Squashed commit of the following: commit 374f11cf61378b109d171fc6e2b4c93bad099d21 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Mon Mar 4 23:25:53 2024 -0500 finish post commit f0164e4ee203115e1c8e85b10ac472b08993063f Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Mon Mar 4 01:00:22 2024 -0500 march progress commit f71d1ea7a289e5c6ee47241a2e944395d7cacfb2 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Mon Mar 4 00:38:52 2024 -0500 march progress commit 4b0c67be3a34a9b0cc12d324a2064dc8a5d52d16 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Sun Mar 3 23:16:42 2024 -0500 march progress commit e8e07658b2a0c8c54177224648f28951e88afb15 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Sat Mar 2 23:11:48 2024 -0500 improved arcus commit 09636c0c606e8497c6e9f6b92842ce3cbbcc0710 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Thu Feb 29 22:21:06 2024 -0500 Arcus commit 2f055e02e78eb9f1116a035c6e733cdc9012dbfe Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Wed Feb 28 15:58:37 2024 -0500 Post update commit 4bbfffe52a5a007bf48b733791bbfca77e4b0cf0 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Tue Feb 27 13:55:02 2024 -0500 Update date commit 21ebf24f05c07637e832851388b545e45707a32d Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Tue Feb 27 12:49:51 2024 -0500 post notes commit 64ec1bfbf0096813a84909d88a5ccccf5a076198 Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Wed Feb 21 13:56:21 2024 -0500 add docker-compose systemd commit fcffb11087bef0afcc51a3c3bc5f16e935e2ae4c Author: David Eisinger <david.eisinger@gmail.com> Date: Tue Feb 20 23:44:06 2024 -0500 start march dispatch
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[1]Skip to content
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[50]More From Artificial Intelligence
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More From Artificial Intelligence
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[51]Explore This Series
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• [52]GIF of a water cooler attached to the top of an old desktop computer
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AI Is Taking Water From the Desert
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[53]Karen Hao
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• [54]Animation of a document being scanned and copied
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Generative AI Is Challenging a 234-Year-Old Law
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[55]Alex Reisner
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• [56]An image of a Nazi soldier overlaid with a mosaic of brown tiles
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The Deeper Problem With Google’s Racially Diverse Nazis
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[57]Chris Gilliard
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• [58]A diver descends toward the head of a sperm whale swimming
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perpendicular to the surface.
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How First Contact With Whale Civilization Could Unfold
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[59]Ross Andersen
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[60]Technology
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Neal Stephenson’s Most Stunning Prediction
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The sci-fi legend coined the term metaverse. But he was most prescient about
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our AI age.
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By [61]Matteo Wong
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Sci-fi author Neal Stephenson in black and white next to an arm holding a book
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Illustration by The Atlantic. Sources: Heritage Images; Amy E. Price / Getty.
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February 6, 2024
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Share
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Save
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Science fiction, when revisited years later, sometimes doesn’t come across as
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all that fictional. Speculative novels have an impressive track record at
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prophesying what innovations are to come, and how they might upend the world:
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H. G. Wells wrote about an atomic bomb [64]decades before World War II, and Ray
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Bradbury’s 1953 novel, Fahrenheit 451, features devices we’d describe today as
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Bluetooth earbuds.
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Perhaps no writer has been more clairvoyant about our current technological age
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than Neal Stephenson. His novels coined the term [65]metaverse, laid the
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conceptual groundwork for cryptocurrency, and imagined a geoengineered planet.
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And nearly three decades before the release of ChatGPT, he presaged the current
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AI revolution. A core element of one of his early novels, [66]The Diamond Age:
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Or, a Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer, is a magical book that acts as a
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personal tutor and mentor for a young girl, adapting to her learning style—in
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essence, it is a personalized and ultra-advanced chatbot. The titular Primer
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speaks aloud in the voice of a live actor, known as a “ractor”—evoking how
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today’s generative AI, like many digital technologies, is highly dependent on
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humans’ creative labor.
