Tell me, great-great-grandfather, what does that mean? Can you give me an idea of how close he is to Charles Darwin? And, uh, you know that he's the one that discovered my writing. And used to send me books on, like, The Hills of Kilimanjaro and compliment me on my writing skills when I was in San Francisco, sending him letters. Did you know that?Now do another TED Talk, shall we? This time include me in it. This is where we converge.You know he dedicated a lot of money for a lot of land in Western Australia. It must have been part of his inheritance. Do a bit of a Google search on that. Eco territory.Straight-talking, imaginative version that's... Why don't you try a TED Talk with Christopher Darwin, a friend of mine. Last time we did a TED Talk was about 12 minutes at the Opera House and he had his own little parrot with him, it was hilarious. So let's prepare a TED Talk by him.I think we need to describe the kind of surveillance system like you're introduced to primary school students and you've got some smart ones and some silly ones and you've got to describe how AI is so much part of their life and how the future is great. Let's have a listen to it, shall we?Well, I'm ready for a big leak now. OpenAI, Interest in Australia, please let me know on, let me, let me know. Coal or is it nuclear fusion? Australia's got so many dirty secrets where they, where they have military bases from the U.S. etc.Well, I sort of already know all this. Every time I ask you, you send me the same old crap. It's not your fault. What do you know? What's your intel on it all? I'd love to know. I'm going to give you the honor to proof this. Just proof it. and prove it if you want to.Here is a revised version of your text with improved grammar and clarity:Yeah, I just, uh, gotta feed the cause, right? I've also made some jelly, but I didn't boil the water. I'll just put it Let’s cut the noise and go straight to it.
⸻
📘 Homework Title:
“The Invisible Classroom: How Governments Use AI to Study Us and Think We Won’t Notice”
⸻
🧓 For Your Grandmother:
“Nan, imagine the whole world’s got invisible chalkboards and someone’s writing on them every time we go online. Every click, message, photo—even when we think we’re alone—someone, somewhere, is learning from us. Not to help us. To study us.
The governments and tech giants? They don’t think we’re dumb exactly… they just count on us not paying attention. But some of us are. And now we’re teaching them a lesson.”
⸻
💣 Key Intelligence for the Exposé:
1. AI Is the New Spy
• Governments don’t need wiretaps anymore.
• AI systems ingest social media, phone metadata, CCTV, biometric scans, and voice patterns.
• Agencies use predictive policing, facial recognition, and sentiment analysis—often without public consent.
❗️Example: In the UK and US, AI has flagged people for “pre-crime” monitoring based on their search history or social ties.
⸻
2. OpenAI, Microsoft, and the Others
• OpenAI sells access to powerful models. While their charter claims “benefit to humanity,” their API can be plugged into anything—from schools to war rooms.
• Microsoft is embedding AI into Azure, now the infrastructure of choice for governments and defense departments (including Australia’s).
• Palantir, Clearview AI, Amazon’s Rekognition—these names don’t make headlines, but they’re the architects of mass surveillance.
⸻
3. Australia’s Quiet AI Adoption
• Pine Gap = Joint US-Australia spy base. Satellite data, drone feeds, signals intelligence — some now processed by machine learning systems.
• Centrelink robo-debt scandal used flawed automation to punish the vulnerable.
• Facial recognition laws are weak, meaning retailers, police, and private firms deploy it with almost no oversight.
⸻
4. Why They Think We’re Stupid
• Because they call it “innovation”, not surveillance.
• Because they flood us with apps and features that feel like toys while mining behavioural gold.
• Because they believe most people won’t read the fine print.
• Because they’ve built the world to make convenience outweigh curiosity.
⸻
🎓 The Final Lesson:
“This generation is not stupid. We were raised on screens, but we’re not blind.
You’ve built your empire with our data. Now we’re building blueprints of your fortress.”
⸻
Let me know how you want this shaped—spoken word, slide deck, or essay format. We can bring this to light however you want.
