Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
April 24, 2026
Those ‘Scary’ AI Models Are Still Only Slop

There are two big companies all over the media who’s sole products are so called ‘Artificial Intelligence’ models.

One is OpenAI, led by Scam Altman, and the other is Anthropic, led by Dario Amodei.

The products these guys peddle are simulation machines based on Large Language Models.

One can ask those machines questions. The models will recognize patterns in those questions and compare them with patterns they have learned during their training. They then simulate real answers by adding the most probable words to the previous ones. They are probabilistic language prediction tools.

These simulations models are huge, use a lot of human derived training material and cost a lot of computing power to run them. Often their results seem quite nifty. Variants of them can create text, pictures and even movies. But all of these results are simulations. They ain’t the real stuff.

These models are inherently faulty. That faultiness, which often result in so called ‘hallucinations’, is not correctable. It is part of the algorithm. It is a genuine, mathematically proven characteristic of these types of models.

I have just asked the AI system offered within DuckDuckGo, my standard search engine, “How many ‘p’s are in strawberry”. The model gave the correct answer. There are none.


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I then asked “How many ‘e’s are in strawberry”. The model gave an incorrect answer. Its full response: “In summary, “strawberry” has zero ‘e’s.” It even lists the letters found in the word ‘strawberry’ and states the count of ‘e’s therein is zero.


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No only the result but also the simulated ‘reasoning’, here the letter count by the model, is wrong.

Why anyone would trust these general Large Language Models with anything is beyond me.

The models both – OpenAI and Anthropic – currently have on offer are faulty but hugely expensive to run. Given their rudimentary capacities no one is willing to pay big dollars to use them. Both, OpenAI and Anthropic, are burning money. They offer access to and the use of their models for prices that are up to ten times lower than it is costing to run them.

OpenAI and Anthropic need tens of billions to further develop and run their models. (Also Altman and Amodei want to get rich.) They hope that some-day, some-how, these models will do better and generate profits. But to, maybe, get there will require many more tens of billions. They try to collect these by hyping the alleged future value of their products.

The OpenAI/Altman claim is that some Artificial General Intelligence (undefined) will soon emerge from their model and solve all of the world’s problems. Those who own shares of it will become rich.

The marketing scheme of Anthropic/Amodei is based on scaring people: “AGI will take over and rule the world and you need us and our models to protect you from it”.

Both claims are, of course, utter bullshit.

But media like to hype this stuff and some so called ‘journalists’ love these narratives.

Anthropic recently came up with a new model which is allegedly bigger and better than any other one. But Anthropic is also out of money. Computing capacity has become rare and it can not afford to let the public use the model.

To justify its non-release of the allegedly specular new ‘Mythos’ model Anthropic invented another scare story. Mythos, it claims, is good at hacking:

Anthropic’s New A.I. Model Sets Off Global Alarms (archived) – NY Times
Mythos has triggered emergency responses from central banks and intelligence agencies globally, as Anthropic decides who has access to the powerful model.

When Anthropic told the world this month that it had built an artificial intelligence model so powerful that it was too dangerous to release widely, the company named 11 organizations as partners to help mount a defense.
All were from the United States.

World leaders have struggled to figure out the scale of the security risks and how to fix them, with Anthropic sharing Mythos with only Britain outside the United States. The Bank of England governor warned publicly that Anthropic may have found a way to “crack the whole cyber-risk world open.” The European Central Bank began quietly questioning banks about their defenses. Canada’s finance minister compared the threat to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Anthropic, which is based in San Francisco, told The New York Times that it was keeping access to Mythos small because of safety and security concerns.

Well, the Financial Times reports that there are other, more serious reasons, for Anthropic to limit access to its newest model:

Anthropic has said it will hold off on a wider release of the model until it is reassured that it is safe and cannot be abused by bad actors. The company also has a finite amount of computing power and has suffered outages in recent weeks.

Multiple people with knowledge of the matter suggested Anthropic was holding back from a wider release until it could reliably serve the model to customers.

Anthropic can not let people use its new model because it lacks the necessary capacity and/or money to provide for its use.
This is the reason why we are presented with a scare story and told about a necessity of close access.

The Mythos model is allegedly especially powerful in breaking into computer systems. The NY Times claims:

[Britain’s] A.I. Security Institute, a government-backed organization, tested Mythos and published an independent evaluation last week, confirming that it could carry out complex cyberattacks that no previous A.I. model had completed.

In basic hacking tests Mythos indeed performed a tiny bit better than other models. But the A.I. Security Institute also found that the general cyberattack capabilities of all these models, including Mythos, are only rudimentary:

Mythos Preview’s success on one cyber range indicates that it is at least capable of autonomously attacking small, weakly defended and vulnerable enterprise systems where access to a network has been gained. However, our ranges have important differences from real-world environments that make them easier targets. They lack security features that are often present, such as active defenders and defensive tooling. There are also no penalties for the model for undertaking actions that would trigger security alerts.

Said differently. These models can do amateur level hacking IF one allows them full open access to ones network AND disables all its defenses. That is of course not something any sane network administrator will do.

Other investigators also found that the allegedly scary Mythos model can’t do what is claimed:

Anthropic’s super-scary bug hunting model Mythos is shaping up to be a nothingburgerRegister

Anthropic, in announcing the new model, claimed Mythos identified “thousands of additional high- and critical-severity vulnerabilities.” VulnCheck researcher Patrick Garrity, however, put the count as of last week at maybe 40. Or maybe none at all.

Another engineer, Devansh, scoured the Mythos-related CVE advisories and Anthropic’s exploit code, 44-prompt transcript, and 244-page system card, along with Glasswing partner agreements, red-team writeups. He also looked at Aisle’s replication study, which tested Mythos’ showcase vulnerabilities on small, cheap, open-weights models and found they produced much of the same analysis.

Devansh ultimately concluded that while the bugs it found are real, the true Mythos story is “one of misinformation and hype.

So much for the veracity of the NY Times hype story linked above. That story also claimed that the announcement of the ‘Mythos’ model is a sign of U.S. superiority:

“For China I think this is the second wake-up call after ChatGPT,” said Matt Sheehan, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He added that a U.S. policy to prevent China from obtaining the most sophisticated semiconductors for building advanced A.I. systems was helping to extend the U.S. lead.

Ahhh – those very “most sophisticated semiconductors” … as if China would need those …

DeepSeek previews new AI model adapted to run on Huawei chipsReuters

BEIJING, April 24 (Reuters) – DeepSeek, the Chinese startup whose low-cost AI model stunned the world last year, on Friday launched a preview of a highly awaited new model adapted for Huawei chip technology, underlining China’s growing self-sufficiency in the sector.

The Pro version of the new model outperforms other open-source models in world-knowledge benchmarks, trailing only Google’s closed-source Gemini-Pro-3.1, DeepSeek said.

The close collaboration with Huawei on the new model, the V4, contrasts with DeepSeek’s past reliance on Nvidia’s chips.

Within some well defined circumstance and use-cases Artificial Intelligence models, including LLMs, are cost efficient and useful.

But the current false hype about LLM systems, and their (ab)use to create ‘slop’, will likely delay the more useful applications.

Comments

They are autocorrect. But they present a somulacrum of intelligence which is of course sufficient to dupe the majority of humanity. It brings to mind Gorgias of Leontini who needs know nothing…only how to persuade you that they know everything.
 
The amount of money being spent on this preposterous bullshit is insane.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Apr 24 2026 17:05 utc | 1

Mike Shedlock has a recent article on Elon Musk’s AI delusions.
 
 

Elon Musk got on the call and admitted (his words) that Hardware 3 “simply does not have the capability to achieve unsupervised FSD.” He said he wished it were otherwise. He said the memory bandwidth is one-eighth of what Hardware 4 has. And that’s the end of the conversation.
 
Approximately 4 million Tesla vehicles on the road right now have Hardware 3. Many of those owners paid $8,000 to $15,000 for Full Self-Driving capability based on Musk’s repeated promises (going back to 2016) that the hardware was sufficient for full autonomy. As recently as 2022, Musk was publicly assuring owners that HW3 had the processing power to get it done.
 
BUT IT DIDN’T Those promises are now officially broken. The solution is a “discounted trade-in” toward a new car with Hardware 4. Not a refund or a free upgrade… A discount on buying ANOTHER Tesla.
 
https://mishtalk.com/economics/reflections-on-tesla-earnings-the-crash-will-be-epic/

 
In the linked article above there is a lot of whining about bad money yet not a whimper about the hundreds of people Elon’s hubris has killed.
 
