Train Models on Hostility Oriented Slop and You Get Happiness? Nope, Nastiness on Steroids

November 10, 2025

green-dino_thumbThis essay is the work of a dumb dinobaby. No smart software required.

Informed discourse, factual reports, and the type of rhetoric loved by Miss Spurling in 1959 can have a positive effect. I wasn’t sure at the time if I wanted to say Whoa! Nelly to my particular style of writing and speaking. She did her best to convert me from a somewhat weird 13 year old into a more civilized creature. She failed I fear.

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A young student is stunned by the criticism of his approach to a report. An “F”. Failure. The solution is not to listen. Some AI vendors take the same approach. Thanks, Venice.ai, good enough.

When I read “Study: AI Models Trained on Clickbait Slop Result In AI Brain Rot, Hostility,” I thought about Miss Spurling and her endless supply of red pencils. Algorithms, it seems, have some of the characteristics of an immature young person. Feed that young person some unusual content, and you get some wild and crazy outputs

The write up reports:

To see how these [large language] models would “behave” after subsisting on a diet of clickbait sewage, the researchers cobbled together a sample of one million X posts and then trained four different LLMs on varying mixtures of control data (long form, good faith, real articles and content) and junk data (lazy, engagement chasing, superficial clickbait) to see how it would affect performance. Their conclusion isn’t too surprising; the more junk data that is fed into an AI model, the lower quality its outputs become and the more “hostile” and erratic the model is …

But here’s the interesting point:

They also found that after being fed a bunch of ex-Twitter slop, the models didn’t just get “dumber”, they were (shocking, I know) far more likely to take on many of the nastier “personality traits” that now dominate the right wing troll platform …

The write up makes a point about the wizards creating smart software; to wit:

The problem with AI generally is a decidedly human one: the terrible, unethical, and greedy people currently in charge of it’s implementation (again, see media, insurance, countless others) — folks who have cultivated some unrealistic delusions about AI competency and efficiency (see this recent Stanford study on how rushed AI adoption in the workforce often makes people less efficient).

I am not sure that the highly educated experts at Google-type AI companies would agree. I did not agree with Miss Spurling. On may points, she was correct. Adolescent thinking produces some unusual humans as well as interesting smart software. I particularly like some of the newer use cases; for instance, driving some people wacky or appealing to the underbelly of human behavior.

Net net: Scale up, shut up, and give up.

Stephen E Arnold, November 10, 2025

Mobile Hooking People: Digital Drugs

November 10, 2025

Most of us know that spending too much time on our phones is a bad idea, especially for young minds. We also know the companies on the other end profit from keeping us glued to the screen. The Conversation examines the ways “Smartphones Manipulate our Emotions and Trigger our Reflexes– No Wonder We’re Addicted.” Yes–try taking a 12 year old’s mobile phone and let us know how that goes.

Of course, social media, AI chatbots, games, and other platforms have their own ways of capturing our attention. This article, however, focuses on ways the phones themselves manipulate users. Author Stephen Monteiro writes:

“As I argue in my newly published book, Needy Media: How Tech Gets Personal, our phones — and more recently, our watches — have become animated beings in our lives. These devices can build bonds with us by recognizing our presence and reacting to our bodies. Packed with a growing range of technical features that target our sensory and psychological soft spots, smartphones create comforting ties that keep us picking them up. The emotional cues designed into these objects and interfaces imply that they need our attention, while in actuality, the devices are soaking up our data.”

The write-up explores how phones’ responsive features, like facial recognition, geolocation, touchscreen interactions, vibrations and sounds, and motion and audio sensing, combine to build a potent emotional attachment. Meanwhile, devices have drastically increased how much information they collect and when. They constantly record data on everything we do on our phones and even in our environments. One chilling example: With those sensors, software can build a fairly accurate record of our sleep patterns. Combine that with health and wellness apps, and that gives app-makers a surprisingly comprehensive picture. Have you seen any eerily insightful ads for fitness, medical, or mindfulness products lately? Soon, they will be even be able to gauge our emotions through analysis of our facial expressions. Just what we need.

