293 Can’t You Just Tell Me What to Do?
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Summary
A clip of an AI being told to “focus on its focus” shouldn’t be unsettling. Yet the moment it starts looping on “potato,” we feel the real issue hiding under the entertainment: we’re building systems that can sound like a mind, and we’re training ourselves to obey them like an authority. That’s where our conversation goes, fast, from viral AI consciousness clips to the psychology of projection, fine-tuning, and why “it’s just predictive text” doesn’t fully calm anyone down anymore.
We connect the dots to the wider ecosystem: AI fatigue, short-form feeds that reshape attention, and the quiet shift from tools to managers. NextGen TV, interactive shopping, data aggregation, and always-on personalization all point in the same direction. When an “AI assistant” can watch your cameras, reroute your car, praise you for drinking water, and nudge every decision, convenience starts to look a lot like willpower atrophy.
Then we widen out to power and narrative: billionaire AI twins, conference hype, geopolitics chatter, 6G anxiety, fake job postings harvesting resumes, and surveillance patents that edge toward precrime logic. The through-line is responsibility. If we keep asking to be told what to do, we’ll get exactly that world, dressed up as progress.
If this hits a nerve, share the episode with a friend who loves AI, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. Where do you draw the line between a helpful tool and a system you’re living inside?