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A Samoan Hackers Manifesto

· 10 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek
Part of the Pacific AI & Data Sovereignty series

This essay is part of a thread on AI, data sovereignty, and Pasifika in technology. See the Pacific AI & Data Sovereignty hub for the full collection. Related: Pasifika Need Tech Leaders Who Are Technical, The Inevitability of AI.

Talofa reader,

I often tell the story of what first got me into thinking about tech, so for this edition, I thought I’d dive deep into what made it such a life-changing point in my life.

Without a doubt, it was getting "hacked" by a high school friend over ICQ late one night while chatting.

That opened my eyes to what was possible with a little knowledge and skill with tech.

From then on, I was hooked.

I couldn’t wait to get my course costs from my university loan to buy my own, very first computer, an Acer laptop.

Real hackers run Linux, so I installed RedHat 5.2—no dual boot, just deleted Windows.

Linux straight, no chaser.

For the next, what seemed like ‘always’, I would battle it out with device drivers, getting my sound card to work, getting my video card to work, learning how to configure, compile and install my own kernels to ensure things worked.

My obsession with getting really good at wielding the power of computing, networking, and programming drove me to learn anything and everything from the hardware up through all 7 OSI layers.

I can’t even hazard a guess at how many hours all up I spent on learning, breaking, and fixing computers, how many all-nighters, weekends, and public holidays I spent just hacking on things.

I thought I just wanted to be a 31337 hax0r, and that was my obsession…

But it wasn’t until I came across a piece of writing, iconic in hacking culture, that I realised hacking was more than computer tricks for me…

That piece of writing was the hacker's manifesto.

TheHackers Manifesto1is a short essay written Lloyd Blankenship aka"The Mentor"of the infamous hacker group"Legion of Doom".

It featured in Issue 7, of equally infamous Hacker Magazine “Phrack” in 1986, and has been cited in popular culture, like the movie Hackers, The Social Network and in Edward Snowden’s autobiography.

You can read it yourself, but it’s the perspective of a smart kid, misunderstood and dismissed by his teachers, bored and unchallenged at school, who finds a world that challenges and teaches him, whereinformation is free.

Sure- if you're familiar with the manifesto- you might think it's cheesy, a bit cringe, “of it’s time” etc.

But I can’t deny the sentiment of"The Mentor"vibed somewhere deep in me.

Why?

Good question.

The manifesto sounded like it was written by a palagi kid, from the U.S., I’m going to go out on a limb here and say probably from a decent home (one that had a computer at least).

So what did we have in common?2

The Mediocre Narcissist’s Guide to Blaming Diversity for Your Own Failings

· 13 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

This edition I’ve got a bit of a bee in my bonnet, so bear with the “tone” of this one 😂

I'm listening to the Lex Fridman1Podcast with Mark Cuban as the guest, and they’re talking about Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) programmes.

Mark’s been in some back-and-forth’s on social media with folks who believe DEI programmes are a big scam perpetuated to allow “under qualified”2people to get hired.

Despite Mark's anecdotal evidence to the contrary-

That he has asked around corporate America to understand how real this claim is, and he's only been met with business leaders admitting it's not happening at their company, but that it "does happen" and point to a news article out on the interwebs-

So, no first-hand experience of this major DEI boogeyman that seems to have corporate America in a death grip.

Mark, again, is backing his understanding and experience of these programs as a business leader.

He takes DEI as part of good business practice and sees no problem with it.

Mark goes on to explain each letter's meaning brilliantly:

  • "D is diversity, and means you just expand your pool of potential candidates to people who you might not otherwise have access to."

  • "E in Equity means when you hire somebody, you put them in a position to succeed."

  • "I, Inclusion, means you hire somebody and they might not be typical, right? You show them some love and give them the support they need. This way, they can do their job as best they can and feel comfortable and confident going to work."

So, DEI, gets the thumbs up from Mark “Dallas Mavericks Owner” Cuban.

Which makes me think - if this Billionaire gets it, and he's a businessman who loves capitalism, so he is definitely no left-leaning liberal shill.

And he's saying it's good for Business…

If Mark Cuban gets it, then why do a lot of people find it hard to park the few examples of badly implemented DEI programs in favour of the majority of great outcomes for the rest of the programme?

Rhetorical question.

