Author name: Rejus Almole

ai-use-damages-professional-reputation,-study-suggests

AI use damages professional reputation, study suggests

Using AI can be a double-edged sword, according to new research from Duke University. While generative AI tools may boost productivity for some, they might also secretly damage your professional reputation.

On Thursday, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) published a study showing that employees who use AI tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini at work face negative judgments about their competence and motivation from colleagues and managers.

“Our findings reveal a dilemma for people considering adopting AI tools: Although AI can enhance productivity, its use carries social costs,” write researchers Jessica A. Reif, Richard P. Larrick, and Jack B. Soll of Duke’s Fuqua School of Business.

The Duke team conducted four experiments with over 4,400 participants to examine both anticipated and actual evaluations of AI tool users. Their findings, presented in a paper titled “Evidence of a social evaluation penalty for using AI,” reveal a consistent pattern of bias against those who receive help from AI.

What made this penalty particularly concerning for the researchers was its consistency across demographics. They found that the social stigma against AI use wasn’t limited to specific groups.

Fig. 1. Effect sizes for differences in expected perceptions and disclosure to others (Study 1). Note: Positive d values indicate higher values in the AI Tool condition, while negative d values indicate lower values in the AI Tool condition. N = 497. Error bars represent 95% CI. Correlations among variables range from | r |= 0.53 to 0.88.

Fig. 1 from the paper “Evidence of a social evaluation penalty for using AI.” Credit: Reif et al.

“Testing a broad range of stimuli enabled us to examine whether the target’s age, gender, or occupation qualifies the effect of receiving help from Al on these evaluations,” the authors wrote in the paper. “We found that none of these target demographic attributes influences the effect of receiving Al help on perceptions of laziness, diligence, competence, independence, or self-assuredness. This suggests that the social stigmatization of AI use is not limited to its use among particular demographic groups. The result appears to be a general one.”

The hidden social cost of AI adoption

In the first experiment conducted by the team from Duke, participants imagined using either an AI tool or a dashboard creation tool at work. It revealed that those in the AI group expected to be judged as lazier, less competent, less diligent, and more replaceable than those using conventional technology. They also reported less willingness to disclose their AI use to colleagues and managers.

The second experiment confirmed these fears were justified. When evaluating descriptions of employees, participants consistently rated those receiving AI help as lazier, less competent, less diligent, less independent, and less self-assured than those receiving similar help from non-AI sources or no help at all.

AI use damages professional reputation, study suggests Read More »

fidji-simo-joins-openai-as-new-ceo-of-applications

Fidji Simo joins OpenAI as new CEO of Applications

In the message, Altman described Simo as bringing “a rare blend of leadership, product and operational expertise” and expressed that her addition to the team makes him “even more optimistic about our future as we continue advancing toward becoming the superintelligence company.”

Simo becomes the newest high-profile female executive at OpenAI following the departure of Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati in September. Murati, who had been with the company since 2018 and helped launch ChatGPT, left alongside two other senior leaders and founded Thinking Machines Lab in February.

OpenAI’s evolving structure

The leadership addition comes as OpenAI continues to evolve beyond its origins as a research lab. In his announcement, Altman described how the company now operates in three distinct areas: as a research lab focused on artificial general intelligence (AGI), as a “global product company serving hundreds of millions of users,” and as an “infrastructure company” building systems that advance research and deliver AI tools “at unprecedented scale.”

Altman mentioned that as CEO of OpenAI, he will “continue to directly oversee success across all pillars,” including Research, Compute, and Applications, while staying “closely involved with key company decisions.”

The announcement follows recent news that OpenAI abandoned its original plan to cede control of its nonprofit branch to a for-profit entity. The company began as a nonprofit research lab in 2015 before creating a for-profit subsidiary in 2019, maintaining its original mission “to ensure artificial general intelligence benefits everyone.”

Fidji Simo joins OpenAI as new CEO of Applications Read More »

doge-software-engineer’s-computer-infected-by-info-stealing-malware

DOGE software engineer’s computer infected by info-stealing malware

Login credentials belonging to an employee at both the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the Department of Government Efficiency have appeared in multiple public leaks from info-stealer malware, a strong indication that devices belonging to him have been hacked in recent years.

Kyle Schutt is a 30-something-year-old software engineer who, according to Dropsite News, gained access in February to a “core financial management system” belonging to the Federal Emergency Management Agency. As an employee of DOGE, Schutt accessed FEMA’s proprietary software for managing both disaster and non-disaster funding grants. Under his role at CISA, he likely is privy to sensitive information regarding the security of civilian federal government networks and critical infrastructure throughout the US.

