惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
T
Threatpost
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Y
Y Combinator Blog
雷峰网
雷峰网
爱范儿
爱范儿
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
T
Tor Project blog
S
Securelist
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
L
LangChain Blog
O
OpenAI News
AI
AI
P
Privacy International News Feed
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
D
DataBreaches.Net
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
罗磊的独立博客
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
月光博客
月光博客
博客园 - 【当耐特】
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
H
Help Net Security
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
博客园_首页
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
腾讯CDC
Jina AI
Jina AI
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
K
Kaspersky official blog
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
The Cloudflare Blog

CNET

Valve's Steam Machine: Summer Release Planned, Still No Price Apple TV: 28 of the Best Shows You're Probably Not Watching YouTube TV vs. DirecTV vs. Hulu Live and More: Which Has the Most Must-Have Channels Out of 100? If You Want to Be a Better Pet Parent, AI Can Help I Was Shocked by How Good These Budget TVs Were Trump Phone Looks Different, Has No Launch Date, Isn't Made in America The Apple Watch Series 12 Is Rumored to Revive a Retired iPhone Feature Best Projector of 2026: Tested by Experts Best Home Theater Systems of 2026 How to Use Apple's Clean Up Tool to Remove Unwanted People and Things From Your Photos Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 12 #770 Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 12, #1036 Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 12, #1758 Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Sunday, April 12 Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 12, #566 Watch a Robot Stuff Cash Into a Wallet Just Like You Do This Animation Startup Wants to Make It Easier to Tell Open-Ended Stories The 23 Best Graduation Gifts for 2026 Grand National 2026 Livestream: How to Watch Aintree Horse Racing From Anywhere Amazon Luna to Drop Support for Third-Party Games and Subscriptions in June YouTube Premium Is the Latest Streaming Service to Hike Prices Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Saturday, April 11 Elden Ring: Tarnished Edition for Switch 2 Reignites Controversy Over Game-Key Cards Comcast Adds New StreamSaver Bundles: HBO Max, Disney Plus, Hulu Now Part of the Lineup Samsung's Galaxy Z Fold 7 Just Got a Price Hike, 9 Months After Its Release Microsoft Is Scrubbing the Copilot Name From Some Windows 11 Apps These $299 Glasses Are Like an HDR TV on Your Face Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for April 11, #565 How to Make Sure Your Private Signal Messages Aren't Still Lurking on Your Phone Apple AirPods Max 2 Review: Seemingly Small Changes Make a Substantial Difference Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for April 11, #1035 Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for April 11 #769 Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for April 11, #1757 Encrypted Emails Are Now Available for Some Gmail Phone App Enterprise Customers Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov Fight: When to Watch the Action on Netflix Encyclopedia Britannica and Merriam-Webster Sue OpenAI OpenAI to Launch ChatGPT 'Adult Mode' Despite Warnings From Its Own Advisers Google Rolls Out Latest AI Model, Gemini 3.1 Pro FA Cup Soccer 2026: Watch Aston Villa vs. Newcastle Live From Anywhere The Google Pixel 10 Pro Might Have the Best Phone Display for Gaming We Tested 35 Phones and Found the Surprising Winner of Best Battery Life Best Smart Soundbar of 2026 Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Feb. 13, #1700 Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 13 #712 Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 13, #978 Hackers Are Trying to Copy Gemini via Thousands of AI Prompts, Google Reports YouTube Is Finally on the Apple Vision Pro. Can We Expect More Google Apps to Come? Premier League Soccer: Stream Brentford vs. Arsenal Live From Anywhere Sony's New WF-1000XM6 Earbuds Just Jumped to the Top of My Best Earbuds List How to Connect Bluetooth Headphones to Your Smart TV Fitbit's Gemini-Powered Coach Comes to the iPhone and Rolls Out to More Countries Today's Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Feb. 12, #1699 Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 12, #977 Lenovo IdeaPad 5i 16 2-in-1 Gen 10 Review: Budget Convertible With Good Performance but a Clunky Design Today's NYT Strands Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 12 #711 Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Feb. 12, #507 Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Thursday, Feb. 12 Remember James Van Der Beek by Streaming Dawson's Creek and His Other Roles Stay Patient, Apple Fans: Siri AI Delayed Again to Late 2026 at the Earliest Anthropic Expands Claude's Free Tier With More Features Diablo Celebrates 30th Anniversary With New Warlock Class, Coming to 3 Games This Year Amazon Pharmacy to Offer Same-Day Delivery to 2,000 More Communities in 2026 Dell XPS 14 Hands-On: The Long-Running Laptop Brand Goes Back to What Works Aloha, AI Moana: Google's AI Will No Longer Accept Disney Character Prompts Darren Aronofsky, Your AI Slop Is Ruining American History in 'On This Day…1776' Best PlayStation 5 Controllers in 2026: The Top PS5 Controllers From Sony, Razer, Nacon and More Best Streaming Services for Kids in 2026 Using AI at Work May Actually Make Your Days Longer and More Unpleasant, Study Finds Best Sonos Speakers for 2026 Premier League Soccer: Stream West Ham vs. Man United, Live From Anywhere Framework Desktop Review: Small and Mighty, but Shy of Upgrade Greatness Overwatch's New Season 1 Launches Today, Delivering on Decade-Long Potential The Best Way to Prevent Fraud: A Guide to Freezing Your Social Security Number Today's NYT Connections: Sports Edition Hints and Answers for Feb. 10, #505 Today's NYT Connections Hints, Answers and Help for Feb. 10, #975 TikTok Ordered to Change Algorithm Over 'Addictive Design,' or Face a Hefty Fine Super Bowl LX: Watch the AI-Related Ads Coming to the Big Game My Wife and I Play the Best Two-Player Games Every Week. Here Are Our Favorites 'Wicked: For Good' Is Coming to Streaming. Here's When You Can Watch Here's Why Taylor Swift's Opalite Music Video Isn't on YouTube Yet Testing the Best Laser Cutters and Engravers Is One of the Best Parts of My Job My iPhone 17 Pro Went Head-to-Head Against a Pro Cinema Camera Valve Delays Steam Frame and Steam Machine Pricing as Memory Costs Rise 'Predator: Badlands': Here's When You Can Stream It on Hulu Americans Plan to Spend $1,177 on a New TV. Here's How to Do It for Less in Time for the Big Game ExpressVPN’s New Privacy-Focused AI and Email Protection Features Could Be Game Changers From Data Entry to Strategy, AI Is Reshaping How We Do Taxes The Motorola Signature Is the Moto Phone I've Wanted for Years Spotify's Page Match Lets You Swap Between a Book and the Audiobook I Played the 5 New Overwatch Heroes Dropping Next Week. Check Out the Gameplay These New AI Transcription Models Are Built for Speed and Privacy Best Budget Earbuds for 2026: Cheap Wireless Picks Maximize Your Refund with H&R Block's Smart Tax Tools How H&R Block's Experts Can Help You Avoid Common Filing Mistakes Anthropic Pinky-Promises It Won't Add Ads to Claude This Phone Stays Charged for Almost a Week by Keeping Your Data Secure Winter Olympics 2026: How to Watch Ice Hockey Events 8 Essential Security Tips for Using AI Chatbots Safely Here's How to Use Apple's Invites App to Plan Your Super Bowl Party Google Brings Genie 3's Interactive World-Building Prototype to AI Ultra Subscribers
From Tea Leaves to AI: Why Today's High-Tech Predictions Are So Dangerous
Carissa Véliz · 2026-04-24 · via CNET

