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

I can’t completely dismiss that AI might have some use to some. For example, a friend of mine who works in investment management said it has helped him.
 
But as a professor and historian, I see no use for it at all. Digitization of resources has already made all the written information accessible that has already been unearthed, and AI can’t do anything for what is not yet available. It does, however, menace research by threatening to dump larger amounts of text on us.
 
And I really hate AI-speak. Maybe this doesn’t come from all forms of it, but what I have experienced always has this cloying, ingratiating tone that makes me want to slap it in the face, if it had a face. One of my co-instructors said AI-speak sounds like advertising. And in fact, this is like what Jerry Mander in his book Four Arguments for the  Elimination of Television observed. Working as an advertising exec in California for 15 years, Mander concluded that television was only good for selling things. And that covers a lot of what AI may do with language as well.
 
Several commenters here have pointed out that formerly people had less work to do because none of this technological stuff existed. And indeed, there is a lot it can never do. Human existence is actually quite simple: Humans are consciousness realized in or moving through time. Neither consciousness nor time is analyzable, both being separately indivisible, with time existing only as a moment, the past and future both being inaccessible and for all worldly purposes non-existent. So we do not and cannot know what we are, and AI being based on us cannot either. We live in a box with impenetrable walls and cannot ever know with rational knowledge what, if anything, lies beyond them, and neither can AI.

Posted by: Cabe | Apr 25 2026 0:39 utc | 101

Do not trust AI. EVER. Ask yourself who controls/writes the AI, and why they offer you that “service” for “free”. That should explain everything. The results are manipualted to brainwash you, just like the main stream media which is quickly exposing itself as liars and losing their influence.
I recently asked an AI about whether Australia is under control of a foreign corporation(s) and by force. It said no, initially. Then after asking the right questions and conrnering it (about 77 pages), it finally confessed that Australia IS under foreign corporate occupation by force. IT LIES TO YOU by design. NEVER TRUST IT.
 

Posted by: Rob | Apr 25 2026 0:47 utc | 102

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 0:18 utc | 98
 
Wikipedia started off with no credibility in university circles* but has since gained some trust. Articles that are disputed usually are clearly marked as such, and so it is constantly being modified. Having said that, if information is taken from there for more accurate work than a blog, the references linked to claims (numbered and at the bottom of the entry) all need to be checked. Sometimes they are not very good, vague, or from dubious sources like newspapers. 
 
*Not that we can even trust universities and academics these days. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 0:59 utc | 103

– I know there was an experiment where AI was tested by lawyers to write a defense argument for a client of them. And it turned out to be “boilerplate” nonsense. The laywers read the defense and knew that they themselves could do much better. So, they ditched AI all together (for the time being) and wrote the defense themselves.

Posted by: WMG | Apr 25 2026 1:02 utc | 104

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 0:14 utc | 97
 
Which amounts to saying because I disagree you are wrong. What an open mind you have (in addition to being a rude SOB).

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 25 2026 1:12 utc | 105

At the speed AI has progressed it is possible to see that in 10 years time not many will dispute its accuracy. I can already see it replacing doctors and many other professionals with still some human overseeing going on.  Having said that, it is unreliable for research purposes at the moment as the article claims, and I have often argued with its against its use compared to human minds. Will it make us lose some faculties that our brains are currently using?  Energy use is currently a big problem as well. The amount of energy that the human brain uses to think is literally peanuts compared to AI.
 
Personally I wish we did not rush into these sorts of rapid technological changes and that we think the potential consequences through a lot more, but those who are pushing this will probably get their way, and a lot of that will be about profit$$$, and not sensible reasoning of advantages verses disadvantages.
 
But I cannot see it fading away nor concerns about employment being taken seriously by those in powerful positions. Inline with such things as computers, internet, robotics, mechanized industrialization, aviation, motor cars, and steam trains replacing horses, I cannot see much to stop how these changes are introduces and then integrated into the human way of life, whether they prove to be better or worse. It’s also clear that some forms of technological and profit making change are actually making things worse and less efficient than they ever were before. Enshitification of the internet is one example. 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 1:22 utc | 106

At the speed AI has progressed it is possible to see that in 10 years time not many will dispute its accuracy. I can already see it replacing doctors and many other professionals with still some human overseeing going on.
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 1:22 utc | 105
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No. Oh gawd no! Not medicine! That’s the last place you should want “AI” to be used!
 
For computer programming and other very limited use cases it’s definitely useful; I’ve read accounts of developers using LLMs to build complex applications from scratch by giving prompts, evaluating the results and resubmitting them.
 
That kind of use is definitely in “AI”‘s wheelhouse.
Diagnosing human (or even animal) ailments is not.
 
If medicine is ever taken over by “AI”, please just take me out to the woods and shoot me.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 3:10 utc | 107

Roger Boyd | Apr 24 2026 23:55 utc | 96
 
Thanks for your reply. The USG has worked directly with organized crime for over 100 years and even longer at municipal levels. Hudson tells a tale of being told the USG wanted to be the world’s money launderer, which makes total sense for an Outlaw Empire. 

Posted by: karlof1 | Apr 25 2026 4:06 utc | 108

🇺🇸 is building new AI data centers powered by aging electrical infrastructure, parts of which haven’t been maintained in decades because doing so isn’t profitable. Profit is the Alpha and Omega to corporations, after all. I’ve heard that it only takes the failure, or sabotage, of nine key substations to plunge most of 🇺🇸 and 🇨🇦 into darkness.

Posted by: 蒸発森 | Apr 25 2026 4:17 utc | 109

Posted by: Sean | Apr 24 2026 17:30 utc | 12
 
“Get figma and get a few agents to design your app. Months of work done in minutes.A very silly post missing the point…”
 
I just tried Figma – the free three day option.
 
Requirements:
Very simple desktop app – MVVM pattern, Direct Injection, WPF and Community Toolkit MVVM (to make it easier).
Small widget like window with two user entered dates and ‘days to go’ display field.
Settings window for user to enter dates and xy cordinates for postioning – all saved to json.
Wrote out the specs and ran them through AI so it was structered as a suitable technical prompt for Figma.
 
Result-
Only supports web applications. It did provide the project structure with the necessary code. Copy & paste into Visual Studio.
 
Generated numerous errors@ 35  in 600 lines of source code (119 lines of executable code).
There were a number of very basic errors. I am a below average programmer, but managed to spot them straight away.
It completely left out the user access to the settings.
 
Not going to bother using my free ‘three days’.
 
When I have time I will try this on Deepseek & ChatGpt and see what they throw up.
 

Posted by: Persona Non Grata | Apr 25 2026 4:31 utc | 110

@ kupkee | Apr 24 2026 18:08 utc | 34
I share your POV completely, nothing more needs to be said, your proposition closes down any possible argument; forgive me if I take your comments too far or in the wrong direction.
I write code commercially and have done for many years and the lure of AI was and is so attractive I devoted a lot of time and effort to it.  Here is a simple line I crossed:
The moment my AI generated code got to the point where I was incapable of determining whether the output was “true”, as in “capable of being depended on given the circumstances of it’s use”  then it could not be used.
A bit like someone depending on Google Maps directions without any other reference point and ending up over a cliff;  it might work just fine during every conceivable test and then under some unknowable set of circumstances take you over that cliff.
AI output becomes “magic” when it’s internal operation and considerations are unknowable and unverifiable and that’s clearly going to be the case with many potential uses where something should have been considered and was not – except in hindsight – and only some potentially catastrophic failure can generate the realisation that “something didn’t work right”.

Posted by: caliban | Apr 25 2026 4:45 utc | 111

I used DeepSeek to generate the following, for ironic purposes:
 

Yes, there is documented information and significant concern in financial circles about a “circular financing” loop among major US AI companies. Critics, including investment banks (Morgan Stanley), analysts (Morningstar), and financial regulators (the Bank of England), warn that these self-reinforcing financial arrangements can artificially inflate valuations.
 
Here is how the mechanism works and the risks it poses.
 
