Author Archives: John Lusk

WaPo essay on long COVID by a first-waver

Fascinating article, actually.

«So how long am I going to do this? Until indoor air is safe for all, until vaccines prevent transmission, until there’s a cure for long covid. Until I’m not risking my family’s future on a grocery run. Because the truth is that however immortal we feel, we are all just one infection away from a new life.»

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2023/08/09/madeline-miller-long-covid-post-pandemic/

Language Is a Poor Heuristic for Intelligence

https://karawynn.substack.com/p/language-is-a-poor-heuristic-for

«One clear reason is that corporations would prefer to use machines for a number of jobs that currently require actual humans who are knowledgeable, intelligent, and friendly, but who also have this annoying tendency to want to be paid enough money to support the maintenance of their inconvenient meat sacks. Not to mention the problematic fact that humans occasionally possess ethics, independent thinking, and objectives besides maximizing shareholder profit.»

Kind of a nothing quote, but I still like it.

Here’s a better one:

«The second reason for this choice is that, as Ted Chiang wryly notes, “there is a market opportunity for volleyballs.” The reference is to the movie Castaway, in which a marooned and desperately lonely Tom Hanks makes a washed-ashore volleyball into an imaginary friend. Humans are a social species down to our core; the more modern life erodes our opportunities for actual human companionship — whether it’s by interposing technology as an intermediary into every interaction, or sucking up all our time with the capitalist/consumerist grind — the more desperate we’ll become for friendly-sounding volleyball substitutes.»

Or this one:

«Computer scientist Timnit Gebru (famously fired from Google in 2020 for raising ethical issues around the use of AI) has repeatedly warned that when the public conversation focuses on red herrings — like the potential morality and values of a wholly-theoretical computer intelligence — we cease to ascribe responsibility to the real people and actual corporations that are creating harmful products. Any action taken to counteract those harms would cut into profit, so the LLM-invested folks would really prefer we all worry about a mirage instead.»

«As a society, we’re going to have to radically rethink….»

Well… THAT ain’t happening.

The footnotes are great:

«6. Increasingly I find myself wanting to take journalists by the shoulders and shake them until their teeth rattle. Like Jeff Jarvis, who first correctly noted that ChatGPT “is a personal propaganda machine that strings together words to satisfy the ear, with no expectation that it is right” … and then turned around in the same article [paywalled link] and discussed his “anthropomorphic sympathy” for ChatGPT as a “wronged party”. FOR FUCK’S SAKE, JEFF!»

#artificialIntelligence #ai

Statement on AP Psychology and Florida – Newsroom

https://newsroom.collegeboard.org/statement-ap-psychology-and-florida

This is what Republicans spend their energy on instead of fixing actual problems in their states:

  • Banning classes on African American history
  • Banning classes on psychology because they say “gay”
  • Banning classic literature
  • Banning gay marriage (NC’s Amendment One)
  • Banning migrant labor (AL’s HB-11, iirc)
  • Restricting voting by forcing counties to have only one polling place

‘Significant Change in Chapel Hill Politics’: Local Expert on 2023 Town Council, School Board Race – Chapelboro.com

https://chapelboro.com/local-election-coverage/significant-change-in-chapel-hill-politics-local-expert-on-2023-town-council-school-board-race

«the way that would happen is (if) the progressive vote gets split too many different ways, especially with the low-profile nature of school board elections. There may not be that many conservative voters in Chapel Hill and Carrboro, but if they’re all voting the same way while the progressives are voting all over the place, (that’s a) potential recipe for disaster.»