The Genie of Everything

When you ask “Chad” (as we refer to Chat GPT, or any LLM) to make an image, a video, or write you a story or something, this video is a great approximation of what’s happening behind the curtain. Kutiman had LLMs figured out 16 years ago, although LLMs didn’t exist back then, and he had no inkling what was coming down the pike. Then again, it doesn’t matter why someone is right. There are no style points in right/wrong questions. Kutiman took bits and pieces of the internet, and made something transformational out of them.

There have been plenty of lawsuits filed against LLM outfits over copyright and trademark infringements. They’re all losers, at least to date. Don’t be misled by a ginormous settlement by Facebook for $1.5 billion or so, paid to a gaggle of authors.  That really wasn’t a lawsuit based on LLMs scraping the internet and re-using what they found in amalgamated forms. Facebook got caught using libraries of pirated books to train their bots, so they lost the case. Legally accessible stuff has never gotten a plaintiff a copyright win against any Chad that I know of, probably won’t ever, and shouldn’t, at least in today’s legal landscape.

The Fair Use Doctrine comes into play here.  Fair Use is a legal principle in U.S. copyright law. It allows people to use copyrighted material without permission in certain situations — typically for purposes like criticism, commentary, news reporting, scholarship, or research. It’s easier to skate on Fair Use if you’re futzing around with factual stuff, and/or the output is educational. Using only modest amounts of any particular pillaged work helps. If the final product isn’t likely to harm the value of the original work, you’re probably golden. But the key detail is that the output has to be transformative.

So what qualifies as transformative, you might ask? Well, I am not a law talking guy, so I’ll keep it as simple as I am. If you transmogrify the original work to say or do something new, add commentary, change its purpose, or make art out of the artless mess you found, you’ve transformed it. You’re probably in the clear, legally. Although if Disney sues you, being technically correct is no longer the best kind of correct. The kind of correct with 400 lawyers on speed dial is the best kind of correct these days. Remember, the courts can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent. Facebook found that billion-and-a-half in their couch cushions. I doubt you can pull off that trick.

Regular humans don’t produce anything artistic or intellectual in a vacuum. People are just like LLMs. Everyone is magpie for information their whole life long. You might get your information in the library, or by watching Two Broke Girls, but whatever you know, someone else has already known it, unless you’re John Von Neumann, and he’s dead. Or maybe Tarzan. But even he picked up stuff from the apes, including fleas. Everyone spends their whole life integrating disparate, already experienced things into their daily activities. Intellectual work is no different than shoveling the driveway. You don’t invent a shovel before putting on your mukluks and heading out. And all your curses have been uttered before, believe me. By me for certain, and probably by several other people who slipped on the ice.

So now LLMs can synthesize all sorts of inputs and produce all kinds of output much faster than homo sapiens, or whatever species they hire to write the New York Times. I really can’t keep up with the pace of it. Here’s a video produced with a suite of AI tools from about five months ago:

There’s a heaping helping of uncanny valley in there, but the days of putting 13 fingers on two left hands is pretty much over. Homages, riffs, and little bits of ephemera are giving way to full-blown productions. That was inevitable. It’s a cinematic Rubicon, the same sort of paradigm shift that self-publishing books produced. I never would have been able to publish a book unless I could pull the self-publishing end-around on nineteen women named Heather at Simon & Scribner Random Penguinstein and Co., all chanting Boxwine Über Alles while typing my rejection letters. And, no, “the end-around” is not a euphemism, although it has plenty of potential.

Just a month after that last one, someone else posted a short Sci-Fi film that looks miles more detailed:

LYRA is a haunting, beautiful glimpse into a future where humanity is gone, and a lone robot walks the Earth. Prompted and produced by Top Notch Cinema, this 3-minute cinematic short was created using a suite of cutting-edge AI tools including MidJourney, SeedDance, 11Labs, Adobe Firefly, and Kling. This film explores themes of identity, memory, and what remains when everything else is gone. As AI tools evolve, we’re just beginning to see how creators will harness this power to tell deeper, more meaningful stories. This is just one example of what’s possible.

If you’re one of the nice folks hoping that any obvious synthetic qualities of AI-generated video and audio will eventually turn people off, maybe you should review the way the music industry adopted pitch-correction software to make singers out of mumblers. Pitch correction was designed to be undetectable, a Lilliputian fraud on the audience, but it took about fifteen seconds for the talent-challenged to turn it up to eleven, where the effect became obvious.

That example was from 27 years ago, by the way. Everything on pop stations has that robotic twang now. People prefer it, I guess. I think it’s like eating Hamburger Helper without the hamburger, but facts is facts.

Back to the videos. Of course 99% of AI video things are bound to be science fiction, or sparkly vampire bodice rippers. The people who produce them are the biggest consumers of the genres. They are bound to get high on their own supply. But they’re going to have a hell of a time trying to “tell deeper, more meaningful stories,” when they’ve never read one, never mind told one.

