Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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7 years, 9 months ago

into the monetary system itself

The power-shift towards finance became self-reinforcing. Financial institutions deployed their increased lobbying power successfully against the legal barriers between speculative and retail banking [...] This drew creative effort and investment into the monetary system itself, and away from the pr…

—p.158 The Bleeding Edge: Why Technology Turns Toxic in an Unequal World Enclosure in the computer age: the magic of control (146) by Bob Hughes
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7 years, 9 months ago

the origin of derivatives

[...] the publication in 1973 of Fischer Black and Myron Scholes's algorithm for the pricing of options.

Before Black and Scholes's work, derivatives had been a small fraction of all investments, essentially the contracts known as 'futures,' [...] Black and Scholes's algorithm allowed almost eve…

—p.157 Enclosure in the computer age: the magic of control (146) by Bob Hughes
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7 years, 9 months ago

people who have been dragooned into it

Positionality is a valuable concept for anyone who is interested in making society more fair, because it highlights the fact that the system is not composed entirely of people who believe in it and want it, but perhaps very largely of people who have been dragooned into it and would love to be free…

—p.127 The invisible foot: why inequality increases impact (123) by Bob Hughes
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7 years, 9 months ago

sequestering mortality in the lower classes

[...] unequal societies have a short-term competitive edge over more egalitarian ones because those who take the decisions do not have to suffer their consequences. Rogers writes: 'unequal societies are better able to survive resource shortages by sequestering mortality in the lower classes'. In th…

—p.65 From water mills to iPhones: why technology and inequality do not mix (46) by Bob Hughes
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7 years, 9 months ago

attacks on wealthy limousine-owners

[...] Demand for large, luxury cars fell abruptly; labor historian Rob Rooke records that demand fell steadily from 150,000 sold in 1929 to only 10,000 a year by 1937. Perhaps this was because it no longer felt right to drive in luxury when people were starving, and perhaps, following rumored or ac…

—p.51 From water mills to iPhones: why technology and inequality do not mix (46) by Bob Hughes