This thread is for the discussion of cybercommunism, the planning of the socialist economy by computerized means, including discussions of related topics and creators. Drama belongs in /isg/
ReadingTowards a New Socialism by Paul Cockshott and Allin Cottrell:
http://ricardo.ecn.wfu.edu/~cottrell/socialism_book/Brain of the Firm by Stafford Beer
Cybernetic Revolutionaries by Eden Medina
Cybernetics: Or the Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine and The Human Use of Human Beings (1st edition) by Norbert Wiener
Economic cybernetics by Nikolay Veduta
People's Republic of Walmart by Leigh Phillips and Michal Rozworski
Red Plenty by Francis Spufford
Economics in kind, Total socialisation and A system of socialisation by Otto Neurath (Incommensurability, Ecology, and Planning: Neurath in the Socialist Calculation Debate by Thomas Uebel provides a summary)
Active writers/creatorsSorted by last name
>Paul Cockshotthttps://www.patreon.com/williamCockshott/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVBfIU1_zO-P_R9keEGdDHQ (
https://invidious.snopyta.org/channel/UCVBfIU1_zO-P_R9keEGdDHQ)
https://paulcockshott.wordpress.com/http://paulcockshott.co.uk/https://twitter.com/PaulCockshott (
https://nitter.pussthecat.org/PaulCockshott)
>Cibcom (Spanish)https://cibcom.org/https://twitter.com/cibcomorg (
https://nitter.pussthecat.org/cibcomorg)
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCav9ad3TMuhiWV6yP5t2IpA (
https://invidious.snopyta.org/channel/UCav9ad3TMuhiWV6yP5t2IpA)
>Tomas Härdinhttps://www.haerdin.se/tag/cybernetics.htmlhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5fDgA_eHleDiTLC5qb5g8w (
https://invidious.snopyta.org/channel/UC5fDgA_eHleDiTLC5qb5g8w)
>Elena Vedutahttp://www.strategplan.com/en/about/veduta.phpVarious videos on YouTube but no channel of her own
>Dave Zachariahhttps://www.it.uu.se/katalog/davza513One video on Paul Cockshott's channel
Podcasts>General Intellect UnitPodcast of the Cybernetic Marxists
http://generalintellectunit.net/Previous threads in chronological orderhttps://archive.is/uNCEYhttps://web.archive.org/web/20201218152831/https://bunkerchan.xyz/leftypol/res/997358.htmlhttps://archive.ph/uyggphttps://archive.is/xBFYYhttps://archive.ph/Afx5ahttps://archive.is/kAPvRhttps://archive.is/0sAS2https://archive.is/jXivP 432 posts and 81 image replies omitted.>>2440889>not gonna watch this trashwhy announce your intention to not do something?
>cybernetics is a bourgeois pseudosciencewhy? elaborate.
>>2447108Roger is a contrarian, but at least he admits that he is
>Anyway, a bias of Goldratt's stories was that he really assumed the bottlenecks to be stubborn and stick in the same place for days, whereas in reality you really can get to the point that the bottleneck switches positions after a few minuteshence why you want inventory as a safety margins. the TPS people are autistically against that
>>2447210Lean production is for overall low inventory, not zero inventory. It's also not really a goal to cut inventory equally in every place (that would be autistic), but to cut inventory in the big picture. Achieving this might involve actually increasing inventory in some spots or even creating inventory spots where there aren't any currently.
My impression of Tom O'Brien is that he really has a very one-sided and extreme view of DA POWAH OF LEAN because he just read texts introducing it and he stays in the hype zone of the early convert for longer than a manager would, simply because he is not a manager. Without the real-world check, you have to be much smarter and very self-critical to learn at the same pace as a dumb person trying it out for real.
>>2448076>Lean production is for overall low inventory, not zero inventory. It's also not really a goal to cut inventory equally in every place (that would be autistic), but to cut inventory in the big picture. Achieving this might involve actually increasing inventory in some spots or even creating inventory spots where there aren't any currently.this is still ass-backwards. your need for inventory depends on how accurate your model of the production line is, and how much variance (noise) there is. if you
know what a bunch of work stations in a production line will do, and the probability that they will keep on doing that, then you should be able to work out the appropriate level of inventory so as to keep costs down while maintaining steady throughput. if inventory is cheap enough then using more of it is no harm, so long as you have proper regulation
one question I find myself asking is how can this lean stuff actually be instrumentalized? how is the necessary politics brought into it?
