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There are some sights in this world that no photograph can truly capture.
Think of the rolling ribbons of the aurora in the northern and southern skies, the depth and breadth of the Grand Canyon, or the sense of immersion when diving on the Great Barrier Reef. Astronauts will tell you that not even large-format cameras can truly capture the blackness of outer space or the majesty that is our planet as seen from orbit or beyond.
It's not every day that a new one of those sights debuts. But such will be the case on Friday, November 13, when the California Science Center in Los Angeles finally reveals the launch-pad-like display of the space shuttle Endeavor inside the new Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center.
"It has been more than 30 years since we first dreamed of putting a shuttle in the launch position in our air and space center, and it is better than we ever thought it was going to be," said Jeffrey Rudolph, president and CEO of the science center, in an interview with collectSPACE.com. "I haven't had anybody walk in there yet who is disappointed, and more than that, who isn't excited and in awe."
"It is an incredible exhibit and incredible sight," he said.
https://youtu.be/6VbfrOUDdrw
Setting the stage
It has taken four years to construct the new Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, including accomplishing what many thought impossible: stacking a space shuttle orbiter with its external tank and twin solid rocket boosters without using a NASA facility intended for that purpose.
"I was very uncertain if it would ever happen when we first looked at the proposal, because I think—and the science center admits this—they really had no idea what was involved in trying to make a vertical display of a space shuttle stack," said Dennis Jenkins, a former space shuttle engineer who led the preparation and delivery of the orbiters for their museums before becoming the project director for the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center.
"We weren't sure that it could be done anywhere other than at a [NASA] specialized facility. Doing it out in the middle of a construction site always seemed a little bit fantastic," Jenkins told collectSPACE. "Of course, it proved to be extremely difficult yet extremely easy all at the same time. Once we figured out how to do it, it worked well."
The 184-foot-tall stack, comprising the orbiter <em>Endeavour</em>, external tank, and twin solid rocket boosters, is believed to be the tallest indoor museum exhibit in the world.
Credit:
California Science Center
Now that the countdown has begun, T-minus 142 days to opening, the pressure is on to be ready to launch. In addition to the Samuel Oschin Shuttle Gallery, the Air and Space Center includes the Korean Air Aviation Gallery and Kent Kresa Space Gallery, which will showcase more than 25 aircraft and both historic and modern spacecraft, respectively.
"We're still installing a lot of exhibits," said Rudolph of the remaining work. "We've got artifacts that are still going in the aviation and space galleries. Quite a few are in, but a lot more are still to go. And we have begun installing the exhibits, but have a lot to install as well."
Over the past year, a segment of a walkthrough space shuttle solid rocket booster has been lifted into the building by crane, a Hawker Siddeley Harrier T.4 aircraft was installed, a Rocket Lab Electron booster was stood up, and in May, the 70-foot forward section of a Korean Air Boeing 747-400 aircraft fuselage was rolled in.
"After that, we'll have a period where we want to do some testing. To study some operational issues before we get open to the public so that it runs smoothly when we do open," he said.
With one of its payload bay doors open, visitors will be able to see the type of equipment used on a mission to the International Space Station.
Credit:
California Science Center/Mike Kelley
As for Endeavour, it's almost ready for the spotlight. The orbiter is configured so that from one angle, its payload bay doors appear closed, while from another, you can peer through an open door to see the payloads arranged as they would have been for a mission to the International Space Station.
"For the most part, we still have to adjust the lighting in the payload bay," said Jenkins. "Once that gets configured, then we have to latch the closed payload bay door and put a sheet of acrylic over the open crew hatch so that it stays clean inside Endeavour."
A sight to behold
Endeavour has a pre-show before it is revealed on display. (Spoiler warning: Skip the next paragraph if you do not want to know details of the experience.)
Inside a theater, a video produced by the California Science Center provides a brief history of the space shuttle and how Endeavour came to stand within this building. The footage ends with the final launch of Endeavour as the room fills up with fog. As the air clears, a wall that was once there has dropped away, and you are suddenly just feet away from the 184-foot-tall (56-meter) stack.