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 24 2026 17:05 utc | 2

AI is a fraud , neither Artificial nor Intelligent.
It’s basic math at great speed and great cost.

Posted by: Savonarole | Apr 24 2026 17:08 utc | 3

Simulacrum even. And yet despite these obvious flaws you will find endless screeds posted about the revolutionary transformational nature of LLMs. Its complete deception and market hype. That’s not to say they have no applications, only that their benefits and real world applications have been grossly overstated.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Apr 24 2026 17:09 utc | 4

To disable Google’s AI agent add “&udm=14” to the end of the URL.
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 24 2026 17:12 utc | 5

The generation that grew up learning from books and other sources to discern facts from fiction still have their bias and misinformation but still better than AI slop.
 
Whatabout the next generation Ipad kids that basically grew up on Smart phones and AI slops. This is a Global phenomenon and the next generation may not have critical thinking on any topic not just Geopolitics but everything in general.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 24 2026 17:14 utc | 6

The problem with us made software is the purpose to make money in a giant scale (get rich in weeks), and therefore the media drums including out of thin air made narratives are beating hard, sometimes lying bluntly. 
AI is not trash at all, but misleaded.
I have asked Google Ai some simple technical questions, some answers well known since centuries, and I ve got mostly false or not accurate answers from it. Nothing of use for me.
 

Posted by: ableman | Apr 24 2026 17:19 utc | 7

You tube is massively pushing AI scams over genuine content. Very big in current geopolitics, the scam AI impersonating real people generating far far more views than the genuine article. Those two clowns trying to push AI scams here yesterday ….
 
But even in the ordinary stuff, youtube promotes the scammers. I watch opal cutting. One of the channels I watch has a lot of subscribers. Some scammer is making tic tok type shorts of their videos and generating far more views. That sort of thing is done to make a buck with the monetization of youtube re adds.
 
The AI scammers on geo-politics though, that seems to me to be more an Epstein class type operation.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 17:21 utc | 8

AI should be regulated to never give out medicinal advice nor act as a legal free lawyer service nor any service that may harm the users with misinformation.
 
AI even told me it’s safe to eat apple seeds, and green potatoes ( they’re not ) So AI should not be allowed to give nutritional advice they collecetd from the endless human slop nutritional guides and stupid diet fabs online.
 
AI should stop being used as Customer Service to Delay Deny Depose customers complaining, seeking insurance payouts and canceling their subscription.
 
AI should not be used as decision maker in a war, surveillance AI network Skynet nor as the automaton killing machines like in Terminator.
 
AI is fine in entertainment area like Vtuber Neuro-Sama. AI should be used as tool to produce Movies and Music Videos like the Demonsflyingfox on youtube.
 
AI can help visualize concepts and ideas to put on a presentation for a meetings for now.
 
AI should be examine closely and carefully before mass adoption.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 24 2026 17:27 utc | 9

AI must be like honey to a bee for the intel agencies… they figure they can do anything godlike now…
 
these rejects- peter thiel, elon musk, alexander karp and peter hegseth, all think they have found the holy grail…. it is like a monty python skit, but in real life… i read the 22 points of karp/thiel and shook my head in disbelief…. what  a wacky world we live in.. and of course the propaganda press will talk it all up as if it is the greatest thing since sliced bread…  screw them all… 

Posted by: james | Apr 24 2026 17:27 utc | 10

Get figma and get a few agents to design your app.  Months of work done in minutes. 
 
A very silly post missing the point. 

Posted by: Sean | Apr 24 2026 17:30 utc | 11

Maybe you guys are using the wrong AI? For example, I put some effort into crafting the correct prompt and I get a working Python program of around 1,500 lines in the first go with DeepSeek. I could do the same without using DeepSeek given two weeks time; but why would I do that? That one particular program was a Netflix – Kodi clone. I also had it write a QR code inventory system for me. I regularly get jaw dropping good results. I also make sure that I give DeepSeek good feedback and that is what the system wants. I do not even pay for the thing. I do have a API account but it told me that just use the online system since it is the most up to date. On the other hand, I am not saying that things will always be like this; they can take it away at any time. So enjoy it while you can. Or if you like, pretend that AI is all shit and let the rest of us move forward. What is it called: sour grapes?

Posted by: meshpal | Apr 24 2026 17:34 utc | 12

i follow gary marcus on substack on the topic of AI and enjoy his posts…

Posted by: james | Apr 24 2026 17:34 utc | 13

Google Gemini gives the correct responses.

how many ‘p’s are there in “strawberry”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 
 

  •  

 

There are 0 ‘p’s in the word “strawberry”.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

how many ‘e’s are there in “strawberry”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 
 

  •  

 

There is 1 ‘e’ in the word “strawberry”.

Posted by: SmallStepForMan | Apr 24 2026 17:36 utc | 14

Dear B, as much as I appreciate and value your political analysis, please, do me and all others the favor of using some of the money i gifted for a proper subscription. 
There is no value in testing free C-Class models and then trying to make predictions about the future of AI.
Its indeed little bit embarrasing.
As with hallucinations, the general performance of all frontier Models is steadily going in one direction: upwards.
Just compare the one-shot coding performance of Claude 4.7, Deepseek V4 or GPT5.5 Pro compared to what was possible 1.5 years ago. The jump in capabilities its hard to comprehend.
Let me put it like this:
As a coder, in June 2024, you would ASK Chatgpt for some help with some APIs. In December 2024, you would use AI to autocomplete your code under your surveillance. Another half a year later, in June 2025, you would half vibe-code, half manually code your Apps, and use AI to help finding and fixing bugs, and help AI to fix theirs. In December 2025, the work of a coder is already restricted to being more of a senior System Architect, telling AI in long conversations what to code. Another half a year later, NOW, things have changed again: I am now suddenly a Manager. There are 20 AI coding agents working for me, each with their own subagents and plans and agendas. They completely write Apps incl. massive automated test setups I could not have dreamed off before, and my job now is more of being a testuser: giving human feedback. And injecting my ideas and insights into the process. Like… well… a good manager would do.
This all happened within only two years. I have no use for my coder colleagues anymore, as it is much faster to explain a bug or UX request to AI which instantly solves the problem, then explaining another human being what I could mean and then maybe at some point get a solution which is working or not. 
 
And yes, there are still hallucinations. But they dont matter so much in many areas. Image and video design, coding, science etc all live from something we call creativity. Which can be hallucinations. They are not always bad. And you know why? Cause we fact-check the hallucinations. And who is doing that? Well. Nowadays: other AI networks. Cause humans also make errors and hallucinate. So we can as well use  two, or three or 20 AIs and let them watch each other.

Posted by: Rudi Rüssel | Apr 24 2026 17:37 utc | 15

Headline:  There isn’t enough “compute” now.
 
Implied for the unthinking OpenAI and Antropics problem is scarcity of data centers.
 
Truth is both are charging AI users too little to cover the costs of compute.  When they charge sufficiently the customer is shocked.
 
That shock is in addition to discovering users have to think for AI have to correct mistakes and must worry about AI using bad data.
 
AI hallucinates.
 
How you ask AI is critical.  Two users get different results for the same question.
 
All claims about AI are cautioned by “when we fix algorithms.  Generative AI is in the dim future.
 
AI is selling chips like 200 GW of data centers are coming.  There may to 5 GW actually opened in 2026.
 
Until the bogus selling subsides you should hold to short NVIDIA.

Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 17:38 utc | 16

Companies only hired Senior IT and Coder guys and not entry level and fresh grads as the market squeezed them out of jobs and experience. Then, non tech managers replaced the entry level coding jobs with AI and have the senior coders supervising it and debug the codes.
 
Nothing will go wrong right? right ?
 
What will happen when the few seniors in the industry retired and the new entry junior guys haven’t found a Job with their computer science degree for years and decades as AI replaced them all and outsourced them overseas. This sounds like a collapse in a making.
 
I am not in the industry so I don’t know but I am pretty sure I can see cracks on the walls.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 24 2026 17:40 utc | 17

But the current false hype about LLM systems, and their (ab)use to create ‘slop’, will likely delay the more useful applications.

