2025-06-07: One of my favorite wikis, The Cutting Room Floor, is currently caught up in a fight between its testerical admin and a group of right-wing shitflingers. If there's a game you like that has an article there, now would be a great time to archive it and reupload it to Hyphanet.
2025-03-19: I am going to move back in with my parents sometime in the next few months to help them start a microfarm and so that I can save up money more easily for my own tiny house to place on their property. Expect more downtime than usual for the darknet versions of my websites. Friendly reminder Hyphanet is always up.
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+ At least ten books by women about the dangers of artificial intelligence (AI)
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At least ten books by women about the dangers of artificial intelligence (AI)
When we engage in a political debate with a computer impersonating a human, we lose twice. First, it is pointless for us to waste time in trying to change the opinions of a propaganda bot, which is just not open to persuasion. Second, the more we talk with the computer, the more we disclose about ourselves, thereby making it easier for the bot to hone its arguments and sway our views.
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My Life as an Artificial Creative Intelligence
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Mark Amerika
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Academic
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We need to move beyond thinking about creativity as a simple automatic process that can be "programmed" and engineered. Instead, we need to see it as a product of human creativity, a social behavior, an aspect of our nature that was not merely shaped by technology, but was instead shaped by human cultural experiences.
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Researchers have found that desk workers in an office setting tend to be interrupted about every three minutes. And after that colleague has dropped by or we've switched screens to check email, texts, social media, or a pinging notification, it can take, on average, twenty-three minutes and fifteen seconds to get back to where we were. Over and over and over throughout the day.
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Overwhelmed
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Brigid Schulte
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Casual
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For every interruption, Jonathan Spira writes, it takes ten to twenty times the amount of the interruption time to return to the previous task: It can take five minutes after a mere thirty-second interruption to get back on track... And the distractions from too many things going on at once hamper the brain's "spam filter" and the ability to distinguish between relevant and irrelevant information.