Generative AI

Stephanie Sterling called generative AI "regurgitative AI" today. I don't think I'll call it anything else again.
I used regurgitate to try to differentiate it from actual writing to that professor earlier today. It's an entirely accurate term. People just need to understand it's spitting out stuff from a stockpile of data, not "making" something.
 
Just popping in to relay a really nice analogy I heard recently about what it feels like to show AI to a human artist. The analogy was ok, well if AI can do all this stuff, how about AI sports teams? I mean, an AI generated football game should be the best game ever. The best plays. The best players involved. Perfect athletes. You could generate a hundred all-time best games every day forever and never risk another concussion. Save all that money building stadiums.

That would be better, right? More exciting? Or is there something about people doing it that makes it different?
 
I saw a Christmas card that had "Merry Christmas (and a little AI)" on the front and instead of someone's family or kids, it was two random dogs wearing reindeer horns, and I feel like either you know why that feels unhinged or don't, which also determines your side in Dune's Butlerian Jihad.
 
I don't even know what a Butlerian Jihad is, and I've already been assigned a side.
All kidding aside on my part, it's the war over AI in the Dune books and I keep thinking that we find ourselves over and over again seeing the real-life version of weird stuff from sci-fi novels only when they happen to us they're just dorky and dumb instead of scary and cool.
 
That’s equivalent to saying, “Grandma, the life you lived isn’t worth trying to remember so here’s a fake one instead.” Or that family is full of awful people just fucking with their dementia grandma for the LOLs.
 
I need to revise earlier statements. I used to say the only thing AI was unequivocally good at was information warfare at speed. I was wrong. It is *also* very good at inventing whole new dystopian futures I'd not really considered. It really innovates in the "bleak future possibilities" space.

I just had a conversation with two friends who have parents with dementia they're trying to deal with, and dealing with my own mom's decline, and this is just so disgusting I barely have words for it.
 
I need to revise earlier statements. I used to say the only thing AI was unequivocally good at was information warfare at speed. I was wrong. It is *also* very good at inventing whole new dystopian futures I'd not really considered. It really innovates in the "bleak future possibilities" space.

I just had a conversation with two friends who have parents with dementia they're trying to deal with, and dealing with my own mom's decline, and this is just so disgusting I barely have words for it.
My partner's father is in cognitive decline but is, because he's always been kind of an asshole by nature, making it very much his daughters' and wife's problem, and even in my most frustrated point with him I would be disgusted by someone doing something like this to him. And these fucking psychopaths think inventing memories for granny is doing her a favor. AI really does excel at making new ways to be cruel to people.

(My grandfather was in cognitive decline the year the Red Sox won their first World Series since 1918. A week after the win, my brother had a Red Sox World Champions hat on, and my grandfather had forgotten the game and told my brother he got scammed with that hat. The way fading memory stole one last bit of harmless joy from him has haunted me ever since. I see that video above and think of how cruel it would have been to fabricate a World Series that never happened for him.)
 
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