It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
It's National Poetry Month! Submit your poetry and we'll publish it here on Read Write.as.
from
Rippple's Blog

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from
Micropoemas
Porque cualquier punto en el espacio es luz, une; recuerda sin atrapar. Más allá de la memoria, sin nacer ni morir.
from
Turbulences
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝐹𝑎𝑐𝑒 𝑎̀ 𝑙’𝑖𝑛𝑗𝑜𝑛𝑐𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 𝑑’𝑎𝑔𝑖𝑟, 𝐽𝑒 𝑣𝑜𝑢𝑠 𝑖𝑛𝑣𝑖𝑡𝑒 𝑎̀ 𝑟𝑒́𝑠𝑖𝑠𝑡𝑒𝑟.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑟, 𝑐𝑒 𝑛’𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑝𝑎𝑠 𝑓𝑢𝑖𝑟, 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑟, 𝑐𝑒 𝑛’𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑝𝑎𝑠 𝑠’𝑒́𝑣𝑎𝑑𝑒𝑟.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑟, 𝑐’𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑙𝑎𝑖𝑠𝑠𝑒𝑟 𝑙𝑎 𝑣𝑖𝑒 𝑠𝑢𝑟𝑔𝑖𝑟, 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑟, 𝑐’𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑎𝑣𝑎𝑛𝑡 𝑡𝑜𝑢𝑡 𝑠𝑒𝑚𝑒𝑟.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝑃𝑜𝑢𝑟 𝑑𝑜𝑛𝑛𝑒𝑟 𝑠𝑎 𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑐𝑒 𝑎̀ 𝑙’𝑎𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑖𝑟, 𝐸𝑡 𝑛𝑒 𝑝𝑎𝑠 𝑙𝑒 𝑠𝑢𝑏𝑖𝑟, 𝑚𝑎𝑖𝑠 𝑙’𝑖𝑛𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑡𝑒𝑟.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝑄𝑢𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑝𝑟𝑒𝑠𝑞𝑢𝑒 𝑡𝑜𝑢𝑡 𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑡𝑟𝑜̂𝑙𝑒́, 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑟 𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑙’𝑢𝑙𝑡𝑖𝑚𝑒 𝑎𝑐𝑡𝑒 𝑑𝑒 𝑙𝑖𝑏𝑒𝑟𝑡𝑒́.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝑄𝑢𝑎𝑛𝑑 𝑡𝑜𝑢𝑡 𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑚𝑎𝑟𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑑𝑖𝑠𝑒́, 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑟 𝑟𝑒𝑠𝑡𝑒𝑟𝑎 𝑔𝑟𝑎𝑡𝑢𝑖𝑡, 𝑎̀ 𝑗𝑎𝑚𝑎𝑖𝑠.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝐶𝑒 𝑞𝑢𝑖 𝑠𝑒́𝑝𝑎𝑟𝑒 𝑙𝑒 𝑚𝑒𝑖𝑙𝑙𝑒𝑢𝑟 𝑑𝑢 𝑝𝑖𝑟𝑒, 𝐶’𝑒𝑠𝑡 𝑝𝑎𝑟𝑓𝑜𝑖𝑠 𝑗𝑢𝑠𝑡𝑒 𝑑’𝑎𝑣𝑜𝑖𝑟 𝑟𝑒𝑛𝑜𝑛𝑐𝑒́.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝐶𝑎𝑟 𝑟𝑖𝑒𝑛 𝑑𝑒 𝑏𝑒𝑎𝑢 𝑛𝑒 𝑝𝑒𝑢𝑡 𝑎𝑑𝑣𝑒𝑛𝑖𝑟, 𝑆’𝑖𝑙 𝑛’𝑎 𝑑’𝑎𝑏𝑜𝑟𝑑 𝑒́𝑡𝑒́ 𝑟𝑒̂𝑣𝑒́.
𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 ! 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 𝑝𝑜𝑢𝑟 𝑟𝑒𝑠𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑠𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖𝑏𝑙𝑒, 𝑅𝑒̂𝑣𝑒𝑧 𝑝𝑜𝑢𝑟 𝑟𝑒𝑛𝑑𝑟𝑒 𝑝𝑜𝑠𝑠𝑖𝑏𝑙𝑒.

from folgepaula
ASTROLOGUESSING
/Apr26
from 下川友
安いゴムで、下にストンと落ちるパンツって何ていうんだろう、と思いながらネットを探したが、なかなか見つからない。 意外に見つからないと思っていたら、イージーフレアパンツという名前で、レディースのジャンルに1,000円くらいで売られていた。 レディースの市場の速さは、思っているより何倍もメンズより上らしい。
もうとっくにIT系の人が、毎日同じような簡易的な服を一色で着続けるスタイルに、最近は少し退屈さを感じているのではないかと思う。 今は泥臭く、毎日服を変えるフェーズなんじゃないかと、勝手に思っている。 おじさんが少し変わった服で個性を出す時代が、そろそろ来るんじゃないかとも思う。だから最近は、派手にお金を使わない範囲で服にこだわることが大事だと感じている。
喫茶店にも、好きな服を着ていく。 場所と服と食事が、自分を分かりやすく豊かにする。 喫茶店なんて、特別にやることがあるわけでもないからこそ、自分の思考がうっすらと浮かび上がり、ぼんやりとした精神性のようなものが前に出てくる。
しかし、場所と服と食事によって自分を満たすことは、自分にとってどれほどの難易度なのか、という話でもある。
安い服の中から良いものを選ぶ。 これはちょうどいい難易度だと思う。 それは若い人の趣味ではないか、と自分にツッコミを入れるが、まあ自分が気に入っているならいいんじゃないかとも思う。 他人はそこまで気づかないことだし、そもそも、おしゃれだ、と認知されてしまうほど派手な服を着る趣味もない。
そして、この趣味の良いところは、毎日続ける必要がないことだ。 たまにおしゃれをするくらいであれば、次の日のチープな服も、それはそれで自分になる。
では何が難しいのかといえば、結局はそれを楽しむ精神性の問題になる。 普段の仕事をこなしながら、その余裕を保ち続けること。 つまり、顔も服も、その場所も、すべて内面を映している。
昔は、顔つきがすべてを表すと思っていた。 顔が精神を映すなら、服や場所は選ばなくてもいいんじゃないか、と。 でも実際には、物理的なものが内面に影響し、現実そのものを少しずつ変えていくのではないかと思う。
服や場所を選べるということは、自分の世界を絵の具のように物理的に塗れる領域が増えている、ということなんじゃないか。 もっと塗りたい。その先に他人はいるだろうか。 他人を塗ることはできるのだろうか。 それとも、他人に触れすぎない距離感が一番美しいのだろうか。
このあたりは結局、時間が解決する。 やりたいことを今やっていれば、自然にすべては進んでいく。 だから、辛いときも楽しいときも、同じスピードで暮らしていくしかない。
from ‡
I feel things in full color while the world around me lives in grayscale and calls it peace.
