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corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 21st December 2025English
10Ā·7 days agoIt might help to know that Paul Frazee, one of the BlueSky developers, doesnāt understand capability theory or how hackers approach a computer. They believe that anything hidden by the porcelain/high-level UI is hidden for good. This was a problem on their Beaker project, too; they thought that a page was deleted if it didnāt show up in the browser. They fundamentally arenāt prepared for the fact that their AT protocol doesnāt have a way to destroy or hide data and is embedded into a network that treats censorship as reparable damage.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 21st December 2025English
13Ā·7 days agoToday, in fascists not understanding art, a suckless fascist praised Mozillaās 1998 branding:
This is real art; in stark contrast to the brutalist, generic mess that the Mozilla logo has become. Open source projects should be more daring with their visual communications.
Quoting from a 2016 explainer:
[T]he branding strategy I chose for our project was based on propaganda-themed art in a Constructivist / Futurist style highly reminiscent of Soviet propaganda posters. And then when people complained about that, I explained in detail that Futurism was a popular style of propaganda art on all sides of the early 20th century conflicts⦠Yes, I absolutely branded Mozilla.org that way for the subtext of āthese free software people are all a bunch of commies.ā I was trolling. I trolled them so hard.
The irony of a suckless developer complaining about brutalism is truly remarkable; these fuckwits donāt actually have a sense of art history, only what looks cool to them. Big lizard, hard-to-read font, edgy angular corners, and red-and-black palette are all cool symbols to the teenage boyās mind, and the fascist never really grows out of that mindset.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 21st December 2025English
4Ā·10 days agoSadly, itās a Chomskian paper, and those are just too weak for today. Also, I think itās sloppy and too Eurocentric. Here are some of the biggest gaffes or stretches I found by skimming Moroās $30 book, which I obtained by asking a shadow library for āimpossible languagesā (ISBN doesnāt work for some reason):
book review of Impossible Languages (Moro, 2016)
- Moro claims that itās impossible for a natlang to have free word order. Thereās many counterexamples which could be argued, like Arabic or Mandarin, but I think that the best counterexample is Latin, which has Latinate (free) word order. On one hand, of course word order matters for parsers, but on the other hand the Transformers architecture attends without ordering, so this isnāt really an issue for machines. Ironically, on p73-74, Moro rearranges the word order of a Latin phrase while translating it, suggesting either a use of machine translation or an implicit acceptance of Latin (lack of) word order. I could be harsher here; it seems like Moro draws mostly from modern Romance and Germanic languages to make their points about word order, and the sensitivity of English and Italian to word order doesnāt imply a universality.
- Speaking of universality, both the generative-grammar and universal-grammar hypotheses are assumed. By āimpossibleā Moro means a non-recursive language with a non-context-free grammar, or perhaps a language failing to satisfy some nebulous geometric requirements.
- Moro claims that sentences without truth values are lacking semantics. Gƶdel and Tarski are completely unmentioned; Moro ignores any sort of computability of truth values.
- Russellās paradox is indirectly mentioned and incorrectly analyzed; Moro claims that Russell fixed Fregeās system by redefining the copula, but Russell and others actually refined the notion of building sets.
- It is claimed that Brocaās area uniquely lights up for recursive patterns but not patterns which depend on linear word order (e.g. a rule that a sentence is negated iff the fourth word is ānoā), so that Brocaās area canāt do context-sensitive processing. But humans clearly do XOR when counting nested negations in many languages and can internalize that XOR so that they can handle utterances consisting of many repetitions of e.g. ānot notā.
- Moro mentions Esperanto and Volapük as auxlangs in their chapter on conlangs. They completely fail to recognize the past century of applied research: Interlingue and Interlingua, Loglan and Lojban, LÔadan, etc.
- Sanskrit is Indo-European. Also, thatās not how junk DNA works; it genuinely isnāt coding or active. Also also, thatās not how Turing patterns work; they are genuine cellular automata and itās not merely an analogy.
