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Emperor Palpatine

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Many things about Star Wars were not well planned out, but having a 37-year-old in old-age makeup play the Emperor in Return of the Jedi was such an incredible call.
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Many things about Star Wars were not well planned out, but having a 37-year-old in old-age makeup play the Emperor in Return of the Jedi was such an incredible call.
mkalus
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Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Witch

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This is why he doesn't come back for humans any more.


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Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Signal

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Tragically, once you introduce costly signaling, all mathematics is impure.


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Anthropic Promises Trump Admin Its AI Is Not Woke

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Anthropic Promises Trump Admin Its AI Is Not Woke

Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei has published a lengthy statement on the company’s site in which he promises Anthropic’s AI models are not politically biased, that it remains committed to American leadership in the AI industry, and that it supports the AI startup space in particular. 

Amodei doesn’t explicitly say why he feels the need to state all of these obvious positions for the CEO of an American AI company to have, but the reason is that the Trump administration’s so-called “AI Czar” has publicly accused Anthropic of producing “woke AI” that it’s trying to force on the population via regulatory capture. 

The current round of beef began earlier this month when Anthropic’s co-founder and head of policy Jack Clark published a written version of a talk he gave at The Curve AI conference in Berkeley. The piece, published on Clark’s personal blog, is full of tortured analogies and self-serving sci-fi speculation about the future of AI, but essentially boils down to Clark saying he thinks artificial general intelligence is possible, extremely powerful, potentially dangerous, and scary to the general population. In order to prevent disaster, put the appropriate policies in place, and make people embrace AI positively, he said, AI companies should be transparent about what they are building and listen to people’s concerns.

“What we are dealing with is a real and mysterious creature, not a simple and predictable machine,” he wrote. “And like all the best fairytales, the creature is of our own creation. Only by acknowledging it as being real and by mastering our own fears do we even have a chance to understand it, make peace with it, and figure out a way to tame it and live together.”

Venture capitalist, podcaster, and the White House’s “AI and Crypto Czar” David Sacks was not a fan of Clark’s blog. 

“Anthropic is running a sophisticated regulatory capture strategy based on fear-mongering,” Sacks said on X in response to Clark’s blog. “It is principally responsible for the state regulatory frenzy that is damaging the startup ecosystem.”

Things escalated yesterday when Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn’s co-founder and a megadonor to the Democratic party, supported Anthropic in a thread on X, saying “Anthropic was one of the good guys” because it's one of the companies “trying to deploy AI the right way, thoughtfully, safely, and enormously beneficial for society.” Hoffman also appeared to take a jab at Elon Musk’s xAI, saying “Some other labs are making decisions that clearly disregard safety and societal impact (e.g. bots that sometimes go full-fascist) and that’s a choice. So is choosing not to support them.”

Sacks responded to Hoffman on X, saying “The leading funder of lawfare and dirty tricks against President Trump wants you to know that ‘Anthropic is one of the good guys.’ Thanks for clarifying that. All we needed to know.” Musk hopped into the replies saying: “Indeed.”

“The real issue is not research but rather Anthropic’s agenda to backdoor Woke AI and other AI regulations through Blue states like California,” Sacks said. Here, Sacks is referring to Anthropic’s opposition to Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill, which wanted to stop states from regulating AI in any way for 10 years, and its backing of California’s SB 53, which requires AI companies that generate more than $500 million in annual revenue to make their safety protocols public. 

All this sniping leads us to Amodei’s statement today, which doesn’t mention the beef above but is clearly designed to calm investors who are watching Trump’s AI guy publicly saying one of the biggest AI companies in the world sucks. 

“I fully believe that Anthropic, the administration, and leaders across the political spectrum want the same thing: to ensure that powerful AI technology benefits the American people and that America advances and secures its lead in AI development,” Amodei said. “Despite our track record of communicating frequently and transparently about our positions, there has been a recent uptick in inaccurate claims about Anthropic's policy stances. Some are significant enough that they warrant setting the record straight.”

Amodei then goes to count the ways in which Anthropic already works with the federal government and directly grovels to Trump.