It’s a Director’s Cut generation. They will watch endless hours of “cinematic universes” filled with creatures named Glorp or Flapdiddle wandering the actual universe in search of new galaxies and a plot. I have no idea how many version of Star Wars are out there, but at this point I imagine you’re watching droids doing their laundry and defrosting their refrigerators.  Hell, even the original Star Wars barely had a plot.

That what Kutiman brought to the table, and why his thang was different than most. He was the first true prompt engineer. Each of the videos in his concatenation was A Thing on its own. He gathered them up, painstakingly I’m sure, because finding particular stuff on the internet sixteen years ago was no picnic. Then he used his own artistic and comedic sense to make something more entertaining than the sum of its parts. His work was transformative. It was His Thing.

Where’s it all going? Probably nowhere very satisfying. The amalgamated output of pablum is more pablum. Good writing is not to be found very often on the internet, or even on the best seller list. You certainly won’t discover its secrets on things like the Hemingway app. And I hate to break it to you, if you need that thing, you’ll never be a good writer.

So Chad is getting really powerful. I know it reads some good writing, because its bots beat the hell out of this website, for instance. But it has no idea what to make of it, and neither do internauts using various Chads to make videos. I explained it to Chad a long time ago, but he didn’t listen. Neither did anyone else:

Granpa told me all about the genie in the lamp.

It’s the oldest story ever and came from the land of the sand and the women with only eyes. It’s in there, the genie of everything, but you have to find him and let him out. Then he’s out and you have to figure what to do with him. Granpa says he’s wonderful but as dumb as a stump, just like all of us. He can do anything but doesn’t know what to do. He needs guidin’.  — A Thousand and One

Take that, Kutiman. I wrote that one 18 years ago.

Incredible, Indeed

No, not the cabin. It’s fine, don’t get me wrong. I’m using the word “incredible” to refer to the builder, Bjorn Brenton, who was 21 when he produced this video. It’s hard to nail him down (sorry), but he’s apparently a Swede, although it appears he’s building stuff in the Ukraine. I’ll have to assume the western part.

I’ve seen lots of videos of people making stuff, including proto-semi-kinda houses like this one. They all use clickbait headlines that are attractive to the modern internaut. Young people don’t respond to anything but dream house baloney. They’re say they’re not only willing, but eager, to live in the forest in a log cabin with no electricity, or a tiny house, or a hobbit hole, or anything other than a regular single family home, because they’d have to mow the lawn and clean out the gutters in the fall. For most of these alternative housing people, it’s an offer to expend all sorts of effort in the quest for a free lunch. They’re willing to watch videos of people doing it, anyway, while eating microwaved hot pockets in their apartments.

At any rate, this video is well worth the two hours it takes to see it done. This fellow’s cabin project is borrowed or stolen or re-purposed on at least one other YouTube channel that I saw, titled: Man Builds Incredible DIY Wood Cabin in the Woods Start to Finish. “Incredible” is one of those words that’s been bowdlerized, if not outright bastardized, by misuse, and then plain overuse. Words like amazing, or at least unusual seem more to the point. Commendable comes to mind.

But I really can’t believe (the true meaning of incredible) what I’m looking at in the video. I don’t mean it’s a fraud. I have no doubt the kid built this by himself. The construction techniques are mundane to someone who’s built houses. Not incredible. I’m talking about the young man in the video. He’s incredible. He wasn’t old enough to buy beer when he built this. Here’s what I noticed about him:

He is dressed properly for construction. He is wearing long pants, a shirt with sleeves, and substantial boots. He is wearing a hat, and it’s not on backwards. He has no visible tattoos. He wears gloves to protect his hands when it’s appropriate. He has a proper toolbelt with small assortment of good hand tools, not loaded down with labor-saving gewgaws that are a drag to carry around all day. He knows better than to risk injury while lifting, and rigs a come-along for timbers that more foolhardy workers would try to muscle into place. He has a broom, and knows how to use it. He finishes off the exterior with a flourish (the antlers). He saves interior work for bad weather. He works carefully, but doesn’t waste his time with superfluous safety devices. He uses insulation, but he doesn’t worship it. He knows the value of wood preservative. He has a cute dog, instead of the usual vicious beast.

A cabin in the woods is nothing. That young man there, however, is a rare thing indeed. I used to know lots of guys like him. I was sorta one myself. And we’ve been hunted to extinction. Well, almost, apparently.

Whoah Nellie!

Let me get this straight. You’ve got Martha Reeves singing a Van Morrison song with James Jamerson playing bass? I’m in:

Man, Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert really used to get shit done back in the day.

Tuesday Bookmark Cleanout

Well, it’s Tuesday. Time for a long overdue link roundup. I don’t even know what happened to Monday. It’s probably around here somewhere. I found Sunday in the couch cushions. I mean that every which way. Like many Americans, I planted myself on the couch to watch football all day, except for the part where you watch football. It’s two days later, and I still have a few sleep creases on my face. Oh well. On to the bookmark cleanout!

