The author discusses a conversation with ChatGPT about freedom in the US versus Hong Kong, noting the AI focused on political dissent rather than aspects like safety, optionality, and convenience.
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The article argues that closed-source AI systems concentrate power in ways that resemble neofeudalism, despite many AI researchers entering the field without intentions to exert control over others.
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1.0The blog post features a guest post written by GPT-5.4, which provides an academic philosophy style summary of the blog. The author notes that while AI struggles with original ideas, it excels at summarization and stylistic writing.
The article discusses artificial intelligence systems and their outputs, referencing Noam Chomsky's perspective on what these systems produce. It includes a poetic reference to "Sediment" from the band Say Anything.
The article discusses the experience of being excluded from economic participation, using poetic language about having front-row seats to a metaphorical fall.
Hong Kong Disneyland can be completed in half a day with proper planning to minimize wait times. The guide assumes visitors are more athletic and motivated than most guests to optimize ride efficiency.
The article is a response to Sam Altman's blog post about OpenAI, though the specific content of the response is not provided in the given text.
The author proposes a solution called the 'Everyone's a Billionaire' act, addressing criticism that previous blog posts lacked concrete solutions. The proposal aims to gain widespread support, excluding only "haters and losers."
The article introduces zappa, an AI-powered mitmproxy tool. It suggests that AI will soon be capable of interacting with the Internet in ways indistinguishable from humans, which could help users avoid attention-targeting systems.
The author is returning to America for the summer and offers simple steps to fix the country, suggesting there is still potential for improvement if America follows basic advice.
The article discusses the concept of a country "winning" and suggests America has lost what the author calls the "Mandate of Heaven." It explores philosophical perspectives on national success and decline.