Summary & Insights
What happens when we’re all “famous to 15 people,” and AI starts generating content for each of those tiny audiences? This question lies at the heart of a conversation exploring how our attention is mined, manipulated, and increasingly fragmented. The discussion frames the current digital landscape as an economy of “attention capitalism,” where platforms and advertisers ruthlessly optimize for what we will look at, often at the expense of what we actually want to pay attention to. This sets the stage for a new wave of “AI slop”—the cheap, automated, and often bizarre content designed purely to capture clicks—which threatens to pollute our digital spaces in the same way spam overwhelmed email.
The dialogue traces how this attention economy has already reshaped society, fragmenting shared culture and altering our psychology. The era of mass media, where everyone watched the same news or read the same bestselling book, has given way to algorithmic niches. This hyper-individuation means we’re less connected to our physical communities and more aligned with digital tribes, leading to a homogenization of tastes across geography but a deep polarization in beliefs. Within this environment, the constant performance of a public self and the fear of viral infamy have driven a retreat to private group chats and messaging apps, seeking refuge from the digital panopticon.
Looking ahead, the rise of AI presents a critical juncture. It could amplify the worst trends, flooding platforms with addictive but meaningless slop, or it could empower creative humans with “superpowers.” The technology’s trajectory hinges on whether it merely automates attention extraction or evolves into a true assistant that upstreams useful tasks. This tension underscores a larger theme: a disconnect between what is lucrative in the tech world and what is genuinely useful for society, a contrast vividly illustrated by comparing the hype around AI to the quiet, revolutionary transformation happening in solar energy.
Surprising Insights
- AI “slop” might fail not on quality, but on retention: The discussion suggests that while AI can brute-force content creation to acquire attention, it may fail at the harder task of maintaining engagement. Humans might simply rebel against the sterile, empty nature of fully automated content.
- Privacy is a modern invention for urban life: The concept of a “right to be left alone” was largely crafted in the 1890s to cope with the anonymity of city living, not a timeless virtue. This reframes our current privacy debates as a reaction to losing the mutual accountability found in small communities.
- The most transformative technology might be the least “sexy”: While AI captures all the venture capital and media buzz, we are simultaneously undergoing an apocalyptic transformation in solar energy that could make energy nearly free at the margin—a shift with more profound material implications that receives far less glamorous attention.
- Digital advertising remains surprisingly ineffective: For all its sophisticated data targeting, much online advertising is still “bad, schlocky, and ineffective,” with major brand advertisers like car companies largely absent from places like TikTok, suggesting a gap between ad tech’s promise and its practical utility.
Practical Takeaways
- Use AI as a co-pilot, not an autopilot: For reliable work, especially where facts matter, use AI tools with web search enabled and insist on citations. Treat it as a powerful assistant for research and drafting, but always verify its outputs against human-reported sources.
- Seek out smaller, bounded communities: To counteract the anxiety of performing for a vast, algorithmic public, move meaningful interactions to private group chats or community forums. These spaces, with their built-in social accountability, can foster more genuine connection.
- Audit your attention deliberately: Be aware of the disconnect between what you will watch (the addictive, algorithmically served content) and what you want to watch. Periodically delete addictive apps to reset your habits and consciously choose media that aligns with your volitional interests.
- Don’t conflate lucrative tech with useful tech: When evaluating new tools or trends, ask yourself if they are merely capturing attention and revenue or if they are solving a fundamental human problem. This framework helps cut through the hype.
What can we learn from the centuries-long quest to eradicate smallpox, once the scourge of humanity? And how did it set the stage for all vaccines to come? First we meet Edward Jenner, a doctor in 18th century Britain who learned about the folk practice of “variolation” and found a safer way to inoculate people against smallpox. Then, Donald Hopkins of the Carter Center takes us back to the 1960s in Sierra Leone, where he discovered that successfully eradicating smallpox could be a feasible goal worldwide. Enjoy this episode from Incubation, another Pushkin podcast.
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