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#friction

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"The idea of frictionlessness has very narcissistic “player character” vibes ... Because being actually touched, being inconvenienced, being emotionally moved, having your mind and perception changed means acknowledging your fellow human beings around you, realizing their differences to you and to recognize their value."

Bleak but true observations by @tante

tante.cc/2025/07/30/friction-a

Smashing Frames · Friction and not being touched
More from tante

Friction and not being touched

The journalist Karen Hao – who published an absolutely fantastic book about OpenAI called “Empire of AI” recently – coined (as far as I know) one of the best terms for describing modern “AI” systems: Everything Machines.

“AI” systems are not framed as specific tools that solve specific problems in specific ways but just as solution in itself: There is nothing “AI” cannot do, if it fails we just failed it by not prompting it right or not building large enough data centers or not waiting for […]

tante.cc/2025/07/30/friction-a

Been trying 2d svg/vector animation on Linux recently. Have tried Synfig and Friction. Weird pros and cons. Friction (crap name, try searching with a name like that...) is winning out in the ease of use from Inkscape dept. Synfig feels more complete, but... it's deeply weird. Like you can't do obvious stuff weird. Like vim is text weird for me.

Anyway. So far so amazing! Linux graphics is a lot of fun.

Replied to Stefan Ihringer

@compfu @birb @friction is available to follow on mastodon:)

It's a wip, but as they say on the blog, very promising.

One thing I discovered when playing with it, since it works w svgs you can actually import multi layered vectors which appear as layers. It even retains edutability of shapes, text, etc.

In theory you could do vector editing in #inkscape files that update in #friction :). They even have a tips channel on #peertube thx to @tonton

makertube.net/w/rVP17o7JigihXe

If you're gonna watch a video today, let it be this one!

youtube.com/watch?v=I4mdMMu-3fc

It is horrible to see how artists are hostages of corporations in order to be able to use their tools to create. Submitting themselves to predatory practices like proprietary formats, software as a service licensing models, vendor lock-in 🤮

We have the power to change that! Support #floss projects like #Blender #Kdenlive #Krita #GIMP #Inkscape #Darktable #Ardour #Godot #Scribus #Natron #Friction #endof10 #linux

Read the conclusion of the recent Media Lab paper about LLMs. It’s a Non-Friction Nightmare.

No, that’s not a typo in my title.

I’ve just had my first look at the MIT Media Lab paper that is making the rounds: “Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task.” 

This paper is disturbing, to say the least. What the authors call “friction” is what we used to call thinking, or it’s at least an essential element of thinking, the effort of it. That effort includes the give and take of inquiry, the difficulty of dialogue, the sweat of education, the work of human language and human encounter. 

The paper’s conclusion only scratches the surface of this problem when it addresses “ethical considerations.”

Consider what is probably the most alarming sentence here, which describes what happens when you reduce friction: people reach the conclusions the algorithm wants them to reach – or, rather, the algorithm reaches conclusions for them; people reach for nothing at all.

It’s surrender.  Not just to machines, mind you, not just to the algorithm, but also to the interests (“the priorities”) the algorithm represents.

By surrendering to the these priorities, allowing ourselves to be guided by them, we’re also throwing in the towel on shared human experience, co-coordination and mutual guidance, reliance on each other and shared commitment — which is the only way we can work out our own priorities.

Finally, I can’t post this on my blog (a little center of friction in its own right) without saying something about the writing here.

I know this is a draft paper, but this conclusion sure could use another going-over. It’s not just the typo in the penultimate paragraph (“theis” instead of “their”) that needs correcting; there’s also that awkward bit about “net positive for the humans” in the final paragraph (which sounds like it came straight from an LLM) and the resort to cliche (“technological crossroads”) and industry jargon (“unprecedented opportunities for enhancing learning and information access”). The findings here deserve more clarity.

Last, I’d like to see a little more about the social and political consequences that would seem to follow inevitably from the “cognitive consequences” the authors document. But maybe that’s a matter for another paper.   

As we stand at this technological crossroads, it becomes crucial to understand the full spectrum of cognitive consequences associated with LLM integration in educational and informational contexts. While these tools offer unprecedented opportunities for enhancing learning and information access, their potential impact on cognitive development, critical thinking, and intellectual independence demands a very careful consideration and continued research. 

The LLM undeniably reduced the friction involved in answering participants’ questions compared to the Search Engine. However, this convenience came at a cognitive cost, diminishing users’ inclination to critically evaluate the LLM’s output or ”opinions” (probabilistic answers based on the training datasets). This highlights a concerning evolution of the ‘echo chamber’ effect: rather than disappearing, it has adapted to shape user exposure through algorithmically curated content. What is ranked as “top” is ultimately influenced by the priorities of the LLM’s shareholders…. 

Only a few participants in the interviews mentioned that they did not follow the “thinking” [124] aspect of the LLMs and pursued their line of ideation and thinking. 

Regarding ethical considerations, participants who were in the Brain-only group reported higher satisfaction and demonstrated higher brain connectivity, compared to other groups. Essays written with the help of LLM carried a lesser significance or value to the participants (impaired ownership, Figure 8), as they spent less time on writing (Figure 33), and mostly failed to provide a quote from theis [sic] essays (Session 1, Figure 6, Figure 7). 

Human teachers “closed the loop” by detecting the LLM-generated essays, as they recognized the conventional structure and homogeneity of the delivered points for each essay within the topic and group. 

We believe that the longitudinal studies are needed in order to understand the long-term impact of the LLMs on the human brain, before LLMs are recognized as something that is net positive for the humans.

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💡 “Friction can happen not only when things break, it can also be intentional to prevent things from breaking. What if we could make the safe things easier (less friction) and the high-risk things harder (more friction)?”

Check out the new blog series “Speculative F(r)iction in AI Use and Governance” by Bogdana Rakova! 👀

speculativefriction.substack.c

Speculative F(r)iction in AI Use and Governance · Introducing a new Blog Series: Speculative F(r)iction in AI Use and GovernanceBy Bogdana Rakova