A steady stream of published credentials

According to journalist Micah Lee, user names and passwords for logging in to various accounts belonging to Schutt have been published at least four times since 2023 in logs from stealer malware. Stealer malware typically infects devices through trojanized apps, phishing, or software exploits. Besides pilfering login credentials, stealers can also log all keystrokes and capture or record screen output. The data is then sent to the attacker and, occasionally after that, can make its way into public credential dumps.

“I have no way of knowing exactly when Schutt’s computer was hacked, or how many times,” Lee wrote. “I don’t know nearly enough about the origins of these stealer log datasets. He might have gotten hacked years ago and the stealer log datasets were just published recently. But he also might have gotten hacked within the last few months.”

Lee went on to say that credentials belonging to a Gmail account known to belong to Schutt have appeared in 51 data breaches and five pastes tracked by breach notification service Have I Been Pwned. Among the breaches that supplied the credentials is one from 2013 that pilfered password data for 3 million Adobe account holders, one in a 2016 breach that stole credentials for 164 million LinkedIn users, a 2020 breach affecting 167 million users of Gravatar, and a breach last year of the conservative news site The Post Millennial.

DOGE software engineer’s computer infected by info-stealing malware Read More »

nasa-scrambles-to-cut-iss-activity-due-to-budget-issues

NASA scrambles to cut ISS activity due to budget issues

Canceling the tracker layer upgrade to the spectrometer would also not be catastrophic. The addition of a silicon tracker layer on top of the detector would increase the amount of data from the $2 billion physics experiment over the next five years by a factor of three. However, the experiment has been in operation since 2011, so it has had ample time to collect information about dark matter and other fundamental physics in the universe.

Cutting crews down to size

The real eye-catching proposal in NASA’s options is reducing the crew size from four to three.

Typically, Crew Dragon missions carry two NASA astronauts, one Roscosmos cosmonaut, and an international partner astronaut. Therefore, although it appears that NASA would only be cutting its crew size by 25 percent, in reality, it would be cutting the number of NASA astronauts on Crew Dragon missions by 50 percent. Overall, this would lead to an approximately one-third decline in science conducted by the space station. (This is because there are usually three NASA astronauts on station: two from Dragon and one on each Soyuz flight.)

It’s difficult to see how this would result in enormous cost savings. Yes, NASA would need to send marginally fewer cargo missions to keep fewer astronauts supplied. And there would be some reduction in training costs. But it seems kind of nuts to spend decades and more than $100 billion building an orbital laboratory, putting all of this effort into developing commercial vehicles to supply the station and enlarge its crew, establishing a rigorous training program to ensure maximum science is done and then to say,Well, actually we don’t want to use it.’

NASA has not publicly announced the astronauts who will fly on Crew-12 next year, but according to sources, it has already assigned veteran astronaut Jessica Meir and newcomer Jack Hathaway, a former US Navy fighter pilot who joined NASA’s astronaut corps in 2021. If these changes go through, presumably one of these two would be removed from the mission.

NASA scrambles to cut ISS activity due to budget issues Read More »

matter-update-may-finally-take-the-tedium-out-of-setting-up-your-smart-home

Matter update may finally take the tedium out of setting up your smart home

There is no product category that better embodies the XKCD take on standards than smart home. With an ocean of connectivity options and incompatible standards, taming this mess has been challenging, but Matter could finally have a shot at making things a little less frustrating. The latest version of the standard has launched, offering multiple ways to streamline the usually aggravating setup process.

The first public release of Matter was in late 2022, but compatible systems didn’t get support until the following year. Now, there are Matter-certified devices like smart bulbs and sensors that will talk to Apple, Google, Amazon, and other smart home platforms. Matter 1.4.1 includes support for multi-device QR codes, NFC connection, and integrated terms and conditions—all of these have the potential to eliminate some very real smart home headaches.

It’s common for retailers to offer multi-packs of devices like light bulbs or smart plugs. That can save you some money, but setting up all those devices is tedious. With Matter 1.4.1, it might be much easier thanks to multi-device QR codes. Manufacturers can now include a QR code in the package that will pair all the included devices with your smart home system when scanned.

QR codes will still appear on individual devices for pairing, but it might not always be a QR code going forward. The new Matter also gives manufacturers the option of embedding NFC tags inside smart home gadgets. So all you have to do to add them to your system is tap your phone. That will be nice if you need to pair a device after it has been installed somewhere that obscures the visible code.