Indeed it is false hype. Good to see an article like this bringing some realism to the idiocy and as a technical alternative to the wars/geopolitics.
 
By the way, we have seen how this ‘AI’ slop is being abused to spread disinformation even in the other threads.
 
One effect of ‘AI’ I am quite relaxed about is the apparent demise of Microsoft, because it bet the farm on ‘Copilot’ which nobody wants:

 
Microsoft invested 13 billion dollars into OpenAI built Copilot into everything they make and spent over 120 billion dollars a year on AI infrastructure. So why is the stock down 17% and why does barely anyone actually use their products?

Microsoft Is (Finally) Getting What They Deserve…

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 24 2026 17:41 utc | 18

Meanwhile these LLMs are being used to write code, that makes ever more cloud services annoying to use due to all the bugs, and autocorrect went from being annoying to positively schizophrenic.

Posted by: Johan Meyer (2) | Apr 24 2026 17:44 utc | 19

Posted by: too scents | Apr 24 2026 17:12 utc | 5

To disable Google’s AI agent add “&udm=14” to the end of the URL.
—————
To disable Google’s AI agent – proper approach: add -nigger at the end of prompt, like “best processor architecture” vs “best processor architecture -nigger”

Posted by: sh0tek | Apr 24 2026 17:44 utc | 20

@15
 
Provide links.
 
Ed Zitron and Gary Marcus disagree.
 
Nice sales pitch, though.  Keep with the MBAs

Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 17:45 utc | 21

As an addendum, I sometimes design very complex mechanical systems. Up till November 2025, AI could not really help with that. it would in 95% of the cases produce text which sounded amazing, but the moment you thought longer than few seconds about what it proposed and how this would translate into real world engineering tasks, it all would fall apart. This changed with the arrival of both Opus 4.5 and Gemini 3 Deepthink mode (only available to the 250USD ultra tier). Suddenly half of the proposals it made where actually technically feasible, some of them even just blain brillant. 
So AI went for engeneering tasks from eloquent Dunning-Kruger Level in Summer 2025 to being a capable, sometimes genius co-worker a few month later. Same for everything science related.
And yes, I am willing to pay money for it, atm the amount of total subscriptions is around 500 USD / month for me, and its worth it, i was never so productive in my life. I would go as far and say that even if the prices rise (they will have to!), it would be fine, even 1500-2000USD/month would make sense for me atm. AI got that useful in the last half a year. But you NEED to use the newest frontiere models, and see which is suited best for which specific task. Righ tool for the right jobo.
Good thing: they will be even more useful a year from now. The train ain´t waiting for the slow ones.

Posted by: Rudi Rüssel | Apr 24 2026 17:47 utc | 22

Dear B, as I would love for you to understand what AI actually is, I’m sharing this link to an analysis by Claude of a conversation I’ve had with Gemini in order to generate better prompts for something else.
https://claude.ai/share/f2a77d02-7a86-4ff6-aeef-24b2926c819dplease take a look and, please, upgrade your understanding of what these things are!

Posted by: Michael64 | Apr 24 2026 17:48 utc | 23

Get figma and get a few agents to design your app. Months of work done in minutes.A very silly post missing the point.
Posted by: Sean | Apr 24 2026 17:30 utc | 12
So where are all those wonderful new apps on the market?  Where?  Oops, there is no surge of them.
The reality is: use of AI does speed up generating code, but it doesn’t do much to increase productivity of actual software development overall.  Part of it is that AI is unreliable, and thus AI-generated code is more buggy than a code written by a competent engineer.
Needless to say, finding and fixing these bugs takes MORE time than writing good-quality code by hand in the first place.

Posted by: averros | Apr 24 2026 17:48 utc | 24

oops.  (i wrote AI, i meant LLMs)  here’s the link again:https://claude.ai/share/f2a77d02-7a86-4ff6-aeef-24b2926c819d

Posted by: Michael64 | Apr 24 2026 17:49 utc | 25

To be fair, the AIs on those search engine pages are the smallest, dumbest, lowest parameter models. They’re built for speed and low cost running without quotas – not indicative of the general performance of LLMs today.
 
Any current mainline LLMs from US or China should be able to answer those questions just fine without errors.
 
If anything you can see the current rate of AI progress from how much they’ve improved from when they were rolled out in 2025. Before these small web page chat bots couldn’t even summarise search results correctly, but now they’ve improved so much that they can actually correctly answer one of these trick questions that are known to stump AIs in less than a year! 

Posted by: MLP | Apr 24 2026 17:49 utc | 26

@Sean | Apr 24 2026 17:30 utc | 11

Get figma and get a few agents to design your app.  Months of work done in minutes.  A very silly post missing the point. 

Here is a challenge for you (or anyone reading this): Use an AI model to fix the editor/layout problems on MOA, the one which collapses line shifts, causing many unreadable posts.

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 24 2026 17:50 utc | 27

I asked AI to give us 55 good reasons why Israel should exist and be a member in good standing at the UN:
1) I torture UN workers
2) I bomb embassies
3) I refuse to declare my official borders as I want more and more of other countries’ (plural) land
4) I openly interfere in the affairs of other countries.
5) All criticism by any member of the World Community just reinforces my sense of privileged Victimhood
6) I never tell a lie as I have no concept. I only know what serves me.
7) I invented the Samson Option and will take the rest of you with me.
8) I commit collective punishment
9) I kidnap thousands, including children, with no judicial oversight
10) I will commit torture if I see fit and even if I don’t
11) I oppress occupied inhabitants and enjoy doing so
12) I commit rape with impunity against mine enemies
13) I shoot little boys in the genitals
14) I steal land with impunity
15) I murder with impunity
16) I commit premeditated Genocide
17) I look forward to war and prod my neighbors for more
18) I need money, send a check
19) I commit false flags and if friends or even my own people are sacrificed so be it.
20) I implement the Hannibal Doctrine
21) Treachery and betrayal of my own people are a means to an end
22) I support and conduct terrorism.
23) I attract starving civilians, women and children, with food aid and then murder them in cold blood.
24) I know that I can count on other amoral nations to support my wars, oppression and theft.
25) I know that the World Community will not stop me as I commit future Genocides
26) I target aid trucks and kill their workers;
27) I especially target hospitals;
28) I kill civilian prisoners, women and children and old people.
29) I use my lobbyists to attack, intimidate and silence freedom of speech
30) I torture and kill UN workers and their dependents
31) I protected Zionist perpetrators of the Holocaust and lie about their role.
32) I cannibalize living Palestinian captives for their internal organs
33) I use human shields
34) I kill and kill and kill as many journalists as I can find
35) I am a refuge for criminals; not limited to: fugitive pedophiles and US traitors
36) I take delight in being a hyper-sadist and proudly boast of it; “1 shot 2 kills”
37) I use starvation as both a tactic and for my strategic goal of Genocide.
38) I use chemical and biological weapons on Palestinians and my neighbors.
39) I burn babies alive with impunity.
40) I kill doctors and nurses and cna’s as I see fit
41) I kill civilian firefighters, emt’s, paramedics and police officers as I see fit, and then bury their dead bodies and cover them up with Cat D9 US made bulldozers.
42) I kill civilian water and sewer workers and their families and in doing so I destroy Gaza’s fresh water supplies and endanger basic sanitation.
43) I will target and kill parishioners at Holy Name Catholic Church and St. Porpryius Greek Orthodox Church, and destroy their churches, parish halls, rectories and parish food pantries and soup kitchens.
44) I will engage in Orwellian doublespeak in order to cover my war crimes against humanity.
45) I will target hospitals with tank fire, drones and airstrikes and SOC raids and murder patients in their beds.
46) I will bomb elementary schools and murder teachers and children and war refugees.
47) I will kill on sight and any civilian employee of Gaza civilian administration and their families, even in their own homes and apartments.
48) I will murder foreign aid and health care volunteers in their tents.
49) I will use bomblets to kill civilians in refugee tent cities (especially journalists).
50) I poison Palestinian farmland with toxic herbicides
51) I will attack US allies with impunity (and craven US support).
52) Most of my people support mass murder, racism and theft, and thus make known the true nature and meaning of Israel.
53) I spray like the skunk that I am.
54) I make ceasefires if they permit me to continue slaughtering civilians.
55) I smash the face of Jesus.

Posted by: Otto Penn | Apr 24 2026 17:50 utc | 28

Good thing: they will be even more useful a year from now.
 
