More from Gwern.net Newsletter
links on AI hardware, diffusion models, optogenetics, brain scanning.
with links on AI scaling, particular new East Asian record-breaking work & deep reinforcement learning.
2 major new site features: 'popins' and recursive Wikipedia popups
links on AI scaling, semaglutide, and ethicist ethics
More in technology
Today, Alec Watson posted a video titled “Algorithms are breaking how we think” on his YouTube channel, Technology Connections. The whole thing is excellent and very well argued. The main thrust is: people seem increasingly less mindful about the stuff they engage with. Watson argues that this is bad, and I agree. A little while ago I watched a video by Hank Green called “$4.5M to Spray Alcoholic Rats with Bobcat Urine”. Green has been banging this drum for a while. He hits some of the same notes as Watson, but from a different angle. This last month has been a lot, and I’ve withdrawn from news and social media quite a bit because of it. Part of this is because I’ve been very busy with work, but it’s also because I’ve felt overwhelmed. There are now a lot of bad-faith actors in positions of power. Part of their game plan is to spray a mass of obviously false, intellectually shallow, enraging nonsense into the world as quickly as possible. At a certain point the bullshit seeps in if you’re soaking in it. The ability to control over what you see next is powerful. I think it would be great if more people started being a bit more choosy about who they give that control to.
A quick look at the physics of conductors, insulators, and electric charges.
I’ve written about how prompting regular LLMs is not as important as people think. Reasoning models are different. When you’re using…
Waymo’s factory, a map of US land values, ships in the Arctic Circle, battery industry trends, and more.