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Nobody really knows what AI war will look like
đŠ Zebra striping | âȘïž Notre Dame | đ Phoney pheromones
In the headlines
Joe Biden has issued a âfull and unconditionalâ pardon for his son Hunter, who was facing years in prison following his convictions for gun-related charges and tax evasion. The outgoing president, who had repeatedly pledged not to use his executive authority in this way, said Hunter had been âselectively, and unfairly, prosecutedâ because of his family name. Iran-backed militias have entered Syria to help President Assadâs forces, after the Islamist militant group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham seized the countryâs second city, Aleppo, yesterday morning. Russia, a long-term Syrian ally, is also bolstering Syriaâs army with airstrikes on the rebels. âBrain rotâ is the Oxford word of the year. The noun refers to the âsupposed deterioration of a personâs mental or intellectual state... as a result of overconsumption of material (now particularly online content) considered to be trivial or unchallengingâ. In other words, the opposite of The Knowledge.
Comment
A glimpse into our future? A scene from Terminator 2: Judgement Day (1991)
Nobody really knows what AI war will look like
I recently attended an off-the-record lecture on AI, delivered by the âhead of one of the Westâs foremost intelligence agenciesâ, says Max Hastings in Bloomberg. I know next to nothing about the AI revolution, and was hoping to change that. But after the hush-hush briefing I was still none the wiser. The prophets of AI predict war will soon be a struggle between ârival machine systemsâ with no humans involved: autonomous drone swarms, âliterally superhumanâ missile defence systems, and so on. Certainly, if I were running a nationâs weapons procurement, I would decline funding for any new combat aircraft with room for a pilot. But in terms of what any of this will actually look like, or how it will play out, even those at the very top donât seem to know.
Military AI is often compared to nuclear weapons, for good reason. They both have the potential to destroy humanity, and so they both stir the same instinct to outdo your enemy (âwe have no choice save to keep upâ). And the extent to which AI will affect the world seems as hard to grasp as it was for nukes. When Winston Churchill was approached in 1941 by his chief scientific adviser seeking permission to investigate nuclear fission to make a bomb, he agreed but couldnât see the point. âPersonally,â he said, âI am quite content with the existing explosives.â One difference is that the Manhattan Project was run by real people â will computers have the same instinct for self-preservation? But thereâs still grounds for optimism. My father, seeing the devastation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945, assumed I would spend my life âhaunted by the spectre of The Bombâ. In fact, it is extraordinary how cheerfully we have made it through the last 79 years.
Architecture
Notre Dame will open to the public again on Saturday, says BBC News, five years after it was gutted by a fire. The Paris cathedralâs iconic timber spire has been painstakingly rebuilt using 13th-century carpentry methods, and the 100-metre wooden roof replaced with timber from 1,200 oaks. The stained-glass windows were âdismantled, removed, cleaned and returnedâ; so too the 18th-century organ, all 7,952 pipes of it. Perhaps most striking is the âluminosity of the stoneworkâ â all the limestone blocks have been cleaned or replaced, removing centuriesâ worth of dust and dirt. See more pictures here.
Global update
Itâs been a tough old year for the leaders of the G7 nations, says Charlemagne in The Economist. Incumbents in Britain, the US and Japan have been booted out by voters. Emmanuel Macron called and lost snap parliamentary elections in France; German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is heading for an âelectoral drubbingâ in February; Canadaâs Justin Trudeau may well be âforcibly retiredâ within a year. The only one whoâs still popular is Italyâs Giorgia Meloni â though that may be because she hasnât had to face voters since winning office in 2022.
Love etc
Paul Rudd describing his aftershave in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
Young people are spritzing themselves with pheromones â the chemicals used in the animal kingdom to attract a mate â to boost their love lives, says The Times. The scent shop Parfumery claims its pheromone cologne can trigger emotions of âpure instinct, lust and sexual attractionâ; the Notino website reckons its PheroStrong massage oil will âmake you irresistible to the opposite sexâ. Scientists say itâs all balls: while humans do have the organ in the nose that many animals use to detect pheromones, itâs not active. Still, maybe worth a try?