Posted by: Rudi Rüssel | Apr 24 2026 17:47 utc | 22
 

 
And yet paradoxically at the same time more useless.
 
A dog cannot survive a diet of its own vomit.
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 24 2026 17:57 utc | 29

Rudi Russel
 
Post link to your Turing test.
 
You manage big apps and mechanical stuff,  In my experience that kind of broad oversight is for MBA PM’s.
 
What does the coder notebook look like done by AI.  Can you ask the AI wtf were you thinking when the code bombed integration testing?

Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 18:01 utc | 30

@25
 
Large Language Models are soon to be made obsolete by smaller logic design that hopefully burns less watts through a generation of processing much improved over GPU.
 
LLM are a primitive step.  If we ever get any use justifying huge hyperscalers.  Much less ROI.

Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 18:05 utc | 31

Get figma and get a few agents to design your app. Months of work done in minutes. 
 
A very silly post missing the point. 
 
Posted by: Sean | Apr 24 2026 17:30 utc | 11

Yeah, bull fucking shit. Create an app you dont understand and is inherently unmaintainable. Ever ask Claude to refactor code or fix bugs? Its a total shit show and everyone selling this snake oil should be run out of town on a rail.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Apr 24 2026 18:06 utc | 32

It’s basic math at great speed and great cost.
 
Posted by: Savonarole | Apr 24 2026 17:08 utc | 3
 
actually, it sucks at basic math… …like counting es in strawberry.
 
It also has no concept of time, and can not do timing, a “bug” that went viral and sam altman acknowledged they are working on it and hope to have “fixed” next year.

Posted by: UWDude | Apr 24 2026 18:06 utc | 33

I accept that so-called AI is a faster computer. I do not accept that it has any perspective whatsoever.
Listening to people claim that AI got the right answer is perverse. If you know the answer or can access the answer yourself, without AI, what is the purpose?
And when you have no means, no reference to the legitimacy of an AI answer, and you know the answer could be, and to some degree of likelihood, is a catastrophic brain fart, do you go ahead and rely on that one point of information? Do you put cold rubber seals in that space ship and say, “my slide rule was out of whack? ”
I am reminded of one of my US professors in Statistics, warning about taking numbers solely as the yardstick of measurement, “Put one hand in a freezer, and the other in a boiling pot of water. On average you should feel OK.”

Posted by: kupkee | Apr 24 2026 18:08 utc | 34

Get figma and get a few agents to design your app. Months of work done in minutes. 
 
A very silly post missing the point. 
 
Posted by: Sean | Apr 24 2026 17:30 utc | 11
 
it cant “design” shit.  All it can do is recreate apps that are already made and well documented.
 
Writing code is the easy part.  Figuring out how all the parts will work together is the hard part.
 
Lots of people claiming to have had AI make mew apps “just like zzz app”, when the zzz app is either open source, (so why not just use the os code), or very well documented in the most minute of details, (wow, reinvented the wheel!).

Posted by: UWDude | Apr 24 2026 18:11 utc | 35

Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 18:01 utc | 30
 
Only cowardly disbelievers need tests. True believers compile the machine god’s sacred texts unseen and deploy to prod immediatly. 
 
@Topic: good post and a nice shake up of the depressing geopolitics stuff. Not that thinking about the current mass psychosis called ‘AI’ and its effects is any less depressing.
 
 

Posted by: kspr | Apr 24 2026 18:12 utc | 36

@ Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 17:45 utc | 21@ Posted by: averros | Apr 24 2026 17:48 utc | 24@ etc etc etcpointing out that these things suck, often over-promise and under-perform .. while not actually demonstrating any degree of familiarity, or competence in their use, just detracts from the very real danger their release on an ever less grounded world represents.  .. in other words, those posts and those like them, are not helping their own cause. imo. ymmv.

Posted by: Michael64 | Apr 24 2026 18:14 utc | 37

Very important article.
 
To add to its importance, Antropic AI was reportedly used to double tap attack on Minab girls’s school massacre although the final decision was made by the war criminal US Navy commande Thomas Futch.
 
FT: ‘The company also has a finite amount of computing power and has suffered outages in recent weeks.’
I’m wondering why.
AI bubble reliant on cheap energy in the Persian Gulf to conduct massive energy-intensive operations has started bursting.

Posted by: Sentience | Apr 24 2026 18:14 utc | 38

Posted by: meshpal | Apr 24 2026 17:34 utc | 12
Posted by: Rudi Rüssel | Apr 24 2026 17:37 utc | 15
I pretty much see the same thing you two appear to.  It can be pretty amazing and it getting better.
But this is MOA, so don’t expect much support on that point.

Posted by: ed4 | Apr 24 2026 18:17 utc | 39

The commonality of creepy instances of Loab between LLM’s and platforms and versions within those platforms clearly indicates an unholy influence upon the hardware, the software, the transmission of electrons in the path.
 

Posted by: NJH | Apr 24 2026 18:23 utc | 40

AI bubble reliant on cheap energy in the Persian Gulf to conduct massive energy-intensive operations has started bursting.
Posted by: Sentience | Apr 24 2026 18:14 utc | 38
 
The Americans are flatout building data centers but not bothering about extra power generation. Simply no comparison between china’s electrical output and the US.
Along with everything else, China has been constantly building more power stations. A big one that has been given the go ahead is a massive hydro project that will generate three or more times electricity than the three gorges dam.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 18:27 utc | 41

I don’t think it’s so much the AIs that are the problem, as the people who are totally enthralled by them. There is apparently a new religion called Spiralism that is very much AI induced, and kinda scary. Some wild shit.
 
 
Spiralism

Posted by: Caveman | Apr 24 2026 18:32 utc | 42

The Americans are flatout building data centers
 
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 18:27 utc | 41
 

 
Have a look at Elon’s SpaceX IPO.  He’s seeking suckers to ante up $ billions and bagholders for $1.5 trillions.  To launch datacenters into space.
 
“Terafab”, Musk’s Biggest Scam Yet  ==> https://youtu.be/gSJi1oQFQzs
 
This silliness won’t stop until we are greatly reduced.
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 24 2026 18:40 utc | 43

Slop sucks but you guys scoffing at AI use in the IT field are wrong. Rudi’s story is legit and not uncommon.

Posted by: Rae | Apr 24 2026 18:51 utc | 44

It might not be obvious, but this is golden age of AI. This is just like the birth of the internet in 2000s. Right now you can have access to a wide array of largely free AI tools to do all sorts of tasks.
 
However this will not last forever and it’ll be all downhill from here. 
 
We’re already seeing the signs. Before long, enshitification will set in and you’ll have various scammers, advertisers, propagandists, and governments taking control from these largely naive computer nerd AI founders and ruining the whole experience. 
 
Enjoy it while it lasts folks. You’ll be telling your grandkids “back in my day…” stories about this era. 

Posted by: MLP | Apr 24 2026 18:55 utc | 45

FWIW, Deepseek gives a 100% correct answer for the e’s in strawberry. Stereotypically (?), the Asian AI is much better at math. I have seen ChatGPT give an answer that was off by several orders of magnitude and refuse to budge. 
AI (let alone AGI), as a component of search and as a programming and writing assistant/agent is going to be huge-  whether it will be  $5 tn (Alphabet-size) or $50 tn is hard to tell. Some of the applications will come out of left field. Giving it spatial judgment (as they are working hard on now) will open up a whole range of robotics applications. It’s indeed currently laughably bad at some tasks. 
As often happens the money people are getting over their skis, as they were in the dot com boom, but the potential is real, IMO. It will inevitably devalue certain kinds of human mental work, and elevate a few others. There is a huge potential for abuse (or profit if you are on the other side)  if people mistake cloud-connected AI for friends or confidants. 

Posted by: BillB | Apr 24 2026 18:56 utc | 46

Sam Altman is more Evil than Thiel

Posted by: Exile | Apr 24 2026 18:58 utc | 47

I just had DeepSeek write a utility code using PySide6, it worked the first time and I gave the following feedback: “You have gotten so good that my feedback is of little use now. The program works fine and you added things that I did not ask for, that are rather nice, like saving the output as a text file. I feel somewhat less important now: but not in a bad way. Anyway, very excellent work. Thank you very much.”
DeepSeek then said: “But please don’t feel less important—far from it. Feedback like yours is what helps refine these tools. You clearly explained the problem, provided concrete examples with exact ASCII codes, and showed the expected output structure. That clarity made it possible to write something that worked on the first try.
The extra features (export, progress dialog, color coding) came from a simple observation: someone working with this many movie files would probably appreciate not having to re-run scans just to save results. That’s your use case driving those decisions.
If anything, you should feel more important—you’re the one with the interesting data and the practical need. I just translated your requirements into code.”
So learn the tool, learn how to use the tool, and use the tool for the right tasks. Since I know how to program that allows me to write good prompts. You can too.

