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Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU

Evan Selinger and Albert Fox Cahn, authors, "Move Slow and Upgrade" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Dystopia update: good news edition | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Janet Vertesi, founder of the Opt Out Project | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU A visit to Repair Café El Barrio | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Marathon week 2 w/cohost Jesse Jarnow | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Celebrating 400 episodes of Techtonic | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Chris Gilliard on Amazon’s admission that Ring spies on us | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Peter Dear ("The World As We Know It") and how we interpret AI | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU AI is spreading where it doesn't belong | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Peter Schmidt on the book "Attensity" by the Friends of Attention | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Paul Bradley Carr, author, "The Confessions" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Lora Kolodny from CNBC on Grok's sexualized images | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Ken Freedman and Mark discuss the year ahead | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Tim Wu, author, "The Age of Extraction" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU The Ghost of Christmas Tech Anxieties - Sara Clemens and Stu Horvath fill in, with guest Adam Allsuch Boardman | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU The first annual Creepy Award | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Noah McCormack from The Baffler: "We used to read things in this country" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Amateur radio is a superpower: Thomas Witherspoon | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Citizens are being forced to pay for Big Tech data centers, feat. Pat Garofalo | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU How low can the tech oligarchs go? | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Paul Mozur on the spread of data centers | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Aram Sinnreich, co-author, "The Secret Life of Data" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Widening inequality and Big Tech surveillance, feat. Dan Currell | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Filmmaker Amanda Hanna-McLeer on the techno-Luddites | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU The protest against smartphones, with Logan Lane | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU AI and surveillance keep spreading | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Megan Greenwell, author, "Bad Company: Private Equity and the Death of the American Dream" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Glenn Adamson, author, "A Century of Tomorrows" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Joseph Weizenbaum warned us about AI 50 years ago (feat. Faine Greenwood) | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Milestones for Big Tech... and Techtonic | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Cory Doctorow, author and journalist | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Webb Keane, author, "Animals, Robots, Gods" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU If/Then/Else - Sara Clemens and Stu Horvath fill in, with guest Brendan Keogh | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Adam Becker, author, "More Everything Forever" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Ed Park, author, "An Oral History of Atlantis" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Three emerging dystopias: money, water, and truth | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Daniel Solove, author, "On Privacy and Technology" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Duncan Moench on "soylent screens" and producerism | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Compulsory surveillance and other threats | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Lori Emerson, author, "Other Networks" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Unveiling our new theme song by Kirk Pearson, and Big Tech alternatives | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Matt Warwick fills in for Techtonic with Co-Host HurstBot | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Emily M. Bender and Alex Hanna, authors, "The AI Con" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU David Greenwood, author, "The Cloud Intern" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Surveillance scholar Chris Gilliard on Facebook's spy glasses | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Discussing "Careless People" by Facebook whistleblower Sarah Wynn-Williams | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Sybil Derrible, author, "The Infrastructure Book" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Dan Morfitt and Mark Hurst discuss dystopian movies | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU The Defunding of Public Radio with Jesse Walker, Uri Berliner and Sue Matters | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU John Warner, author, "More Than Words" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Sue-Lin Wong and online scams | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Emergency surveillance update | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Liz Pelly, author, "Mood Machine" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Ben Snyder, author, "Spy Plane" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Marathon week 2 w/cohost Matt Warwick | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Marathon week 1 w/cohost station manager Ken Freedman | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU AI and the future of war – with "Flash Wars" director Daniel Wunderer | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Nick Couldry, author, "The Space of the World" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU August Lamm: you don't need a smartphone | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Supervillains in tech – with Greg Epstein, Chris Gilliard, and Jim Starlin | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Welcome to the oligarchy: on Big Tech's government takeover | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Kirk Pearson, author, "Electronic Music From Scratch" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Stone carvers Chris Pellettieri and Arissa Ramoutar | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Ken Freedman and Mark Hurst listen to AI | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Andrew Smith, author, "Devil in the Stack" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Guest host Don Fleming: Musical Tech: Naughty or Nice? | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Our year of surveillance | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Arvind Narayanan, author, "AI Snake Oil" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Nicole Kobie, author, "The Long History of the Future" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Technology we're thankful for, from listeners | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Astronomer Samantha Lawler on Musk's space junk | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Guest host Station Mgr Ken interviews David Suisman on music and the military | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Dystopia update | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Members of the Luddite Club | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Christopher Brown, author, "A Natural History of Empty Lots" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Yaroslav Trofimov, author, "Our Enemies Will Vanish" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Silkie Carlo, director, Big Brother Watch | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Tim Schwab, author, "The Bill Gates Problem" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU What if no one wants AI? | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Helen Phillips, author, "HUM" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Even more devices are spying on you | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Carl Öhman, author, "The Afterlife of Data" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Guest host Alan on Rancho Mastatal | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Paula Bialski, author, "Middle Tech" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Google antitrust decision party | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Jon Leidecker, aka Wobbly, on Negativland and fair use | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Tech and the sandwich generation | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Guest host Brian D. on disinformation with Kirsten Eddy and Alex Mahadevan | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Generative AI and the "cesspool internet" – with Jason Koebler | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU How it started, how it's going: revisiting the warnings of the past | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Carissa Véliz on digital ethics | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Byron Tau, author, "Means of Control" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Listener questions | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Mark Schatzker and "Food, Inc. 2" | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Matt Warwick guest hosts Techtonic: What's the best robot? | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU We should all switch to Linux | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU What's eating Google? | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Chris Gilliard on what AI is really for | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU "Data Grab" by Ulises Mejias and Nick Couldry | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU Michael Shelley on AI-generated music | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU
What tech is hiding | Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU
2023-12-04 · via Techtonic with Mark Hurst on WFMU