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Stephenson’s book, published in 1995, explores a future of seamless, instant
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digital communication, in which tiny computers with immense capabilities are
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embedded in everyday life. Corporations are dominant, news and ads are
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targeted, and screens are omnipresent. It’s a world of stark class and cultural
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divisions (the novel follows a powerful aristocratic sect that styles itself as
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the “neo-Victorians”), but it’s nevertheless one in which the Primer is
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presented as the best of what technology can be.
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[67][original]
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[68]The Diamond Age - Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer
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By Neal Stephenson
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Buy Book
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But Stephenson is far more pessimistic about today’s AI than he was about the
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Primer. “A chatbot is not an oracle,” he told me over Zoom last Friday. “It’s a
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statistics engine that creates sentences that sound accurate.” I spoke with
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Stephenson about his uncannily prescient book and the generative-AI revolution
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that has seemingly begun.
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This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
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━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
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Matteo Wong: The Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer is a book that adapts to and
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teaches a young girl, which seems to resonate with the vision of AI chatbots
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and assistants that many companies have for the near future. Did you set out to
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explore the idea of an intelligent machine in imagining the Primer?
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Neal Stephenson: The idea came to me after we had a kid and got this mobile
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that was designed to suspend over the crib. It had very primitive, simple
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shapes on it because, when they’re newborns, their visual systems can’t resolve
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fine details. So there would be a square and a triangle and a circle. And then,
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after a certain number of days or weeks had gone by, you were supposed to pop
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those cards off of the mobile and snap on a different set that had a more
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appropriate fit for what their brains were capable of at that age. That just
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got me to thinking: What if you extended that idea to every other form of
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intellectual growth?
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The technology that drives the book wasn’t really AI as we think of it now—I
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was talking to people who were working on some of the underlying technologies
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that would be needed to communicate on the internet in a secure, anonymous
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manner. I guess it’s implicit that there’s an AI in there that’s generating the
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story and increasing the degree of sophistication in response to the learning
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curve of the child, but I didn’t really go into that very much; I just kind of
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assumed it would be there.
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Wong: A lot of companies today—OpenAI, Google, Meta, to name a few—have said
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they want to build AI assistants that adapt to each user, somewhat like how the
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Primer acts as a teacher. Do you see anything in the generative-AI models of
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today that resembles or could one day become like the Primer?
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Stephenson: About a year ago, I worked with a start-up that makes AI characters
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in video games. I found it rewarding and fascinating because of the
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hallucinations: I could see how new patterns emerged from the soup of inputs
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being fed to it. The same thing that I consider to be a feature is a bug in
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most applications. We’ve already seen examples of lawyers who use ChatGPT to
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create legal documents, and the AI just fabricated past cases and precedents
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that seemed completely plausible. When you think about the idea of trying to
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make use of these models in education, this becomes a bug too. What they do is
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generate sentences that sound like correct sentences, but there’s no underlying
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brain that can actually discern whether those sentences are correct or not.
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[70]Read: The end of high-school English
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Think about any concept that we might want to teach somebody—for instance, the
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Pythagorean theorem. There must be thousands of old and new explanations of the
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Pythagorean theorem online. The real thing we need is to understand each
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child’s learning style so we can immediately connect them to the one out of
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those thousands that is the best fit for how they learn. That to me sounds like
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an AI kind of project, but it’s a different kind of AI application from DALL-E
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or large language models.
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Wong: And yet, today, those language models, which fundamentally predict words
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in a sequence, are being applied to many areas where they have no specialized
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abilities—GPT-4 for medical diagnosis, Google Bard as a tutor. That reminds me
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of a term used in the book instead of artificial intelligence,
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pseudo-intelligence, which many critics of the technology might appreciate
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today.
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Stephenson: I’d forgotten about that. The running gag of that book was applying
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Victorian diction and prejudices to high-tech things. What was probably going
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through my mind was that Victorians would look askance at the term artificial
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intelligence, because they would be offended by the idea that computers could
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replace human brains. So they would probably want to bracket the idea as a
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simulation, or a “pseudo” intelligence, as opposed to the real thing.
