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So if library users stop communicating with each other and with the library authors, how are library authors gonna know what to do next? Unless you want them to talk to AIs instead of people, too.
At some point, when we’ve disconnected every human from each other, will we wonder why? Or will we be content with the answer “efficiency”?
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto retrocomputing@lemmy.sdf.org•Windows 95 chime composer Brian Eno denounces Microsoft for its ties to Israeli governmentEnglish28·14 days agoBrian Eno is pretty cool.
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Avoiding AI is hard – but our freedom to opt out must be protectedEnglish132·15 days agoSo what counts as dictating my life?
The government prohibiting me from firing my gun in the air, or my neighbor’s falling bullets prohibiting me from leaving my porch?
I’m always suspect of those who assume there is only “freedom to do” and not also “freedom from being done-to”.
They tend to think they will never be on the receiving end of someone else’s “freedom”.
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Saudi Arabia has big AI ambitions. They could come at the cost of human rightsEnglish4·19 days agoAlso the people who do the tagging and feedback for training tend to be underpaid third-world workers.
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Researchers discover new security vulnerability in Intel processorsEnglish4·21 days agoAnother day, another speculative execution vulnerability.
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•AI Could Be the Most Effective Tool for Dismantling Democracy Ever InventedEnglish1·21 days agoI don’t believe the common refrain that AI is only a problem because of capitalism. People already disinform, make mistakes, take irresponsible shortcuts, and spam even when there is no monetary incentive to do so.
I also don’t believe that AI is “just a tool”, fundamentally neutral and void of any political predisposition. This has been discussed at length academically. But it’s also something we know well in our idiom: “When you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail.” When you have AI, genuine communication looks like raw material. And the ability to place generated output alongside the original… looks like a goal.
Culture — the ability to have a very long-term ongoing conversation that continues across many generations, about how we ought to live — is by far the defining feature of our species. It’s not only the source of our abilities, but also the source of our morality.
Despite a very long series of authors warning us, we have allowed a pocket of our society to adopt the belief that ability is morality. “The fact that we can, means we should.”
We’re witnessing the early stages of the information equivalent of Kessler Syndrome. It’s not that some bad actors who were always present will be using a new tool. It’s that any public conversation broad enough to be culturally significant will be so full of AI debris that it will be almost impossible for humans to find each other.
The worst part is that this will be (or is) largely invisible. We won’t know that we’re wasting hours of our lives reading and replying to bots, tugging on a steering wheel, trying to guide humanity’s future, not realizing the autopilot is discarding our inputs. It’s not a dead internet that worries me, but an undead internet. A shambling corpse that moves in vain, unaware of its own demise.
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•Cloudflare CEO warns AI and zero-click internet are killing the web's business modelEnglish0·22 days agoFor a glorious second, the entire world was able to communicate as one.
Then we catalogued every accessible reservoir of culture and knowledge, mined them bare, and refilled them with slop.
A global collective consciousness, hollowed out, replaced with static. No signal. Only noise.
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Fediverse@lemmy.world•The Social Network That Can't Sell Out: Understanding Mastodon vs. BlueskyEnglish0·2 months agoI look forward to the documentary.
“Mastodon: Victory Through Technical Superiority”, available soon on Laserdisc and Betamax
kibiz0r@midwest.socialto Technology@lemmy.world•EU considers tariffs on digital services Big TechEnglish0·2 months agoDon’t use tariffs. Legalize jailbreaking and adversarial interop instead. Disregard American DRM.
Cool, but… why not just NixOS?
How about robots that heal people?