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Posted by Tim Harford

Christmas now is drawing near at hand, and your favourite undercover economist has been observed performing some most uncharacteristic acts. My father used to make amazing Christmas puddings and distribute them to his children. Now that he’s dead, I have the recipe and the solemn duty falls to me. Any economics textbook could explain that I am undervaluing my time. I could buy a hundred good puddings with the money I could have earned, had I not been making half a dozen.

Then there is the Harford-Monks Christmas card, designed using a still life created by my wife. And the Harford-Monks Christmas mixtape. (This used to be a true labour of love, requiring dozens of CDs to be burned. Spotify makes life easier, although that somewhat cheapens the ritual.)

No such shortcuts for the Christmas Game, an all-day role-playing game in which, since time immemorial, my friends and I have gathered and pretended to be wizards — often in some seasonally inflected adventure, and always created by one of the group rather than bought off the shelf in a gaming store. This is the way.

I’ve devoted many columns over the years to the “deadweight loss of Christmas” — the grotesque waste involved in buying badly chosen gifts. I remain convinced this loss is quite real, and that if you are choosing a gift for your grandchild or niece, picking from a wishlist or sending cash are underrated choices. Face facts, you’re not demonstrating that you’re down with Gen Alpha, you’re transferring purchasing power.

But there is a different kind of gift-giving going on in homespun rituals. Lewis Hyde’s much-loved book, The Gift, recently gave me a new perspective on the matter. Hyde looks upon creative acts as gifts, and gifts as creative acts. One gift inspires another, he argues, retelling fairy tales to underline the common motif of a small act of generosity which begets a larger one, and a larger one. One story begins with a mother giving a small loaf and a blessing to her daughter; the daughter gives the bread to some birds; a virtuous spiral begins and before the end of the story, she has been gifted with a flask of cordial that can raise the dead. The gift grows as it is passed along.

Hyde devotes a chapter to the way gifts establish bonds between people. This is certainly true of my Christmas game, and is the impulse behind those handcrafted cards, the family pudding recipe and even the endless burning of CDs. One friend insists that the spell of Christmas can only be woven on Christmas Eve by the playing of the Harford-Monks Christmas album with a glass of champagne in hand. Flattery perhaps, but the idea of connecting with that friend compensates for the knowledge that many others will quite reasonably shrug and listen to their own music instead.

Bonds of friendship are all very well, but sometimes bonds can be graver. Consider the connection between kidney donor and kidney recipient: the recipient is literally walking around with part of the donor’s body inside them. (Few gifts, incidentally, create more value than a live kidney donation, where the recipient has their health transformed while the donor usually suffers no more than temporary discomfort. It is the deadweight loss of Christmas in reverse.)

It is easy to romanticise such gifts, but they can be socially complicated. In 2006, the writer Virginia Postrel donated her kidney to Sally Satel — a friend, but “no one would have called us close”. Postrel argued for a legal market in kidneys, and once told me that Satel “would really have liked to do an arms-length transaction with a stranger, where she paid somebody she didn’t know, because there can be a great deal of emotional entanglement when there is a gift”.

Lewis Hyde describes the flip side: a daughter who offered to donate a kidney to her mother, in exchange for a fur coat. “It really shook me up,” said the mother, who agreed to the terms but came to view her own daughter with something close to contempt. Hyde writes, “the gift did not render the mother subservient to the daughter. And for a good reason: it wasn’t a gift.” The daughter turned it into a barter, and in doing so surrendered her moral authority. Evidently, she preferred the coat.

The gift is neither superior nor inferior to a market transaction; it’s different. Sometimes we want those bonds with others, and use gifts to strengthen them. Sometimes we want to be cut free, and then cash is king.

Cash for kidneys remains frowned upon, but one intriguing development has been the emergence of kidney exchanges. Cruelly, it’s quite common for people who’ve had children together not to be compatible for transplants, but two couples can pair up and donate to each other. Such exchanges have to be simultaneous, because of the risk that one couple gets the kidney they want and then backs out on the (legally unenforceable) deal.

But much more can be done if someone volunteers to donate a kidney, no strings attached, to any stranger who needs one. That donation can trigger a series of sequential kidney exchanges — in 2015, an altruistic donor, Kathy Hart, started a record-breaking chain of 35 transplants, each one involving a pair of people who received a kidney, then donated one to keep the chain going. That’s a more complicated affair than simply paying cash for a kidney, but everyone seems to feel a lot better about it. One gift inspires another — and the gift grows as it is passed along.

