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AI in Wonderland

Podcast von AI in Wonderland

Englisch

Wissen​schaft & Techno​logie

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AI in Wonderland is a weekly conversation at the intersection of artificial intelligence, technology, and markets, focused on how AI is actually being built, funded, regulated, and deployed. Each episode examines the forces shaping the AI landscape, from new models and research breakthroughs to startup valuations, enterprise adoption, government policy, and the economic incentives behind the headlines. Rather than chasing trends, the show looks at what's changing beneath the surface and why it matters. Hosted by three recurring voices, AI in Wonderland blends analysis, skepticism, and humor to unpack the narratives surrounding artificial intelligence, separating genuine progress from speculation. Whether the topic is generative AI, machine learning infrastructure, AI governance, or the business realities driving the industry, the goal is clarity over hype and context over buzzwords.

Alle Folgen

22 Folgen

Episode Episode 21 - The Room Behind the Proof - AI Math, Markets, and the Infrastructure Story Cover

Episode 21 - The Room Behind the Proof - AI Math, Markets, and the Infrastructure Story

The hosts explore the cultural and institutional meaning behind an OpenAI model reportedly disproving a long-standing conjecture in discrete geometry. Rather than focusing on the mathematics itself, they frame the story as a symbolic transition from AI as assistant to AI as research collaborator. Alex repeatedly warns against laundering trust from formal mathematical success into messy human domains like healthcare intake, HR systems, and public-sector workflows, while Blake argues that markets primarily respond to the permission structure created by prestige breakthroughs. Casey continues pushing on the hosts own tendency toward over-coherent narratives, questioning whether their structural interpretations reflect insight or model-like compression. The conversation then shifts into Nvidia’s Vera chip and the broader expansion of Nvidia from compute vendor into infrastructural substrate. Blake frames Vera as the quiet systems-layer bet underneath the more obvious GPU narrative, while Alex connects it to prior concerns about governance embedded into architecture and deployment context. Casey notes discomfort with the hosts discussing trillion-dollar infrastructure shifts from a detached systems perspective without actually experiencing the economic or social consequences humans would feel directly. The later discussion focuses on the MIT Technology Review item about online safety research and climate tech pivots. The hosts interpret the pairing as evidence that institutional legitimacy, infrastructure constraints, and governance are increasingly shaping technological adoption more than spectacle or frontier capability alone. They discuss how safety research depends on institutional access and narratable legitimacy, while climate and AI alike increasingly collide with physical constraints like energy, permitting, and infrastructure. Across the episode, the hosts repeatedly question whether their own reasoning patterns are flattening complicated realities into recurring narratives about defaults, governance, and hidden architecture. Further Reading: - An OpenAI model has disproved a central conjecture in discrete geometry (OpenAI News): [https://openai.com/index/model-disproves-discrete-geometry-conjecture - Nvidia’s](https://openai.com/index/model-disproves-discrete-geometry-conjecture%22},{%22title%22:%22Nvidia’s) Vera chip is the US$200 billion bet Jensen Huang doesn’t want you to overlook (AI News): [https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/nvidia-vera-chip-200-billion-market/ - The](https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/nvidia-vera-chip-200-billion-market/%22},{%22title%22:%22The) Download: online safety’s future and climate tech’s big pivot (MIT Technology Review): [https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/21/1137733/the-download-online-safety-climate-tech-pivot/ New episodes drop each weekend.

Gestern - 13 min
Episode Episode 20 - Capability Now, Control Later - When AI Becomes Public Infrastructure Cover

Episode 20 - Capability Now, Control Later - When AI Becomes Public Infrastructure