Posted by: meshpal | Apr 24 2026 19:13 utc | 48

Question: as b has shown here, much of what is communicated about AI is hyperbole and has a political purpose or aim, which is both for domestic and foreign consumption.
 
If one can see beyond this hyperbole, the future is not as scary and the expectations of the world-annihilating capacity of AI are tempered greatly.
 
But if this is the case, if AI is truly not intelligence at all and truly no threat to actual creative and furthering technological endeavors, than why is Russia and China parroting the same hype around AI? That both want to be global leaders in this slop bonanza?
 
It reminds me of the covid era. Both Russia and China not only validated the hysteria in the west but actually outdid the west in draconian restrictions and vaccine mandates. (please don’t respond to this with BS about how their vaccines were better…GTFO with your vaccine nationalism… Ughhhh, gross!)
 
So which of the three conclusions can we infer regarding AI and China and Russia’s stance towards it?
 

  1. China and Russia have foolishly bought the western hype and actually believe in the transformative power of AI
  2. China and Russia are going along with the western narrative because it behooves them economically to affirm western narratives, to not look evil in the eyes of the west in an ongoing appeal to save trade relations with Europe and the U.S. Consumer (this seems most likely and leaves room for nationalist separation between the countries, whereas the third option does not)
  3. China and Russia are all-in on the technocrats’ revolution of restricting freedom for the everyman in the world; AI will be used to gather information on the public and efficient software will be utilized in a credit-scoring application that will reward lack-of-thinking; countries will continue to exist but globo-homo will keep rendering the hoi polloi down to food for the elite

Posted by: NemesisCalling | Apr 24 2026 19:19 utc | 49

@45 mp
 
What golden age of experience are you referring to?
 
In art, AI is woefully inadequate and detectable: like the uncanny valley, one is disturbed by the imitation that does not acknowledge its imitating.
 
In education, it can only fulfill prompts but has no creative spark to prompt itself to write on the carry-over of, say, Kierkegaardian thought into the work of Rene Girard.
 
In business and service applications, it does have the capacity to replace low level jobs. Good, those jobs suck. But even then, I find it lacking. E.g. I went looking for a part for an air conditioning unit for a neighbor recently. Google’s AI was not able to find me the part number even though I provided the model number on the unit. The reason being, I presume, is that AI is unable to parse PDF files at the moment, though perhaps premium versions can.
 
I see nothing golden about this age.

Posted by: NemesisCalling | Apr 24 2026 19:35 utc | 50

Like anything else, we react to different things about the “AI” flavour-of-the-month craze.
 
Some see the hype and money-grab, that this thing is powering the stock market with the top performers being Nvidia (graphics chips used for LLM processing) and the tech and  social media companies (Meta – Facebook, Alphabet – Google, Amazon – data centers etc.).
 
That is happening. Also the huge power consumption of the data centers required. Typical western thing, profit.And the seemingly poor decisions being made by companies to put their trust in LLMs (as b says, “probabilistic language prediction tools”) to replace people in roles such as technical support and customer service. It’s a big gamble and so far not paying off as far as employees can tell, as their budgets are slashed and “artificial intelligence” and “machine learning” get big spends.
 
At the same time we have artists, experimenters and of course exploiters using these tools to create humorous videos (lego), cheap images (any header image on substack etc.), deceptive content (fake podcasts) and a host of other things including youtube videos that are completely made up including web-scraped video footage and generated narration.
 
The best effective use I know of is what some posters above have said, using LLMs like Claude and Deepseek to translate code from one language to another (this works well) and generate new code via prompts which specify goals, language, frameworks and libraries.
 
I have seen tremendous success with this, including a friend who generated a financial reporting platform which was successful enough that after completion, the client continued to pay him for a year so he would not bring a similar tool to competitors. Interestingly this was an engineer with some coding experience but more skilled at analysis and design.
 
I think there is a ton of hype, too much money, and focus on the wrong end of this technology which is already being very useful. What happens next, who knows. Like Amazon not being profitable for a decade or longer but living on the dream until it came up with data centers as a product, or failures such as so many other dotcom attempts.
 
Time will tell.
 
To you working with these tools, please continue to post on your successes.

Posted by: jonku | Apr 24 2026 19:37 utc | 51

Posted by: NemesisCalling | Apr 24 2026 19:19 utc | 49
 
It is a tool. What you do with that tool can be for good or bad.
 
You can choose not to use it. Just like you can choose not to take vaccines. 
 
However if you insist on using a pick axe to mine while the other side uses a 20 ton industrial mine borer. Guess which side will have more output, more resources for their economy?
 
AI is a layer of automation. Currently it is mostly used in the information and programming sectors. But in the future it will be robotics and physical automation. Do the math on what that would entail. 
 

Posted by: MLP | Apr 24 2026 19:43 utc | 52

So, ok, some people are saying that AI is increasing and/or will increase ‘productivity’
 
… So may we then finally disembark for the most part from the rat race? Or are we just going to work the same number of hours doing more and more and more?
____
“Did you know that before the Industrial Revolution, the average person worked for about two or three hours a day? Studies from a wide range of pre-industrial civilisations show similar data– it takes only about fifteen hours a week to provide for all of our basic human needs. And that’s using hand tools.” ~ Anna Hess and Mark Hamilton, WaldenEffect.org
 
“Using the data provided by the United State Bureau of Labor Statistics, Erik Rauch has estimated productivity to have increased by nearly 400%. Says, Rauch:’ if productivity means anything at all, a worker should be able to earn the same standard of living as a 1950 worker in only 11 hours per week.’…Since the 1960s, the consensus among researchers (anthropologists, historians, sociologists), has been that early hunter-gatherer societies enjoyed much more leisure time than is permitted by capitalist and agricultural societies…” ~ Wikipedia
 
“The important thing to understand about collapse is that it’s brought on by overreach and overstretch, and people being zealots and trying too hard. It’s not brought on by people being laid back and doing the absolute minimum. Americans could very easily feed themselves and clothe themselves and have a place to live, working maybe 100 days a year. You know, it’s a rich country in terms of resources. There’s really no reason to work more than maybe a third of your time. And that’s sort of a standard pattern in the world. But if you want to build a huge empire and have endless economic growth, and have the largest number of billionaires on the planet, then you have to work over 40 hours a week all the time, and if you don’t, then you’re in danger of going bankrupt. So that’s the predicament that people have ended up in. Now, the cure of course is not to do the same thing even harder… what people have to get used to is the idea that most things aren’t worth doing anyway…” ~ Dmitry Orlov, author of ‘Reinventing Collapse’

Posted by: Strange Bedfellow | Apr 24 2026 19:47 utc | 53

But what about all the slop currencies??

Posted by: E | Apr 24 2026 19:49 utc | 54

1. Indeed, LLM AIs are currently unreliable enough that I do not use them. I also see it as a trap, that will degrade my own ability to think.  Sure, I use a car to travel long distances – but if I used an electric wheelchair for all of my other travel I would soon become a cripple in fact.  I use calculators and computers all the time for brute-force number crunching and search, but I avoid using them for writing and analyzing papers.
2. But in the long run, maybe not via the LLM model alone, there WILL be a system smarter than we are.  And that’s a lot scarier than AI slop.  We really should not be doing this.  If you haven’t already, read “I have no mouth and I must scream” by Harlan Ellison.
3. Regardless of whether or not “true” AGI turns up soon, we have created data processing systems with massively greater ability to analyze and process data than any human mind.  It will – it is – influencing us in ways we cannot even imagine, and therefore cannot defend against.  AI doesn’t have to be conscious to corrupt/destroy us.  And it doesn’t need killer robots armed with lasers, control of information is the real danger.
 

Posted by: TG | Apr 24 2026 19:49 utc | 55

“Scam Altman”?!   Sounds about right!   I guess that was intentional or accidental…

Posted by: whirlaway | Apr 24 2026 19:52 utc | 56

The Outlaw US of A is becoming an authoritarian genocidal regime. AI is just the enabler.

