Love and Boundaries

Falling in love is not an extension of one's limits or boundaries; it is a partial and temporary collapse of them. Once the precious moment of falling in love has passed and the boundaries have snapped back in place, the individual is disillusioned. Real love (the will to extend one's self for the purpose of nurturing one's own or another's spiritual growth) is a permanently self enlarging experience. Falling in love is not.

M Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled

The journey is the destination

One of life’s great paradoxes: Happiness requires purpose; purpose requires a sense of direction; a sense of direction requires goal-setting—but happiness cannot be had by realizing those goals. People believe that achieving big objectives will give them a lot of happiness and then are bitterly disappointed to find that doing so is a letdown. After a big achievement, many people experience depression. True satisfaction comes from progress in the struggle toward the goal. 

Arthur C. Brooks writing in The Atlantic

21 Articles about Politics & AI

Biden ratchets up AI chip war with China - Axios

AI enters Congress: Sexually explicit deepfakes target women lawmakers – 19th News  

The case for a Hippocratic Oath for artificial intelligence – Global Government Forum

U.S. Prepares New AI Chip Restrictions to Close China’s Backdoor Access – Wall Street Journal 

Trump names Musk ally David Sacks "AI & crypto czar" to coordinate policy – Axios  

AI without limits threatens public trust — here are some guidelines for preserving communications integrity – The Conversation

How US AI policy might change under Trump – MIT Tech Review  

What the departing White House chief tech advisor has to say on AI – MIT Tech Review

How do you tame AI? Scientist sees a need for regulating bots like drugs or airplanes - Geekwire

A plan to democratize access to powerful AI tools gets a last-ditch push in Congress – Semafor

Western Europe lags behind the United States in Al and IT spending  - McKinsey

Canada launches Canadian Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute – Canada  

AI didn’t sway the election, but it’s eroding voters’ grip on reality - The Washington Post

Biden Administration Outlines Government ‘Guardrails’ for A.I. Tools – New York Times

Studies Show AI Triggers Delirium in Leading Experts – Information Technology & Innovation Foundation

Biden’s Farewell to China’s Tech Sector: A New Type of Forbidden Chip - Wall Street Journal

What the US can learn from the role of AI in other elections – MIT Tech Review

Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoes AI safety bill opposed by Silicon Valley – LA Times

Who Will Win the 2024 US Election? We Asked ChatGPT - Newsweek 

White House orders Pentagon and intel agencies to increase use of AI – Washington Post

Cognitive Scientist Gary Marcus Says AI Must Be Regulated. He Has a Plan. - Wall Street Journal

As I’ve become older

My first book was about a lot of pain and a lot of knee-jerk, reactionary responses to being mistreated and abused [emotionally and physically]. When I look back on it now, I see it wasn’t about craft. It was my release. 

As I’ve become older, I’m learning more about what grace really means, and what it means to be able to bring a slice of joy to somebody. At the end of the day, I’d like to think, “What did I do today that was beneficial for somebody?” I know I can’t change the world, save the world, but I believe if all of us scratch hard enough in the same little spots where we occupy time, where we live, play and die, that we can effect change.

Jaki Shelton Green speaking to the Washington Post

AI Definitions: Prompt Injection

Prompt Injection - Like prompt engineering (where a user is good at writing AI prompts), but, in this case, with the goal of working around AI to produce harmful content. Hackers use carefully crafted prompts or text-based instructions to manipulate generative AI systems into sharing sensitive information or perform unintended actions by making the model ignore previous instructions. 

More AI definitions here

Loyalty to the Company above all else

Many companies have an unspoken command floating through the halls: "Bow to the organization above the rest!" There is a constant re-evaluation as to whether someone is playing their loyal role for the tribe. Talk of employees taking time for family and self-care is just that—talk. In practice, the expectation is that everyone will constantly genuflect toward the hierarchical (and often paternalistic) structure.

Someone who drinks to excess, yells at coworkers, holds racist views, drives away competent employees, has materialistic goals, and so forth will be tolerated, even rewarded, as long as their allegiance is true, helped by bringing in dollars or playing some other role that helps to perpetuate the organization.

On the other hand, someone with none of those vices might be cast aside if they are deemed not adequately sacrificing themselves on the altar of the organizational machinery.

In the children's book "Hope for the Flowers," Trina Paulus tells the story of caterpillars who form a tower with their bodies. They climb over each other in an attempt to reach the top. What reward waits for them? Nothing. Nothing at all. The struggle to rise only serves to stop them from cocooning and becoming the butterflies they were meant to me.

Stephen Goforth

16 Articles about AI & Academic Scholarship

AI Used by Law Enforcement

The sheriff’s department in a country just southwest of Nashville has deployed AI-powered dashcams despite the limited budget for law enforcement in the sparsely populated county, according to GovTech. Meanwhile, police in a California town are using AI tech “to transcribe video recordings taken on officers' body-worn cameras and create a first draft of a police report,” according to another GovTech report.

