トランスクリプトEnglish

This is actually terrifying

10m 47s1,806 単語276 segmentsEnglish

全トランスクリプト

0:00

This is one of the scariest things that

0:02

I have ever seen. I don't usually make

0:04

videos like this where I see something

0:06

and then immediately feel compelled to

0:08

turn on the camera, but as of today, my

0:10

dystopian Rubicon has been crossed. My

0:13

predefined one.

0:15

Boom. Oligarchowned AI truth machine.

0:19

This is a concept that I have feared for

0:22

a while

0:23

and uh it exists now.

0:27

>> Journalists ruined your reputation. Not

0:29

with evidence, with a narrative. And

0:31

when they come for you, there's no way

0:33

to fight back until now. Introducing

0:37

Objection, the first AI tribunal. Former

0:41

CIA and FBI agents will investigate.

0:44

They gather evidence and make it public

0:46

permanently. The AI tribunal checks the

0:49

record and renders the verdict. You can

0:52

save your reputation in days, not years.

0:55

From the team that bankrupted Gawker,

0:57

mastermind Aaron Duza, and investor

1:00

Peter Teal comes objection. Truth isn't

1:04

what goes viral. It's verified. File an

1:07

objection

1:14

from the team that bankrupted Gawker.

1:16

All right. So, if you didn't catch

1:18

exactly what that was, it is an assault

1:21

on journalism. It's an assault on the

1:22

media. It's an assault on truth. It is a

1:25

privatelyowned company run by Antichrist

1:27

Peter Teal and a guy who's proud of the

1:29

fact he bankrupted Gawker to centralize

1:32

the truth, to centralize narratives. I'm

1:35

not going to get too loud cuz my kids

1:37

are sleeping in the room next to me, but

1:38

holy [ __ ] man. This is [ __ ]

1:40

terrifying. This is really, really

1:42

scary. Let's have a look. Look at this

1:44

dystopian [ __ ] So, here is their

1:46

dystopian website, uh, the AI Tribunal

1:50

of Truth. Today, anyone can publish

1:52

allegations. almost no one can afford to

1:54

challenge them. Objection changes that.

1:56

It gives everyone a fast, affordable,

1:58

evidence-based way to dispute statements

2:00

in the media. Sure. Sure, journalists

2:03

get stuff wrong. Sure, the narrative

2:04

changes. Journalists have got stuff

2:06

wrong about me. It It's annoying. I get

2:08

it. But like, this is not a solution. I

2:12

cannot stress that enough. Journalism

2:16

must be decentralized.

2:18

The truth must be decentralized.

2:22

I hate this man. To have this controlled

2:25

in one centralized place owned by the

2:28

most rich and evil people. Oh wow. Here

2:31

we go. Without objection. The court

2:34

jester rules. You challenge any public

2:37

statement. We have the best investors in

2:39

the world. Warhawks. Warhawks.

2:42

Bailed out banks. The CIA. Our

2:45

investigators have previously worked at

2:47

these organizations. Right. So these are

2:50

just logos that are on people's resumes.

2:52

Let's have a look at your manifesto. The

2:55

truth is the foundation of civilization.

2:59

Yes, truth is not optional. It is the

3:01

essential condition that allows humans

3:03

to reason together about reality.

3:04

Without shared truth, trust collapses

3:06

and discourse gives way too force. This

3:09

is how all of these evil fascist people

3:11

work. They say something that is like

3:13

broad enough to be true and then they

3:15

just skip ahead to like the worst

3:17

premise ever. They'll be like, "Hey,

3:19

killing people is wrong." That's why

3:21

we've decided to own every bullet and

3:23

put AI in every bullet. So if it kills

3:25

you, we know,

3:28

hey, the truth is wrong. So we're going

3:29

to own the truth. Before courts rule,

3:31

before regulators act, before markets

3:33

move, stories are published, narratives

3:35

form, reputations are made or destroyed.

3:37

Reality is framed often irreversibly.

3:40

This is so corrupt. It is basically just

3:42

saying, "Hey, what's the last system

3:43

that we can't control?" Oh yeah, people

3:45

talking, the media. It's like all of

3:46

these things before courts rule. It's

3:48

like if you are a billionaire, you can

3:50

buy the courts, you can control the

3:52

courts. Before regulators act, you can

3:54

lobby the regulators. Before markets

3:56

move, you are the market. Before stories

3:57

are published. Hell, I mean like half of

3:59

them freaking own the media. It's just

4:02

other journalists.

4:04

This is so cooked. Narratives formed,

4:05

reputations are made or destroyed.

4:06

Reality is framed often irreversibly

4:08

good. And yet journalism today is not

4:11

truth adjudicated. and moves at the

4:13

speed of the internet without a shared

4:14

process for testing claims. This is a

4:17

problem, but this is not the solution.

