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Comment by jongjong

2 hours ago

We need to change the law to reduce regulations and introduce a principle of unlimited liability instead.

These things have to be fixed at the incentive layer. Self-regulation is the best form of regulation, by far.

Any discarded plastic found outside of a landfill should be tallied and result in a fine for the company which produced the plastic.

If a person is caught discarding a plastic bottle (littering), they should receive a fine as normal but the company should also be fined a portion of the liability.

The company knows very well that some percentage of the plastic they sell will end up in nature. They know this for a fact... And yet they choose to keep producing plastic packaging when cleaner alternatives exist; I.e. tin cans and glass bottles.

We've been completely brainwashed by the cult of 'limited liability'. It's a horrible idea. The words themselves tell you everything. Right there in front of your face. The liability is limited... It means the liability is externalized. This construct should never have been allowed.

Now with AI and the externalized harms which will result from it, this construct is more important than ever. Lives are at stake.

Once we start assigning partial liability to every harm. Eventually, we'll be able to collectively identify all of them; they will become so rare that they will stand out like a sore thumb.

Imagine; all the people who are currently messing up the political system with useless bureaucracy and toxic ideologies could actually be useful to society. Instead of identifying each other's genders, orientations and emotional triggers, they could be identifying social and environmental harms and holding companies accountable.