I think that Moroās strongest point, on which they spend an entire chapter reviewing fairly solid neuroscience, is that natural language is spoken and heard, such that a proper language model must be simultaneously acoustic and textual. But because they donāt address computability theory at all, they completely fail to address the modern critique that machines can learn any learnable system, including grammars; they worst that they can say is that itās literally not a human.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 14th December 2025 - awful.systemsEnglish
5Ā·12 days agoI got jumpscared by Gavin D. Howard today; apparently his version of
bcappeared on my system somehow, and his nameās in the copyright notice. Who is Gavin anyway? Well, he used to have a blog post that straight-up admitted his fascism, but I canāt find it. I could only find, say, the following five articles, presented chronologically:- Free Speech and Pronouns
- Israel is Not an Apartheid State, featuring Denis āNo Uā Prager
- My Thought Process Regarding Vaccines
- Intermission: This comment on Lobsters leads to this ban reason on Lobsters
- No More Skittles, featuring Libs of āTikTokā TikTok
- I Am Divorced
Also, while heās apparently not caused issues for NixOS maintainers yet, heās written An Apology to the Gentoo Authors for not following their rules when it comes to that same
bcpackage. So this might be worth removing for other reasons than the Christofascist authorship.BTW his code shows up because itās in upstream BusyBox and I have a BusyBox on my system for emergency purposes. I suppose itās time to look at whether there is a better BusyBox out there. Also, it looks like Denys Vlasenko has made over one hundred edits to this code to integrate it with BusyBox, fix correctness and safety bugs, and improve performance; Gavin only made the initial commit.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 14th December 2025 - awful.systemsEnglish
5Ā·12 days agoThey (or the LLM that summarized their findings and may have hallucinated part of the post) say:
It is a fascinating example of āGlue Codeā engineering, but it debunks the idea that the LLM is natively āunderstandingā or manipulating files. Itās just pushing buttons on a very complex, very human-made machine.
Literally nothing that they show here is bad software engineering. It sounds like they expected that the LLMās internals would be 100% token-driven inference-oriented programming, or perhaps a mix of that and vibe code, and they are disappointed that itās merely a standard Silicon Valley cloudy product.
My analysis is that Bobby and Vicky should get raises; they arenāt paid enough for this bullshit.
By the way, the post probably isnāt faked. Google-internal
go/URLs do leak out sometimes, usually in comments. Searching GitHub for that specific URL turns up one hit in a repository which claims to hold a partial dump of the OpenAI agents. Here iscombined_apply_patch_cli.py. The agent includes a copy of ImageMagick; truly, ImageMagick is our ecosystemās cockroach.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Why Disney just put $1 billion into OpenAIEnglish
5Ā·13 days agoNow Iām curious about whether Disney funded Glaze & Nightshade. Quoting Nightshadeās FAQ, their lab has arranged to receive donations which are washed through the University of Chicago:
If you or your organization may be interested in pitching in to support and advance our work, you can donate directly to Glaze via the Physical Sciences Division webpage, click on āMake a gift to PSDā and choose āGLAZEā as your area of support (managed by the University of Chicago Physical Sciences Division).
Previously, on Awful, I noted the issues with Nightshade and the curious fact that Disney is the only example stakeholder named in the original Nightshade paper, as well as the fact that Nightshadeās authors wonder about the possibility of applying Glaze-style techniques to feature-length films.
corbin@awful.systemsOPto
SneerClub@awful.systemsā¢Your favorite science YouTubers are misleading you about AI ā how to spot liesEnglish
192Ā·16 days agoThe author also proposes a framework for analyzing claims about generative AI. I donāt know if I endorse it fully, but I agree that each of the four talking points represents a massive failure of understanding. Their LIES model is:
- Lethality: the bots will kill us all
- Inevitability: the bots are unstoppable and will definitely be created in the future
- Exceptionalism: the bots are wholly unlike any past technology and we are unprepared to understand them
- Superintelligent: the bots are better than people at thinking
I would add to this a Plausibility or Personhood or Personality: the incorrect claim that the bots are people. Maybe call it PILES.
corbin@awful.systemsto
SneerClub@awful.systemsā¢A Post-Mortem for Geeks, Mops, and SociopathsEnglish
13Ā·16 days agoFundamentally, Chapmanās essay is about how subcultures transition from valuing functionality to aesthetics. Subcultures start with form following function by necessity. However, people adopt the subculture because they like the surface appearance of those forms, leading to the subculture eventually hollowing out into a system which follows the iron law of bureaucracy and becomes non-functional due to over-investment in the faƧade and tearing down of Chestertonās fences. Chapmanās not the only person to notice this pattern; other instances of it, running the spectrum from right to left, include:
- Raoās The Gervais Principle, which Chapman explicitly cites, is about how businesses operate
- Baudrillardās Simulacra and Simulation is about how semiotic systems evolve
- Benjaminās The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction is about how groups of artists establish symbols
- Debordās The Society of the Spectacle is about how consumerist states cultivate mass consciousness through mass media
- The Marxist concept that fascism is a cancer upon liberalism, which doesnāt have a single author as far as I can tell, is about how political systems evolve under obligate capitalism
I think that seeing this pattern is fine, but worrying about it makes one into Scott Alexander, paranoid about societal manipulation and constantly worrying about in-group and out-group status. We should note the pattern but stop endorsing instances of it which attach labels to people; after all, the patternās fundamentally about memes, not humans.