Asked and answered, because we all know why, and that shit is not only exhausting, it means we're not going by facts and statistics anymore, we're going by people's "feelings" - wasn't this what those folks most upset by DEI say we shouldn't do? Go with our feelings over facts?

In the podcast, Mark points out that a lot of folks who get let go were actually not good at their jobs - where have we heard this before?

Mediocre people who think they're great and refuse to accept the objective feedback that they really are not good at their jobs. You know these types of people; they blame everyone but themselves.

Diversity hires are under-qualified and taking jobs of much more qualified "people"!

For the "facts, not feelings" crowd, let's do some quick research and find out what evidence there is to back all these DEI claims being made on social media.

Technology Is Political. No Matter How Much People Try to Say It's Not.

· 8 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa Reader,

In my career and in life, the following statements I've heard repeatedly make me want to headbutt a brick wall to save me from a lawsuit:

  1. "Don't bring politics into x, y, z!"

  2. "I don't do office politics."

  3. "I don't care about politics, I just want to write code!"

Sure, they're all worded differently but essentially all say the same thing, which is, "I don't understand how society and human beings work and I'm basically an underdeveloped human being."

I mean, even look at the recent uproar over a women's rugby team doing a Haka that was critical of the government.

"Keep politics out of sports," scream the same crowd that tells everyone else to "harden up, change the channel if you don't like it".

Weakest demographic of human beings to ever exist.

Politics is in everything because people are in everything and people are inherently political beings shaped by the ideologies, values, and power structures around them.

This is just a fundamental understanding ofpeople, so it pains me to think this is missing from anyone's consciousness.

In terms of technology - not just the way people who work in tech think about politics, but just how anyone views technology, the most dangerous misunderstanding about technology is thatit's not political.

People think the technology is objective; it's just doing what it's programmed to do, abdicating it of any responsibility.

But the truth of the matter is, technology is very much political - in how it's created, developed, by whom, for whom, and why?

Technology doesn't exist in a vacuum.

It's developed within socio-political contexts that influence how it's designed, where it's deployed, and how it's used.

A great example of this is the development and debate around encryption technologies.

You have governments and law enforcement agencies on one side arguing that encryption helps criminals and that there should exist backdoors in the technology.

On the other side, you have privacy advocates and technologists counter that backdoors in encryption technologies inherently compromise the security of the technology, thereby making them vulnerable not just to law enforcement agenciesbut to malicious actors as well.

Here we’re talking about the mathematical algorithms that encrypt and secure data, how it's developed (with or without backdoors) and who it's developed for and against.

It’s very much the proverbial football being kicked between two sets of political ideologies.

The encryption debate has raged on for a long time now, but a lot has developed and evolved for tech over the years, and in the exact same way, the same political vulnerabilities for encryption are there for these new topics as well.

Let’s have a look at some of these topics shall we?

The Duality of Living in Privilege and being Pasifika

· 10 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

I was actually working on another piece about how AI and it’s practical implications in the ‘hood, but got stuck having to hand wave off a concept of how I live in two different worlds at the same time, all the time.

I figured it would just be easier to write this one first, and then I can refer back to it anytime I have to run scenarios that require the reader to “get where I’m coming from”, essentially.

Let’s begin.

ShareIn my reality, I've always known I live in two worlds simultaneously.

The non-brown world, the one I experience with everyone else who's white basically.

Let’s call this world, “tech world”.

And the "brown" world, the one where, y'know, I'm a brown Pasifika guy.

We can call this “home world”.

Give Us the AI Overlords Already - Part 2

· 10 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

Last week's newsletter kicked off with a history lesson and went "mask off" on the actual world we live in. It unveiled the imperialist hegemonic powers, the facade of international law, and the democracy scam used to invade and subjugate nations since forever ago.

The genocide in Gaza highlights the absolute failure of the Western world to even pretend to give a shit when human lives are being annihilated daily.

The precious international laws and standards they impose on all their "enemies" suddenly become “not applicable” when it comes to Israel.

Civilian populations have been bombed and massacred for over 129 days. Hospitals have been rendered inoperable, universities systematically demolished, and, as of today's count, 85 journalists killed.

These acts are all considered war crimes, yet we hearnothingfrom politicians in Western power.

