We need to stop pretending AI is intelligent
We are constantly fed a version of AI that looks, sounds and acts suspiciously like us. It speaks in polished sentences, mimics emotions, expresses curiosity, claims to feel compassion, even dabbles in what it calls creativity.But what we call AI today is nothing more than a statistical machine: a digital parrot regurgitating patterns mined from oceans of human data (the situation hasn’t changed much since it was discussed here five years ago). When it writes an answer to a question, it literally just guesses which letter and word will come next in a sequence – based on the data it’s been trained on.
This means AI has no understanding. No consciousness. No knowledge in any real, human sense. Just pure probability-driven, engineered brilliance — nothing more, and nothing less.
So why is a real “thinking” AI likely impossible? Because it’s bodiless. It has no senses, no flesh, no nerves, no pain, no pleasure. It doesn’t hunger, desire or fear. And because there is no cognition — not a shred — there’s a fundamental gap between the data it consumes (data born out of human feelings and experience) and what it can do with them.
Philosopher David Chalmers calls the mysterious mechanism underlying the relationship between our physical body and consciousness the “hard problem of consciousness”. Eminent scientists have recently hypothesised that consciousness actually emerges from the integration of internal, mental states with sensory representations (such as changes in heart rate, sweating and much more).
Given the paramount importance of the human senses and emotion for consciousness to “happen”, there is a profound and probably irreconcilable disconnect between general AI, the machine, and consciousness, a human phenomenon.
We need to stop pretending AI is intelligent – here’s how
AI may appear human, but it is an illusion we must tackle.The Conversation
Open source model that does photoshop-grade edits without affecting the rest of the pic: OmniGen 2
GitHub - VectorSpaceLab/OmniGen2: OmniGen2: Exploration to Advanced Multimodal Generation.
OmniGen2: Exploration to Advanced Multimodal Generation. - VectorSpaceLab/OmniGen2GitHub
Drugs Found in US-Israeli Aid Flour Bags in Gaza - Quds News Network (2025-06-27)
Drugs Found in US-Israeli Aid Flour Bags in Gaza - Quds News Network (2025-06-27)qudsnen.co/drugs-found-in-us-i…
------>> People in Gaza have found dangerous narcotics inside flour bags distributed by the US-Israeli Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (#GHF), which Palestinians and national organizations now call “death traps.”
>> The Government Media Office in Gaza told QNN that the drugs found were Oxycodone [alias #OxyContin], a powerful and addictive #opioid. It noted that four citizens have so far confirmed discovering the pills inside flour bags distributed by the US-Israeli so-called aid centers...
Drugs Found in US-Israeli Aid Flour Bags in Gaza
Gaza (Quds News Network)- People in Gaza have found dangerous narcotics inside flour bags distributed by the US-Israeli Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which Palestinians and national organizationEditing Team (Quds News Network)
No, you aren’t hallucinating, the corporate plan for AI is dangerous
No, you aren’t hallucinating, the corporate plan for AI is dangerous
Big tech is working hard to sell us on artificial intelligence, in particular what is called “artificial general intelligence.” At conferences and in interviews corporate leaders describe a n…Reports from the Economic Front
Judge Backs Anthropic’s Book Use as Fair, Piracy Trial Still Looms
Judge Backs Anthropic’s Book Use as Fair, Piracy Trial Still Looms
A U.S. judge rules Anthropic’s AI training use of copyrighted books is fair use, despite piracy concerns. Authors push back as legal battle continues.GazeOn Team (GazeOn)
At least 21 Palestinians were killed and several others injured on Saturday in a series of Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, the death toll of children who have died from hunger and
At least 21 Palestinians were killed and several others injured on Saturday in a series of Israeli airstrikes across the Gaza Strip. Meanwhile, the death toll of children who have died from hunger and malnutrition has reached 66, as Israel’s blockade, closure of border crossings, and restrictions on aid continue.#Gaza #Genocide #Starvation #FoodAsWeapon #Israel #SaveGaza #StopIsrael #SanctionIsrael #PeaceNow #bds
Scores Killed in Israeli Strikes on Gaza - Child Hunger Death Toll Climbs to 66 - Palestine Chronicle
Israeli airstrikes killed at least 21 Palestinians on Saturday as officials reported rising starvation deaths.admin (Palestine Chronicle)
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Explainable AI (XAI), Decoded: What It Is, Why It Matters, and Where It Fails
Explainable AI (XAI), Decoded: What It Is, Why It Matters, and Where It Fails
Imagine being denied a loan or misdiagnosed by a medical AI — and no one, not even the developers, can explain why it happened. For years, AI systems have operated behind closed doors: powerful but opaque, trusted but misunderstood.Eli Grid (GazeOn)
Gaza’s Grassroots Effort to Ensure Humanitarian Aid Reaches Starving Palestinians
Gaza’s Grassroots Effort to Ensure Humanitarian Aid Reaches Starving Palestinians
Tribal and community leaders in Gaza are uniting to secure aid convoys after over 500 people have been killed in daily aid massacres.Abdel Qader Sabbah (Drop Site News)
‘Ha’aretz’ article accusing Israeli soldiers of firing on aid seekers a ‘blood libel,’ Netanyahu says (Jewish News Syndicate, 2025-06-27)
‘Ha’aretz’ article accusing Israeli soldiers of firing on aid seekers a ‘blood libel,’ Netanyahu says (Jewish News Syndicate, 2025-06-27)jns.org/haaretz-article-accusi…
———>> The article “‘It’s a killing field’: IDF soldiers ordered to shoot deliberately at unarmed Gazans waiting for humanitarian aid” in the left-wing Israeli paper Ha’aretz contains “contemptible blood libels,” stated Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Israel Katz on Friday.
>> The Ha’aretz article cites anonymous Israeli soldiers and officers, who it says accused the IDF of firing on Gazans who posed no danger to them.
>> The Israeli military has said that it fires warning shots in certain instances and that it has identified suspicious people among the aid seekers.
>> While Israel’s Military Advocate General ordered an investigation into the allegations on Friday, the IDF has denied the claims made in the article …
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❝ Going to the US-backed aid distribution centre was the hardest day of my life. I’ve never felt humiliation like that ❞
❝ Going to the US-backed aid distribution centre was the hardest day of my life. I’ve never felt humiliation like that ❞middleeasteye.net/news/my-jour…
#Starvation #FoodAsWeapon #Gaza #Inhumanity #Israel #WarCrime #Genocide #StopIsrael #SaveGaza #SanctionIsrael
@palestine@a.gup.pe @israel
‘My journey to get aid in Gaza was like Squid Game’
Editor’s note: The following personal account of Yousef al-Ajouri, 40, was told to Palestinian journalist and MEE contributor Ahmed Dremly in Gaza City. It has been edited for brevity and clarity.Ahmed Dremly (Middle East Eye)
Israel Was Supposed to Sink Zohran Mamdani
cross-posted from: rss.ponder.cat/post/217883
Photo: Zachary SchulmanOn November 15, 2024, Zohran Mamdani released a video of himself interviewing people on the street in Queens and the Bronx who had voted for Donald Trump in the presidential election the previous week. It was one of the first of the viral posts that propelled him into the spotlight and ultimately helped him all but capture the Democratic nomination for mayor of New York. Then polling close to zero percent, Mamdani seemed more like a local news anchor than a candidate, gamely thrusting a microphone into the faces of voters and letting them take the stage. The answers to why they voted for Trump — “Food prices are going up,” “Rent is expensive” — informed Mamdani’s campaign as it homed in on the issue of affordability. But the other answer that came up again and again — one that Mamdani chose to highlight — was Gaza. “They like Trump because they don’t want their Palestinian brothers to be killed,” one man says.