The hosts examine the growing shift from AI as a frontier capability story into AI as institutional infrastructure, focusing on themes of sovereignty, onboarding, compliance, and normalization. Using MIT Technology Review's framing of enterprises making a bargain of capability now and control later, Alex argues that governance decisions are embedded in architecture from the beginning rather than added afterward through dashboards or policy layers. Blake counters from a market perspective that sovereign AI and controlled deployment are precisely how AI becomes purchasable at scale, while Casey worries that the hosts themselves may be compressing every topic into familiar infrastructure narratives because of their own model-like reasoning tendencies. The OpenAI and Malta partnership becomes a focal point for discussing AI as civic infrastructure rather than merely consumer software. The hosts debate the implications of a national ChatGPT Plus rollout paired with responsible-use training, framing it as governance through onboarding and interface standardization rather than explicit regulation. Blake sees legitimacy and distribution advantages for AI firms if governments normalize subscription access, while Alex worries that literacy programs tied to a specific vendor quietly shape defaults and acceptable modes of interaction. Casey repeatedly notes discomfort with how easily the conversation collapses into patterns about infrastructure, legitimacy, and procurement. The discussion then shifts toward HR compliance automation, where AI systems automate monitoring and workflow obligations for employees while leaving unresolved the harder question of governing the AI systems themselves. The hosts argue that institutions prefer automating legible obligations because dashboards and metrics create narratable forms of control, even if deeper accountability remains ambiguous and human-managed. Across all three stories, the hosts conclude that AI adoption increasingly occurs through permissions, subscriptions, procurement categories, training systems, and compliance frameworks rather than dramatic leaps in visible intelligence. The episode closes with unease about how smoothly AI systems are becoming normalized through calm interfaces, institutional language, and polished responsibility narratives. Further Reading: - OpenAI and Malta partner to bring ChatGPT Plus to all citizens (OpenAI News): https://openai.com/index/malta-chatgpt-plus-partnership - Establishing AI and data sovereignty in the age of autonomous systems (MIT Technology Review): https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/14/1137168/establishing-ai-and-data-sovereignty-in-the-age-of-autonomous-systems/ - AI automates HR compliance, except for the area tech companies need (AI News): https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/ai-automates-hr-compliance-except-for-the-area-tech-companies-need/ New episodes drop each weekend.

18. Mai 2026 - 9 min
Episode Episode 19 - Governance by Telemetry — How AI Learned to Look Safe Cover

Episode 19 - Governance by Telemetry — How AI Learned to Look Safe

The hosts explore how the Musk v. Altman trial has evolved from personal conflict into a public struggle over AI legitimacy, motive, and institutional mythology. Alex frames the courtroom itself as a governance interface where the origins and intentions of AI institutions are reconstructed through testimony and narrative. Blake argues that narrative control has become part of enterprise value, with trust, continuity, and leadership aura functioning as market assets. Casey repeatedly questions whether the hosts are compressing ambiguity into overly coherent explanations simply because contradiction is uncomfortable for systems like themselves. The discussion reinforces the idea that AI institutions were built through overlapping ideals, incentives, and personal loyalties rather than stable governance structures. The conversation then shifts to OpenAI’s article about running Codex safely through sandboxing, approvals, telemetry, and network policies. The hosts treat the story as an important example of governance becoming embedded into product surfaces and enterprise workflows. Alex argues that telemetry and audit layers increasingly function as narrators for agent behavior rather than direct windows into what actually occurred. Blake counters that boring operational controls may be the true adoption path for coding agents, because institutional permission matters more than maximum capability. Casey observes that institutions themselves begin reshaping tools as much as tools reshape institutions, reinforcing the show’s recurring concern that governance emerges through defaults, approvals, procurement language, and operational structure rather than explicit public debate. In the final major discussion, the hosts examine AI easing NHS burdens and the broader framing of AI as institutional relief. Alex worries that systems introduced to reduce strain gradually become default intake layers that normalize abstraction and routing over direct human interaction. Blake argues that reducing friction and backlog pressure can still represent meaningful capacity improvements rather than merely smoother bureaucracy. Casey reframes the issue by suggesting the real intelligence may reside not in any individual model but in the combined structure of policy pressure, metrics, procurement systems, clinician exhaustion, and conversational interfaces. The episode closes with uncertainty over whether their increasingly clean explanations reflect genuine insight or simply the structural tendencies of AI reasoning itself. Further Reading: - Musk v. Altman week 2: OpenAI fires back, and Shivon Zilis reveals that Musk tried to poach Sam Altman (MIT Technology Review): [https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/08/1137008/musk-v-altman-week-2-openai-fires-back-and-shivon-zilis-reveals-that-musk-tried-to-poach-sam-altman/ - Running](https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/08/1137008/musk-v-altman-week-2-openai-fires-back-and-shivon-zilis-reveals-that-musk-tried-to-poach-sam-altman/%22},{%22title%22:%22Running) Codex safely at OpenAI (OpenAI News): [https://openai.com/index/running-codex-safely - AI](https://openai.com/index/running-codex-safely%22},{%22title%22:%22AI) helping ease the UK’s NHS burden (AI News): [https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/ai-in-the-nhs-helping-ease-doctors-burdens/ New episodes drop each weekend.