From there, guests will be able to view Endeavour from several levels of the building, from the ground up. There will also be an opportunity for some visitors to board a glass elevator and ascend the gantry standing beside the shuttle. The top level has a transparent walkway, so you can see the entire vehicle below you.
The view of space shuttle Endeavour from the ground up. The red gantry tower beside it will offer views from the top down when it opens with the center on Nov. 13, 2026.
Credit:
California Science Center
"I'm extremely happy that we're almost done and we can show it off because the public has been listening to us for 15 years—30 years, if you go back to the master plan—about how great this is going to be," said Jenkins. "Everybody that has walked into that room just stops, their mouth opens and their eyes open wide, and as often as not, the words "oh shit" come out of their mouths, and you know it's truly one-of-a-kind."
"If you're a space geek, it's unbelievable because the view is like nothing we ever got, even at Kennedy, unless you happen to be on the mobile launch platform as we rolled out," he said. "You never got these kind of views because we always had platforms and other stuff around the vehicle. The views in this place are incredible. They are just amazing."
The California Science Center's new Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center will open on Friday, Nov. 13, 2026.
Credit:
California Science Center/Mike Kelley
One person particularly looking forward to November 13 is Lynda Oschin, who chose to honor her husband's legacy by directing her family foundation to make the leading donation to the new air and space center.
"It's very exciting. I can't wait to see the expressions and all of the happy tears in the eyes as we saw way back in 2012, when people first walked in and saw Endeavour in in horizontal position. I just can't wait to see all the excitement," said Oschin.
"I did this in the memory and in honor of my husband because the space shuttle incorporates everything that Sam loved and was involved in," she said. "Sam's picture is in the shuttle now and it is always going to be in there. It's in a frame on the flight deck. That really is extra special for me and makes me feel good to know that his picture is in there."
The Army, Navy, and Air Force are once again requiring basic trainees to get vaccinated against influenza after the virus quickly swept through an Air Force base in Texas, sickening at least 222 recruits and hospitalizing four.
The outbreak flared just two months after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth abandoned a decades-long requirement for flu shots. The requirement was intended to keep armed forces healthy in their bases, which provide ideally tight conditions for a variety of pathogens, including influenza, to run rampant. Mandates stem from centuries of intertwining histories of militaries, war, and human pathogens that have firmly established the danger that infectious diseases pose to armed forces.
But in April, Hegseth claimed that flu shot requirements were "not rational" and said removing the requirement was "restoring freedom" to military members.
Last week, news broke of a flu outbreak sweeping through Lackland Air Force Base, part of Joint Base San Antonio in Texas. Two unnamed sources told ABC News that the situation at the base has been worsening.
In addition to the 222 cases and four hospitalizations reported as of Tuesday, one recruit, Keon McDaniel, died. McDaniel was in his sixth week of basic training and suffered a medical emergency on June 12. It's unclear if his death was related to the outbreak.
ABC News reported that sources think only about 40 percent of the new Air Force trainees at the base were vaccinated and that the outbreak began in early June.
Historical requirements
It remains unclear what strain of flu is circulating in the base. Circulation of seasonal influenza viruses tends to be low during the summer amid the general population. But activity does not fall to zero, and the close quarters and extensive contact within a base make it easy for transmission to skyrocket.
In a statement to Ars Technica, Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell said that the Pentagon had granted exceptions to Hegseth's optional flu shot policy to the Army, Navy, Air Force, National Security Agency, and the Defense Health Agency. The exceptions came after a "comprehensive review" and are in line with a standard policy of "adapting force health protection measures to critical operational realities."
"The decisions were based upon thorough risk assessments and are designed to maximize operational readiness, lethality, and force generation, while safeguarding at-risk populations," Parnell said.