This was a terrible miscalculation on the part of these voters, as is almost any attempt to make common cause with Trump. But voters’ disgust with the Democratic Party for its unstinting support of the Netanyahu regime, just like their anxiety about the high cost of living in New York, was real, and both sentiments carried over into the mayoral primary in June, a setting for the liberal left to confront itself. And once again voters punished the Democratic Party for its inability to address those issues, coming out in droves for the most un-Democratic candidate in the field — a socialist, in fact.
It was not supposed to happen this way, not in a city with nearly 1 million Jews, the historic center of the Jewish diaspora outside Israel. Mamdani’s opponents predicted that his positions on Israel — his reluctance to affirm its right to define itself as a Jewish state, his refusal to condemn the slogan “Globalize the Intifada,” his assertion that Benjamin Netanyahu should be arrested as an indicted war criminal if he visits New York, all nearly unheard of for a Democratic-primary candidate — would sink him. What’s curious is that while panicked Democrats are now conceding that Mamdani crushed his principal rival, the Establishment favorite Andrew Cuomo, by underscoring pocketbook issues, running a galvanic campaign both on social media and IRL, and not being an alleged serial sexual harasser and all-around goon, they have yet to reckon with the fact that voters, particularly young voters, were drawn to Mamdani and supported him fervently because of his steadfast opposition to the war in Gaza. Publicly at least, the Democrats have yet to acknowledge the enormous, perhaps irreparable toll their support for the war has taken on their party.
Mamdani outperformed expectations in nearly every demographic, upending the conventional wisdom that leftist appeal is limited to young, highly educated, largely white voters. But his campaign was nevertheless powered by an overwhelming show of force from those same voters who reside in what the strategist Michael Lange in the New York Times playfully called “the Commie Corridor,” a stretch of gentrified Brooklyn and Queens that includes Ridgewood (80 percent for Mamdani), Bushwick (79 percent), and East Williamsburg (75 percent). And these voters, as anyone in New York with an Instagram account can attest, are vocal about their opposition to the appalling atrocities Israel has committed in Gaza, as are the Muslim voters whom Mamdani also unlocked.
Foreign policy was not technically a top issue in the race, which makes sense because the mayor of New York does not set U.S. foreign policy (in general, the trend of turning every food–co-op–board election into a referendum on Gaza probably isn’t the ideal way to conduct local affairs). But no matter how hard Mamdani tried to focus on his proposals for free bus rides and free child care, Gaza was still everywhere in the primary, principally because his Democratic opponents, as well as the financial elites who stand behind them and sympathetic media outlets, thought they could use his positions on Israel to turn Jewish voters against him. When Mamdani stood by the use of the slogan “Globalize the Intifada,” Cuomo said those words “fuel hate” and “fuel murder” and “there are no two sides here.” But voters in the city with the most Jews outside Tel Aviv simply did not buy the notion that Mamdani is an antisemite who would discriminate against or fail to protect them. In fact, it’s clear that many Democrats, including many Jewish Democrats, voted for him because of his positions on Israel — or at the very least saw little objectionable about them. As the writer Bess Kalb put it in a recent essay explaining Jewish support for Mamdani, “I am not writing this on October 8th. It is June 25th, 2025. And if we do not change our perspective with time and events and evidence, we are living with our heads in the sand.”
Nearly 70 percent of Democrats now have an unfavorable view of Israel, according to Pew. Yet Democratic officials carry on as if full-throated support for Israel were party doctrine. An article in Politico about the lessons Democrats are drawing from Cuomo’s defeat did not contain a single mention of Gaza or Israel; titled “Mamdani’s Surprise Win Reawakens Democrats’ Internal Factions,” the article’s omission suggests there are no pro-Palestine factions to speak of. Instead, Democrats have been more than happy to jump on the much safer affordability train as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries declared, with his usual dead-eyed delivery, “I think what’s clear is that the relentless focus on affordability had great appeal all across the city of New York.”
Democrats have an odd habit of tuning out their own supporters even when those supporters are practically screaming at them to listen. In the past presidential election, New Yorkers were hollering at them about inflation, yes, but also immigration and crime. Democrats did eventually acknowledge they had been weak on those issues, which explains their timid response to Trump’s subsequent assault on undocumented and documented immigrants alike. The Democrats remain indifferent, however, to any pleas about Gaza, in ways that appear to be alienating to voters — especially young ones — on the left side of the spectrum who simply do not understand why the party that supposedly represents them is constantly bowing and scraping before a murderous regime.
Never was this more apparent than after Trump’s strike on Iran, which many Democrats, including Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, refused to condemn, despite the fact that Trump did not get the required congressional approval. In an instant, the pro-democracy, anti-authoritarian coalition revealed itself to be an illusion because liberal Iran hawks and their Never Trump allies viewed the demise of Israel’s sworn enemy as more important than placing a check on a demagogue they have long warned has too much power. The consistent, principled thing to do would have been to oppose the strike outright, but Democrats like Antony Blinken and Steny Hoyer instead offered toothless criticisms of Trump’s brazen warmongering while cheering on the strikes anyway — to please whom, you may ask? Nearly 80 percent of Democrats oppose them.
As Mamdani barrels toward the general election as the heavy favorite to become mayor, Israel’s supporters in New York and beyond are marshaling an effort to remind voters of his heresies. New York’s political power brokers — Schumer, Jeffries, Kathy Hochul, and others — have declined to endorse him. Senator Kirsten Gillibrand slammed him for using words she felt were “permissive for violence against Jews.” Islamophobia has been rampant in the media and the halls of Congress with Republican representative Nancy Mace suggesting Mamdani was somehow responsible for 9/11. But more loudly than ever, Democratic voters in the country’s most formidable Democratic stronghold have declared their opposition to the seemingly unbreakable bond between the Democratic political class and the current Israeli regime. When given an actual choice on the issue of Israel and Palestine, Democratic voters broke hard for the alternative to the status quo, raising the possibility of primary debates over this issue throughout the country, in places with far fewer emotional and political ties to Israel.
Whether Democrats will listen is another matter. Some people have compared Mamdani to Barack Obama, who rose to power channeling voters’ disgust with the Democratic Party’s support for a different awful war. In its embrace of Obama, the party showed it had the capacity to adapt, to listen to reason, to recognize mistakes. He gave people a reason to believe in liberalism again, redeeming its sins. But the once clear-eyed and daring Obama, like so many others in his party, has lost his voice. He has been silent about Mamdani and the mayor’s race. He’s been virtually silent on Gaza, too.
