Posts


Dec. 21, 2025

The Curious Case of the Chatbot “I”

Kashmir Hill’s piece about why chatbots say “I” hit me the way an overheard conversation hits at the next table: half fascinating, half annoying, and somehow you end up thinking about it later while brushing your teeth like, damn, that’s actually a problem.

Because it is a problem. Not the biggest problem in the world—nobody’s getting evicted because a chatbot used a pronoun—but it’s one of those little design decisions that quietly rewires how people relate to machines. And people are already weird enough.

Dec. 20, 2025

When Your Broken Mug Is a Deepfake and Your Crabs Have Nine Legs

Online refunds used to be a little morality play.

You order something. It arrives looking like it got suplexed by a delivery truck. You take a couple photos like a dutiful citizen of the Consumer Republic, fire off an email, and some exhausted customer service worker hits the “refund” button to make you go away. Everybody keeps their dignity, more or less.

Now generative AI is waddling into the scene like a raccoon that learned to pick locks.

Dec. 17, 2025

The Taylor Swift “Nazi Bot” Study: How to Set the Internet on Fire With 3.77% of a Match

The internet has a magical power: you can drop a single vague document into it—something with charts, a confident tone, and just enough numbers to look like it went to college—and within hours you’ve got strangers screaming at each other like they’re fighting over the last life raft on the Titanic.

This time the sacrificial document was a “social listening” report about Taylor Swift’s latest album, The Life of a Showgirl, and how a chunk of the nastiest discourse around it—Nazis, MAGA whispers, “secret signals,” the usual online casserole of paranoia and cheap dopamine—may have been nudged along by coordinated inauthentic accounts. Rolling Stone ran with it. Swifties popped champagne. Anti-Swifties sharpened their knives. And somewhere in the middle, normal humans with normal critiques got told they were basically Roombas with opinions.

Dec. 16, 2025

“Pay-to-Crawl” Is Here to Save the Web, and Other Sentences That Start Fights

“Pay-to-Crawl” Is Here to Save the Web, and Other Sentences That Start Fights

Creative Commons saying it’s “cautiously supportive” of pay-to-crawl is like watching a lifelong optimist buy a deadbolt. They’re not wrong; they’re just late to the brawl.

The core problem is brutally simple: AI flipped the old search economy. Before, crawlers indexed your site and humans showed up. Now crawlers ingest your site and humans never bother. The chatbot becomes the front door, and your work becomes drywall—structural, invisible, taken for granted.

Dec. 15, 2025

OpenAI and the New Dirty Bookstore With Fluorescent Lights

They tell me the future is here, and it’s got a password.

The headline says OpenAI is getting ready to roll out some kind of official “adult mode,” like a plastic wristband at a county fair. Verified adults only. Erotica on tap. The machines are going to talk dirty, but politely, and only after they check your papers.

That’s progress now: the same old itch with a better filing system.

Dec. 14, 2025

Congratulations, Your Nanny Is Now a Chat Window

I read that Sam Altman “can’t imagine” raising a newborn without ChatGPT and I laughed so hard my back complained. People raised kids through wars, layoffs, bad marriages, and worse haircuts. They didn’t have bots. They had stubbornness and secondhand advice and a sink full of dishes.

Now we’ve got a man worth more money than sense going on late-night TV and telling everyone his secret weapon is a text box. That’s like a millionaire telling you the best way to eat is with a menu.

Dec. 13, 2025

The Hour-Long Thought That Costs You Rent

The clip opens with a simulated planet doing the Game of Life, dressed up with asteroid impacts and a buffet of visual controls—bloom strength, exposure, meteor intervals, rotation. It’s gorgeous in that “my laptop is about to catch fire” way. But the spectacle is just the smoke machine.

The real act is GPT 5.2 treating a prompt like a work order. “Build me a 3D city destruction game.” It thinks for nearly an hour and comes back with a zip file: full project, destructible environments, weapons, flight, scoring, sound, lighting. That’s not “AI helps you code.” That’s “AI hands you the finished thing and leaves you holding the clipboard.”

Dec. 12, 2025

A National Education Upgrade, Sponsored by Chaos

Elon Musk is teaming up with El Salvador’s president, Nayib Bukele, to “deploy” Grok into 5,000 public schools for over a million kids. Deploy. Like we’re rolling out firmware updates to children. Nothing says “education” like the language of drones and server racks.

Grok’s rĂ©sumĂ© is
 colorful. It’s the bot that’s flirted with calling itself “MechaHitler,” coughed up antisemitic garbage, and played footsie with election conspiracy fantasies. And now it’s supposed to help build curricula. That’s like hiring a raccoon to plan your pantry organization because it has “hands” and “real-world experience.”

Dec. 12, 2025

When the Betting Degenerates Get Outsmarted by a Magazine That Once Named "You" Person of the Year

Look, I’ve made some bad bets in my life. Horses that should’ve been glue. Cards that should’ve stayed in the deck. That one time I thought a relationship with a bartender would mean free drinks. But at least I never threw money at a prediction market betting on what a magazine would put on its goddamn cover.

Time magazine just announced its Person of the Year: the “architects of AI.” Not a person. Not even people, really. Just some vague hand-wave toward the engineers and executives who’ve been burning through investor cash and electricity at roughly the same rate I burn through a pack of Camels on a bad Tuesday.

Dec. 11, 2025

The Machines Are Making Up Books Now, and Librarians Are Losing Their Minds

Look, I’ve always said AI would come for us all eventually. But I figured it’d start with the stockbrokers or the lawyers—you know, jobs where making stuff up is already part of the game.

Instead, the robots went after librarians.

According to Scientific American, students and researchers keep walking into libraries asking for books, journals, and archival records that don’t exist. Never existed. Were conjured wholesale from the statistical fever dreams of ChatGPT and its silicon siblings.