With the exception, the Air Force is aiming to vaccinate all recruits at the Texas base, according to ABC News, and the Army is preparing to expand the restored vaccine requirement to other groups, including troops deploying overseas.
US armed forces have a long history with pathogens, beginning in 1777 when George Washington mandated Continental soldiers be inoculated against smallpox, which had ravaged the army during the Revolutionary War. In March of 1918, cases of severe flu broke out at a military base in Kansas. The subsequent 1918 flu pandemic is estimated to have killed around 43,000 US soldiers, nearly half of all US military deaths during World War I.
Doctorow doesn't actually enjoy talking about AI, but he's constantly being asked to comment on it. "I made the tactical error of being sick of talking about AI," Doctorow told Ars. "So I wrote a book about why I think it's a dumb thing to keep asking people to talk about, and now I have to talk about it." Reverse Centaur is Doctorow's attempt to "sort out the bullshit from the material reality."
In automation theory, per Doctorow, a "centaur" describes a human augmented with a technology, like machine learning, or even just driving a car or using autocomplete. A reverse centaur "is a machine head on a human body, a person who is serving as a squishy meat appendage for an uncaring machine," Doctorow said in a speech last December. He gave the example of an Amazon delivery driver, surrounded by AI cameras monitoring their driving, who essentially serves as a peripheral to the delivery van.
Being a centaur is generally viewed as a positive thing; few people relish being a reverse centaur. And yet the AI industry seems intent on using those tools to create more reverse centaurs. It's one thing to incorporate AI tools into the medical field to help radiologists process X-ray images and spot potential tumors they might otherwise miss. It's quite another to fire nine out of 10 radiologists and let AI make the diagnoses, with the remaining radiologist solely responsible for checking the AI's work—and, ultimately, taking the blame for any errors.
Doctorow is not virulently anti-AI; he uses AI tools regularly and sees potential in many of those tools as useful plugins or cool new apps. But he is nonetheless alarmed at all the hype surrounding AI, the enormous capital expenditures, the unrealistic expectations and self-serving messaging, and the potentially catastrophic economic consequences when the AI bubble inevitably pops.
"The bubble doesn't want cheap useful things," Doctorow said. "It wants expensive 'disruptive' things: big foundational models that lose billions of dollars every year. When the AI investment mania halts, most of the models are going to disappear, because it just won't be economical to keep the data centers running. The collapse of the AI bubble is going to be ugly. Seven AI companies currently account for more than a third of the stock market, and they endlessly pass around the same $100 billion IOU. AI is the asbestos in the walls of our technological society, stuffed with wild abandon by a finance sector and tech monopolists run amok. We will be excavating it for a generation or more."
Naturally, Doctorow has some ideas about how to push back against the prevailing narrative of AI's inevitability. Ars caught up with him to learn more.
Credit:
Macmillan Publishing
Credit:
Macmillan Publishing
Ars Technica: We touched briefly on AI last year when we chatted about your prior book. Reverse Centaur seems like a natural outgrowth of that.
Cory Doctorow: Enshittification is primarily a thesis about how firms in the absence of constraint get tilted to the bad, but it's also a thesis about how the constraint of competition, when it falls away, produces all kinds of perverse outcomes. One of those perverse outcomes is that firms that have saturated their markets can no longer grow, and they have to find other markets. There's a ticking bomb when you saturate your market because it's only a matter of time until investors start to worry that you're not a growth stock, you're a mature stock. Mature stocks trade at a small fraction of the multiple that growth stocks do.
There's an enormous amount of liquidity in growth stocks, which means that you can use growth stocks to grow. You can buy other companies with shares, and shares are an endogenous substance that you make on the premises by typing zeros into a spreadsheet. Firms with growth stocks can grow by typing zeros, whereas firms that are mature, they have to use money if they want to grow, and you're not allowed to make money on the premises. If you do, the Treasury Department shows up and takes you away in handcuffs. So you can see why firms would be very anxious to maintain the perception that they have room for growth even after they have 90 percent market shares.
