No mist without fire?

I know, it looks like smoke, but it’s really an early morning mist.
Quote of the Day
”I always want to say to people who want to be rich and famous: ‘Try being rich first.’ See if that doesn’t cover most of it. There’s not much downside to being rich, other than paying taxes and having your relatives ask you for money. But when you become famous, you end up with a 24-hour job. . . . The only good thing about fame is that I’ve gotten out of a couple of speeding tickets. I’ve gotten into a restaurant when I didn’t have a suit and tie on. That’s really about it.”
- Bill Murray
Many years ago, when I was the Observer’s TV critic, I turned down a big TV job because I didn’t want to be recognised in the street. Best decision I ever made.
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Rufus & Martha Wainwright | Sweet Thames, flow softly
Long Read of the Day
How Brexit Created Britain’s New Political Tribes
As we approach the tenth anniversary of the Brexit referendum, this is a really insightful essay by James Tilley, who teaches Politics at Oxford, about the new book he’s written with Sara Hobolt: Tribal Politics: How Brexit Divided Britain, which is based on survey research indicating that Britain is as polarised as the US.
We find that Remainers and Leavers were consistently a lot more attached to their identity than were Conservative or Labour supporters. And those scores have been very stable over the last ten years. People like people like them. And they define ‘like them’ in terms of their Brexit tribe. All our measures also show that people not only disagree with, but really dislike, people on the other side and typically say that they have a ‘cold or unfavourable feeling’ towards their rival group. Again, this has barely changed since 2016.
Third, people engage in the same sort of motivated reasoning that we see for party identities. At the most basic level, any group identity that is strongly held will provide motivations to think that the other side is inferior and should be avoided. As our data shows, huge majorities say that their own Brexit group is intelligent, honest and selfless, while the other side is stupid, dishonest and selfish. In fact, when we asked people to describe the other side in their own words, a quarter simply listed bad things and another quarter did that in addition to other information (to give you a flavour, one of the pithiest responses was simply ‘selfish dicks’). However we measure it, we find widespread prejudice. And we also find lots of evidence of discrimination: people actively wanted to avoid everyday interactions with people on the rival team…
This is an interesting read for those of us who fondly imagine that the US has a monopoly on polarisation. It also helps to explain why the traditional UK political parties are losing their grip on — not to mention attractiveness to — voters.
Anthropic’s Mythos AI heralds a new era of cybersecurity warfare
My most recent Observer column:
Mythos, says Collins dictionary, is “the complex of beliefs, values, attitudes, etc, characteristic of a specific group or society”. It is also the name Dario Amodei’s Anthropic has given to its latest AI model – officially Claude Mythos Preview – which has arrived as a bombshell, and whose reverberations we will soon begin to notice.
How come? It turns out that Mythos, which is a general-purpose large language model (LLM), is also a world-class hacker. Or, to put it less luridly, it is striking for its ability to discover security vulnerabilities in networked systems and exploit them. Anthropic said that it has already found thousands of high-severity vulnerabilities, including some “in every major operating system and web browser”. It added: “Given the rate of AI progress, it will not be long before such capabilities proliferate, potentially beyond actors who are committed to deploying them safely.” It also said: “AI have reached a level of coding capability where they can surpass all but the most skilled humans at finding and exploiting software vulnerabilities.”
Discovery of this capability persuaded Anthropic that it would be unsafe to launch Mythos on an unsuspecting world. Accordingly, the company decided on Project Glasswing; the codename for making the model available only to a number of large – and presumably trusted – corporate bodies…
pdf version: Anthropic’s Mythos AI heralds a new era of cybersecurity …
Linkblog
Something I noticed, while drinking from the Internet firehose.
- Making a typeface with potatoes
A group of typeface designers decided to have a go.
Type design is mostly precisely drawing vector curves, printing proofs and judge the grey value with a minus lens. But it can also be a group of friends coming together to have an experimental typographic evening. We had the idea to make a Bodoni interpretation with potato stamps, so we bought 8kg of potatoes, some knifes and carved a long, long evening in the kitchen. When we finally had the full alphabet we stamped it on paper, made a font out of this and called it Bodedo.

Screenshot
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Seen on a street in Brighton in March 2012.




