Freedom, liberty, individual rights, that idea of dealing with other people in a matter that is not initiating force against them, is critical to me.
We have to come together, worldwide, and "think". We have a tool - the internet - to let us do that. Let's use it wisely.
We are growing from a cheerful small town where everyone waves off their front porch to the subway of New York City where everyone rushes by. How do you preserve the culture that has worked so well?
People are not fundamentally bad. It only takes the smallest of correctives to take care of that tiny minority that wants to disrupt the community.
It's kind of surprising that you could just open up a site and let people work.
Given enough time humans will screw up Wikipedia just as they have screwed up everything else, but so far it's not too bad.
I have no regular schedule. I get up whenever I can.
People who have achieved a public voice find it a mixed bag.
Dialing down is not an option for me.
A lot of people who work on open-source software don't mind making money elsewhere. They aren't anticommercial.
Everybody tells jokes, but we still need comedians.
Everybody tells jokes, but we still need comedians.
If I had some information, the last thing I would ever do with it is send it to Wikileaks.
Things work well when a group of people know each other, and things break down when it's a bunch of random people interacting.
People do fun and interesting things because they're fun and interesting.
Most people assume the fights are going to be the left versus the right, but it always is the reasonable versus the jerks.
Massive numbers of people are going to come online from cultures we don't normally interact with.
There's a big tendency to gravitate toward a closed and proprietary approach too easily.