Philosopher in tech, currently at Mistral AI. Doctor of talking machines, now teaching them good behavior.
Giada Pistilli
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To me, the funniest thing about this whole thing is how vehemently people spend their time saying they don't care. And for me, that’s peak social media energy :) So long!
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Map of the internet: 1.3M nodes (BGP)
Giada Pistilli
ELLIS
I wasn't making a big deal out of it at all, and I'm free to do what I want with my time. Social media platforms have always been a vehicle for me to talk about my work and research, and that's what you'll find everywhere. I don't care about engaging with raging people, and I never will.
E allora mi chiedo: se la solitudine diventa infrastruttura, cosa resta della cura? Cosa significa “sentirsi ascoltati” in un mondo che non ascolta più? Stiamo chiedendo alle macchine di colmare un vuoto… o di nasconderlo?
Forse il problema non è migliorare l’empatia dell’IA, ma ritrovare la nostra.
But I think that if Will picked up the info, it wasn't to talk about me (honestly, who cares who I am) but about the use and abuse of blocklists here. Because I have the right to be annoyed if I'm classified with something that doesn't represent me, just as you are free to block me.
I notice that a journalist picked up the info and that many of you are keen to let me know how much you don't give a shit -- okay! I took screenshots of the most absurd blocklists and not all of them, but I'm not here to explain who I am for the umpteenth time because, again, who cares?
I really wanted this social network to work for me. But apparently, I’m on the worst block lists out there… a bit unfair.
If you are interested in my research, follow me on LinkedIn.
Il mio nuovo op-ed su @wired.com parte da un dato inquietante: milioni di persone oggi confidano le proprie crisi emotive all’intelligenza artificiale.
Non perché la credano umana.
Ma perché non trovano alternative umane disponibili.