England’s Green and Pleasant Land

Impending showers included.
Quote of the Day
”If you think education is expensive, try ignorance.”
- Derek Bok (President of Harvard 1971-91)
Musical alternative to the morning’s radio news
Eric Whitacre | Sleep | Voces8
Hypnotically beautiful. Like a lullaby for a peaceful death
Long Read of the Day
The independent writer’s advantage in the age of AI
Lovely essay by Jasmine Sun on why secrets, live presence, and a distinct voice matter more than ever in an AI-saturated world, and what independent creators need to build careers that machines can’t replace.
Here’s how it opens.
When economists debate the future of work, they often ask the question: what will humans’ comparative advantage be? I think the key to understanding what the future of work looks like is not, How can humans race against the machine, how can we generate slop faster than the machines can generate slop? but rather, What are the human strengths, and how can we understand what skills are going to go down in value now that AI has made them commoditized, versus what skills are going to go up in value because they are still scarce and because the machines simply aren’t very good at them yet? I’m going to introduce four ideas, or provocations, that have shaped the way that I think about AI and my own media career.
One: The value of summary will go down, and the value of secrets will go up.
Reporting is the act of taking private knowledge and making it public. The things that people have not said, things in whisper networks, the tacit knowledge, the open secrets that have never been put in the public domain—the journalist manages to pluck them out and make them public. When you persuade a source to tell you about some corporate malfeasance, or you venture to a remote town that few people have ever written about, or you sneak your way into a tiny underground party and talk about all the people who are there, you are working in a space where there is no training data.
That is what is really valuable. There’s a reason that robotic startups are paying thousands of people to strap little cameras to their heads so that they can fold T-shirts all day and try to take in the world from a human point of view. There’s a reason that data companies like Mercor are paying Redditors $100 an hour to write up their niche hobbies and explain the intricacies of being a knitter, or playing Magic the Gathering. There are all these details and tacit knowledge that you only know by doing, that AI hasn’t had access to yet because it’s just not in the data. AI can summarize, and it can remix information already out there, but it can’t see stuff. It can’t feel stuff. It can’t break news. And the thing that writers can uniquely do is all of that. You can go out into the world, and you can take that knowledge and you can make that public or you can sell it, and that is something that is really valuable…
Read on. It’s good and, in a way, encouraging.
Linkblog
Something I noticed, while drinking from the Internet firehose.
US Developers Revive Wild Plan for Nuclear-Powered Floating ‘City Ship’ for 80,000 People Circling the Globe

Screenshot
Plans for the Freedom Ship, a vast floating city concept designed to carry up to 80,000 people while continuously travelling the globe, are being revived once again, re-entering debate around the feasibility of ultra-large maritime living projects and the regulatory questions they raise.
Originally conceived decades ago, the project has long existed more as an engineering vision than a deliverable construction scheme. Its latest iteration again highlights the tension between technological ambition, commercial viability, and international governance challenges at sea.
Apparently it will be a mile long and too big to dock anywhere. I think it should be called the SS Peter Thiel, because he was an early advocate of ‘seasteading’. And if you are beginning to think that humanity is losing the plot, then join the club!
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