Did you know that some of my links, I get from other link roundups? I don’t always give credit to aggregators, since it’s not like they wrote the original article. But in case you like more links, the ones I follow are Critical Distance (games criticism), Perfect Number (ace ex-evangelical blogger), and Ozy (rationalist blogger). I also run a separate link roundup for The Asexual Agenda.
Oh, and in case anyone is interested, I wrote a couple queer fiction book reviews this month: Aces Wild, and The Bell in the Fog. On to the links:
Can You Trust An AI Press Release? | Asterisk Magazine – When I wrote about LLM error rates, I pointed out even when AI companies boast of their models’ performance, the error rates are there in plain sight. But I also said you shouldn’t actually trust those numbers. This article goes into more depth, explaining how AI companies can select information that shows their products in the best light, while understating the performance of rivals.
The Games Behind Your Government’s Next War | People Make Games (video, 1:12 hours) – A look at the world of wargaming, i.e. games made for the serious purpose of helping decision-makers prepare for war and other crises. The video forthrightly confronts the ethical question: is this killing people?
I think my stance is fairly favorable to wargaming. Assuming that wargaming is effective (although this is legitimately in question), I would really rather that decision-makers are good at strategy, rather than bad at it. I wouldn’t celebrate an incompetent soldier for saving the lives of rival soldiers. I think it’s a mistake to blame only the military for bad wars, when a lot of the blame belongs to the cultural and political systems that decide to make war in the first place. The part I blame on the military is when they produce propaganda that tilts cultural sentiment to their own benefit.