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Monday December 8th, 2025

AI users like sycophancy Dan Lyke / comment 0

Sycophantic AI Decreases Prosocial Intentions and Promotes Dependence Myra Cheng, Cinoo Lee, Pranav Khadpe, Sunny Yu, Dyllan Han, Dan Jurafsky

However, participants rated sycophantic responses as higher quality, trusted the sycophantic AI model more, and were more willing to use it again. This suggests that people are drawn to AI that unquestioningly validate, even as that validation risks eroding their judgment and reducing their inclination toward prosocial behavior. These preferences create perverse incentives both for people to increasingly rely on sycophantic AI models and for AI model training to favor sycophancy.

Via

Tesla Optimus robot falling over Dan Lyke / comment 0

This video clip of a Tesla Optimus humanoid robot knocking over a bunch of water bottles and falling over, apparently as its operator removes their headset before shutting the robot down in a stable state, is giving me the giggles.

Stopping Russia now half as expensive as doing so later Dan Lyke / comment 0

Norway did the math: Arm Ukraine to win, or pay double when Russia does.

The report arrives as a direct challenge to the Trump administration’s 28-point peace plan, which the authors argue misreads what is required for a stable Ukraine and Europe. A Russian partial victory would force Europe into a massive rearmament program to deter further aggression, amounting to €1.2-1.6 trillion over a four-year period. Equipping Ukraine to win would cost €522-838 billion over the same period—roughly half of that amount.

Europe's choice Military and economic scenarios for the War in Ukraine Corisk Report Series No 12, 2025 November 2025

DOI:10.13140/RG.2.2.29662.70725

Police state shenanigans Dan Lyke / comment 0

Whoah: Houston Chronicle: A mysterious Texas surveillance network told police to search his truck. Watch how it went wrong. Texas cops making up bullshit excuses for traffic stops in order to try to frame people is hardly news. Doing so on the basis of WhatsApp chats using information from sooper s3kr1t information centers allegedly doing behavior analysis is next level creepy.

Formed after the 9/11 terrorist attacks, fusion centers are federally recognized, state-run intelligence-gathering hubs where police from local, state and federal organizations team up to gather and distribute intelligence. Texas boasts eight of the secretive facilities, more than any other state. In court filings, Bexar County said the Schott intelligence came from “the Laredo Fusion Center” — a location not on any official list.

"falling behind" like a fox Dan Lyke / comment 2

CNN: What the heck is going on at Apple?. Talking about the recent exodus and possible departure of Tim Cook:

The changes come as critics say Apple, once a tech leader, is behind in the next big wave: artificial intelligence. For one of the world’s most valuable tech companies, a change in leadership could mean a change in how it conceives, designs and creates products used around the world every single day.

Ondřej Surý @ondrej@sury.org observes:

@briankrebs Yeah, we need more "falling behind" from Apple, not less :). I am happy that Apple did not jump on the FOMO bandwagon.

My uneducated guess is that they have a lot of telemetry from their devices and they probably see how many people did disable the use of LLMs on their devices.

AI slop and DDG Dan Lyke / comment 0

AskMeFi question about Duck Duck Go results shows the summary for the Wikipedia result, that I've replicated, as:

Williot Swedberg is a Swedish footballer who plays for Celta Vigo and the Sweden national team. He started his career at Hammarby IF and was named one of the best young talents in 2004 by The Guardian.

What Wikipedia actually says is:

In October 2021, Swedberg was named as one of the 60 best young talents in world football born in 2004, by the English newspaper The Guardian.

[Emphasis mine]

https://noai.duckduckgo.com/ gives the same bogosity, so this is probably something that's crept in from Bing. https://www.startpage.com/ gives a shorter summary.

AI & Insurance coverage Dan Lyke / comment 0

I ran across links to this article, Financial Times: Insurers retreat from AI cover as risk of multibillion-dollar claims mounts, about AIG, Great American, and WR Berkley backing away from AI coverage, but it's paywalled, so I went searching for the headline, and it's interesting how this current media push is being spun, with a week before that stories about startup insurers stepping in to cover risks that the major companies don't want to touch: Insurance companies are trying to avoid big payouts by making AI safer

“We’re in an era now where the losses are really here and happening; that’s one thing. The second thing is that insurers are now actually starting to exclude AI from their existing policies,” Dattani said. “So it feels pretty certain that we’re going to need some solution here, and we need people with skin in the game who can provide third- party oversight. That’s where we see the role of insurance.”

Ernst & Young: How can responsible AI bridge the gap between investment and impact?

Almost every company in our survey (99%) reported financial losses from AI- related risks, and 64% experienced losses exceeding US$1 million. On average, the financial loss to companies that have experienced risks is conservatively estimated at US$4.4 million.1 That’s an estimated total loss of US$4.3 billion across the 975 respondents in our sample.

And now traditional insurers stepping back: Major Insurers Want Out of AI Coverage as 'Black Box' Risk Grows:

The industry has good reason to be spooked. Google's AI Overview falsely accused a solar company of legal troubles earlier this year, triggering a $110 million lawsuit. Air Canada got stuck honoring a discount its chatbot completely invented after a customer took the airline to small claims court. Most dramatically, fraudsters used a digitally cloned executive to steal $25 million from London engineering firm Arup during what appeared to be a legitimate video conference.

Live and let Dye Dan Lyke / comment 0

Wow, the Alan Dye hatred is big on the inkernets: Spyglass: Live and Let Dye (Via)

Saturday December 6th, 2025

That this is the sole suggested Dan Lyke / comment 0

That this is the sole suggested reaction pic, that shows up when I think I'm trying to send a photo, says something about Android messages.

(And if I could totally turn off reaction pics, I would, because I do not want to send this message by accident.)

Your regular reminder that businesses Dan Lyke / comment 0

Your regular reminder that businesses run loyalty programs because they make more money with them, consumers use loyalty programs because they're willing to trade privacy for being made more money from.

So privacy has negative market value.


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for the web publications at www.flutterby.com and www.flutterby.net. Last modified: Thu Mar 15 12:48:17 PST 2001