Given a cell phone is pretty much required to navigate life these days, what are we to do? Monteiro suggests:

“We can access device settings and activate only those features we truly require, adjusting them now and again as our habits and lifestyles change. Turning on geolocation only when we need navigation support, for example, increases privacy and helps break the belief that a phone and a user are an inseparable pair. Limiting sound and haptic alerts can gain us some independence, while opting for a passcode over facial recognition locks reminds us the device is a machine and not a friend. This may also make it harder for others to access the device.”

If these measures do not suffice, one can go retro with a “dumb” phone. Apparently, that is a trend among Gen Z. Perhaps there is hope for humanity yet.

Cynthia Murrell, November 10, 2025

How Frisky Will AI Become? Users Like Frisky… a Lot

November 7, 2025

OpenAI promised to create technology that would benefit humanity, much like Google and other Big tech companies. We know how that has gone. Much to the worry of its team, OpenAI released a TikTok-like app powered by AI. What could go wrong? Well we’re still waiting to see the fallout, but TechCrunch shares that possibilities in the story: “OpenAI Staff Grapples With The Company’s Social Media Push.”

OpenAI is headed into social media because that is where the money is. The push for social media is by OpenAI’s bigwigs. The new TikTok-like app is called Sora 2 and it has an AI-based feed. Past and present employees are concerned how Sora 2 will benefit humanity. They are worried that Sora 2 will produce more AI slop, the equivalent of digital brain junk food, to consumers instead of benefitting humanity. Even OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman is astounded by the amount of money allowed to AI social media projects:

‘ ‘We do mostly need the capital for build [sic] AI that can do science, and for sure we are focused on AGI with almost all of our research effort,’ said Altman. ‘It is also nice to show people cool new tech/products along the way, make them smile, and hopefully make some money given all that compute need.’ ‘When we launched chatgpt there was a lot of ‘who needs this and where is AGI,’ Altman continued. ‘[R]eality is nuanced when it comes to optimal trajectories for a company.’”

Here’s another quote about the negative effects of AI:

‘One of the big mistakes of the social media era was [that] the feed algorithms had a bunch of unintended, negative consequences on society as a whole, and maybe even individual users. Although they were doing the thing that a user wanted — or someone thought users wanted — in the moment, which is [to] get them to, like, keep spending time on the site.’”

Let’s start taking bets about how long it will take the bad actors to transform Sora 2 into quite frisky service.

Whitney Grace, November 7, 2025

Copilot in Excel: Brenda Has Another Problem

November 6, 2025

green-dino_thumbAnother short essay from a real and still-alive dinobaby. If you see an image, we used AI. The dinobaby is not an artist like Grandma Moses.

Simon Wilson posted an interesting snippet from a person whom I don’t know. The handle is @belligerentbarbies who is a member of TikTok. You can find the post “Brenda” on Simon Wilson’s Weblog. The main idea in the write up is that a person in accounting or finance assembles an Excel worksheet. In many large outfits, the worksheets are templates or set up to allow the enthusiastic MBA to plug in a few numbers. Once the numbers are “in,” then the bright, over achiever hits Shift F9 to recalculate the single worksheet. If it looks okay, the MBA mashes F9 and updates the linked spreadsheets. Bingo! A financial services firm has produced the numbers needed to slap into a public or private document. But, and here’s the best part…

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Thanks, Venice.ai. Good enough.

Before the document leaves the office, a senior professional who has not used Excel checks the spreadsheet. Experience dictates to look at certain important cells of data. If those pass the smell test, then the private document is moved to the next stage of its life. It goes into production so that the high net worth individual, the clued in business reporter, the big customers, and people in the CEO’s bridge group get the document.