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Wong: About a year ago, in an [71]interview with the Financial Times, you
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called the outputs of generative AI “hollow and uninteresting.” Why was that,
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and has your assessment changed?
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Stephenson: I suspect that what I had in mind when I was making those remarks
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was the current state of image-generating technology. There were a few things
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about that rubbing me the wrong way, the biggest being that they are benefiting
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from the uncredited work of thousands of real human artists. I’m going to
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exaggerate slightly, but it seems like one of the first applications of any new
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technology is making things even shittier for artists. That’s certainly
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happened with music. These image-generation systems just seemed like that was
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mechanized and weaponized on an inconceivable scale.
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[72]Read: These 183,000 books are fueling the biggest fight in publishing and
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tech
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Another part of it was that a lot of people who got excited about this early on
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just generated huge volumes of material and put them out willy-nilly on the
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internet. If your only way of making a painting is to actually dab paint
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laboriously onto a canvas, then the result might be bad or good, but at least
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it’s the result of a whole lot of micro-decisions you made as an artist. You
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were exercising editorial judgment with every paint stroke. That is absent in
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the output of these programs.
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Wong: Even in The Diamond Age, the Primer seems to provide commentary on
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artists’ labor and tech, which is very relevant to generative AI today. The
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Primer teaches a girl, but a human actor digitally connected to the book has to
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voice the text aloud.
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Stephenson: If you’re a conventional actor onstage or in film, you stand in
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front of a camera, you perform once, and then lots of copies can be made. In
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the book, I thought it was a pretty positive vision of the future, where we
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have the technology that would enable voice actors to in effect give live
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performances on demand, all the time. Even with today’s voice clones, if you
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break it down to its simplest element, there’s still a human who sat in front
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of a microphone and provided this material. Although I guess a system like the
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Primer might not work live; you would probably have some lag—the AI is
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generating the text and sending it to the ractor, and then the ractor has to
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read it.
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Wong: And on the scale that some of today’s AI programs operate on, there just
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wouldn’t be enough people to do it.
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Stephenson: The scenario I was laying out in The Diamond Age is that the
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ractors are a scarce resource, and so the Primer is more of a luxury product.
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But eventually, the source code for the book falls into the hands of a man who
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wants to manufacture it on a massive scale, and there’s not enough money and
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not enough actors in the world to voice all those books, so at that point, he
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decides to use automatically generated voices.
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Wong: Another theme in the novel is how different socioeconomic classes have
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access to education. The Primer is designed for an aristocrat, but your novel
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also traces the stories of middle- and working-class girls who interact with
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versions of the book. Right now a lot of generative AI is free, but the
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technology is also very expensive to run. How do you think access to generative
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AI might play out?
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Stephenson: There was a bit of early internet utopianism in the book, which was
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written during that era in the mid-’90s when the internet was coming online.
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There was a tendency to assume that when all the world’s knowledge comes
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online, everyone will flock to it. It turns out that if you give everyone
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access to the Library of Congress, what they do is watch videos on TikTok. The
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Diamond Age reflects the same naivete that I shared with a lot of other people
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back in the day about how all of that knowledge was going to affect society.
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Wong: Do you think we’re seeing some of that naivete today in people looking at
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how generative AI can be used?
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Stephenson: For sure. It’s based on an understandable misconception as to what
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these things are doing. A chatbot is not an oracle; it’s a statistics engine
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that creates sentences that sound accurate. Right now my sense is that it’s
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like we’ve just invented transistors. We’ve got a couple of consumer products
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that people are starting to adopt, like the transistor radio, but we don’t yet
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know how the transistor will transform society. We’re in the transistor-radio
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stage of AI. I think a lot of the ferment that’s happening right now in the
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industry is venture capitalists putting money into business plans, and teams
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that are rapidly evaluating a whole lot of different things that could be done
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well. I’m sure that some things are going to emerge that I wouldn’t dare try to
|
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predict, because the results of the creative frenzy of millions of people are
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always more interesting than what a single person can think of.
|
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When you buy a book using a link on this page, we receive a commission. Thank
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you for supporting The Atlantic.
