We like puzzles. And we like the way some recent letterpress broadside experiments using our "ink pulls has been going. We decided to try making a jigsaw puzzle out of two of them. Here is the results of one of them.
@mkirschenbaum
Critical tech and literary/cultural AI. Also cats, letterpress printing, and tabletop gaming. Professor of English at UVA (Commonwealth chair upon approval). Speaking for myself as a private citizen here. Being rude will get you blocked.
We like puzzles. And we like the way some recent letterpress broadside experiments using our "ink pulls has been going. We decided to try making a jigsaw puzzle out of two of them. Here is the results of one of them.
Grammarly describing how it can detect or hide ai written text, whatever you want boss
Grammarly... Detecting AI, hiding AI, all in one snazzy service
https://www.grammarly.com/ai-agents/expert-review
New: The White House is transforming the Iran strikes into a meme war. An "aesthetic of bloodlust" that gives Americans the empathy-free, Hollywood, video-game version of deadly combat www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2...
Trump says college sports is more complicated than geopolitics.
This is very good.
It always seemed like an easy (and typically ungenerous) gotcha to me (calling someone out for anthropomorphization).
This is like Wordle but for headlines
#BrainrotPropaganda: You take the patriotic imagery of the past and strip it of all content. There's no narrative left, no promise of meaning, only vibes. The total destruction of meaning is the content, no matter if it's AI generated or manually stitched together from YouTube clips
#MemeFascism
Behold the wisdom and bravery of the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security.
www.mediaite.com/media/tv/rep...
If that bingo card gets updated any more times Iβm gonna wear a hole right through
Like pulling teeth, I tell ya
CNN headline: βIran war spreads as European nations drawn further inβ
I have a very vivid memory of a family member telling me they were voting for Trump in 2024 because they were afraid Biden was looking to start World War III
I know why Kristi Noem SHOULD be fired, but why is she being fired
Dining out with a reservation is now an excruciation of reminders and confirmations before the meal, and incessant nagging for βfeedbackβ afterwards.
Weird how this keeps happening! www.miamiherald.com/news/politic...
To be sure. But we canβt just wave away the structural truth of βeven if only a small percentage.β The power imbalance is hugely consequential!
Yesterday, I received a project assessment/problem fix plan that was created with AI. It's a mash-up of generic text and excerpts from tech blogs, some of which are, amazingly, applicable.
It's exactly the sort of commodity writing that MK is taking about.
Here works best for me, thank you
But to the extent we are all creatures of neoliberal institutions, yada yada, itβs the same argumentβ
We live in the world of what Michel de Certeau called the scriptural economy. Writing and capital are inextricably linked. That has been my position since pretty much day one. It is not intended as a salutary diagnosis.
π. In the abstract for something I just wrote, I appended: βThis is not intended as a salutary diagnosis.β
Some of the other replies Iβve received are illuminating. The assumption/expectation in their workplace is that people will just use a model.
We live in the world of what Michel de Certeau called the scriptural economy. Writing and capital are inextricably linked. This has been my position since pretty much day one.
I fear Iβm already lost.
And no, of course not every academic believes this. But every time the category error gets made, itβs an academic who does it.
I was honored to be asked!
I am genuinely looking forward to our conversation!
You should have kept that chapter in the book. :-)
For me, itβs not βweβ with the agency here, itβs capital. I just wrote a longish piece on this for Social Research Iβd love to send you before itβs out, if I may.
Exactly. Iβm not saying this is a salutary state of affairs. I am saying itβs the way of the world.
Right. I call it transactional writing, following Deborah Brandt. What gets missed over and over in these discussions is that itβs by far (volumetrically) the most common form of writing in the world.