Because those “reports” can move a stock up or down or provide useful information about a deal that is not put into a number context, most outfits protect Excel spreadsheets. Heck, even the fill-in-the-blank templates are big time secrets. Each of the investment firms for which I worked over the years follow the same process. Each uses its own, custom-tailored, carefully structure set of formulas to produce the quite significant reports, opinions, and marketing documents.

Brenda knows Excel. Most Big Dogs know some Excel, but as these corporate animals fight their way to Carpetland, those Excel skills atrophy. Now Simon Wilson’s post enters and references Copilot. The post is insightful because it highlights a process gap. Specifically if Copilot is involved in an Excel spreadsheet, Copilot might— just might in this hypothetical — make a change. The Big Dog in Carpetland does not catch the change. The Big Dog just sniffs a few spots in the forest or jungle of numbers.

Before Copilot Brenda or similar professional was involved. Copilot may make it possible to ignore Brenda and push the report out. If the financial whales make money, life is good. But what happens if the Copilot tweaked worksheet is hallucinating. I am not talking a few disco biscuits but mind warping errors whipped up because AI is essentially operating at “good enough” levels of excellence.

Bad things transpire. As interesting as this problem is to contemplate, there’s another angle that the Simon Wilson post did not address. What if Copilot is phoning home. The idea is that user interaction with a cloud-based service is designed to process data and add those data to its training process. The AI wizards have some jargon for this “learn as you go” approach.

The issue is, however, what happens if that proprietary spreadsheet or the “numbers” about a particular company find their way into a competitor’s smart output? What if Financial firm A does not know this “process” has compromised the confidentiality of a worksheet. What if Financial firm B spots the information and uses it to advantage firm B?

Where’s Brenda in this process? Who? She’s been RIFed. What about Big Dog in Carpetland? That professional is clueless until someone spots the leak and the information ruins what was a calm day with no fires to fight. Now a burning Piper Cub is in the office. Not good, is it.

I know that Microsoft Copilot will be or is positioned as super secure. I know that hypotheticals are just that: Made up thought donuts.

But I think the potential for some knowledge leaking may exist. After all Copilot, although marvelous, is not Brenda. Clueless leaders in Carpetland are not interested in fairy tales; they are interested in making money, reducing headcount, and enjoying days without a fierce fire ruining a perfectly good Louis XIV desk.

Net net: Copilot, how are you and Brenda communicating? What’s that? Brenda is not answering her company provided mobile. Wow. Bummer.

Stephen E Arnold, November 6, 2025

Iran and Crypto: A Short Cut Might Not Be Working

November 6, 2025

One factor about cryptocurrency mining (and AI) that is glossed over by news outlets is the amount of energy required to keep the servers running. In short, it’s a lot! The Cool Down reports how one Middle Eastern country is dealing with a cryptocurrency crisis: “Stunning Report Reveals Government-Linked Crypto Crisis: ‘Serious And Unimaginable’”.

What is very interesting (and not surprising) about the crypto-currency mining is who is doing it: the Iranian government. Iran is dealing with an energy crisis and the citizens are dismayed. Lakes are drying up and there are abundant power outages. Iran is dealing with one of the worst droughts in its modern history.

Iran’s people have protested, but it’s like pushing a boulder up hill: no one is listening. Iran is home to a large saltwater lake, Lake Urmia, and it has transformed into a marsh.

Here’s what one expert said:

“An Iranian engineer cited by The Observer alleged that cryptocurrency mining by the state is consuming up to 5% of electricity, contributing to water and power depletion. "We are in a serious and unimaginable crisis," Iran President Masoud Pezeshkian said as he urged action during a recent cabinet meeting.”

The Iranian government has temporarily closed offices and is rationing resources, but it likely won’t be enough to curb power demanded by the crypto mining.

Iran could demolish its authoritarian and fundamentalist religious government, invest in a mixed economy, liberate women, and invest in education and technology to prepare for a better future. That likely won’t happen.

