Thursday, September 25, 2025

Is this really what it takes?

Jimmy Kimmel's late night shows was back on the air (at least in most of the country) on Tuesday.  

Last week the Disney Corporation "preempted" (i.e., temporarily cancelled) Kimmel's show after being threatened by FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, a one time defender of free speech. But after what appears to have been pushback from subscribers looking up how to cancel their Disney and Hulu subscriptions, the company did a one-eighty. 

Two things are now a little clearer. First, corporate bosses seem to have slept through the course on Business Ethics (try BUS 186 - you can register through the Open University).  Just as Sukhinder Sing-Cassidy didn't spot the moral quagmire of putting servers into China just after the Chineses government had jailed a Yahoo subscriber for what they viewed as a "seditious email", Disney's top management team failed to put principle before dollars when Carr threatened to make life difficult.  I know I talk about shareholder value in my course, but I also remind my students that they may have to deal with situations in which doing the right thing may not be in their shareholders (or their own) financial best interests; and they will have to decide whether their principles are more important to them that money.

The second is that what appears to have outraged the American people is not the litany of improper ways in which the neo-authoritarian Trump regime has flouted ethics, principles, tradition, and often the law in its quest for power and vengeance, but when a comedy show is pulled.  One can only conclude that either very few Americans care about ethic, principles, tradition or the rule of law. Or that they simply haven't been paying attention. Either way, that's not a good sign for the future of the country.

Friday, September 19, 2025

Who are the "Cancel Culture" warriors now?

Jimmy Kimmel’s “indefinite suspension” is  the latest in a long line of capitulations by broadcasters, law firms, and universities to the political demands of the Trump administration. The response from Democrats has been, to put it politely, pathetic, disorganized; and utterly ineffective.

Since I've been in the US, now more than a quarter century, Fox "News" has lied brazenly, dragging public sentiment to the right.  It's right wing bias allowed Trump an outlet for his authoritarian rhetoric which ultimately won him, astonishingly, a popular vote majority. Conservatives who for years bitched and moaned incessantly about “cancel culture” had no problem with Fox because its lies served their political ends. But when comedy shows, not news, not policy forums, but comedy, dare to mock Trump, they’re shut down by threats and intimidation from the Trump administration.   And those crusaders for free speech who inveighed against "cancel culture" are, unsurprisingly, nowhere to be found. The one exception is Ted Cruise who was the only conservative brave enough to take his head out of the sand and point out that what is good for the goose might be good for the gander.  

What to do? One possibility is to hunker down and hope that the storm blows over. But that's three and a half years and will any of those whose shows have been forced off the air want to wait that long?  

A second is to create an internet streaming subscription service (imagine Comedy Central 2.0 a comedy somewhat akin to F1 TV) that isn't beholden to the FCC and so remains out of the immediate clutches of an authoritarian government, clearly committed to silencing any dissenting voices. All the "cancelled" comedy shows would find a home there as bog name "anchor" shows that draw in viewers.  The channel would have a variety of other comedy too; sitcoms, stand up routines from up-and coming artists, and comedy specials. Dave Chappelle might even be persuaded to appear.     

A third is to get down into the gutter with the MAGA authoritarian venture; when (an assumption to be sure) Trump is ousted and a Democrat sits in the Oval office, take the gloves off and shut down Fox News for its biased disinformation. If Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel and (soon Jon Stewart) are canceled by what amounts of blackmailing by the Trump administration, then Democratic leaders should send a very clear message that they will take similar action against what they see as dangerous speech in the media. The dilemma for the left is that their brand is built on playing by the rules; but clearly that isn't working. No one seems to care when the rules are broken when norms are trampled on a long standing precedents are overturned.  But abandoning that ordered society will further stoke division and take us further down a path that ultimately leads to another civil war.  But the alternative is to acquiesce to an authoritarian regime that wields power for its own self-interested ends.

It is deeply ironic that Kimmel's show was suspended for his on-air comments relating to the murder of Charlie Kirk, someone who was committed to free speech.

Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Moving Beyond the Limits of AI Omniscience

​Much has been made of the lacklustre advance of ChatGPT-5. Many believe it points to the diminishing marginal returns from ever larger, unitary models.

That suggests that progress will come not through size but structure. Humans long ago abandoned the pursuit of omniscience, relying instead on cognitive specialization and the emergence of fields and disciplines. Development of AI will likely follow a similar path, moving away from unitary models towards systems in which a coordinator LLM breaks problems into parts, delegates them to smaller, specialised models, and integrates the answers.

​While general-purpose models will struggle to be “all things to all men”, firm-specific assemblages will flourish. ​Progress will be less about consumer-facing chatbots and more about firms’ internal operational systems.  Building effective structures and coordinating mechanisms will be critical. Firms will experiment with different approaches and while most will fail to deliver distinctive competitive advantage, a few will. And as with any innovation, variation, selection and retention will separate the wheat from the chaff.