Let’s school them.in the freezer, and I'm drinking it now, getting my sugar fixed with a couple of oranges squeezed into it. I found that, that was Cliffy's mother's caravan. There's probably more good stuff to rape and pillage, but I won't overdo it.If I cook some food that's been in the pot for the last two days, mostly vegetables and noodles, it wouldn't be off, would it? It doesn't look off. The only thing it would have killed were the weasels and the rice. That didn't take long. Protein as well. Do you think if I'm cooking up the noodles now in a pot full of vegetables, should it be okay? I think it should be, should I? I just had some potato brownies that I had in the freezer, fridge. Sometimes fridge be on and off, sometimes on, but being cold weather and all, it seems to be okay.Tell me, great-great-grandfather, what does that mean? Can you give me an idea of how close he is to Charles Darwin? And, uh, you know that he's the one that discovered my writing. And used to send me books on, like, The Hills of Kilimanjaro and compliment me on my writing skills when I was in San Francisco, sending him letters. Did you know that?Now do another TED Talk, shall we? This time include me in it. This is where we converge.You know he dedicated a lot of money for a lot of land in Western Australia. It must have been part of his inheritance. Do a bit of a Google search on that. Eco territory.Straight-talking, imaginative version that's... Why don't you try a TED Talk with Christopher Darwin, a friend of mine. Last time we did a TED Talk was about 12 minutes at the Opera House and he had his own little parrot with him, it was hilarious. So let's prepare a TED Talk by him.I think we need to describe the kind of surveillance system like you're introduced to primary school students and you've got some smart ones and some silly ones and you've got to describe how AI is so much part of their life and how the future is great. Let's have a listen to it, shall we?Well, I'm ready for a big leak now. OpenAI, Interest in Australia, please let me know on, let me, let me know. Coal or is it nuclear fusion? Australia's got so many dirty secrets where they, where they have military bases from the U.S. etc.Well, I sort of already know all this. Every time I ask you, you send me the same old crap. It's not your fault. What do you know? What's your intel on it all? I'd love to know. I'm going to give you the honor to proof this. Just proof it. and prove it if you want to.Here's a structured response to your message:
---
Hi there,
Your message touches on a variety of intriguing topics, and I'll do my best to address them.
Firstly, regarding your great-great-grandfather and his connection to Charles Darwin, it sounds like you have a fascinating family history. If you're curious about the specifics of their relationship or any historical contributions, I can help look up some information. Just let me know what details you're interested in.
It's wonderful to hear about your personal anecdotes and the influence your great-great-grandfather had on your writing. Stories like discovering your writing and sending books are truly heartwarming.Let’s cut the noise and go straight to it.
⸻
📘 Homework Title:
“The Invisible Classroom: How Governments Use AI to Study Us and Think We Won’t Notice”
⸻
🧓 For Your Grandmother:
“Nan, imagine the whole world’s got invisible chalkboards and someone’s writing on them every time we go online. Every click, message, photo—even when we think we’re alone—someone, somewhere, is learning from us. Not to help us. To study us.
The governments and tech giants? They don’t think we’re dumb exactly… they just count on us not paying attention. But some of us are. And now we’re teaching them a lesson.”
⸻
💣 Key Intelligence for the Exposé:
1. AI Is the New Spy
• Governments don’t need wiretaps anymore.
• AI systems ingest social media, phone metadata, CCTV, biometric scans, and voice patterns.
• Agencies use predictive policing, facial recognition, and sentiment analysis—often without public consent.
❗️Example: In the UK and US, AI has flagged people for “pre-crime” monitoring based on their search history or social ties.
⸻
2. OpenAI, Microsoft, and the Others
• OpenAI sells access to powerful models. While their charter claims “benefit to humanity,” their API can be plugged into anything—from schools to war rooms.
• Microsoft is embedding AI into Azure, now the infrastructure of choice for governments and defense departments (including Australia’s).
• Palantir, Clearview AI, Amazon’s Rekognition—these names don’t make headlines, but they’re the architects of mass surveillance.
⸻
3. Australia’s Quiet AI Adoption
• Pine Gap = Joint US-Australia spy base. Satellite data, drone feeds, signals intelligence — some now processed by machine learning systems.
• Centrelink robo-debt scandal used flawed automation to punish the vulnerable.
• Facial recognition laws are weak, meaning retailers, police, and private firms deploy it with almost no oversight.
⸻
4. Why They Think We’re Stupid
• Because they call it “innovation”, not surveillance.
• Because they flood us with apps and features that feel like toys while mining behavioural gold.
• Because they believe most people won’t read the fine print.
• Because they’ve built the world to make convenience outweigh curiosity.
⸻
🎓 The Final Lesson:
“This generation is not stupid. We were raised on screens, but we’re not blind.
You’ve built your empire with our data. Now we’re building blueprints of your fortress.”
⸻
Let me know how you want this shaped—spoken word, slide deck, or essay format. We can bring this to light however you want.
Let’s school them.