Whitney Grace, November 6, 2025

We Must Admire a $5 Trillion Outfit

November 5, 2025

The title of this piece refers to the old adage of not putting all of your eggs in one basket. It’s a popular phrase used by investors and translates to: diversify, diversify, diversify! Nvidia really needs to take that heart, because despite having record breaking sales in the last quarter, their top customer base is limited to three. Tom’s Hardware reports, “More Than 50% Of Nvidia’s Data Center Revenue Comes From Three Customers — $21.9 Billion In Sales Recorded From The Unnamed Companies.”

Business publication Sherwood reported that 53% of Nvidia’s sales are from three anonymous customers and they total $21.9 billion. Here’s where the old adage about ego enters:

“This might not sound like a problem — after all, why complain if three different entities are handing you piles and piles of money — but concentrating the majority of your sales to just a handful of clients could cause a sudden, unexpected issue. For example, the company’s entire second-quarter revenue is around $46 billion, which means that Customer A makes up more than 20% of its sales. If this company were to suddenly vanish (say it decided to build its own chips, go with AMD, or a scandal forces it to cease operations), then it would have a massive impact on Nvidia’s cash flow and operations.”

The article then hypothesizes that the mysterious customers are Elon Musk, xAI, OpenAI, Oracle, and Meta. The company did lose sales in China because of President Trump’s actions, so the customers aren’t from Asia. Nvidia needs to diversify its client portfolio if it doesn’t want to sink when and if these customers head to greener pastures. With a $5 trillion value, how many green pastures await Nvidia. Just think of them and they will manifest themselves. That works.

Whitney Grace, November 5, 2025

Medical Fraud Meets AI. DRG Codes Meet AI. Enjoy

November 4, 2025

green-dino_thumbThis essay is the work of a dumb dinobaby. No smart software required.

I have heard that some large medical outfits make use of DRG “chains” or “coding sequences.” I picked up this information when my team and I worked on what is called a “subrogation project.” I am not going to explain how subrogation works or what the mechanisms operating are. These are back office or invisible services that accompany something that seems straightforward. One doesn’t buy stock from a financial advisor; there is plumbing and plumbing companies that do this work. The hospital sends you a bill; there is plumbing and plumbing companies providing systems and services. To sum up, a hospital bill is often large, confusing, opaque, and similar to a secret language. Mistakes happen, of course. But often inflated medical bills do more to benefit the institution and its professionals than the person with the bill in his or her hand. (If you run into me at an online fraud conference, I will explain how the “chain” of codes works. It is slick and not well understood by many of the professionals who care for the patient. It is a toss up whether Miami or Nashville is the Florence of medical fancy dancing. I won’t argue for either city, but I would add that Houston and LA should be in the running for the most creative center of certain activities.

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Grieving Family Uses AI Chatbot to Cut Hospital Bill from $195,000 to $33,000 — Family Says Claude Highlighted Duplicative Charges, Improper Coding, and Other Violations” contains some information that will be [a] good news for medical fraud investigators and [b] for some health care providers and individual medical specialists in their practices. The person with the big bill had to joust with the provider to get a detailed, line item breakdown of certain charges. Once that anti-social institution provider the detail, it was time for AI.

The write up says:

Claude [Anthropic, the AI outfit hooked up with Google] proved to be a dogged, forensic ally. The biggest catch was that it uncovered duplications in billing. It turns out that the hospital had billed for both a master procedure and all its components. That shaved off, in principle, around $100,000 in charges that would have been rejected by Medicare. “So the hospital had billed us for the master procedure and then again for every component of it,” wrote an exasperated nthmonkey. Furthermore, Claude unpicked the hospital’s improper use of inpatient vs emergency codes. Another big catch was an issue where ventilator services are billed on the same day as an emergency admission, a practice that would be considered a regulatory violation in some circumstances.

Claude, the smart software, clawed through the data. The smart software identified certain items that required closer inspection. The AI helped the human using Claude to get the health care provider to adjust the bill.