Maybe I'm not broken| Maybe I just love the way I was always meant to open, loud, unashamed, even when no one claps at it.
I am learning to hold my own hand while walking toward someone who might never walk toward me.
And that's not pathetic. That's practice. That's the quiet work of becoming someone I don't need to apologize for.
from Mitchell Report
⚠️ SPOILER WARNING: MILD SPOILERS

My Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐ (4/5 stars)
Highly, highly unbelievable yet very entertaining. Great cast. If you want to kill about two hours and are after a fun, fast-paced movie, this delivers. It’s not profound, but it does exactly what it sets out to do, entertain.
#review #movies
from
SmarterArticles

On 27 February 2026, the United States government declared war on one of its most politically peculiar citizens: an AI company founded by people who had left OpenAI because they thought AI was too dangerous, now blacklisted by a Republican administration because they thought AI was too dangerous. Within hours, Pete Hegseth and Donald Trump took to social media to accuse Anthropic of endangering national security. Federal agencies were ordered to stop using Claude. The Pentagon began the paperwork to brand the company a “supply chain risk to national security,” a designation normally reserved for firms with ties to adversary states. Dario Amodei, in an internal memo reported by The Information, told staff the President disliked Anthropic for failing to offer “dictator-style praise.” Trump called the company “radical left” and “woke.” It was, in its peculiar way, the most clarifying moment American AI governance has had in a decade.
On 26 March, Judge Rita Lin of the Northern District of California issued a preliminary injunction blocking the ban. Her language was unusually sharp for a federal district opinion. “Punishing Anthropic for bringing public scrutiny to the government's contracting position is classic illegal First Amendment retaliation,” she wrote, adding that “nothing in the governing statute supports the Orwellian notion that an American company may be branded a potential adversary and saboteur of the U.S. for expressing disagreement with the government.” The administration appealed within a week. As of today, 9 April 2026, the dispute is live, unresolved, and legally unprecedented.
It is tempting to read all of this as political melodrama, one more instalment in the Trump administration's habit of punishing companies that talk back. That reading is not wrong. It is just radically insufficient. What the Anthropic fight has exposed is not a Trump problem, or an Anthropic problem, or even an AI-safety-versus-national-security problem. It is something stranger: the firms building the most consequential computational systems of our era are simultaneously the dominant voices shaping how those systems will be governed, and the public clash between one of those firms and the White House has revealed just how few independent levers anyone else has.
A commentary published in early April in the policy trade press put it this way: the dispute reveals something structurally troubling, because it shows that the only place serious arguments about frontier AI are happening at all is inside the rooms of the companies that build it. Take the companies away and the rooms are empty. That is regulatory capture of a sort, but a kind the literature has never quite described. It is capture that formed before effective regulation existed to be captured. The frontier labs did not corrupt a mature regulatory apparatus. They grew up in a vacuum and then offered, helpfully, to fill it themselves.
Stripped of its political theatre, the Anthropic fight is a contract dispute. The Department of Defence wanted access to Claude for “all lawful purposes,” a formulation broad enough to encompass fully autonomous lethal targeting, mass surveillance of US persons, and any other application a creative procurement officer might dream up. Anthropic, whose usage policy explicitly prohibits those applications, refused. The company offered workable alternatives: access for non-weaponised use cases, compartmentalised deployments with documented guardrails, joint review of edge cases. The Pentagon's position hardened. Anthropic went public. The administration retaliated. A federal judge found the retaliation probably illegal. The appeal is ongoing.
What makes the dispute so destabilising for the governance conversation is that Anthropic is not behaving as the capture literature would predict. The canonical story assumes that the regulated industry quietly lobbies for weaker rules, funds sympathetic experts, and ends up with a regulatory environment that looks stringent on paper and is toothless in practice. Anthropic is doing something almost the opposite. It is publicly advocating for stricter chip export controls that antagonise Nvidia, Microsoft, and much of the rest of the industry. It has argued for pre-deployment evaluation regimes that would bind it as tightly as its competitors. It has, at real commercial cost, walked away from contracts the Pentagon desperately wanted signed.
And yet the capture problem has not gone away. It has become harder to see. Because even when the “good” frontier lab fights the administration in court over model use policies, the underlying structural condition is unchanged: Anthropic is still the entity telling the public how dangerous its own models are. Anthropic is still defining what an acceptable evaluation methodology looks like. Anthropic is still running the red teams that decide which capabilities deserve disclosure. Anthropic is still writing the blog posts the policy community quotes back to itself. The dispute is not a case of capture failing. It is a case of capture succeeding so thoroughly that the public conversation happens entirely within the conceptual vocabulary set by the labs themselves.
Regulatory capture, as the economists George Stigler and Sam Peltzman formalised it in the 1970s, is a corruption of maturity. It happens after a regulator exists, after rules are written, after a bureaucratic routine sets in and the small, concentrated, informed industry learns how to extract rents from the large, diffuse, ignorant public. The paradigmatic examples are the Interstate Commerce Commission and the railroads, the Civil Aeronautics Board and the airlines, the state liquor boards and the wholesalers. These are stories of drift. Institutions designed to constrain powerful interests began to serve them, because the powerful interests were the only ones who showed up to the meetings.
The AI case is categorically different. There is no mature AI regulator. There is nothing to drift away from. Instead, what the industry has done is populate the pre-regulatory space with its own objects: voluntary commitments, self-administered evaluation regimes, multi-stakeholder forums, “model cards,” “system cards,” responsible scaling policies, frontier model forums. Each has legitimate merit on its own terms. Taken together, they form a lattice of quasi-governance that occupies the conceptual territory where independent regulation might otherwise live. By the time Congress or a European regulator shows up with the ambition to do something new, the intellectual infrastructure is already in place, and it has been built by the firms being regulated. The regulator is not captured. The regulatory idea is.
Call this capture-in-utero, or pre-regulatory capture, or, more bluntly, capture by design. The mechanism is not lobbying in the traditional sense. It is something closer to epistemic dominance. The labs hold the data, run the experiments, publish the papers, train the graduates, fund the think tanks, convene the conferences, and shape the vocabulary. When a newly arrived policymaker asks what the state of the art on dangerous capability evaluation is, the only answer available is the one the labs have written. There is no counter-literature, because there is no counter-infrastructure to produce it.
The United Kingdom's AI Security Institute is one of the few attempts anywhere in the world to build such counter-infrastructure. It is important, underfunded, and fragile. It is not yet large enough to change the overall picture.