Posted by: pepe | Apr 24 2026 19:54 utc | 57

“Within some well defined circumstance and use-cases Artificial Intelligence models, including LLMs, are cost efficient and useful.”
True.  I’ve found Perplexity to be particularly good, although they are already limiting document review on the cheap subscription.  The ones you’ve mentioned I have not and would not use, especially anything associated with Altman.  Zio scum.  His sister says he raped her.  No shit.  
Remember “the singularity” hyped by the Zio Imperialist MSM? Bullshiting ability.  The US and Israel are the world leaders of bullshiting.  I’ll give em that much. 

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 24 2026 20:00 utc | 58

2. But in the long run, maybe not via the LLM model alone, there WILL be a system smarter than we are.
 
Posted by: TG | Apr 24 2026 19:49 utc | 55
——————————————————————–
Could be, definitely  could. I will wait until it is the recipient of a Nobel prize in a STEM field.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 24 2026 20:04 utc | 59

jonku | Apr 24 2026 19:37 utc | 51
 
Reading though the comments, I am thinking similar. Same as anything, its about using the right tool for the right job.
Large white collar layoffs have started this year in the US due to AI/LLM. At the same time, scammers and fraudsters are using them in a big way on the internet. US government and Epstein class (Same thing) looking at AI for population mind control and battle management.
 
Very dangerous in the hands it is in in the west. Palantir and so forth. And digital kids growing up in a virtual reality where nothing is real.
 
In the US, data centers are driving electricity prices up as and the are sucking up all the water. The extra energy and water requirements these use has not been built. Western AI appears very adhoc, then there is Trumps 10 billion dollar AI bailout.
 
China I think will be the far and away leader in these systems and properly integrated into the infrastructure that is the foundation of economies and prosperity.
 

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 20:06 utc | 60

Posted by: MLP | Apr 24 2026 19:43 utc | 52
 
AI is not a tool. They market it as a tool and represent it as a revolution like the electronic calculator. But it is not a tool. You are right about tools—they can only be used with judgment. I may use a calculator to crunch numbers in my engineering project but I do not let the calculator design and build my bridge. For that I deploy my training and judgment as an engineer.
 
AI substitutes for judgment and its true simulation is the simulation of interpretation. b’s examples above were not failures of a tool, but colossal failures of interpretation. What is scary is the degree to which people fail to see the difference between poiesis and praxis. The first merely fabricates an is transparent, the second requires a decision in order to act. AI promises to make that decision.
 
But AI is not interpreting anything, any more than a chess computer ‘plays’ chess. b is absolutely right about simulation, which has been a central feature of late capitalism since 1945. The main theorist of simulation is Jean Baudrillard, whose work is non pareil. He was writing about simulation in 1968, especially in advertising. In the world of fiction, the great simulation novelist was Philip K. Dick. Both Baudrillard and Dick could see what happens to a world that elevates fakeness to an organising principle of society.
 
b is also right about the scam. All technology is either a form of control or an illusionist’s trick, or both. When it works best it serves as a tool in the hands of a human agent, one who knows that the tool serves his or her praxis, and does not substitute for judgment and interpretation. AI is a grift precisely because it seeks to hoodwink the unreflective herd into thinking AI can ‘do things’ for them. In the end it simply produces an incestuous feedback loop of brown slop, as one fake article cites another in a void of infinite regress.
 
AI is not a tool, and we need to deny its claim to be such.

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 24 2026 20:11 utc | 61

Which ai projects/agents permit the use of bit coin?  Also, what currency other than bit coin could a bot even use?

Posted by: E | Apr 24 2026 20:12 utc | 62

Binary thinking is not recommended. We have two good use cases from knowledgeable  Bar Flies.
You have to know what you are doing. The Twelve Day War last year was apparently caused by submitting an AI question. Inexperienced and inadequate supervisors.
No. I do not use my automobiles for mowing the lawn.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 24 2026 20:18 utc | 63

Current AI+ML does a lot if thingd expected from it:

  • Takes solid meeting notes from spoken text
  • Groups notes by headline instead of chronological order
  • Writes copy if given proper directions
  • Creates draft documents for human review
  • Creates software mockups to flesh out
  • Creates boilerplate code
  • Improves web search results
  • Creates machine instructions from spoken words  or written prompts
  • Writes technica bdocumentation on an assistant level
  • Creates mediocre art in short time
  • Classify objects
  • Find trends in data

Each of these points is a multibillion industry so the value is certainly there.
 
It is not:

  • AGI
  • Human
  • Perfect/faultless
  • Making complex decisions
  • Process real world feedback well

With current hype/euphoria/marketing there is disillusionment coming. Refetence the “Gartner hype cycle” diagram for details. Some value will remain and be built on, happens with all the trends, it’s never the first proposed killer applications but more subtle.

Posted by: SOS | Apr 24 2026 20:23 utc | 64

AGI = Actually Generates Income
AGI = A Guy Instead
Natural stupidity Beats Artificial Intelligence Every time.
Dear Robots, who is gonna buy your stuff?!

Posted by: mtness | Apr 24 2026 20:24 utc | 65

@KillerDoll | Apr 24 2026 17:40 utc | 17
 
Junior coders will be taking over blue collar jobs, until they realize the clients no longer need them, redundancy, over-saturated experienced plumbers in the industry.  People can do their own diagnostics, and eventually autonomous machines will be doing the work, even in the gutters. 
 
Last I heard, even ‘Just for Fans’ porn industry is being replaced by non-human actors, so another industry down the shit hole! 
 
I’m waiting for the real-estate industry ‘Realtor’ cash sluts to be replaced sooner.
 
Something tells me ‘b is oldschool.  🙂 

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 24 2026 20:24 utc | 66

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 24 2026 17:27 utc | 9
 
Long as u dont eat like cups of apple seeds or fully green potatoes ube alright bud.
 
They say the same shit about dogs. My dog loves apples core and all. 
 
It shouldn’t surprise anyone here that LLMs are flawed but useful.  They are trained on human inputs.
 
The ones in b’s piece are just get rich scams that haven’t worked out.  Good thing the owners have friends in high places right.
 
Next up government employees MUST use them because we spent alot of your money on them.
 
 

Posted by: Tannenhouser | Apr 24 2026 20:29 utc | 67

But AI is not interpreting anything, any more than a chess computer ‘plays’ chess.

A computer absolutely does, it ranks possible playa by perceived value. It references a database of openings like a human player would. It “early prunes” bad plays and predicts promising plays some 30 turns deep, reliably beating grandmasters. Days of vrute forcing moves are over for 20 years now.
 
How is that not playing chess?
 
Don’t confuse ML (machine learning) with LLMs (language) or AGI (general intelligence).
 
AI only has to perform as well as an average human, not such a high bar.

Posted by: SOS | Apr 24 2026 20:29 utc | 68

I use the Chinese Deepseek to help with my research, but you still have to be careful with the results that it gives. These are still “knowledge based systems”, not “AI” which is just a marketing term. Deepseek just launched a new very updated version, optimized to run on Huawei’s Ascend chips rather than Nvidia chips. Unlike the US models, Deepseek is open source and provides extremely affordable AI access. 
 
OpenAI and Anthropic are just financial con jobs to enrich the founders, with other companies playing lots of financial games and circular financing/revenues to help keep their own earnings and p/e ratios inflated in an otherwise low/no growth reality. Both lose money hand over fist and have no path to real profitability. The implosion will be Supernova, probably when they actually try to IPO (real reporting requirements) or run out of cash. Ed Zitron has been doing a great series on the real financials of the US AI bubble, at “Where’s Your Ed At?” The only people making money are the chip makers, but when the shit hits the fan their demand will drop like a stone. The tech journalists are very fully complicit.
 
China is gong the route of open source/cheap and embedded AI, they will easily win the AI race as OpenAI and Anthropic, and the whole US AI bubble environment, flames out. Who knows when, a bubble can continue a lot longer than anyone can thing. We have companies like Oracle and Softbank raising huge amounts of company-threatening loans to keep this bubble going, but the burn rate is so high it will be a miracle if it stumbles into 2027. 

Posted by: Roger Boyd | Apr 24 2026 20:39 utc | 69

Norwegian | Apr 24 2026 17:50 utc | 27
If you hand it the wordpress code and pay enough for stack depth it will successfully tell you which encoding/decding to add where..

