>>5632156>Axiom 3, for transparency:in the age of information, the only way to hide facts is with interpretations; there is no way to stop the free exchange of idle speculations. In the days before communication, privacy meant staying at home, sitting in the dark with the curtains shut, unsure whether to answer the phone. But these are different times, nowadays the bottom line is that everyone should prepare to be known. Most of your (nonexistent, imaginary) friends will still like you fine.
>Axiom 4, for this world I adore:our loyalties should shift in view, according to what we know and who we are speaking to. Once I was loyal to you, and prepared to be against information; now I am loyal to information, maybe I'm disloyal to you. My loyalty becomes more complex and cubist with every new fact I learn. It depends who I'm speaking to and who they speak to in turn.
>Axiom 5, for information workers who wish to stay alive:supply, never withhold, the information requested with total disregard for interests personal and vested. Chinese whispers was an analogue game where the signal degraded from brain to brain.
Digital whispers is the same in reverse: the word we spread gets better, not worse.