🔄 How the “Circular Financing” Loop Works
 
The core mechanism involves money moving in a closed loop, generating revenue that may not come from actual end customers. The main examples include:
 
· Nvidia <-> OpenAI: Nvidia invests in OpenAI, which uses the funds to buy Nvidia chips for data centers.
· Microsoft <-> OpenAI: Microsoft invests in OpenAI, which commits to spending billions on Microsoft’s Azure cloud services.
· AMD’s Equity Warrants: AMD offers significant equity stakes (warrants for ~10% of shares) to OpenAI and Meta in exchange for billions in chip purchase commitments.
· The Oracle Loop: Oracle provides cloud credits to OpenAI, which uses them to order Nvidia chips for Oracle’s data centers.
· The xAI Example: Nvidia invests in xAI, and xAI then borrows billions to purchase… Nvidia chips.
· The CoreWeave Trap: CoreWeave uses Nvidia’s funding to buy Nvidia’s chips and then rents them back to Nvidia.
 
📊 Risks and Warnings from Financial Experts
 
The widespread adoption of these deals has triggered several alarms:
 
· A “Vibe Revenue” Bubble: With massive infrastructure spending ($400 billion in 2025) vastly outpacing actual AI revenue ($60 billion), some say growth is fueled by a self-referential loop.
· Exposure and Warning: The Bank of England calls valuations “stretched” and warning of a sharp correction if expectations cool.
· Echoes of 1999: Morningstar analyst Brian Colello and others draw direct parallels, fearing this mirrors the vendor-financing that signaled the top of the Dot-com bubble.
· Cash Flow Mirage: Nvidia reported a net income of $19.3 billion but operating cash flow of just $14.5 billion—a significant gap critics say is tied to non-cash, circular pre-orders.
· Hidden Risks: Much of the leverage is in private credit markets or hidden off-balance-sheet in special purpose vehicles (SPVs), which are extremely difficult to track and could trigger a crisis if the AI boom falters.
 
The debate over whether this is a sustainable “virtuous cycle” or a speculative “bubble” remains open. If you’d like to explore any of these case studies or risk factors in more detail, feel free to ask.

I no longer do my own web searches, because DeepSeek will look at hundreds of sites and give me an averaged answer in seconds. I have to do this, because 99% of websites are now click bait AI slop, as far as I can tell. Finding pearls in all the dross is nigh-on I possible. The  internet is becoming unusable without AI, because of AI.

Posted by: Occasional poster | Apr 25 2026 5:09 utc | 112

So guess best leave AI to pick girls schools to bomb with a human being accepting the double tap for survivors and rescuers. Neat 

Posted by: Hankster | Apr 25 2026 5:19 utc | 113

By his own logic — a single failure proves permanent, uncorrectable brokenness —  every human who ever misremembered anything are mathematically proven to be unreliable for any task whatsoever. No jury should trust your testimony. No employer should trust your work. No friend should trust your promise.
 
And yet… we function. We cross-check. We use lists. We say “let me double-check that.” We build systems that account for our flaws.
 
When a human forgets or miscounts, we call it “being human.” When an AI does the exact same thing, he calls it “proof of fundamental worthlessness.” That’s not analysis. That’s prejudice wearing a lab coat. “The first principle is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest person to fool.” — Richard Feynman
 
The author has fooled himself into believing his own perfect cognition is the baseline. It isn’t. He just forgives himself for errors he condemns in machines.  Errors like not noticing his image shows the output said there were 2 x Rs.  Bzzzt, wrong. There are 3 in Strawberry. 
 
The LLM using the system of Tokens literally doesn’t “see” the individual letters unless forced to. A peer-reviewed paper presented at EMNLP 2025 (a top NLP conference) formalized this as “The Strawberry Problem” — a structural limitation of tokenization, not an uncorrectable algorithmic flaw 
The author mistakes a quirky, fixable and well known artifact of tokenization for a metaphysical proof of AI’s permanent brokenness. That’s like pointing to a calculator’s floating-point error and declaring math itself is flawed. The funniest thing of all, is that if he had bothered to ask one of the standard AI LLM apps the right question he’d have become far better informed than his readers currently are. 
Yes. I wish we could all do better than this too. One ‘Donald Trump’ is enough for one world. 

Posted by: What the Duck | Apr 25 2026 5:58 utc | 114

There is a well known youtube channel called blackbeltbarrister. He has shown that using AI in legal situations is very dangerous. My son used AI within his university degree and is now employed helping to produce AI systems.  AI depends on what is written, its knowledge base, yet cannot decide whether its knowledge is flawed or incorrect. It cannot evaluate known unknowns and unknown unknowns. Haha, Rumsfeld’s great quote.

Posted by: Kaiama | Apr 25 2026 6:01 utc | 115

There is a well known youtube channel called blackbeltbarrister. He has shown that using AI in legal situations is very dangerous. My son used AI within his university degree and is now employed helping to produce AI systems.  AI depends on what is written, its knowledge base, yet cannot decide whether its knowledge is flawed or incorrect. It cannot evaluate known unknowns and unknown unknowns. Haha, Rumsfeld’s great quote.

Posted by: Kaiama | Apr 25 2026 6:01 utc | 115
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Yes, and what about that behavior, well-documented in the case of certain LLMs as of not long ago (and still occurring so far as I know) of just making up case citations. Just pulling legal case citations out of its ass. Simply lying.
 
I think this is a much deeper problem than “The Strawberry Problem” noted above. Something insidious about the whole LLM construct.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 6:07 utc | 116

golden age of AI. This is just like the birth of the internet in 2000s. 
 
Posted by: MLP | Apr 24 2026 18:55 utc | 45
I couldn’t read beyond this part.
 
The WWW was opened to the public in 1991 but many of us had access to it well before that at work or school. Usage exploded in 1993 when the Mosaic web browser was released.

Posted by: Screwdriver | Apr 25 2026 6:16 utc | 117

« 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. »
Posted by: Sentience | Apr 24 2026 18:14 utc | 38
———————
And that is the fundamental issue.
AI, LLM for which purpose? To make the world better or to grant the likes of CIA, MI6, mafias, corporations, criminal governments more nuisance capacity ?
 
What will be the balance between beneficial applications of those technologies and malicious use motivated by greed, power and money?
 
I have no great hopes in the intrinsic nature of human beings to make the right choices.

Posted by: scc | Apr 25 2026 6:16 utc | 118

Here’s an historic parallel going back to the development of the graphic user interface at Apple.
 
Apps like MacPaint were for the first time driven by a combination of drop down menus keystroke commands and mouse movements.
 
These user operations generate “events” that go into a queue and then processed by the code beneath the user interface.
 

 
 
In the early days of Apple, the “Monkey” testing tool—a program designed to feed random events into Macintosh applications to test for bugs and system crashes was developed by software developer Steve Capps prior to 1983.
 
 
Purpose: It was created to generate random mouse clicks, drags, and key presses at high speed, simulating an unruly user to find bugs in early Mac software like MacPaint.
Implementation: Steve Capps used “journaling hooks” that were originally intended for replaying tutorials in the Macintosh Guided Tour, adapting them to create unpredictable, chaotic events.
 
 
“Monkey Lives”: The application was so aggressive that it often hit the “Quit” command, stopping the test. Bill Atkinson subsequently created a system flag called “MonkeyLives” to detect when the Monkey was running, allowing programs to disable the Quit command during tests.
 
 
At first, the Monkey could crash the system or applications (like MacPaint) every few minutes, but it played a significant role in improving the stability of early Macintosh software.
 

 
 
OK, you’ve got the picture.   Now imagine operating Microsoft Excel current version, on a Windows machine, and you’re inputting formulae, using multiple menus, keystrokes, mouse drags, copy and paste – and because you know what you’re doing from experience with the app not a lot goes wrong and when it does the consequences are generally recoverable.
 
 
Now play with Excel again for half an hour when you’re blind pissed with a Macintosh keyboard and a three button mouse while knowing that the consequences of finding a “bug” will absolutely wipe your hard disk and you’ll lose every bit of data on your computer.OK, finally, now get an AI to monitor the output of  a complex multi-nodal nuclear warning radar system looking for a pre-emptive attack across the North Pole.
 