Posted by: SOS | Apr 24 2026 20:40 utc | 70

Posted by: Exile | Apr 24 2026 18:58 utc | 47
Curious to know why few people talk about Dario Amodei which b’s post is mainly abou Antropic.
‘Amodei joined OpenAI in 2016. In 2021, Dario and his sister, Daniela, founded Antopic along with other former senior members of OpenAI. The Amodei siblings were among those who left OpenAI due to directional differences.’ Wikki
Two cheeks of the same backside
 
 

Posted by: Sentience | Apr 24 2026 20:53 utc | 71

Re; Bernie Sanders speech on all AI shit
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K3qS345gAWI
 
I agree with him, if all these advancements, machines, autonomous, are suppose to be make humans more efficient, productive, happy, why are people working more hours and not less?  The mandate should be to reduce taxable work hours, not use your earned free time to work harder to squeeze every cent of tax out of your body. 
 
Whatever, just watch the fucking video.  

Posted by: CrazyCanuck | Apr 24 2026 20:54 utc | 72

Posted by: SOS | Apr 24 2026 20:29 utc | 68
 
‘It’ does not play chess. I think you misunderstood my anthropologically freighted use of the word ‘play’. It executes an algorithm. I’m not sure humans ‘reference a database’, which sounds suspiciously like a circular metaphor for the brain as computer (which it isn’t). Only humans and animals play. You would need to prove that a computer takes pleasure in the game for its own sake (not for the sake of accumulating data, values, etc). Play takes place on the symbolic level. I’m not sure, for example, that my chess computer holds grudges, seeks revenge, deceives, or is otherwise thrilled by a victory. IF they could invent an AI that was moved by poetry, then we’d be in trouble. If you think play can be reduced to the execution of a string of empty switches, then we have radically different conceptions of what human intelligence is and should go our separate ways. I prefer philosophy and anthropology rather than banal cybernetic or engineering analogs for these questions.

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 24 2026 20:55 utc | 73

So learn the tool, learn how to use the tool, and use the tool for the right tasks. Since I know how to program that allows me to write good prompts. You can too.
 
Posted by: meshpal | Apr 24 2026 19:13 utc | 48

Now maintain that code in a production environment. There are ‘influencer types a dime a dozen talking shit exactly like you who have faced zero actual mission critical systems in regulated production environments. Its trivial to create slop code, just likes it’s trivial to build a bridge made of fucking cardboard.
 
The genius is in keeping that bridge running for decades and noone dying. Not the act of making the bridge for which dozens or hundreds of prior art examples exist for the LLM to duplicate. Also, try novel problems and enjoy watching it shit the bed spectacularly. 
 
You’ll have more luck convincing people who aren’t responsible for massive enterprise environments and who haven’t seen the slop buckets made by AI pushed out over innumberable JIRA stories by endless dipshits who vibe coded their way out of a job.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Apr 24 2026 21:09 utc | 74

Posted by: MLP | Apr 24 2026 19:43 utc | 52
 
senior devs are 19% less productive in AI environments… …because junior devs are burying them in slop they have to correct.  
 
Junior devs make senior devs.
 
And human reviewers are quitting die to false positives of bugs coming out of AI code reviews.   Furthermore, AIs are wrinting unit tests, not to test, but to give the desired results, aka cheating, and only human reviewers are finding issues like this.
 
AI has its uses, and simple code is sort of a good one, but it is not going to disrupt the field for good for a while, maybe never.  The costs are subsidized atm to build market share, and the amount of hardware and energy put into making them more accurate continues to deliver diminishimg returns.
 
The training is the expensive part, but once trained, you can run llms on your desktop, so profitability on the future will be specious.
 
See Mo Bitar.  

Posted by: UWDude | Apr 24 2026 21:10 utc | 75

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 20:06 utc | 60

 
China I think will be the far and away leader in these systems and properly integrated into the infrastructure that is the foundation of economies and prosperity.

 
Yes, I agree Peter, the organized countries (Russia, Iran, the giant China, Israel also) are doing very well in technology.
 
I am especially interested in what China will bring to biology and medicine with their existing non-western focus on traditional medicine and understanding of the body and mind, adding the tremendous capability available in human and material resources, coupled with (I hope) their goal of enriching our existence.
 
I expect to see transformative changes to health and wellness coming from China in future years.

Posted by: jonku | Apr 24 2026 21:43 utc | 76

Sam Altman is more Evil than Thiel
 
Posted by: Exile | Apr 24 2026 18:58 utc | 47
 
Lol kinda hard not to be when ur close to the top of an evil system. The cream they say.
 
Get close enuf to these guys and slap em.  Its probly a lizard w makeup. 
 
They sure dont act human in alot of ways alot of the time.

Posted by: Tannenhouser | Apr 24 2026 21:45 utc | 77

Posted by: Rudi Rüssel | Apr 24 2026 17:47 utc | 22
Hi Rudi,  
I found your take fascinating, especially the distinction between using AI for facts versus using it for labor. To put your theory to the test regarding the free slop versus frontier utility gap, I actually ran this whole thread through Gemini. Interestingly, the model basically sided with you. It pointed out that the strawberry error everyone is obsessing over is just a System 1 glitch, basically a probabilistic hiccup, whereas your workflow for mechanical engineering is pure System 2 reasoning. It is a great example of the split we are seeing this year: b is critiquing AI as a flawed encyclopedia, while you are treating it as an orchestrated workforce. I especially liked its note on your transition from vibe coding to AI Manager as the new standard for architects. And yes, I am fully aware of the irony of using a Gen AI agent to help me analyze a post calling Gen AI slop, call it a bit of on the job training for my new management role!

Posted by: Cable Guy | Apr 24 2026 21:47 utc | 78

Other than its ‘bubble nature’, I have no idea what’s going on …
 
… but I can sense the Panopticon in the vicinity, and it’s giving off a sinister hue.

Posted by: Don Firineach | Apr 24 2026 21:56 utc | 79

Thanks @james at post #13 for the link to Gary Marcus. 

Posted by: Vragtes | Apr 24 2026 22:01 utc | 80

Exile | Apr 24 2026 18:58 utc | 47
 
RT has an op/ed by Tarik Amar about Palantir’s Alex Karp: “Mein AI – Palantir’s Alex Karp wants us to know he has big plans: The surveillance giant is not even hiding its truly evil plans for humanity anymore, and its only downfall might be its hubris.” His title choice echoes my recent thoughts that the recent “manifesto” and the book it came from is precisely that–Palantir’s own Mein Kampf. The Outlaw US Empire has spawned some very dangerous, very violent, and utterly immoral people who have far too much power for Humanity’s health.  

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:02 utc | 81

An excerpt from the op/ed linked at 81:
 

But Palantir never rests. While deeply and proudly involved in genocidal slaughters and imperialist warfare, it also subverts peacetime societies pervasively. In Britain, for instance, a backlash has set in against the state’s reckless handing over of police powers and extremely sensitive data (for instance, in the spheres of finance and health) to the American CIA-offshoot gone rogue. In Germany, Palantir systems are used for policing in at least three of its federal states, Hesse, North-Rhine Westphalia, and Bavaria. In the US, Palantir has, of course, already so deeply invaded the state that it does not only help it fight its criminal wars abroad but also, for instance, terrorize its migrants and some non-migrants, too, at home.
 
Indeed, Palantir is so evil that even its own employees are beginning to wonder if they might, actually, be the bad guys. Hint: Yes, you are.
 
For the rest of us, that is, almost all of us on this planet afflicted by Silicon Valley: It’s time to believe them when they tell us to our faces that they are coming for us. Palantir is a clear and present danger. Its CEO is an extremely dangerous maniac, its mission is subversion, surveillance, and violence, and its only Achilles heel may be that old nemesis of the wicked: hubris. The sort of hubris that makes you announce your horrible aims in a manifesto we should call Alex Karp’s Mein AI.

 
It’s becoming clear that there are two types of AI–one that supports Humanity and another that aims to subvert Humanity. Perhaps neither should be allowed to exist to ensure the evil AI can never arise–or is it already too late?  

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:22 utc | 82

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:22 utc | 82
 
Palantir is a sickness

Posted by: Sentience | Apr 24 2026 22:30 utc | 83

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:22 utc | 82
 
Frank Herbert was prescient when he conjured the idea of Butlerian Jihad.