Matter update may finally take the tedium out of setting up your smart home Read More »

the-company-with-the-world’s-largest-aircraft-now-has-a-hypersonic-rocket-plane

The company with the world’s largest aircraft now has a hypersonic rocket plane

“Demonstrating the reuse of fully recoverable hypersonic test vehicles is an important milestone for MACH-TB,” said George Rumford, director of the Test Resource Management Center, in a statement. “Lessons learned from this test campaign will help us reduce vehicle turnaround time from months down to weeks.”

Krevor said Talon-A carried multiple experiments on each mission but did not offer any details about the nature of the payloads, citing proprietary reasons and customer agreements.

“We cannot disclose the nature of those payloads, other than to say typical materials, instrumentation, sensors, etc.,” he said. “The customers were thrilled with their ability to recover the payloads shortly after landing.”

Stratolaunch completed the first powered flight of a Talon-A vehicle last year, when the rocket plane launched over the Pacific Ocean and fired its liquid-fueled Hadley engine—produced by Ursa Major—for about 200 seconds. The Talon-A1 vehicle accelerated to just shy of hypersonic speed, then fell into the sea as planned and was not recovered.

That set the stage for Talon-A2’s first flight in December.

Military officials previously stated they set up the MACH-TB program to enable more frequent flight testing of hypersonic weapon technologies, including communication, navigation, guidance, sensors, and seekers. Stratolaunch aims for monthly flights of the Talon-A rocket plane by the end of the year and eventually wants to ramp up to weekly flights.

“These flights are setting the stage now to increase the cadence of hypersonic flight testing in this country,” Krevor said. “The ability to have a fully reusable hypersonic flight architecture enables a very high cadence of flight along with a lot of responsiveness. The DoD can call Stratolaunch if there’s a priority program, and we can have a hypersonic flight next week, assuming the readiness of all the other technologies and payloads.”

Pentagon officials in 2022 set a goal of growing US capacity for hypersonic testing from 12 to 50 flight tests per year. Krevor believes Stratolaunch will play a key part in making that happen.

Catching up

So, why is hypersonic flight testing important?

The Pentagon seeks to close what it views as a technological gap with China, which US officials acknowledge has become the world’s leader in hypersonic missile development. Hypersonic weapons are more difficult than conventional missiles for aerial defense systems to detect, track, and destroy. Unlike ballistic missiles, hypersonic weapons ride at the top of the atmosphere, enhancing their maneuverability and ability to evade interceptors.

Hypersonic flight is an unforgiving environment. Temperatures outside the Talon-A vehicle can reach up to 2,000° Fahrenheit (1,100° Celsius) as the plane plows through air molecules, Krevor said. He declined to disclose the duration, top speed, and maximum altitude of the December and March test flights but said the rocket plane performed a series of “high-G” maneuvers on the journey from its drop location to Vandenberg.

The company with the world’s largest aircraft now has a hypersonic rocket plane Read More »

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Trump admin picks COVID critic to be top FDA vaccine regulator

Oncologist Vinay Prasad, a divisive critic of COVID-19 responses, will be the next top vaccine regulator at the Food and Drug Administration, agency Commissioner Martin Makary announced on social media Tuesday.

Prasad will head the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research (CBER), which is in charge of approving and regulating vaccines and other biologics products, such as gene therapies and blood products.

“Dr. Prasad brings the kind of scientific rigor, independence, and transparency we need at CBER—a significant step forward,” Makary wrote on social media.

Prasad, a professor in the department of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco, is perhaps best known for his combative social media postings and criticism of the mainstream medical community. He gained notoriety amid the COVID-19 pandemic for assailing public health responses, such as masking and vaccine mandates.

In an October 2021 newsletter, titled “How Democracy Ends,” Prasad compared the country’s pandemic responses to the rise of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich. The post led New York University bioethicist Arthur Caplan to rebuke Prasad, writing in The Cancer Letter that the comparison is “ludicrous, dangerous, and offensive,” before adding “imbecilic.”

Prasad has also criticized the FDA for approving COVID-19 booster vaccines. Last year, he accused his predecessor as the head of the CBER, Peter Marks, of being “either incompetent or corrupt” for allowing the approvals.

