Rosano / Journal

353 entries from "Germany"

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Behind the AI boom, the armies of overseas workers in ‘digital sweatshops’

More than 2 million people in the Philippines perform this type of “crowdwork”, according to informal government estimates, as part of AI’s vast underbelly. While AI is often thought of as human-free machine learning, the technology actually relies on the labour-intensive efforts of a workforce spread across much of the global south and is often subject to exploitation.

Charisse, 23, said she spent four hours on a task that was meant to earn her $2, and Remotasks paid her 30 cents.

Founded in 2016 by young college dropouts and backed by some $600m in venture capital, Scale AI has cast itself as a champion of American efforts in the race for AI supremacy. In addition to working with large technology companies, Scale AI has been awarded hundreds of millions of dollars to label data for the US Department of Defense

Monday, February 2, 2026

Evan You – From Art School Kid to Open Source Legend

[In the same way that "how do you monetize a startup?" is too open-ended, it's necessary to be specific and creative in how you fit an open-source "product" to potential "markets". Monetization capacity of an open-source project depends on how it's applied: frameworks have larger scope and reach many developers whereas an esoteric build tool may have a smaller audience.]

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

if ai-generated open-source code is incomprehensible to review, does that effectively make it closed-source?

Monday, January 26, 2026

Welcome to Gas Town

Stage 1: Zero or Near-Zero AI: maybe code completions, sometimes ask Chat questions

Stage 2: Coding agent in IDE, permissions turned on. A narrow coding agent in a sidebar asks your permission to run tools.

Stage 3: Agent in IDE, YOLO mode: Trust goes up. You turn off permissions, agent gets wider.

Stage 4: In IDE, wide agent: Your agent gradually grows to fill the screen. Code is just for diffs.

Stage 5: CLI, single agent. YOLO. Diffs scroll by. You may or may not look at them.

Stage 6: CLI, multi-agent, YOLO. You regularly use 3 to 5 parallel instances. You are very fast.

Stage 7: 10+ agents, hand-managed. You are starting to push the limits of hand-management.

Stage 8: Building your own orchestrator. You are on the frontier, automating your workflow.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

The Great Entertainment

Reagan proved you could use TV aesthetics in governance. Trump is proving you cannot replace governance with TV.

[the world is not given by parents, but borrowed from children.]

Friday, January 23, 2026

Who profits from a world without cash?

[Transitioning to a cashless society implies moving away from state-issued money towards 'tokens' issued by private corporations. We currently trust their casino chips because they can be redeemed for fiat currency, but without cash this is no longer possible.]

Thursday, January 22, 2026

Why I Left iNaturalist

This post is an announcement for those who were unaware, an explanation for those who are confused, and a record so I don’t forget.

posted to Blog

visual family cosmos

One surname is not "where you're from".

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Pingu voice acting

Italian voice actor Carlo Bononi was the voice of all of the characters on Pingu. A trained clown by trade, he used a theater technique called grammelot, which consists of "speaking" in a mix of babbled gibberish noises. He improvised all the voices live and unscripted.

Monday, January 19, 2026

A Social Filesystem

what we make with a tool does not belong to the tool. A manuscript doesn’t stay inside the typewriter, a photo doesn’t stay inside the camera, and a song doesn’t stay in the microphone.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

posted to Vibrations

trio improvisation

with Jack Rusher (guitar) and Andrey (bass)

Thursday, January 15, 2026

I see every one's project, and purpose, to be connected to all others as a piece of a grand puzzle. And my job in the last 2 years has been looking at each person, and finding where they fit, and when it works, they thrive, and the world thrives. Because the world needed them, and they needed it

and now I'm trying to see if I can create a container where people understand this is what I'm doing, how I'm doing it, and for others to help me do it

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

posted to Occasion

rights of the reader

Skip pages, read anything, don't read that, read anywhere, don't finish, repeat, read aloud…

What's happening on Jan 13th?

If you don’t have access to a dentist in your trust network, but you trust me, you can “borrow” my connection here.

if someone with resources wants to give you money, you should say no if it’s clear to you it will make your life worse, even if it’s not clear to them. Don’t let their (bad) judgement override your clarity.

Saturday, January 10, 2026

posted to Now

January 2026

Berlin, Germany 🇩🇪

Friday, January 9, 2026

LLMs are coherence engines, not truth engines

[LLMs generate coherence more than truth, with] no access to the world, no sensory grounding, no lived experience, and no intrinsic way to check correspondence between its outputs and reality.

[The same is true of humans, as we] construct narratives, causal explanations, identities, and moral frameworks that hang together, rather than ones that are objectively correct. [We tend towards] narrative consistency, social acceptability and reinforce biases based on beliefs.

science works because it builds institutional scaffolding that forces grounding through measurement, replication, falsification, and peer review. Without grounding, both humans and LLMs drift into elegant nonsense.

The risk with LLMs is not that they lie, but that they speak with fluent confidence in domains where humans already confuse coherence with truth.

Tuesday, January 6, 2026

I guess I was wrong about AI persuasion

“The best diplomat in history” wouldn’t just be capable of spinning particularly compelling prose; it would be everywhere all the time, spending years in patient, sensitive, non-transactional relationship-building with everyone at once. It would bump into you in whatever online subcommunity you hang out in. It would get to know people in your circle. It would be the YouTube creator who happens to cater to your exact tastes. And then it would leverage all of that.

We can be convinced of a lot. But it doesn’t happen because of snarky comments on social media or because some stranger whispers the right words in our ears. The formula seems to be:

  1. repeated interactions over time
  2. with a community of people
  3. that we trust

You can try to like stuff

When I encountered spinach as an adult, instead of tasting a vegetable, I tasted a grueling battle of will. Spinach was dangerous—if I liked it, that would teach my parents that they were right to control my diet.

On planes, the captain will often invite you to, “sit back and enjoy the ride”. This is confusing. Enjoy the ride? Enjoy being trapped in a pressurized tube and jostled by all the passengers lining up to relieve themselves because your company decided to cram in a few more seats instead of having an adequate number of toilets? Aren’t flights supposed to be endured?

Unit

Unit is a general purpose visual programming system built for the future of interactivity

Polarized Words

Enter 2 or more words to see their relative distances to the concepts of "good" and "evil".

based on language model embeddings which capture the semantics associated with the words in humanity's collective consciousness.