“Anthropic publicly praised President Trump’s AI Action Plan. We have been supportive of the President’s efforts to expand energy provision in the US in order to win the AI race, and I personally attended an AI and energy summit in Pennsylvania with President Trump, where he and I had a good conversation about US leadership in AI,” he said. “Anthropic’s Chief Product Officer attended a White House event where we joined a pledge to accelerate healthcare applications of AI, and our Head of External Affairs attended the White House’s AI Education Taskforce event to support their efforts to advance AI fluency for teachers.”

The more substantive part of his argument is that Anthropic didn’t support SB 53 until it made an exemption for all but the biggest AI labs, and that several studies found that Anthropic’s AI models are not “uniquely politically biased,” (read: not woke).

“Again, we believe we share those goals with the Trump administration, both sides of Congress, and the public,” Amodei wrote. “We are going to keep being honest and straightforward, and will stand up for the policies we believe are right. The stakes of this technology are too great for us to do otherwise.”

Many of the AI industry’s most vocal critics would agree with Sacks that Clark’s blog and “fear-mongering” about AI is self-serving because it makes their companies seem more valuable and powerful. Some critics will also agree that AI companies take advantage of that perspective to then influence AI regulation in a way that benefits them as incumbents. 

It would be a far more compelling argument if it didn’t come from Sacks and Musk, who found a much better way to influence AI regulation to benefit their companies and investments: working for the president directly and publicly bullying their competitors.

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OpenAI Catches Up to AI Market Reality: People Are Horny

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OpenAI Catches Up to AI Market Reality: People Are Horny

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman appeared on Cleo Abram's podcast in August where he said the company was “tempted” to add sexual content in the past, but resisted, saying that a “sex bot avatar” in ChatGPT would be a move to “juice growth.” In light of his announcement last week that ChatGPT would soon offer erotica, revisiting that conversation is revealing. 

It’s not clear yet what the specific offerings will be, or whether it’ll be an avatar like Grok’s horny waifu. But OpenAI is following a trend we’ve known about for years: There are endless theorized applications of AI, but in the real world many people want to use LLMs for sexual gratification, and it’s up for the market to keep up. In 2023, a16z published an analysis of the generative AI market, which amounted to one glaringly obvious finding: people use AI as part of their sex lives. As Emanuel wrote at the time in his analysis of the analysis: “Even if we put ethical questions aside, it is absurd that a tech industry kingmaker like a16z can look at this data, write a blog titled ‘How Are Consumers Using Generative AI?’ and not come to the obvious conclusion that people are using it to jerk off. If you are actually interested in the generative AI boom and you are not identifying porn as a core use for the technology, you are either not paying attention or intentionally pretending it’s not happening.” 

Altman even hinting at introducing erotic roleplay as a feature is huge, because it’s a signal that he’s no longer pretending. People have been fucking the chatbot for a long time in an unofficial capacity, and have recently started hitting guardrails that stop them from doing so. People use Anthropic’s Claude, Google’s Gemini, Elon Musk’s Grok, and self-rolled large language models to roleplay erotic scenarios whether the terms of use for those platforms permit it or not, DIYing AI boyfriends out of platforms that otherwise forbid it. And there are specialized erotic chatbot platforms and AI dating simulators, but what OpenAI does—as the owner of the biggest share of the chatbot market—the rest follow.

404 Media Generative AI Market Analysis: People Love to Cum
A list of the top 50 generative AI websites shows non-consensual porn is a driving force for the buzziest technology in years.
OpenAI Catches Up to AI Market Reality: People Are Horny

Already we see other AI companies stroking their chins about it. Following Altman’s announcement, Amanda Askell, who works on the philosophical issues that arise with Anthropic’s alignment, posted: “It's unfortunate that people often conflate AI erotica and AI romantic relationships, given that one of them is clearly more concerning than the other. Of the two, I'm more worried about romantic relationships. Mostly because it seems like it would make users pretty vulnerable to the AI company in many ways. It seems like a hard area to navigate responsibly.” And the highly influential anti-porn crowd is paying attention, too: the National Center on Sexual Exploitation put out a statement following Altman’s post declaring that actually, no one should be allowed to do erotic roleplay with chatbots, not even adults. (Ron DeHaas, co-founder of Christian porn surveillance company Covenant Eyes, resigned from the NCOSE board earlier this month after his 38-year-old adult stepson was charged with felony child sexual abuse.)