Comment
Of course he brought an anorak: Starmer at the Paris Olympics. Karwai Tang/WireImage/Getty
Starmerâs real problem is that he doesnât like politics
There are plenty of reasons why Keir Starmerâs administration is already so unpopular, says John Harris in The Guardian, but for me the big one is tone. He and his government simply donât know how to tell a story. Just look at the protests over the removal of inheritance tax relief for farmers. Whereas those in Barbour jackets and wellies talked passionately about âfamily, history and the emotional pull of the British landscapeâ, ministers stuck to âdry numbersâ: the ÂŁ3m couples can pass on tax-free; the fact that it was 50% of the normal rate; the 10-year grace period farmers have to pay it. Stirring rhetoric it was not.
This is something centre-left politicians have long struggled with, not just here but across the West. As the US political strategist Drew Westen wrote back in 2007, too many liberal folk fail to understand that âwhen reason and emotion collide, emotion invariably winsâ. The right are much more comfortable on this terrain: they weave compelling human stories while their opponents earnestly recite facts and figures. The best examples are of course Donald Trump and Nigel Farage. However âmonstrousâ we lefties find them, we canât deny that they are âoverwhelmingly humanâ: brazen, instinctive and able to spin a good yarn. Starmer and Rachel Reeves, by comparison, are âstilted and bloodlessâ. They think âall will be well once the relevant numbers align correctlyâ. Thatâs not a winning political message.
đ„đ Starmerâs real problem, says Charles Moore in The Daily Telegraph, is that he doesnât like politics. A lawyer to his core, he sees questioning of his policies as an âaffrontâ rather than an opportunity to prove his critics wrong. The most successful politicians of the past 50 years â the likes of Thatcher, Blair, Reagan and Clinton â were âenergisedâ by political challenge. They positively wanted to go out and reach voters, to smell âthe smoke of battleâ and hear âthe roar of the crowdâ. On the very day Thatcher was forced out of office in 1990, she told the Commons: âIâm enjoying this!â Sir Keir isnât enjoying it one bit.
Tomorrowâs world
A robot giving a Ted Talk, created by DALL.E
Anyone unfortunate enough to have visited LinkedIn recently will know that the networking site is awash with ponderous, jargon-filled essays by executive types trying to position themselves as âthinkfluencersâ. What may or may not come as a surprise is that more than half of them are written by AI bots â a new analysis estimates that 54% of posts longer than 100 words are churned out using ChatGPT and the like. Itâs not a bad fit, says Wired: LinkedIn is where people âstrive to be the most anodyne version of themselvesâ. Artificiality, in other words, is âwhat everybodyâs expectingâ.
Zeitgeist
The big trend this festive season is âzebra-stripingâ: a new term for the old trick of drinking one non-alcoholic drink for every alcoholic one. According to a recent study â admittedly one produced by a prominent alcohol-free beer brand â a quarter of British drinkers now do it at the pub to stop themselves getting too sozzled on a night out. For me, says Daisy Jones in Vogue, nothing will beat the tactic my friendâs mum adopted at parties: every time she had a drink, sheâd roll her sleeve up once. âBy the time her sleeves were rolled up to mid-forearm, she knew that it was time to dip out.â
Snapshot
Snapshot answer
Itâs a killer whale wearing a âdead salmon hatâ, says the Vancouver Sun. Boffins tracking the marine predators in Puget Sound, off the coast of Washington State, have noticed at least one orca balancing a finished-off fish on its head, and âpossibly snacking on the salmon at its leisureâ. Whatâs weird is that âsporting a salmon-corpse lid isnât exactly new behaviourâ. The phenomenon was first recorded in 1987, when a single female started doing it, kicking off a trend that soon spread to whales in totally different pods. âHonestly, we have no idea why this started,â says local marine biologist Deborah Giles. Or âwhy it happens, or why it seems to be starting againâ.
Quoted
âNot enough of life makes sense for you to be able to survive it without humour.â
Jerry Seinfeld
Thatâs it. Youâre done.
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