 
I’m also a radio ham, I can swap data with other radio hams by bouncing radio signals from meteor trails and moving aircraft and these are often random events.  I commonly experience abrupt changes in radio propagation from Auroral events, from atmospheric and tropospheric inversions, from interference from other services and unexpected and sometimes unexplained and uninterpretable events – a bit like the SETI monitoring system looking for life outside the solar system.
 
 
What chance has AI?  It’s not the case that there have been a few hundred test runs.  It has to make a decision for the very first time within a small window of opportunity and the operators and military decision makers have to decide on the spot what to do about a code red output.

Posted by: caliban | Apr 25 2026 6:26 utc | 119

George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 6:07 utc | 116
 
“Yes, and what about that behavior, well-documented in the case of certain LLMs as of not long ago (and still occurring so far as I know) of just making up case citations. Just pulling legal case citations out of its ass. Simply lying.
I think this is a much deeper problem than “The Strawberry Problem” noted above. Something insidious about the whole LLM construct.”
 
For some reason that reminded me of the “replication crisis” in science. In that case and in the case of LLMs we have the typical effects of an overall garbage-in-garbage-out civilization. 

Posted by: Flying Dutchman | Apr 25 2026 6:29 utc | 120

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 3:10 utc | 107
 
I don’t know where you come from George the Zeroth but I can see this coming – not that I want it either.
 
Many general practitioner doctors in my country already check out Google or some other search engine for information while chatting with patients. They virtually no longer do much physical testing. They largely prescribe drugs and write prescriptions. Connecting people to machines that diagnose and test is done by nurses or  pathology workers. Family doctors are becoming a thing of the past given so many practices change their doctors on a regular basis.
 
Physical histories and visual/touch-feely inspection seems to be rarer and once again if done, it is with various optical and sensory/scanning devices. Most consultations are around 10 minutes, mainly to read through the results from pathology tests. If there is anything seriously wrong then you are sent to a specialist who also uses machines. So I can see that sort of diagnostic process being done by AI in the future even by just sitting in a chair or being scanned. Surgery is also done sometimes by robotics already and many machines/computers guide that process. All your medical information is in ‘the cloud’.
 
I’m someone who sees doctors regularly and have been through the hospital process many times in the last 3 years for myself and others. 
 
So I think 10 years is even conservative, we are well on the way. Humans may monitor these processes, but like automated check outs it won’t take long before the patient is doing some of the work in diagnosis, and the rest will be computers, robots, and AI. I don’t think you or I are going to be consulted about it, and as with automated supermarket check outs, no one is going to care about any jobs being lost. With transition to newer technologies, people seem to go onto doing things at other levels as the process continues. Natural ‘wellness’ practitioners might gain some clients out of this, but some of those also resort to high technology and use ‘wholistic’ AI already as well.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 6:34 utc | 121

Surgery is also done sometimes by robotics already and many machines/computers guide that process.
Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 6:34 utc | 122
======================================
 
Regarding that, I recently had surgery done by a robot.
Without going into the gory details, I can tell you that it went extraordinarily well. That is a very appropriate use of technology. The operation was still completely under the control of the surgeon, but the apparatus used (Da Vinci) allowed them to go into me and leave only tiny incisions.
 
Amazing shit. Not “AI”, either, just clever use of robotics.
 
I’m in the U.S., BTW.

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 6:39 utc | 122

Posted by: Hankster | Apr 25 2026 5:19 utc | 113
 
I’m not necessarily in support of AI, but from what I read the girl’s school bombing resulted from intelligence that was several years old and not up to date at all. They just did not check again before the attack. So I don’t think it is the current AI we are currently talking about, more likely old satellite imagery and past its use by date information. Slackness really, but then they were ‘evil’ Iranians so their deaths didn’t matter.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 6:44 utc | 123

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 6:39 utc | 123
My wife had robotic surgery too on Thursday, but she nor I have no idea what the surgeon did however or whether he used any AI information. 
 
20 years ago robotics in surgery was seen as a very scary step too.
 
As I said before I do not necessarily endorse AI for all things, and some critics like Gary Marcus in the US have been very vocal about many of the risks, but I also realise that you and I are not going to be consulted about what we think.  

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 6:51 utc | 124

@蒸発森
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  • 3. Captain Jack Substation (42.080034, -121.390400)
  • 4. McCullough Substation (41.116477, -122.43174)
  • 5. Mead Substation (35.927807, -114.834742)
  • 6. Marketplace Substation (35.819235, -115.011322)
  • 7. Wylie Ridge Substation (40.454274, -80.570078)
  • 8. Fort Smith Substation (35.300004, -94.430405)
  • 9. Los Banos Substation (37.053064, -121.021699)

Posted by: bones☠️ | Apr 25 2026 6:54 utc | 125

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 6:34 utc | 122
 
“Physical histories and visual/touch-feely inspection…”
 
Remember the old days when the doctor used his stethoscope it actually touched your skin – now they use it through layers of clothing.
Stethoscope technology has not changed, so they all must have ‘better’ hearing.
 
Haven’t been to a GP since covid – the clown said if I didn’t have the jab and I was in a car accident, I would not be admitted to the Emergency Dept.
Got up and walked out.

Posted by: Persona Non Grata | Apr 25 2026 7:07 utc | 126

I no longer do my own web searches … The  internet is becoming unusable without AI, because of AI.
Posted by: Occasional poster | Apr 25 2026 5:09 utc | 112
 
You are victim no 1. You will be fed propaganda and answers collected from random forum threads and other ai generated sources. It’s Idiocracy but the electrolyte drink to be used for everything did not appear yet. You can still find stuff using other search engines, not like when google had the good algorithm but close enough for these days. 
Google ruined their search engine twice. First time was when they wanted more money and switched from the original algorithm to one that promotes paid results, blogs and social media (official propaganda sources).  The second time was to force a need for more ai investments with their retarded ai answering and by making it very hard to find useful sites created by real people. The search was returned to 2000s level of Yahoo and Ask Jeeves paid listings of sites.

Posted by: rk | Apr 25 2026 7:29 utc | 127

Thanks for the (pre-emptive) AI summary, b. I was planning to ask your opinion of AI in the next Open Thread. And here it is!

Posted by: Hoarsewhisperer | Apr 25 2026 7:34 utc | 128

Long time lurker here. Thanks for all the work B!
I actually had great success in working with Deep Seek. Once it was placed  in my framework or way of thinking it really helped with research and writing a book. I admit, it makes mistakes, is lazy sometimes, sometimes lies, but still a very powerful tool! And to be sure about the facts I uploaded the book in chatgpt from time to time. It never found errors.

Posted by: Smallproof | Apr 25 2026 7:51 utc | 129

Posted by: Persona Non Grata | Apr 25 2026 7:07 utc | 127
 
Stethoscopes are almost relegated to museum pieces, I think only respiratory specialists use them on occasion these days . 
 

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 7:52 utc | 130

Mead Substation (35.927807, -114.834742)
 
Posted by: bones☠️ | Apr 25 2026 6:54 utc | 126
 

 
Mead substation is HUGE.  You used to fly over it on approach to Boulder City NV Airport, before overflight was restricted ’cause of the terrorisms.
 
https://www.bcnv.org/719/Pilot-Information
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 25 2026 7:52 utc | 131

Just pulling legal case citations out of its ass. Simply lying. I think this is a much deeper problem than “The Strawberry Problem” noted above. Something insidious about the whole LLM construct.
       Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 6:07 utc | 116
 
That’s generally true of course George. Corporations are experts at insidious. While I also think it’s critically important to realise AI cannot provide anything that isn’t based on or channelled via human output and judgement. People lying throughout the whole legal system from start to finish is far greater an insidious problem than any technical errors by AI apps. Deceit and graft permeates our globalized “capitalist civilization” — it’s been built on such things for 5 centuries now. And humans made AI and fund it’s development. 
 
Human beings with their poor judgement and callous behaviour is a much  deeper problem. Though people will disagree with that too. 

