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Discontinuity

Discontinuity

By: Rediacc
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Discontinuity takes the most thought-provoking long-form videos and turns them into focused, narrated audio. One clear idea per episode, drawn from the source and made easy to follow on a walk or a commute.

© 2026 Discontinuity
Episodes
  • The White Rice Problem: Why the Infrastructure You Trust Most Is Your Biggest Risk
    Jun 15 2026

    Summary

    The question this episode answers: Why does the infrastructure component your team trusts most often carry the most hidden recovery risk — and how do you make that gap visible before the incident does?

    The answer: Trust displaces testing. The components your team stopped worrying about are the components that stopped getting verified. The gap between a four-hour written RTO and a four-day real RTO is not a planning failure — it is a measurement failure. You measured the wrong thing under the wrong conditions and called it a recovery time objective. The fix is five specific questions, not more tooling.

    What you will learn:

    • Why the most-trusted parts of your infrastructure are structurally the most dangerous — the MGM 2023 pattern explained
    • The three conditions that reliably inflate real RTO above written RTO
    • Five questions that make hidden recovery risk visible without requiring a real incident
    • The difference between backup-native and recovery-native architecture and why it determines your actual recovery time
    • How to evaluate any backup or DR vendor against a single architectural test: does the recovery mechanism share failure modes with the thing it recovers from?

    References:

    • Dr. David Unwin, Teaspoon of Sugar infographic — open access, 35 languages: https://www.phcuk.org/sugar/
    • Dr. David Unwin on The Diary of a CEO (source video): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9szCG0PW14c
    • MGM Resorts 2023 ransomware incident public timeline: https://www.securityweek.com/mgm-resorts-ransomware-attack/
    • Rediacc recovery audit — live restore test, no slides: https://www.rediacc.com/en/professional-services

    About this episode: Published by Rediacc — self-hosted infrastructure with sub-60-second recovery. Book a recovery reality check at https://www.rediacc.com/en/professional-services

    References

    • Dr. David Unwin, Teaspoon of Sugar infographic — food, glycemic index, serving size, and sugar equivalents per serving. Available in 35 languages, open access, not copyrighted. — https://www.phcuk.org/sugar/
    • Dr. David Unwin on The Diary of a CEO — the sugar cube demonstration that is the source for this episode's analogy. — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9szCG0PW14c
    • MGM Resorts 2023 ransomware incident — public timeline of the attack and ten-day recovery period. SecurityWeek coverage. — https://www.securityweek.com/mgm-resorts-ransomware-attack/
    • Rediacc recovery reality check — live restore test against your real environment, no slides. Book at rediacc.com/rto-audit. Code AUDIT30 for extended trial. — https://www.rediacc.com/en/professional-services


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    17 mins
  • The Second Engels Pause
    Jun 15 2026

    What This Episode Answers If technology has always enriched the owners and impoverished the renters, which side of that divide does your infrastructure put you on?

    The Answer Ownership is the only durable answer to the K-shaped economy — and that principle scales from national energy policy all the way down to who controls your disaster recovery.

    What You'll Learn

    • Why the Engels Pause of 1790-1840 is the most instructive historical model for understanding AI disruption in 2026, and what the fifty-to-seventy-five-year pain window actually looked like
    • How the theory of marginal productivity was commissioned by JP Morgan specifically to prevent workers from concluding they were underpaid — and how the same logic runs in cloud pricing today
    • The Norway vs. UK North Sea oil decision as the direct structural precedent for infrastructure ownership choices being made this quarter
    • Why AI's instant global deployment eliminates the adaptation window that allowed previous technology transitions to self-correct before social breakdown reached crisis levels
    • What the active DOJ antitrust cases against Google and Amazon mean for recovery plans that depend entirely on the continued corporate integrity of one cloud provider
    • The specific threat environment — ransomware spikes during economic transition, AI model weights as high-value extortion targets — that makes infrastructure resilience non-optional rather than best-practice

    About This Episode Sourced from a two-and-a-half-hour debate between Nick Hanauer (venture capitalist, first major external investor in Amazon) and Daniel Priestley (entrepreneur, 5,500 businesses coached) on The Diary of a CEO, published June 8, 2026. Extended sovereignty assessment at https://www.rediacc.com/en/solutions/data-sovereignty

    References

    • The Diary of a CEO: 'EMERGENCY DEBATE: The Death Of The Middle Class! Only The Top 1% Will Survive!' — Nick Hanauer and Daniel Priestley, June 8 2026 — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uLBsHXNEwAU
    • Henry George, Progress and Poverty (1879) — the best-selling book in US history at the time; foundational text on land rent as wealth extraction — https://openlibrary.org/works/OL60753W
    • John Bates Clark, The Distribution of Wealth (1899) — introduced the theory of marginal productivity at JP Morgan's commission to counter Henry George — https://openlibrary.org/works/OL1117620W
    • Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (1776) — Chapter 8 on wages: employer-worker power asymmetry recognized by capitalism's founding theorist — https://openlibrary.org/works/OL76827W
    • Daron Acemoglu and James Robinson, The Narrow Corridor: States, Societies, and the Fate of Liberty — the 'narrow corridor' between laissez-faire capitalism and socialism as the optimal growth zone — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Narrow_Corridor
    • Friedrich Engels and the Engels Pause (1790-1840) — the period of stagnant real wages during early British industrialization despite surging aggregate output — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_Engels
    • Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist and A Tale of Two Cities — cited as literary products of the Jevons Paradox / Industrial Revolution displacement era — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Dickens
    • William Stanley Jevons and the Jevons Paradox — agricultural mechanization as the structural model for AI-driven labor displacement — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jevons_paradox
    • Nick Hanauer, 21st Century Economics — free download at marketsbuiltforhumans.org; the alternative economic paradigm for human flourishing over capital efficiency — https://marketsbuiltforhumans.org
    • Anthropic economic impact report on AI and entry-level employment (DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.5453694) — https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.5453694
    • DOJ v. Google LLC — search monopoly liability finding; remedy phase ongoing as of 2026 — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v.Google_LLC(2023)
    • Lloyds Banking Group / Citra Living — 70,000 UK homes purchased for permanent rental income strategy — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lloyds_Banking_Group


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    21 mins
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