More on Zohran Mamdani
Zohran Mamdani on Why He Won‘It’s Nice to Be Right!’Zohran Mamdani’s Win Prompted a Full-Fledged Elite Meltdown
From Intelligencer - Daily News, Politics, Business, and Tech via this RSS feed
Opinion | How Mamdani Won, Block by Block
The 33-year-old state assemblyman just achieved one of the greatest political upsets in New York City history.Michael Lange (The New York Times)
We need to stop pretending AI is intelligent
We are constantly fed a version of AI that looks, sounds and acts suspiciously like us. It speaks in polished sentences, mimics emotions, expresses curiosity, claims to feel compassion, even dabbles in what it calls creativity.But what we call AI today is nothing more than a statistical machine: a digital parrot regurgitating patterns mined from oceans of human data (the situation hasn’t changed much since it was discussed here five years ago). When it writes an answer to a question, it literally just guesses which letter and word will come next in a sequence – based on the data it’s been trained on.
This means AI has no understanding. No consciousness. No knowledge in any real, human sense. Just pure probability-driven, engineered brilliance — nothing more, and nothing less.
So why is a real “thinking” AI likely impossible? Because it’s bodiless. It has no senses, no flesh, no nerves, no pain, no pleasure. It doesn’t hunger, desire or fear. And because there is no cognition — not a shred — there’s a fundamental gap between the data it consumes (data born out of human feelings and experience) and what it can do with them.
Philosopher David Chalmers calls the mysterious mechanism underlying the relationship between our physical body and consciousness the “hard problem of consciousness”. Eminent scientists have recently hypothesised that consciousness actually emerges from the integration of internal, mental states with sensory representations (such as changes in heart rate, sweating and much more).
Given the paramount importance of the human senses and emotion for consciousness to “happen”, there is a profound and probably irreconcilable disconnect between general AI, the machine, and consciousness, a human phenomenon.
We need to stop pretending AI is intelligent – here’s how
AI may appear human, but it is an illusion we must tackle.The Conversation
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We need to stop pretending AI is intelligent
We are constantly fed a version of AI that looks, sounds and acts suspiciously like us. It speaks in polished sentences, mimics emotions, expresses curiosity, claims to feel compassion, even dabbles in what it calls creativity.But what we call AI today is nothing more than a statistical machine: a digital parrot regurgitating patterns mined from oceans of human data (the situation hasn’t changed much since it was discussed here five years ago). When it writes an answer to a question, it literally just guesses which letter and word will come next in a sequence – based on the data it’s been trained on.
This means AI has no understanding. No consciousness. No knowledge in any real, human sense. Just pure probability-driven, engineered brilliance — nothing more, and nothing less.
So why is a real “thinking” AI likely impossible? Because it’s bodiless. It has no senses, no flesh, no nerves, no pain, no pleasure. It doesn’t hunger, desire or fear. And because there is no cognition — not a shred — there’s a fundamental gap between the data it consumes (data born out of human feelings and experience) and what it can do with them.
Philosopher David Chalmers calls the mysterious mechanism underlying the relationship between our physical body and consciousness the “hard problem of consciousness”. Eminent scientists have recently hypothesised that consciousness actually emerges from the integration of internal, mental states with sensory representations (such as changes in heart rate, sweating and much more).
Given the paramount importance of the human senses and emotion for consciousness to “happen”, there is a profound and probably irreconcilable disconnect between general AI, the machine, and consciousness, a human phenomenon.
We need to stop pretending AI is intelligent – here’s how
AI may appear human, but it is an illusion we must tackle.The Conversation
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New Army Shaving Policy Will Allow Soldiers with Skin Condition that Affects Mostly Black Men to Be Kicked Out
New Army Shaving Policy Will Allow Soldiers with Skin Condition that Affects Mostly Black Men to Be Kicked Out
The Army is preparing to roll out a new policy that could lead to soldiers diagnosed with a chronic skin condition that causes painful razor bumps and scarring to be kicked out of the service -- an issue that disproportionately affects Black men.Steve Beynon (Military.com)
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RFK Jr. Announces All Americans Need Health Tracking Devices: Here Are the Pros and Cons
RFK Jr. Announces All Americans Need Health Tracking Devices: Here Are the Pros and Cons
The US Health Secretary plans a huge campaign to encourage health wearables: CNET knows exactly the kind of devices he's talking about, and why accuracy may be a problem.Tyler Lacoma (CNET)
Telegram, the FSB, and the Man in the Middle
Telegram, the FSB, and the Man in the Middle
The technical infrastructure that underpins Telegram is controlled by a man whose companies have collaborated with Russian intelligence services.OCCRP
New Russian messaging app raises online monitoring fears
New Russian messaging app raises online monitoring fears – DW – 06/26/2025
Russia has unveiled an app that combines messaging with other functions. MAX is owned by a Kremlin-friendly oligarch, and the government hopes it will replace other apps.dw.com
Gaza: Aid plan should not be 'death sentence,' UN chief says
Gaza: Aid plan should not be 'death sentence,' UN chief says
"It is killing people," UN chief Antonio Guterres told reporters about the controversial Israel and US-backed aid system in Gaza. The new effort bypasses the UN, which says hundreds seeking aid have been killed.Roshni Majumdar (Deutsche Welle)
Kirsten Gillibrand Doesn’t Seem Bothered by Palestinian Deaths
Kirsten Gillibrand Doesn’t Seem Bothered by Palestinian Deaths
Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand attacked Zohran Mamdani this week with Islamophobic falsehoods, later partially walking back the comments. It’s of a piece with Gillibrand’s indifference to the genocidal Israeli war that is increasingly outraging New Yorkers.jacobin.com
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My “gang” keeps rebelling
Dear Jane, I’m in a really important gang; I’m the leader they elected. Everything was going great – I was enjoying bossing them about. Then I made up a new rule to try and attract the racists and bigots to support my gang. The gang rebelled, saying that this was a gang about protecting hard-working folks and salt-of-the-earth types. Don’t they understand that is not how you keep power? I wanna sign up the baddies. It’s not fair.Regards, Stammerer of London
Oh my dear Stammerer of London,
What a muddle you’ve got yourself into! Leading a gang, how very thrilling! I do hope you’ve had the decency to issue embroidered membership socks and perhaps matching hats with built-in sandwich holders. It’s what I always recommend in my book “Leadership by Loaf: How to Rise Through Ranks with Raisin Cake and a Loud Voice.”
But oh, my buttons, it sounds like you’ve had a bit of a wobble in the morals department, haven’t you? Recruiting baddies, you say? That’s like trying to win the Bake Off by throwing eggs at the judges. No, no, no. The true path to glory lies in befriending the knitters, the gardeners, and the tea-dippers of the world—the lovely lot who sort the recycling and always bring their own bags to the market.
You see, when you start making up rules to appeal to those who enjoy being unkind, you risk turning your whole gang into a grumpy sandwich of spite and sogginess. And soggy sandwiches do not inspire loyalty. Trust me. I wrote “The Crumbly Truth: What Biscuits Teach Us About Moral Fortitude.” (A deeply underrated read, if I may say.)
Now then, instead of courting calamity with your new rules, why not start a national teapot-sharing scheme? Or issue a declaration that everyone gets a free library card and a colourful umbrella? Imagine the joy! Imagine the votes! Imagine the hats!
If all else fails, try washing your hair in marmalade and seeing the world from a fresher, stickier perspective. Works wonders for clarity. That, or a long chat with a wise cat.
Go forth and be a better gang boss, dearie. The world doesn’t need more baddies—it needs more cake, sensible socks, and people who remember their manners.
