
Can Humanity Survive AI?
With the development of artificial intelligence racing forward at warp speed, some of the richest men in the world may be deciding the fate of humanity right now.
Zola Carr is a doctoral candidate at Columbia University, working on a dissertation on the development of experimental brain implants for psychiatric disorder.
With the development of artificial intelligence racing forward at warp speed, some of the richest men in the world may be deciding the fate of humanity right now.
At the heart of the US-Japanese franchise Transformers is a tension between visions of robotics as liberation and as enslavement.
This isn’t capitalism’s first loneliness epidemic. But in the 21st century, relationship simulators like Replika are here with the solution: your very own AI lover.
Chile’s Project Cybersyn should be remembered as a masterful branding effort — not a road to socialism.
On the “cynical operation” of Kissinger’s Kurdish affair.
Legislation full of carve-outs is no replacement for a political movement to democratize AI.
Kissinger’s covert-ops misadventure with apartheid South Africa.
Kissinger and the violent suppression of Bangladesh.
Almost 50 years ago, Harry Braverman’s Labor and Monopoly Capital showed us how workers can become the masters of technology rather than letting it rule over them.
A journey through your iPhone’s family tree.
When and where organized labor’s been on the move.
After securing historic deals with the Big Three automakers, the UAW is continuing to go on the offensive.
Education reform liberals like Bill Gates are back. And this time, they want AI to solve America’s schooling crisis.
Until recently, nobody could generate meaningless platitudes more efficiently than Vice President Kamala Harris.
Even before his corpse was cold, the rehabilitation of Henry Kissinger had begun.
Elon Musk doesn’t care about free speech. He wants everyone — including his new “anti-woke” chatbot — to think like him.
Why settle for one bullshit job when you could have two?
The most pernicious computer viruses in history have touched millions and cost billions since the early aughts.