tiistai 8. huhtikuuta 2025

The Browser Strategy for Liberty: Personalized Link Reputation Scores

The basic structure of history is simple: From the dawn of civilization, humanity was trapped in Malthusian cycles of poverty and recurrent famine. Everything changed only when the revolutionary libertarian ideal of individual rights began to spread in the nineteenth century. Soon, both free speech and free-market competition eroded monopolies, allowing supply and demand to align more efficiently. This led to vastly improved economic productivity, making it possible—with the help of the Industrial Revolution—to achieve an unprecedented leap in living standards.

Cartels

Unfortunately, the libertarian mission was only half-complete. Eliminating monopolies was not enough, as many cartels persisted. These cartels claimed to serve the public good, only to grow even stronger with the help of the political process. What we need now is a second libertarian revolution—one that dismantles cartels once and for all. But how can this be achieved when the political system itself functions as a cartel-producing machine, constantly spawning new ones?

Luckily, there is a simple solution that bypasses the political process entirely: Thanks to the spread of libertarian ideas, it is now generally legal to circumvent cartels. Politicians do not dare to punish or obstruct consumer groups that simply want to purchase affordable, high-quality goods and services from legitimate producers. All that remains is to find an easy way for people to cooperate in bypassing these cartels.

High Information Costs

Why hasn’t consumer cooperation happened on a large scale? The answer is simple: high information costs and trust issues. Efficiently coordinating millions of people is extremely difficult—so difficult, in fact, that it undermined the Cooperative Movement. This movement sought to bypass cartels by organizing consumers into groups capable of collective action. In the last century, it valiantly attempted to carve out a third way between cartel capitalism and monopoly socialism, but ultimately, it failed.

Objective Values

But wait—now we have the internet. With information costs far lower today, why can’t the internet do more to coordinate supply and demand? The reason is simple: the reputation scores of hyperlinks and other online content are not fully personalized. They are too global or "objective" because they are algorithmically generated and limited to simplistic ratings. While this approach is technologically easier and cheaper, it often results in reputation scores that are inaccurate from an individual’s perspective.  This flaw impacts not just search results but also video, article, comment and product recommendations across platforms like CNN, Fox, YouTube, X and Amazon."

Even worse, accurate online rankings of topics, products, information sources, and especially people are now practically impossible. This further isolates internet users, making cooperation and collective action far more difficult and costly.

In practice, the internet repeats the socialist mistake by failing to fully account for and reflect individual preferences. Instead, it relies on global, collective, "objective" reputation scores. The solution is simple: allow people to fully express their subjective individual values.

Subjective values

Imagine if people could instantly see the algorithmic scores of internet links and effortlessly adjust them through ranking. Now, imagine they could also rank other people and information sources. With this capability, algorithms could easily identify the exact types of people, news, products, and services you want and need.

This system would enable web browsers to adopt a "subjectivist" approach by automatically reorganizing web pages according to your personal preferences and recommendations from your trusted network. Each reader would see a customized version of every page, prioritizing articles, videos, and comments from their favorite authors and commentators. Disliked topics, authors, commentators and other sources could be automatically filtered out—effectively creating a personalized internet experience for every user.

The same principle could apply to Amazon or other online shops, where you’d instantly find the best products at the best prices—already vetted and negotiated by your trusted network. Even better, the highest-quality links from Amazon, YouTube, X, Facebook, Instagram, news sites, online stores, and beyond could be automatically compiled into your personalized Dream Feed.

Subjectivist browser

Fortunately, this subjectivist-individualist-libertarian vision—where users have direct control over algorithmic scores—is entirely feasible. By developing websites and browser extensions that allow users to view and adjust algorithmic rankings in real time, we could enable precise ranking of virtually anything: topics, people, search results, businesses, products, services, videos, articles, authors, comments, and commentators. Combining your personal rankings with those of your trusted sources would generate highly accurate, personalized reputation scores for nearly every important link and item online.

No longer would people be isolated; instead, they could effortlessly coordinate and fully benefit from each other’s knowledge. Demand and supply would finally align much more seamlessly. All it takes is giving people the ability to express their preferences accurately online. It’s that simple.


torstai 3. huhtikuuta 2025

The Browser Strategy for Liberty: Practical steps for personalized link reputation scores






This might be the most important question of our time: Why do web browsers not enable you to accurately rank links and then automatically share those rankings?? If you could accurately (publicly or privately) rank other people/raters, topics, information (articles, videos, etc.) and its sources (websites, video channels, etc.) then the web browser could assign personalized reputation scores to internet links. 