>he really has a very one-sided and extreme view of DA POWAH OF LEANhis zeal is very strong, yes. the same goes with his views on Marx, since they too are detached from reality
>>2457826>The principle of exploitation is as straightforward as the principle of its abolition. The abolition of wage labour can only be achieved by abolishing the separation between labour and its products, and by returning the right to dispose of these products, and thus the means of production, to the workersby "the workers", does the author mean the workers at a particular workplace, or the working class as a whole? if the former, then it's the same reactionary nonsense we see from anarchists and market "socialists"
>The enforcement of labour-time accounting, i.e. the use of individual labour-time as a measure of a worker’s share in the product of socially averaged labour-time, makes exploitation impossible and leads to the socialisation of the means of productionthis seems to imply that non-workers (the sick, the elderly) should have no share in the surplus product, and indeed that no surplus product should be produced. how they imagine investments should be handled is not clear
>Without this foundation, any attempts to reorganise the labour process would rely on moral appeals or administrative orders instead of decisions made by the associated producers themselvesapparently "administrative orders" and "decisions made by the associated producers" are different things in these people's heads. this reeks of cold war anti-communism
>This concept is intended to prevent two undesirable developments: […] 2) The state-communist danger of the central apparatus treating the operational units as passive executors of its directives.this reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of Soviet (and Chinese etc) planning
>In capitalism, accounting in value terms is the private record of capital’s command over labour; in council communism, accounting in socially-average labour hours is the public record of the producers’ command over their own work and product.<if I change the names of things (value -> SNLT) then I have changed the things in themselves!at least the public accounting bit is decent though. it's the one actually good thought the GIC has produced. it's a shame it's hidden among a bunch of much
as expected the text has nothing to say about Neurathian pseudorationality. apparently labour time accounting and talking is enough to deal with global warming
>>2457850>by "the workers", does the author mean the workers at a particular workplace, or the working class as a whole?The latter. Hermann Lueer is the number one promoter of the GIK text in the world so he has the same take as them.
>this seems to imply that non-workers (the sick, the elderly) should have no share in the surplus product, and indeed that no surplus product should be producedDon't be silly. Professional caretakers get remuneration and there is a deduction for that (and for people doing R & D and other stuff) and that logically means that the individual worker cannot own their output as an individual. This is covered in the GIK text.
>global warmingThe GIK text is almost a century old by now.
>>2457986>Don't be silly. Professional caretakers get remuneration and there is a deduction for that (and for people doing R & D and other stuff) and that logically means that the individual worker cannot own their output as an individual. This is covered in the GIK text.then why tf do they feel the need to point this shit out? there's no need to spill ink over saying that the DotP is when the proletariat decides things. it just strikes me as arguing against straw men
>The GIK text is almost a century old by nowyes, but none of the people who cite it do anything to address global warming. global warming is also far from the only such concern. see Neurath, who was writing about planning in the late 1910's and early 1920's. or the Soviet debate, which was very lively
>>2488453COCKSHOTT OR BUST
BYE
>>2488860the true genius of toyota is not JIT production, its using your dominant position and subcontracting to squeeze the subcontractors hard and drain all the profit. Its a model also used in the supermarket industry and franchising in general, subcontract the actual stores to "independent" managers who own it, but control the supply and central procurement and get all the profit. Small owners are very good at exploiting their employees (and themselves) harder than a big company could (because they face harsher regulation, taxes, and more easily organized labor, its the small business advantage against big company who get economy of scale)
(I once wanted to translate this excellent article to post it, but now that AI can do it for me, I will simply post the link)
https://www.econospheres.be/Delhaize-le-gout-amer-du-vrai-capitalisme >>2488453At 11:49 there is a statement from AcidCommunistAachen that in
Critique of the Gotha Programme Marx endorsed unequal hourly remuneration under socialism, that is the quantity of your individual output is remunerated on the basis of how many hours it takes on average for people with the
same job to achieve this.