“Absurd”

More recently, Prasad has heaped praise on new FDA Commissioner Makary, while continuing to criticize Marks. In early March, Prasad called Makary “smart, thoughtful, and disciplined” and “exactly what we need at the FDA.” Later in the month, he continued to take shots at Marks, writing: “You could replace Peter Marks with a bobblehead doll that just stamps approval and you would have the same outcome at FDA with lower administrative fees. Maybe something DOGE should consider.”

Trump admin picks COVID critic to be top FDA vaccine regulator Read More »

apps-like-kindle-are-already-taking-advantage-of-court-mandated-ios-app-store-changes

Apps like Kindle are already taking advantage of court-mandated iOS App Store changes

As of an update released today, the iOS app still doesn’t allow books to be purchased directly in the app, but you can search Amazon’s virtual bookstore inside the app and tap a new “Get Book” button that automatically pops you over to Amazon.com in your phone or tablet’s default browser. This is not as convenient for users as allowing them to purchase digital goods or services directly in the app, but it does make things a lot more friendly for users of apps whose developers don’t want to pay Apple a cut.

For the first time ever, the Kindle app on iOS can automatically direct book buyers to Amazon’s site to complete a purchase. Credit: Andrew Cunningham

Apple’s position on its App Store commissions has generally been, to write a high-level summary, that these third-party app developers benefit from the size and reach of Apple’s platform, the work Apple does to maintain the App Store and to make apps discoverable, and Apple’s payment processing services, among other benefits.

Even when it complied with a court order to allow third-party developers to use alternate payment processors in their apps, Apple still insisted on a 12 to 27 percent cut (rather than the usual 15 to 30 percent) to cover these other less-tangible benefits of offering apps and services on Apple’s devices. (Apple’s method of complying with that ruling, including onerous filing requirements for developers who used third-party payment services, was one of many things Judge Gonzalez criticized Apple for in last week’s ruling.)

A new headache for Apple

Apple is appealing last week’s ruling, and it may well succeed in the end, giving the company the ability to roll back these rule changes and once again force developers to either use Apple’s in-app payments or force users to buy goods and services externally. But even if this change is only temporary, it still creates new potential PR headaches for Apple.

Apps like Kindle are already taking advantage of court-mandated iOS App Store changes Read More »

how-long-will-switch-2’s-game-key-cards-keep-working?

How long will Switch 2’s Game Key Cards keep working?

You could even argue that Nintendo is more likely to offer longer-term support for Game Key Card downloads since backward compatibility seems to be a priority for the Switch hardware line. If we presume that future Switch systems will remain backward compatible, we can probably also presume that Nintendo will want players on new hardware to still have access to their old Game Key Card purchases (or to be able to use Game Key Cards purchased on the secondhand market).

A pile of physical games that will never require a download server to work.

Credit: Aurich Lawson

A pile of physical games that will never require a download server to work. Credit: Aurich Lawson

There are no guarantees in life, of course, and nothing lasts forever. Nintendo will one day go out of business, at which point it seems unlikely that a Game Key Card will be able to download much of anything. Short of that, Nintendo could suffer a financial malady that makes download servers for legacy systems seem like an indulgence, or it could come under new management that doesn’t see value in supporting decades-old purchases made for ancient consoles.

As of this writing, though, Nintendo has kept its Wii game download servers active for 6,743 days and counting. If the Switch 2 Game Key Card servers last as long, that means those cards will still be fully functional through at least October 2043.

I don’t know what I will be doing with my life in 2043, but it’s comforting and extremely plausible to imagine that the “eighty dollar rental” I made of a Switch 2 Game Key Card back in 2025 will still work as intended.

Or, to put it another way, I think it’s highly likely that I will become “e-waste” long before any Switch 2 Game Key Cards.

How long will Switch 2’s Game Key Cards keep working? Read More »

zuckerberg’s-dystopian-ai-vision

Zuckerberg’s Dystopian AI Vision

You think it’s bad now? Oh, you have no idea. In his talks with Ben Thompson and Dwarkesh Patel, Zuckerberg lays out his vision for our AI future.

I thank him for his candor. I’m still kind of boggled that he said all of it out loud.

We will start with the situation now. How are things going on Facebook in the AI era?

Oh, right.

Sakib: Again, it happened again. Opened Facebook and I saw this. I looked at the comments and they’re just unsuspecting boomers congratulating the fake AI gen couple😂

Deepfates: You think those are real boomers in the comments?

This continues to be 100% Zuckerberg’s fault, and 100% an intentional decision.

