Over the weekend, I did an interview about my forthcoming book *The Reverse Centaur's Guide to Life After AI* (a book about being a better AI critic), and the interviewer said she was surprised that I wasn't an AI booster, based on my demographics and work history:

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374621568/thereversecentaursguidetolifeafterai/

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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/06/15/vernacular/#hypercardian

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I could see where she was coming from. I encountered computers in the mid-seventies, as a small child. My first computer was a CARDIAC, a working, Turing-complete, mechanical computer made entirely of cardboard, that I spent endless hours with:

https://www.instructables.com/CARDIAC-CARDboard-Illustrative-Aid-to-Computation-/

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CARDIAC (CARDboard Illustrative Aid to Computation) Replica

CARDIAC (CARDboard Illustrative Aid to Computation) Replica: Back in the 1960's and early 70's Bell Labs made some very sophisticated educational kits available to high schools and colleges. Designed for classroom use, they included wonderful manuals written by some of Bell Labs best minds. One of these kits…

Instructables

Then I graduated to a teletype terminal and acoustic coupler connected to a minicomputer at the University of Toronto. My mom, a kindergarten teacher, used to smuggle home 1,000' rolls of paper towel from the kids' bathroom. I'd get 1,000' feet of computing up one side, then another 1,000' down the other side, then I'd carefully re-roll the paper towel so she could put it back in the bathroom for the kids to dry their hands on.

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After that, I got an Apple ][+ in 1979, and shortly thereafter acquired a modem, and that was it: I was hooked for life. I became an amateur programmer, then a professional programmer. I hosted forums on dial-up BBSes where I distributed software and offered support to strangers who wanted to connect their computers to the internet. I got a job as a gopher developer, then a web developer, then a CIO-for-hire, helping wire up small businesses and connect them to the net.

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Eventually, I co-founded a free/open source software startup, before transitioning to 25 years as a digital rights activist with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. And for most of that time, I was energetically writing science fiction, eventually becoming associated with a school sometimes called "post-cyberpunk":

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rewired:_The_Post-Cyberpunk_Anthology

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Rewired: The Post-Cyberpunk Anthology - Wikipedia

The force that energized all this work was a dialectical one, the contradiction that powered cyberpunk literature itself. For all that cyberpunk was undeniably enamored with the coolness and combustibility of new technology, it was also terrified of how technology could be a force for oppression, surveillance and control. As William Gibson says, "cyberpunk was a warning, not a suggestion."

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Gibson's more famous quote, of course, is "the street finds its own use for things." In Gibson's novels (and in my own life in technology) all the most interesting things happen when users of technology (often without formal training or credentials) find ways to adapt the technology they use to suit their needs:

https://pluralistic.net/2026/03/17/technopolitics/#original-sin

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Pluralistic: William Gibson vs Margaret Thatcher (17 Mar 2026) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

@pluralistic wait ... Was the super computer in Hackers named after this author??
@pluralistic 🤯. Hack the planet!!
@pluralistic Neuromancer on hold at the library. I gotta get in on this.
@fullywoolly @pluralistic I was once asked if I had ever hacked a Gibson.... I quietly checked out of the conversation.
@nuintari @fullywoolly @pluralistic if they weren't testing you i'm sad
@ssfckdt @fullywoolly @pluralistic They seemed to be dead serious. They reaked of posuer.
@nuintari @ssfckdt @pluralistic wow that's special. I wouldn't guess someone would bring that seriously.
@fullywoolly @ssfckdt @pluralistic They didnt know any better. I _still_ meet people who think "Hackers," is real.
@nuintari @ssfckdt how? I guess if nation states can make stuxnet to target a PLC used in Iran's Nuke development and all the trickery it used, doing some oil tankers could be plausible? I still don't get how anyone could take the movie seriously. Type "Cookie" you idiot!
@fullywoolly @ssfckdt I dunno where you live, but in the USA, people still support trump, believe in angels, and think trickle down economics is gonna happen any day now.
@nuintari @ssfckdt oh I'm very aware. Unfortunate family relations, quite strained. I also remember growing up having them praise Reagan so ...
@fullywoolly @nuintari Honestly? If anything, technical literacy has gotten much much worse. It's been downhill since the iPhone. Nobody barely even knows how to use a proper computer anymore.
@nuintari @pluralistic no one has ever asked me. But I absolutely adore the movie and pretty much watch it whenever I see it available. For whatever reason I never bought it though.

@fullywoolly @pluralistic My HS girlfriend acted like it was a guidebook on, "how to be a hacker," while ignoring her actual hacker boyfriend's input on the subject. She wanted to watch it constantly, to study it.

I fucking HATE that movie to this day.

She also did this with "The Craft" and a so-called Wiccan phase.

God she was annoying.

@nuintari @pluralistic 😂 I once dressed up as Cereal Killer for Halloween. Not like the movie, but got a box of cereal cut a hole in the middle, put a plastic butcher knife through the hole, and glued a cereal bits to the outside.

I always knew the righteous hacks were laughable. But I like it because of the nostalgia I guess. When computer users were outcasts but did it anyway because they loved it. I feel like the movie captures that. I can't imagine taking it seriously.

@fullywoolly @pluralistic That aspect is fairly accurate.

The technical aspects and the rollerblades? Yeah, less accurate.

@nuintari @pluralistic Phreaking was the most realistic hack. It still blows me away the original did it by whistling.

@fullywoolly @pluralistic Yes, the phone booth scene was accurate.....

But not when the movie came out. SS7 did away with that shit years before the movie came out.

@nuintari @pluralistic oh I didn't know about SS7. Gonna have to read a bit about it.

@fullywoolly @pluralistic Short version: SS6 was the golden age of phone phreaking because of all the in-band signaling involved.

Like "whistler," you could blow tones onto the phone system to do cool shit like open up trunk lines.

SS7 introduced elementary out of band signaling to POTS lines(among other things).

This is why a T1 was 1.5 Mb in bandwidth, which was 24 channels of 64k data, but dialup was restricted to 56k. That 8 k was reserved for per channel signaling.

Channeled for pure data, a T1 delivered 1536 Kb. Channeled for voice or dialup banks, it delivered more like 1288Kb best case, and that was absolutely BEST FUCKING POSSIBLE case. Because each voice channel was 56 voice + 8 in band, and the 24th channel of the PRI(basically digital T1) was for out of band signaling.

@nuintari @pluralistic wow that's super cool and super cool that you know it
@daycoder @nuintari @fullywoolly @pluralistic instructions unclear have root on my guitar now
@pluralistic @fullywoolly @daycoder @nuintari Perhaps not, but *everyone* has hacked a Fender…
@jbohn @pluralistic @fullywoolly @daycoder @nuintari and then you get a nastigram from Fender...
@hub @jbohn @pluralistic @fullywoolly @daycoder @nuintari Especially if the guitar just *looked* like a Fender, but was from another company.
@michaelgemar @hub @jbohn @pluralistic @fullywoolly @daycoder @nuintari Which makes a lot of sense, Fender and Gibsons make for bad bases for mods due to horrible build quality.
@nuintari @fullywoolly @pluralistic I'm sure lot of guitar techs and luthiers have hacked a Gibson.
@hub @pluralistic @nuintari @fullywoolly I owned a hacked Gibson back in the 80s… (It was adjusted to be strung upside down so I could play it left handed).