I think this is a bit imprecise. What is the same job? New and improved tools are not instantly available to everybody in sufficient quantity, so some will work with outdated tools. Your performance should be judged relative to people working with the same tools. So for remuneration, we will have several standards on the basis of using old or new tools. (But when it comes to the price of the output, we will pool the processes with the old and new tools together for averaging.) I do believe that the person agrees with what I'm saying here.
O'Brien points out the distinction between producing more due to differences in technology and due to different natural endowments. It is clear that he doesn't like rewarding natural endowments. He tries to make this point by interpreting Marx correctly, using the same passage in CotGP. He notes that there is a common "misinterpretation" of the text, a "basic mistake" and that it actually aligns with his position. I'm a native German speaker and it's clear to me that O'Brien is misinterpreting it. This guy who can't read German refers to Andrew Kliman, another guy who can't read German, on how to interpret Marx. (He is confident in his position, so he could and should just state it without reference to the authority of Marx. He actually seems to come to this insight right after the Kliman shilling.) O'Brien claims rewarding natural endowment would stratify society. Yeah OK sure. He illustrates this with a society pyramid with slaves at the bottom and a literal pharaoh on top! Now that's what I call a basic mistake. If there is no extraction mechanism that takes from the bottom and gives to the top, you don't have a class society.
He seems against remunerating unpleasant labor for more, claiming this has been gamed in communes, so time and again these people have come around to chore rotation. So his argument is: If it can't even work on a small scale, why would it work on a big scale? Now any mainstream economist can tell you that's a silly argument because it's easy to game a tiny market compared to a thick market with many participants. We can say the same about voting procedures that look very different from what we normally call a market. A solution of equal chore rotation of course does not require weighting the chores, but equal duties are not feasible when there are many different tasks. For organizing production on the big scale, there is no way around weighting arduous work, irrespective of whether that information is used for different remuneration or for equalizing the "weight" of different packages of concrete chores.
For the rest, I agree with him: For complex labor, we can add the training time to the produced output. We can put a physical use-limit per year on a natural resource and use demand data to increase its price accordingly or set its price somewhat arbitrary fashion and this is neither abandoning labor-time accounting in the big picture nor against Marx and Engels. O'Brien quotes Engels in support of still having rental payments:
<Just as the abolition of property in land is not the abolition of ground rent, but its transfer, although in a modified form, to society. The actual seizure of all the instruments of labor by the working people therefore does not at all exclude the retention of the rent relations.https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1872/housing-question/ch03.htm >>2488941>the true genius of toyota is not JIT production, its using your dominant position and subcontracting to squeeze the subcontractors hard and drain all the profitTRVE and HONEST gommunism
>>2488860>I have no idea why Tom is so hellbent on shilling Toyota methods in socialismit's because what Tom is saying is deeply reactionary. he
explicitly agrees with the Austrians. specifically Hayek, as has been pointed out ITT many times
Donal as far more interesting. I don't understand why he attaches himself to Tom
>>2488987class struggle sharpens in communism
>>2488453I find it really funny that around 30:30 Tom just flat out admits that labor time accounting is the same as money accounting
>picrelis Tom a clangfag?
>>2488958>This guy who can't read German refers to Andrew Kliman, another guy who can't read German, on how to interpret MarxI only read a little bit of German, and even I have come up with multiple places where the English translations don't do the original text justice. this is why it's important not to treat Marx as some kind of prophet. especially since Marx is wrong in many places
what I think O'Brien is doing is using Marx to try and justify his own eclectic views. except of course where Marx' words directly contradicts O'Brien's views
>>2489622cibcom was moving towards an international section for a while I think, but indep becoming a thing probably put a damper on that
we probably need to struggle within indep
>>2489635running a forum isn't terribly difficult. bots are an issue though, but it can be handled by having a custom question during account setup, like asking who wrote Capital
Jenny. Anubis can take care of some of the DDOS nonsense
>>2491066do not besmirch Ian Wright (pbuh), the Prophet of Capital
>>2489325watched this earlier. there's a bunch of good stuff in there. didn't know Wright is working on a book
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