The algorithm knows full well what kind of post this is. It still floods people with them, especially if you click even once. If they wanted to stop it, they easily could.

There’s also the rather insane and deeply embarrassing AI bot accounts they have tried out on Facebook and Instagram.

Compared to his vision of the future? You aint seen nothing yet.

Ben Thompson interviewed Mark Zuckerberg, centering on business models.

It was like if you took a left wing caricature of why Zuckerberg is evil, combined it with a left wing caricature about why AI is evil, and then fused them into their final form. Except it’s coming directly from Zuckerberg, as explicit text, on purpose.

It’s understandable that many leave such interviews and related stories saying this:

Ewan Morrison: Big tech atomises you, isolates you, makes you lonely and depressed – then it rents you an AI friend, and AI therapist, an AI lover.

Big tech are parasites who pretend they are here to help you.

When asked what he wants to use AI for, Zuckerberg’s primary answer is advertising, in particular an ‘ultimate black box’ where you ask for a business outcome and the AI does what it takes to make that outcome happen. I leave all the ‘do not want’ and ‘misalignment maximalist goal out of what you are literally calling a black box, film at 11 if you need to watch it again’ and ‘general dystopian nightmare’ details as an exercise to the reader. He anticipates that advertising will then grow from the current 1%-2% of GDP to something more, and Thompson is ‘there with’ him, ‘everyone should embrace the black box.’

His number two use is ‘growing engagement on the customer surfaces and recommendations.’ As in, advertising by another name, and using AI in predatory fashion to maximize user engagement and drive addictive behavior.

In case you were wondering if it stops being this dystopian after that? Oh, hell no.

Mark Zuckerberg: You can think about our products as there have been two major epochs so far.

The first was you had your friends and you basically shared with them and you got content from them and now, we’re in an epoch where we’ve basically layered over this whole zone of creator content.

So the stuff from your friends and followers and all the people that you follow hasn’t gone away, but we added on this whole other corpus around all this content that creators have that we are recommending.

Well, the third epoch is I think that there’s going to be all this AI-generated content…

So I think that these feed type services, like these channels where people are getting their content, are going to become more of what people spend their time on, and the better that AI can both help create and recommend the content, I think that that’s going to be a huge thing. So that’s kind of the second category.

The third big AI revenue opportunity is going to be business messaging.

And the way that I think that’s going to happen, we see the early glimpses of this because business messaging is actually already a huge thing in countries like Thailand and Vietnam.

So what will unlock that for the rest of the world? It’s like, it’s AI making it so that you can have a low cost of labor version of that everywhere else.

Also he thinks everyone should have an AI therapist, and that people want more friends so AI can fill in for the missing humans there. Yay.

PoliMath: I don’t really have words for how much I hate this

But I also don’t have a solution for how to combat the genuine isolation and loneliness that people suffer from

AI friends are, imo, just a drug that lessens the immediate pain but will probably cause far greater suffering

Well, I guess the fourth one is the normal ‘everyone use AI now,’ at least?

And then, the fourth is all the more novel, just AI first thing, so like Meta AI.

He also blames Llama-4’s terrible reception on user error in setup, and says they now offer an API so people have a baseline implementation to point to, and says essentially ‘well of course we built a version of Llama-4 specifically to score well on Arena, that only shows off how easy it is to steer it, it’s good actually.’ Neither of them, of course, even bothers to mention any downside risks or costs of open models.

The killer app of Meta AI is that it will know all about all your activity on Facebook and Instagram and use it against for you, and also let you essentially ‘talk to the algorithm’ which I do admit is kind of interesting but I notice Zuckerberg didn’t mention an option to tell it to alter the algorithm, and Thompson didn’t ask.

There is one area where I like where his head is at:

I think one of the things that I’m really focused on is how can you make it so AI can help you be a better friend to your friends, and there’s a lot of stuff about the people who I care about that I don’t remember, I could be more thoughtful.

There are all these issues where it’s like, “I don’t make plans until the last minute”, and then it’s like, “I don’t know who’s around and I don’t want to bug people”, or whatever. An AI that has good context about what’s going on with the people you care about, is going to be able to help you out with this.

That is… not how I would implement this kind of feature, and indeed the more details you read the more Zuckerberg seems determined to do even the right thing in the most dystopian way possible, but as long as it’s fully opt-in (if not, wowie moment of the week) then at least we’re trying at all.

Also interviewing Mark Zuckerberg is Dwarkesh Patel. There was good content here, Zuckerberg in many ways continues to be remarkably candid. But it wasn’t as dense or hard hitting as many of Patel’s other interviews.

