Couldnt help making this after seeing the late cartoonist Dudley D Watkins words to a song about Desperate Dan...Who was a popular cartoon character when growing up - there was no music to the words so being curious was able to create with AI, https://lnkd.in/eSbDFBf3
Desperate Dan Cartoon Character Tribute with AI Music
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"I find texts written by AI difficult to understand. The words are all there and it should make sense but for some reason I have to reread those texts multiple times to understand what the person behind it was trying to say." -- a friend
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I want to point out you can never truly trust any form of AI. Every time I go to swipe in on my keyboard, while on my phone, “sincerely,” it tries to put in soberly.💀 To be clear, I am always sober and it is not my goal to come across in a somber manner!🤣
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I think my mistrust of AI comes from the fact that asking it anything feels like asking a pyschic who's giving you a cold read...just picking up on subtle hints to tell you what they think you want to hear.
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Let's make a TV show opening with AI. As a concept, to demonstrate the kind of stuff we can do at Dreadful Freaks The pipeline is repeatable. Genre-agnostic. We've already adapted it for fantasy, drama, and literary fiction. Made on OpenArt AI
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Following on from the cartoon I posted earlier this week, I was talking to a friend who had just been interviewed by an AI. She thought she was going to hate the experience, but actually loved it. She described the AI as straight to the point, no inbuilt prejudices and the questions were very perceptive about her experience. Considering this was for a role to train the AI, the irony of who was holding the power in this human-machine interaction was not lost! As I always like to give both sides of any argument, I will rely on another cartoon from Ian Foley. https://lnkd.in/eYCcd3xS
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Calling routine maintenance "dreaming" or "sleep" blurs how AI systems work and why they fail. This article examines Claude Code’s auto dream and shows why precise, mechanism‑oriented language matters for trust and safety. One practical takeaway: avoid anthropomorphic feature names and use mechanism-focused terms so teams and users have clearer expectations. Read the full article for the close look and implications. https://lnkd.in/eDHPjdPd #AItools #TrustAndSafety #AIforBusiness
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First they pronounced it nuc-u-lar, but I did not speak out because I was not a physicist. Then they called all ML "ai," and I did not speak out, because ... well because I didn't really know the difference. And now they call anything with a chatbox agentic ai, and there is no one left who could protest.
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I wrote this post without AI. No prompt. No draft. No polish. Just me, a blinking cursor, and the reminder that the blank text box still fights back. How’s everyone else holding up?
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Judging today's AI through the lens of the Turing Test is wild to me. ELIZA passed the Turing Test in 1966. By the early 1980s, chatbots were routinely posting on Usenet forums with other humans. I'm seeing headlines now about Mythos that say Claude 'passed the Turing Test in 2025'. Sure, and our legal system was based on the Code of Hammurabi until 2025 too. #ai #claude #mythos
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I hate that in my AI image generation prompts I still have to drop-in the line "don't only show white people"
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how lovely to see your still so active - bless you my brother.