UsefulIdiot
Known Reviewer
Whenever you post something anywhere (including on Massage Planet) just assume it can be traced back to you, whatever steps you take to hide your identity. And since this is the age of communication anything you do in real life can also catch up to you. This is the abbreviated version of what follows if you do not want to read further.
Awhile back it was announced that privacy is dead. I think this made people of my generation more careful (e.g. when a retailer like the Gap asks for my email address the young person at the counter is always surprised when I balk at the request), and younger generations did not really get it or resigned themselves to not having privacy or wrongly assumed that avatars and VPNs, etc., would protect them (if you were not the smartest person in your college or university why would you think you could outsmart corporations or governments?). This is resonating with me today for two reasons: yesterday I scrolled through a click-bait slideshow of famous people now being held to account for sex crimes committed not just recently but going back decades (e.g. Stephen Tyler, Dustin Hoffman, Marilyn Manson); and this morning I saw a news item about CHATGPT, an AI program that can write essays and simulate conversations (e.g. an interview with George Washington by a modern journalist). I was also thinking about how in the future we might have AI in our heads constantly giving advice, as I walked my dog yesterday.
My own paranoia began as a teenager when I read books about subliminal manipulation. There was a lot of nonsense written on the subject (for the life of me I could not make out vulgar images hidden within pictures of ice cubes), but what was proven is that some advertising companies did try it. What was more apparent was "lifestyle advertising" - for example a scene in a commercial of a party with very attractive people having fun, and ending with an allusion to a particular brand. Drink our beer and you will be cool and have cool friends. You are ugly and worthless but buy our products and you can look and feel better. Corporations may be made up of mostly normal people, but as a whole are psychopathic - there mandate is to maximize profit by all legal (and sometimes illegal) means. Those at the top of the food chain surround themselves with yes men and do not have their bullshit kept in check by peers like the rest of us. Smart people create new and interesting tools and technology, and corporations and the billionaire class exploit them.
The trouble is that AI is getting really powerful. It can create dialog that is almost indistinguishable from real people (the Turing test). It can curate the dialog to appeal to different personality types. I can guarantee that in the future it will be able to deep dives on each individual, find out all our secrets and motives and use them to manipulate us. With this in mind I just assume anything I say or post might come back to haunt me. On the plus side it is not just us plebes that need to be careful, it is also the ownership class. Rupert Murdoch and Donald Trump will probably die before they are held accountable for their crimes, but their successors will not.
Awhile back it was announced that privacy is dead. I think this made people of my generation more careful (e.g. when a retailer like the Gap asks for my email address the young person at the counter is always surprised when I balk at the request), and younger generations did not really get it or resigned themselves to not having privacy or wrongly assumed that avatars and VPNs, etc., would protect them (if you were not the smartest person in your college or university why would you think you could outsmart corporations or governments?). This is resonating with me today for two reasons: yesterday I scrolled through a click-bait slideshow of famous people now being held to account for sex crimes committed not just recently but going back decades (e.g. Stephen Tyler, Dustin Hoffman, Marilyn Manson); and this morning I saw a news item about CHATGPT, an AI program that can write essays and simulate conversations (e.g. an interview with George Washington by a modern journalist). I was also thinking about how in the future we might have AI in our heads constantly giving advice, as I walked my dog yesterday.
My own paranoia began as a teenager when I read books about subliminal manipulation. There was a lot of nonsense written on the subject (for the life of me I could not make out vulgar images hidden within pictures of ice cubes), but what was proven is that some advertising companies did try it. What was more apparent was "lifestyle advertising" - for example a scene in a commercial of a party with very attractive people having fun, and ending with an allusion to a particular brand. Drink our beer and you will be cool and have cool friends. You are ugly and worthless but buy our products and you can look and feel better. Corporations may be made up of mostly normal people, but as a whole are psychopathic - there mandate is to maximize profit by all legal (and sometimes illegal) means. Those at the top of the food chain surround themselves with yes men and do not have their bullshit kept in check by peers like the rest of us. Smart people create new and interesting tools and technology, and corporations and the billionaire class exploit them.
The trouble is that AI is getting really powerful. It can create dialog that is almost indistinguishable from real people (the Turing test). It can curate the dialog to appeal to different personality types. I can guarantee that in the future it will be able to deep dives on each individual, find out all our secrets and motives and use them to manipulate us. With this in mind I just assume anything I say or post might come back to haunt me. On the plus side it is not just us plebes that need to be careful, it is also the ownership class. Rupert Murdoch and Donald Trump will probably die before they are held accountable for their crimes, but their successors will not.