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AI's 'Fog of War'

The Atlantic - Technology

This is Atlantic Intelligence, an eight-week series in which The Atlantic's leading thinkers on AI will help you understand the complexity and opportunities of this groundbreaking technology. Earlier this year, The Atlantic published a story by Gary Marcus, a well-known AI expert who has agitated for the technology to be regulated, both in his Substack newsletter and before the Senate. Marcus argued that "this is a moment of immense peril," and that we are teetering toward an "information-sphere disaster, in which bad actors weaponize large language models, distributing their ill-gotten gains through armies of ever more sophisticated bots." I was interested in following up with Marcus given recent events. In the past six weeks, we've seen an executive order from the Biden administration focused on AI oversight; chaos at the influential company OpenAI; and this Wednesday, the release of Gemini, a GPT competitor from Google.


Will Anyone Ever Make Sense of Elon Musk?

The Atlantic - Technology

Elon Musk is "wired for war." At least, that's what Musk has told Walter Isaacson, whose thick biography of the mercurial mega-billionaire, Elon Musk, is out this week. When Musk says this, he's not talking about Ukraine, where his Starlink internet service has played a central role. Civilization, Warcraft: Orcs & Humans, The Battle of Polytopia, Elden Ring--Musk has spent much of his life in fantasy worlds. Isaacson's biography includes many astonishing details and relatively few pages focused on Musk's gaming obsession. But the video-game detail is telling. Musk doesn't seem to inhabit our reality, exactly, even as he profoundly shapes it.