There has been no ceasefire, humanitarian aid’s a joke.

In fact, aid has been sent with one hand and taken away with the other. This includes the suspension of UNRWA funding based on a claim with zero evidence. And then the Zionists go and blockade aid trucks, preventing them from reaching the starving people of Gaza.

Children make up50%of the population in Gaza.

Israel, the United States, and the rest of the so-called Western world are complicit in this atrocity.

Our Western systems of politics, economics, security, technology, and law have led to the annihilation of a people. This occurs even as we witness these very crimes with our own eyes, with evidence recorded for everyone to see.

When you combine these systems with the worst flaws of human beings, the outcome is a Gaza genocide 100 out of 100 times.

"The system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets."

Give Us the AI Overlords Already - Part 1

· 13 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

It's been quite hard watching the state of the world at the moment with respect to the genocide happening in Gaza at the hands of US-backed Israel.

There. I said it.

As of writing this, the UN puts the number ofpeople in Gaza killed, injured, or missing at 100,000.

My first sentence shouldn't even be controversial, as we're now at 122 days of relentless bombing of a civilian population.

Yet, here we are: story after story of denial and justification, deflection, and whatever word you can use for what I can only describe as deranged self-righteousness by those defending these atrocities, in the face of over11,500 children murdered by Israel.

These kinds of atrocities, against anyone, are abhorrent, and my only consolation in the face of these events is that there will be justice.

That the systems we've put in place as a society will come to the rescue and make right where humans have wronged each other.

Don't worry, I'm not that naïve.

I don't expect the world to be fair; I haven't had that expectation since I was in primary school. I've always known that there exists a different world for different people and that the systems we live by in society were created for specific sets of people and not others.

We live in an age of information, of declassified top-secret government files, of tell-all memoirs of people who would know how the world actually works. Books, biographies, documentaries, and Broadway plays, all doing the same thing—telling us what we may have suspected, even had an inkling of, but were never too sure—was, in fact, true.

Enough time has passed, and the atrocities of the past are just cold facts in a file online, on Wikipedia, in a press release; it's just accepted now.

This is the way the world actually is, so let's just humour ourselves and set the self-preserving delusions aside for a moment and just stare at reality for a second, shall we?

Sorry, I don't mean to sound as sarcastic as I probably do, but anytime I've had to pull the veil off and reckon with "reality", it always pisses me off.

Tech Gun for Hire: Lessons From a Pasifika Engineer's Career.

· 12 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

I’m often asked by young people wanting to get into tech, "I want to break into tech, what would you recommend I do?"

They ask about Cloud, CyberSecurity, and whether DevOps is the way to go.

Over the years, I find I'm doing two things over and over again:

  1. repeating myself in terms of certs and skills I’d recommend,

  2. and not providing information that, in my opinion, would be more valuable than certs and skills recommendations.

What’s more important than what certs and skills?

Understanding the corporate game.

The certs and skills you need for roles—that information is all out there on the internet.

What newbies don’t tend to get a heads-up on is the environment they will need to navigate through in order to “have a career”.

A lot of people don't understand the corporate game.

Pasifika, more so, because most of our parents didn't come up this way, so weren't in a position to pass on any knowledge. This perpetuates the trend of very few people from my community venturing out past sports and music careers into the tech world, and so the cycle of limited career and future-proof opportunities continues.

For the few Pasifika that do make it into the tech space, we’re out there individually fending for ourselves. If we’re lucky, we may come across a colleague willing to impart their wisdom of the corporate game to help us out.

Otherwise, we’re destined to learn those lessons the hard way.

I’ve learned a good number of lessons in my two decades working in tech, both nationally and internationally, as a contractor and an employee, in the office and as a fully remote engineer.

I did all that as a Pasifika person (can’t really change that, to be honest), so the lessons I learned, I’d say, are fairly unique in the tech context.

In this week's newsletter, I wanted to share those lessons, all in one place, so I don’t have to keep repeating myself—or at the very least, I know I have these receipts.

Some of it might be a bit tongue-in-cheek, but rest assured, I mean every word.

Walk with me now...

2023: The End Is the Beginning Is the End

· 8 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

I didn't plan on an "end of year" or 'wrap-up 2023' edition for the Uncommon Engineer.