Editors' note: Welcome to CNET's new series of guest columns called Alt View, a forum for a diverse array of experts and luminaries to share their insights into the rapidly evolving field of artificial intelligence. For more AI coverage, check out CNET's AI Atlas.


"How are you using AI?" I asked a class full of executives. Some of the answers I have heard before: health professionals using it to read medical images; managers using it to draft emails; a retail company using it to take notes in meetings before giving up on it when they realized that the AI confabulated and had no understanding of context. And then, a gem. There's almost always a gem. 

"I use chatbots as fortune tellers," said a middle-aged Asian woman with a beige cardigan and white sneakers. I would later learn that she has built a billion-dollar empire. A nervous rustle spreads throughout the room as people shift uncomfortably in their seats. "Just like we used to read tea leaves, you can ask AI about the future, and it can be surprisingly accurate. For example, it recently correctly predicted a 2% rise in the stock market," the student said, nodding and looking around the room while her classmates avoid eye contact.

A glowing translucent lightbulb, held by a hand, in front of lighted lines suggesting a circuit board

Today's ruling soothsayers are no longer astrologers, astronomers, sociologists or even economists; they are computer scientists, data analysts and engineers. Algorithms are the new tea leaves, animal entrails and stars through which we hope to catch a glimpse of the future. 

We tend to associate predictions with knowledge, but all too often, they are closer to the realm of power. Prophecies are the boxing ring in which fights over the future take place. Our expectations bend the social world toward our predictions. When someone forecasts that the world will be a certain way, they are commanding that others obey their wishes and bring that world about. Even though we have been using predictions for thousands of years to make some of the most important decisions of our lives, we have dedicated remarkably little thought to the deeper questions about prophecy. Thousands of books have been written about how to predict, but none about the ethics of prediction.

Prediction has become a major industry. Take, for instance, platforms like Polymarket, which aggregate public expectations about future events, collecting massive amounts of data and creating influence. If 58% of users believe that the Oklahoma City Thunder are going to win the NBA Championship title, why would you bet against the majority? But the betting on these platforms extends far beyond sports or even reality TV. It has turned political instability, natural disasters and human suffering into a spectacle, dehumanizing the real-life victims, gamifying life.

Today, predictions have evolved into weapons of power that justify value-laden decisions under the pretense of facts, but predictions are never facts. Facts belong to the present and the past. An assertion about the future can be many things -- an estimate, a desire, a warning -- but never a fact.

What makes the future the future is that it hasn't yet happened. What hasn't come to pass doesn't exist, and there are no facts about what doesn't exist. Yet we're using prediction more than ever with AI, prediction markets and experts talking about the future. 