Why so many incompetent men rise to leadership positions

Research on why so many incompetent men rise to leadership positions found there’s a lot of antimeritocratic and implicit positive discrimination going on that favors not just men but overconfident, narcissistic, and incompetent men when it comes to leadership roles.  

Often, even when women are appointed to very senior leadership roles, it isn’t because people have embraced what they bring to the table in terms of EQ, self-awareness, self-control, integrity, humility, people skills, et cetera. Rather, it’s because they go for a profile of somebody who may be biologically female but out-males males in masculinity. So there’s a queen bee or Margaret Thatcher phenomenon. In fact, there are many countries in the world that are run by women who look more alpha male than their male competitors.  The point is not to have more biological women in charge but to have better leaders in charge.  

Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, Columbia University

26 Recent Articles about AI & Writing

Should You Write with Gen AI – Harvard Business Review

To Use AI or Not to Use AI? A Student’s Burden – Inside Higher Ed

The distinct human writer becomes more essential – Harvard’s Nieman Lab

How Indigenous engineers are using AI to preserve their culture – NBC News

Harvard Is Releasing a Massive Free AI Training Dataset of nearly 1 million public-domain books – Wired  

How to identify AI-generated text: 7 ways to tell if content was made by a bot – Mashable

Over half of longer English-language posts on LinkedIn are AI-generated – Wired  

TV Writers Found 139,000 of Their Scripts Trained AI – The Ankler

Is Grammarly AI? Notre Dame Says Yes – Inside Higher Ed

The Poetry Turing Test

Stanford Professor Accused of Using AI to Write Expert Testimony Criticizing Deepfakes – Gizmodo

AI Companies Are Trying to Get MIT Press Books – 404Media

There’s No Longer Any Doubt That Hollywood Writing Is Powering AI – The Atlantic

What genre of writing is AI-generated poetry? - Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference, and Social Science

What Kind of Writer Is ChatGPT? – New Yorker

HarperCollins Confirms It Has a Deal to Sell Authors' Work to AI Company - 404Media

Why Watermarking Text Fails to Stop Misinformation and Plagiarism – Data Innovation  

National Novel Writing Month faces backlash over allowing AI: What to know – Washington Post   

How to Tell If What You're Reading Was Written By AI - Lifehacker 

Can a Start-Up Help Authors Get Paid by A.I. Companies – New York Times

Google unveils invisible ‘watermark’ for AI-generated text – Nature

The Difference Between Editing Human vs AI Writing - Rebecca Dugas on Substack 

Writer Ted Chiang on AI and grappling with big ideas – NPR  

AI is My Research & Writing Partner. Should I disclose it? – Wired

Writers Guild Calls on Studios to Take “Immediate Legal Action” Against AI Companies – Hollywood Reporter  

You can now ask Claude to mimic your writing style – Tech Radar

AI goes undetected and gets better grades

University of Reading researchers “slipped 63 AI-generated submissions into the school’s examination system. Even with no editing or efforts to hide the AI usage, 94 percent of those went undetected, and nearly 84 percent got better grades than a randomly selected group of students who took the same exam. The issue with such tools is that they usually perform well in a lab, but their performance drops significantly in the real world. ArsTechnica

The Surprising Allure of Ignorance

At some point we all decline the opportunity to discover what really is the case. We willingly give up a shot at learning the truth about the world out of fear that it will expose truths about ourselves, especially our insufficient courage for self-examination. We prefer the illusion of self-reliance and embrace our ignorance for no other reason than it is ours. It doesn’t matter that reliance on false opinion is the worse sort of dependence. It doesn’t matter that through stubbornness we might pass up a chance at happiness. We prefer to go down with the ship rather than have our names scraped off its hull.  

Mark Lilla, Ignorance and Bliss: On Wanting Not to Know

4 Free Webinars this week about Journalism, AI, & Social Media

Mon, Dec 16 - Open and Hidden Sources for Your Climate Investigation; part 1

What: This webinar series will help you discover open and hidden sources, refine your investigative skills, and learn how to navigate information challenges in climate journalism.

Who: Iryna Ponedelnik Project Manager 

When: 6 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Network for Border Crossing Journalism

More Info

Tue, Dec 17 - How to Build a Chatbot Using Gen AI: Accelerating Learning Through Conversation

What: We'll explore the fascinating neuroscience behind chatbot learning, walk you through the step-by-step process of designing your own chatbot, and equip you with essential dos and don'ts for effective implementation.

Who: Margie Meacham is an expert in adapting AI technology to accelerate learning and support performance. She teaches training organizations around the world how to leverage AI for education and training.

When: 3 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Training Magazine Network

More Info

 

Wed, Dec 18 - Open and Hidden Sources for Your Climate Investigation; part 2

What: This webinar series will help you discover open and hidden sources, refine your investigative skills, and learn how to navigate information challenges in climate journalism.

