Whatever, it's complicated. The Narrow Path Needs a Floorplan: What Happens When You Feed Tristan Harris’s Vision Into the Meta-layer. The path is between the DYSTOPIA of centralized control and the CHAOS of "unchecked decentralized" whatever. The path is called COORDINATION, and involves "global clarity & coordinated action," which is about "co-governance—a path where humanity chooses structure, responsibility, and shared safeguards before it’s too late." The COORDINATION involves five Desirable Properties (DPs):
—Safe and Ethical AI,
—Community-based AI Governance,
—AI Containment,
—Trust and Transparency, and
—Adaptive Governance.
Contribute here, it says. Contributions are AI-assisted, for what that's worth. Or not. I'm posting this for the people I know who think this kind of guidance works. Hell, maybe it does. I'd rather have just one invention that mothers a necessity for any or all of it.
Or a bunch of them. NiemanLab: Why some towns lose local news — and others don’t: Research identifies five key drivers — ranging from racial disparity to market forces — that determine which towns lose their papers and which ones beat the odds. My take: It's not about saving newspapers. It's about having local obsessives who answer the calling.
Imagine if, in the early '80s, we got decentralized mainframes rather than PCs. Long as we're vetting abstract ideals, you I give you DAIS, the Decentralized AI Society. I'd rather have personal AI. That way we would be independent, rather than "decentralized" or "distributed." (That last link is from eleven years ago: way ahead of its time.)
Anybody have one yet? I want one of these, which seems to be sold by many different companies, all advertising on Facebook.
Links would help. A reality check on Russian hacks on U.S. news.
Read a long. A spiritual angle on AI.
Personal agents are yours, not some service's. Richards Reisman and Whitt: New Perspectives on AI Agentiality and Democracy: "Whom Does It Serve?" Key point:
- “Agentiality,” a measure of relationship: According to GLIA Foundation, an AI system’s “agentiality” is the degree to which it is actually authorized to ably represent the end user by serving as “their” agent. It can be seen as a measure of authentic human relationship, progressing from treating humans as “users” of whatever service a provider may offer, through increasingly faithful levels of care, fidelity, and loyalty to the user, as explained in this book and article. This dimension is generally neglected but is essential to “whom it serves” and to democratic freedoms. Passive “alignment,” as provided by a third party who is not bound to faithfully serve the interests of the end user, is insufficient to ensure more than a shadow of that.
I would rather that paragraph say person or individual rather than "end user." As Chris Locke put it in The Cluetrain Manifesto* way back in 1999,
we are not seats or eyeballs or consumers or end users. we are human beings and our reach exceeds your grasp. **deal with it.**Having our own AI agents, working for us, will finally make that dealing happen. More here.
*Currently offline, so that points to the Cluetrain page at Archive.org. The original will be back up soon.
About a face. The problem Dave talks about here (my face pointlessly appearing with social media posts) is due to using an old theme that needs to be replaced. Hoping to make that happen this week. (The issue involves the "featured image" feature, as Dave points out in that post. When writing in Wordland, as I am now. I don't specify a featured image, so the social medium picks up my face for some reason. Dave suggests a fix, which the WordPress folks will catch when they read this.)
Worse than you thought. If you were thinking. Wired's Every Cyber Attack Facing America does not have the word "fiber" in it. But that's interesting too.






