Francisco Escobedo

@FranciscoEscobedo@infosec.exchange
33 Followers
114 Following
1.5K Posts
Tea addict. InfoSec professional. Amateur photographer. Life apprentice.
A new Martian climate model suggest a mostly cold, harsh environment
A model built using data from the Curiosity rover suggests wet periods were rare.
https://arstechnica.com/science/2025/07/a-new-martian-climate-model-suggest-a-mostly-cold-harsh-environment/?utm_brand=arstechnica&utm_social-type=owned&utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=social
como estamos en nuestro Superman moment, dejamos aquí uno de los mejores retratos que se ha hecho jamás del fascismo en los cómics, de su pulsión de muerte y de cuál es la actitud para hacerle frente
I think about this a lot.

Something I’ve been thinking about a lot in the current battle over the future of (pseudo) AI is the cotton gin.

I live in a country where industrial progress is always considered a positive. It’s such a fundamental concept to the American exceptionalism claim that we are taught never to question it, let alone realize that it’s propaganda.

One such myth, taught early in grade school, is the story of Eli Whitney and the cotton gin. Here was a classic example of a labor-saving device that made millions of lives better. No more overworked people hand cleaning the cotton (slaves, though that was only mentioned much later, if at all). Better clothes and bedding for the world. Capitalism at its best.

But that’s only half the story of this great industrial time saver. Where did those cotton cleaners go? And what was the impact of speeding up the process?

Now that the cleaning bottleneck was gone, the focus was on picking cotton as fast as possible. Those cotton cleaners likely, and millions of other slaves definitely, were sent to the fields to pick cotton. There was an unprecedented explosion in the slave trade. Industrial time management and optimization methods were applied to human beings using elaborate rule-based systems written up in books. How hard to punish to get optimal productivity. How long their lifespans needed to be to get the lost production per dollar. Those techniques, practiced on the backs and lives of slaves, became the basis of how to run the industrial mills in the North. They are the ancestors of the techniques that your manager uses now to improve productivity.

Millions of people were sold into slavery and worked to death *because* of the cotton gin. The advance it provided did not, in fact save labor overall. Nor did it make life better overall. It made a very small set of people much much richer; especially the investors around the world who funded the banks who funded the slave purchases. It made a larger set of consumers more comfortable at the cost of the lives of those poorer. Over a hundred years later this model is still the basis for our society.

Modern “AI” is a cotton gin. It makes a lot of painstaking things much easier and available to everyone. Writing, reading, drawing, summarizing, reviewing medical cases, hiring, firing, tracking productivity, driving, identifying people in a lineup…they all can now be done automatically. Put aside whether it’s actually capable of doing any of those things *well*; the investors don’t care if their products are good, they only care if they can make more money off of them. So long as they work enough to sell, the errors, and the human cost of those errors, are irrelevant. And like the cotton gin, AI has other side effects. When those jobs are gone, are the new jobs better? Or are we all working that much harder, with even more negative consequences to our life if we fall off the treadmill? One more fear to keep us “productive”.

The Luddites learned this lesson the hard way, and history demonizes them for it; because history isn’t written by the losers.

They’ve wrapped “AI” with a shiny ribbon to make it fun and appealing to the masses. How could something so fun to play with be dangerous? But like the story we are told about the cotton gin, the true costs are hidden.

#ML #TESCREAL

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Snaps Closest-Ever Images to Sun

Newly released images - taken closer to the Sun than we’ve ever been before - are helping scientists better understand the Sun’s influence across the solar system, including events that can affect Earth.

https://science.nasa.gov/science-research/heliophysics/nasas-parker-solar-probe-snaps-closest-ever-images-to-sun/

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This whole 🐰in bunnies🐰 thing is tickling me so much that I had to make a meme for it.

#InBunnies #Memes

Kit Bashir (@Unixbigot@aus.social)

We thought the elder races were gone; extinct or transcended or estivating inside black holes until the frigid far future when their mainframes will run cooler. You’d be forgiven for overlooking that they ever existed except for the occasional hollowed-out asteroid, certain isotope imbalances in planetary crusts. And the wormhole network, of course. Not gone, it turns out. Just, ah, 🐰semi-retired🐰. Not sure what we did to cheese them off, but now that they’ve implemented age-verification at the transit gates I’ve gotta solve this puzzle or walk home from Fomalhaut C. What have you got for thirteen across? #Tootfic #MicroFiction #PowerOnStoryToot

Aus.Social
@alice You are a hero for changing our language and a villain for twisting our minds. <3
@alice behold as I use Guild Wars 2 to cause real chaos.
@rootwyrm it's an eldritch fennec fox fire sprit 💁🏼‍♀️
@alice 🤷
Or is it a fucking bnuuy?
Nobody knows!
@alice to anyone who did not hear this in Dr Evils voice, you did but you're just denying it
@alice “Mini Me, stop humping the laser!”
“Gonna vom… I need a young priest and an old priest… The power of Christ compels you!”
@alice If it was 🐰 a thing🐰 then doesn't that mean it was already a meme?
@Infrapink I'd never heard the term #InBunnies until like a day or two ago.

@alice Oh, I thought it was something I'd missed but the rest of the Ineternet knew about.

HomerBackingIntoAHedge.gif

@alice taken me a long while but, on maybe the 5 viewing, I have finally understood it. 😂