Who: Iryna Ponedelnik Project Manager 

When: 6 am, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Network for Border Crossing Journalism

More Info

 

Wed, Dec 18 - News x Bluesky

What: Share your questions about Bluesky, what you’re thinking about in this space, the successes/challenges of your experimentation on it.

Who: Bluesky’s Emily Liu

When: 4 pm, Eastern

Where: Zoom

Cost: Free

Sponsor: Online News Association

More Info

22 Articles about the Business of Running an AI Company

The GPT era is already ending something has shifted at OpenAI – The Atlantic

Harvard Is Releasing a Massive Free AI Training Dataset of nearly 1 million public-domain books – Wired  

Their Job Is to Push Computers Toward AI Doom – Wall Street Journal  

Google Unveils A.I. Agent That Can Use Websites on Its Own – New  York Times 

Former OpenAI researcher raises $40 million to build more empathetic audio AI – Reuters 

Meta rolls out internal AI tool as it pushes into business market – Financial Times 

Perplexity expands its publisher program – Tech Crunch

The UC Berkeley Project That Is the AI Industry’s Obsession – Wall Street Journal

The Furious Contest to Unseat Nvidia as King of A.I. Chips – New York Times

OpenAI looks at chatbot ads – Axios 

Amazon Announces Supercomputer, New Server Powered by Homegrown AI Chips – Wall Street Journal  

OpenAI explores advertising as it steps up revenue drive – Financial Times

Amazon eyes news partners for revamped AI Alexa voice assistant – Axios

Labelers training AI say they're overworked, underpaid & exploited by big US tech companies - CBS News

Who's winning the AI race – Axios 

OpenAI hits pause on video model Sora after artists leak access in protest – Washington Post  

The AI War Was Never Just About AI – The Atlantic  

Stanford’s AI Center names US the top AI ecosystem, China follows – Semafor  

The future of Windows is cloud and AI – The Verge 

TV Writers Found 139,000 of Their Scripts Trained AI – The ankler

Five Canadian news media outlets sue OpenAI for copyright breach – Al Jazeera  

Biden’s Farewell to China’s Tech Sector: A New Type of Forbidden Chip - Wall Street Journal

Creativity’s link to dishonesty

Creative people who can “think out of the box” are prized in the business world, the arts, and science. But a new study has found that creative thinkers are also more likely to cheat to get ahead, and to rationalize away less-than-ethical behavior. Harvard Business School researchers gave personality quizzes to hundreds of study participants and then asked them to perform quick games or other tasks for cash. Participants who scored high on a creativity test were more likely to falsify their results so they could earn more prize money. People who were merely high in intelligence, however, were not more dishonest. It appears that the same “divergent thinking” and “cognitive flexibility” that enable creative people to come up with innovative ways of looking at things also equip them to circumvent ethical norms—and to justify their cheating to themselves. “When you’re a creative person, you can use that creativity to come up with reasons for why unethical behaviors may be okay,” researcher Francesca Gino tells The Boston Globe. These “self-serving rationalizations,” she said, can include deciding that “other people would cheat under the same circumstances or that a little cheating will not hurt anyone.”

The Week magazine

19 Recent Articles about AI & Audio/Video

Researchers Use AI To Turn Sound Recordings Into Accurate Street Images – University of Texas  

Samsung has developed an audio eraser feature for smartphones that will allow users to erase unwanted sounds from videos – Data Company  

Former OpenAI researcher raises $40 million to build more empathetic audio AI – Reuters

The Most Hyped Bot Since ChatGPT Remember Sora? – The Atlantic  

OpenAI’s video generator, Sora, aims to kickstart the AI video era – Washington Post 

NVIDIA's new AI model Fugatto can create audio from text prompts & modify existing sound files - Engadget

Randy Travis’s beautiful baritone was lost. AI helped him sing again. - Washington Post 

Polish radio station ditches DJs, journalists for AI-generated college kids – The Register  

Adobe Firefly Video Model: How AI is Changing the Future of Video Editing - Unite

There’s a New Hit Podcast That Will Blow Your Mind: The hosts aren’t human. – Wall Street Journal  

Podcast: AI and Voice Replication  - Illusion of More  

Adobe’s AI video model is here, and it’s already inside Premiere Pro – The Verge  

Talking through AI and the future of music with will.i.am – Semafor

Amazon is allowing Audible narrators to clone themselves with AI - The Verge

This Hit Music Radio Station Is Fully AI-Generated – Radio World

Amazon's AI Generator Tool Can Now Create Audio Ads – AdWeek 

How To Create And Customize An AI Podcast With Google’s NotebookLM – Forbes

Zoom will let AI avatars talk to your team for you - The Verge 

Mariah Carey Responds to Claims Her Spotify Wrapped Video Was Made With AI – Hollywood Reporter