The world’s first trillionaire took away our Ebola response capacity, gave us screwworms, hollowed out our government so he could pay less taxes, and condemned millions of the world’s most vulnerable people to death.
All writers:
The export control directive banning state of the art language models from Anthropic is only counterproductive to the US AI industry if you don’t view it as yet another act in the current production of AI safety theatrics.
‘But, he added, making the leap from having AI agents recommend what to buy to doing the purchasing “just requires a whole different level of trust.”’
Trust is exactly the problem here. And it could be one source of liability for companies and recourse for customers.
I'm delighted to share my collection of 50 magazine covers on privacy from the 1950s to the present. danielsolove.substack.com/p/privacy-ma...
“To give your voice to a machine, to say 'speak for me, I'm going to be silent and I'm going to tell a machine to express myself or to tell my narrative,' is such a crime against yourself.”
I know Calvin’s dad is already having a moment, but every terrible “outsource precious and fleeting moments with your children to tech so that you can spend more time on your work” pitch makes me think of that one strip I never really cared about as a kid, but care a lot about as an adult.
When you see the story
about how the world
now has its first trillionaire,
and when you see the story
about how laboratories
in Congo have run out
of supplies to test for Ebola,
it is important to understand
that in many ways
these are the same story.
Hey so those of you who thought the whole TikTok v. Garland situation wasn't a big deal because "it's just a divestiture", here you go.
Anything we don't like is "national security" now. TikTok paved the way for this.
www.anthropic.com/news/fable-m...