Why did the hospital make billing errors? Was it [a] intentional fraud programmed into the medical billing system; [b] was it an intentional chain of DRG codes tuned to bill as many items, actions, and services as possible within reason and applicable rules; or [c] a computer error. If you picked item c, you are correct. The write up says:

Once a satisfactory level of transparency was achieved (the hospital blamed ‘upgraded computers’), Claude AI stepped in and analyzed the standard charging codes that had been revealed.

Absolutely blame the problem on the technology people. Who issued the instructions to the technology people? Innocent MBAs and financial whiz kids who want to maximize their returns are not part of this story. Should they be? Of course not. Computer-related topics are for other people.

Stephen E Arnold, November 4, 2025

Google Is Really Cute: Push Your Content into the Jaws of Googzilla

November 4, 2025

green-dino_thumbThis essay is the work of a dumb dinobaby. No smart software required.

Google has a new, helpful, clever, and cute service just for everyone with a business Web site. “Google Labs’ Free New Experiment Creates AI-Generated Ads for Your Small Business” lays out the basics of Pomelli. (I think this word means knobs or handles.)

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A Googley business process designed to extract money and data from certain customers. Thanks, Venice.ai. Good enough.

The cited article states:

Pomelli uses AI to create campaigns that are unique to your business; all you need to do is upload your business website to begin. Google says Pomelli uses your business URL to create a “Business DNA” that analyzes your website images to identify brand identity. The Business DNA profile includes tone of voice, color palettes, fonts, and pictures. Pomelli can also generate logos, taglines, and brand values.

Just imagine Google processing your Web site, its content, images, links, and entities like email addresses, phone numbers, etc. Then using its smart software to create an advertising campaign, ads, and suggestions for the amount of money you should / will / must spend via Google’s own advertising system. What a cute idea!

The write up points out:

Google says this feature eliminates the laborious process of brainstorming unique ad campaigns. If users have their own campaign ideas, they can enter them into Pomelli as a prompt. Finally, Pomelli will generate marketing assets for social media, websites, and advertisements. These assets can be edited, allowing users to change images, headers, fonts, color palettes, descriptions, and create a call to action.

How will those tireless search engine optimization consultants and Google certified ad reselling outfits react to this new and still “experimental” service? I am confident that [a] some will rationalize the wonderfulness of this service and sell advisory services about the automated replacement for marketing and creative agencies; [b] some will not understand that it is time to think about a substantive side gig because Google is automating basic business functions and plugging into the customer’s wallet with no pesky intermediary to shave off some bucks; and [c] others will watch as their own sales efforts become less and less productive and then go out of business because adaptation is hard.

Is Google’s idea original? No, Adobe has something called AI Found, according to the write up. Google is not into innovation. Need I remind you that Google advertising has some roots in the Yahoo garden in bins marked GoTo.com and Overture.com. Also, there is a bank account with some Google money from a settlement about certain intellectual property rights that Yahoo believed Google used as a source of business process inspiration.

As Google moves into automating hooks, it accrues several significant benefits which seem to stick up in Google’s push to help its users:

  1. Crawling costs may be reduced. The users will push content to Google. This may or may not be a significant factor, but the user who updates provides Google with timely information.
  2. The uploaded or pushed content can be piped into the Google AI system and used to inform the advertising and marketing confection Pomelli. Training data and ad prospects in one go.
  3. The automation of a core business function allows Google to penetrate more deeply into a business. What if that business uses Microsoft products? It strikes me that the Googlers will say, “Hey, switch to Google and you get advertising bonus bucks that can be used to reduce your overall costs.”
  4. The advertising process is a knob that Google can be used to pull the user and his cash directly into the Google business process automation scheme.

As I said, cute and also clever. We love you, Google. Keep on being Googley. Pull those users’ knobs, okay.

Stephen E Arnold, November 4, 2025

Don Quixote Takes on AI in Research Integrity Battle. A La Vista!