In the August interview, Abram sets up a question for Altman by noting that there’s a difference between “winning the race” and “building the AI future that would be best for the most people,” noting that it must be easier to focus on winning. She asks Altman for an example of a decision he’s had to make that would be best for the world but not best for winning. 

Altman responded that he’s proud of the impression users have that ChatGPT is “trying to help you,” and says a bunch of other stuff that’s not really answering the question, about alignment with users and so on. But then he started to say something actually interesting: “There's a lot of things we could do that would like, grow faster, that would get more time in ChatGPT, that we don't do because we know that like, our long-term incentive is to stay as aligned with our users as possible. But there's a lot of short-term stuff we could do that would really juice growth or revenue or whatever, and be very misaligned with that long-term goal,” Altman said. “And I'm proud of the company and how little we get distracted by that. But sometimes we do get tempted.”

“Are there specific examples that come to mind?” Abram asked. “Any decisions that you've made?”

After a full five-second pause to think, Altman said, “Well, we haven't put a sex bot avatar in ChatGPT yet.” 

“That does seem like it would get time spent,” Abram replied. “Apparently, it does.” Altman said. They have a giggle about it and move on.

Two months later, Altman was surprised that the erotica announcement blew up. “Without being paternalistic we will attempt to help users achieve their long-term goals,” he wrote. “But we are not the elected moral police of the world. In the same way that society differentiates other appropriate boundaries (R-rated movies, for example) we want to do a similar thing here.” 

This announcement, aside from being a blatant hail mary cash grab for a company that’s bleeding funds because it’s already too popular, has inspired even more “bubble’s popping” speculation, something boosters and doomers alike have been saying (or rooting for) for months now. Once lauded as a productivity godsend, AI has mostly proven to be a hindrance to workers. It’s interesting that OpenAI’s embrace of erotica would cause that reaction, and not, say, the fact that AI is flooding and burdening libraries, eating Wikipedia, and incinerating the planet. It’s also interesting that OpenAI, which takes user conversations as training data—along with all of the writing and information available on the internet—feels it’s finally gobbled enough training data from humans to be able to stoop so low, as Altman’s attitude insinuates, to let users be horny. That training data includes authors of romance novels and NSFW fanfic but also sex workers who’ve spent the last 10 years posting endlessly to social media platforms like Twitter (pre-X, when Elon Musk cut off OpenAI’s access) and Reddit, only to have their posts scraped into the training maw.

Altman believes “sex bots” are not in service of the theoretical future that would “benefit the most people,” and that it’s a fast-track to juicing revenue, something the company badly needs. People have always used technology for horny ends, and OpenAI might be among the last to realize that—or the first of the AI giants to actually admit it.

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A California Courtyard House With Japanese-Inspired Serenity

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A California Courtyard House With Japanese-Inspired Serenity

In a quiet Cupertino, California neighborhood just a few miles from Apple’s campus and near the city’s iconic Eichler district, SHED Architecture & Design has designed a home that feels both timeless and distinctly modern. The Cupertino Courtyard House sits on a modest flat lot surrounded by homes in Mission and Spanish Colonial styles, yet it stands apart – grounded in local architectural lineage while reimagining it for a new generation.

Modern two-story house with a minimalist design, featuring a dark upper section, white lower facade, large garage door, and landscaped front yard.

From the street, the residence leans into modern while following the strict design requirements of the area. White stucco landscape walls give nod to the Mediterranean vernacular of its surroundings, while a dark, charred-wood upper volume – clad in shou sugi ban – announces a bolder contemporary sensibility. The home’s entry is behind a slatted wood gate, partially hidden between concrete walls, through a small, secluded courtyard. This path leads to a recessed “genkan,” a traditional Japanese threshold where shoes are removed.

A modern outdoor entryway with a partially open metal and wood gate, concrete path, white walls, a wooden bench, and a tree on the left.

A small courtyard with a solitary tree, a wooden bench, and white and dark wood walls under a clear blue sky.

View of a modern home's entryway with a wood ceiling, black walls, concrete floor panels, and a glass door opening to a bright interior living space with large windows.

