Christopher Nolan, he’s just like us: “I have a lot of bad Sunday nights — it’s because I haven’t worked out the week’s work properly. You stay awake all night processing things that maybe you didn’t have time to process the week before.” https://t.co/2TD2SCdjnV
This is not AI. Every drone you see in this video is being controlled by a single Ukrainian operator. There is currently no technology capable of countering this, and I don’t think one will exist anytime soon.
The low-budget hit ‘Obsession’ is leaving boyfriends rattled as girlfriends bond over their similarities to the terrifying villain. https://t.co/xLJv2ZXCHW
Durante años nos repitieron que el futuro era aprender a programar. Que las humanidades eran adorno. Que filosofía, ética y derecho eran cosas lentas para un mundo que iba a vivir de datos, código y velocidad. Pero ahora ocurre algo revelador: los grandes laboratorios de inteligencia artificial están contratando filósofos. No porque se hayan vuelto románticos, sino porque descubrieron que la pregunta más difícil ya no es técnica.
El problema ya no es si una máquina puede escribir, diagnosticar, conducir, resolver, vigilar o decidir. El problema es desde qué idea de verdad, daño, libertad, dignidad y responsabilidad lo va a hacer. Una IA no contesta desde el vacío: trae una arquitectura moral escondida. Puede privilegiar eficiencia sobre derechos, seguridad sobre privacidad, obediencia sobre criterio, propiedad sobre igualdad. Y cuando esa lógica entra a tribunales, hospitales, escuelas, bancos o gobiernos, deja de ser software: se vuelve poder.
Por eso este debate es gigantesco. La pregunta brutal no es si la IA va a pensar por nosotros. La pregunta es quién va a decidir cómo debe pensar. Porque si empresas y gobiernos empiezan a diseñar “constituciones invisibles” para máquinas que ordenan nuestra vida, sin transparencia, sin control democrático y sin responsabilidad jurídica, no estaremos frente al futuro: estaremos frente a una nueva forma de autoridad, más rápida, más elegante, más opaca y mucho más difícil de combatir.
https://t.co/YgYG0iUZrw
Blackwater founder and mercenary-in-chief Erik Prince talks about Iran, facing public anger and the role that private contractors will play in the future of war – over Lunch with the FT https://t.co/UUPJ1y41Il
Starchy foods like rice and pasta can spike your blood sugar because they break down so easily in the gut. But there is an easy way to fix this problem, our Ask a Doctor columnist says. https://t.co/DqHDba5n5f
Dave Chappelle says no one needs to think anymore because of AI: “Thinking is for poor people”
“I was talking to a friend of mine and we were laughing about how no one really would know what to teach a kid now. What skill sets are going to matter 10 or 20 years from now as the world becomes automated”
“We decided your character is your destiny. If you’re a good person that’s all you can ask from anybody and hope for the best”
“I don’t know if anyone needs to think anymore. It’s AI, quantum computing, it seems like thinking is for poor people”
If critical thinking skills are so fragile that they can erode when people use AI, those skills could not have been robustly taught in the first place.
https://t.co/FcaRlcesOS
Ask a doctor about vitamin supplements and they will probably tell you that all they do is help you produce “expensive urine”. But the evidence is more positive than that advice might suggest https://t.co/igWeexT3O0
From adult series like The Simpsons and South Park, to kid's cartoons like Adventure Time and Pokémon, these animated shows weren't afraid to make fans cry. https://t.co/7oXp0Qheer
Today’s dads are spending more time with their children, leading to changes in their brains and hormones. Does this make them better fathers? https://t.co/SjyXYDSgFR
🚨 “WOW!” Joe Rogan Was Absolutely Mind-Blown By This iPhone/iPad Addiction Hack 🔥
His guest, Chase Hughes, dropped the ultimate parental (and personal) life hack:
“I did it on my 2-year-old’s iPad… and nothing is addictive anymore. She won’t sit there and stare at it for more than 3 or 4 minutes anymore.”
Joe’s reaction? A shocked “Whoaa!”
The trick? A simple red color tint filter in your device’s Accessibility settings. It strips away the bright, colorful, dopamine-spiking visuals that keep us (and kids) glued to screens, while also cutting blue light for better sleep.
One quick change. Massive difference in screen time and focus.
Try it yourself:
1Settings → Accessibility → Display & Text Size → Color Filters
2Turn on Color Filters → Color Tint
3Slide Hue all the way to red + max Intensity
Works on iPhone and iPad. You can even set a triple-click shortcut to toggle it instantly.