Posted by: What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 8:08 utc | 132

I have taken the plunge into using AI technology but on purely engineering problems that require programming and use of most current research. My general experience has been positive in the sense that the systems I used (Claude, Gemini, DeepSeek) were able in very short time to write the code to BEGIN solving the posed problem. However that is just the start, as without human intervention/monitoring they are not able to complete the job. Likewise I wouldn’t even trust what they came up with. The issue is that they , at least on my problems, needed a lot of guidance and monitoring. It’s definitely not a technology that is suitable of someone who is trying to do something in an area where their knowledge is weak or none existent as then “guidance and monitoring” goes out the window.I was also fascinated how at times these models can go down a blind alley telling you they found the error only to repeat the error that you just told it was in the code. In these situations I just took the work, described the issue and tried a different model. This iteration worked well for me.
Bottom line, it can be useful but requires close inspection and multiple means to test the final product they offer as the solution as they are serving up something that might take 2 wks of work in minutes. Difference being that a human during those 2 wks is closely monitoring all steps taken to arrive at the solution. With AI the individual is tempted to take it on faith as being correct and might ( young and inexperienced) just accept what’s given due to time constraint or laziness.
Lazy Minds + AI = Big Big Trouble in my opinion.

Posted by: Tom_12 | Apr 25 2026 8:10 utc | 133

Lazy Minds + AI = Big Big Trouble in my opinion.
 
We are in big trouble then since there are unfortunately many lazy minds. 
 
I think its is safe to say as you imply:  advice is only good as a function of knowing something about the area of knowledge you are seeking advice for.
 
I saw many people for example, during the 2008 GFC, lose a lot of money due to faith in a financial guru they were following. But they were badly informed about finance and the stock market themselves. During the time before the crash most stocks were rising exponentially, so some who appeared like gurus were in fact charlatans at a time when almost any stock was increasing in value.

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 8:36 utc | 134

I dont understand what it is about the term “Artificial Intelligence” that people arent getting.  Let us say you bit into an artificial apple,  made of wax,  and then complain “it is  not sweet,  this artificial apple isnt real,  phleh! ” would that make sense?
Yes,  you can trip these “artificial intelligences”  up if you want to,  if that’s where your interest lies.  I have used them quite effectively as a tool, both technically,  practically and creatively.  My conern is the resource footprint (significant,  but an engineering attitude problem as shown by the likes of Deepseek) and AI psycosis,  as exploring this system of mirrors can be “ergonomically hazardous”.  But I dont see the point of these long tracts people write to complain that Artificial Intelligence isnt even Real Intelligence it’s” some sort of simulcra of intelligence”,   what- like, “Artificial”  intelligence,  do you mean??  I am shocked. 
 
Also,  people who dismiss autocomplete have mistaken the experience of a system being familiar with that system being trivial to make work,  let alone autocomplete * millions,  Hyper-Autocomplete,  literally billions of parameter autocomplete. It took a lot of work to get here,  Scam Altman and various silicon valley twats and marketing campaigns and bubbles of a desperate capitalism searching for something to hurl itself into for profits aside I dont see the point of all the whinning about the technology itself. If you dont see the use for it in your own activities then   (shrugs)  dont use it. Why all this time spent pointing out that an artificial apple made of wax isnt a real apple?   To me,  AI slop means lazy promptwork,  its the workman at fault,  not the tool. 

Posted by: Niralof | Apr 25 2026 8:42 utc | 135

The people that love AI are usually the same people that love technology in general. You would never be able to convince them that a cell phone could cause damage to the human body (oh hey, I see some of you reading are already getting angry). For them, simply, “tech = science” and “science = proven”, by definition, with a subcorollary that since “safety testing = science”, then “safety of any tech = proven”.
 
They’re also often the kind of people that do not read a scientific article, cannot read a scientific article, and WILL not read a scientific article. This means that for them, “government = science”, since they leave it fully for the next epstein in adacemia or in the doctor’s office to tell them the truth.

Posted by: Jack M | Apr 25 2026 9:08 utc | 136

Posted by: GeorgeWendell | Apr 25 2026 8:36 utc | 136
Once you trying it on something serious, I’m thinking engineering, the issues becomes obvious. OK, I’m using publicly accessible LLM’s so that is the caveat to my comments on this subject. They are helpful but at times can waste a hell of a lot of time correcting something that should be relatively simple (system lost in a blind alley). Even funnier is when they break that which worked before that they coded.

Posted by: Tom_12 | Apr 25 2026 9:20 utc | 137

There are all sorts of dangers and pitfalls to human technology,  I certainly recognize that.  Brung all the scientific articles you want,  the term “Artificial Intelligence”   is still the correct term for what we’ve made here,  the artifice of intelligence,  taking it for what it is- artificial,  it is in my humble opinion quite an acheivement,  and quite cool technologically. “BUT IT DOESNT HAVE A SOUL!!!!1!” shreils the haters.  To which I say “yes,  indeed,  it is Artificial Intelligence”.  Frankly I no longer think even genuine intelligence rewuires soyl,  if what you mean by intelligence is a problem solvimg enginr,  probably you still need a soul somewhere in the system to have a “problem”  to solve,  ultimately that remains the job of us humans. 

Posted by: Niralof | Apr 25 2026 9:30 utc | 138

@Jack M | Apr 25 2026 9:08 utc | 138

The people that love AI are usually the same people that love technology in general.

That would be the segment that “loves technology” without understanding it.

For them, simply, “tech = science” and “science = proven”

People with such ideas have fallen for the “appeal to authority” fallacy. Science is a methodology and it is about falsifying hypotheses. If the hypothesis is that AI is always correct, this article falsifies it by showing it can’t properly count the letters in “strawberry”.
 
By the way, since “AI” can’t properly count letters in a word, do it the simple way:
# naive python code
word = “strawberry”
letter_counts = {}
for letter in word:
if letter in letter_counts:
letter_counts[letter] += 1
else:
letter_counts[letter] = 1
print(letter_counts)

{‘s’: 1, ‘t’: 1, ‘r’: 3, ‘a’: 1, ‘w’: 1, ‘b’: 1, ‘e’: 1, ‘y’: 1}
 
The thing is to choose the right tool for any task. Some people seem to think the answer is ‘AI’ for any task, and that is where they get into trouble.
 
Using human language to program a computer (‘vibe coding’) is extremely inefficient and error prone. That is why we have formal computer languages.

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 25 2026 9:34 utc | 139

@Norwegian | Apr 25 2026 9:34 utc | 141
 
Well the formatter botched my code where I used <pre> tags. So now the python code is invalid 😛

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 25 2026 9:36 utc | 140

word = “strawberry”letter_counts = {}for letter in word:if letter in letter_counts:letter_counts[letter] += 1else:letter_counts[letter] = 1print(letter_counts)
{‘s’: 1, ‘t’: 1, ‘r’: 3, ‘a’: 1, ‘w’: 1, ‘b’: 1, ‘e’: 1, ‘y’: 1}

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 25 2026 9:34 utc | 141
===================================
 
I know you didn’t ask for code correction here, but you could simplify it, get rid of the conditional by initializing the count array to zeros:
word = “strawberry”
letter_counts = {0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0}
/* not sure if this is the right way to initialize the array, but you get the idea */
for letter in word:
letter_counts[letter] += 1
print(letter_counts)
{‘s’: 1, ‘t’: 1, ‘r’: 3, ‘a’: 1, ‘w’: 1, ‘b’: 1, ‘e’: 1, ‘y’: 1}

Posted by: George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 9:52 utc | 141

I wish you were more careful about something you don’t know that well. It makes me wonder about your opinion on stuff I have less expertise on. By the way, the website you are using is or will probably be partially generated/operated in a way or another by an AI.
so you’re part of the dumb people who trust them in a way…

Posted by: Godefroy | Apr 25 2026 10:04 utc | 142

They are brilliant for learning languages.
 
Just finished NAT 5 Spanish at the age of 60. Using AI is changing the way we learn languages. 

Posted by: Andrew | Apr 25 2026 10:50 utc | 143

I asked my pals what topics we have talked about over the last 40 years when we go for a pint and unbelievably there are only about 7 topics we always talk about when we meet up.
 
AI will create these 7 language islands in Spanish. You just need to learn these 7 topics in Spanish and you will never run out of things to say in Spain. Always be able to hold long conversations when you are there.
 