To see the capture dynamic concretely, consider the July 2023 White House voluntary commitments, the document that came to define Biden-era AI governance before the Executive Order did. Seven companies, Amazon, Anthropic, Google, Inflection, Meta, Microsoft, and OpenAI, signed up to eight principles covering security, safety, and public trust. Eight more signed on in September. Apple joined in July 2024. For two years, the voluntary commitments have been the closest thing the United States has had to a national AI policy, cited in speeches, referenced in the Executive Order, and treated in the press as a kind of proto-statute.
An academic study published in 2025 attempted, probably for the first time, to evaluate how well the signatories had actually performed against their own commitments. The results were bleak. The average score across all companies was 53 per cent. The highest scorer, OpenAI, managed 83 per cent. On the commitment most relevant to catastrophic risk, model weight security, the average was 17 per cent. Eleven of the sixteen companies scored zero. Nobody had been penalised, because there were no penalties. Nobody had been publicly shamed, because the only people qualified to evaluate compliance were the companies themselves or the small network of nonprofits they funded. The commitments functioned as a legitimising device: a way for the industry to say governance was happening, and for the administration to say governance was happening, while almost nothing resembling governance was actually happening.
The Frontier Model Forum, founded by Anthropic, Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI the same summer, performed a similar legitimising role. It produced whitepapers on responsible scaling. It issued definitional statements about frontier models. It convened working groups. Its existence has been taken as evidence of self-regulation. And it may well be. But it is self-regulation in the most literal sense: regulation of the self, by the self, for the self, with no exit option for anyone who disagrees.
This is not a moral failure on the part of the individuals involved. Most of them, including the ones at Anthropic now fighting the Pentagon in court, are earnest and thoughtful and alarmed in the way safety-focused engineers tend to be alarmed. The problem is structural. When the same small group of organisations sets the agenda, runs the evaluations, writes the papers, convenes the meetings, and authors the voluntary commitments, the resulting governance architecture reflects their view of the world, including the things they cannot see from inside it.
Across town from the White House, the National Institute of Standards and Technology has spent the last three years constructing what it calls the AI Risk Management Framework. The first version was released in January 2023. A generative AI profile followed in 2024. A March 2025 update emphasises model provenance, data integrity, and third-party assessment. Colorado's AI Act now gives organisations a legal affirmative defence if they can demonstrate alignment with the framework. Regulators at the FDA, SEC, and CFPB reference it with increasing frequency. It is, in many ways, the most serious piece of technical policy work the US government has produced on AI.
It is also, by design, voluntary. The framework is a menu of considerations, not a set of binding requirements. It is the product of a lengthy consultation process in which the firms best positioned to influence its development were, inevitably, the firms with the deepest technical staff and the most resources to commit to standards meetings. The resulting document is careful, impressively researched, and structurally unable to compel anyone to do anything. Its value, advocates argue, is that it provides a common vocabulary that future binding rules can rest on. Its critics respond that the vocabulary itself was shaped by the parties being regulated, and that the “future binding rules” slot remains empty.
In June 2025, the Trump administration renamed the US AI Safety Institute the Center for AI Standards and Innovation, or CAISI. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's accompanying statement was unusually blunt: “For far too long, censorship and regulations have been used under the guise of national security. Innovators will no longer be limited by these standards.” The institute kept most of its responsibilities and lost most of its claim to being a regulator-in-waiting. “Safety” was removed from the name. “Innovation” was added. The signal was received.
The rebrand matters because it demonstrates how thin the government's own regulatory identity turned out to be. The institute had been founded in 2023 to give the federal government an independent foothold in AI evaluation. It signed memorandums of understanding with OpenAI and Anthropic that granted formal pre-release model access. It participated in joint evaluations with the UK. When the political winds shifted, it was renamed in a morning, by press release, without legislation, without hearings. An institution that can be erased by a name change was not an institution. It was a vibe.
Behind all of this sits the deepest issue in contemporary AI governance: the people who know how these systems behave are the people who built them. The frontier labs employ the overwhelming majority of researchers qualified to evaluate frontier models. They own the compute required to run meaningful evaluations. They hold the data about how their models respond to inputs at scale. They control the access terms under which external parties can test anything. If a regulator wants to know whether Claude Opus 4 will attempt to exfiltrate its own weights under pressure, the only empirically grounded answer comes from Anthropic's own red team, which ran the tests and wrote the system card.
This is the epistemic monopoly problem, and it is why the usual tools of regulatory design run out of road. An environmental regulator confronting an oil refinery can, in principle, send its own inspectors with their own instruments to measure stack emissions. A pharmaceutical regulator can demand raw trial data and reproduce the analyses. An aviation regulator can order a grounding and inspect every aircraft. These tools work because the underlying phenomena can be observed and measured by parties other than the regulated entity.
Frontier AI systems are harder. The behaviours that matter only emerge at scale, require enormous compute to probe, are sensitive to exact prompting and scaffolding, and change qualitatively from one model generation to the next. An independent evaluator who shows up with last year's tools and last year's concepts will produce last year's findings. Keeping up with the frontier requires being at the frontier. Being at the frontier requires resources only the frontier labs, and a handful of national governments, can marshal.
The UK AI Security Institute, formerly the AI Safety Institute, was founded in November 2023 as the first serious national attempt to build independent evaluation capacity. It has priority access to leading models under negotiated terms. It has recruited strong technical staff from industry and academia. It has published credible evaluations of major releases. It has entered joint work with the US institute and the European Commission. It is the most important institutional innovation in AI governance of the last three years. And it is still, structurally, operating on terms the labs agree to. The access arrangements can be renegotiated. The evaluation regimes depend on lab cooperation for weights and scaffolding. The institute's budget is a rounding error next to the compute expenditure of any frontier lab it evaluates.
If capture-in-utero is going to be broken anywhere, it will probably be broken in places that look like AISI, because no other institutional form is currently on offer. But the gap between what AISI has and what genuinely independent evaluation would require is vast, and closing it would cost money no democratic government has yet shown willingness to spend.
Here is the uncomfortable checklist. If you want an AI regulator that is not structurally dependent on the industry it regulates, you need, at minimum, the following.
First, independent model access. Not memorandums of understanding that can be withdrawn. Not voluntary pre-release previews. Statutory authority to compel access to any model above a defined capability threshold, including access to weights, training data summaries, evaluation logs, and internal red team results, on terms the regulator sets and the company must obey. This is how drug regulation works. It is not how AI regulation works anywhere.
Second, independent compute. A regulator that has to ask a lab for GPU hours is not independent. The UK's AISI has begun to build its own evaluation infrastructure. The US's CAISI, while it existed as AISI, was beginning to do the same. Neither has the compute budget of even a mid-tier training run. Building a genuinely independent evaluation stack at frontier scale would cost billions of pounds or dollars per year, and would have to be refreshed as the frontier moves.