Written for and first published in the Financial Times on 13 December 2024.

Loyal readers might enjoy the book that started it all, The Undercover Economist.

I’ve set up a storefront on Bookshop in the United States and the United Kingdom. Links to Bookshop and Amazon may generate referral fees.

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Posted by Zach Weinersmith



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Dr Crab Robot Reaches the Exit

Dec. 4th, 2025 11:54 am
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[personal profile] jack
I made ten levels for the programming puzzle game I wrote in rust!

Play online at the link: https://cartesiandaemon.github.io/rusttilegame/programming_release.html

It's clunky in several places but you can successfully play! Drag the instructions onto the flowchart. Press space to start the crab robot moving. Get them to the exit.

Leave the tab open, there's not yet any save :)

It's currently best played in a browser on a PC. (It works on mobile except that you need a spacebar. You can also build an exe for windows or Linux if you want, repo https://github.com/CartesianDaemon/rusttilegame)

andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker
Opening up my YouTube Recap so I can find out what nonsense Gideon has been watching this year.

(Sophia is on her own account, but for technical reasons Gideon can't be yet.)
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

For lo these many years (i.e. basically since I got a smartphone) I've been using Swype as an onscreen keyboard. Some time ago it was announced that it had reached end-of-life-and-support, but it wasn't until I went looking earlier today that I realised that happened in 2018, that being when I posted asking for suggestions for replacements.

And then I didn't think about it again for, apparently, approximately eight years, through several new phones and quite a lot of new major versions of Android... and then a few-ish weeks ago Fairphone rolled out Android 15 to the Fairphone 4 and alas That Was The End Of That.

Recommendations back in 2018 were for Gboard and Swiftkey; a question posted to reddit in 2022 garnered similar responses.

Since the Abrupt Keyboard Failure I've swapped to Gboard more or less by default. I don't hate the bit where language switching is now automatic (for the purposes of language learning apps, at any rate), but good grief I am missing the ability to e.g. type < or | without needing to go like three clicks deep in menus. Yes, when I have "Touch and hold keys for symbols" enabled -- as far as I can tell that only gives me one symbol per key, not "now select from a variety of them" as with the much-lamented Swype. I'm also missing the gestures I know for "yes, that word, but change the capitalisation", and still grumpily adjusting to the shift key mode cycle being in a different order to what I'm used to.

I've experimented briefly with AnySoftKey but rapidly got annoyed by the total lack of any Irish language pack (and how difficult it is to navigate the app listings to establish this fact). I'm trying to persuade myself that it's worth giving SwiftKey a try even though it (1) is now Microsoft, (2) has gone all-in on Bundling With Copilot, and (3) apparently "contains ads".

Eheu, alas, etc; all is woe; ... unless anyone knows of any other Android keyboards that provide ready access to All the punctuation...?

Invoking the Kurt Vonnegut rule

Dec. 3rd, 2025 10:14 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

You know you had a bad day when the next day [personal profile] angelofthenorth brings you coffee as soon as she gets home, saying "well your blog post from yesterday made me think you'd need it!"

I actually had a much better day at work today: no meetings to speak of and I even started messing around with the slides for the presentation I have to give on Tuesday. Plus, Tuesday turns out to be the London staff's Christmas lunch and I can go to Wahaca (yes, that's how they spell it) with them, they're all excited about Taco Tuesday.

I was able to slip away from work early enough to walk Teddy before D and I went to see Pillion, which was well-acted and horny (even in the audio description!) and had some genuine funny moments but is a little too Fifty Shades of Gay in that its basic message that being a dom makes you a dickhead who is incapable of healthy relationships. But I had fun and I'm glad we had time for a pint in the twinkly outdoors before coming home to delicious homemade stew and dumplings.

And before I'd finished eating, [personal profile] angelofthenorth offered cinnamon tea and when I made interested noises brought me some in the clear glass mug with the flower petals between its two walls which V bought in the Hebridean Tea Store, and then D asked if anyone wants a mince pie, so I had my first mince pie of the season with the perfect tea pairing for it.

Before bed I unloaded the dishwasher so V could load it up again, emptied the food waste bin, locked the doors, turned off the little plant lights, and changed my bedding. How nice to be in such a functional house, doing my little bit to reset, maintain, upkeep.

All this made me think of Kurt Vonnegut saying:

My uncle Alex Vonnegut, a Harvard-educated life insurance salesman taught me something very important.

