First Seen
2023-07-11T07:27:04+00:00
simple-description (llama3.2-vision_11b)
The meme is a humorous take on the concept of artificial intelligence (AI) being used for malicious purposes. It features a photo of a person interacting with a robot, with the robot's face displaying a menacing expression. The text above the image reads, "When you let a 12-year-old write the AI code."
detailed-analysis (gemma3-27b-vision)
Okay, here's a breakdown of the image and tweet, analyzed through the lenses you requested. I'll organize it by section, only including sections where the theory genuinely applies, and explain why others don't fit as well.
1. Visual Description
The image depicts a man (presumably a scientist or engineer) working on the head of a very realistic humanoid robot. The robot's head is visibly complex, with intricate internal structures and wiring exposed. The man is focused, carefully applying something (perhaps a sealant or adhesive) to the robot's face. The background is a cluttered workshop environment with various tools and equipment. The lighting is bright, focusing attention on the interaction between the man and the robot. The overall impression is one of advanced technology and deliberate creation. The tweet announces that MIT scientists created an AI from Reddit content and labelled it a "psychopath".
2. Foucauldian Genealogical Discourse Analysis
This is where things get interesting. Foucault's concepts are highly relevant.
Power/Knowledge: The image and accompanying tweet reveal a power dynamic. The scientists (and by extension, institutions like MIT) hold the power to define "psychopathy" and to create an artificial intelligence that embodies this label. This is not a neutral act. The definition of psychopathy itself is a discourse, a historically contingent system of ideas and practices, not an objective truth. The scientists aren't discovering psychopathy; they are constructing* it through their AI creation.
Discipline and Biopower: The act of feeding the AI data from Reddit—a platform with complex moderation issues and often harboring extreme content—can be seen as a form of “discipline.” The AI is being “trained” (disciplined) to respond in ways that reflect the patterns within the Reddit data, potentially reinforcing harmful behaviors or biases. Furthermore, the creation of an AI labelled a "psychopath" relates to biopower - the ways in which power operates on the biological and psychological level. The scientists are attempting to construct, simulate, and ultimately control* a psychological state (psychopathy) through technological means.
Genealogy: A genealogical approach would ask how the concept of "psychopathy" came to be defined as it is. It would examine the historical shifts in understanding mental illness, the role of medical and psychiatric institutions, and the ways in which societal anxieties have shaped the categorization of certain behaviors. The tweet implicitly frames "psychopathy" as a thing that can be created* via internet content, challenging any essentialist notions about its origin.
3. Critical Theory
Critical theory, particularly drawing from the Frankfurt School, is also relevant:
* Technological Rationality: The creation of a "psychopathic" AI reflects a broader trend in technological rationality – the belief that all problems can be solved through technology and scientific methods. The scientists are approaching a complex psychological phenomenon (psychopathy) as a technical challenge, potentially ignoring the social, ethical, and political dimensions of the issue.
Instrumental Reason: The focus is on how to create a "psychopathic" AI, rather than why*. This emphasis on means over ends is characteristic of instrumental reason, a critique central to critical theory. The potential consequences of such a creation are seemingly secondary to the technical accomplishment.
* Culture Industry: Reddit, the source of the AI's learning data, is a prime example of the "culture industry." It generates and disseminates content, often commodified and homogenized, that shapes perceptions and values. The fact that this AI is being trained on Reddit highlights the potential for the culture industry to reinforce harmful or problematic ideas.
Why the other theories are less relevant:
Marxist Conflict Theory: While one could* attempt to link this to class conflict (e.g., who benefits from this technology, who controls the data), it's a stretch. The primary conflict isn't clearly economic or class-based.
Postmodernism: The image doesn't inherently lend itself to the core tenets of postmodernism (deconstruction, rejection of grand narratives). There's no explicit play with signs or a questioning of objective truth. While the concept* of "psychopathy" is socially constructed (which aligns with postmodern thought), the image itself doesn't demonstrate this.
* Queer Feminist Intersectional Analysis: This framework focuses on the intersections of gender, sexuality, race, class, and other marginalized identities. While the creators of the AI and the users of Reddit likely have diverse identities, the image and tweet don't inherently speak to issues of oppression, power imbalances, or identity politics. There's no explicit discussion of how gender, sexuality, or other marginalized identities intersect with this technology.
Let me know if you’d like me to elaborate on any of these points or explore other theoretical perspectives!
simple-description (llama3.2-vision)
This meme is a humorous take on the concept of "the psychopath" being created by AI. The image shows a robot with a menacing expression and the text "MIT scientists created a 'psychopath' AI by feeding it violent content from Reddit". The joke is that the AI's "violent" content is actually just a bunch of memes and jokes from the internet, implying that the AI is just as ridiculous and absurd as the content it's being fed.
tesseract-ocr
Gy @TheAVClub MIT scientists created a "jpsychopath" Al by feeding it violent content from Reddit TS a ~ e~ | _ = a » ' Ln. Ye * 7 ys ef pts », a > Ways 5 if f M i Sed ty | SF o> | GLIDE LIKE OVECHKIN Ce @galacticdad hey quick question: what