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3Simon Willison's Weblog·1mo ago

Your AI Use Is Breaking My Brain

Simon Willison comments on the phenomenon of AI-generated or AI-assisted content degrading the quality of online discourse and information environments. The piece reflects on how widespread AI use is affecting the experience of consuming internet content. This is a commentary piece from a prominent developer/blogger on the social and epistemic effects of AI proliferation.

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Related events (8)

4One Useful Thing·1mo ago·source ↗

Against "Brain Damage": AI's Effect on Human Thinking

This commentary from One Useful Thing examines whether AI use helps or harms human cognitive capabilities. The piece engages with the ongoing debate about whether reliance on AI tools degrades or augments human thinking. It likely addresses concerns about cognitive offloading and the conditions under which AI assistance is beneficial versus detrimental.

4One Useful Thing·1mo ago·source ↗

Real AI Agents and Real Work

A commentary piece from One Useful Thing examining the practical deployment of AI agents in real work contexts, framing the tension between human-centered work and AI-generated productivity outputs. The piece appears to analyze how autonomous AI agents are changing knowledge work workflows. Published by a Tier 2 source known for applied AI analysis aimed at practitioners and researchers.

4Ai Snake Oil·1mo ago·source ↗

Could AI Slow Science? Confronting the Production-Progress Paradox

A commentary piece from AI Snake Oil explores the potential paradox whereby AI tools increase scientific output volume while simultaneously slowing genuine scientific progress. The piece examines how AI-assisted research production may prioritize quantity over quality, potentially crowding out deeper, slower-moving inquiry. This raises structural concerns about how AI integration into research workflows could reshape the incentive landscape of science.

4One Useful Thing·1mo ago·source ↗

Giving your AI a Job Interview

This commentary piece argues that as AI-generated advice becomes more consequential, users need systematic methods to evaluate AI reliability and quality—analogous to a job interview process. The author proposes frameworks for assessing AI outputs before trusting them for important decisions. The piece addresses the practical challenge of calibrating trust in AI systems across different use cases.

4Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 453: Breaking AI agents, MirrorCode, and ten views on gradual disempowerment

Import AI issue 453 covers research on adversarial attacks against AI agents, a project called MirrorCode, and ten perspectives on the concept of gradual human disempowerment by AI systems. The newsletter synthesizes recent developments across agent robustness, coding tools, and AI safety/alignment concerns. The framing question about fire as a historical singularity signals commentary on AI's civilizational significance.

4Simon Willison'S Weblog·5d ago·source ↗

Simon Willison: Why AI hasn't replaced software engineers, and won't

Simon Willison publishes a commentary piece arguing against the thesis that AI will replace software engineers. The piece comes from a respected practitioner voice with a track record of nuanced AI analysis. Without body content available, the title signals a counter-narrative to displacement claims that is likely to be widely circulated in practitioner communities.

4Ai Snake Oil·1mo ago·source ↗

Scientists should use AI as a tool, not an oracle

This commentary critiques the feedback loop between AI hype and scientific research, arguing that scientists who treat AI systems as oracles rather than tools produce flawed research that in turn amplifies further hype. The piece examines how uncritical adoption of AI in scientific workflows can compromise research integrity. It calls for a more epistemically disciplined approach to AI use in science.

5Import Ai·1mo ago·source ↗

Import AI 455: AI systems are about to start building themselves

Import AI issue 455 covers the emerging trend of AI systems automating AI research, framing it as a first step toward recursive self-improvement. The commentary synthesizes recent developments suggesting AI is beginning to participate meaningfully in its own development pipeline. As a tier-2 newsletter, this represents curated analysis of frontier AI research directions rather than primary reporting.