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Two cheers for preppers


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2021 Oct 7, 9:58am   229 views  5 comments

by Patrick   ➕follow (55)   💰tip   ignore  

https://spectatorworld.com/topic/two-cheers-for-preppers-facebook/


As the Facebook outage portends, sometimes it’s good to be prepared

October 7, 2021 | 8:57 am

Really, the Facebook outage should not have been as entertaining as it was. As Jon Stokes, the founder of Ars Technica, observes, if Facebook, with its hyper-sophisticated software and security practices, is vulnerable to sudden collapse, what does that say about energy infrastructure run on ‘old Windows installs’? The potential for far greater carnage is tremendous.

But it was entertaining, and I think what it made so was the fact that the damage was so comprehensive that security systems in the Facebook offices crashed and its employees could not enter the building to fix the problem. Here were some of the smartest people in the world and they could not get through a door. You can imagine the coffee cooling in their paper cups.

Younger days of the pandemic raised thoughts of a world imperiously mediated by technology. Who even needed offices when we had Skype, Zoom, WhatsApp, et cetera? Yet all it took was a ‘faulty configuration change’ and WhatsApp crashed along with Facebook and Instagram.

This peculiar occasion reminds us of the value of material possessions – and I emphasize material, as in ‘existing in a material form’. The Facebook outage offers us a chance to reflect that a lot of the photos, videos, songs, texts, and so on that we take to be our own depend on other people’s software to be accessed and to exist. If an app disappears, one can lose everything.

To be sure, physical objects need not be more resilient than data. Facebook reappeared with all of its users’ content after that configuration change had driven it offline whereas a lit match lazily dispensed with inside an art gallery could lead to devastation from which only ash emerges. Still, it is worthwhile to have a physical alternative of your favorite photographs or texts – a back-up you can hold, which no configuration change can reach.

This was one of several small but suggestive incidents which have illustrated how the software and infrastructure that sustains our lives is less strong than we imagined. All the intricate systems that thread through our societies like pipes and beams through buildings have been shaken. There was the Texas power crisis in February, which reportedly left the Lone Star State within four minutes of a total grid collapse. There are the resource shortages caused by, according to an informative report from Axios, ‘pandemic restrictions, labor shortages and record-high prices for Chinese shipping containers.’ Hell, one could even mention the Suez Canal blockage, which, though hilarious, held up $9 billion in global trade per day.

Of course, these problems are not inevitable facts of life. Pandemic restrictions should be lifted, with the International Chamber of Shipping rightly demanding ‘an end to the fragmented travel rules and restrictions that have severely impacted the global supply chain and put at risk the health and wellbeing of our international transport workforce.’ A nation like the USA should not be so pathetically dependent on imports from China. A ship blocking the Suez Canal, meanwhile, was a freak event – and barring an unprecedented increase in alcoholism among the crews of cargo ships, it will remain so. These things being out of our hands, my thoughts turn to those widely mocked enthusiasts, the preppers.

Granted, some advocates of hoarding canned beans and building a makeshift nuclear bunker in your basement are bananas – either paranoiacs, misanthropes who take quiet pleasure in the thought of being safe and warm while their neighbors freeze to death or kill and eat each other, or both. But the broad premises of the phenomenon make an uncomfortable amount of sense: keeping a cupboard full of food before you have to fill the thing, having some sort of independence from your energy suppliers, and having basic knowledge of emergency procedures, from medicine to self-defense. ...

No one can be ready for anything, life is too complex, but we can still prepare. Tangible objects and skills will always have a place. ...


Best line imho: "A nation like the USA should not be so pathetically dependent on imports from China."

Comments 1 - 5 of 5        Search these comments

2   NuttBoxer   2021 Oct 11, 8:28am  

HunterTits says
Preppers should switch to a new name.


Realists?

I've got three months of food for my family stored on a ranch in the middle of nowhere. Membership guarantees me free room and board in the event of an emergency, and place is off-grid and sustainable. Will be filled with like-minded, well armed members.
But to this articles point, all our photos and videos are backed up to a physical hard drive, which is itself backed up with a portable HDD that is never otherwise plugged in, and stored in a separate location.
3   RC2006   2021 Oct 11, 8:54am  

Lol my street has a lot peppers, probably better armed and stocked than most CA police departments.
4   RC2006   2021 Oct 11, 8:56am  

One of my neighbors was flagged by fb and he is retired cop and marine..
5   Ceffer   2021 Oct 11, 9:07am  

Cannibal Anarchists.

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