He said that when things were really going well, we should be sure to NOTICE it. He was talking about simple occasions, not great victories: maybe drinking lemonade on a hot afternoon in the shade, or smelling the aroma of a nearby bakery; or fishing, and not caring if we catch anything or not, or hearing somebody all alone playing a piano really well in the house next door.

Uncle Alex urged me to say this out loud during such epiphanies: "If this isn’t nice, I don’t know what is."

So I do the same now, and so do my kids and grandkids. And I urge you to please notice when you are happy, and exclaim or murmur or think at some point, "If this isn’t nice, I don’t know what is."

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Posted by Tim Harford

It’s become something of a seasonal tradition – with apologies to the remarkable Randall Munroe – for me to tackle your bizarre hypothetical economics questions. To give you a sense of what I meanm here are some questions from previous years:

  • What if DogeCoin became the official US currency?
  • How big would an asteroid made of precious metal have to be for it to be worth doing a space mission to bring it back?
  • What if interest rates were controlled by the net run rate in a never-ending cricket match between the Treasury and the Bank of England?
  • What does the world look like if all monetary transactions are now conducted with only penny coins?

You get the idea.

I’m hoping to publish more answers to more strange questions, so please send them in – if you’re receiving this post via email just hit reply, or you can send them in to me at tim.harford at my ft.com email address. Brief is good, weird is good, political is probably not as funny as you think – looking forward to tackling your questions!

Wednesday reading: Percy Jackson

Dec. 3rd, 2025 07:36 pm
rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)
[personal profile] rmc28

About ten days ago, my hockey-and-languages buddy Owen enthused about Percy Jackson to me on the journey to/from my game in Lee Valley. (Owen was riding along to provide photography services.)

I was like, I've never read the books but I'm pretty sure I've got Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief somewhere in my to-read pile. So I took a look and sure enough, I had ten Percy Jackson books in my kindle account. My emails tell me I bought them in May 2016, and I have no memory of doing so or why (except that they were all 99p so that might have had something to do with it).

I opened up Lightning Thief to see if it was as good as expected ... and got fairly instantly hooked. I've read the first series of five books, Percy Jackson and the Olympians, then I briefly borrowed and read the short story collection The Demigod Files, before moving on to the next series of five, Heroes of Olympus. I'm currently a few chapters into the second book in that series, Son of Neptune. I'm having a great time: the books are good reads and I'm reviving a lot of memories from my childhood Greek myths phase. The positive ADHD rep doesn't hurt either.

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Posted by Open Rights Group

The 13 NGOs backing this briefing all oppose the Labour government’s plans for a mandatory digital ID, representing the vast numbers of people whose interests we represent. This position is informed by our varied expertise spanning privacy and data protection rights, equality rights and anti-discrimination, and immigration and migrants’ rights. This joint briefing for the 8th December 2025 debate on the digital ID Parliamentary petition summarises the most significant concerns associated with the government’s mandatory digital ID proposal. We urge you to attend the debate on Monday 8th December and ensure that the government hears these concerns.

In September, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer announced plans for a new digital ID scheme to be introduced and made mandatory for ‘right to work’ checks by the end of Parliament. Since the announcement, the “Do not introduce Digital ID cards” Parliamentary petition has accrued more than 2.96 million signatures, making it the fourth largest petition in British history and the second largest non-Brexit petition.

Read the full joint briefing

Download Now

tell your mp to attend the debate

Write to your MP

Key issues

Mission creep

Although the Prime Minister proposed the latest digital ID scheme. in the context of immigration enforcement for ‘right to work’ checks, we have already seen the government promoting an expansive array of potential use cases. Minister for Intergovernmental Relations Darren Jones, signalled the. government’s intent for the digital ID proposals to “shut down the legacy state”.

Additionally Children and Families Minister Josh MacAlister MP in an interview on GB News stated the Government was “starting with this issue of right to work check first -but there are loads of other applications for Digital ID”. He explained, “we’re not saying we’re going to boil the ocean in one go because the public would be really sceptical.”

The government’s own guidance on the scheme states that the digital ID will “in time” be used across government and private sector services, from right to rent checks to accessing welfare and other benefits, childcare, education, banking, and voting.

This confused and arguably misleading messaging has severely damaged trust in digital IDs – with polling showing that public support for digital ID has collapsed since Starmer’s announcement. As a result, millions of members of the public do not want to and are unlikely to use a digital ID, making any mandatory application of it exclusionary rather than inclusive.

