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#corydoctorow

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LLMs become more dangerous as they rapidly get easier to use

This is a concise summary by Ethan Mollick of what I increasingly see as a key factor driving the evolution of consumer-facing LLMs:

Using AI well used to be a pretty challenging process which involved crafting a prompt using techniques like chain-of-thought along with learning tips and tricks to get the most out of your AI. In a recent series of experiments, however, we have discovered that these techniques don’t really help anymore. Powerful AI models are just getting better at doing what you ask them to or even figuring out what you want and going beyond what you ask (and no, threatening them or being nice to them does not seem to help on average).

What limited truth there was to the inflated discourse of ‘prompt engineering’ has largely evaporated at this point, leaving us in a strange position. The conversational approach I’ve always advocated, literally treating the LLM as an interlocutor analogous to a human collaborator, remains the best way of getting the most out of these systems. But neither this nor ‘prompt engineering’ is necessary to get LLMs to perform usefully in real world contexts.

This seems like an obviously positive thing for users. However my concern is the burden of articulation with LLMs, explaining what you want in a clear and substantive way, was a necessary condition for responsible use of LLMs. This burden was never sustainable at the level of a commercially viable product. It presupposed a consistent level of reflexivity, a degree of cultural capital and a fluency with writing which was always incompatible with the kind of mass market software that has a user base of one billion plus.

However it did ensure that users were thinking carefully about their use because you literally couldn’t produce valuable outcomes with an LLM unless you were doing this. Now it’s very easy to get LLMs to infer what you want, with success much of the time to at least some degree. What’s lost in the process is the reflexivity which came prior to use (i.e. the moment when you stopped to think “what am I actually asking Claude to do here?”) and the learning which came through reflecting on the output and the related interaction it generates, as your sense of what you were trying to do is refined and expanded through dialogue.

This is how Claude Opus 4 glossed my analysis here. It conveyed my own words back to me but it did it in a way which surfaced an element (“the pause”) which was only latent in my original phrasing (“the moment when”), leading me to reflect more on the temporal dimension to “the burden of articulation”:

The “burden of articulation” you describe served as a kind of productive friction – it forced users to crystallize their thinking before engaging with the tool. There’s something valuable in that pause, that moment of having to translate a vague intention into clear language. It’s reminiscent of how writing itself can clarify thinking, or how explaining a problem to someone else often helps you understand it better yourself.

In this sense friction with LLMs was a positive thing because it necessitated meta-cognition. The optimisation of the human-model interaction erodes a feature which I would argue was immensely important, even if its value is only manifested outside of the interaction itself. It doesn’t I think level the playing field because those with the necessary capital and fluency can still use LLMs in a deeper and more reflective way, with better outcomes emerging from the process.

But it does create worrying implications for organisations which build this practice into their roles. Earlier today I heard Cory Doctorow use the brilliant analogy of asbestos to describe LLMs being incorporated into digital infrastructure in ways which we will likely later have to remove at immense cost. What’s the equivalent analogy for the social practice of those operating within the organisations?

https://soundcloud.com/qanonanonymous/cory-doctorow-destroys-enshitification-e338

One Useful Thing · Mass IntelligenceBy Ethan Mollick

Die Gelddruckmaschine von Big-Tech

Apple, Ama­zon, Meta, NVi­dia gel­ten als Stars des Akti­en­markts. Ihre Akti­en stei­gen und stei­gen. Inves­to­ren rei­ßen sich dar­um. Das gibt ihnen schein­bar unbe­grenz­te Mög­lich­kei­ten – solan­ge der Hype hält. Der Autor und Netz-Akti­­vist Cory Doc­to­row erklärt, wie die Geld­druck­ma­schi­ne bei Big-Tech funktioniert.

👉 kaffeeringe.de/2025/08/27/akti

#AGI#Aktien#Amazon

#CoryDoctorow @pluralistic on fire in this blog post: pluralistic.net/2025/08/26/sol

A concise definition of #conservatism: "There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect."

With lots of examples from (tech) corporate and MAGA conservatism. "The Flu Klux Klan wants to ban you from wearing a mask for health reasons, but they will defend to the death the right of ICE brownshirts to run around in gaiters and Oakleys as they kidnap our neighbors off the streets."

Conservatism underpins #fascism. Therefore "we should treat every attempt to pull any of these scams as an inch (or a yard, or a mile) down the road to fascist collapse."

pluralistic.netPluralistic: By all means, tread on those people (26 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

"As Thomas Piketty argues, there comes a point where it's cheaper to make society more fair – say, by building hospitals and schools – than it is to pay for all the gaiter-wearing gun-thugs you'll need to weed out the guillotine-building projects that spontaneously erupt under conditions of gross unfairness"

pluralistic.net/2025/08/20/bil

pluralistic.netPluralistic: Become unoptimizable (20 Aug 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

"When your drivers are pushed so hard by automation that they can't even urinate, they aren't centaurs, whose work is supercharged by high-tech tools. They are reverse-centaurs, humans who are used as inconvenient, fallible meat-puppets for a robot that demands superhuman feats of them, working them in ways the human body literally can't withstand, until they are used up and discarded, and then replaced with other humans.