One key difference between the interviews is that when Zuckerberg lays out his dystopian vision, you get the sense that Thompson is for it, whereas Patel is trying to express that maybe we should be concerned. Another is that Patel notices that there might be more important things going on, whereas to Thompson nothing could be more important than enhancing ad markets.

  1. When asked what changed since Llama 3, Zuckerberg leads off with the ‘personalization loop.’

  2. Zuckerberg still claims Llama 4 Scout and Maverick are top notch. Okie dokie.

  3. He doubles down on ‘open source will become most used this year’ and that this year has been Great News For Open Models. Okie dokie.

  4. His heart’s clearly not in claiming it’s a good model, sir. His heart is in it being a good model for Meta’s particular commercial purposes and ‘product value’ as per people’s ‘revealed preferences.’ That’s the modes he talked about with Thompson.

  5. He’s very explicit about this. OpenAI and Anthropic are going for AGI and a world of abundance, with Anthropic focused on coding and OpenAI towards reasoning. Meta wants fast, cheap, personalized, easy to interact with all day, and (if you add what he said to Thompson) to optimize feeds and recommendations for engagement, and to sell ads. It’s all for their own purposes.

  6. He says Meta is specifically creating AI tools to write their own code for internal use, but I don’t understand what makes that different from a general AI coder? Or why they think their version is going to be better than using Claude or Gemini? This feels like some combination of paranoia and bluff.

  7. Thus, Meta seems to at this point be using the open model approach as a recruiting or marketing tactic? I don’t know what else it’s actually doing for them.

  8. As Dwarkesh notes, Zuckerberg is basically buying the case for superintelligence and the intelligence explosion, then ignoring it to form an ordinary business plan, and of course to continue to have their safety plan be ‘lol we’re Meta’ and release all their weights.

  9. I notice I am confused why their tests need hundreds of thousands or millions of people to be statistically significant? Impacts must be very small and also their statistical techniques they’re using don’t seem great. But also, it is telling that his first thought of experiments to run with AI are being run on his users.

  10. In general, Zuckerberg seems to be thinking he’s running an ordinary dystopian tech company doing ordinary dystopian things (except he thinks they’re not dystopian, which is why he talks about them so plainly and clearly) while other companies do other ordinary things, and has put all the intelligence explosion related high weirdness totally out of his mind or minimized it to specific use cases, even though he intellectually knows that isn’t right.

  11. He, CEO of Meta, says people use what is valuable to them and people are smart and know what is valuable in their lives, and when you think otherwise you’re usually wrong. Queue the laugh track.

  12. First named use case is talking through difficult conversations they need to have. I do think that’s actually a good use case candidate, but also easy to pervert.

  13. (29: 40) The friend quote: The average American only has three friends ‘but has demand for meaningfully more, something like 15… They want more connection than they have.’ His core prediction is that AI connection will be a compliment to human connection rather than a substitute.

    1. I tentatively agree with Zuckerberg, if and only if the AIs in question are engineered (by the developer, user or both, depending on context) to be complements rather than substitutes. You can make it one way.

    2. However, when I see Meta’s plans, it seems they are steering it the other way.

  14. Zuckerberg is making a fully general defense of adversarial capitalism and attention predation – if people are choosing to do something, then later we will see why it turned out to be valuable for them and why it adds value to their lives, including virtual therapists and virtual girlfriends.

    1. But this proves (or implies) far too much as a general argument. It suggests full anarchism and zero consumer protections. It applies to heroin or joining cults or being in abusive relationships or marching off to war and so on. We all know plenty of examples of self-destructive behaviors. Yes, the great classical liberal insight is that mostly you are better off if you let people do what they want, and getting in the way usually backfires.

    2. If you add AI into the mix, especially AI that moves beyond a ‘mere tool,’ and you consider highly persuasive AIs and algorithms, asserting ‘whatever the people choose to do must be benefiting them’ is Obvious Nonsense.

    3. I do think virtual therapists have a lot of promise as value adds, if done well. And also great danger to do harm, if done poorly or maliciously.

  15. Dwarkesh points out the danger of technology reward hacking us, and again Zuckerberg just triples down on ‘people know what they want.’ People wouldn’t let there be things constantly competing for their attention, so the future won’t be like that, he says. Is this a joke?