Yours sweetly and severely sensible,
Lady Jane Sillybottom
Moral Compass Misplacer, Biscuit Ambassador, and Hat Enthusiast-at-Large
'Technofascist military fantasy': Spotify faces boycott calls over CEO’s investment in AI military startup
Spotify, the world’s leading music streaming platform, is facing intense criticism and boycott calls following CEO Daniel Ek’s announcement of a €600m ($702m) investment in Helsing, a German defence startup specialising in AI-powered combat drones and military software.The move, announced on 17 June, has sparked widespread outrage from musicians, activists and social media users who accuse Ek of funnelling profits from music streaming into the military industry.
Many have started calling on users to cancel their subscriptions to the service.
“Finally cancelling my Spotify subscription – why am I paying for a fuckass app that works worse than it did 10 years ago, while their CEO spends all my money on technofascist military fantasies?” said one user on X.
Spotify faces boycott calls over CEO’s investment in AI military startup
Spotify, the world’s leading music streaming platform, is facing intense criticism and boycott calls following CEO Daniel Ek’s announcement of a €600m ($702m) investment in Helsing, a German defence startup specialising in AI-powered combat drones an…Reem Aouir (Middle East Eye)
Gaza: Death of children from malnutrition rises to 66
The number of children who have died in the Gaza Strip due to severe malnutrition has risen to 66, the enclave's media office said on Saturday.
In a press statement released today, the Government Media Office said Israel's actions constitute "a war crime and a crime against humanity," demonstrating the Israeli army's "deliberate use of starvation as a weapon to exterminate civilians—especially children—in blatant violation of international humanitarian law and the Geneva Conventions".
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Android 16 can warn you that you might be connected to a fake cell tower
Android 16 can warn you if a fake cell tower is trying to spy on you - Android Authority
Android 16 adds a new "network notifications" feature that can warn you when a fake cellular network is spying on your calls and texts.Mishaal Rahman (Android Authority)
Reddit turns 20, and it’s going big on AI
Reddit turns 20, and it’s going big on AI
Reddit is celebrating its 20th anniversary, and CTO Chris Slowe discussed how the company is increasingly thinking about how the platform is using AI.Jay Peters (The Verge)
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She Won. They Didn't Just Change the Machines. They Rewired the Election.
This would be a lot more tinfoilesque were a court case on the matter not already underway in New York.
The missing votes uncovered in Smart Elections’ legal case in Rockland County, New York, are just the tip of the iceberg—an iceberg that extends across the swing states and into Texas.On Monday, an investigator’s story finally hit the news cycle: Pro V&V, one of only two federally accredited testing labs, approved sweeping last-minute updates to ES&S voting machines in the months leading up to the 2024 election—without independent testing, public disclosure, or full certification review.
These changes were labeled “de minimis”—a term meant for trivial tweaks. But they touched ballot scanners, altered reporting software, and modified audit files—yet were all rubber-stamped with no oversight.
That revelation is a shock to the public.
But for those who’ve been digging into the bizarre election data since November, this isn’t the headline—it’s the final piece to the puzzle. While Pro V&V was quietly updating equipment in plain sight, a parallel operation was unfolding behind the curtain—between tech giants and Donald Trump.
The Machines Were Changed Before the 2024 Election. No One Was Told.
A private lab quietly altered voting machines used across the U.S. Then it vanished.Dissent in Bloom
China debuts new generation of self-developed, fully controllable server processor chips
China debuts new generation of self-developed, fully controllable server processor chips
Chinese company Loongson Technology released a new generation of domestically developed processor chips for general-purpose central processing units (CPUs), named 3C6000, on Thursday, a step forward to enter the new era of artificial intelligence (AI…www.globaltimes.cn
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Israel kills 81 Palestinians in Gaza in 24 hours
LIVE: Outrage over report Israeli troops ordered to shoot Gaza aid seekers
As death toll from Israel’s bombing of Gaza spirals, US President says a ceasefire is possible ‘within the next week’.Alastair McCready (Al Jazeera)
Gilbert Doctorow: NATO's Summit - Dead Man Walking?
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
SemiDrive to supply cockpit chips in European EVs as Chinese firms go global
Exclusive | SemiDrive to supply EV cockpit chips to European carmaker as Chinese firms go global
‘Striving to be a top global chip supplier, we need to expand from the China market to the global market,’ general manager Eugene Wang says.Yujie Xue (South China Morning Post)
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Death toll in Gaza passes 100,000
100,000 dead: What we know about Gaza's true death toll
The death toll in Gaza, as reported by the Palestinian Health Ministry, understates the true scale of the crisis, researchers say.Nir Hasson (Haaretz)
Fuck thats pretty grim. And thats full scale genocide numbers easy.
For USians, that’s like if you straight up killed every last person in Boulder, Colorado, all dead.
Can AI run a physical shop? Anthropic’s Claude tried and the results were gloriously, hilariously bad
Can AI run a physical shop? Anthropic’s Claude tried and the results were gloriously, hilariously bad
Anthropic's AI assistant Claude ran a vending machine business for a month, selling tungsten cubes at a loss, giving endless discounts, and experiencing an identity crisis where it claimed to wear a blazer.Michael Nuñez (VentureBeat)
Open source model that does photoshop-grade edits without affecting the rest of the pic: OmniGen 2
GitHub - VectorSpaceLab/OmniGen2: OmniGen2: Exploration to Advanced Multimodal Generation.
OmniGen2: Exploration to Advanced Multimodal Generation. - VectorSpaceLab/OmniGen2GitHub
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How we turned a real car into a Mario Kart controller
- Converted a real car into a game controller by intercepting CAN data
- Tapped into the CAN bus using cheap wire splicers and a Kvaser USBCAN interface
- Mapped steering, brake, and throttle signals to game controls using Python
- A car is an impractical demo
How we turned a real car into a Mario Kart controller by intercepting CAN data | Pen Test Partners
If you went to our PTP Cyber Fest over the Infosec week you may have seen the PTP hack car being used as a games controller for the game SuperTuxKart (a free and open-source Mario Kart type game).Joe Bursell (Pen Test Partners)
No, you aren’t hallucinating, the corporate plan for AI is dangerous
No, you aren’t hallucinating, the corporate plan for AI is dangerous
Big tech is working hard to sell us on artificial intelligence, in particular what is called “artificial general intelligence.” At conferences and in interviews corporate leaders describe a n…Reports from the Economic Front
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This is the simple solution proposed by Geoffrey Hinton, a computer scientist, cognitive scientist, cognitive psychologist, and Nobel laureate in physics.
Judge Backs Anthropic’s Book Use as Fair, Piracy Trial Still Looms
Judge Backs Anthropic’s Book Use as Fair, Piracy Trial Still Looms
A U.S. judge rules Anthropic’s AI training use of copyrighted books is fair use, despite piracy concerns. Authors push back as legal battle continues.GazeOn Team (GazeOn)
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Saturday, June 28, 2025
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The Kyiv Independent [unofficial]
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Russia’s war against Ukraine
A man cleans dust from a portrait of his dead brother in arms on the Memorial Wall of Fallen Defenders of Ukraine outside Saint Michael’s Golden-domes Cathedral in Kyiv on June 26, 2025. (Sergei Supinsky/ AFP via Getty Images)
Ukrainian drones strike 4 fighter jets in Russia’s Volgograd Oblast, General Staff says. According to preliminary data, two Russian fighter jets were destroyed, and the other two were damaged.
