The Boy Asked for Milk
An eighteen-year-old lawyer wants to drag predatory social media into court. The strange part is not his age; it is that children need a child prodigy to say the obvious for them.
An eighteen-year-old lawyer wants to drag predatory social media into court. The strange part is not his age; it is that children need a child prodigy to say the obvious for them.
AI can make bad thinking look clean enough to pass inspection. The trap is not that machines write badly, but that they lie smoothly.
Meta broke the trust of its AI workers, then promised smaller manager ratios and better snacks. The machine age still runs on human misery with a pantry budget.
The feed promised to know us better than we knew ourselves, then sold our own appetites back wearing a dead person's sunglasses.
KPMG let the machine invent corporate reality, then discovered that authority without verification is just a parrot in a necktie.
Meta wanted superintelligence and found the old factory floor waiting inside the laptop: watched hands, dull tasks, and people drafted into feeding the machine.
The AI boom ran face-first into the oldest problem in the world: somebody has to wire the building, weld the pipe, and keep the miracle from overheating.
The graduates booed the men selling them an AI future, and Microsoft called it a wake-up call. Funny how the people building the alarm are always surprised when it rings.
A cookie company tried the shiny AI slop and got ignored. Then it built a cardboard airline with puppets, and people remembered what effort looks like.
The chatbot companies wanted to be treated like harmless magic. The lawsuits are asking who gets buried when the magic starts giving instructions.