The AI Risk

The risk of AI is not that it doesn’t work. It already does, no matter what the BlueSky clowns claim.

The risk is that it eliminates jobs and funnels even more money to the rich while creating a permanent underclass of former white-collar professionals.

Unlike what economists believe, those people won’t find any other roles as anything else they could do can be performed better and vastly faster by AI. And no one seems to be dealing with this fact at all in any credible way.

Four Scenarios for a Postwar Iran.

Can Europe Ever Thrive Again? Not without forcing out Islam and a ton of remigration.

Every company building your AI assistant is now an ad company.

Blue light filters donโ€™t work. Why controlling total luminance is a better bet.

Across the US, people are dismantling and destroying Flock surveillance cameras. Good.

A war foretold:how the CIA and MI6 got hold of Putinโ€™s Ukraine plans and why nobody believed them.

Syria asks Germany not to deport its citizens back home, warning it would make country โ€˜unsafeโ€™. LOL.

Donโ€™t expect lower prices now that the Supreme Court has ruled against Trumpโ€™s tariffs.

Police โ€˜turn blind eyeโ€™ to sharia courts in Britain.

Big Tech still dreams of mass surveillance โ€” now people are pushing back.

Ukraine is the biggest and most consequential of all the American betrayals.

Over 65? Congratulations, You Own the Economy.

Cosmologists collaborate to sharpen measurements of the Hubble constant.

NASA moon rocket hit by new problem, putting March launch with astronauts in jeopardy.

The Risk

Brad R. Torgersen on X: "Yesterday I saw someone object to VA as a vet entitlement, saying, "Why do vets get free stuff when none of the rest of us get free stuff?!" That's an honest question. From the outside looking in it can seem like vets do indeed get a lot of money, and also explicitly vet-focused" / X

Death and serious harm are, unfortunately, "business as usual" in a lot of military stuff. You don't have to be shot or blown up to be seriously hurt, or even killed

Indeed. Was at serious risk of death at least three time in the military, and in danger far more often than that. And I was never in combat. Not unusual at all. Luckily, I never received a really debilitating injury.

Also, we don’t just “get” those things. They are part of the signed contractual compensation.

Directing

I really didn’t think I would get this far. Asking for advice. (IT Director).

I became the IT Director of a large regional company with about three years of full-time IT experience. It can be done.

By the way, I did great. I was probably one of the youngest people in the country with that role, if not the youngest. What I didn’t know, I researched. If I truly was out of my depth I brought in outside help.

But I succeeded so hard they begged me to stay when I decided to leave that role.

Slip Slap

“Childโ€™s Play,” by Sam Kriss

I don’t even agree with a lot of the article, but this writing slaps.

This assumption is remarkably out of step with the people who actually inhabit the cityโ€™s public space. At a bus stop, I saw a poster that read: today, soc 2 is done before your ai girlfriend breaks up with you. itโ€™s done in delve. Beneath it, a man squatted on the pavement, staring at nothing in particular, a glass pipe drooping from his fingers. I donโ€™t know if he needed SOC 2 done any more than I did. A few blocks away, I saw a billboard that read: no one cares about your product. make them. unify: transform growth into a science. A man paced in front of the advertisement, chanting to himself. โ€œThis .โ€‰.โ€‰. is .โ€‰.โ€‰. necessary! This .โ€‰.โ€‰. is .โ€‰.โ€‰. necessary!โ€ On each โ€œnecessaryโ€ he swung his arms up in exaltation. He was, I noticed, holding an alarmingly large baby-pink pocketknife. Passersby in sight of the billboard that read wearable tech shareable insights did not seem piqued by the prospect of having their metrics constantly analyzed. I couldnโ€™t find anyone who wanted to prompt it. then push it. After spending slightly too long in the city, I found that the various forms of nonsense all started to bleed into one another. The motionless people drooling on the sidewalk, the Waymos whooshing around with no one inside. A kind of pervasive mindlessness. Had I seen a billboard or a madman preaching about โ€œa CRM so smart, it updates itselfโ€? Was it a person in rags muttering about how all his movements were being controlled by shadowy powers working out of a data center somewhere, or was it a car?

The article is actually completely wrong about AI progress, though. It’s improving just as rapidly as it was, if not more so.

Phillip Glass: Etude no. 6 | Elizabeth Joy Roe, piano

Here’s someone else playing the same piece as below to show how stylistically different two interpretations can be. Similar piano model, too, which is great. That allows you to hear the performer’s voice better.

Yuja’s is more formal, frantic and anxious; Elizabeth’s is more bombastic and emotional. I like both, but give the slight edge to Elizabeth’s. Her version just feels deeper to me.