Brutkey

Ketan Joshi
@ketanjoshi.co@bsky.brid.gy
a picture of a red bus with seats on either side and no driver's compartment inside a museum com.atproto.sync.getBlob.jpg POWERFUL BRAKING sign - with images of people and even a cute dog being jerked around com.atproto.sync.getBlob.jpg View Jürgen Geuter’s  graphic link
Jürgen GeuterJürgen Geuter
   • 2ndVerified • 2nd
Research Director @ART+COM | Independent writer/theorist | Keynote Speaker | AI-Deinfluencer | #LudditeResearch Director @ART+COM | Independent writer/theorist | Keynote Speaker | AI-Deinfluencer | #Luddite
22h •  22 hours ago • Visible to anyone on or off LinkedIn

Follow
Very few narratives piss me off as much as the whole "let's give marginalised people LLM assistants for inclusion". 

Inclusion does not mean giving marginalised people shittier versions of a thing: Sure you can give kids from poorer backgrounds an LLM to "learn" but what you are saying is that poor people are not worth having trustworthy sources of information. When you say that older or lonely people can talk to chatbots to feel less alone you are saying that some people are not worth a social life. 

This is a deeply inhumane perspective that goes actively against the ideas and ideals of inclusion.
likesupportcelebrate
186
You and 185 others
com.atproto.sync.getBlob.jpg Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows
Energy groups are refocusing on exploration in anticipation of the world remaining hooked on fossil fuels for decades
Oil pumping jacks in an oil field at sunset in Russia
Wood Mackenzie estimates a slower green transition could leave the world needing about 5% more oil per year than previously forecast from the mid-2030s © Bloomberg Creative
Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows on x (opens in a new window)
Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows on facebook (opens in a new window)
Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows on linkedin (opens in a new window)

Save
current progress 65%
Malcolm Moore in London and Jamie Smyth in New York
Published15 minutes ago
0
Print this page
Stay informed with free updates
Simply sign up to the Oil & Gas industry myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your inbox.
The world’s leading oil companies are stepping up their hunt for new oil and gas reserves, as a slower than expected transition to clean energy sets the stage for stronger fossil fuel demand for decades to come.
Executives from BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell and TotalEnergies all used recent earnings calls to highlight how they have begun refocusing on securing new reserves after years of prioritising renewables.
Expectations for a rapid energy transition have moderated in recent years, as elevated inflation and interest rates raised costs and slowed development of renewables.
Geopolitical instability has led governments to prioritise energy security over decarbonisation. US President Donald Trump has directed oil and gas producers to “drill, baby, drill”.
Wood Mackenzie estimates a slower transition could leave the world needing about 5 per cent more oil per year than previously forecast from the mid-2030s. The energy consultancy forecasts that the world will require more than 100bn extra barrels of oil and gas from ex… com.atproto.sync.getBlob.jpg Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows
Energy groups are refocusing on exploration in anticipation of the world remaining hooked on fossil fuels for decades
Oil pumping jacks in an oil field at sunset in Russia
Wood Mackenzie estimates a slower green transition could leave the world needing about 5% more oil per year than previously forecast from the mid-2030s © Bloomberg Creative
Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows on x (opens in a new window)
Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows on facebook (opens in a new window)
Big Oil heeds call to ‘drill, baby, drill’ as green transition slows on linkedin (opens in a new window)

Save
current progress 65%
Malcolm Moore in London and Jamie Smyth in New York
Published15 minutes ago
0
Print this page
Stay informed with free updates
Simply sign up to the Oil & Gas industry myFT Digest -- delivered directly to your inbox.
The world’s leading oil companies are stepping up their hunt for new oil and gas reserves, as a slower than expected transition to clean energy sets the stage for stronger fossil fuel demand for decades to come.
Executives from BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell and TotalEnergies all used recent earnings calls to highlight how they have begun refocusing on securing new reserves after years of prioritising renewables.
Expectations for a rapid energy transition have moderated in recent years, as elevated inflation and interest rates raised costs and slowed development of renewables.
Geopolitical instability has led governments to prioritise energy security over decarbonisation. US President Donald Trump has directed oil and gas producers to “drill, baby, drill”.
Wood Mackenzie estimates a slower transition could leave the world needing about 5 per cent more oil per year than previously forecast from the mid-2030s. The energy consultancy forecasts that the world will require more than 100bn extra barrels of oil and gas from ex… com.atproto.sync.getBlob.jpg AI search engines cite incorrect news sources at an alarming 60% rate, study says
CJR study shows AI search services misinform users and ignore publisher exclusion requests.

Benj Edwards – Mar 13, 2025 10:16 PM |  140
A dartboard with only a few darts hitting it, with many misses beside it.
Credit: Wong Yu Liang via Getty Images

A new study from Columbia Journalism Review's Tow Center for Digital Journalism finds serious accuracy issues with generative AI models used for news searches. The researchers tested eight AI-driven search tools by providing direct excerpts from real news articles and asking the models to identify each article's original headline, publisher, publication date, and URL. They discovered that the AI models incorrectly cited sources in more than 60 percent of these queries, raising significant concerns about their reliability in correctly attributing news content. com.atproto.sync.getBlob.jpg