So, on Chapman. I think that theyāre a self-important nerd who reached criticality after binge-reading philsophy texts in graduate school. I could have sworn that this was accompanied by psychedelic drugs, but I canāt confirm or cite that and I donāt think that we should underestimate the psychoactive effect of reading philosophy from the 1800s. In his own words:
[T]he central character in the book is a student at the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory who discovers Continental philosophy and social theory, realizes that AI is on a fundamentally wrong track, and sets about reforming the field to incorporate those other viewpoints. That describes precisely two people in the real world: me, and my sometime-collaborator Phil Agre.
Heās explicitly not allied with our good friends, but at the same time they move in the same intellectual circles. Iām familiar with that sort of frustration. Like, he rejects neoreaction by citing Scott Alexanderās rejection of neoreaction (source); thatās a somewhat-incoherent view suggesting that heās politically naĆÆve. His glossary for his eternally-unfinished Continental-style tome contains the following statement on Rationalism (embedded links and formatting removed):
Rationalisms are ideologies that claim that there is some way of thinking that is the correct one, and you should always use it. Some rationalisms specifically identify which method is right and why. Others merely suppose there must be a single correct way to think, but admit we donāt know quite what it is; or they extol a vague principle like āthe scientific method.ā Rationalism is not the same thing as rationality, which refers to a nebulous collection of more-or-less formal ways of thinking and acting that work well for particular purposes in particular sorts of contexts.
I donāt know. Sometimes he takes Yudkowsky seriously in order to critique him. (source, source) But the critiques are always very polite, no sneering. Maybe heās really that sort of Alan Watts character who has transcended petty squabbles. Maybe he didnāt take enough LSD. I once was on LSD when I was at the office working all day; I saw the entire structure of the corporation, fully understood its purpose, and ā unlike Chapman, apparently ā came to the conclusion that it is bad. Similarly, when I look at Yudkowsky or Yarvin trying to do philosophy, I often see bad arguments and premises. Being judgemental here is kind of important for defending ourselves from a very real alt-right snowstorm of mystic bullshit.
Okay, so in addition to the opening possibilities of being naĆÆve and hiding his power level, I suggest that Chapman could be totally at peace or permanently rotated in five dimensions from drugs. Iāve gotta do five, so a fifth possibility is that heās not writing for a human audience, but aiming to be crawled by LLM data-scrapers. Food for thought for this community: if you say something pseudo-profound near LessWrong then it is likely to be incorporated into LLM training data. I know of multiple other writers deliberately doing this sort of thing.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 14th December 2025 - awful.systemsEnglish
15Ā·16 days agoThe orange-site whippersnappers donāt realize how old artificial neurons are. In terms of theory, the Hebbian principle was documented in 1949 and the perceptron was proposed in 1943 in an article with the delightfully-dated name, āA logical calculus of the ideas immanent in nervous activityā. In 1957, the Mark I Perceptron was introduced; in modern parlance, it was a configurable image classifier with a single layer of hundreds-to-thousands of neurons and a square grid of dozens-to-hundreds of pixels. For comparison, MITās AI lab was founded in 1970. RMS would have read about artificial neurons as part of their classwork and research, although it wasnāt part of MITās AI programme.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 30th November 2025 - awful.systemsEnglish
7Ā·27 days agoOh wow, thatās gloriously terse. I agree that it might be the shortest. For comparison, here are three other policies whose pages are much longer and whose message also boils down to ādonāt do thatā: donāt post copypasta, donāt start hoaxes, donāt start any horseshit either.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 30th November 2025 - awful.systemsEnglish
11Ā·30 days agoZiz was arraigned on Monday, according to The Baltimore Banner. She apparently was not very cooperative:
As the judge asked basic questions such as whether she had read the indictment and understood the maximum possible penalties, [Ziz] LaSota chided the āmock proceedingsā and said [US Magistrate Douglas R.] Miller was a āparticipant in an organized crime ringā led by the āstates united in slavery.ā
She pulled the Old Man from Scene 24 gag:
Please state your name for the record, the court clerk said. āJustice,ā she replied. What is your age? āTimeless.ā What year were you born? āI have been born many times.ā
The lawyers have accepted that sometimes a defendant is uncooperative:
Prosecutors said the federal case would take about three days to try. Defense attorney Gary Proctor, in an apparent nod to how long what should have been a perfunctory appearance on Monday ended up taking, called the estimate āoverly optimistic.ā
Folks outside the USA should be reassured that this isnāt the first time that weāve tried somebody with a loose grasp of reality and a found family of young violent women who constantly disrupt the trial; Ziz isnāt likely to walk away.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Stubsack: weekly thread for sneers not worth an entire post, week ending 23rd November 2025 - awful.systemsEnglish
1Ā·1 month agoIndeed. I left a note on one of his blogposts correcting a common misconception (that itās āall just tokensā and the model canāt tell when you clearly substituted an unlikely word, common among RAG-heavy users) and he showed up to clarify that he merely wanted to āstart an interesting conversationā about how to improve his particular chatbots.
