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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 25th, 2023

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  • Yes, it’s an odd statement. The authors are all Harvard scientists, and I have checked what they post on Twitter, they aren’t anti vaccine cranks. Though one of them, Al Ozonoff, does try to engage with such people. Perhaps this is a concession in a similar vein of outreach. The Hill is a conservative news website. Perhaps they felt they had to get their own dubious science a mention, and that was the price of publication for the Harvard scientists?












  • I don’t mean to diminish people’s fears and anxieties because they are extremely real, but I think it’s worth considering other outlooks.  For example, look at how quickly the world changed in March 2020 in response to COVID-19. Isn’t there something hopeful about that? Doesn’t it suggest that the world can adapt to sudden change far more quickly than we expected?

    Sometimes I wonder if some people are too apocalyptic in their ideas especially if they come from a product in an apocalyptic Christian background.  if you look at thousands of years of European history isn’t the lesson to take away that revolution and change happen all the time, but eventually, progress is what people settle into and things work out in the end.

    I realize that is the most hopeful interpretation of events, and perhaps too hopeful, but I’m optimistically natured and that’s what I try to stick to.





  • The last 12 months have seen the most sustained period of deflation in China since the late 1990s. It’s hard to know how much AI is responsible, but I would guess it is to some extent. It’s driving the reduction in prices in the manufacturing of so many things, EVs especially.

    Many people assume unemployment will be AI’s most destructive economic effect. That may be true, but before it causes a problem, there will be a far more immediate one to deal with - deflation.

    Deflation is so destructive because it shrinks businesses’ incomes while increasing the size of their debt relative to this income. If there is sustained deflation, then this leads to a spiraling collapse that takes asset prices like the stock market and property values with it. This was the main mechanism that caused most of the damage in the Great Depression.

    If AI is on the cusp of giving us lawyers, doctors, and other experts knowledge for practically free, then it follows that there is massive deflation to come. There is already a backlash against AI in some quarters, I would expect it to grow when the deflation problem arrives.



  • I suspect many people might find these facts incongruous. After all, if you can afford $35K per year for your kid’s education - surely you want the best human teachers that money can buy. Isn’t it more likely we’ll see human teacher job cuts in public schools while fobbing off the pupil’s with AI - a second-rate option for the poors and peons?Except that isn’t what is happening here. The school in question - David Game College is for the children of the global elites and oligarchs who live in London. At $35,000 per year I doubt many local London kids can afford it.

    This isn’t some cheapo option, it’s the ‘best of the best’ for the kids of the 1%.Except that isn’t what is happening here. The school in question - David Game College is for the children of the global elites and oligarchs who live in London. At $35,000 per year I doubt many local London kids can afford it.

    This isn’t some cheapo option, it’s the ‘best of the best’ for the kids of the 1%.

    What’s much more likely is that (eventually) AI Teachers and AI Doctors are going to be the best we’ve ever had. No human, not even the parents of only children, can lavish the time, expertise, and attention these AIs will give your child.