November 3, 2025

Scientific publisher Frontiers asserts its new AI platform is the key to making the most of valuable research data. ScienceDaily crows, “90% of Science is Lost. This New AI Just Found It.” Wow, 90%. Now who is hallucinating? Turns out that percentage only applies if one is looking at new research submitted within Frontiers’ new system. Cutting out past and outside research really narrows the perspective. The press release explains:

“Out of every 100 datasets produced, about 80 stay within the lab, 20 are shared but seldom reused, fewer than two meet FAIR standards, and only one typically leads to new findings. … To change this, [Frontiers’ FAIR² Data Management Service] is designed to make data both reusable and properly credited by combining all essential steps — curation, compliance checks, AI-ready formatting, peer review, an interactive portal, certification, and permanent hosting — into one seamless process. The goal is to ensure that today’s research investments translate into faster advances in health, sustainability, and technology. FAIR² builds on the FAIR principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable) with an expanded open framework that guarantees every dataset is AI-compatible and ethically reusable by both humans and machines.”

That does sound like quite the time- and hassle- saver. And we cannot argue with making it easier to enact the FAIR principles. But the system will only achieve its lofty goals with wide buy-in from the academic community. Will Frontiers get it? The write-up describes what participating researchers can expect:

“Researchers who submit their data receive four integrated outputs: a certified Data Package, a peer-reviewed and citable Data Article, an Interactive Data Portal featuring visualizations and AI chat, and a FAIR² Certificate. Each element includes quality controls and clear summaries that make the data easier to understand for general users and more compatible across research disciplines.”

The publisher asserts its system ensures data preservation, validation, and accessibility while giving researchers proper recognition. The press release describes four example datasets created with the system as well as glowing reviews from select researchers. See the post for those details.

Cynthia Murrell, November 3, 2025

Hollywood Has to Learn to Love AI. You Too, Mr. Beast

October 31, 2025

green-dino_thumb_thumbThis essay is the work of a dumb dinobaby. No smart software required.

Russia’s leadership is good at talking, stalling, and doing what it wants. Is OpenAI copying this tactic? ”OpenAI Cracks Down on Sora 2 Deepfakes after Pressure from Bryan Cranston, SAG-AFTRA” reports:

OpenAI announced on Monday [October 20, 2025] in a joint statement that it will be working with Bryan Cranston, SAG-AFTRA, and other actor unions to protect against deepfakes on its artificial intelligence video creation app Sora.

Talking, stalling or “negotiating,” and then doing what it wants may be within the scope of this sentence.

The write up adds via a quote from OpenAI leadership:

“OpenAI is deeply committed to protecting performers from the misappropriation of their voice and likeness,” Altman said in a statement. “We were an early supporter of the NO FAKES Act when it was introduced last year, and will always stand behind the rights of performers.”

This sounds good. I am not sure it will impress  teens as much as Mr. Altman’s posture on erotic chats, but the statement sounds good. If I knew Russian, it would be interesting to translate the statement. Then one could compare the statement with some of those emitted by the Kremlin.

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Producing a big budget commercial film or a Mr. Beast-type video will look very different in 18 to 24 months. Thanks, Venice.ai. Good enough.

Several observations:

  1. Mr. Altman has to generate cash or the appearance of cash. At some point investors will become pushy.  Pushy investors can be problematic.
  2. OpenAI’s approach to model behavior does not give me confidence that the company can figure out how to engineer guard rails and then enforce them. Young men and women fiddling with OpenAI can be quite ingenious.
  3. The BBC ran a news program with the news reader as a deep fake. What does this suggest about a Hollywood producer facing financial pressure working out a deal with an AI entrepreneur facing even greater financial pressure? I think it means that humanoids are expendable first a little bit and then for the entire digital production. Gamification will be too delicious.

Net net: I think I know how this interaction will play out. Sam Altman, the big name stars, and the AI outfits know. The lawyers know. Who doesn’t know? Frankly everyone knows how digital disintermediation works. Just ask a recent college grad with a degree in art history.

Stephen E Arnold, October 31, 2025

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