“Childโs 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 cityโs 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. itโs done in delve. Beneath it, a man squatted on the pavement, staring at nothing in particular, a glass pipe drooping from his fingers. I donโt 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. โThis .โ.โ. is .โ.โ. necessary! This .โ.โ. is .โ.โ. necessary!โ On each โnecessaryโ 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 couldnโt 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 โa 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.