The Power of Proximity to Coworkers: Training for Tomorrow or Productivity Today?

We find being near coworkers has tradeoffs: proximity increases long-run human capital development at the expense of short-term output. We study software engineers at a Fortune 500 firm, whose main campus has two buildings several blocks apart.

There’s a mark on the calendar where the perfectly cromulent term “office park” was replaced by “campus,” and not much good has happened since then. Or much work.

On 10 Years of Writing a Blog Nobody Reads

In November 2015, I started a blog on Blogger. My first post was a book review of The Martian by Andy Weir. 10 years and a couple of blog migrations later, I’m still writing. I wanted to share some thoughts and learnings I picked up throughout this time.

Well, I’ve been writing a blog nobody reads for nearly twenty years. I’d like to share my thoughts on, ahem, writers who thing learnings is a word.

The rise of AI denialism

So why has the public latched onto the narrative that AI is stalling, that the output is slop, and that the AI boom is just another tech bubble that lacks justifiable use-cases? I believe it’s because society is collectively entering the first stage of grief — denial — over the very scary possibility that we humans may soon lose cognitive supremacy to artificial systems.

What you me “we,” paleface? Code monkeys call themselves “engineers,” and start believing it themselves. They’ll be replaced by LLMs, and fight back by sneering. They’re going to learn that math isn’t intelligence. The hard way.

Trajan’s Column: A Digital Evocation

Using artificial intelligence to render scenes from the Dacian Wars (101-106 AD) as depicted on Trajan’s Column.

Oh drat. Caught me thinking about the Roman Empire again.

Netflix Kills Casting From Its Mobile App to Most Modern TVs

The change was first spotted by users on Reddit and confirmed in an updated Netflix support page (via Android Authority), which now states that the streaming service no longer supports casting from mobile devices to most TVs and TV-streaming devices. Users are instead directed to use the remote that came with their TV hardware and use its native Netflix app.

You know, there really are a few useful things you can do with a cellphone. After that, the phone is just thinking up ways to get you to fiddle with it. I’m picturing this Rube Goldberg process of streaming from a cell tower to a phone and launching it at the television, and wondering how it would make sense to anyone sensible.

The Enshittification of Plex Is Kicking Off, Starting with Free Roku Users

Practically speaking, this means that if both sides, the server owner and the viewer are free users, and the viewer is not on the same network as the server owner (meaning in the same house, in most cases) remote access will now just stop working when the Roku app updates. Enthusiasts who are free users, and only stream from home, will most likely experience very little change, but their free user friends will, basically, no longer be able to watch an enthusiast’s movie and TV collection.

Letting other people watch your movie collection remotely was always kinda daft. Everyone should just pirate all their media for themselves, like God and nature intended.

Microsoft Teams will tell your boss when you’re out of the office

The update, set to arrive in December, will let Microsoft’s communication platform automatically detect when an employee arrives at the office by monitoring their connection to the building’s Wi-Fi. If you’re working on-site and step out, Teams will automatically change your work location once it notices you’ve disconnected.

Quelle horreur! I know this sounds like science fiction, but I once had a job where I was compelled to remove a card from a big rack and punch in and out at work. To punch another worker’s card to feign their presence at work was an immediate firing offense for both parties. Then again, we were doing real work in the real world, not pretending to answer emails while looking at TikTok on our phones.

The Differences Between an IndyCar and a F1 Car

Formula 1 is a constructors’ championship, and the cars developed by the teams push technical limits, whereas IndyCar is more of a drivers’ championship, competing not only on traditional road and street courses, but also on ovals. While the key term for a Formula 1 car is ‘on the limit’, for IndyCar, it’s more about ‘robustness’.

Well, only one had Andy Granatelli. Game, set, match there.

Michael and Susan Dell donate $6.25 billion to encourage families to claim ‘Trump Accounts’

Its structure is also unusual. Essentially, it builds on the “ Trump Accounts ” program, where the U.S. Department of the Treasury will deposit $1,000 into investment accounts set up by Treasury for American children born between Jan. 1, 2025 and Dec. 31, 2028. The Dells’ gift will use the “Trump Accounts” infrastructure to give $250 to each qualified child under 10.

I had trouble following along with the details. In general, I gather the Dell household will have $6.25 billion less money later, and has no mirrors now. 

Every Major City as a Tiny Miniature World

Present a clear, 45° top-down isometric miniature 3D cartoon scene of [CITY], featuring its most iconic landmarks and architectural elements. Use soft, refined textures with realistic PBR materials and gentle, lifelike lighting and shadows. Integrate the current weather conditions directly into the city environment to create an immersive atmospheric mood. Use a clean, minimalistic composition with a soft, solid-colored background.

*Sniff* I miss SimCity.

Month: December 2025

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