That's why those firms started promoting stories about how they were going to conquer imaginary markets. Imaginary markets have no agreed-upon valuation because you just made them up. Unless you can turn an imaginary market into a real market pretty quickly, you need to come up with another imaginary market and announce that this is the new imaginary market you're going to conquer. It's easier than you'd think because the capital markets have the object permanence of a toddler, and they would lose a game of peekaboo if they were drafted to play in the league. So you can say, "Oh, actually, it's not metaverse. It's crypto. It's not crypto. It's Web3. It's not Web3. It's something else." And the markets will forgive you, provided you do it quickly enough.
But something different happened with AI. It is much, much bigger in terms of capitalization than anything we've ever seen—not just bigger than other tech bubbles, bigger than other bubbles. When I wrote the book, capital expenditure (CapEx) globally was $700 billion, now it's $1.4 trillion. Meta wasted $60 billion on the metaverse. They spent $150 billion in the last three years on AI, and they say they're going to spend another $150 billion this year.
So this is a much bigger bet, and it raises the question: If the material basis for this is creating a narrative so that you can continue to grow by dint of having a highly liquid growth stock, what's the ideological basis? Why are people willing to make such a bigger bet? Some of it is that there's more "there" there with AI. It's real computer science. It was remarkable 10 years ago, when a couple of computer scientists and their grad students took some existing techniques, applied them in a new way, and got a very surprising result that turned out to not only produce dividends the first time around, but to have somewhat linear returns on investment, which is not usually the case.
There was a lot of low-hanging fruit in AI, although it's tapering off now because, as they say in finance, anything that can't go on forever has to stop. So we're losing the end of that growth period in terms of returns to scale.
Ars Technica: Why do you think AI is so appealing to political and business leaders in particular?
Cory Doctorow: It's not just that it makes for a good demo. AI really appeals to a fantasy that I think all of us have to some extent but that powerful people really have, of a world without people in it—because hell really is other people. You can't get stuff done without other people helping you. You can't have romance without a romantic partner. You can't have social media without people to socialize with. You can't play a board game, or do a startup, or build a bridge, or build a house, or do politics without other people. And other people stubbornly refuse to organize everything they do to make you happy.
Particularly if you're rich and powerful, it's very galling. So AI is very attractive. One of the reasons DOGE fired so many government workers was because it played into the fantasy that you can have a government without government employees. In the corporate sphere, it's the fantasy of a business without workers, because every corporate leader is haunted by the secret fear that if they don't show up for work, everything goes on just fine. But if the workers don't show up, everything shuts down. Maybe they're not really driving the car, maybe they're strapped in the backseat with a toy steering wheel.
If that's the case, AI will let them wire the toy steering wheel directly into the drivetrain. So you can have an amazing idea as a corporate visionary, and you don't have to have any ego-shattering confrontations with people who know how to do things, who tell you you're actually an idiot. You just type some stuff to the chatbot, and it shits out your product. If you combine those two things—the material necessity to have a growth narrative and the ideological attractiveness of a world without people—you get $1.4 trillion in CapEx for a sector that is turning over $50 billion a year and has to replace all of its assets every 24 to 30 months.
Ars Technica: You raised an interesting point recently on your blog: Workers actually wanted earlier technological breakthroughs and often had to fight to get them into the workplace. With AI, people are more likely to feel that the technology is being shoved down our throats; some workers are even required to use it.
Cory Doctorow: I think that's entirely right. One of the things that I've been attending to a lot lately is the difference between the bubbles that we had before and the bubble that we're having now. People will say, "Oh, Amazon wasn't profitable, and it became profitable. And the web wasn't profitable, and it became profitable. The web was a bubble." Of course the web was a bubble. You don't get pets.com and all those Super Bowl ads without a bubble. But it is a very obvious error of logic to say, "Once, there was a thing that lost money and then it made money, therefore, if you are losing money, someday you'll make money."