Itās almost like thereās a sequence: passing the Turing test, sycophancy, ELIZA effect, suggestibility, cognitive offloading, shared delusions, psychoses, conspiracy theories, authoritarian-follower personality traits, alt-right beliefs, right-wing beliefs. A mechanical Iago.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Vibe nuclear ā letās use AI shortcuts on reactor safety!English
33Ā·1 month agoLinear no-threshold isnāt under attack, but under review. The game-theoretic conclusions havenāt changed: limit overall exposure, radiation is harmful, more radiation means more harm. The practical consequences of tweaking the model concern e.g. evacuation zones in case of emergency; excess deaths from radiation exposure are balanced against deaths caused by evacuation, so the choice of model determines the exact shape of evacuation zones. (I suspect that you know this but itās worth clarifying for folks who arenāt doing literature reviews.)
corbin@awful.systemsto
SneerClub@awful.systemsā¢On Incomputable Language: An Essay on AI by Elizabeth SandiferEnglish
7Ā·1 month agoI donāt have any experience writing physics simulators myselfā¦
I think that this is your best path forward. Go simulate some rigid-body physics. Simulate genetics with genetic algorithms. Simulate chemistry with Petri nets. Simulate quantum computing. Simulate randomness with random-number generators. Youāll learn a lot about the limitations that arise at each step as we idealize the real world into equations that are simple enough to compute. Fundamentally, youāre proposing that Boltzmann brains are plausible, and the standard physics retort (quoting Carroll 2017, Why Boltzmann brains are bad) is that they āare cognitively unstable: they cannot simultaneously be true and justifiably believed.ā
A lesser path would be to keep going with consciousness and neuroscience. In that case, go read Hofstadter 2007, āIā is a strange loop to understand what it could possibly mean for a pattern to be substrate-independent.
If theyāre complex enough, and executed sufficiently quickly that I can converse with it in my lifetime, let me be the judge of whether I think itās intelligent.
No, youāre likely to suffer the ELIZA Effect. Previously, on Awful, Iāve explained whatās going on in terms of memes. If you want to read a sci-fi story instead, Iād recommend Wattsā Blindsight. You are overrating the phenomenon of intelligence.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Data Center Watch worries that anti-AI activism is workingEnglish
5Ā·1 month agoUnlike a bunker, a datacenterās ventilation consists of
[]which are out of reach. The[]are heavily[], so[]unlikely to work either. However, this ventilation must be[]in order to effectively[], and thatās done by[]into the[]and[]to prevent[].Edit: making the joke funnier.
corbin@awful.systemsto
TechTakes@awful.systemsā¢Data Center Watch worries that anti-AI activism is workingEnglish
13Ā·1 month agoIn my personal and professional opinion, most datacenter outages are caused by animals disturbing fiber or power lines. Consider campaigning for rewilding instead; itās legal and statistically might be more effective.
corbin@awful.systemsto
SneerClub@awful.systemsā¢On Incomputable Language: An Essay on AI by Elizabeth SandiferEnglish
81Ā·1 month agoIām going to be a little indirect and poetic here.
In Turingās view, if a computer were to pass the Turing Test, the calculations it carried out in doing so would still constitute thought even if carried out by a clerk on a sheet of paper with no knowledge of how a teletype machine would translate them into text, or even by a distributed mass of clerks working in isolation from each other so that nothing resembling a thinking entity even exists.
Yes. In Smullyanās view, the acoustic patterns in the air would still constitute birdsong even if whistled by a human with no beak, or even by a vibrating electromagnetically-driven membrane which is located far from the data that it is playing back, so that nothing resembling a bird even exists. Or, in Aristotelesā view, the syntactic relationship between sentences would still constitute syllogism even if attributed to a long-dead philosopher, or even verified by a distributed mass of mechanical provers so that no single prover ever localizes the entirety of the modus ponens. In all cases, the pattern is the representation; the arrangement which generates the pattern is merely a substrate.