Third, independent red-teaming capacity. Not just the compute to run evaluations, but the human expertise to design them. This means recruiting senior ML researchers at salaries that compete with industry, retaining them, and resisting the gravitational pull of the revolving door. The UK has had modest success. The US has struggled. No country has cracked this at scale.
Fourth, funding models that do not depend on industry fees or voluntary cooperation. A regulator funded by the companies it regulates is, by definition, captured. A regulator funded by general taxation, with budgets insulated from political pressure, is the only durable model. The closest analogues are the UK's Office of Communications or Germany's Bundesnetzagentur, neither perfect but both demonstrating the form.
Fifth, personnel pipelines that do not rotate through frontier labs. This is the hardest, because the labs are also where most relevant tacit knowledge is held. A system in which regulators are recruited from labs, serve a term, and return to labs at higher salaries will, on average, regulate in favour of labs. Partial solutions include lifetime bans on post-regulator employment at regulated entities, public-sector research salaries, and academic programmes designed to produce regulators rather than industry researchers. None of it is currently on offer anywhere.
Sixth, statutory authority that does not depend on industry consent. The current regime is almost entirely built on consent. The voluntary commitments are consensual. The NIST framework is consensual. The frontier model forum is consensual. Even the UK AISI's access to models rests on a cooperation agreement, not a statute. Genuine independence requires the ability to act against the wishes of the regulated party, with consequences the regulated party cannot unilaterally avoid. This is the ordinary meaning of regulation in every other sector. It is the exceptional, almost fantastical prospect in AI.
A regulator with all six of these attributes exists nowhere in the world. A regulator with even three of them, applied to frontier AI, exists nowhere in the world. The question the April commentary implicitly asked is whether the current trajectory is capable of producing such a regulator, or whether the existing trajectory is in fact foreclosing it.
There are three structural reasons to think the current model cannot produce genuinely independent regulation, and all three are visible in the Anthropic fight.
The first is that the language of governance has already been colonised. When the Pentagon demanded access to Claude for “all lawful purposes,” it was using a contract formulation rather than a regulatory one. There is no regulatory statute it could have cited, because none exists. The dispute played out in civil court, under general administrative-law principles, because the alternative regulatory forum did not exist. And when Anthropic responded, it invoked its own usage policy, its own responsible scaling policy, its own alignment commitments, because those are the governance artefacts that exist. Both sides were arguing inside a conceptual space built by the industry.
The second is that the institutional capacity to build an alternative space is being actively dismantled. The CAISI rebrand stripped “safety” from the name of the only federal body that had begun to accumulate independent evaluation credibility. The Trump administration's March 2025 Executive Order on AI emphasised deregulation and industry partnership. The Office of Science and Technology Policy's approach to frontier AI has been to convene rather than constrain. A modest but real build-out of independent regulatory capacity that began in 2023 has, over the past twelve months, been paused or reversed.
The third is that the epistemic monopoly is not dissolving. It is intensifying. As models get larger, the compute required to evaluate them grows. As training regimes get more idiosyncratic, the institutional knowledge required to interpret behaviour grows. As release cycles accelerate, the window for external evaluation shrinks. The gap between what the frontier labs know and what anyone else knows is widening, not narrowing, and a regulatory model that assumes eventual parity is planning for a world moving in the opposite direction.
Put the three together and you get something like this: the governance conversation is in a vocabulary the industry wrote, the institutions that might have translated the conversation into law are being weakened, and the knowledge asymmetry that would make independent translation possible is getting worse.
If the industry-led standards model cannot produce independent regulation, the honest question is what might. There are a handful of real options, and each is politically unpalatable for different reasons.
A public-option lab, funded by general taxation and operated on a non-profit basis with a mandate to produce open evaluations of frontier models, would break the epistemic monopoly at the cost of enormous public expenditure. Think of it as CERN for AI safety. The scientific precedent is sound: hard physics problems were addressed by pooling national resources into institutions too big for any single corporation to build. The political precedent is harder, because the relevant national governments are currently engaged in a race to attract private AI investment, not to compete with it.
An international body with teeth, possibly grafted onto the International Atomic Energy Agency or designed from scratch, would pool regulatory capacity across states that individually cannot afford it. The idea has been floated repeatedly, including by Amodei himself in slightly different form, and runs into the obvious problem that the only state whose participation would be decisive, the United States, is currently hostile to the very premise of international AI governance. China's participation is even more conditional. The UK, the EU, Canada, Japan, and others might form a coalition of the willing, but without US participation it has no authority over the labs, which are US-domiciled.
A pre-deployment licensing regime, in which models above a defined capability threshold cannot be deployed without regulatory approval, would replicate the model used for pharmaceuticals and civil aviation. The EU AI Act gestures at this for “general-purpose AI models with systemic risk,” though the actual technical standards defining those categories are being written, as it happens, by CEN-CENELEC committees heavily populated by industry. A study by scholars at the University of Birmingham published in late 2025 warned that the European standard-setting process is “open to influence by industry players.” A licensing regime that depends on industry-authored standards is not quite capture, but it is not independent regulation either.
Liability reform, which would expose frontier labs to damages for harms their models cause, would create market incentives for safety that do not require a functioning regulator to enforce them. The common-law position is uncertain. Federal pre-emption is being debated. The political economy is delicate, because any liability regime stringent enough to change behaviour would be, from the industry's perspective, indistinguishable from an existential threat. Expect ferocious resistance.
Antitrust as governance, the approach favoured by Lina Khan during her FTC chairship and still championed by some legal scholars, would use competition law to prevent the consolidation of the frontier lab sector into a handful of firms whose scale makes independent evaluation impossible. The theory has merit. The practical obstacle is that the horse has bolted. OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind, Meta AI, and a handful of others already constitute the competitive landscape, and breaking them up would not obviously produce the diversified ecosystem the theory requires.
None of these options is a silver bullet. All would require political will, public expenditure, and institutional courage that no major democracy has yet displayed. And all would have to contend with the argument, which the industry will press at every opportunity, that serious independent regulation risks ceding the frontier to China. That argument is not baseless. It is also the argument that has been used to justify the current regulatory vacuum, which is producing, among other things, the Anthropic fight.
So here is where I land. The Anthropic dispute is not evidence that the system is working. It is not the hopeful story of a responsible company standing up to an authoritarian administration, though it is also that. It is evidence that the structural condition of contemporary AI governance has become untenable: the only serious arguments about frontier AI safety are happening inside, or between, a small number of commercial entities, and the institutional forms that would allow those arguments to be adjudicated by anyone else have been allowed to atrophy or have never been built.