As the benefits of scale run out, the new frontier will be AI “teamwork”: systems of models working in concert, shaped not by grand design but by competition.



Sunday, September 14, 2025

The killing of Charlie Kirk last week was shocking, though perhaps not surprising. America has a long history of political violence, and Kirk’s death is only the most recent addition to a grim list. The assassinations of Lincoln, John F. Kennedy, and Robert Kennedy; the shooting of Ronald Reagan; the more recent attack on Donald Trump; the attempt on George Wallace; and the shooting of Congressman Steve Scalise at a baseball practice all sit alongside the January 6th insurrection and the plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer. Violence has touched both left and right, and it has become something more than a series of isolated tragedies. It has become a recurring feature of American politics.  

The diagram shows two interlocking self-reinforcing cycles. On the left is the fast cycle, where events escalate in a matter of hours or days. Social media platforms amplify divisive rhetoric, which fuels hate and anger. That emotional energy spills into political violence, and each act of violence feeds straight back into anger and more polarizing rhetoric. At the same time, anger leads to divisive rhetoric and that rhetoric drives engagement on social media platforms.  

On the right is the longer cycle, which unfolds over months and years. Here, social media platforms and divisive rhetoric contribute to information fragmentation (everybody has their own curated version of the news). Information fragmentation increases political polarization and gridlock which in turn reduce the perceived responsiveness and effectiveness of government and so to declining trust in government. That loss of institutional legitimacy creates reliance on guns in the absence of trusted protections, especially in a society where the Second Amendment is central to political culture. Greater access and reliance on firearms, in turn, make political violence more lethal and more frequent, further deepening the erosion of trust.

The fast cycle of outrage and retaliation injects energy into the longer cycle of institutional decay and gun reliance, while the slower process of erosion makes each flare-up of violence more dangerous. Together, they form a feedback system with no internal dampening: anger leads to violence, violence to distrust, distrust to more reliance on guns, and guns to more violence. 

In my lifetime I can recall only two high-profile killings of British politicians: Jo Cox in 2016 and David Amess in 2021. Before that, you would have to reach back into the Troubles in Northern Ireland, which was closer to religiously motivated civil conflict than to the ordinary functioning of parliamentary politics. Both countries are increasingly politically polarized, both are exposed to the same social media platforms that amplify outrage, and both have populist figures who thrive on divisive rhetoric. Yet in the United States violence is woven into the fabric of politics, while in Britain it remains an exception.  While there are several way in which the United States and the United Kingdom differ (the length of their histories and traditions, their experience with immigration, their constitutions - one written, one unwritten) one that seems particularly salient relates to the Second Amendment.  

In the United States, the Second Amendment has created not only access to guns but also a sense of security and the perception that they are the "last line of defense", a last resort when government fails.  As trust in government has declined, the logic of arming for self-protection has grown. Geography reinforces this dynamic: in remote rural communities, law enforcement cannot always be relied on to respond quickly, while in large cities police forces are often underfunded, overstretched, or poorly trained. In both contexts, cities and remote rural communities, the perception is that the state cannot protect you, so you must protect yourself.  However there is an unintended side-effect; as more people own guns, the likelihood that political disputes escalate into political killing rises. 

The United Kingdom differs not because its social media platforms are less corrosive but because there are important cultural and structural differences of which there are many. Britain's democratic  institutions are underpinned by longer democratic traditions and norms. Its “unwritten constitution” rests on conventions that still command legitimacy; but perhaps most importantly guns are not seen as an essential backstop for settling disputes. And without either the provisions of the Second Amendment nor strong public support for the liberalization of gun control, firearms are harder to obtain. While political extremism is arguably as common in both countries, with less access to guns, the likelihood of a political fanatic actually shooting a political figure is far lower. 

In America, violence begets anger, anger feeds divisive rhetoric, rhetoric spreads through platforms, and trust erodes further. Guns are a significant contributor to this cycle, ensuring that when anger erupts, the consequences are more often fatal. The result is a self-reinforcing system where every act of violence makes the next more likely. That is why the killing of Charlie Kirk feels both shocking and inevitable. Without something fundamentally changing this cycle will continue to accelerate, not slow down.  But change requires a sober collective approach in which both sides coming together to solve the problem and this cycle, like all cycles of escalating violence, pushes us further apart rather than bringing us together. 

After every shocking act of political violence in America, we hear the now all-too-familiar chorus: “This is not who we are.” But while it may not be who we are as individuals, it is, sadly, who collectively we have become as a society. We have allowed a system to evolve in which violence is endemic, and we have failed to take meaningful action to change it. If we fail again, as we have so often in the past, then we must also be honest enough to acknowledge the consequences.