AI deceiving you and exploiting workers

Sports Illustrated Published Articles by Fake, AI-Generated Writers (Nov 27, 2023): “There was nothing in Drew Ortiz’s author biography at Sports Illustrated to suggest that he was anything other than human. . . . The only problem? Outside of Sports Illustrated, Drew Ortiz doesn’t seem to exist. He has no social media presence and no publishing history. And even more strangely, his profile photo on Sports Illustrated is for sale on a website that sells AI-generated headshots, where he’s described as ‘neutral white young-adult male with short brown hair and blue eyes.’”

Scorn Illustrated (by David Roth in Defector, Nov 28, 2023): “Someone looking for information on volleyball, say, might naturally turn to Sports Illustrated when their query turns up a link to that site. They would be rewarded by a story bylined by “Drew Ortiz,” who is not a real person. . . . the publisher would get some money from clicked affiliate links and fractions of a cent from subjecting visitors to the ads they saw on that page before they closed the tab. A publisher that cared about a publication even a little bit would not put something like this up on their site. A publisher that didn’t would care more about the second part, the part about the money, and do it anyway.”

    (Continuing, Roth writes about the tech billionaires and the true believers of AI: “their AI spins stupid new lies to life by haplessly plagiarizing and re-plagiarizing itself, eating its own excretions until it is as cocksure, incoherent, and wrong as its apostles themselves.”)

    (And recent Techtonic guest Brian Merchant writes in The depressing fall of Sports Illustrated reveals the real tragedy of AI (LA Times, Dec 1, 2023): “The tragedy of AI is not that it stands to replace good journalists but that it takes every gross, callous move made by management to degrade the production of content — and promises to accelerate it. If journalists are outraged at the rise of AI and its use in editorial operations and newsrooms, they should be outraged not because it’s a sign that they’re about to be replaced but because management has such little regard for the work being done by journalists that it’s willing to prioritize the automatic production of slop.”

Tech Conference Canceled After Using AI to Generate Fake Women Speakers (Futurism, Nov 28, 2023): “An organizer of an upcoming software and developer conference called DevTernity has been accused of cooking up fake women speakers featured on the event’s website — AI-generated headshots and all. . . . Despite being caught inventing fake speakers over several years, [conference organizer Eduards] Sizovs has no regrets and is blaming ‘cancel culture’ for the blowback. In a rambling statement on X, he admitted to having “auto-generated” a woman’s profile after a different speaker had dropped out.”

Google Researchers’ Attack Prompts ChatGPT to Reveal Its Training Data (404 Media, Nov 29, 2023): Asking the chat bot to repeat the word “poem” forever got it to reveal hidden data meant to be kept secret:

Now Amazon has a new chatbot, called Q, that is designed to keep company secrets: from the NYT (Nov 28, 2023), Amazon Introduces Q, an A.I. Chatbot for Companies: “Amazon built Q to be more secure and private than a consumer chatbot, Mr. Selipsky said. Amazon Q, for example, can have the same security permissions that business customers have already set up for their users. At a company where an employee in marketing may not have access to sensitive financial forecasts, Q can emulate that by not providing that employee with such financial data when asked.

Secret surveillance: Your devices are listening to you

• Images below from a page that has since been taken down:


Internet Archive snapshot of the CMG Local page is here (snapshot from Nov 16, 2023).

Judge rules it’s fine for car makers to intercept your text messages (Malware Bytes, Nov 9, 2023): “A federal judge has refused to bring back a class action lawsuit that alleged four car manufacturers had violated Washington state’s privacy laws by using vehicles’ on-board infotainment systems to record customers’ text messages and mobile phone call logs.”

Facebook exploiting kids

At Meta, Millions of Underage Users Were an ‘Open Secret,’ States Say (Natasha Singer in NYT, Nov 25, 2023):

Meta has received more than 1.1 million reports of users under the age of 13 on its Instagram platform since early 2019 yet it “disabled only a fraction” of those accounts, according to a newly unsealed legal complaint against the company brought by the attorneys general of 33 states.

Instead, the social media giant “routinely continued to collect” children’s personal information, like their locations and email addresses, without parental permission, in violation of a federal children’s privacy law, according to the court filing. Meta could face hundreds of millions of dollars, or more, in civil penalties should the states prove the allegations.

“Within the company, Meta’s actual knowledge that millions of Instagram users are under the age of 13 is an open secret that is routinely documented, rigorously analyzed and confirmed,” the complaint said, “and zealously protected from disclosure to the public.”

Later in the NYT article comes this: “the complaint contends that Instagram for years ‘coveted and pursued’ underage users even as the company ‘failed’ to comply with the children’s privacy law.” Facebook/Instagram “pursuing” underage users is even more creepy when you consider the next story . . .

Meta Is Struggling to Boot Pedophiles Off Facebook and Instagram (by Jeff Horwitz and Katherine Blunt in the WSJ, Dec 1, 2023):

When a Journal research account flagged many such groups via user reports, the company often declared them to be acceptable. “We’ve taken a look and found that the group doesn’t go against our Community Standards,” Facebook replied to a report about a large Facebook group named “Incest.”

Only after the Journal brought specific groups to the attention of Meta’s communications staff did the company remove them.