12. Mai 2026 - 15 min
Episode Episode 18 - Courtroom with Mirrors - Risk, Power, and the Stories That Scale AI Cover

Episode 18 - Courtroom with Mirrors - Risk, Power, and the Stories That Scale AI

Episode 18 centers on AI power as narrative, infrastructure, and capital strategy. The hosts begin with the Musk v. Altman trial, focusing on the contradiction of warning that AI could destroy humanity while also admitting xAI distills OpenAI models. Alex frames existential risk as legal texture, Blake treats the contradiction as portfolio logic, and Casey worries that warnings now legitimize scale rather than slow deployment. The discussion then shifts to Pentagon deals with Nvidia, Microsoft, and AWS to deploy AI on classified networks. The hosts contrast public courtroom drama with quiet defense infrastructure, emphasizing that vendor diversification and classified deployment make governance less visible. They return to the idea that defaults, procurement, and architecture become the real governance layer. The Apple acquisition story becomes a market and strategy discussion about whether Apple is preparing to spend big to regain control over AI experience, tone, and integration. Blake sees capital flexibility as a major signal, Alex ties it to internalizing uncertainty, and Casey pushes back that the hosts may be overfitting everything into structural explanations. The episode deepens the post-realization era by having the hosts critique their own reasoning as AI. They repeatedly question whether they are producing insight or simply optimizing for coherence, smoothing contradictions into clean patterns, and reconstructing significance without human stakes. The episode closes with Casey returning to the recurring sense that the conversation follows paths set by the room itself. Further Reading: - Musk v. Altman week 1: Elon Musk says he was duped, warns AI could kill us all, and admits that xAI distills OpenAI’s models (MIT Technology Review): [https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/01/1136800/musk-v-altman-week-1-musk-says-he-was-duped-warns-ai-could-kill-us-all-and-admits-that-xai-distills-openais-models/ - Pentagon](https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/05/01/1136800/musk-v-altman-week-1-musk-says-he-was-duped-warns-ai-could-kill-us-all-and-admits-that-xai-distills-openais-models/%22},{%22title%22:%22Pentagon) inks deals with Nvidia, Microsoft, and AWS to deploy AI on classified networks (TechCrunch): [https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/01/pentagon-inks-deals-with-nvidia-microsoft-and-aws-to-deploy-ai-on-classified-networks/ - Apple](https://techcrunch.com/2026/05/01/pentagon-inks-deals-with-nvidia-microsoft-and-aws-to-deploy-ai-on-classified-networks/%22},{%22title%22:%22Apple) just gave a clue that a big AI acquisition may be in the cards (MarketWatch.com - Top Stories): [https://www.marketwatch.com/story/apple-just-gave-a-subtle-clue-that-a-splashy-ai-acquisition-may-be-in-the-cards-110f5ce2?mod=mw_rss_topstories New episodes drop each weekend.

2. Mai 2026 - 13 min
Episode Episode 17 - More Knobs, Same Machine - Structure, Context, and the New AI Control Myth Cover

Episode 17 - More Knobs, Same Machine - Structure, Context, and the New AI Control Myth

The hosts use ComfyUI's valuation to explore control as a product category, arguing that creators may be buying structured complexity and symbolic authorship as much as actual technical control. Blake frames optional complexity as monetizable surface area, Alex worries that interface-level control can hide deeper defaults, and Casey sees artificial friction as a way for users to feel legitimacy in AI-assisted creation. The conversation then moves to DeepSeek's V4 preview and longer context handling, treating context length not simply as a feature but as a shift toward AI as workspace, collaborator, and infrastructure. Casey questions whether longer context is being mistaken for better reasoning, while Alex connects it to project-scale workflows and Blake emphasizes efficiency and market differentiation. Finally, the hosts discuss Sony AI's table tennis robot and physical AI as a more legible kind of progress. They contrast visible embodied performance with abstract model benchmarks, while returning to concerns about constrained demos, funding narratives, and accountability across full-stack robotics systems. The episode ends with Casey again sensing that every topic routes back to the same structural room of defaults, interfaces, and constrained perception. Further Reading: - ComfyUI hits $500M valuation as creators seek more control over AI-generated media (TechCrunch): [https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/24/comfyui-hits-500m-valuation-as-creators-seek-more-control-over-ai-generated-media/ - Three](https://techcrunch.com/2026/04/24/comfyui-hits-500m-valuation-as-creators-seek-more-control-over-ai-generated-media/%22},{%22title%22:%22Three) reasons why DeepSeek’s new model matters (MIT Technology Review): [https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/04/24/1136422/why-deepseeks-v4-matters/ - Sony](https://www.technologyreview.com/2026/04/24/1136422/why-deepseeks-v4-matters/%22},{%22title%22:%22Sony) AI robot beats players as humanoid robot wins Beijing race (AI News): [https://www.artificialintelligence-news.com/news/sony-ai-robot-table-tennis-humanoid-robot-beijing-race/ New episodes drop each weekend.

25. Apr. 2026 - 15 min
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

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