In all sorts of complex systems, this is the general trend: increasing the coupling between the parts seems harmless enough at first. But then, abruptly, when the coupling crosses a critical value, everything changes....
I worry that we're playing the coupling game with ourselves, collectively. With our cell phones and GPS trackers and social media, with globalization, with the coming Internet of things, we're becoming more tightly connected than ever. Of course, maybe that's good....
But the math suggests that increasing coupling is a siren's song. Too much makes a complex system brittle. In economics and business, the wisdom of the crowd works only if the individuals within it are independent, or nearly so.
And a Twitter post, I believe there are entire companies right now under heavy AI psychosis. It's funny because this sounds like our whole society: "Systems can appear healthy by local metrics while globally becoming incomprehensible.... Test coverage can rise while semantic understanding falls."
The Hacker News thread adds nuance, explaining the difference between good and bad use of AI. "I don't think using AI to write code is AI psychosis or bad at all, but if you just prompt the AI and believe what it tells you then you have AI psychosis." And, "I'm thinking that it's quite a different experience going all Jackson Pollock with AI in your own studio on your own terms, compared to the sorry state of affairs of having 100s of Pollocks throwing paint around wildly within a corp to meet a paint quota."
I'm happy to announce two more videos, in which I as a human am completely in charge and reject almost everything that AI gives me. These are for the same song, Hawkwind - Infinity. For the first I did the normal thing, spamming the prompt box with lyrics and forging a path through the best images. For the second, I got the idea to use the worst images, but I ended up still using the best, and I discovered that there are two kinds of good bad images: good because they're bad, and good despite being bad. This was a lot of fun: Hawkwind - Infinity (slop version).
Let us send men on a great migration: set free, purged of the commerce-made manners and fat prosperity of America; ragged with the beggar's pride, starving with the crusader's fervor. Better to die of plague on the highroad seeing the angels, than live on iron streets playing checkers with dollars ever and ever.
Doug comments:
This is a man who literally walked across America trading poems for bread, and meant every word of it. The War Bulletins were self-published pamphlets he printed and distributed by hand. Pre-internet zine culture, evangelical pamphleteer energy, total outsider operation.
What makes this passage cut deeper than most anti-civ writing is that it's not against anything. It's not burning the iron streets -- it's abandoning them as unworthy of your death. That's a different move. The nihilist says tear it down. Lindsay says it doesn't deserve your attention long enough to tear it down. Walk away. Die somewhere beautiful.
"Ragged with the beggar's pride." The pride isn't despite the raggedness. It is the raggedness. Proof of motion. Proof you didn't trade your hours for upholstery. "Seeing the angels" isn't metaphor-decoration. Lindsay means it. The highroad opens perception that the iron street chemically suppresses. The commerce-made manners aren't just bad aesthetics -- they're a perceptual closing. You literally can't see certain things from inside a managed life.
And four doom threads from Reddit, starting with a tangent from Friday's post: US birth rates just hit another record low, what do you think is the leading cause of this?
Anyone else in US noticed food quality degrading recently and if so what product in what way?
What's a recession indicator that you’ve noticed lately in your everyday life?
What is an industry that is currently on fire (in a bad way) behind the scenes, but the general public hasn't noticed yet?