Having fully personalized visible reputation scores for links would make not only browsing easier and more efficient but also generate better search results, suggestions and feeds. Soon you would get just the kind of information you need about people, events, products, services, etc. So simple.


Imagine that every time you visit Unz.com you would see visible fully personalized reputation scores for each author, article, audio, video, commenter and comment. The browser could also automatically rearrange Unz.com and other web pages optimally for you so that you could immediately see the best topics, authors, articles, commenters, etc. In other words, the browser would allow each person to see web pages differently in an optimal way.


Imagine further that all the articles, videos and comments from all over the internet ranked highly by your friends and other trusted sources would automatically be collected into your own personal feed page. All this is now finally technically possible though not in common use.


From the libertarian perspective the present lack of ranking-sharing web browsers explains why the internet has not led to free speech and the break-up of cartels but instead to censorship and ever bigger cartels. People are now simply too isolated/atomized on the internet. There is not enough consumer cooperation and business competition on the internet because ranking-sharing is limited in many ways:


1. Limited ranking

Web browsers or even many social media platforms do not allow you to (privately or publicly) accurately rank people, topics, websites and other links with many up/down thumbs. Even worse is that they do not allow the most important thing: Ranking of rankers/people.


2. No visible reputation scores

Even worse is that websites and web browsers do not allow efficient sharing of rankings.  This makes fully personalized reputation systems impossible. Thus browsers cannot generate fully personalized reputation scores for links. This makes it difficult to find good people, articles, videos, products and services. Shopping especially becomes unnecessarily difficult since you are prevented from receiving automatic help from your like minded and trusted sources. 


Amazon offers only a primitive rating with stars where the reputation score is the average global rating. This is almost useless and highly susceptible to manipulation and scamming. It would be much better to have fully personalized visible reputation scores that are based on like minded sources trusted by the individual.


 



Better searching and browsing

Reputation scores based on trusted sources would also make searching and browsing much more easier. Here are two examples: 


1. Here a leftist is searching for information about Donald Trump. Browser automatically offers him the latest highest ranked links from his trusted leftist sources.





2. Here a leftist is randomly browsing on Youtube: 





Dream feed

Accurate ranking-sharing and consequent fully personalized reputation scores would also make it possible to have a music mixer type of control panel. It would show you why a link has been suggested and then allow you to adjust the settings. 


This would not only give you full control but also save time. No more need to daily check many of your favorite websites or browse/scroll mindlessly suggestions in the hope of finding something useful. Soon the highest ranked articles, videos and products from many trusted sources would automatically appear on your Dream feed page. 


Group actions

Automatic ranking-sharing would also make group actions such as group buys much easier. First you would get optimal information about people, businesses, products and services. Then you could use group power to get the best deals. The consumer would finally become the king.


Problem is isolation

From the economic point of view supply and demand can meet only if there is 1. accurate ranking (demand), 2. ranking of rankers (trusted information network) 3. sharing of rankings (revealing demand) and 4. automatic coordination (connecting supply and demand) through the internet with the help of fully personalized reputation scores. First time in history technology now makes this practical on a large scale. 


So why do social media websites and web browsers not enable accurate ranking-sharing? Why isolate you from like minded and trusted people on the internet? There are three possible reasons: 


1. Ignorance 

Most people do not question things. They do not wonder why they cannot accurately rank people, topics, websites and individual links. They do not wonder why they cannot see link reputation scores and control them.


2. Costly

It is relatively difficult and expensive to create fully personalized link reputation scores and thus fully customized searches, browsing, suggestions and feeds. It is much easier and cheaper to offer primitive rating and global/”objective” reputation scores instead of accurate ranking and fully personalized/”subjective” reputation scores.


3. Manipulation

Economy is so cartelized that Big Tech is not in the business of serving consumers. Instead Big Tech maximizes its profits by spying and manipulating consumers. People are turned from consumers into products for Big Business and bamboozled subjects of Big Government.


Solution

Luckily ranking-sharing is still starting to emerge. Trustpilot.com [https://trustpilot.com] and MyWot.com [https://mywot.com] allow you to rank whole websites. Trustpilot browser extension even shows reputation scores for Google search results though does not rearrange them:




The main  problem with Trustpilot is that the reputation scores are global, i.e. average score of all the rankers. What is needed is a website and browser extension that offers fully personalized reputation scores that take into account only your own rankings and the rankings of people you like and trust. 


Luckily there now seems to be at least one such website: A small Finnish website Omahaku.com [https://omahaku.com


Hopefully more companies will invest in user-centered ranking. The internet would finally redeem its promise.