Reflections and Lessons Learned45:05 The Launch of Nock Chain Other Life✦ The coolest free newsletter in the world: https://otherlife.co✦ The monthly PRINT edition: https://otherlife.co/upgrade✦ My new book, The Independent Scholar: https://otherlife.co/scholar

    49 min
  3. 09/05/2025

    Markets Learn to Manufacture Intelligence and Politics Modernizes (Nick Land, Meltdown, Sentence 3)

    This episode unpacks the third sentence from Nick Land's "Meltdown." "As markets learn to manufacture intelligence, politics modernizes, upgrades paranoia, and tries to get a grip." What does it mean for markets to "manufacture intelligence"? Drawing on Hayek and Mises, we discuss how this phrase is not merely a figure of speech. The earliest stock markets around the year 1600 illustrate the concept. We then consider the reaction of politics to this ascendant market intelligence. Much of political modernism, along with its heightened paranoia, is an attempt to cope with or "get a grip" on forces it cannot control. We discuss examples from Soviet collectivization to the "paranoid style" in American politics. The idea finds surprising applicability in the contemporary debate around Artificial Intelligence. As AI accelerates, familiar calls for control and "safety" emerge. Referencing Land's "Machinic Desire," we discuss "Politically Organized Defensive Systems" (PODS) and their core rule: "the outside must pass by way of the inside." This is what's going on when it comes to AI governance and the push to centralize oversight of a rapidly escalating new form of intelligence. Other Life✦ The coolest free newsletter in the world: https://otherlife.co✦ The monthly PRINT edition: https://otherlife.co/upgrade✦ My new book, The Independent Scholar: https://otherlife.co/scholar

    20 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

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Adventures in the humanities and social sciences.

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