Daily reminder that calling ai dead labor and stolen labor is literal.
Daily reminder that calling ai dead labor and stolen labor is literal.
I have said this before, but eliminating programs that teach a lot of students but donβt have many majors is like a restaurant not buying flour in its grocery delivery because people arenβt ordering flour on the menu.
over and over they say it out loud: big ideas for the elite class, and only widget grunts for the working people.
ideas are for everybody. art is for everybody. education is for everybody.
gallaudet.edu/education/wh...
A view up grey river from the gorge edge, under a grey sky, fog apparent in the distance upriver. Brown dead leaves on some of the trees in the foreground and across the river. A light snowfall is dusting on top of crunchy old snowy ice from a few weeks ago.
foggy rainy afternoon, no blizzard here, alas
The Athletic has an interesting profile of her and "work life balance" as a working mom - but talks about her kids and their disabilities in gross, reductive ways so not linking here..
the closest I've ever felt to an Olympic athlete = Elana Meyers Taylor signing to her kids
βwhy do you hate technologyβ as though βtechnologyβ were some discrete entity divorced entirely from the context of what it does and what it creates, rather than a category so broad as to constitute reality itself
βConfusionβ doesnβt begin to describe our emerging predicament. Seventy-two percent of American teens have turned to A.I. for companionship. A.I. therapists, coaches and lovers are also on the rise. Yet few people realize that some of the frontline technologists building this new world seem deeply ambivalent about what theyβre doing. They are so torn, in fact, that some privately admit they donβt plan to use A.I. intimacy tools. βZero percent of my emotional needs are met by A.I.,β an executive who ran a team mitigating safety risks at a top lab told me. βIβm in it up to my eyeballs at work, and Iβm careful.β Many others said the same thing: Even as they build A.I. tools, they hope they never feel the need to turn to machines for emotional support. As a researcher who develops cutting-edge capabilities for artificial emotion put it, βthat would be a dark day.β
Developers I spoke to said the same incentives that make bots irresistible can stand in the way of reasonable safeguards, making outright abstention the only sure way to stay safe. Some described feeling stuck between protecting users and raising profits: They support guardrails in theory, but donβt want to compromise the product experience in practice. Itβs little wonder the protections that do get built can seem largely symbolic β you have to squint to see the fine-print notice that βChatGPT can make mistakesβ or that Character.AI is βnot a real person.β βIβve seen the way people operate in this space,β said one engineer who worked at a number of tech companies. βTheyβre here to make money. Itβs a business at the end of the day.β
But even if companies can curb serious dependence on A.I. companions β an open question β many of the developers I spoke with were troubled by even moderate use of these apps. Thatβs because people who manage to resist full-blown digital companions can still find themselves hooked on A.I.-mediated love. When machines draft texts, craft vows and tell people how to process their own emotions, every relationship turns into βa throuple,β a founder of a conversational A.I. business said. βWeβre all polyamorous now. Itβs you, me and the A.I.β
A genuinely alarming piece in the NYT about how the developers, scientists and assorted techbros behind "AI companions"/"synthetic care" do not even know or understand the potential harms of the tech they're developing but they're too greedy to stop themselves from developing it.
only saw 1 with, an NFL commercial (and they were delayed/not synced!)
can't find a single *local* #ROC TV or print clip covering this! (plz send if you see one!) more info: www.yahoo.com/entertainmen...
and the national anthem was signed by Fred Beam- super accomplished artist, performer and staff w/ Sunshine 2.0 here in #ROC at NTID π
great performances! (folks who didn't watch the [sadly separate] signed stream may not know that the halftime show was signed in Puerto Rican Sign Language by a Puerto Rican deaf interpreter who tours with Bad Bunny!)
π
Every morning I wake up with a hollow anger that I have been enrolled, as a university worker, into a long-term objective of βenhancingβ AI integration (βwhere appropriateβ) into my undergraduate teaching
just finished @thewaroncars.bsky.social 'Life After Cars' - so good, myth-busting and oriented towards action + community building. excited to co-host a book club discussion w/ local walk/bike grp at library next month and dream up next steps for our (car-centric π) town
reciting those Frost poems memorized in elementary school
My glove-clad arm holds a cross country ski pole and the tips of two skis are in the foreground, with a snowy flat trail between trees ahead
how your email finds me (until everything starts up again tmw...)
congrats π π
Yeah curly hair wet vs dry bounce back is a trip - usually keep it shorter but had for a few yrs seeing how long could grow it out w/o feeling the urge to chop it off π - happy new year!
Happy new year!!
not exactly a resolution but read a lot of poetry + cut off a foot of hair to welcome in the new year
Rua M Williams's Disabling Intelligences: Legacies of Eugenics and How We are Wrong about AI, publushed by palgrave macmillan, is held in front of rainbow glass. The cover is deep pink with orange vines.
This book is titled βDisabling Intelligencesβ for many reasons. First, because so-called βAIβ is built from historical commitments to the excision of disability from the classification of humanity.
link.springer.com/book/10.1007/9β¦
every book its reader perhaps but this one cannot stay here
this book was published fairly recently (after 2015) and is part of an apparently popular homeschooling curriculum.
Unit 1 is "People of Greatness" and *the first story* is disinfo about the civil war. you can guess which people they imagined were great
kid#2 found a US history book in the little free lib nearby. it seemed ... off from even the first page. looked up the pub-- turns out it's a phonics reader published by a higher ed institution that doesn't allow women to wear pants on campus
πππ
OTD in 1950, Judy Wajcman was born. A pioneering sociologist and feminist theorist, Wajcman reshaped the philosophy and sociology of technology by showing how technological systems are deeply entwined with gender, power, and social organization.
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Here's one of them - www.theatlantic.com/technology/a...