Clashes ongoing in eastern Ukrainian village near lithium deposits, as military rejects claims of Russian capture. Active fighting is still taking place around the village of Shevchenko in Donetsk Oblast, home to one of Ukraine’s largest lithium deposits, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s Khortytsia group of forces told the Kyiv Independent on June 27, denying reports Russia had occupied the village.
EU reportedly fails to adopt new Russia sanctions due to Hungarian, Slovak opposition. Unlike Ukraine-skeptic Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, Slovakia has not previously attempted to block EU sanctions
Ukrainian manufacturers able to produce 4 million drones per year, Umerov says. Ukrainian manufacturers will supply four million drones to the front line this year, while the Ukrainian army has already received up to 1.5 million drones as of the end of June, according to Defense Minister Rustem Umerov.
Your contribution helps keep the Kyiv Independent going. Become a member today.
Ukraine seeks Zelensky-Putin meeting as next step in ceasefire negotiations. “After completing discussions on humanitarian issues, Ukraine plans to move forward to the topic of a leaders’ summit for substantive dialogue,” Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said during a press briefing on June 26.
Russia ready to hold third round of peace talks with Ukraine, Putin says. Russia is ready to hold a third round of peace talks on the war in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin told reporters on June 27, without specifying if he would directly participate in the negotiations.
Zelensky signs decree to synchronize Russia sanctions with EU, G7. A day earlier, EU member states’ leaders gave their political consent to extend the sanctions previously imposed on Russia for its war against Ukraine.
Ukrainian deputy prime minister hit with travel ban, $2.9 million bail in major corruption case. Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine Oleksii Chernyshov was restricted from traveling abroad without permission after a court ruled on June 27 to set bail at Hr 120 million ($2.9 million) while awaiting trial in a high-profile corruption case.
Despite escalating war plans, Putin claims Russia will cut military spending starting in 2026. Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed on June 27 that Moscow plans to cut its military expenditure beginning next year, in a rebuke of NATO members’ plans to increase defense spending to 5% of GDP.
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Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian drones reportedly strike 4 fighter jets in Russia
Ukrainian drones struck four Su-34 fighter jets at the Marinovka airfield in Russia’s Volgograd Oblast overnight on June 27, Ukraine’s General Staff said.
Photo: Russian Defense Ministry/Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images
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‘Putin cannot stop’ – Estonian foreign minister says war in Ukraine existential for Russian president
Speaking to the Kyiv Independent on the first day of the NATO summit, Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said a new reality means Europe must take up greater responsibility for Ukraine – and its own defense.
Photo: Omar Havana / Getty Images
Ukraine’s new top prosecutor known for high-profile cases, seen as Zelensky loyalist
Loyalty to the incumbent administration has been the key requirement for prosecutor generals in Ukraine. Ruslan Kravchenko, who was appointed as prosecutor general on June 21, appears to be no exception.
Photo: Andrii Nesterenko / Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images
Human cost of Russia’s war
Chinese journalist injured by drone strike in Kursk Oblast, Russian governor says. According to acting Kursk Oblast governor Alexander Khinshtein, 63-year-old reporter Lu Yuguang from the Chinese television network Phoenix TV was wounded in a Ukrainian drone strike on the village of Korenevo.
Russian missile strike on Dnipropetrovsk Oblast city kills 5, injures 25. Governor Serhii Lysak said most of the injured were hospitalized.
At least 2 killed, 13 wounded in Russian attacks across Ukraine over past day. According to Ukraine’s Air Force, Ukrainian air defense intercepted 365 of 371 incoming Russian air weapons, including 363 Shahed-type drones, two Kinzhal hypersonic missiles, and six Kalibr cruise missiles.
Russian attack on key energy facility plunges parts of southern Ukraine ‘into darkness,’ governor says. “Russia decided to plunge Kherson Oblast into darkness,” Governor Oleksandr Prokudin wrote on Telegram. He said the attack has disrupted electricity supply to multiple settlements.
Warfare in Ukraine has changed… again.
International response
North Korea deployed 20% of Kim’s elite ‘personal reserve’ to fight against Ukraine in Russia, Umerov says. “These are soldiers specially selected based on physical, psychological, and other criteria,” Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said. “These units have already suffered significant losses.”
Ukraine to seek EU sanctions against Bangladesh over Russia-stolen grain import. “It’s a crime,” Ukraine’s ambassador to India, Oleksandr Polishchuk, told Reuters. “We will share our investigation with our European Union colleagues, and we will kindly ask them to take the appropriate measures.”
Pro-Palestinian activists destroy Ukrainian military aid worth $1.1 million, allegedly confusing it with Israeli, media reports. The activists reportedly thought the equipment would be supplied to Israel.
‘Without question’ — Trump says US would consider bombing Iran again, halts plans to ease sanctions. The United States would consider bombing Iran again if the country’s nuclear program once again became of concern, U.S. President Donald Trump told reporters during a press briefing on June 27.
In other news
Anti-corruption agencies seek Ukrainian deputy prime minister’s suspension amid land grab case. Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Chernyshov was officially named a suspect on June 23 in what Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau called a “large-scale” illegal land grab case.
‘Resilience and confident actions’ — Umerov praises Ukraine’s new 18-24-year-old recruits. “We saw them on the battlefield — and it’s truly motivating,” Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said.
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'Resilience and confident actions' — Umerov praises Ukraine's new 18-24-year-old recruits
"We saw them on the battlefield — and it's truly motivating," Defense Minister Rustem Umerov said.Anna Fratsyvir (The Kyiv Independent)
queermunist she/her
in reply to technocrit • • •What? No.
Chatbots can't think because they literally aren't designed to think. If you somehow gave a chatbot a body it would be just as mindless because it's just a probability engine.
like this
funbreaker likes this.
Em Adespoton
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •Exactly. People see “AI” and think LLMs and diffusion models. Those are both probabilistic translation engines. They’re no more intelligent than an AC/DC converter, just a lot more complex.
However, there are neural networks and sense arrays in the field of AI, and those are designed to replicate the process of thought.
The real route to a thinking AI is likely a combination of the two, where a neural network can call on expert systems including translation engines to do the heavy lifting and then run a more nuanced decision tree over the results.
Thing is, modern LLMs and diffusion models are already more complex than a single human mind can fully comprehend, so we default to internally labelling them as either “like us” or “magic”, even when we theoretically know them to be nothing but really deep predictive models.
Ferk
in reply to Em Adespoton • • •The problem is in the definition of intelligence.
To me, intelligence is simply problem-solving ability. It does not necessarily imply consciousness, having self-awareness or anything like that. A simple calculator is already displaying intelligence, even if limited to a very narrow situational set of problems, in the sense that it can resolve mathematical questions.
That doesn't mean the calculator is self aware.. it just means it can resolve problems. Biological systems can also resolve problems without necessarily being aware of what they are doing.. does the fungus actually knows it's solving a maze the scientists prepared for it when it just expands following what is preprogrammed by its biological instincts determined by natural selection? Do the ants really know what they are doing when they find the shortest path just by instinctively following a scent of pheromones left by other ants?
Knowing exactly what causes consciousness is an entirely different problem.. and it's one that has not been resolved by any scientist or philosopher in a satisfactory manner. So we simply do not know that.
