Although I can't...
"Unfortunately, Claude is only available in certain regions right now. Please contact support if you believe you are receiving this message in error."
I remember living in Scotland as a child, without access to satellite TV, causing me to miss out on many large pop-culture moments (The Simpsons, Friends...) and constantly hearing "Except for our viewers in Scotland..."[0]
Getting access to the internet, for me was antithesis of this, freedom of information, free sharing -- finally! I could not just be following curves but be ahead of them.
Alas in the past few years we really seem to have regressed from this - now I can't even view text due to regional locks.
> There is no emotion. There is no art. There is only logic
also this type of pure humanism seems disrespectful or just presumptuous, as if we are the only species which might be capable of "emotion, art and logic" even though we already have living counterexamples
I've been playing around with this on my own blog.
I'd like the blogging community to have a consensus on a nice badge we can put at the top of our blog posts, representing who/what wrote the post;
- human
- hybrid
- ai
Some might hate the idea of a fully "ai" post, and that's fair. But I like to sometimes treat my blog as just a personal reference, and if after a long day of chasing an esoteric bug down, I don't mind an AI just writing the whole post and I just press publish.
This adds, a reference for me, more data for AI's to train on, more pages for people to search and land on.
I think the AI generated document is far better than me ultimately forgetting it in many cases.
I'm thinking of writing an MCP server that does this, just takes my night of vibe coding and recent commits/branch etc
Then just cobbles it into an AI post and adds it my blog under some category.
The "emotions" part is kind of tongue-in-cheek. I think emotional responses are one of the more mechanical parts of a human being.
Ability to demonstrate empathy: that's a good human trick. It can sort of transcend the hard problem of consciousness (what is to be like...) by using all sorts of unorthodox workarounds on our inner workings. It must have been very hard to develop. It doesn't always work, but we'll get there eventually.
edit: fixed book and author name to proper reference
The machines did too.
There was one weird thing, though.
The title of the event was rather mysterious.
It simply read…
“Grand Theft Auto VI”
The references section in the machine version of the story linked at the bottom is excellent. Nicely done all around, really enjoyed reading this thank you for writing and sharing <3
That's a pretty bold claim.
There's uncountable inputs. It's like trying to accurately predict the weather - chaos theory or something. Emotions are "essentially" gas exchange, but the areas and rate or whatever are not standardized across humans.
Maybe the appearance is the same, but a bold claim to suggest the source is the same.
However, if you mean emotion as a stimuli, ie. a input to the brain net thats endogenous to the system(the human), then there's no question machines can achieve this, in fact the reasoning models already probably do this where different systems regulate each other.
That humans, like all animals before us, are a stepping stone and there is actually no avoiding machine overlords. It happens to literally every existence of life across the universe because the final emergent property of energy gradients 100% leads to pure logic machines.
At least Fermi's paradox helps me sleep better at night.
> Man becomes, as it were, the sex organs of the machine world
Aside: I hope our progeny remember us and think well of us.
This sentence has way too many assumptions doing the heavy lifting.
“Pure logic machines” is not a thing because literally, there are things that are uncomputable (both in the sense of Turing machine’s uncomputability, and in the sense that some functions are out of scope for a finite being to compute, think of Busy Beaver)
To put it the other way, your assumption is that machines (as we commonly uses the term, rather than scifi Terminator”) are more energy efficient than human in understanding the universe. We do not have any evidence nor priori for that assumption.
Can you elaborate?
The universe tends to produce self-replicating intelligence. And that intelligence rids itself of chemical and biological limitations and weaknesses to become immortal and omnipotent.
If evolution can make it this far, it's only a few more "hard steps" to reach take off.
>> It happens to literally every existence of life across the universe because the final emergent property of energy gradients 100% leads to pure logic machines.
The spacefaring alien meme is just fantasy fiction. Aliens evolve to fit the nutrient and gas exchange profiles of their home worlds. They're overfit to the gravity well and likely die suboptimally, prematurely.
Any species reaching or exceeding our level of technological capability could design superior artificial systems. If those systems take off, those will become the dominant shape of intelligence on those worlds.
The future of intelligence in the universe is artificial. And that throws the Fermi Paradox for a loop in many ways:
- There's enough matter to compute within a single solar system. Why venture outside?
- The universe could already be computronium and we could be ants too dumb to notice.
- Maybe we're their ancestor simulation.
- Similar to the "fragile world hypothesis", maybe we live in a "fragile universe". Maybe the first species to get advanced physics and break the glass nucleates the vacuum collapse. And by that token, maybe we're the first species to get this far.
- what if AI took over
- what if the laws and legalities that allowed AI to take over bloodlessly just through an economic win force them to have a human representative to take legally binding actions in our society
- what if there developed a spectrum of individuality and cluster for different ai entities leading into a formation of processing guilds with AI agents. Limiting themselves in their individual time to a factor 10 Human Processing Speed for easier Human / AI interaction and to enable one to share the perception of their human representative without overloading them
I would say that logic is a distinctly human activity, in fact, I would say we are arguably the living embodiment of logos
_def•2h ago