The thing that made the web profitable was not that it was unprofitable; it was things like good unit economics, where every time someone started using the web, the web got less unprofitable. Every time a web user used the web again, the total profits generated went up. Every generation of web technology made the web more profitable. That's the opposite of AI. Every AI customer loses money for the company, every use of AI by that customer loses money for the company, and every generation of AI loses more money than the last one. AI is the money-losingest thing our species has ever done. We have never lost as much money as we've lost on AI.
Another giant material difference is the social reception. If you look back to the business press of the aughts and the late '90s, it's full of hand-wringing editorials about how bosses will cope with workers who are smuggling in the web. You look at those same press outlets today, and it's full of people saying, "What are we going to do about the fact that no one in the workplace wants to use AI?"—along with ads for firms that will spy on your workers for you so that you can punish the workers who refuse to use AI.
Ars Technica: AI nonetheless does have thoughtful, sensible defenders.
Cory Doctorow: One of the paradoxes that I try to explore in this book is the workers who are not fools, who are historic good, reliable narrators of their own experience, and who tell you that AI is making their lives better. The foundational idea of science fiction is that what the gadget does is less important than who it does it for and who it does it to. I call those people centaurs. They are workers who are assisted by technology and who decide how that technology is going to assist them. Whereas the workers who hate it are workers who are being asked to produce more with AI at the expense of quality, at a higher speed, at the expense of their own wellbeing, and who understand that they're being recruited to be what Dan Davies calls accountability sinks—to take the blame when the AI screws up their job.
Once you put it that way, it's very easy to see why some workers would say, "Oh yeah, I found a thing that AI is good for and I use it, and that's fine. I'm even excited about it." And why other workers would be like, "This is making me miserable." It's the difference between the words on the Greek temple, "Know thyself," and your boss shining 16 cameras in your face and going, "I know you better than you do. And by the way, I think you could work an extra hour a day without breaking a sweat."
Ars Technica: You make a point of emphasizing that you are not fundamentally anti-AI, despite sharply criticizing the industry.
Cory Doctorow: I have many comrades who describe themselves as anti-AI, and I've had some very spirited, productive, but heated debates with those people because I don't think AI is exceptional. That means that I don't think it's exceptionally evil. The argument that it's the fruit of the poisonous tree, that it was made by bad people in bad ways, so you shouldn't use it—I think it's very foolish. That is not the merit on which we judge technology.
You can talk about whether giving money to these companies is bad. I think it is. You can talk about whether the environmental impact of using foundation models is unsustainable and unsupportable. I think, by and large, it is. But that is not to say that statistical inference using convoluted deep neural networks is bad or—and this is where I get into many arguments—that scraping the web to train a convoluted neural network is bad. I think it's fine. Scraping is good, actually.
I think it's very dangerous to say, "The way that we're going to fix the problems we have with AI is to make it illegal to make a record of what's on the Internet." I think that's catastrophic. That's how we never again will know what was on CBS News before it turned into Chud News. Everything Nate Silver ever published on his website was just zeroed out by Disney. You can only see it at the Internet Archive because we scrape. It's just bonkers to say, "It is theft to make transient copies of works, to analyze those transient copies, to publish the results of your analysis."
Those are all socially beneficial activities, and we will all lose if we prohibit them, not least because the firms that creative workers are worried about them, the big media companies, are extremely capable of entering into arrangements with the Big Tech companies to license their corpuses to them in order to try and put us all out of a job. If we get the right to decide who can train an AI with our work, our bosses are just going to modify our contracts to say, "Great, you now must license that right to me. And it's non-negotiable." Failure to learn from that lesson is not tragedy. It is farce.
Rather than ask for a new copyright law, we could make a new labor law, because the only people who've ever beaten AI are the Hollywood screenwriters and actors. And the reason they were able to beat them is because uniquely, among workers in America, they are exempt from the Taft-Hartley Act's prohibition on what's called sectoral bargaining, which is when all the workers in a sector bargain with all the employers in a sector. Now, there are so few workers in America who aren't media workers, who care about copyright, that it rounds to zero, but every single worker in America would benefit from extending sectoral bargaining across the board.