Inside, the home unfolds as a collection of interior courtyards, each one framing views of the outdoors. Floor-to-ceiling glass doors blur the lines between interior and garden, letting natural light highlight the plaster walls and oak finishes throughout the day. The living, dining, and kitchen areas flow together along the rear of the property, anchored by custom white oak built-ins that double as storage and seating. A bench built into the back of the kitchen island transforms the space into an informal gathering hub.

A modern dining and kitchen area with light wood furniture, large windows, and natural light, featuring a dining table, wooden slats, and a view of a small courtyard with plants.

Modern open-plan living and dining area with wooden finishes, a light wood dining table, pendant light, and large windows letting in natural light.

The materials palette exudes cozy warmth and natural tactility. Clay plaster, wood, and slate bring an earthy softness that contrasts the home’s geometric, black and white exterior. A covered “engawa” – a Japanese-style porch hovering just above the ground – extends the living spaces outdoors, inviting quiet moments of reflection.

Modern kitchen with light wood cabinetry, white countertops, minimalist backsplash, integrated appliances, and a dark stone island with a built-in sink.

Modern living room with light wood accents, a gray sectional sofa, a low coffee table, a large paper lantern ceiling light, and floor-to-ceiling glass doors opening to a small garden.

Modern living room with wooden beams, large windows, a low TV unit, and minimalist decor, overlooking a garden on both sides.

A modern wooden house features large windows and a central courtyard with a blossoming tree, gravel ground, and rocks under a clear sky.

A modern hallway with light wood floors and walls, vertical wooden slats on the right, and natural light streaming from a bright room at the end.

A narrow hallway with light wooden floors and walls, featuring built-in cabinetry, a washing machine, and vertical wooden slats, leading to a bright room with a window.

A minimal room with a wooden chair by a large window, a small tree outside, a stack of books, a guitar case, a small lamp, and indoor plants on a light wood floor.

At the center of the layout, a skylit stairwell serves as a sculptural element that leads to the second floor. Designed for passive ventilation, it channels light and air through the home while discreetly housing mechanical systems. Upstairs, the compact footprint is organized with efficiency: the primary suite features a slate-lined wet room and a cedar soaking tub, while the children’s rooms each include playful lofts for rest and imagination.

A minimal indoor staircase with light wood steps, a wooden handrail, vertical wood slats on the wall, and a large, round pendant light hanging from the ceiling.

Minimalist architectural interior with white walls, soft curved surfaces, a circular ceiling light, and a skylight revealing a blue sky. Light and shadows create geometric patterns.

Performance was as much a priority as aesthetics. The house exceeds net-zero energy standards with a rooftop solar array generating more power than it consumes. High-efficiency systems – from heat pump HVAC and water heating to energy recovery ventilation – combine with advanced framing and airtight insulation to minimize waste. Every fixture, material, and assembly was considered for longevity and environmental impact, ensuring the home not only looks but lives sustainably.

Minimalist bedroom with light wood furniture, white bedding, large wardrobe, two windows, and potted plants on the headboard and wardrobe. Natural light fills the space.

A minimalist bathroom with dark tiled walls, a light wood soaking tub, a small window, a towel hanging on a hook, and a round ceiling light.

A minimalist bathroom vanity with wood drawers, a white sink, black fixtures, a mirror cabinet, a potted plant, and a window with a view of greenery and blue sky.

A small bedroom with a loft ladder, a single bed with pink bedding, stuffed toys, a window with a garden view, and a fish-shaped ceiling light.

Minimalist bathroom with light wood accents, a green towel, a paper lantern ceiling light, and a window letting in natural light above a tiled bathtub and shower area.

Modern house exterior with large glass windows, wooden and dark panel siding, and a view into a warmly lit living room. Gravel ground and a tree branch are visible in the foreground.

A small flowering tree stands in a modern courtyard surrounded by dark wooden walls, large windows, and minimal landscaping illuminated by ground lights.

A modern two-story house with a dark wood upper level, large glass sliding doors, a covered patio, and a lawn in front.

To learn more about the Cupertino Courtyard House by SHED Architecture & Design, please visit shedbuilt.com.

Photography by Ethan Gordon.

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