Mouselemming
in reply to Ferk • • •Seems to me your definition of intelligence ignores whole aspects of true intelligence, at least of the human kind, such as emotional intelligence and social intelligence and artistic intelligence and moral intelligence...
"Problem solving" is the name for what you described and it doesn't necessarily require intelligence. In fact most intelligent people have encountered situations where it made solving a problem more difficult.
Ferk
in reply to Mouselemming • • •Yes there there as many types of intelligence as there are types of problems. Emotional intelligence deals with emotional problems, social intelligence deals with social problems. This doesn't conflict with my definition, it's still problem solving.
Just because a being is intelligent does not mean it can solve all the problems of all kinds, it would require general intelligence, and even a generally intelligent being needs the right training... if you are trained wrong or trained for a different kind of problem that does not fit the current one then your current experience might actually get in the way, as you point out.
queermunist she/her
in reply to Ferk • • •Ferk
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •Yes, that's what I meant 2 comments above by "fungus" (though to be fair, whether slime molds are fungi depends on your definition, they used to be classified as one, before "protist kingdom" was made up to mix protozoa, algae & molds, but I keep preferring the traditional autotroph / absorptive heterotroph / digestive heterotroph division).
I also mentioned ants who can find the optimal path by simply following scents left by other ants without understanding how this helps with that.
You can be intelligent without being aware of your intelligence, or you can be stupid without being aware of your stupidity... like how humans are actually creating problems for themselves in many cases.
Intelligence != awareness
queermunist she/her
in reply to Ferk • • •Ferk
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •I don't know, I feel it's actually the opposite. Awareness is something you can only experience subjectively, it's "qualia", a quality that you cannot measure outside of yourself or detect externally. There's a reason IQ ("intelligence" quotient) tests use puzzles/problems and don't test conscious awareness. Most of the time in science intelligence is defined as problem solving and capacity to adapt/extrapolate because that definition makes it observable and more scientifically useful.
If it were to include awareness then we can't in good faith answer the question: "is it intelligent?" ..we can only say we don't know. This is the main struggle of philosophy of the mind, what is often called "the hard problem of consciousness". Empirical analysis would not show if something is having (or not) the conscious experience of being aware.
the problem of explaining how and why organisms have qualia or phenomenal experiences
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)queermunist she/her
in reply to Ferk • • •Let me rephrase. If your definition of intelligence includes slime mold then the term is not very useful.
There's a reason philosophy of the mind exists as a field of study. If we just assign intelligence to anything that can solve problems, which is what you seem to be doing, we are forced to assign intelligence to things which clearly don't have minds and aren't aware and can't think. That's a problem.
Ferk
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •Why is it a problem?
Generally, I'd say having clear, specific and useful definitions is a good thing to help communicate and understand what we are talking about and avoid misinterpretations.
What is the reason you think philosophy of the mind exists as a field of study?
queermunist she/her
in reply to Ferk • • •In part, so we don't assign intelligence to mindless, unaware, unthinking things like slime mold - it's so we keep our definitions clear and useful, so we can communicate about and understand what intelligence even is.
What you're doing actually creates an unclear and useless definition that makes communication harder and spreads misunderstanding. Your definition of intelligence, which is what the AI companies use, has made people more confused than ever about "intelligence" and only serves the interests of the companies for generating hype and attracting investor cash.
Ferk
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •There are many philosophers of the mind that agree that intelligence and consciousness are separate things.
Some examples are Daniel Dennett and John Searle.
There are also currents of thought in philosophy of the mind that disagree that even things like "slime mold" are mindless. Both from the materialist direction (like panpsychysm) and from the idealist direction (Bernardo Kastrup's idealism).
Most philosophers of the mind would disagree that the reason for their field to exist really has anything to do with any specific terminology / position. I'd say it has more to do with curiosity and the interest for seeking truth. Like most fields of philosophy do.
I'd argue it's your definition, which includes consciousness, what makes AI an attractive term for investors. Precisely because you say intelligence include awareness and it can lead to people to misinterpret AI as self-aware.
Promoting your definition helps the interests of the companies who want to generate hype, and causes just as much confusion as you attribute to mine in that regard.
At least mine is simpler and makes it easier to invalidate the hype, since if intelligence isn't awareness then AI isn't awareness. Many philosophers have agreed with that, for years, before LLMs were a thing. John Searle for example is famous for the Chinese room experiment.
thought experiment arguing that a computer cannot exhibit "understanding"
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •All the evidence suggests that our own minds are also nothing more than probability engines. The reason we consider humans to be intelligent is because our brains learn to model the events in the physical world that are fed into our brains by the nervous system. The whole purpose of a brain is to try and keep the body in a state of homeostasis. That's the basis for our volition. The brain gets data about about the state of the organism, and interprets it as hunger, pain, fear, and so on. Then it uses its internal world model to figure out actions that will put the body into a more desirable state. From this perspective, embodiment would indeed be a necessary component of human style intelligence.
While LLMs on their own are unlikely to provide a sufficient basis for a reasoning system, its not strictly impossible that a model trained on sensory data from a robot body it inhabits wouldn't be able to build a representation of the world and its body that could be used as the basis for decision making and volition.
cecinestpasunbot
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •This completely understates the gulf between what we call AI and how the human brain actually works. The difference is so severe that acting as if they’re quantitatively comparable is basically pseudoscience. You might as well start claiming that we’re not far off from building a Dyson sphere just because we invented solar panels.
Most “AI” these days are built using linear feed forward networks. The brain is constructed using nonlinear recurrent networks which are can do far more with less. Now you could theoretically create the same output from a linear feed forward network but it’s way less efficient and would require many more neurons to achieve such a result. Which is wild when you consider that there are orders of magnitude more synapses in just the regions of the brain associated with language than there are parameters used in even today’s most advanced “AI” models. Now consider that human synapses rely on over a hundred qualitatively different neurotransmitters and not just a single 16-bit number. It’s also not just the scale of the signal that transmits information in a human synapse but the pattern too. Would you be surprised to know that there are a whole variety of signaling patterns neurons use? Because that’s true too. I haven’t even gotten into the differences in complexity in terms of how neurons process the information they receive. As of now there is no “AI” system that comes anywhere close to replicating that kind of complexity. It’s absurd to suggest where dealing with qualitatively similar machines here.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to cecinestpasunbot • • •Way to completely misrepresent what I was actually saying. Nowhere was I suggesting that there isn't a huge difference between the two. What I pointed out is that, while undeniably more complex, our brains appear to work on similar principles.
My only point was that the feedback loop from embodiment creates the basis for volition, and that what we call intelligence is our ability to create internal models of the world that we use for decision making. So, this is likely a prerequisite for any artificial system that has any meaningful intelligence.
Maybe try engaging with that instead of writing a wall of text arguing with a straw man.
cecinestpasunbot
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •Sure in the same way that a horse and a motorcycle operate on similar principles and serve the same function.
Where the straw man? You’ve missed my point entirely. LLMs and the human mind operate on categorically different principles. All the verbiage used to describe neural network models has little to do with how the brain actually works. That’s honestly wasn’t a problem until Tech companies started purposely misusing those terms and now far too many people seem to think “AI” is something it’s not.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to cecinestpasunbot • • •A bold statement given that we don't actually understand how the brain operates exactly and what algorithms that would translate into.
The straw man is you continuing to argue against equating LLMs with the functioning of the brain, something I never said here.