The fantasy of defeating uncertainty

Pierre-Simon Laplace had a dream, often referred to as Laplace's demon. It occurred to him that, with enough data and compute, it would be possible to achieve complete knowledge. If you knew the exact location and momentum of every particle in the universe, as well as all the laws of nature, then you would be able to predict the future with perfect accuracy. Uncertainty would be defeated at last. As Laplace put it:

Given for one instant an intelligence which could comprehend all the forces by which nature is animated and the respective situation of the beings who compose it -- an intelligence sufficiently vast to submit these data to analysis -- it would embrace in the same formula the movements of the greatest bodies of the universe and those of the lightest atom; for it, nothing would be uncertain and the future, as the past, would be present to its eyes.

Supporters of AI may not put it in these words, but what they seem to suggest when they enthuse about the power of machine learning plus vast amounts of data is that these technologies are bringing us tantalizingly close to realizing Laplace's demon. If we can collect every single data point, the thought goes, and we can build enough compute to analyze that data, we can forecast what was previously unforeseeable. Such predictive power promises to revolutionize all fields of knowledge, from medicine to climate change and politics. 

AI Atlas

Driven by this fantasy, the quantifiers are tracking your every move; recording, tabulating and exhaustively analyzing your pleasures and vices; torturing your data until it screams out in confession. You are being tracked while you drive, search online, do sports, have sex, drink alcohol, do drugs, travel, sleep, talk with your friends and family, spend time on social media, go to the doctor's office, play online games, read, watch television and breathe.

We manage and discuss our fears in quantified terms: the probability of getting cancer, or getting robbed, of earthquakes happening, or another pandemic, of climate change making our world unlivable, of another world war.

The unbridled optimism to defeat uncertainty through AI is understandable. Computers, data and statistics have brought incredible breakthroughs. The computer Bombe broke the Nazi's Enigma cipher. In medicine, regression analysis was instrumental in identifying risk factors for diseases. Mainframe computers delivered new insights about business; centralized data processing brought real-time transaction processing and scalability. Manufacturing firms gained the ability to monitor production efficiency across entire supply chains, identifying bottlenecks and improving resource allocation. 

Personal computers emerged in the 1980s. The 1990s and 2000s saw the rise of the internet and cloud computing, further increasing data availability and processing power. The 2010s marked a turning point with the practical application of deep learning, fueled by big data and improved hardware like GPUs. Advances in algorithms paved the way for machine learning -- prediction machines. 

AI and prediction: a power play

With prediction come all the patterns of prophecy and power that paper our history books. The difference is that AI is prediction on steroids, and we are using it not only on the battlefield and in the doctor's office but everywhere, from the office to the classroom, the courtroom, our roads, our love lives and beyond. 

Machine learning algorithms are predictive machines. That is all they do, whether they are engaging in regression, classification or language. When a machine learning system translates text, it is predicting the most likely translation based on millions of examples of previous translations. When it recognizes wolves in photos, it does so by predicting the probability that a given image contains a wolf, based on patterns it learned from thousands of images labeled wolf and not-wolf. When a large language model answers a question, it is predicting what a human being would say in its place, based on the statistical analysis of books, online forums, social media and so forth.

It's no wonder that an "oracle" is a technical term in the context of machine learning. An oracle represents the best possible performance that could be achieved; it's an idealized function that always provides perfect predictions.

The triumph of machine learning is a corporate victory much more than a scientific one. Idealists might find it anticlimactic, even depressing. Someone wanting to put it crassly might say that we simply threw money at the problem. 

What is most remarkable about the success of machine learning is how unremarkably it came about. "What's disappointing," said Michael Wooldridge, professor of AI at Oxford, to a group of my MBA students, "is that it didn't happen as a result of a scientific breakthrough." He looked around the room to make sure the weight of his words has landed. 

From the 1960s to the early 2000s, the results from neural networks were not very impressive. The symbolic AI gang was winning the race and the grants -- until it wasn't. Something changed: We got more data and more compute, and machine learning took off. In the span of a few years, automatic translation, for instance, went from being unusable to being comprehensible, then good enough to help clueless tourists find their way with no knowledge of the local language. It's now good enough that I admit I have sometimes preferred an automatic translation to the suggestions of a professional translator who had a weakness for verbosity. 

The amazing things that machine learning can do didn't happen because of greater understanding. It didn't need any genius. The picture is bleaker than an uninspiring lack of creativity. The means through which such brute force in data and compute was acquired involved theft, the exploitation of vulnerable people, a ferocious use of natural resources and building an architecture of mass surveillance, to name but a few sins.

We might be centuries away from the oracles and astrologers who predated algorithms, but prediction is still mostly about power. Power is how you get predictive algorithms, and more power is what they grant you in return.

From Prophecy: Prediction, Power, and the Fight for the Future, from Ancient Oracles to AI by Carissa Véliz. Reprinted by permission of Doubleday, an imprint of the Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright © 2026 by Carissa Véliz.