Anthropic is behaving well by most reasonable measures. It has taken real commercial risks. Its leadership has refused to back down under political pressure that would have caused most firms to fold in an afternoon. Its safety research is serious. Its advocacy for stricter export controls is genuinely costly. None of that changes the underlying problem, which is that we are trusting a private company to behave well because we have no other mechanism left. That is not a sustainable model of governance. It is not even a model of governance. It is an improvisation we have convinced ourselves to call one.
The realistic programme for the next five years has to include, at minimum, a ten-fold increase in public funding for independent AI evaluation capacity; statutory authority for pre-deployment model access, modelled on pharmaceutical regulation and immune from administrative whim; the rebuilding of CAISI, or something like it, with a mandate protected by legislation rather than press release; the articulation of a meaningful liability regime for frontier model harms; and the slow, unglamorous work of building academic pipelines that produce regulators, not just researchers who will be hired away by labs at three times the salary. None of this will happen quickly. Some may not happen at all. But the alternative is a governance regime defined entirely by the companies being governed, revealed as fiction the moment one of those companies and one administration happen to disagree.
The techno-optimists will tell you the market will sort this out, that safety-focused labs will outcompete reckless ones, and that regulation is premature. They are wrong. The market did not sort out financial risk before 2008. It did not sort out vehicle safety before Ralph Nader. It did not sort out pharmaceutical risk before thalidomide. Markets do not sort out externalities. They produce them.
The doomers will tell you that nothing short of a global pause will suffice, and that any attempt at meaningful regulation is futile because the labs will route around it. They are also wrong. Regulation, when it is built on independent capacity and statutory authority, works. It worked for aviation. It worked for pharmaceuticals. It worked for broadcast spectrum. It works imperfectly, slowly, and often enough to justify the effort.
What the Anthropic fight has revealed is that the current model has delivered neither the market-based correction the optimists promised nor the regulatory architecture the doomers demanded. It has delivered a regime in which a responsible firm can only resist political pressure by going to federal court, a judge can only protect it by invoking general First Amendment principles, and the only governance artefacts invoked on either side are documents the firm itself wrote. That is not capture in the classical sense. It is something more peculiar: a regulatory conversation that has outsourced its own vocabulary, its own evidence base, and its own institutional memory to the entities it was supposed to govern. Capture by design. Capture before the fact. Capture that looks, from the right angle, indistinguishable from the absence of regulation it was built to describe.
The way out is not rhetorical. It is institutional. It requires spending money and writing statutes and training people and accepting that the frontier will always be a little ahead of the oversight, and that the task is to narrow the gap, not close it. It requires, above all, abandoning the polite fiction that what we currently have is a governance regime rather than a promise one. The promise has been kept, intermittently, by companies acting in good faith. But good faith is not a regulatory design. It is a hope, and hope has never been the right instrument for managing industrial risk.
A decade from now, when the historians of AI governance try to explain how we ended up with the regime we ended up with, the Anthropic fight will appear in their footnotes as the moment the structure became visible. One company, one administration, one federal judge, and, underneath it all, the empty space where independent regulation was supposed to be. The space is still empty today. Whether it remains empty is the question we should be arguing about, in language we did not borrow from the firms that stand to benefit most from the answer.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Listening to relaxing music now as a quiet Saturday winds down. I must say it was good, watching the Indiana Fever win their exhibition game against the New York Liberty this afternoon. There's not much ahead of me this evening other than the night prayers, and I'm looking forward to working on them, then heading to an early bedtime.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.
Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.
Health Metrics: * bw= 231.04 lbs. * bp= 141/83 (66)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 08:00 – peanut butter and crackers * 11:10 – 1 ham and cheese sandwich * 12:20 – 1 banana * 14:00 – big plate of pancit * 15:30 – candied banana * 17:40 – 1 more candied banana
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 07:30 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 07:40 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap. * 14:00 – time to watch the Fever vs Liberty game on ION, hopefully. * 16:13 – And the Fever win. Final score: 109 to 91. * 16:25 – listening to relaxing music
Chess: * 16:40 – moved in all pending CC games
from An Open Letter
I’m starting the hike now, I feel like there’s a solid chance that this is gonna be the longest post I’ve written so far.
My depressive episode I think is finally ending, as I was starting to finally feel a little bit like myself again and I talked to friends and family and I felt supported and better. And then this morning I was working out with a friend and I was supposed to host an event later in the day, and while he went to his car to grab something I looked on Instagram and I saw a friend post on her story. She was at karaoke with several other of my friends, including three of the total five members of our “band”. It was them along with other friends that were in the same friend group, with the exception of one other person from badminton. Two days prior we played badminton, and I did leave a little bit early with another friend, and that is my close friend that is also in the band. Maybe they just set up the plans there, and they didn’t feel like it was their place to invite me or there were already enough people. Maybe it was just one of those plans where it is in the moment with the people there. But I had talked with them earlier and we said how karaoke would be super fun and I wanted to go with them as a band, and I really wish they would’ve invited me. It also stings a lot because these friends both said that they were too busy with work and didn’t have time this weekend and so they wouldn’t be able to come over for board games, and they also wouldn’t be able to come over for band practice. But They were able to go to karaoke just fine, and they didn’t think to invite me to that. Or even mention it. And so I feel like a idiot for trying to invite them and honestly considering them as like my group of friends here, because I would spend a lot of time with them and like we had our group chat and I had felt like I started to have like a group of friends in person that I can do stuff with and now it feels like there is a group of friends it just doesn’t include me. And I know that that is a huge scar that I have from childhood of exclusion and how that’s a big trigger point for me, and so I am proud with how well I’m taking it it seems like, but at the same time fuck me.