  16. I do get that the right way to design AI-AR glasses is as great glasses that also serve as other things when you need them and don’t flood your vision, and that the wise consumer will pay extra to ensure it works that way. But where is this trust in consumers coming from? Has Zuckerberg seen the internet? Has he seen how people use their smartphones? Oh, right, he’s largely directly responsible.

    1. Frankly, the reason I haven’t tried Meta’s glasses is that Meta makes them. They do sound like a nifty product otherwise, if execution is good.

  17. Zuckerberg is a fan of various industrial policies, praising the export controls and calling on America to help build new data centers and related power sources.

  18. Zuckerberg asks, would others be doing open models if Meta wasn’t doing it? Aren’t they doing this because otherwise ‘they’re going to lose?’

    1. Do not flatter yourself, sir. They’re responding to DeepSeek, not you. And in particular, they’re doing it to squash the idea that r1 means DeepSeek or China is ‘winning.’ Meta’s got nothing to do with it, and you’re not pushing things in the open direction in a meaningful way at this point.

  19. His case for why the open models need to be American is because our models embody an America view of the world in a way that Chinese models don’t. Even if you agree that is true, it doesn’t answer Dwarkesh’s point that everyone can easily switch models whenever they want. Zuckerberg then does mention the potential for backdoors, which is a real thing since ‘open model’ only means open weights, they’re not actually open source so you can’t rule out a backdoor.

  20. Zuckerberg says the point of Llama Behemoth will be the ability to distill it. So making that an open model is specifically so that the work can be distilled. But that’s something we don’t want the Chinese to do, asks Padme?

  21. And then we have a section on ‘monetizing AGI’ where Zuckerberg indeed goes right to ads and arguing that ads done well add value. Which they must, since consumers choose to watch them, I suppose, per his previous arguments?

To be fair, yes, it is hard out there. We all need a friend and our options are limited.

Roman Helmet Guy (reprise from last week): Zuckerberg explaining how Meta is creating personalized AI friends to supplement your real ones: “The average American has 3 friends, but has demand for 15.”

Daniel Eth: This sounds like something said by an alien from an antisocial species that has come to earth and is trying to report back to his kind what “friends” are.

Sam Ro: imagine having 15 friends.

Modest Proposal (quoting Chris Rock): “The Trenchcoat Mafia. No one would play with us. We had no friends. The Trenchcoat Mafia. Hey I saw the yearbook picture it was six of them. I ain’t have six friends in high school. I don’t got six friends now.”

Kevin Roose: The Meta vision of AI — hologram Reelslop and AI friends keeping you company while you eat breakfast alone — is so bleak I almost can’t believe they’re saying it out loud.

Exactly how dystopian are these ‘AI friends’ going to be?

GFodor.id (being modestly unfair): What he’s not saying is those “friends” will seem like real people. Your years-long friendship will culminate when they convince you to buy a specific truck. Suddenly, they’ll blink out of existence, having delivered a conversion to the company who spent $3.47 to fund their life.

Soible_VR: not your weights, not your friend.

Why would they then blink out of existence? There’s still so much more that ‘friend’ can do to convert sales, and also you want to ensure they stay happy with the truck and give it great reviews and so on, and also you don’t want the target to realize that was all you wanted, and so on. The true ‘AI ad buddy’ plays the long game, and is happy to stick around to monetize that bond – or maybe to get you to pay to keep them around, plus some profit margin.

The good ‘AI friend’ world is, again, one in which the AI friends are complements, or are only substituting while you can’t find better alternatives, and actively work to help you get and deepen ‘real’ friendships. Which is totally something they can do.

Then again, what happens when the AIs really are above human level, and can be as good ‘friends’ as a person? Is it so impossible to imagine this being fine? Suppose the AI was set up to perfectly imitate a real (remote) person who would actually be a good friend, including reacting as they would to the passage of time and them sometimes reaching out to you, and also that they’d introduce you to their friends which included other humans, and so on. What exactly is the problem?

And if you then give that AI ‘enhancements,’ such as happening to be more interested in whatever you’re interested in, having better information recall, watching out for you first more than most people would, etc, at what point do you have a problem? We need to be thinking about these questions now.

I do get that, in his own way, the man is trying. You wouldn’t talk about these plans in this way if you realized how the vision would sound to others. I get that he’s also talking to investors, but he has full control of Meta and isn’t raising capital, although Thompson thinks that Zuckerberg has need of going on a ‘trust me’ tour.

