Nurses Protest “Deeply Troubling” Use of AI in Hospitals [404media.co]
The specific process by which Google enshittified its search [pluralistic.net] — Cory Doctorow @pluralistic@mamot.fr
Elon Musk wants to turn Tesla’s fleet into AWS for AI — would it work?
Andrew J. Hawkins [theverge.com]:
During last night’s earnings call with investors, Elon Musk threw out an all-time late-night dorm room bong sesh of an idea: what if AWS, but for Tesla?
Musk, who loves to riff on earnings calls, compared the unused compute power of millions of idle Tesla vehicles to Amazon’s cloud service business. If they’re just sitting there, he mused, why not put them to good use to run AI models? (Also, have you ever really looked at your hands? No, I mean really looked?)
Various cover illustrations by John Schoenherr [reddit.com]
Something I wrote: Blue Planet OSS lets you BYO AI fierce-network.com — Telcos can beef up back-office operations by bringing their favorite AI to Blue Planet’s Cloud Native Platform for OSS.
I walked past a school this morning and saw a couple of dozen sweatshirts. neatly pinned spread-eagled on a chain link fence. What’s up with that?
“I’m a major hypochondriac. I won’t even masturbate anymore. I’m afraid I might give myself something.”—Richard Lewis
We watched the first episode of Shogun. I don’t understand a lot of what’s going on, but I think I like it.
Dolores Costello, Ziegfeld girl, by Alfred Cheney Johnston (1923) [reddit.com]
Chef Boy-Ar-Dee pizza mix ad w/Joe E. Ross (1968) [reddit.com]
Please enjoy this Instagram reel of five classic Hollywood accents. [instagram.com]
How Meta is paving the way for synthetic social networks
Casey Newton [platformer.news]:
The first era of Facebook was for talking with friends and family. The second, TikTok-influenced era of the company is more focused on content from creators and other people you don’t know.
This week, we got a glimpse of the era yet to come: one where we interact regularly with both people and bots – perhaps not even always knowing, or caring, which one we are talking to.
I started on social media just to talk with other people. Some of these were actual friends and family; others came to be friends through long interactions online. We were all at the same level.
Then I started following celebrities. We occasionally interacted, but mostly I just consumed what they produced. And that’s cool. Like everybody reading this, I grew up having what’s come to be called “parasocial relationships” with fictional characters and the actors who played them.
Now I’m supposedly going to have parasocial relationships with AIs? I’m skeptical.
Some ways I find ChatGPT and generative AI useful today
- Generating questions for interviews. ChatGPT is surprisingly great at that.
- Generating images.
- Occasionally writing draft introductions to articles, as well as conclusions, descriptions and summaries. I’ve always had trouble writing that kind of thing. I don’t use the version ChatGPT generates—I tear that up and write my own—but ChatGPT gets me started. I don’t do this often, but I’m grateful when I do.
- Casual low-stakes queries, when I remember to use ChatGPT for that. “What was the name of the movie that was set in a boarding house for actresses that starred Katherine Hepburn?” “Stage Door.” “Was Lucille Ball in that one too?” “Yes.” “Was that Katherine Hepburn’s first movie?” “No.” And ChatGPT provided some additional information. I probably could have gotten that information from Google, but ChatGPT was faster.
- I find otter.ai extremely useful for transcriptions, likewise Grammarly for proofreading. Those applications use AI, but do they use GenAI? I don’t know.
My big problem, and the reason I don’t us ChatGPT more, is that ChatGPT lies. Not only that, but it lies convincingly. A convincing liar is even worse than a liar. I don’t have much use for an information source that I can’t trust. I don’t see an obvious way to solve this problem.
Tempest in a teapot And by “teapot” I mean massage parlor
Lloyd Evans, theater critic for the British magazine The Spectator, writes about how he attended a lecture by a woman political philosopher and found her so attractive that he was distracted, so he went to a business that we in the US would call a “rub and tug” and had sexual relations with a prostitute.
“My (surprisingly) decent proposal” The Spectator
I’ve seen a few disparaging comments on social media about Evans’ article, so I found it and read it, and it was … fine. It was a certain type of humor that isn’t for everyone. I enjoyed it, though I would not say I enjoyed it a lot. The author makes himself look like a pathetic loser, but that is the point of that type of humor.
My only quibble with the article was that the author should not have named the lecturer. But the lecturer herself seems to be taking the incident in good humor so there was possibly no harm there either.
“Spectator Writer Faces Backlash Over ‘Grotesque’ Article As Named Lecturer Speaks Out” mediaite.com
The Spectator is apparently a conservative magazine, so this has become a minor football in the culture wars. Focus, people! Don’t get worked up about a slight, ephemeral article. There is far more important work to be done.