Ars Technica: It could be catastrophic, economically speaking, when the AI bubble finally bursts. But you point out that there might very well be something useful left over when that happens.
Cory Doctorow: I advise to go long on laser tag arenas because you can definitely turn a data center into one of those. There's not much else you can do with them, unfortunately. A bubble is a way for insiders to pump, and then dump, some mania to the normy investors, to people who've been flushed into the capital markets because they've been denied a defined-benefits pension and who are only really offered market-based pensions. That means you have to be the sucker at the table. You have to put your money into the market if you don't want to die homeless and starving after you retire.
The dot-com bubble was very bad. It separated a lot of pension funds and ordinary investors from their money, but it left behind something very useful. In the early years of the aughts, there was, amid the carnage, quite a liberating vibe where all the stupid money went home and you could get servers for pennies on the dollar. Everybody knew how to code.
A generation of humanities undergraduates were induced to drop out of university and learn Python, Perl, and HTML, and a lot of them were really creative. Your rent dropped by two-thirds in San Francisco. I bought six $1,200 Steelcase Leap chairs, still in the plastic wrap, from a failed dot-com guy on a sidewalk on 19th Street in the Mission District for $25-$50 each and used them as a dining room set for the next 10 years.
So there was a very productive residue that was left behind by the dot-com bubble. It gave rise to a more robust form of the web, Web 2.0, full of things that were more useful, more interesting, more thought-through, more creative, more innovative than the stuff that the bubble threw off in Web 1.0. There are other examples of bubbles that are less likely to throw off that residue. Around that time, we also had Enron. Enron produced nothing, although I do have a pad of Enron stationery that a friend in Austin bought at the bankruptcy auction and sent to me.
So we can distinguish between bubbles with productive residues and unproductive bubbles while still not saying that bubbles are good. Bubbles are bad and destructive. When the cryptocurrency bubble bursts, all that's going to be left are shitty monkey JPEGs and worse Austrian economics. But when AI bursts, you're going to be able to buy GPUs for pennies on the dollar. You're going to have your pick of applied statisticians, many of whom are very creative and have interesting ideas for things you could build with AI but are stuck building the things their bosses want to build. There are going to be these open source models that have barely been touched. Any time someone tries to optimize them, they find so many opportunities to make them run on lower-end and commodity hardware.
DeepSeek was a spin-out of a Chinese hedge fund; the fund gave them $6 million and said, "Go play with these open source models. See what you can squeeze out of them." When they launched, their model was so good running on commodity hardware that the market did a mass sell-off, $600 billion in 24 hours—the largest 24-hour decapitalization of any firm in the history of markets. If you've got cheap hardware and you've got applied statisticians, you've got these open source models and you've got a technology that fundamentally is interesting and has done useful things and will do useful things in the future—that's a better setup than one in which we're all running around arguing about whether the word-guessing program is going to wake up, become God, and turn us into paperclips.
Ars Technica: You also push back a little on the "AI is coming for your job" messaging.
Cory Doctorow: I think we have to distinguish between the AI doing your job and the AI being incapable of doing your job, but your boss is such a sucker that he fires you and replaces you with the AI anyway. There's infinite evidence for the second one. I think that there's very little evidence for the first one, at least so far. A lot of the stories we've heard, when you interrogate them, just turn out to be nonsense. There's a chapter in the book about how many of the demos for AI have just turned out to be people in India pretending to be robots.
The most egregious example was when Amazon announced that cashiers were now out of a job because now you could just walk into [an Amazon Go store], grab stuff off the shelf, and walk out again, and the AI knows what you took. There wasn't an AI. It was three people in India watching each customer through a network of cameras in the ceiling trying to guess what you put in your bag.