In some ways this is a microcosm of key parts of the alignment problem. I can see the problems Zuckerberg thinks he is solving, the value he thinks or claims he is providing. I can think of versions of these approaches that would indeed be ‘friendly’ to actual humans, and make their lives better, and which could actually get built.

Instead, on top of the commercial incentives, all the thinking feels alien. The optimization targets are subtly wrong. There is the assumption that the map corresponds to the territory, that people will know what is good for them so any ‘choices’ you convince them to make must be good for them, no matter how distorted you make the landscape, without worry about addiction to Skinner boxes or myopia or other forms of predation. That the collective social dynamics of adding AI into the mix in these ways won’t get twisted in ways that make everyone worse off.

And of course, there’s the continuing to model the future world as similar and ignoring the actual implications of the level of machine intelligence we should expect.

I do think there are ways to do AI therapists, AI ‘friends,’ AI curation of feeds and AI coordination of social worlds, and so on, that contribute to human flourishing, that would be great, and that could totally be done by Meta. I do not expect it to be at all similar to the one Meta actually builds.

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Signal clone used by Trump official stops operations after report it was hacked

Waltz was removed from his post late last week, with Trump nominating him to serve as ambassador to the United Nations.

TeleMessage website removes Signal mentions

The TeleMessage website until recently boasted the ability to “capture, archive and monitor mobile communication” through text messages, voice calls, WhatsApp, WeChat, Telegram, and Signal, as seen in an Internet Archive capture from Saturday. Another archived page says that TeleMessage “captures and records Signal calls, messages, deletions, including text, multimedia, [and] files,” and “maintain[s] all Signal app features and functionality as well as the Signal encryption.”

The TeleMessage home page currently makes no mention of Signal, and links on the page have been disabled.

The anonymous hacker who reportedly infiltrated TeleMessage told 404 Media that it took about 15 to 20 minutes and “wasn’t much effort at all.” While the hacker did not obtain Waltz’s messages, “the hack shows that the archived chat logs are not end-to-end encrypted between the modified version of the messaging app and the ultimate archive destination controlled by the TeleMessage customer,” according to 404 Media.

“Data related to Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the cryptocurrency giant Coinbase, and other financial institutions are included in the hacked material, according to screenshots of messages and backend systems obtained by 404 Media,” the report said. 404 Media added that the “hacker did not access all messages stored or collected by TeleMessage, but could have likely accessed more data if they decided to, underscoring the extreme risk posed by taking ordinarily secure end-to-end encrypted messaging apps such as Signal and adding an extra archiving feature to them.”

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OpenAI scraps controversial plan to become for-profit after mounting pressure

The restructuring would have also allowed OpenAI to remove the cap on returns for investors, potentially making the firm more appealing to venture capitalists, with the nonprofit arm continuing to exist but only as a minority stakeholder rather than maintaining governance control. This plan emerged as the company sought a funding round that would value it at $150 billion, which later expanded to the $40 billion round at a $300 billion valuation.

However, the new change in course follows months of mounting pressure from outside the company. In April, a group of legal scholars, AI researchers, and tech industry watchdogs openly opposed OpenAI’s plans to restructure, sending a letter to the attorneys general of California and Delaware.

Former OpenAI employees, Nobel laureates, and law professors also sent letters to state officials requesting that they halt the restructuring efforts out of safety concerns about which part of the company would be in control of hypothetical superintelligent future AI products.

“OpenAI was founded as a nonprofit, is today a nonprofit that oversees and controls the for-profit, and going forward will remain a nonprofit that oversees and controls the for-profit,” he added. “That will not change.”

Uncertainty ahead

While abandoning the restructuring that would have ended nonprofit control, OpenAI still plans to make significant changes to its corporate structure. “The for-profit LLC under the nonprofit will transition to a Public Benefit Corporation (PBC) with the same mission,” Altman explained. “Instead of our current complex capped-profit structure—which made sense when it looked like there might be one dominant AGI effort but doesn’t in a world of many great AGI companies—we are moving to a normal capital structure where everyone has stock. This is not a sale, but a change of structure to something simpler.”

But the plan may cause some uncertainty for OpenAI’s financial future. When OpenAI secured a massive $40 billion funding round in March, it came with strings attached: Japanese conglomerate SoftBank, which committed $30 billion, stipulated that it would reduce its contribution to $20 billion if OpenAI failed to restructure into a fully for-profit entity by the end of 2025.

Despite the challenges ahead, Altman expressed confidence in the path forward: “We believe this sets us up to continue to make rapid, safe progress and to put great AI in the hands of everyone.”

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