Because legislation in the UK can be changed or removed by a simple Act of Parliament, there is no durable safeguard against mission creep once the infrastructure for a digital ID has been built. A future government could, at any time, require digital ID to access essential services – including healthcare, education, childcare, tax payments, and accessing age-restricted services. A digital ID system will last far beyond this government, meaning that we risk building a mass surveillance infrastructure for a less rights-respecting future administration.

Privacy

It is unclear what information the government intends to require for inclusion on the digital ID. The government has stated that the digital ID will include, name, date of birth, nationality, and a photo as well as technology used for biometric authentication. Put simply, the proposed digital ID scheme would provide the infrastructure for a mass mandatory biometric system for tens of millions of people. But the digital ID could include much more, with the government stating in its digital ID explainer that the upcoming consultation will consider whether the digital ID should include other details such as addresses.

In other jurisdictions, national ID systems mandate expansive categories of personal information to be included on ID cards, ranging from age, gender, marital status, health records, education records, and photographs to biometric data. As the mandatory ID would be digital, it is a living identity document that could be updated and changed in real-time. Each time an individual uses their digital ID – whether in the public or private sector – that use may be recorded in government database, allowing vast amounts of information to be amassed, searched, and sorted to offer insights through data analysis and profiling. The public should not be forced to bare their lives to the state in order to access basic services.

The digital ID would also allow an individual’s data across government departments to be linked up using a single unique identifier meaning that data shared for one purpose could be repurposed for use in a different context. For instance, personal health data shared with one’s GP could potentially be linked up with an individual’s welfare applications, criminal record, education history, giving the state a comprehensive view of an individual’s life.

The mass surveillance and profiling that digital ID systems facilitate mean that certain individuals and communities are likely to be subjected to excessive monitoring and targeted interventions. There is a significant disproportionality in the use of stop and search powers on Black and other racialised people, and digital IDs, given their likely mission creep, could facilitate extensive data sharing with the police and other authorities and be treated like internal passports for people of colour.

Security Risks

Mandatory digital ID would put the population’s personal data at unprecedented risk of data breaches by creating a honey pot for criminal hackers, and target for foreign adversaries. It is also less resilient than non-digital forms of ID to certain risks on the National Risk Register of Civil Emergencies such as those that impact the electricity or communications network.

In the past year alone, breaches of the legal aid database and Afghans relocating to the UK have resulted in the addresses, financial data, legal records, criminal histories, and political allegiances of hundreds of thousands of people, including members of the special forces and MI6, being leaked. The government’s OneLogin system, which the proposed digital ID will be built on, is also reported to be suffering from “serious vulnerabilities” according to security experts.

Unlike a password, it is impossible to change your biometric data, which uniquely identifies you. A breach of a biometrically-linked digital ID system could therefore leave an individual permanently susceptible to identity theft and privacy intrusions without recourse to protect themselves.

Security breaches are common in digital ID systems around the world. In Estonia – which is often held up as the poster child for digital ID, a hacker was able to obtain over 280,000 personal identity photos in 2021, following an attack on the state information system. The culprit had already obtained personal names and ID codes and was able to obtain a third component, the photos, by making individual requests from thousands of IP addresses. Similarly, in 2017, a flaw was identified in over 760,000 national identity cards which could have let attackers decrypt private data or impersonate citizens. The citizens at risk were banned from accessing online government services whilst the threat was remedied. In India, which is home to the world’s largest biometrically linked digital ID scheme, citizens’ personal data was reportedly being sold for less than £6 online after the database was breached.

Accuracy

The eVisa scheme for migrants has already caused a raft of failures, leaving people stranded at airports, missing job opportunities and excluded from health services.

These failures can stem from the digital records of someone’s status being incorrect or entirely inaccessible. The government has failed at providing an accurate and reliable digital ID scheme for the 10 million eVisa holding migrants in the UK. Many of the problems digital ID schemes face will scale with population size. In March 2024, The Guardian reported that 76,000 records in the Home Office were corrupted, resulting in eVisas displaying incorrect photos, passport numbers and nationalities.

Discrimination and exclusion

Many people risk being excluded by mandatory ID systems, including elderly people, the unemployed, disabled people, and those living in digital poverty or without digital skills. Young people are also a particularly affected group, being the second most digitally excluded group after the elderly.

There should always be the right of people to use acceptable “functional” IDs such as passports and driving licenses rather than enrol in a mandatory foundational identity system; and there must also be the right to use non-digital methods for those who cannot or do not want to use digital means to identify themselves.

Say No to Digital ID
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Posted by Zach Weinersmith



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