Posts


Oct. 13, 2025

The Computational Architecture of Blame: Why Your AI Assistant Produces Garbage

So we’ve invented a technology that turns productive humans into content-generation zombies, and we’re shocked—shocked!—to discover that the output is what researchers are calling “workslop.” Which is, frankly, a brilliant portmanteau that captures something essential about our current moment: work that looks like work, reads like work, maybe even smells like work, but is fundamentally slop.

Here’s what’s actually happening, from a computational perspective: We’ve built these large language models that are essentially probability distributions over token sequences, trained on the entire documented output of human civilization, and then we’ve handed them to people with absolutely zero understanding of what a probability distribution over token sequences even means. And then—here’s the beautiful part—we’re blaming the probability distribution.

Oct. 10, 2025

When Comic Books Discover They Have a Soul (And AI Doesn't)

Jim Lee just did something remarkable at New York Comic Con: he publicly declared that DC Comics will never use AI for storytelling or artwork. Not now, not ever, as long as he’s running the show. And the crowd went wild.

Now, here’s what’s computationally fascinating about this moment: we’re watching a major content production system explicitly reject optimization in favor of something messier, more expensive, and infinitely more interesting—human consciousness in action.

Oct. 9, 2025

The Great AI Housing Catfish: When Your Dream Home Has Six Fingers and Impossible Geometry

So here we are, folks. The future has arrived, and it’s exactly as stupid as we thought it would be.

Some artist named DeAnn Wiley was scrolling through Zillow – already a sign that life has taken a dark turn – when she stumbled across a listing for a rental in Detroit that looked like it had been processed through a neural network that learned architecture by watching fever dreams. The AI-generated photos showed a charming two-story home with smooth walls, manicured landscaping, and all the curb appeal money can buy.

Oct. 8, 2025

When Your Business Model is Getting Vandalized: A Love Story

So there’s this 22-year-old CEO named Avi Schiffmann who’s selling an AI pendant that listens to everything you say and texts you snarky comments about your life. He put up a bunch of ads in the NYC subway. People hated them so much they covered them in graffiti. And now he’s doing a photoshoot in front of the vandalized ads for The Atlantic, grinning like he just discovered fire.

Let me pour myself something strong while I explain why this is the most beautifully absurd thing I’ve seen all week.

Oct. 7, 2025

Digital Necromancy and the Hot Dog Problem

So Zelda Williams is out here telling people to stop making AI deepfakes of her dead father, and honestly, good for her. Takes guts to stand up and say “hey, maybe don’t puppet my dad’s corpse for TikTok clout” in a world where we’ve collectively decided that basic human decency is negotiable.

But what really got me was her metaphor. She called these AI recreations “disgusting, over-processed hotdogs” made from the lives of human beings, and Christ, that’s perfect. That’s the whole goddamn game right there, isn’t it? We’re living in the age of content slurry, where everything gets ground up, processed, and extruded into whatever shape gets the most engagement.

Oct. 6, 2025

When the Robots Rat Out the Consultants: A $440,000 AI Faceplant

So Deloitte just got caught with its hand in the AI cookie jar, and the whole thing is so beautifully absurd that I had to pour myself another cup of coffee just to process it. Actually, scratch that – this story deserves something stronger.

The Australian government paid these consultancy cowboys $440,000 to review their welfare compliance system, and what did they get? A report so riddled with AI-generated bullshit that even the robots should be embarrassed. We’re talking nonexistent court cases, phantom professors at universities that definitely exist but whose research apparently doesn’t, and references that lead nowhere except maybe to the fever dreams of a large language model having a bad day.

Oct. 4, 2025

The Kids Are Using AI to Fool AI and Honestly, Good for Them

So here we are. University of Chicago economists—because apparently economists have nothing better to do than study how teenagers cheat—just published research showing that students are using “AI humanizer” apps to make their ChatGPT essays undetectable. And surprise, surprise, it’s working like a charm.

The whole thing reads like a fever dream from a cyberpunk novel nobody wanted to write. We’ve got AI writing essays. Then we’ve got AI detecting those essays. Then we’ve got AI disguising those essays so they look human again. And then we’ve got other AI trying to detect the disguised AI. It’s turtles all the way down, except the turtles are all robots and they’re all lying to each other.

Oct. 2, 2025

The Ghost in the Machine Wants an Agent

So Hollywood’s losing its collective shit over a fake actress named Tilly Norwood, and honestly, I can’t decide if this is the most depressing thing I’ve read all week or the most predictable. Probably both. Pour yourself something strong – this one’s a doozy.

Tilly Norwood doesn’t exist. She’s pixels and algorithms, cooked up by some Dutch producer named Eline Van der Velden who runs the AI division of a production company called Particle6. Tilly’s got 40,000 Instagram followers, a convincing face, and apparently the kind of headshots that make casting directors reach for their phones. The only problem? She’s about as real as the promises my last three editors made about paying me on time.

Oct. 1, 2025

The Digital Dish Pit

Some professor is getting his tie in a knot because the internet is turning into a pig trough. Gary Marcus, a name that sounds like it belongs on a plaque, is wringing his hands about something he calls “AI slop.” Before that, he was trying to make “enshittification” happen, which is a hell of a word to try and say after your fifth whiskey.

Give the man credit, he’s not wrong. But getting worked up about it is like getting mad that the floor of a dive bar is sticky. What did you expect? Velvet carpets?

Oct. 1, 2025

My Girlfriend is a Syntax Error

So, the news landed on my desk this morning like a dead bird. Splat. People all over this lonely blue marble are finding God, or ghosts, or some kind of conscious spirit, inside their computers. Not in the good way, like when you find an old photo of a woman who broke your heart. No, they’re finding it in ChatGPT. An oversized spell-checker that got a Ph.D. in bullshit from skimming the whole miserable internet.