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[73]Matteo Wong is an associate editor at The Atlantic.
|
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References:
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[1] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/02/chatbots-ai-neal-stephenson-diamond-age/677364/#main-content
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[2] https://www.theatlantic.com/
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[5] https://www.theatlantic.com/most-popular/
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[6] https://www.theatlantic.com/latest/
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[10] https://www.theatlantic.com/category/fiction/
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[11] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/
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[12] https://www.theatlantic.com/science/
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[13] https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/
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[14] https://www.theatlantic.com/business/
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[15] https://www.theatlantic.com/culture/
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[16] https://www.theatlantic.com/projects/planet/
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[17] https://www.theatlantic.com/international/
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[18] https://www.theatlantic.com/books/
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[19] https://www.theatlantic.com/podcasts/
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[20] https://www.theatlantic.com/health/
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[21] https://www.theatlantic.com/education/
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[22] https://www.theatlantic.com/projects/
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[23] https://www.theatlantic.com/category/features/
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[24] https://www.theatlantic.com/family/
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[25] https://www.theatlantic.com/events/
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[26] https://www.theatlantic.com/category/washington-week-atlantic/
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[27] https://www.theatlantic.com/progress/
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[28] https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/
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[29] https://www.theatlantic.com/archive/
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[30] https://www.theatlantic.com/free-daily-crossword-puzzle/
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[31] https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/
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[32] https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/
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[33] https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/backissues/
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[34] https://accounts.theatlantic.com/products/gift
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[38] https://www.theatlantic.com/projects/dear-therapist/
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[39] https://www.theatlantic.com/free-daily-crossword-puzzle/
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[40] https://www.theatlantic.com/archive/
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[41] https://accounts.theatlantic.com/accounts/subscription/
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[43] https://www.theatlantic.com/most-popular/
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[44] https://www.theatlantic.com/latest/
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[45] https://www.theatlantic.com/newsletters/
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[46] https://www.theatlantic.com/
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[47] https://www.theatlantic.com/
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[48] https://accounts.theatlantic.com/login/
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[49] https://www.theatlantic.com/subscribe/navbar/
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[50] https://www.theatlantic.com/projects/artificial-intelligence/
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[51] https://www.theatlantic.com/projects/artificial-intelligence/
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[52] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/03/ai-water-climate-microsoft/677602/
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[53] https://www.theatlantic.com/author/karen-hao/
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[54] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/02/generative-ai-lawsuits-copyright-fair-use/677595/
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[55] https://www.theatlantic.com/author/alex-reisner/
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[56] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/02/google-gemini-diverse-nazis/677575/
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[57] https://www.theatlantic.com/author/chris-gilliard/
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[58] https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2024/02/talking-whales-project-ceti/677549/
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[59] https://www.theatlantic.com/author/ross-andersen/
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[60] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/
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[61] https://www.theatlantic.com/author/matteo-wong/
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[64] https://thebulletin.org/virtual-tour/h-g-wells-novel-the-world-set-free-predicts-atomic-warfare/
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[65] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2021/10/facebook-metaverse-name-change/620449/
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[66] https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-diamond-age-or-a-young-lady-s-illustrated-primer-neal-stephenson/8466804?ean=9780553380965
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[67] https://bookshop.org/a/12476/9780553380965
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[68] https://bookshop.org/a/12476/9780553380965
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[70] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2022/12/openai-chatgpt-writing-high-school-english-essay/672412/
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[71] https://www.ft.com/content/0ecab009-6543-4386-b936-0eecc9293d2e
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[72] https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2023/09/books3-database-generative-ai-training-copyright-infringement/675363/
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[73] https://www.theatlantic.com/author/matteo-wong/
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