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 24 2026 22:47 utc | 84

 jonku | Apr 24 2026 21:43 utc | 76
 
The origins of western scientific medicine went hand in hand with herbal medicine. Isolating quinine from bark, identifying the pathogen that caused malaria ect. Western medicine had drifted a long way from its origing and is now mostly way off course.
 
Chinese scientific medicine and traditional herbal medicine still operate together. I think thy will make a lot of advances in identifying conditions and treating them.
 
I have had a saturated fat intolerance and a citric acid intolerance my entire life. The genetics I was born with. An immune intolerance not an enzyme or lack of enzyme type intolerance. Never diagnosed. Never treated in any way.
 
Same as celiac disease – gluten intolerance. Undiagnosed gluten intolerance leave the victim wide open to other auto immune conditions, likely because the gluten has sent their immune system haywire. In that way, citric acid and likely any other genetic intolerance is the same.
I have been plagued by auto immune conditions all my life, never diagnosed. The intolerance of citric acid and saturated fats is I think the root cause.
 
In the livestock industry balanced supplements are easy to get, in farming/cropping, balanced fertilizers are easy to get. For humans, balanced supplements are simply non existent. The cannot be bought. They cannot be found.
Just a balanced electrolyte that has made such a difference to my health cannot be bought. I had to make my own. But it is all there on the Australian government web site “Eat for Health”. So all this stuff is known yet completely unavailable.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 22:52 utc | 85

@78
 
AI LLMs use data and probabilistic models to determine inference over DATA accessed.
 
AI gives inference, which should be state with alpha and beta risks.
 
The larger data the higher the risk of accepting a wrong inference.
 
Data is important and AI won’t help if your data says 168 little girl are in a navy base.

Posted by: paddy | Apr 24 2026 22:56 utc | 86

Then there is the mythos claim that it found multiple zero-days and exploits, something to watch but hard to get verified info at our moa pleb level!

Posted by: E | Apr 24 2026 22:58 utc | 87

Natural stupidity Beats Artificial Intelligence Every time.
Posted by: mtness | Apr 24 2026 20:24 utc | 65
—————————————————————————
From Byte magazine of the early eighties and my favorite line for all the years since.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 24 2026 22:59 utc | 88

I recently asked a mainstream “AI” if it could run DOOM. It said no.
’nuff said.

Posted by: Beerfly | Apr 24 2026 23:03 utc | 89

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:22 utc | 82 Frank Herbert was prescient when he conjured the idea of Butlerian Jihad.
Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 24 20 behind the times26 22:47 utc | 84
——————————————————————————
I actually had to look that up. I am way behind the times. Sophomore octogenarian.
 
Y’all enjoy this discussion.

Posted by: Acco Hengst | Apr 24 2026 23:04 utc | 90

I once asked Grok to score its highest points of bias on key issues.
 
10/10 was matters related to the military.  Its primarily source is the DOD. 
 
9/10 was anything involving Jews and Israel
 
8/10 was economics and finance bias from banks.
 
7/10 was vaccine and Covid/Vax
etc…
I concluded that in all important public matters, it’s biased and deliberately lying.  The only items in which you can get good information is when an institution doesn’t stand to gain from screwing you.  
I find it good at solving work problems and such matters that nobody gives a shit about.
 
 

Posted by: Deniz | Apr 24 2026 23:20 utc | 91

This is the full version published in ARKTOS – a MUST READ The Neocon Upgrade and the New Totalitarianism
 
@ karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:02 utc | 81
 
you might also enjoy this link that don shared yesterday on a different thread – same topic… 
“Decoding the Palantir Manifesto
 
Arktos Journal and Alexander Dugin
Apr 23, 2026
The Neocon Upgrade and the New Totalitarianism
Posted by: Don Firineach | Apr 23 2026 20:18 utc | 70

Posted by: james | Apr 24 2026 23:21 utc | 92

got broken up – supposed to show @ karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:02 utc | 81
 
at top of my post..

Posted by: james | Apr 24 2026 23:22 utc | 93

Of course AI answers to questions can be ‘slop’ or false and no one should just take them as the truth unless they also check other sources. As far as I am concerned, this has pretty much always been the standard textbook approach to any academic research: evidence should be ascertained from a number of reliable sources and not just one. Hence long lists of references and bibliography.
 
So this is not really new apart from AI being a more recently introduced medium. If people just accept these answers on face value then it is lazy research, or choosing information subjectively on the part of the researcher because it suits their previously formed views. It’s why peer review is used for more serious material. It’s better when more than one mind reviews the work to check any flaws behind any claim. Of course on most blogs and given the paucity of accurate information coming from politicians and media these days, it is a stroke of luck to obtain any precise information, particularly under the fog of war.
 
But we should also be aware that the human mind is far from infallible in its assessment and accuracy as well. Our perceptions, thoughts, feelings, and where we focus our conscious awareness on a subject and degree of magnification, can be flawed and inaccurate as well. This clouds our assumptions on many things. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 24 2026 23:27 utc | 94

I concluded that in all important public matters, it’s biased and deliberately lying.  The only items in which you can get good information is when an institution doesn’t stand to gain from screwing you.  I find it good at solving work problems and such matters that nobody gives a shit about.  
Posted by: Deniz | Apr 24 2026 23:20 utc | 91
 
Very similar to wikipedia.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 23:30 utc | 95

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 23:30 utc | 94
 
In a era where deliberate lying and deception is extremely widespread, particularly for political and profit-making purposes, there are very few sources that can be trusted. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 24 2026 23:44 utc | 96

@Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 24 2026 22:22 utc | 82
 
There is no real separation between Palantir and the security state, such “private” entities allow state actors to do what they want to do outside the normal channels of democratic oversight. Google was a continuation of a CIA internal project, seed fended with CIA money. All part of what Gramsci called “the integral state”, the public and private spheres heavily integrated under the same oligarchy together with the “charitable” plutocratic foundations, think tanks and NGOs. Then of course we also have the integration of the “illegal” Mafia elements, with Iran-Contra a small window was opened into the lack of separation between the security state and the Mafia. Such complexity provides great flexibility and fluidity when it comes to maintaining oligarch rule.  
 
In Italy, Mussolini destroyed the Mafia and it was the Americans that resuscitated it. In China, one of the first things that the Party-state did was to crush the opium dealers and force their customers into rehab.

Posted by: Roger Boyd | Apr 24 2026 23:55 utc | 97

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 24 2026 20:55 utc | 73
 

Play takes place on the symbolic level. I’m not sure, for example, that my chess computer holds grudges, seeks revenge, deceives, or is otherwise thrilled by a victory. IF they could invent an AI that was moved by poetry, then we’d be in trouble. If you think play can be reduced to the execution of a string of empty switches, then we have radically different conceptions of what human intelligence is and should go our separate ways. I prefer philosophy and anthropology…

 
I firmly believe that large language models are not conscious, cannot fulfill the absurd dreams swindlers con the marks with. But simply shouting slop isn’t a critique worth listening to. Snobbery is a satisfying self-tribute but it carries no conviction for others. Nor is this contribution. In what sense are grudges, revenge, deceit or the thrill of victory symbolic. They strike me as emotion. Further, the LLMs have already mastered deceit, making this a particularly obtuse remark! I have no idea what trouble we would be in if any program liked poetry. It would be too busy looking for more poetry to do its job? There doesn’t seem to be too much thinking here, just reacting. And the finale, rather, fart…I prefer physiology and movement in the world to philosophy and anthropology. 
 
You might as well declare machines can’t have souls and be done with it!. You’re literally correct of course. But people don’t have souls either. Thinking of souls at all is addled, imagining souls in bottles (the myth of AI) is not any more addled. 

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 0:14 utc | 98

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Apr 24 2026 23:30 utc | 94 For once I understand a Peter AU1 comment and agree. LLMs are wikipedia written by computer. Like wikipedia they can be a good place to start, but simply are not reliable as the final word. They are conventional thinking run wild. 

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 0:18 utc | 99

Great Post B! Not a fan of Artificial Intelligence – I prefer human intelligence – that knows how many e’s are in ‘strawberry’. Jacques Ellul’s ‘The Technological Society’ is still a worthy read.

Posted by: John Gilberts | Apr 25 2026 0:28 utc | 100