(A leaked 2021 Amazon internal research memo warned that the company was burning out warehouse workers so quickly that it was in danger of using up every single eligible worker in the United States."

— Cory Doctorow: Enshittification

7.10: Ariel & Christina Discuss the Solarpunk Merits of Walkaway by Cory Doctorow

Cory Doctorow’s 2017 novel Walkaway has a reputation in solarpunk circles as a great example of a solarpunk lifestyle, and a must-read book for everyone from the individual who lives and breathes solarpunk to the solarpunk-curious to general science fiction fans. But what is it about Walkaway that gives it solarpunk cred? Ariel and Christina ponder this, discussing features of the novel that could be considered solarpunk, and some that might be more post-cyberpunk than anything, and how some of the ideologies and technologies are or have been applied in our present world. Is the world of Walkaway an achievable solarpunk paradise, or a nice hopeful story featuring very cool gadgets and bites of lefty philosophy? Or something else entirely? What is the draw, here, anyway? Join us to think through some of the quandaries and ideas the book raises.

youtu.be/K0Qx3MnrceA

youtu.be- YouTubeEnjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

From: blenderdumbass . org

A lot of people claim that they need to use proprietary software, either for work or something else. And the question is. Do they consent to it, or the existence of a need makes it some sort of a power dynamic?

Read or listen: blenderdumbass.org/articles/it

blenderdumbass . orgIt's Better to Want It Than to Need It

"An app is just a website wrapped in enough IP so that the company that made it can send you to prison if you dare to modify it so that it serves your interests rather than theirs." -- Cory Doctorow
Use web sites, not apps, if you know what's good for you.
pluralistic.net/2025/02/26/urs
#CoryDoctorow #Enshittification #UrsulaFranklinLecture #TuckersBalls

pluralistic.netPluralistic: With Great Power Came No Responsibility (26 Feb 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
Replied in thread

@Gryficowa

Explore Cory Doctorow’s insightful take on the “Four Horsemen of the 3D Printing Apocalypse” and the challenges of regulating technology in his Make Magazine article. 🤖🖨️📚 Stay informed on tech, DRM, and digital rights! #3DPrinting #TechFuture #DigitalRights #CoryDoctorow 2011

Read more: web.archive.org/web/2013103100

#Thinkofthechildren #ageverification #1984 #facescan #bigbrother #yalllost 🤷

web.archive.orgFour Horsemen of the 3D Printing Apocalypse

Hallo Cyber Freunde! Das fantastische Buch 'red team blues' von @pluralistic ist jetzt als deutsches Audiobuch erhältlich. Da alle Werke Cory's ohne DRM verkauft werden, ist es nur ueber kickstarter zu bekommen. (hintergrund hier: pluralistic.net/2025/07/21/mar)

Unterstuetzt DRM freie Werke und Autoren die weiterhin ohne DRM verkaufen. kickstarter.com/projects/docto

#corydoctorow
#cybercrime
#hoerbuch

pluralistic.netPluralistic: How my DRM-free principles left me owning the rights to a German audiobook (21 Jul 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

Last night, @pluralistic was in conversation with @mariafarrell to mark ORG's 20th birthday.

This wide-ranging conversation covers everything from the 'Internet dimension' of policy-making to copyright in the age of AI and how to fight for digital rights.

Plus much more!

Missed it live? No worries, you can watch it in full on Youtube 📺

youtube.com/live/M9H2An_D6io

"That's right: at the first hint of competition, the self-described libertarians who insisted that computers would make governments obsolete went running to the government, demanding a state-backed monopoly that would put their rivals in prison for daring to interfere with their business model. Plus ça change: today, their intellectual descendants are demanding that the US government bail out their 'anti-state', 'independent' cryptocurrency"

#CoryDoctorow, 2025

pluralistic.net/2025/03/04/obj

pluralistic.netPluralistic: There Were Always Enshittifiers (04 Mar 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow

When Google’s slop meets webslop, search stops: pluralistic.net/2025/07/15/inh

A very good article on awful Google AI search results and how Google have ruined their own reputation by wrecking their workforce, by @pluralistic. A quote:

'Publishers and advertisers have more concentrated money than readers, but the dominant theory of antitrust since the Reagan administration is something called "consumer welfare," which holds that monopolistic conduct is only to be condemned if it makes consumers worse off. If a company screws its workers or suppliers in order to deliver better products and/or better prices, then "consumer welfare" holds that the government should celebrate and protect the monopolist for improving "efficiency."

But all that is true only if Google AI Overviews are good. And they are very, very bad.'

Don't use Google for search.

pluralistic.netPluralistic: When Google’s slop meets webslop, search stops (15 Jul 2025) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow