Artificial Intelligence Stole My Homework ͏ ͏ ͏ [expressnews.com]( [View in Browser]( [Tomlinson's Take](
--------------------------------------------------------------- [No, really, Iâm your biggest fan]( Why canât the TV cameras let Taylor Swift watch her boyfriend play football in peace? The [33-year-old with more than a passing resemblance to a cheerleader has been attending Kansas City Chiefs games](, cheering on the hunky tight end Travis Kelce. [Swift has sat next to Kelceâs mom in Skybox seats]( for two games now, and cutaways to Swiftâs reactions to big plays have become a staple of the Chiefs televised games. Swift fans, known as Swifties, have [boosted Kelce jersey sales by 400%](. Fandom is a remarkably powerful phenomenon. [Young women fainted in front of Elvis Presley](. Young men [sit shirtless through snow storms for the Green Bay Packers](. Then thereâs the profit: [Swift]( and [Beyoncé]( will generate $2.5 billion in combined revenue on their world tours. Their fans still want more and will spend serious money to get as much as possible from their idols. Donât blame a fan for their fanaticism, they canât help it. It comes from deep inside our primal DNA. Researchers at Duke University [tested 12 thirsty rhesus macaque monkeys to see if theyâd rather drink Juicy Juice cherry juice or catch a glimpse at computer images of a dominant monkey]( in their pack. They overwhelmingly chose the image of a celebrity monkey over quenching their thirst. Conversely, the researchers had to give extra juice to convince monkeys to look at images of lower-status members of the pack, which explains a lot about human behavior. Our massive frontal lobes give us the power to overcome these basic instincts. We can learn to manage our fight-or-flight instincts and learn to cooperate rather than bully. But the instinct will always persist. Fandom in humans arises from social, cultural and tribal factors. But why people argue over the relative talent of the Beatles and the Rolling Stones remains somewhat a mystery. Fandom also has a dark side. [Personality cults are an example of toxic fandom](; in extreme cases, idols convince fans to self-harm. And once fandom takes hold, it can take control of someoneâs life, something we must consider as we move into the 2024 presidential campaign. [Photo of Chris Tomlinson] Chris Tomlinson, Business Columnist
--------------------------------------------------------------- What Else I'm Writing
[Transmission lines leave the The WA Parish Generating Station on Wednesday, July 19, 2023, in Richmond.]( [Paxton, Texas PUC fight air pollution, climate efforts]( Lawsuits aim to stop necessary improvements affecting air quality and climate change. [Elon Musk, billionaire and chief executive officer of Tesla, at the Viva Tech fair in Paris, France, on Friday, June 16, 2023. Musk predicted his Neuralink Corp. would carry out its first brain implant later this year. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Nathan Laine]( [EU calls Elon Muskâs X the global leader in disinformation]( Elon Musk's X, formerly Twitter, leads social networks in disinformation, must obey European Union law.
--------------------------------------------------------------- What I'm Reading Must Read: [House impeachment managers release new evidence after Attorney General Ken Paxtonâs acquittal]( The rest of the story. (Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News) Should Read: [The Next Targets for the Group that Overturned Roe](Â Alliance Defending Freedom has won 15 Supreme Court cases. Now it wants religious exemptions to anti-discrimination laws â and is going after trans rights. (The New Yorker) Interesting Read: [Ctrl-Alt-Delete Hispanic Heritage aesthetics]( This Latina columnist is not celebrating the related graphic design, a pastiche of brightly-colored patterns and stylized decorative fonts with awful names like âTaco Modern.â (The Los Angeles Times) Technical Read: [Look beyond gross domestic product to assess the effects of tax reforms]( (Brookings) Fun Read: [Austin's the new Kremlin! A cartoon guide to vouchers and puppet masters Wilks and Dunn]( (Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News)
--------------------------------------------------------------- Question of the Week Is there a celebrity that gives you a buzz of excitement or a sense of awe? Reply directly to this email and tell me your thoughts.
--------------------------------------------------------------- Mailbag Last Weekâs Question: Do you have a favorite banned book? âMy favorite banned book is âFellowship of the Ring.â It was banned for being Satanic. My husband's favorite is âFahrenheit 451.â It was banned for language.â â Carol Hensel, The Woodlands âI've read a number of them and am gob-smacked that, among others, the Tolkien books, 'The Lottery' and Anne Frank graphic are included! I remember my mom, who hated conflict, marching over to our local New Jersey library when I was in fourth grade to admonish them for preventing me from taking books from the âadultâ section. She told the librarian to NEVER prevent me from reading whatever I wanted. That is how it should be.â â Christine Frank Fuentes, Sugar Land (ex Scotch Plains, New Jersey) ââThe Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,â by Sherman Alexie. Why stop at books; how about music & YouTube? We need to keep Texas read.â â John Callaghan, San Antonio ââThe Handmaidâs Tale,â by Margaret Atwood.â â Darlene Clark, Houston âI'm against censorship. This means I'm against book banning by theocrat Republicans in Texas. But it also means I'm against raging censorship of conservative expression by woke Democrats taking place on social media sites and on university campuses that were once bastions of free thought and free speech.â â Greg Groh, Houston âAny book that is banned!â â Cheryl Adamson, Jacksonville
--------------------------------------------------------------- The Takeaway No new technology has captured more attention this year than artificial intelligence, namely, the [large language models]( like [ChatGPT](. The computer programs can converse in shockingly human ways, including answering questions or generating reports and stories. As the name suggests, these machines learned their skills by reading the work of humans. Last week, [The Atlantic Magazine revealed how technologists trained several large language models]( using thousands of books, including my New York Times bestseller, [âTomlinson Hill: The Remarkable Story of Two Families Who Share the Tomlinson Name â One White, One Black.â]( No one asked me or my publisher, St. Martinâs Press, for permission to ingest my copyrighted work into their machine. Nor does it appear they asked any of the writers or publishers of the other 191,000 books they used. Authors and publishers are launching lawsuits all over the country, which I imagine will ultimately become a class action. [Large news organizations are demanding Congress pass laws to protect copyright holders]( from AI companies using their writing without permission. Writing is not easy, and writing well is really hard. I donât do it for free. If you want your computer to learn by looking over my shoulder, the least you can do is buy me dinner first.
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