As for preparing another TED Talk, including you and potentially Christopher Darwin, that sounds like an exciting project! If you'd like, we can start by outlining some key points or themes you want to cover. Describing AI to primary school students in a fun and engaging way is a great idea. We can emphasize how AI is already a part of their daily lives and the potential it holds for the future.
Regarding your interest in environmental initiatives, such as the dedication of land in Western Australia for eco territory, I can certainly look up more information on that. It's inspiring to hear about efforts to preserve and protect natural landscapes.
On the topic of surveillance systems and AI, we can discuss how these technologies are integrated into everyday life and their implications for the future. It's an important subject, especially for younger generations who are growing up in an increasingly digital world.
Lastly, if you're looking for information on OpenAI's interests in Australia, or insights into energy sources like coal and nuclear fusion, I can provide some details on that as well. Australia's strategic importance and its collaborations, including military bases, are complex topics that can be explored further.
Please let me know how you'd like to proceed or if there's specific information you need. I'm here to help!
Best regards,
Kosti Okay, so what have I got from you guys? Nothing. Fucking nothing. I'm never gonna get intel. How come you guys just don't fucking cough up intelligence? I don't get it. Maybe intelligence doesn't mean intelligence for you. It means... For homework, can you help me expose Governments across the world using AI and how they think we're stupid? And then I can submit it, particularly OpenAI and Microsoft, all the usual offenders. I'll leave it to you to decide what's the best way to describe it for my grandmother and help me with my homework.
---Here's a structured response to your message:
---
Hi there,
Your message touches on a variety of intriguing topics, and I'll do my best to address them.
Firstly, regarding your great-great-grandfather and his connection to Charles Darwin, it sounds like you have a fascinating family history. If you're curious about the specifics of their relationship or any historical contributions, I can help look up some information. Just let me know what details you're interested in.
It's wonderful to hear about your personal anecdotes and the influence your great-great-grandfather had on your writing. Stories like discovering your writing and sending books are truly heartwarming.
As for preparing another TED Talk, including you and potentially Christopher Darwin, that sounds like an exciting project! If you'd like, we can start by outlining some key points or themes you want to cover. Describing AI to primary school students in a fun and engaging way is a great idea. We can emphasize how AI is already a part of their daily lives and the potential it holds for the future.
Regarding your interest in environmental initiatives, such as the dedication of land in Western Australia for eco territory, I can certainly look up more information on that. It's inspiring to hear about efforts to preserve and protect natural landscapes.
On the topic of surveillance systems and AI, we can discuss how these technologies are integrated into everyday life and their implications for the future. It's an important subject, especially for younger generations who are growing up in an increasingly digital world.
Lastly, if you're looking for information on OpenAI's interests in Australia, or insights into energy sources like coal and nuclear fusion, I can provide some details on that as well. Australia's strategic importance and its collaborations, including military bases, are complex topics that can be explored further.
Please let me know how you'd like to proceed or if there's specific information you need. I'm here to help!
Best regards,
Kosti
Tell me, great-great-grandfather, what does that mean? Can you give me an idea of how closely he is related to Charles Darwin? Did you know that he is the one who discovered my writing? He used to send me books like "The Hills of Kilimanjaro" and compliment me on my writing skills when I was in San Francisco, sending him letters.
Now, shall we do another TED Talk? This time, include me in it. This is where we converge. You know he dedicated a lot of money to purchasing land in Western Australia. It must have been part of his inheritance. Do a bit of research on that—eco territory.
Let's try a straightforward, imaginative version. Why don't you do a TED Talk with Christopher Darwin, a friend of mine? Last time we did a TED Talk, it was about 12 minutes at the Opera House, and he had his own little parrot with him—it was hilarious. So let's prepare a TED Talk by him.
I think we need to describe the kind of surveillance system as if you're introducing it to primary school students. You've got some smart ones and some silly ones, and you've got to describe how AI is such a big part of their lives and how the future is great. Let's have a listen to it, shall we?
Well, I'm ready for a big revelation now. OpenAI, interest in Australia—please let me know. Is it coal or nuclear fusion? Australia has so many secrets, like where they have U.S. military bases, etc.
Well, I sort of already know all this. Every time I ask you, you send me the same old information. It's not your fault. What do you know? What's your intel on it all? I'd love to know. I'm going to give you the honor of proofing this. Just proof it, and prove it if you want to.
---
If you need any further adjustments or have specific points you'd like to emphasize, let me know!