You are not suddenly going to talk about the mating habits of a moth or the habitat of birds on wetlands if that is not what you normally talk about when you are at home. You are just going to be yourself and talk about what you normally talk about.
 
You are free to add extra language islands to the original 7 if you wish . Just add another topic.  AI is brilliant at that. You can become fluent quite quickly in your own personal language islands.

Posted by: Andrew | Apr 25 2026 11:03 utc | 144

I am a basic computer user for information only. When I go online about some topic there is a box at the top of the page which is an “ai” assist”. I skip this because I would rather have information put online by a human being.
One day I wanted a fact, so did open the ai assist box.  When I hit the button for more information, a little phrase came up which said (paraphrasing)  – wait a minute, I am thinking . Thinking!  A machine can’t think. No matter what a person would like to think, machines can’t think.  A machine can get a million billion electronic bits of info in which it recognizes patterns and spews out info based on these patterns, but it cannot think.
We are being hyped and sold a big fat lie, IMO, as usual, I might add, but it is really terrible, as people might think(!) the machine can think.  We are stupid.

Posted by: a lurking reader | Apr 25 2026 11:11 utc | 145

I am a basic computer user for information only. When I go online about some topic…..
 
Posted by: a lurking reader | Apr 25 2026 11:11 utc |
 
 
And there’s the crux of the issue , right there..
 
 
Where do you go ? Does your ideological tendencies and confirmation biases push in a general direction and what GROUPTHINK have you fallen for ?
 
That’s what makes humans stupid…
 
 
Take the tax payer money myths for example. Who told you your taxes fund the ” issuer ” of the currency ? Why did you believe it ? Did you check if what they are saying is true? Where did you go to check if it was true ? What tribe checked it it was true for you ?
 
Or 
 
 
Did you decide for yourself free from ideology and Confirmation biases to actually study the central bank accounts and how they work.  Learn what assets and liabilities are and learn double entry book keeping. Then study the treasury accounts followed by the commercial bank accounts to find out yourself if indeed your taxes fund the ” issuer ” of the currency. Actually track where your taxes go after they have been paid and how they are shredded ?
 
 
Did you do any of that ? If not why not ? How do you know what is is true if you don’t check it yourself ? How are you going to know what’s true if you only rely on GROUPTHINK?
 
 

Posted by: Andrew | Apr 25 2026 11:26 utc | 146

Slop is slop
I want my baby back.
 
Trump has digested so much AI slop in his life that he can only think in AI slop.
 
You can put the AI into the human
but you can’t get the human intelligence,  the intelligence of the human heart /conscience plus the intelligence  of the RAM and logic  of the humsn brain,  into the AI.

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 12:02 utc | 147

Andrew 148
 
The sense of being more intellugent  than others is in itself Empire GROUPTHINK.
 
Excuse your Caps.

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 12:06 utc | 148

Andrew | Apr 25 2026 11:03 utc | 146
 
“You are not suddenly going to talk about the mating habits of a moth or the habitat of birds on wetlands if that is not what you normally talk about when you are at home. You are just going to be yourself and talk about what you normally talk about.”
 
 
What I normally talk about when I’m being myself may traverse a wide range of topics where I have varying levels of knowledge and various modes of talking about it (serious, humorous, matter-of-fact, thoughtful, light-hearted…), and that’s the kind of people I like to talk to. The kind of people you’re talking about, who would apparently freeze up the moment they diverge from one of a handful of topics, would strike me as some kind of extreme autists. So you’re actually describing one of the dangers of this kind of technology.

Posted by: Flying Dutchman | Apr 25 2026 12:41 utc | 149

It might not be obvious, but this is golden age of AI. (…)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

 
I think I know what you mean. Enshitification, encrapification. Remember the time when Google was providing good quick relevant results on the top of page1?
 
Yeah. Like industrial food when they launch a new product that’s not bad. Acquiring clientele. Then progressively replacing all the ingredients by the cheapest crap almost legally allowed.
 
Remember democracy, when you could end up with some candidate not too bad and somehow caring for the country and the citizens and not getting shot in the first 86 days by “some deranged guy”?

Posted by: Asian Frog | Apr 25 2026 12:51 utc | 150

@George the Zeroth | Apr 25 2026 9:52 utc | 143

I know you didn’t ask for code correction here, but you could simplify it, get rid of the conditional by initializing the count array to zeros:

Well,  introduces a bug via a hidden assumption that is bound to be worng: You are assuming the English alphabet. If the word in question was a Norwegian word with any of the additional characters we have in the alphabet (æøå), your version would fail. Same for other non-English alphabets. Below C++ without this problem  😛
 
 
#include <iostream>
#include <map>
#include <string>
int main()
{
std::string word = “strawberry”;
std::map<char,int> word_count;
for( char c : word) word_count[c]++;
for( auto p : word_count) std::cout << ‘ ‘ << p.first << ‘:’ << p.second;
return 0;
}
 
a:1 b:1 e:1 r:3 s:1 t:1 w:1 y:1

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 25 2026 12:58 utc | 151

b — not your best piece.  Plenty of Hype in AI but not a fraud. 
Example:  AI determines how proteins fold with great accuracy.  This is very useful
in biochemistry.  AI is now being used in professional mathematics (see a good deal
written by Terry Tao (fields medal winner) ) and to write code.  Math and software engineering 
are not error-tolerant fields. 
 
 

Posted by: Nick | Apr 25 2026 13:06 utc | 152

One scary aspect is the crossing curves of (1) average human intelligence going down, Idiocracy-like (2) average AI “intelligence” (real-time conversation ability) and “thinking” going up, and quite fast.
 
While the average MoA commenter and lurker may find today’s AI a bit “dumb”, he/she may not have had a conversation with a real “average” human for quite some time.
 
Give it 10 or 20 years, and the bottom 90% of humanity will be dumber than an entry-level AI app on a smartphone. Lazyness to think will have terrifying results.
 
That’s maybe the reason no alien civilization has contacted us yet : they invented AI and are now only focused on their 3 penis enlargement and silicon boobs. Forget about travelling to the stars…

Posted by: Asian Frog | Apr 25 2026 13:12 utc | 153

Via Google.
Q. how many r are there in elephant
A. There is one letter “r” in the word “elephant” (e-l-e-p-h-a-n-t). The word is spelled: E – L – E – P – H – A – N – T
At least it can spell.

Posted by: Ghost Ship | Apr 25 2026 13:28 utc | 154

Good morning
 
AI is pretty good at pattern recognition.
 
For example: AI can be used to check for Cancer cells from Xray. AI can be used to detect defective products in manufacturing on assembly lines. AI can increase efficiency and productivity in many mundane tasks like sorting products.
 
AI is a tool or a slop depending on the context and application. AI is the future but AI doesn’t have a place in a more geopolitical discussion because they collected their information from human & ai political slops, lies, bias, propagandas, misinformation without an ability to understand deeply and discern facts from fiction yet.
 
My friend’s grandpa has been fed by AI slops on his social media,youtube,tiktok so much he thinks it’s snowing in Indonesia and Ukrainian army was occupied Moscow last year. AI Abuse to spread misinformation is something that needs to be regulated quickly.

Posted by: KillerDoll | Apr 25 2026 13:50 utc | 155

Nick 154
 
Let’s  face it, AI is no good at all for problems connected to the intelligence of the Heart/Soul/ Conscience. And even if it was, we would be constantly disagreeing with it.
 
My father was a mathematian and electronical engineer. If I started a conversation about human conflict or personal  conflict , could tolerate it for about 3 minutes and end the discussion forthwith
 
Trump is constantly  combobulating ideas and switching metaphors and the world is fed up with his distraction from the real issues that concern us.
 
If, like Trump, we found the persecution of other human beings, their imprisonment and sadistic torture, destruction of their human necessities of life and psychology , interesting,  we would put up with him.
 
What the world cannot understand is how the people we have elected as leaders,  seem to be able to endure his madness indefinitely.
 
These leaders aren’t there to protect madmen and women. They are there to protect the public from insanity.
 
USUKIS is pushing us to Revolution.
And it’s lasted well more than three minutes.
 
