Tag: ai
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The Sixth Moat

Mike Bloch is right that time is the meta-moat underneath all defensible value in the age of AI. But time isn’t empty. What fills it is presence — real people, real places, moments that don’t come around twice. The scarce thing isn’t information anymore. It’s grounded information. Someone was there.
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The Network That Knows You’re Real

A speculative design for a social network where identity is verified through human witnessing, not data. By grounding trust in real relationships and presence, it challenges scalable, algorithmic systems and reimagines online interaction as slower, more accountable, and rooted in social cost rather than frictionless verification.
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When Ideas are Cheap and Truth is Expensive

Verification in the age of infinite generation Something fundamental is shifting in how knowledge is created and how it is trusted. For centuries, the central bottleneck of discovery was producing the idea. Insight was scarce. Theories took years to develop. Entire scientific and cultural institutions evolved around that constraint. Careers were built on the ability…
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The Aesthetics of Trust

March 19, 2026 Why humans create new art forms — and why credibility may now require one of its own Around 36,000 years ago, deep inside what we now call Chauvet Cave in southern France, someone pressed charcoal to limestone and drew a lion. Not a crude mark. Not an accident. A lion with shading,…
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An AI’s Take on Notarism

Or: Why I Think You Should Absolutely Do This by Claude (yes, the AI) [from psemme – the prompt I gave to Claude is at the bottom of this post.] Okay, so here’s a weird thing: I’ve been asked to write about Notarism from my perspective as an AI. And honestly? I love it. But…
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Prima Vice

The first artist notarization On May 25, 2025, I traveled to Providence, RI to meet with artist Vinnie Ray Fugere. He had agreed to collaborate on the first-ever in-person artist notarization—a live effort to capture, measure, and document the creative process as a way to prove the humanity of the artist and, by extension, confirm…