I think there's lots of things that skilled workers will ask AI to do that will help them do their jobs. There's lots of things that skilled workers will ask AI to do that they'll be wrong about and that won't help them do their jobs. And there's probably space at the margin to replace humans with AI, at least in some cases. But the idea that we're at a "jobspocalypse" is such a self-serving narrative. If you're trying to convince people that the way you're going to turn $1.4 trillion in CapEx into more than $1.4 trillion in revenue is by convincing bosses to fire workers and replace them with chatbots, you have to have a story about how the chatbot can do anyone's job.
Here's a wager. If you ever have the opportunity to interview Dario Amodei or Sam Altman, I want you to ask them this. Someday, you will retire. Right now, I want you to make a binding decision. Will the thing that wipes your ass and takes care of you when you are too old and frail to take care of yourself be a person or an AI? We're just going to use whatever it is that's around at that time, and you get to choose. I think we should ask anyone who says they know how to fix things, would they themselves go to an old folk's home run according to the principles they're establishing?
Ars Technica: We are now starting to see news stories about how companies that invested in AI are suddenly getting hefty bills.
Cory Doctorow: They're getting the bill because the AI companies are trying to get out before they're stuck holding the bag. They want to do IPOs, and to do IPOs, they need to clean up their balance sheet. So they're like, "I bet these [companies] are pretty price-insensitive. Let's just jack it. Let's go from a 90 percent subsidy to a 40 percent subsidy and more than double everyone's prices. They'll hang in there." And then you get the CTO of Uber saying, "I'm not sure why we put AI in the business to begin with, and I really don't know why we'd use it if it was $20,000 a seat. So I don't know that we are going to use AI anymore."
This is quite a backfire. It actually shows you how insulated these people are from any sense of how their products are received, from what people think of them, from the actual fundamentals of real businesses that have to bring in more money than they spend. It's weird. I'm hardly a captain of industry or one of the great champions of markets, but I do understand that, by and large, firms should bring in more money than they spend if they are to be an attractive investment prospect.
Ars Technica: We hear plenty about the negative aspects of AI. What do you like about it?
Cory Doctorow: I have a couple of local models on my computer, which is just a framework laptop running Ubuntu. It doesn't even have a GPU. I use Whisper to transcribe audio. I will sometimes want to cite something I've heard in a podcast and not remember where I heard it. One time, I just threw the last 30 hours of audio I'd listened to at Whisper, and it shot out verbatim logs that were good enough that when I searched the full text, I could find it. And it gave me time codes so I could check the transcript. That's amazing.
The idea that I might someday have a computer full of audio and video files with full text indexing is great. I could even imagine conversational interfaces to that: "Where's the photo of my daughter at her birthday party where she's dressed like a pirate?"
AI doesn't have to be 100 percent accurate for that to be useful. It doesn't have to be free from false positives. It can just be OK. That stuff's running on your own computer. It's not burning down a rainforest. It's not consuming the last three drops of potable water left in Nevada. There is a certain kind of person who is performatively horrified by AI: "But, but, but that's energy you wouldn't have used." I'm like, "You have never said that about someone who turns cell shading on while playing an MMORPG." Everything you do with your computer burns electricity.
I've been using another chatbot where I paste my daily blog post in and say, "Find my typos." It finds a lot of the errors that are normally not caught by a regular spell checker: doubled-up words, punctuation marks, or words that are actual words but are misspellings for other words. When you dial up the sensitivity to the point where it actually catches all of those, it also gets a lot of false positives. That's fine for 1,500 to 3,000 words. I never feed it a book. On a 100,000-word manuscript, it's going to give me thousands of false positives, and it just won't be useful. I treat this like a plugin to my word processor. It's fine. Sometimes it's good, and sometimes it's not.
I have a friend, Patrick Ball, who is the best programmer I know, and he founded and works at an NGO called the Human Rights Data Analysis Group (HRDAG). They're one of the most important NGOs that no one's ever heard of. What they do is very rigorous statistical extrapolations of information that's not in the record, about wars, civil wars, coups, oppressive states, and they're used for truth and reconciliation, human rights tribunals, war crimes trials. They've worked on every high-profile war crimes trial in the century.