4:19

This is so not the solution. So, we

4:22

decided to own the truth. Oh, man. No

4:26

way. No. No. No.

4:29

This This is my dystopia Rubicon. I've

4:33

It's written down, dog. Courts were

4:35

built for truth, but cannot scale. I

4:38

hate this language, but cannot scale.

4:40

Shut up. For centuries, courts served as

4:42

society's truth adjudication engine.

4:45

That's like partially true. There's also

4:48

like truth that gets adjudicated by

4:50

communities. And the courts fail people

4:52

a lot of the time. Laws aren't perfect.

4:54

Courts aren't perfect. OJ definitely

4:57

killed his wife. What are we doing here,

4:59

guys? But it's also like the modern

5:01

court of public opinion is a reaction to

5:03

a broken court system or like an

5:05

inaccessible court system that people

5:06

who don't have enough money which

5:08

structurally was caused by you you

5:09

freaking VC backer dorks. So people have

5:12

to bypass these exclusive and expensive

5:13

things in order to actually just get

5:15

some sort of freaking modicum of

5:17

justice. And justice is so rare. These

5:21

people have enough. They have so much.

5:23

They have more money than God. They have

5:25

more power. They have they own

5:26

everything. Why do you want more Peter

5:28

Teal? What is wrong with you? Oh my god.

5:31

I'm not saying someone should, but why

5:34

journalism is our first focus?

5:38

There is so much hope in that one

5:40

sentence for everybody else. Journalism

5:43

is where truth breaks now and where it

5:45

can be repaired fastest. It feels like a

5:48

threat. Journalism's truth

5:49

infrastructure and every downstream

5:51

system improves. Oh my god, this is so

5:53

paternalistic of these evil, evil

5:56

people. They make this stuff. They lobby

5:58

governments. They like try to turn all

6:00

like they try to turn the commons they

6:01

try to turn life existence into

6:03

corporate assets and then all people

6:06

have left is what they can say all right

6:10

all right all right what objection

6:11

provides um total immunity well our

6:15

long-term ambition to be a complete

6:19

totalitarian government wherein there is

6:22

just one truth and we get to decide what

6:24

it is

6:26

yeah it's pretty much what it says all

6:27

right the direction is inevitable. H

6:30

there is a um there's a propaganda

6:32

technique called inevitable victory.

6:34

It's so funny. It's like it's not even

6:37

like that thinly masked. I've been

6:38

reading a lot of Hannah Arent lately

6:40

because I think everything that she

6:41

writes is incredibly relevant to this

6:43

moment. But there's this one line that's

6:45

been sticking out to me. It's like a

6:46

throwaway line in Origins of

6:47

Totalitarianism where she is describing

6:50

Hitler. For context, if you don't know,

6:52

she fled the Nazis. Amazing political

6:54

scientist, incredible historian. Anyway,

6:56

the way that she describes the amount of

6:58

time that Hitler was in power, she talks

7:00

about it as the 12 years that Hitler's

7:02

thousand-year Reich had managed to last.

7:05

The 12 years of his thousand. So, when I

7:08

read the direction is inevitable, I'm

7:10

like, "All right, your predecessor got

7:12

1.2% of the way towards his backing

7:14

goal. What are you going to do? You

7:17

don't scare me, dog." We begin with

7:19

journalism because that's where truth

7:20

now lives and where it is most at risk.

7:24

How convenient. We begin with the fourth

7:26

estate, something that we don't own. All

7:28

right, let's end on hope. Two bits of

7:32

hope. The first is small and personal,

7:34

and the second is structural and

7:35

actually massive. And I think it's

7:38

really, really cool. All right, so the

7:39

first small personal one, I have

7:42

struggled with perfectionism for a long

7:43

time, particularly on YouTube. And right

さらにアンロック

無料でサインアップしてプレミアム機能にアクセス

インタラクティブビューア

字幕を同期させ、オーバーレイを調整し、完全な再生コントロールでビデオを視聴できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

AI要約

動画コンテンツ、キーポイント、および重要なポイントのAI生成された要約を即座に取得します。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

翻訳

ワンクリックでトランスクリプトを100以上の言語に翻訳します。任意の形式でダウンロードできます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

マインドマップ

トランスクリプトをインタラクティブなマインドマップとして視覚化します。構造を一目で理解できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトとチャット

動画コンテンツについて質問します。AIを利用してトランスクリプトから直接回答を得られます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトをもっと活用する

無料でサインアップして、インタラクティブビューア、AI要約、翻訳、マインドマップなどをアンロックしてください。クレジットカードは不要です。