人工智能行业正向美国选举投入数百万美元。
The AI industry is pouring millions into US elections

原始链接: https://www.bloodinthemachine.com/p/the-ai-industry-is-pouring-hundreds

《Blood in the Machine》的播客和视频系列已正式上线。为了回应读者的热切期待,该节目旨在通过聚焦针对大型科技公司、人工智能及科技寡头的日益增长的抵制力量,为当前主流科技新闻提供一种反向叙事。 该项目重点呈现了工人、活动人士和记者的声音,探讨他们如何应对人工智能对社会产生的影响。首期节目邀请了莫莉·怀特(Molly White),她分享了自己的“科技影响力观察”(Tech Influence Watch)项目,并探讨了人工智能和加密货币公司如何投入数百万美元用于政治竞选,以左右当前的选举周期。 该项目由制作人瑞安·霍兹(Ryan Hodes)和顾问凯特·奥斯本(Kate Osborn)合作完成。目前节目处于试验性的“软启动”阶段,将以播客和视频两种形式呈现,以触达更广泛的受众。作者强调,这一新尝试是对现有文字通讯的补充而非替代。作为一个独立项目,该节目的持续运营依赖于付费订阅者的支持。团队欢迎广大听众提供反馈,以便不断改进节目形式。

Hacker News 最新 | 过往 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 招聘 | 投稿 登录 AI 行业正向美国大选投入数百万美元 (bloodinthemachine.com) 15 点 由 speckx 发布于 30 分钟前 | 隐藏 | 过往 | 收藏 | 2 条评论 | 帮助 guywithahat 0 分钟前 | 下一条 [–] 我的意思是,这些公司中许多每家的营收都达数百亿美元,而它们所在的大本营州却对它们的存在越来越不友好。话虽如此,这篇文章没有分享任何数据,所以我不知道它们影响的范围或规模有多大。 回复 ausbah 9 分钟前 | 上一条 [–] “AI 智能体也拥有投票权”还要多久才能成为现实? 回复 指南 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请 YC | 联系 搜索:
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原文

Well I’ve finally done it. I’ve been threatening to start a regular audio enterprise here at Blood in the Machine Inc for quite some time, and now it’s officially happening. In the player above, embedded in the video below, and populating that long-dormant BITM podcast feed is what’s essentially a pilot for a Blood in the Machine show. The topic for this inaugural episode is a timely one: How the AI industry is spending hundreds of millions of dollars to sway outcomes this election cycle.

Last year, I recorded a few video interviews with folks like Karen Hao, Jacob Silverman, and Cory Doctorow, and enjoyed all of them. I kept intending to expand that facet of the newsletter, but it turns out starting a show is hard, and requires a lot of preparation, persistence, and help. I really became convinced it was worth trying for a couple reasons: First, the top ask I get from readers and folks I meet at events and so forth is, hands down, for an audio component to the newsletter. Where’s the podcast? etc. Well, here it is! This is for you.

Second, there’s just so much happening in the world BITM covers. So many people are organizing, resisting, and pushing back against the concentrating power of big tech and the AI industry. Exposing and interrogating its excesses. I personally have wanted a show that reflects how expansive and momentous this tendency is; that delivers a digest of regular updates on this wildly growing opposition to AI, Silicon Valley, and the tech oligarchy; a show that puts voices of workers, activists, journalists behind the mic.

Every week now, after all, people are protesting data centers that AI companies want to build in their backyards. They’re organizing workers in Silicon Valley, resisting AI’s encroachment into schools and the office, reclaiming public life from total social media saturation. This is the time of the Summer of Ludd, of the open booing of AI at college graduations. I’m hoping this show will help vividly document these movements and the people behind them. There are approximately one billion podcasts that highlight tech stories from a business perspective, and that host tech executives, AI advocates, and startup founders. This show is for everyone else; the folks in their crosshairs.

Our first guest is Molly White, a technologist, journalist, and writer of the great Citation Needed newsletter. We discuss the ballooning influence of AI and crypto money in politics, and her new project: Tech Influence Watch. It’s an ongoing effort to keep tabs on the hundreds of millions of dollars being spent by AI and crypto companies to sway our elections.

I mentioned that this show wouldn’t have happened without help; here’s a shout to everyone who has worked to get this thing off the ground. Ryan Hodes is the show’s producer; he’s the brains behind the critical tech YouTube show The Stories We Tell, and now he’ll be behind the boards at Blood in the Machine, too. Kate Osborn is our chief consultant and has whipped this thing into shape. Koren Shadmi did the killer cover art. Salman Al-Rashid’s support has made the production possible. The theme music is composed by me, with bass guitar from Ryan Hall, and audio engineering by Josh Gildardo Quintero at Metronome.

This is all something of a work in progress. A soft launch, if you will. We’re still experimenting with the approach and the format, so do let me know what you think in the comments, via email, etc. And yes, it’s video, too, something that I resisted even considering for a long time. But I was ultimately convinced—by Ryan, Kate, by my wife, who’s a media studies professor, and by readers—that video is simply where audiences live now. If you want to reach the most people, video it is. I was further consoled by Ryan’s bangup production job, and the way the format allows us to incorporate media elements like clips from data center protestors at town hall meetings, anti-AI campaigns from artists, and so on. It will of course live as a podcast, too, but I don’t know, maybe I’m coming around to the video thing. Maybe.

Note that the written edition isn’t going anywhere; the podcast is if anything meant to build off of it. There’s no separate written edition this week because my time and energy was sapped by prepping the launch of this pilot here.

I’ll end by adding that if any or all of this sounds interesting to you, if you like the sound of where the show is heading, please do consider becoming a paid supporter of BITM. This is an entirely independent project, and I can only do any of this thanks to the support of readers—of those subscribers that chip in a small sum each month. (Thank you, thank you.) If you find value here, think about joining their ranks, and support critical tech journalism.

Okay, that should about cover the bases. Look forward to hearing everyone’s thoughts here. Hammers up.

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