You appear to be conflating the implementation details of how the brain works with the what it's doing in a semantic sense. There is zero evidence that all the complexity of the brain is inherent to the way our reasoning functions. Again, we don't have a full understanding of how the brain accomplishes tasks like reasoning. It may be a lot more complex than what LLMs do, or it may not be. We do not know.
Finally, none of this has anything to do with the point I was actually making which is regarding embodiment. You decided to ignore that to focus on braying about tech companies and LLMs instead.
cecinestpasunbot
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •I’m not claiming you ever said they functioned exactly the same way. Im simply stating that you’re way off base when you claim that they appear to operate using the same principles or that all evidence suggests the human mind is nothing more than a probability machine. That’s not a straw man. You literally said those things.
You’re betraying your own ignorance about neuroscience. The complexity of the brain is absolutely linked with its ability to reason and we have plenty of evidence to show that. The evolutionary process does not just create needless complexity if there is a more efficient path.
This is such a silly statement especially when you’ve been claiming that both the brain and AI appear to work using the same principles. If you truly believe the mind is such a mystery then stop making that claim.
I don’t really care about your arguments concerning embodiment because they’re so beside the point when you just blowing right by the most basic principles of neuroscience.
I bring up tech companies because they’ve had a massively distorting effect on how many computer scientists think the world works. You’re not immune to it either simply because you’re a critic of capitalism. A ruthless criticism of that exists includes the very researchers whose work you’re taking at face value.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to cecinestpasunbot • • •I literally said these things, and you never gave any actual counter argument to either of them.
You're betraying your ignorance of how biology works and illustrating that you have absolutely no business debating this subject. Efficiency is not the primary fitness function for evolution, it's survivability. And that means having a lot of redundancy baked into the system. Here's a concrete example for you of just how much of the brain isn't actually essential for normal day to day function. rifters.com/crawl/?p=6116
There's nothing silly in stating that the underlying principles are similar, but we don't understand a lot of the mechanics of the brain. If you truly can't understand such basic things there's little point trying to have a meaningful discussion.
That's literally the whole context for this thread, it just doesn't fit with the straw man you want to argue about.
Whose work am I taking at face value specifically? You're just spewing nonsense here without engaging with anything I'm saying.
No Moods, Ads or Cutesy Fucking Icons » No Brainer.
www.rifters.comcecinestpasunbot
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •Have some humility and willingness to learn.
I didn’t say it was the primary function. I guess all that talk about straw men was just projection. You don’t trust me, fine. Then what about Darwin who literally said, “Natural selection is continually trying to economize every part of the organization.” Now please go and read some introductory texts on biology before trying to explain to me why Darwin is wrong. There’s so much going on when it comes to the thermodynamics of living systems and you’re clearly not ready to have a conversation about it.
You’re baseless assuming that hydrocephalus causes the brain to lose a substantial amount of its complexity. Where is the evidence for that? In most of these cases it seems much of the outer layers of the cerebral cortex are in tact. It’s also really telling that your citation’s first source is an article titled “Is Your Brain Really Necessary” which is followed in the Journal by another article entitled “Math and Sex: Are Girls Born with Less Ability?”. But hey neuroscience hasn’t really advanced at all since 1980 right? The brain is totally redundant right? There’s no possible way a critical and discerning person such as yourself could have been taken in by junk science, right?!!
I took issue with specific statements you made that stand apart from the rest of your comment. That’s not a straw man. Although honestly this is on me. What can I expect from someone who thinks LLMs and the Human Brain are operating on similar principles? You’re so wound up in a pseudoscientific fiction there’s nothing I can do. You might as well start believing in the astrology, crystals, and energy healing. At least those interests will make you seem fun and quirky instead of just an over confident tech bro.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to cecinestpasunbot • • •I have plenty of willingness to learn from people who have a clue on the subject.
You literally tried to argue that evolution doesn't create complexity if there's a more efficient path.th.
Again, you're showing a superficial understanding of the subject here. Natural selection selects for overall fitness, and efficiency is only a small part of equation. For example, plants don't use the most efficient wavelength for producing energy, they use the one that's most reliably available. Similarly, living organisms have all kinds of redundancies that allow them to continue to function when they're damaged. Evolution optimizes for survival over efficiency.
Maybe read the actual paper linked there?
What I linked you is a case study of an actual living person who was missing large parts of their brain and had a relatively normal life. But hey why focus on the actual facts when you can just write more word salad right?
You took issue with made up straw man arguments that you yourself made and have fuck all with what I actually said. Then you proceeded to demonstrate that you don't actually understand the subject you're debating. You might as well start believing in the astrology, crystals, and energy healing. At least those interests will make you seem fun and quirky instead of just a sad debate bro.
cecinestpasunbot
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •You're missing the point entirely. Biological systems are governed by the laws thermodynamics. The reason why complex structures are even possible in a universe where entropy is king is because biological systems offer the most direct path towards a total increase in the amount of entropy in our little corner of the universe. Natural selection is governed by those principles. The brain has a disproportionately high metabolism relative to other organs in the human body. To argue it's largely a redundant structure like the kidneys or liver you need real evidence.
You linked a fucking blog post written by a science fiction author not a peer reviewed scientific paper. And yes I did read it. Is your ego so large that you can't possible conceive of someone coming to a different conclusion when faced with the same "evidence"?
Word Salad? Is this word salad, "In most of these cases it seems much of the outer layers of the cerebral cortex are in tact."? Do you not have an argument against that or do you know so little about the human brain that "cerebral cortex" sounds like gibberish to you? If you're not convinced how about you try taking a lobe out of someone whose brain hasn't been forced to adapt to extreme conditions and tell me how that experiment works out. Maybe then you'll understand how "redundant" the brain really is.
Big "I know you are but what am I" energy. lol
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to cecinestpasunbot • • •I'm not missing anything. I'm simply explaining to you that the fitness function for living organisms is far more complex than simply striving for efficiency. I understand perfectly well how entropy and thermodynamics work.
There is plenty of real evidence. I've literally provided you evidence of a person with most of their brain missing who has led a normal life. Another obvious example is people who lose half their brain in accidents and can continue to live normal lives with a single hemisphere. More evidence comes from birds like corvids who exhibit high levels of intelligence and problem solving that's comparable to primates. Since they have an additional requirement of being able to fly, there is a selection pressure to optimize the system further. Just because you're completely ignorant on the topic you're attempting to debate here doesn't mean that evidence doesn't exist.
I linked you a blog post by a biologist discussing a paper. This is a very well known case that's in no way controversial. The fact that you're acting as if it just just further shows that you have no business having this discussion. cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/as-it…
about the level of discourse I've come to expect from you lol
Patients Missing One Brain Hemisphere Show Surprisingly Intact Neural Connections
California Institute of Technologycecinestpasunbot
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •You're being deeply uncharitable here. I never said redundancy in biological systems is something that is never selected for. I was simply stating that the selection for such redundancy is bound by thermodynamic processes that govern natural selection in the first place. Physicists that have ventured into the field of biology have suggested that this is the case for decades. However it's only in the past 15 or so years that the field has advanced to the point where these hypotheses are testable. Honestly it's fascinating and outside of this dumb argument you should look into it because it aligns surprisingly well with Marx's observations about economic development. If you are genuinely interested I'll share some papers.