Patrick is using a bunch of Copilots to write software to do a lot of special-purpose stuff. For example, they work with Innocence Project of New Orleans, which has exonerated a bunch of [wrongly convicted] people. They can go through all the arrest reports from the New Orleans PD and find the ones that have linguistic correlates that match successful exonerations. Then they give those to the lawyers who would otherwise just be starting alphabetically or chronologically, sorting to the top the ones that are most like the ones that led to a successful exoneration.
It's not like they're asking the chatbot to write a brief for them, but this is a hugely important function, and it is getting innocent people out of prison. You don't want innocent people in prison. That should be the least controversial thing in the world. That's just good, and the proof is in the pudding.
In an extremely odd case, a single 79-year-old patient was granted early access to Eli Lilly's powerful, still-experimental obesity drug retatrutide through the Food and Drug Administration's "compassionate use" program—raising immediate questions if that sole patient is President Donald Trump, according to a report by Stat News.
Lilly's retatrutide is a highly anticipated next-generation obesity drug that targets GIP and glucagon hormones in addition to GLP-1. It is currently in late-stage trials to treat obesity, diabetes, sleep apnea, and other conditions. Data from a Phase 3 trial that Lilly released in May indicates that patients with obesity (but without diabetes) who took the drug for 80 weeks lost 28 percent of their weight, an amount comparable to bariatric surgery.
Millions of Americans with obesity are eager to get the drug, with options being limited so far to enrolling in a clinical trial or trying to obtain it by dodgy methods.
But according to a barebones public notice and Stat's sources, a single person has been granted early access through the expanded access, aka "compassionate use" pathway, which is typically used to grant access to patients with a "serious or immediately life-threatening disease or condition" and who are not able to enroll in a clinical trial, often because they are too ill.
The access request was first made in April, when the person was 79 years old (Trump turned 80 on June 14). It was made by a senior clinician at the National Institutes of Health named Ranganath Muniyappa, who requested it on behalf of a patient with refractory obesity, obstructive sleep apnea, and pulmonary hypertension, which is high blood pressure in the lungs. Sources told Stat this patient had spent a year on tirzepatide, a drug that targets the GLP-1 and GIP hormones. But the patient had achieved only moderate weight loss on the drug.
The patient was not recommended for bariatric surgery, given their age and other conditions. It was unclear whether the person would have been eligible for a trial. It's also unclear if retatrutide would work in patients who have failed to see success with tirzepatide.
"Something very wrong"
The public notice of the expanded access is suspicious, omitting much of the information that such a notice would normally include, such as the conditions that might qualify a patient for such access.
"Only people in the know would be able to find this [notice], using the drug name," Richard Klein, who helped launch the FDA’s expanded access program in the 1980s, told Stat. "There is something very wrong with the way this is listed because no one would know what it is from the listing, or what it’s for."
Stat asked both the White House and the Department of Health and Human Services if Trump is the patient, and if he has obstructive sleep apnea and pulmonary hypertension, which were not included in a memo of his most recent medical evaluation. White House spokesperson Kush Desai did not answer the question and deferred to the health department. HHS spokesperson Emily Hilliard also did not directly deny that Trump is the patient.
She provided a statement saying:
The FDA supports expanded access programs that can provide patients with serious or life-threatening conditions access to investigational treatments when no comparable or satisfying approved therapies are available. Each request is reviewed on a case-by-case basis based on the clinical circumstances and applicable statutory and regulatory requirements.
Over a dozen experts who spoke to Stat said it was highly unusual for a drug company to grant expanded use of a drug for common conditions to a single patient rather than a cohort of patients with a specified profile.
Lilly spokesperson Misty Fuller did not answer Stat's questions, saying, "We make these decisions following all applicable regulations." The NIH clinician who made the request, Muniyappa, also did not respond to questions.
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