From Pine View Farm

Geek Stuff category archive

Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Capable of critical thought? Zeynep Tufekci argues that (emphasis added)

Large language models are not reasoning machines. They’re plausibility engines. They can only assess which answers are probable, based on the data on which the models have been trained.

Follow the link for his arguements.

And, in more news of AI . . . .

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

The Dot-Com Bubble v 2.0? El Reg reports that

Businesses are rethinking their AI plans in the face of changing cost structures and rising fees. The research also found nearly half of organizations have rephased AI deployments when costs have outweighed the expected value. Lower-cost, high-fidelity models are the fastest-growing influence on AI strategy, up 7 percentage points from Q1.

“These actions do not signal reduced confidence in AI. Rather, they suggest a growing willingness to evaluate where AI creates meaningful value and where it does not. Organizations appear increasingly focused on concentrating investment where expected returns are strongest,” the report said.

Much more at the link.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Capable of kidnapping your data? El Reg reports that (s)mooth AI criminal drives ‘first’ end-to-end agentic ransomware attack. (To put that another way, once it got the prompt, an AI bot ran a rensomeware scam from start to finish all on its ownsome.)

AI doesn’t stand for “ariticial intelligence.” It stands “amoral instrumentation.”

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Impartial? Only as impartial as the data they scrape train on.

At the Psychology Today website, Phil Reed reminds that “AI mirrors human cognitive biases, not just factual knowledge.” Follow the link for the evidence.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

A competent couples counselor? Better have that divorce lawyeer’s number handy.

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Driven to Destruction 0

A tale of AI, that is, autoficial intelligence.

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It’s All about the Algorithm 0

Time of having “social” media decide what to hear about?

The EFF travels back into the past to recommend a way to escape tentacles of “social” media algorithms.

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Facebook Frolics 0

Politico reports:

Social media giant Meta is pushing California state lawmakers to shield it from pending legislation that would increase legal penalties in child-harm cases, according to two people familiar with the effort. . . .

One more time, “social” media isn’t.

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The Coming Robot Apocalypse 0

My old Philly DL Friend Noz tells a tale of the singularity.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much? 0

A teaching tool? If you want more fools.

At the Psychology Today website, Soren Kaplan discusses a study involving 26,000 students indicating that “(u)sing AI can create short-term results but may stifle long-term learning.”

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The Disinformation Superhighway 0

Rat:  What are you doing, Pig?  Pig:  Writing a paper about the internet.  I'm supposed to explain why they call it the World Wide Web.  Rat:  Because it trapps you a spider's prey and ends what was once a healthy life.  Pig:  Of course.  Rat:  It's all right there in the name.

Click for the original image.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Impartial and unbiased? Just as impartial and unbiased as the internet it scrapes to fill its database: As Phil Reed warns us at the Psychology Today website, “AI in healthcare amplifies existing gender and cultural stereotypes, worsening inequality.”

Follow the link for his evidence.

(Slightly edited for clarity.)

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Signs of the Singularity 0

From El Reg:

Waymo is recalling nearly 4,000 robotaxis after its vehicles repeatedly failed to recognize freeway construction zones, in some cases driving past closure signs or between cones marking closed lanes. . . .

Renenberm, robots are programmed by fallible human beings. Therefore, robots are fallib–no, never mind. Noone is listening and and everyone’s buying the hype.

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It’s All about the Algorithm 0

At the Psychology Today website, Rosanna E. Guadagno argues that “social” media is by design, er, antisocial.

She makes three main points:

  • Outrage drives engagement, so social media platforms amplify it by design.
  • Reordering social media feeds alone shifted partisan warmth by more than 2 points in a 2025 field study.
  • Disagreement is healthy, but contempt is what social media algorithms actually produce and reward.

Follow the link for some hints to avoid the artificially augmented algorithmic anger.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Seeing stuff that isn’t there? It’s, like, tripped out, dude.

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It’s All about the Algorithm 0

Via The Charlotte Observer, Northwestern University professors William J. Brady and Eli J. Finkel remind us that artificial “intelligence” is not intelligent. It’s engineered, and it’s engineered by humans to benefit the companies that they work for.

After looking at the damage that “social” media algorithms have done to dis coarse discourse (and that section alone makes their article worth reading), they explain why they fear that AI will have similar effects, especially now that AI designers are turning to advertising as a source of revenue. Here’s a tiny bit:

Some will argue that our analogy between chatbots and social media platforms is overdrawn – that chatbots are conversational tools, not social networks. But the issue is not the technology. It is the business model. When the product is free and the revenue comes from advertisers, the money comes from capturing users’ attention. This was true of broadcast television. It was true of social media. And it will be true of AI.

We are not opposed to AI – far from it. The evidence we’ve cited suggests it can be a powerful tool for improving reasoning and reducing prejudice. But those benefits depend on what the chatbots are optimized for.

The argument that AI is fundamentally different from social media, that it will elevate expertise rather than amplify outrage and moderate views rather than entrench them, is seductive precisely because we want it to be true. But that argument deserves scrutiny, not credulity. If anything, the case for skepticism is stronger here than it was for social media.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

A competent legal researcher? Maybe you should check with these lawyers.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much 0

A competent ER doctor? You may be headed for a quack-up.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Dressing up superficial slop in Sunday go-to-meeting clothes? Yes, argues John Nosta who warns us that (empasis added)

It’s important to recognize that slop isn’t simply bad writing. Bad writing is clumsy and unfinished and reflects the process of thinking. Slop operates differently. Its output is optimized for the read rather than the idea. Its purpose isn’t to explore a thought but to create the experience of having encountered one.

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A Picture Is Worth 0

Man labeled

Click for the original image.

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