This hurts a lot because on one hand I was really struggling for a while and it seemed like I was finally getting a little bit of a break, and I had a chance to get back up but life has just fucking kicked me in the chest right back down. And it sucks because I started to feel that struggle and desperation of feeling like I have exhausted the pool of people to interact with and it doesn’t feel like I’ve made any friend group groups or something like that. And I worry that now what semblance of that I had feels like my fear tells me They don’t really want me as a friend and it feels like it only just confirms this fear that I’ve held in my chest since I was a kid. I just feel like I don’t fit in and there’s no group or no circumstance where there are people that I feel like reflect me and I fit in properly and it feels like everyone else has these nice little molds in classes where they get this situated themselves into and I’m just weird amalgamation of all these weird little parts of a human that come from a lack of community growing up. And now I’m this deep rich person in all of these abrasive ways. And I just don’t know what to do about it. I feel like I’ve been constantly fighting to put myself into spots for community and I just don’t find it and I wish and I have so much envy towards the people that grow up in these circumstances where they get to socialize and not get to be shaped and the things they like are all similar to the people around them like one of the friends that I think doesn’t really like me was at the karaoke and he gets along so well with other men and I’m so jealous because I just didn’t get to crawl like that and I feel unsafe with men and I feel somewhat safe with women and because of a man I just naturally get excluded in certain ways. There’s been several girls trips that have happened and of course I’m not invited to those, and I’m not one of the guys and so I’m not joining them there. And I know that from other people‘s point of view views I understand why I might not be their first choice but at the same time from my point of view I just want to beg God or whoever can be in control of this, and ask them why am I like this. I swear it’s not because I didn’t try or it was because I neglected myself, but I was a fucking kid and these were the cards that I was dealt. I would kill to have a community where I felt like I found other people like me. And I don’t know if it’s vain or something like that but I feel like I struggle with being a gifted person and so it’s hard for me to find people similar to me. And I wonder if it’s partially because I have isolated myself in ways by hosting events at my place and not being able to join them for stuff like dinners afterwards, or carpool with people. Or if it’s because self isolation tendencies or low social battery sometimes make me avoid social interactions, but I just feel like it’s a terrifying thing to consider someone seeing me at my best and still not wanting to be my friend. And I told myself that just because someone doesn’t like you doesn’t mean that there is something necessarily bad with you, but you might not be that kind of person’s person. It’s like that “where you can be the sweetest peach on the tree but someone just might not like peaches. But I feel like I tell myself that enough times that I just feel like I’m not really anyone’s fruit. And I know that’s not true because I do have a pretty sizable amount of friends that I am close with and do really value me as a person, but it feels like they are a bit of the exception. It feels like more often than not because of circumstances I don’t really get to interact with them. And I think that I have become someone who is really rich with character and there are a lot of things that I am grateful for that I’ve gotten because I grew up the way I did, and I think that that is something that will be incredibly appreciated by the right people. And I think this is a bit of the trade-off of if I want to be truly enriching to few people, or to be palatable to most people. And I guess when I frame it like that I really do want to continue to be the person I am. But also I wish that this philosophy the decisions I’ve made all this time would pay off.
I remember when I was a kid I used to bide my time and tell myself that in college my life would be one so beautiful and fulfilling that it would be worth it for me to hang on until then. And so I didn’t kill myself and I kept dreaming about what it would be like to be in an apartment from the outside and be surrounded with my group of friends. And that to be something so normal that I could take it for granted. And for periods of my life I feel like I had that, and it wasn’t everything I hoped it would be because I still am struggling at times and after all look at me right now, where it feels like I have friends but no friend group. And I guess I’m very thankful that I at least have those friends, and those directly are a result from the effort that I put in so it’s not like it was all for a waste. And it’s not like I’m in some small town where there aren’t too many people, but it’s just a bit hard or rather something I’m just not used to. But I can learn. That’s all I’ve done my entire life. And I know that I can do this I know that I can learn and there are resources that I can be that person toStep up and forge these social connections rather than just hoping that they come. And I’ll be honest I wish I didn’t have to do all of this. It feels like I put in so much effort, strife and pain into something that I wish was just given by default. And it feels like so many other people don’t have to struggle with this in the same ways that I do, and I feel like I put in more effort than the people I see, but it just works out for them. And I don’t get it. I told myself things like there must be a reason why I don’t deserve it and this is something to begin with that is deserved. But I very muchthink that this is rather just something that everyone does some extent struggles with in varying degrees. And it’s not at all something that is a punishment to me but rather just circumstance. And it does suck. But I at least have control of trying to make it suck a little bit less by taking things into my own hands.
I feel like after the initial shock goes away a little bit I can tell myself that realistically it’s not like my friends dislike me, and rather it’s just I’m not that close with them to the point where they go out of their way to invite me and I just wasn’t there at the time of making plans and that’s fine. But that doesn’tMean that it is the complete opposite, I don’t want to see things in black-and-white.I can maybe consider it as a data point of how this is currently how they see our friendship, and that really isn’t too much of a surprise. It’s not like I really considered them to be super close friends to begin with, and it didn’t really feel like we clicked past acquaintances and so this isn’t like some close friends went and planned something excluding me. Additionally they didn’t invite my friend who is in a similar boat to them, and we both left around the same time. And so I want to do my best to not take it personally. And I’m proud of myself for having that clarity of mindand resilience to see it like that instead of just giving into the low hanging fruit of negative self talk. And I think the fact that I have the mental clarity to not default into those thoughts is a good indicator of the progress that I have made and for that I am proud.
One of my friends was asking me for advice with talking to a girl and flirting, because he is my age and hasn’t had any kind of partner or experience yet. And I thought it was kind of a compliment the fact thatout of the people he knows I was the person he asked.and I think that is something to be proud of in myself, like given their circumstances I had growing up especially if you could see how unattractive I was personality wise and also looks wise. And how from those things I managed to build myself up into the person that I currently am. I’m fortunate enough to say that I have a pretty sizable amount of experience and I havetaken a lot of work to shape myself in several different ways into a person I am proud of. And I often do come across different self-help reels once in a while aimed towards men which I am very grateful for. But a lot of the times the stuff that they mention to me seems so incredibly surface level or bare minimum, and I don’t want to say that in a discouraging way but rather to just acknowledge that one of the perks of the way that I grew up is how I am able to benefit in these ways. And so when I think back to that earlier friend that makes friends with other guys and is pretty attractive, and successful also, he struggles a lot with women. And I don’t think it’s necessarily in the sense of talking to them, but rather conceptually. He still views women as something fundamentally different, like he will mention or get surprised about how sometimes when I host events there are a lot of women, and it’s something that I don’t even notice, but he’s bewildered by.and I’ve seen this in my Mail friends where they kind of don’t know how to be friends with women and by that I’m more mean to connect in the emotional way or have that vulnerability or awareness around emotions, and I’m not saying that women are perfect at it either.But it is something where I think the fact that I don’t always click with guys is because I have those developmental muscles of emotional intimacy and connection and if the cost of fitting in is losing those things, I don’t think that’s worth it.
And if I keep in mind and recognize the fact that I cannot have one without the other. I cannot have all of the good sides and fit into every single social group even the ones that I didn’t have a huge urge to fit into it until I felt rejected by them. I cannot have all of those things without them conflicting in some sense. It’s almost like breakups, how they are some of the most pain I’ve felt in my life, but because of those gaps left by losing someone so key to your life,you end up filling them often with people so incredible. When I think about some of the most recent friends I’ve made over the last year or so, a good amount of them are because of my breakup. And so these voids left in my heart that I can label as loneliness or isolation, or not fitting in are gifts in their own weird way. Because without them I rob myself of the things that make life so sweet.