Consider the notion that thought is a biological process. Itās true that, if all of the atoms and cells comprising the organism can be mathematically modeled, a Turing Machine would then be able to simulate them. But it doesnāt follow from this that the Turing Machine would then generate thought. Consider the analogy of digestion. Sure, a Turing Machine could model every single molecule of a steak and calculate the precise ways in which it would move through and be broken down by a human digestive system. But all this could ever accomplish would be running a simulation of eating the steak. If you put an actual ribeye in front of a computer there is no amount of computational power that would allow the computer to actually eat and digest it.
Putting an actual ribeye in front of a human, there is no amount of computational power that would allow the human to actually eat and digest it, either. The act of eating canāt be provoked merely by thought; there must be some sort of mechanical linkage between thoughts and the relevant parts of the body. Turing & Champernowne invented a program that plays chess and also were known (apocryphally, apparently) to play ārun-around-the-house chessā or āTuring chessā which involved standing up and jogging for a lap in-between chess moves. The ability to play Turing chess is cognitively embodied but the ability to play chess is merely the ability to represent and manipulate certain patterns.
At the end of the day what defines art is the existence of intention behind it ā the fact that some consciousness experienced thoughts that it subsequently tried to communicate. Without that thereās simply lines on paper, splotches of color, and noise. At the risk of tautology, meaning exists because people mean things.
Art is about the expression of memes within a medium; it is cultural propagation. Memes are not thoughts, though; the fact that some consciousness experienced and communicated memes is not a product of thought but a product of memetic evolution. The only other thing that art can carry is what carries it: the patterns which emerge from the encoding of the memes upon the medium.
corbin@awful.systemsto
SneerClub@awful.systemsā¢Yudkowsky denies the accusations! several thousand words in, and ten years after they were madeEnglish
13Ā·1 month agoHe very much wants you to know that he knows that the Zizians are trans-coded and that heās okay with that, heās cool, he welcomes trans folks into Rationalism, heās totally an ally, etc. How does he phrase that, exactly?
That cult began among, and recruited from, a vulnerable subclass of a class of people who had earlier found tolerance and shelter in what calls itself the ārationalistā community. I am not explicitly naming that class of people because the vast supermajority of them have not joined murder cults, and what other people do should not be their problem.
I mean, yes in the abstract, but would it really be so hard to say that MIRI supports trans rights? What other people do, when those other people form a majority of a hateful society, is very much a problem for the trans community! So much for status signaling.
corbin@awful.systemsto
SneerClub@awful.systemsā¢Habryka posts a NEW OFFICIAL LESSWRONG ENEMIES LIST. Guess who's #1, go on, guessEnglish
16Ā·1 month agoThis is a list of apostates. The idea is not to actually detail the folks who do the most damage to the cultās reputation, but to attack the few folks who were once members and left because they were no longer interested in being part of a cult. These attacks are usually motivated by emotions as much as a desire to maintain control over the rest of the cult; in all cases, the sentiment is that the apostate dared to defy leadership. Usually, attacks on apostates are backed up by some sort of enforcement mechanism, from calls for stochastic terrorism to accusations of criminality; here, thereās not actually a call to do anything external, possibly because Habryka realizes that the optics are bad but more likely because Habryka doesnāt really have much power beyond those places where heās already an administrator. (That said, I would encourage everybody to become aware of, say, CoSās Fair Game policy or Noisy Investigation policy to get an idea of what kinds of attacks could occur.)
There are several prominent names that arenāt here. Iād guess that Habryka hasnāt been meditating over this list for a long time; itās just the first few people that came to mind when he wrote this note. This is somewhat reassuring, as it suggests that he doesnāt fully understand how cultural critiques of LW affect the perception of LW more broadly; he doesnāt realize how many people e.g. Breadtube reaches. Also, he doesnāt understand that folks like SBF and Yarvin do immense reputational damage to rationalist-adjacent projects, although he seems to understand that the main issue with Zizians is not that they are Cringe but that they have been accused of multiple violent felonies.
Not many sneers to choose from, but I think one commenter gets it right:
In other groups with Iām familiar, you would kick out people you think are actually a danger or you think they might do something that brings your group into disrepute. But otherwise, I think itās a sign of being a cult If you kick people for not going along with the group dogma.








Itās a power play. Engineers know that theyāre valuable enough that they can organize openly; also, as in the case of Alphabet Workers Union, engineers can act in solidarity with contractors, temps, and interns. Iāve personally done things like directly emailing CEOs with reply-all, interrupting all-hands to correct upper management on the law, and other fun stuff. One does have to be sufficiently skilled and competent to invoke the Steve Martin principle: ābe so good that they canāt ignore you.ā