Some kind of alloy lamppost and nylon rope should be strong enough to resolve the  problem of him and his collaborators .
 
After lampposts are sited at ratio of about 1: 100 human beings. If not enough , there are other structures, road signs,  traffic lights, bridges. 
 
We would soon get used the smell of political corpses if the stink of International politics began to clear. 

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 13:56 utc | 156

 
 
158 lol
..after all…

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 13:59 utc | 157

Then there is the “drunken Hegseth” video.
Google AI claims

No, the “Drunken Hegseth” LEGO cartoon is not pro-Hegseth.
It is a satirical, anti-Hegseth animation released by Iranian-linked sources that mocks U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth.

  • Mockery: The video uses LEGO stop-motion to portray Hegseth as a “clown” or “drunken infidel”.
  • Content: The video is styled as a sea shanty titled “What Shall We Do with the Drunken Hegseth?”, which alleges misconduct and features him stumbling through scenes.
  • Context: The video is part of a series of AI-assisted, satirical animations from Iran designed to mock American military leadership amid ongoing tensions.
  • Themes: It directly targets Hegseth with accusations of misconduct and portrays him as outwitted.

But wait for the end and you’ll see the word Ponder.
And Google AI reports

 

 
Drew Ponder is the American satirist and AI creator behind the viral “Drunken Hegseth” Lego-style cartoon.
He creates these satirical AI productions as a hobby, using his YouTube channel and X (formerly Twitter) to mock political figures. While several of his videos—including the “Drunken Hegseth” sea shanty—were initially misattributed to the Iranian government or pro-Iranian groups like Explosive Media

Which to believe? Great cartoon but a certain type of MAGA supporter might see it as a pro-Hegseth whitewash.

Posted by: Ghost Ship | Apr 25 2026 14:10 utc | 158

What shall we do with..
 
https://youtu.be/haE2erHRJhU?si=84H-RpPMVn8vUbZ8
Definitely not Dubliners grade of Music.
More like Radio Wales 

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 14:22 utc | 159

MisAnthropic’s AI “Claude” did indeed identify the Minab girls’ elementary school as a target, but only because it was ordered to find a target exactly like that. This violated the AI’s safety guidelines (the AI identified the school as a strictly civilian facility and extremely inappropriate for targeting) and like many LLMs would do if you try to work out a murder plan with them, it raised alarms with the maintainers at MisAnthropic. To even proceed with the target selection the AI’s “guardrails” had to be overridden by a “three star or higher” officer. 
 
 
The targeting of the Minab girls’ school was NOT a choice made by the AI, and it was not a mistake. The AI would have no difficulty whatsoever identifying the target as a school and thus off-limits. The AI in question has been trained to identify such facilities specifically to prevent “AI error” in selecting them as targets, which is why an officer’s override is required. The AI would have explained in detail why the targeting results that were being requested were being denied (“The targets requested are civilian facilities and significant harm to civilians would occur if they are struck. This would be a war crime.”). The individual humans involved would have been alerted in no ambiguous terms that what they wanted is a  crime, and they would have to personally override the AI’s decision. 
 
 
Rather than giving the people involved deniability (“It wasn’t me! The AI did it!”), the use of the AI to select the targets removes all deniability. The humans involved knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that they were targeting a school full of little girls, and even had to perform extra tasks (the override of the AI’s objection) to assure that the school was struck. There were no mistakes. There was no accident. Striking the school was deliberate beyond any question. 

Posted by: William Gruff | Apr 25 2026 14:26 utc | 160

AI can fail in non-obvious, non-reproducible ways that evade standard testing. That’s real. But solutions exist. non-AI software systems and human input and design has been failing for decades and centuries, but we get by in the  end. unfortunately that means airliners crash now and then.
The CrowdStrike outage (2024) took down 8.5 million Windows machines — human-written kernel code, reviewed, tested, deployed. SatNavs have sent trucks into low bridges and cars the wrong way down one way streets. Excel has had floating-point bugs for 40 years. The programmer’s standard would ban half the software running our phones.
That programmer isn’t wrong that AI has failure modes. Its far from perfect. But it’s also Free. You get what you pay for; and if it’s free then usually YOU are the product or the unpaid systems tester. He’s wrong to pretend human systems don’t have worse failure modes, and wrong to demand perfect verifiability when he accepts opacity everywhere else. Nothing is perfect. The question is whether the imperfection is manageable and useful. For millions of developers, the answer is already yes. While investors and bankers keep throwing billion$ last year at Anthropic and all the rest still. A problem in the US is the substandard aging grid system which is affecting all tech hubs, a problem money alone cannot fix.  
 

It even lists the letters found in the word ‘strawberry’ and states the count of ‘e’s therein is zero.

 
And yet shown in the screenshot above duckduckdo listed all the letters which included the “E”. Can’t be zero then. Something else is going on; while it got the letter R wrong too, saying it was 2 instead of 3 letter R’s in strawberry. It’s a known engineering problem to do with how tokens work with AI. Just go ask one of them better than duckduckdo’s low grade tool, and they’ll tell you what causes this easily fixed glitch. Nothing’s perfect, it’s self defeating to throw the baby out with the bath water. 
 
There are manifold concerns over the tech industry, but this requires high quality competent critiques and expose investigations to help inform the general public. Though don’t even care anyway. The article is a paradigmatic example of the very “slop” it attacks — poorly sourced, logically broken, technically badly uninformed, and driven by pre‑existing animus rather than any genuine fact based comprehensive investigation. It tells us far more about the author’s biases and research capacity choosing to ignore AI sources than about AI itself.  I doubt anyone serious about learning about AI would look to Moon to provide the best information. Better options are easy to find everywhere. 

Posted by: What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 14:27 utc | 161

https://youtube.com/shorts/uc_2gyVhIr4?si=aiKEs1By7-lkSh56
 
This is a bar. Yes?

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 14:28 utc | 162

https://youtu.be/fpDPSo0ybtU?si=8bKIzbHtGRzNyuN-

Posted by: Giyane | Apr 25 2026 14:34 utc | 163

Posted by: Nick | Apr 25 2026 13:06 utc | 154 Pretty sure that the programs which successfully predict protein folding are not Large Language Models. Also pretty sure that those programs were trained with data from many experiments and well-tested applied mathematics. LLMs are trained on text, not the real world. 
 
Personally I tend to think that LLMs do potentially represent a civilization changing technology, Star Trek’s Universal Translator. [It’s amazing how many people don’t realize how science fictional that is, the transporter and warp drive look like hard science by comparison.] What will happen to culture when a language doesn’t need its own flag, its own army, its own currency and central bank? 

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 14:37 utc | 164

What will happen to culture when a language doesn’t need its own flag, its own army, its own currency and central bank? 
 
Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 14:37 utc | 166
 

 
Dolphins will talk to whales.
 

Posted by: too scents | Apr 25 2026 14:42 utc | 165

Posted by: caliban | Apr 25 2026 4:45 utc | 111
Thanks.  I observe that nearly zero cashiers can count out the change anymore. So, if you don’t exercise your brain, it atrophies. Same disease coming with “AI”.
And all AI is EAGER for you to provide criticism. But that is just for the Owners of AI to take your knowledge, your assets for free.
Big Picture ? Either AI economics collapses as a strategic error, say like Rome hiring mercenaries to protect the remains of the Empire, thereby feeding their own demise at the hands of those same mercenaries. Or, more and more knowledge and know-how goes into the hands of our self-appointed Master Race.

Posted by: kupkee | Apr 25 2026 14:45 utc | 166

MisAnthropic’s AI “Claude” did indeed identify the Minab girls’ elementary school as a target
Posted by: William Gruff | Apr 25 2026 14:26 utc | 162
 
There is much misunderstanding about the school strike in Iran. The verified facts afaik now are —
The real targeting system used was Palantir’s Maven Smart System. It pulls together satellite imagery, signals intelligence, and sensor data to identify targets. It isn’t just a LLM chatbot. Anthropic’s Claude was a small add-on layer to this system, helping analysts search and summarize reports, so it’s not the primary “decider” of targets.
 
The primary cause was outdated military intelligence. The school building was once part of an adjacent Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) naval base. The Pentagon’s preliminary investigation found that a Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) database had not been updated to reflect that the two sites had been separated by a wall sometime between 2013 and 2016.
 
Simultaneously the newly deployed Maven system had compressed the “kill chain” of the time from identifying a potential valid target to launching a strike down to an unprecedented speed. That was decided under military supervision and approval. This speed meant that the system could generate hundreds of targeting coordinates based on the stale DIA data faster than any human running these systems could cross-check them against newer satellite imagery.  The whole integration of the automated Maven system with human oversight was flawed. 
 
Former military officials who spoke to Semafor and CENTCOM’s own leadership were unequivocal that humans were to blame. A commander was ultimately responsible for the strike, not a machine. The strike required an officer’s approval, and the evidence suggests that approval was given based on bad data that hadn’t been accurately provided up the chain. 
 
The school strike was a human intelligence systems failure, and not one caused by an AI LLM App failure. People were responsible for the deadly error. 

Posted by: What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 14:48 utc | 167

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 25 2026 1:12 utc | 105 Pointing out you wrote nonsense is not rudeness, it’s candor. You are not superior to computers, nor even to me, because you are a sensitive man of taste. That’s really all you had to offer. 

Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 14:49 utc | 168

epistemology, the study of knowledge, a 3000 year old discipline under Logic/Symbolic Logic.   Logic has 8 operators and these make up the “Latin” base of all computer languages.   
In 3000 years we are no closer to defining knowledge than we were 3000 years ago.   What then is Intelligence, more so “artificial intelligence?”.  A marketing hype buzz word.    It’s amazing non of these computer programmers have studied epistemology 

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 14:50 utc | 169

ableman 7, the problem with US programming is it’s all about surveillance and backdoors for CIA/NSA, this makes the programming slow and cumbersome and a data hog.   

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 14:54 utc | 170

Fun week in AI:
Top law firm apologizes for slop in court filing:
https://www.businessinsider.com/sullivan-and-cromwell-apologizes-ai-hallucinations-court-filing-2026-4More instances of AI chat history used as evidence in court:https://www.smithlaw.com/newsroom/publications/turning-chats-into-trial-exhibits-litigation-risks-of-generative-ai-use
Meanwhile, seeing businesses speed to process more and more sensitive data through the cloud providers.
I think it’s lowering the barriers to entry in many fields as proprietary knowledge seeps out. It’s also ruining on-the-job training for entry-level people—fewer hired and less reps on menial tasks that used to train you on the basics.
But maybe it creates new opportunities for entrepreneurs and, in the best case scenario, shakes up the rat race to getting into a corporate oligopoly job and trying to climb as the conventional life path for too many.

Posted by: CallSaul | Apr 25 2026 15:01 utc | 171

Fun week in AI:
Top law firm apologizes for slop in court filing:
https://www.businessinsider.com/sullivan-and-cromwell-apologizes-ai-hallucinations-court-filing-2026-4More instances of AI chat history used as evidence in court:https://www.smithlaw.com/newsroom/publications/turning-chats-into-trial-exhibits-litigation-risks-of-generative-ai-use
Meanwhile, seeing businesses speed to process more and more sensitive data through the cloud providers.
I think it’s lowering the barriers to entry in many fields as proprietary knowledge seeps out. It’s also ruining on-the-job training for entry-level people—fewer hired and less reps on menial tasks that used to train you on the basics.
But maybe it creates new opportunities for entrepreneurs and, in the best case scenario, shakes up the rat race to getting into a corporate oligopoly job and trying to climb as the conventional life path for too many.

Posted by: CallSaul | Apr 25 2026 15:01 utc | 172

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 14:50 utc | 171
Spot on. We burried the basics of ‘the computer’ under a mountain of abstractions and now we burry this mountain under an even bigger mountain of nondeterministic systems based on probabalistic models trained on an endless heap of data scraped from every corner of the internet. And somehow ‘we’ convinced ourselves this will lead to ‘AGI’ which then again will solve problems, most of which are not even technological in nature at all but social. 
 
Its a cult.
 
 

Posted by: kspr | Apr 25 2026 15:03 utc | 173

Posted by: What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 14:27 utc | 163

Please rejoin the hype brigade at Hacker News and post more nonsense about LLMs and their ‘revolutionary’ applications that noone is paying for. There is a whole industry around hyping this technology which isnt ready for prime time. Their are plenty of childish morons who have fully bought into the hype however, they typically are people with few if any real responsibilities in the sector. 
 
When an LLM is capable of writing maintainable and nontrivial code I’ll pay attention. That day is not here.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Apr 25 2026 15:03 utc | 174

Posted by: Cabe | Apr 25 2026 0:39 utc | 101

You hit the nail on the head. AI is a martingale.

Posted by: pepe | Apr 25 2026 15:06 utc | 175

When an LLM is capable of writing maintainable and nontrivial code I’ll pay attention. That day is not here.
Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Apr 25 2026 15:03 utc | 175
 
 
Fine by me, because it’s not my concern what you choose to pay attention to. But do feel free to let us know what if any errors of fact or reasoning you noticed in my comment your dissing with your nonsensical hyperbole and crass innuendo.   

Posted by: What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 15:11 utc | 176

There’s no need to dismiss the whole GenAI thing. You have to separate marketing hype from reality. I’m not sure how many politicians and journalists actually understand the difference between LLM-based generative AI and true AI. But either way, anyone can use the free versions to improve their day‑to‑day work. I use it for writing emails, fixing my coding mistakes, and just for fun. No one can say for sure what it’ll be used for in the future. But just like the military helped kickstart the early internet and the adult industry pushed online payments and streaming forward, I wouldn’t be surprised if they end up driving some unexpected AI innovations too. Just for fun, go search for ‘adult AI’ sometime.

Posted by: Cable Guy | Apr 25 2026 15:15 utc | 177

AI or human face the same problem. Garbage in = garbage out. And, getting the right answers involves asking the right questions, not just from AI, but in general.

Posted by: Skiffer | Apr 25 2026 15:19 utc | 178

Its a cult. 
Posted by: kspr | Apr 25 2026 15:03 utc | 174

You just don’t believe hard enough. If we spend just one more trillion euros on datacenters, imagine how many more lonely shut-ins will be able to marry their personal chatbots modelled after cartoon characters.
 
All of these AI critics keep on ignoring the big and unquestionable victories of the LLM revolution:

  • Image search is practically unusable now 
  • Billions of dollars are being borrowed and taxed, redistributed to the tech industry’s most vapid representatives
  • Millions of emails and meetings can now be (poorly) summarized 
  • Romance scammers have never had an easier job robbing the lonely 

 
Halcyon days and fie to all naysayers.

Posted by: Chunk | Apr 25 2026 15:20 utc | 179

Imagine all the ways we could discover how many he’s there are in strawberry without massive computer use and resulting land waste. I get there are more important questions but frickin Google now gives AI summaries of me email threads. Phew I was worried I was going to have to read an entire paragraph of me email. Now I only have to read a paragraph summary.

Posted by: GS | Apr 25 2026 15:23 utc | 180

I read somewhere that massive industrial-scale Bitcoin mining facilities are being converted into AI data centers now that BTC’s dropping. So hype works out sometimes.

Posted by: Cable Guy | Apr 25 2026 15:27 utc | 181

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
The guy is an even bigger fraud that Altman.  Classic demagogue: just enough truth to sell you the lie.  
Don’t watch or listen to anything genocidal Imperialist Bernie Sanders has to say.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 25 2026 15:28 utc | 182

Posted by: Patroklos | Apr 25 2026 1:12 utc | 105 Pointing out you wrote nonsense is not rudeness, it’s candor. You are not superior to computers, nor even to me, because you are a sensitive man of taste. That’s really all you had to offer. 
 
Posted by: steven t johnson | Apr 25 2026 14:49 utc | 168
Pat is definitely superior to you.  In every possible way, really. 