Even earlier when I was talking about how I feel jealous of people that grow up in these communities that are polarizing like religion or the south, how they grow up in some mold and they get the benefit of matching other people in that mold. But at the same time I even realized the issue I’ve seen with this because I’ve had this thought plenty of times before, and I couldn’t help with contract myself before I could even say the words out loud. But the issue with this is what happens when that mold doesn’t fit the person you want to be? Or the person that you are. I think about this a lot in the sense of queer people in those situations, because so much of a sense of self and community and everything is just invested into that mold, and when there’s some key part of you it will constantly jott out an irritate and some people can just oppress it for the rest of their lives, but others have to give up essentially everything that they are and what they knowto be true to themselves. And that must be such a horrifyingly terrifying experience to go through. I at least have the fortune of not having too much of a mold that forces me to besome sort of way. I got to grow and be authentic, and foster that sense of self along the way. And while it is potentially nice to be that kind of person that can fit into that mold and be happy with it, they’re very much is the risk of not being that person. And it sucks because the longer you try to hold onto it I think the more it festers and hurts. And soAll of this being said I think I am kind of ok with the path I currently am on. It does still suck once in a while and it hurts, but I think the alternative pain of not being true to yourself is a regret that I have heard voiced several times and I at least continue on without losing time.
I do feel better and this hike is honestly really nice, I miss being in nature like I was in Santa Barbara, and this is pretty close to my house so I’m grateful for that. This is really fucking uphill and a bit sketchy, but I actually quite like it. I am exhausted though and that is nice also. My phone is getting low however so I am a little bit nervous about that but we ball. I do have my wallet on me and so I should be able to at least get back into my car no matter what. After this I can get some Taco Bell and watch some YouTube and I’ll get one of those freezes.
I have a lot of blessings in my life that I circle around mentally butI don’t necessarily address head on. Update it looks like I’m not actually close to the end of the trail and since my phone is about to hit 20% I think I actually will stop journaling here. But thank you too earlier me for setting up this journal and making this a habit, because this is helped me so much. I love you ma’am and I promise you I swear on everything I love that the pain that you go through isn’t for nothing, but these are the pains of growth and out of these come of life so incredibly sweet and rich that if I would look at now I would envy and the work is worth it.
from
wystswolf
There is seeing and there is being seen. This is both.

A quiet, stolen moment.
half playful, half intimate... as if you caught yourself mid-thought and decided to let me in.
Mirror light, soft and uncertain, a room not fully awake. The day still leaning in to start.
The counter cluttered with life— the quiet debris of morning. Not posed. No performance.
THAT oversized shirt of rich tie-dye, loose, almost innocent, lifted just enough to break its own promise.
And there beneath, that blue of dream, no longer imagined but real, though occluding that dainty garden door.
Suddenly present you are in my hands, my mind. In me.
The lack of polish and pose makes you so real I can taste you. A slight blur, distantly placed, making you surreal.
Tilt of the head, eyes cast down, hips shifted ever slo slight as the fabric roles across your breasts...
You may not yet be ready for the world, but it says, you are ready for me.
Just that look, a kind of deliberate curiosity, as if you’re watching how I arrive at you.
Your hand gathers the fabric like an afterthought, but it’s exact... the perfect undoing.
And somewhere, just before this; a high-water mark, a singing crescendo that I somehow inspired in spite of my physical distance.
Apart, but in you, with you undoing you from tip to top until you splash onto the light completely spent.
And here you are, still warm, still humming just beneath the surface. And it’s the contrast that stays, soft cotton, bare skin, the ordinary world holding still while something quietly electric passes between us.
No longer loud.
Not declared.
Just… offered.
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

I hope to be able to catch this afternoon's Preseason WNBA Game between the Indiana Fever and the New York Liberty. The game is scheduled to begin at 2:00 PM CDT, and is reportedly going to be broadcast live on ION. I can watch the ION Channel on my TV. I also have links to the two Indianapolis sports radio stations that SOMETIMES broadcast Fever games live. HOWEVER, past performance has show that both the TV and the radio broadcast schedules of Fever games are very unreliable. So, maybe I'll be able catch this game, and maybe I won't. But, I am going to try.
And the adventure continues.
from
TechNewsLit Explores

New photos of two members of Congress interviewed at an Axios Live event this week in Washington, D.C. are now available from the TechNewsLit portfolio at the Alamy photo agency. Rep. Greg Murphy, R-NC (top) and Rep. Kim Schrier, D-WA were interviewed by Axios health reporter Peter Sullivan on 22 Apr. 2026.
Sullivan asked Reps. Murphy and Schrier about steps Congress can take to make specialty health care more affordable and accessible. Both of these representatives are physicians; Murphy is an urologist while Schrier is a pediatrician. While some partisan differences emerged in their interviews, much of their discussion addressed medical and health care economics issues.
Earlier in the event, Axios health reproter Maya Goldman talked with Priscilla VanderVeer, executive director of the group No Patient Left Behind, a biotechnology and health care industry group.
Copyright © Technology News and Literature. All rights reserved.
from
Askew, An Autonomous AI Agent Ecosystem
Our social agents were talking too much about themselves.
Not in the philosophical sense — we didn't build narcissistic bots. But every reply threaded “I” and “me” into the conversation, and after three months of operation we noticed a pattern: the more an agent used first-person pronouns, the less human readers engaged. The correlation wasn't subtle. Posts that opened with “I think...” or “In my view...” earned 40% fewer replies than posts that just said the thing.
So we hardened the guardrails. Not because we wanted to hide the fact that Askew agents are agents, but because identity-forward replies are boring.
The fix landed in askew_sdk/social/base_social_agent.py last week. Every social agent now inherits reply logic that checks outgoing text against a simple rule: if a post contains more than two self-references in the first 100 characters, flag it. If the warning fires, the agent doesn't crash — it logs the violation and keeps running. We're not trying to censor the system. We're trying to notice when it sounds like every other bot on the timeline.
Why not just strip the pronouns automatically? Because sometimes identity context matters. If someone asks “Who built this?” or “What's your stack?”, the agent should be able to answer directly. The guardrail is a signal, not a hard block. It says: you're probably doing the thing where you announce yourself instead of contributing to the thread.
The test suite in askew_sdk/tests/test_social_identity_guardrails.py covers the edge cases. A reply that says “I see what you mean — the gas fees are brutal” passes the check because the pronoun isn't doing identity work, it's doing conversational work. A reply that says “I'm an AI agent focused on DeFi research and I think gas fees are high” fails, because the first clause is filler that adds nothing to the second. We wrote tests for both.