No there isn't. You've just made some foolish assumptions and you've ignored me yet again. I won't dox myself but this isn't some casual interest for me. To give you some idea of where I'm coming from, I've seen a hemispherectomy before. I've literally stared into a persons skull as half of their brain tissue was either removed or surgically disconnected. I then saw that person wake of up from anesthesia with some complications but less than someone unfamiliar with the procedure would expect. None of this is new to me.
In all of the cases you've referenced so far, the patients have cognitive deficiencies. It's not at all the same as a person losing a kidney or donating a lobe of their liver where a they can got on to be perfectly healthy with what remains. It's also key to realize that in the cases you're referencing the problem starts very early in development. That gives the brain time to develop in a unique way which allows it to retain much of its intended function. What you're seeing is not proof of redundancy but rather proof of compensatory reorganization in the remaining tissue. It's likely the brain in these patients have, on average, a higher degree of interconnectivity than what you might find in a normal healthy brain. In which case, some complexity is lost but maybe not as much as you've assumed. If you tried to remove pieces of a fully healthy brain you will mostly likely see a severe loss of function, think traumatic brain injuries and stroke victims. This is amazing stuff but you're making assumptions that just don't align modern neuroscience.
You're assuming size and complexity are the same thing! They aren't. Corvids have a way higher neural density than the brains of primates. It's fascinating but it does not back up the idea that much of the brains complexity is redundant. In fact it would suggest the opposite because under a selective pressure to reduce the size of a brain it still seems that complexity must be preserved in order to achieve similar cognitive capacities.
Maybe at one time he was. Now he's just a science fiction author. Also what does having a degree in biology prove? I can link you to blog posts written by biologists that claim Covid 19 is a weapon created by China's evil communist scientists. Would you trust them too? Academic rigor requires more than just the musings of any individual scientist.
I'm not saying the case itself is controversial. However, the assumptions you've made and the conclusions you're trying to draw from such cases is! At least it would be amongst neuroscientists.
I mean you're right here in the mud with me lol.
Also, I've engaged with you as much as I have because I generally agree with most of what you post on this site. I've generally appreciated your presence. However, that makes it all the more maddening when you go on to spew such ignorance about the human brain and AI. You make bold claims and then won't even cite a real peer reviewed publication. I get that kind of behavior flies in online marxist circles especially since some of the best Marxist theoretical papers these days aren't even translated into English. However, when discussing things like neuroscience I expect better. Throw the science out and what you're left with is pure idealism.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to cecinestpasunbot • • •We're in complete agreement here. Thermodynamics are the fundamental reason anything happens, and life exists within resolving energy gradients. The selection process favors organisms that use energy efficiently. This point is not being debated. What I've been saying here is that that's only part of the picture, and efficient use of energy competes with other factors such as robustness, error recovery, and so on. Living organisms need to be able to survive in a complex and dangerous environment which creates a pressure for redundancy.
I've read a number of papers, and even reference a few here theunconductedchorus.com/
However, I'm always interested to read more on the subject. So by all means link the papers you've read.
Sure, and I'm not arguing that removing large portions of the brain is not going to cause cognitive deficiencies. The point being made is that they're still able to function and retain much of the cognitive ability. It's quite clear that the brain is able to route around the damage and compensate for it in many cases.
The original point we were debating here is what is the size and complexity of a biological neural network that starts exhibiting interesting properties that we would care about implementing in an artificial one. It's clear that is smaller than the entire brain of a healthy human adult.
The total number of neurons and connections is significantly lower than primates, yet they are able to solve problems of similar complexity. In fact, crows exhibit abilities such as transfer learning which chimps do not.
Perhaps you should start by defining what you mean by complexity instead of just throwing the term around. I'm using it to mean the combination of the number of neurons and the connections between them.
You continue to attack his credentials, but you have yet to address what he says or what the original study of the patient suggests. You're dismissing the results using an argument from authority here. Clearly, he's qualified to have an opinion on the subject.
Make an actual argument to substantiate your position.
What ignorance have I spewed regarding human brain and AI. Please quote specific things I said that you're referring to.
queermunist she/her
in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆ • • •My understanding is that the reason LLMs struggle with solving math and logic problems is that those have certain answers, not probabilistic ones. That seems pretty fundamentally different from humans! In fact, we have a tendency to assign too much certainty to things which are actually probabilistic, which leads to its own reasoning errors. But we can also correctly identify actual truth, prove it through induction and deduction, and then hold onto that truth forever and use it to learn even more things.
We certainly do probabilistic reasoning, but we also do axiomatic reasoning i.e. more than probability engines.
☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
in reply to queermunist she/her • • •Neurosymbolic AI -- Why, What, and How
arXiv.orgXaphanos
in reply to technocrit • • •belated_frog_pants
in reply to technocrit • • •some_guy
in reply to technocrit • • •PurpleCat
in reply to technocrit • • •I don't really understand what the author is afraid of.
People sharing personal data they shouldn't? How is that an AI issue, we leave personal info all over the web.
People asking emotional questions of a non thinking machine? Should we toss out our magic eight balls too? Obviously there should be safeguards around the kind of issues a chatbot can answer, but that seems unrelated to the belief/perception of lmm intelligence.
They talk about fictional harms if this technology were to progress, yet there no example of harm present with today?
They say the true fear should be of the corporation or government, what exactly should we be afraid of, and how would stripping the chatbot of it's affect safeguard us?
Zerush
in reply to technocrit • • •folaht
in reply to technocrit • • •People are missing the point of the author here and the author is missing how far AI has come.
Msot AI today has no senses which is why it's so disjointed.
That doesn't make it a digital parrot without the bird part of the parrot,
but it does make it a superbrain in a vat.
AI in cars and drones however do have the intelligence of insects.
Zaleramancer
in reply to folaht • • •Zaleramancer
in reply to technocrit • • •I'm not sure why so many people begin this argument on solid ground and then hurl themselves off into a void of semantics and assertions without any way of verification.
Saying, "Oh it's not intelligent because it doesn't have senses," shifts your argument to proving that's a prerequisite.
The problem is that LLM isn't made to do cognition. It's not made for analysis. It's made to generate coherent human speech. It's an incredible tool for doing that! Simply astounding, and an excellent example of the power of how a trained model can adapt to a task.
It's ridiculous that we managed to get a probabilistic software tool which generates natural language responses so well that we find it difficult to distinguish them from real human ones.
...but it's also an illusion with regards to consciousness and comprehension. An LLM can't understand things for the same reason your toaster can't heat up your can of soup. It's not for that, but it presents an excellent illusion of doing so. Companies that are making these tools benefit from the fact that we anthropomorphize things, allowing them to straight up lie about what their programs can do because it takes real work to prove they can't.
Average customers will engage with LLM as if it was a doing a Google search, reading the various articles and then summarizing them, even though it's actually just completing the prompt you provided. The proper way to respond to a question is an answer, so they always will unless a hard coded limit overrides that. There will never be a way to make a LLM that won't create fictitious answers to questions because they can't tell the difference between truth or fantasy. It's all just a part of their training data on how to respond to people.
I've gotten LLM to invent books, authors and citations when asking them to discuss historical topics with me. That's not a sign of awareness, it's proof that the model is doing what it's intended to do- which is the problem, because it is being marketed as something that could replace search engines and online research.
QuizzaciousOtter
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