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 25 2026 15:30 utc | 183

programmers here cheering the equivalent of promulgated forms as some radical achievement, like phone trees made receptionists obsolete, it also made everyone a switchboard operator due to the many wrong routings.   How do you know if some programming was good or not?   Code or programming may be very efficient w few lines or bulky using code segments borrowed from other code.   Without analyzing the actual code, you really don’t know.   AI doesn’t represent any great leaps, it’s just the next edition of Google search.   Also, the biggest factor is AI doesn’t know what sources are good and bad.   We most all here know the broad media narratives are false and deceptive, so hows your LLM working on Garbage in?    Finally, what you clowns don’t get, and sorry, engineers are “on the spectrum” so there’s a lot you don’t “get;”  is that LLMs don’t learn at all, they have no memory that builds collectively.   It’s like these talk show hosts that learn things aren’t what they seem, but the next episode, we’re back at square one, gullible as ever.   AI has a long way to go.   Again smarties, define “knowledge” or “Intelligence*. you can’t so stop spewing words you don’t understand 

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 15:30 utc | 184

MisAnthropic’s AI “Claude” did indeed identify the Minab girls’ elementary school as a target, but only because it was ordered to find a target exactly like that. This violated the AI’s safety guidelines (the AI identified the school as a strictly civilian facility and extremely inappropriate for targeting) and like many LLMs would do if you try to work out a murder plan with them, it raised alarms with the maintainers at MisAnthropic. To even proceed with the target selection the AI’s “guardrails” had to be overridden by a “three star or higher” officer. 
 
 
The targeting of the Minab girls’ school was NOT a choice made by the AI, and it was not a mistake. The AI would have no difficulty whatsoever identifying the target as a school and thus off-limits. The AI in question has been trained to identify such facilities specifically to prevent “AI error” in selecting them as targets, which is why an officer’s override is required. The AI would have explained in detail why the targeting results that were being requested were being denied (“The targets requested are civilian facilities and significant harm to civilians would occur if they are struck. This would be a war crime.”). The individual humans involved would have been alerted in no ambiguous terms that what they wanted is a crime, and they would have to personally override the AI’s decision. 
 
 
Rather than giving the people involved deniability (“It wasn’t me! The AI did it!”), the use of the AI to select the targets removes all deniability. The humans involved knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that they were targeting a school full of little girls, and even had to perform extra tasks (the override of the AI’s objection) to assure that the school was struck. There were no mistakes. There was no accident. Striking the school was deliberate beyond any question. 
 
Posted by: William Gruff | Apr 25 2026 14:26 utc | 160
A critical point.  Thanks, Gruff.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 25 2026 15:31 utc | 185

I’ve heard that it only takes the failure, or sabotage, of nine key substations to plunge most of 🇺🇸 and 🇨🇦 into darkness.
 
Posted by: 蒸発森 | Apr 25 2026 4:17 utc | 109
That would not surprise me at all.

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 25 2026 15:33 utc | 186

Posted by: Cable Guy | Apr 25 2026 15:27 utc | 181
——-
Quantum computing will replace Bitcoin.

Posted by: pepe | Apr 25 2026 15:35 utc | 187

Just a thought – prompted by b’s frustrating AI experience with the word “strawberry”.
What if the authors of the most popular AI programs think, speak and write in English? If so, then they couldn’t have chosen a worse language if they hoped to avoid the pitfalls of ambiguity in AI’s responses to queries.  
Esperanto was an 1887 attempt by a Polish gent, to create a simplified Global Language with rigid rules for spelling, vocabulary and pronounciation. It wasn’t intended to replace National Languages, but merely to augment them. It is loosely based on Latin.
In the Introductory Lesson of the 1959 edition of the book Teach Yourself Esperanto, the authors point out that the Esperanto dictionary is ~ 1/10 the size of one for a National Language.
 
It’s easy to imagine that the problem encountered by the AI program b used, to query a detail related to the spelling of the word STRAWBERRY, was caused by confusion over the English Language meaning of one or more of the words used by him to frame the question.

Posted by: Hoarsewhisperer | Apr 25 2026 15:38 utc | 188

TG, AI can’t analyze anything.   You people are the best argument against yourselves, equivocation is something you don’t appreciate.   You use words very sloppily,we all do, problem is an LLM can’t tell and will be compromised by equivocation leading to more hallucinations, or fallacies.   A logically sound argument can be ruined by entering false information as true.   God, you people should have studied Logic and epistemology 

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 15:40 utc | 189

TG, AI can’t analyze anything.   You people are the best argument against yourselves, equivocation is something you don’t appreciate.   You use words very sloppily,we all do, problem is an LLM can’t tell and will be compromised by equivocation leading to more hallucinations, or fallacies.   A logically sound argument can be ruined by entering false information as true.   God, you people should have studied Logic and epistemology 

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 15:41 utc | 190

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
Check out Tarik Cyril Amar’s article.  Excellent.  

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 25 2026 15:42 utc | 191

Peter, look more carefully,there are zero layoffs due to AI, dig in there, they show zero productivity gains.   The layoffs are a sign of late stage bubble financial cycle.   AI is the cover story, the layoffs are due to the collapsing empire/economy 

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 15:44 utc | 192

Apologies for too few paragraph breaks in my comment above : -)

Posted by: Hoarsewhisperer | Apr 25 2026 15:45 utc | 193

@ William Gruff | Apr 25 2026 14:26 utc | 160
 
it’s good you are not letting go of this issue… 
 
@ What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 14:48 utc | 167
 
fine… when does the accountability take place??? 

Posted by: james | Apr 25 2026 15:46 utc | 194

SOS, it does none of those reliably (taking minutes of meetings).  It gets easily confused and it takes as much,(nearly as much, sometimes more) effort to check and confirm that it saves.   
I’m a landscaper by trade (w a philosophy degree) I often use as prefer hand tools to powered equipment.   That fact undercuts your sweeping claims.   I still find hand drawn designs far superior to a computer aided design.   And, the computer design implies more work, more steps and we get further from the reality.   Designing in Situ is superior to any “on paper” detraction.  Spacing is far more reliable in Situ than on paper

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 15:51 utc | 195

The primary cause was outdated military intelligence. The school building was once part of an adjacent Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) naval base. The Pentagon’s preliminary investigation found that a Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) database had not been updated to reflect that the two sites had been separated by a wall sometime between 2013 and 2016.
Posted by: What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 14:48 utc | 167

When the duck pâté is made by the Zionist Agents I just spit it out.
Smells like the same cooks to me.
The U.S. bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade on May 7, 1999, was a mistake attributed to outdated maps and intelligence failures, during NATO’s campaign in Yugoslavia.”

Posted by: Tom_12 | Apr 25 2026 15:52 utc | 196

@78 Cable Guy:
‘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.’
Yes, totally. If you use AI only as an extended Wikipedia or Google Search, you for sure missed the point. Actually I couldnt comprehend this paradigm shift. I knew about Open Claw, and Agentic frameworks. But I really needed to use it in practice to understand its transformative impact.

Posted by: Rudi Rüssel | Apr 25 2026 16:04 utc | 197

They are incredibly helpful for simple monotonous coding (LaTeX) – if you give it a sample code a pretty nicely designed table it’ll replicate it for you and save you quite a bit of time. Same with coding for R or Stata. If you know what you are doing with implementation, LLMs are a multiplier. But the logic behind the analysis, yeah that’s up to you. 

Posted by: Eol | Apr 25 2026 16:07 utc | 198

@What the Duck? | Apr 25 2026 14:27 utc | 161

That programmer isn’t wrong that AI has failure modes. Its far from perfect. But it’s also Free.

No, it’s not, that is the whole idea. Typical monthly subscription costs:
 
ChatGPT Plus ~$20
Claude Pro ~$20
Gemini AI Pro ~$19.99
Perplexity Pro ~$20
 

Posted by: Norwegian | Apr 25 2026 16:07 utc | 199

Deniz, I asked my father who was a city attorney for hire, and knew the lobbying game to some degree, though he wasn’t impassioned politically; if he knew of anyone lobbying for good policy, not feathering someone’s nest.   He thought for a while and sadly answered, “I don’t know of anyone who’s interested in that.” 
Peace doesn’t sell, there’s nothing to sell, no kickback, no lobbying dollars, just general prosperity.   What good is that?

Posted by: Scottindallas | Apr 25 2026 16:13 utc | 200