Women talkin' 'bout AI
We're back from a few weeks off (I went to Florida, Jessica bought a new house and went to a psilocybin retreat — more on that below) with a wide-ranging catch-up that ends up circling one idea: Incentives matter more than intentions. We trace that thread through a proposed data center near Ames, Iowa, through the words AI chatbots keep teaching us to use, and through our own complicated relationships with money, time, and control. In this episode: The data center fight in Ames, Iowa (Kimberly's current hometown). Ames is now considering airport-adjacent land for a data center, [https://www.cityofames.org/News-articles/City-Council-to-Review-Proposed-Data-Center-Includes-Public-Input-Process]and we walk through what that actually means at scale, including the energy draw, the water use, the construction-jobs pitch that's more one-time than it sounds, and what a community can realistically do about it. Incentives over intentions. A phrase from Your Undivided Attention's [https://open.spotify.com/episode/62M20Ru669ETTJCCBEGHSh?si=OSWUJ4h0TWKcI4rbcQa5fg] recent episode on the Center for Humane Technology's [https://www.humanetech.com/]seven principles of humane tech becomes the throughline for the whole episode. We talk about tech executives who don't let their own kids use their platforms and, more personally, the unsolicited advice that's well-meant but lands as criticism anyway. "Claudish" and linguistic capitalism. Kimberly has been tracking word-frequency spikes in a web corpus — quiet, nuanced, connective tissue, and others — that track suspiciously well with the rise of generative AI in everyday writing. We talk through Frédéric Kaplan's 2014 concept of linguistic capitalism [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271899710_Linguistic_Capitalism_and_Algorithmic_Mediation] and how an SEO-shaped corpus of web writing became the training data now teaching all of us to sound a certain way. [https://substack.com/@kpb12177/p-200896894] Surveillance capitalism and bread and circuses. We talk about Sarah Wynn-Williams' Careless People [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Careless_People] and what it reveals about how Meta's own leadership treated their products' addictiveness, plus the older idea of "bread and circuses" — distraction and convenience as tools of social control. If you're unfamiliar with surveillance capitalism, we highly recommend this book by Shoshana Zuboff [https://www.bookshop.org]. Frugal hedonism (and failing at it). A book recommendation for The Art of Frugal Hedonism [https://frugalhedonism.com/] by Annie Raser-Rowland and Adam Grubb leads to an honest conversation about the gap between the lifestyle we'd like to want and the one we actually have. Pit & Peach. Beach trips, a near-drowning rescue, a psilocybin retreat in Georgia, and stepping away from a long-held academic role. Also mentioned in this episode: * Ayana Gray, I, Medusa [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/762979/i-medusa-by-ayana-gray/](Kimberly's beach read) Leave us a comment or a suggestion! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2411501/fan_mail/new] Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2411501/support] Contact us: https://www.womentalkinboutai.com/
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