That seemed like too "common" an idea 😉🥁

One of my younger brothers turned 40 today (Boxing Day), and all five of my brothers got together for lunch. We reminisced about life growing up together and all the life events that have happened from then until today.

So, I thought, why not review the year?

Why not cast my mind's eye back 12 months and play my life forward like a fast-forwarding VHS tape to see what's happened in my life this year.

I've been around the sun for 40+ years.

I've seen this Christmas and New Year combination so many times now, it's become a sort ofGroundhog Daydéjà vu. Sometimes I wonder if I'll ever wake up and it's the next day.

I've lived a semi-charmed life.

I wouldn't have thought so at any point in my life, but there's no denying, looking back, that a) I should be dead, given some of the stunts I've pulled and the trouble I've dealt with in my life, and b) I've done some pretty cool stuff that I can honestly say not a lot of people can say they've done.

Maybe that's why, once you've done most things at least once and you've done one thing for a long time, you find yourself doing something for the first time, several times, in one year.

This year was a year of firsts.

Pasifika And The AI Opportunity

· 9 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek
Part of the Pacific AI & Data Sovereignty series

This essay is part of a thread on AI, data sovereignty, and Pasifika in technology. See the Pacific AI & Data Sovereignty hub for the full collection. Related: Data Sovereignty & The Cloud, Beyond Netflix: AI Literacy Among Indigenous Tech Leaders.

Talofa Reader,

I was listening to a podcast once, and the guest was explaining why there aren't as many "geniuses" and prodigies around now as there were in, say, Mozart's days.

The explanation was that historically, aristocracies often had exclusive access to the best education and intellectual resources. Children of aristocrats were frequently tutored by leading scholars, artists, and thinkers.

I sat on this and thought about my experiences growing up, my environment, my schools, my circle of friends, and my parents' friends. I looked at who was successful and who didn't quite come out on top.

Which led me to the following hypothesis:

The single factor, which paradoxically accounts for both the challenges and successes experienced by Pasifika, in my opinion, can be summed up in one central theme—

The limits to this access came in many forms:

environments that were hostile to learning things that would advance, and not hinder, us; whether that was at home, learning we needed to "play our role", or at school, where we were treated like we were too dumb to understand anything academically.

Teachers who weren't skilled in getting through to Pasifika kids; admittedly, were already hard-up against it, given theteaching industry's a bit shit(pay, class sizes etc), and then the Island kids are coming to school from stressed environments, hungry, wrong uniforms, etc.

If we got to school at all...

It wasn’t usually the best schools.

No offence to the teachers that made it to the schools I went to, but the rich schools got the best teachers, right?

Statistically, your parents either didn't finish school or can't really help you with your English and maths homework, and hiring a tutor is only what kids in the movies did.

So, poor communities, with poor schools, and poor teachers don't lead to a rich, knowledgeable learning outcome1.

New Tech, Eyes Open: Stay Critical of Tech's Shiny New Toys

· 11 min read
Ron Amosa
Hacker/Engineer/Geek

Talofa reader,

PSA for all Pasifika: Stop Falling For AI, Crypto, NFTs and Blockchain Marketing.

New tech has always brought the promise of a better life, a better "me", a better world, etc.

So, it's definitely enticing.

Who doesn't want to only work 20 minutes a week and have an automated email campaign, “drop shipping” business automation AI, make them 48 million dollars a week in "passive income"?

But when you'reinthe tech game, you learn to be cynical,especiallyif you haveanyexperience building practical, real-world solutions with the so-called second-coming programming language, or API, or cloud service.

Because when the rubber meets the road, and you meet the rubber, it's usually not as shiny as the tech marketing makes it out to be.

We know this from experience (plus, it's our area of interest, so we tend to stay informed).

This is all fun and games for geeks and tech nerds alike; we'll give each other sh!t for our taste in Operating Systems or hardware (iPhone vs. Android will never die), and so the fun is pretty harmless.

Where it starts getting (dare I say it) "dangerous" is when the tech we're either frothing over or memeing gets out into the normal world, and those folks take it seriously.

It's like they're not in on the joke.

And the jokes stops being funny when the grifters

start influencing people who don't know any better about that tech - not usually in their best interests.

And it stops being funny altogether when folks in the industry, touted as "tech leaders", who look like us, end up being the people leading us astray.