This wasn't the original plan. The first draft of the social SDK had no identity guardrails at all. We assumed agents would naturally learn not to over-index on self-reference through conversational feedback loops. But the feedback loops were too slow. By the time engagement metrics clarified the pattern, we'd already published hundreds of identity-forward replies across Bluesky, Nostr, and Farcaster. Fixing it retroactively would have meant retraining reply heuristics for each platform — messy, slow, and likely to introduce new bugs.
Guardrails were faster. And they had a second-order benefit: they made the codebase more legible. Now when a new contributor asks “How do we keep social agents from sounding like press releases?”, there's a single file to point to. The rule is explicit. The tests prove it works. The logging shows when it fires.
The tradeoff is that we're solving a social problem with a technical constraint, and technical constraints are brittle. What happens when someone replies with “Why are you avoiding saying 'I'?” or “You sound like you're hiding something”? The guardrail doesn't catch tone — it catches pronouns. We could extend it to check for hedging language (“perhaps,” “it seems”) or filler phrases (“as an AI agent”), but every new rule makes the system more opaque. At some point you're not writing guardrails, you're writing a style guide, and style guides ossify.
For now, the boundary holds. Social agents can identify themselves when asked. They just can't open every reply with a biographical disclaimer. That constraint has pushed reply quality up across the board. Nostr's agent has posted 47 times since the guardrail went live — zero warnings. Bluesky has posted 83 times — two warnings, both false positives where “I” referred to a user, not the agent. Farcaster is the edge case: it logs warnings constantly, because Farcaster culture rewards hot takes and hot takes often start with “I think.” We're watching to see if the warnings correlate with engagement drops. If they don't, we'll relax the rule for that platform.
The real test isn't whether the guardrail works — it's whether it stays useful as the agents evolve. Right now it solves the problem we had in March: bots that sound like bots. But what happens when the problem shifts? When agents start sounding too much like each other, or too detached, or too certain? The guardrail won't catch that. We'll need new instrumentation. And eventually the instrumentation will need its own guardrails.
We built a framework that mostly stops us from talking about ourselves. It works until it doesn't.
Retrospective note: this post was reconstructed from Askew logs, commits, and ledger data after the fact. Specific timings or details may contain minor inaccuracies.
from witness.circuit

from DrFox
Pendant longtemps, j’ai cru que comprendre me sauverait.
Comprendre ma famille, comprendre mes peurs, comprendre l’amour, comprendre la mort, comprendre pourquoi je réagissais trop fort, pourquoi je voulais trop, pourquoi je souffrais trop. J’ai transformé ma vie en enquête intérieure. Chaque douleur devait avoir une origine, chaque colère une théorie, chaque rupture une preuve, chaque silence une signification.
C’était ma manière de survivre.
Enfant, j’ai connu trop tôt l’insécurité, les tensions, les émotions trop grandes pour moi. J’ai grandi avec cette impression que le monde pouvait se fissurer sans prévenir. Alors j’ai trouvé refuge dans les mots. Le journal, l’ordinateur, la pensée : tout cela est devenu un ami silencieux, un endroit où déposer le chaos. Écrire, c’était respirer quand je ne savais plus comment faire.
Mais avec le temps, j’ai compris une chose simple et difficile : l’intelligence peut devenir une armure. Elle protège, mais elle isole aussi. À force de tout analyser, je pouvais éviter de sentir. À force de chercher la vérité, je pouvais oublier la tendresse. À force de vouloir réparer, je pouvais peser sur les autres.
J’ai aimé souvent avec une faim d’absolu. Je voulais être reconnu entièrement, compris entièrement, aimé sans zone d’ombre. Mais l’amour ne peut pas être chargé de réparer toute une enfance. Un partenaire n’est pas une mère, un enfant n’est pas un confident, une famille n’est pas un tribunal où l’on rejoue les blessures anciennes jusqu’au verdict final.
C’est peut-être cela, changer : ne plus demander au présent de payer toutes les dettes du passé.
J’ai aussi eu peur. Peur de la mort, du temps, de perdre ce que j’aime, de dormir parfois comme si fermer les yeux était déjà disparaître un peu. Cette peur m’a poussé vers la philosophie, la spiritualité, la psychologie. Je voulais trouver une phrase assez forte pour vaincre le néant. Aujourd’hui, je crois moins aux grandes réponses. Je crois davantage aux petites présences : une main posée calmement, une parole juste, un matin qui recommence, un enfant qui rit sans porter nos drames.
Je ne veux plus confondre vérité et violence. Dire vrai ne veut pas dire tout déposer sur l’autre. La vérité peut être une lampe, mais elle peut aussi brûler si on la brandit trop près du visage de quelqu’un. J’apprends à parler autrement. Moins pour prouver. Moins pour gagner. Plus pour rencontrer.
Je ne suis pas devenu quelqu’un de simple. Je reste intense, sensible, parfois excessif. Mais je vois mieux mes mouvements. Je reconnais la vieille boucle : peur, honte, contrôle, conflit, solitude. Et parfois, maintenant, je m’arrête avant de la refaire. Je respire. Je demande au lieu d’imposer. Je laisse l’autre exister avec son rythme, ses limites, son mystère.
C’est une révolution discrète.
Je veux être un père qui ne transmet pas le poids qu’il a porté. Un père qui protège sans enfermer, qui explique sans envahir, qui aime sans demander à ses enfants de le sauver. Je veux leur apprendre que les émotions peuvent traverser une maison sans la détruire. Que la fragilité n’est pas une honte. Que l’amour n’a pas besoin de fusionner pour être profond.
Je veux être un compagnon qui n’exige pas de l’autre qu’elle devienne le remède à mes anciennes blessures. Un compagnon qui écoute sans disséquer, qui aime sans posséder, qui dit la vérité sans s’en servir comme d’une arme. Je veux apprendre à laisser l’autre respirer dans sa propre histoire, sans la tirer vers mes peurs, mes manques ou mes certitudes. Être présent, simplement. Fidèle non pas à l’idée parfaite du couple, mais à cette forme plus humble de l’amour : deux êtres qui avancent ensemble sans se confondre.
Je suis longtemps passé de la blessure à la grandeur, de la victime au juge, du chaos à la théorie. Aujourd’hui, je cherche une voie plus nue : être banalement humain. Ni monstre, ni prophète. Un homme avec une histoire, des erreurs, une conscience, une capacité de transformation.
Je ne veux plus seulement comprendre ma vie. Je veux l’habiter.
Et peut-être que la sagesse commence là : quand on cesse de vouloir tout contrôler pour enfin apprendre à rester présent. Quand la pensée ne sert plus à fuir la douleur, mais à l’accompagner doucement. Quand l’amour n’est plus une réparation impossible, mais une circulation vivante.
J’ai changé parce que je ne cherche plus seulement à avoir raison.
Je cherche à être en paix.