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    <title>The AI We Deserve</title>
    <dc:date>2024-12-29T13:32:07+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>https://www.bostonreview.net/forum/the-ai-we-deserve/</link>
    <dc:creator>jm</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[A very thought-provoking essay from Evgeny Morozov on AI, LLMs and their embodied political viewpoint:

<blockquote>
Sure, I can build a personalized language learning app using a mix of private services, and it might be highly effective. But is this model scalable? Is it socially desired? Is this the equivalent of me driving a car where a train might do just as well? Could we, for instance, trade a bit of efficiency and personalization to reuse some of the sentences or short stories I’ve already generated in my app, reducing the energy cost of re-running these services for each user?

This takes us to the core problem with today’s generative AI. It doesn’t just mirror the market’s operating principles; it embodies its ethos. This isn’t surprising, given that these services are dominated by tech giants that treat users as consumers above all. Why would OpenAI, or any other AI service, encourage me to send fewer queries to their servers or reuse the responses others have already received when building my app? Doing so would undermine their business model, even if it might be better from a social or political (never mind ecological) perspective. Instead, OpenAI’s API charges me— and emits a nontrivial amount of carbon emissions— even to tell me that London is the capital of the UK or that there are one thousand grams in a kilogram.

For all the ways tools like ChatGPT contribute to ecological reason, then, they also undermine it at a deeper level—primarily by framing our activities around the identity of isolated, possibly alienated, postmodern consumers. When we use these tools to solve problems, we’re not like Storm’s carefree flâneur, open to anything; we’re more like entrepreneurs seeking arbitrage opportunities within a predefined, profit-oriented grid. [....]

The Latin American examples give the lie to the “there’s no alternative” ideology of technological development in the Global North. In the early 1970s, this ideology was grounded in modernization theory; today, it’s rooted in neoliberalism. The result, however, is the same: a prohibition on imagining alternative institutional homes for these technologies. There’s immense value in demonstrating—through real-world prototypes and institutional reforms—that untethering these tools from their market-driven development model is not only possible but beneficial for democracy, humanity, and the planet.
</blockquote>]]></description>
<dc:subject>technology ai history eolithism neoliberalism llms openai cybernetics hans-otto-storm cybersyn</dc:subject>
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    <title>Scrapheap Transhumanism</title>
    <dc:date>2011-11-23T21:17:10+00:00</dc:date>
    <link>http://hplusmagazine.com/2010/02/11/scrapheap-transhumanism/</link>
    <dc:creator>jm</dc:creator><description><![CDATA[Lepht Anonym and the 'Grinders'.  crazy stuff -- low-end DIY cybernetic augmentation.  'The implants sit in various places under my skin: middle fingertips of my left hand, back of the right hand, right forearm — tiny magnets, five or six millimeters across, coated in gold and then in silicon to isolate the delicate metal from the destructive environment of your body. They’re something of an investment at about thirty euros apiece, and hard to get hold of, but worth pursuing. When implanted, they become technological sensory organs.  There’s an entire world of electromagnetic radiation out there, invisible to most. Our cities are saturated with it. A radio, for instance, gives off a field that’s bigger than the device itself. So do power supplies and wires in the walls. The implants pick up on the fields, and because they’re magnets, they fizz with gentle electricity, telling you this hard drive is currently active, that one is turned off, there’s the main line in the wall. Holding a mobile phone, you can feel the signals it sends and receives. You know it’s ringing before it starts to play any sounds, and when you answer it, you stick the touchscreen stylus to the back of your hand to hold it, then to your finger to type.']]></description>
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