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A false history

 My daughter has been sending me adorable AI-generated images of her and my grandson in various Christmas get-ups. They’re so fun and cute and she’s having a blast.

It makes me wonder, though, what happens 20 years from now when she’s scrolling back through her photos and sees these. Will she remember that they’re faked? How will she know what’s real and what’s not? How will my grandson?

I worry that it won’t matter to her or anyone else that their pasts are imaginary. Well, it matters to me and it makes me sad.

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Baty.net posts

20 Dec 2025 at 11:42

Thoughts on MCP

 

I was listening to a recent Vergecast episode the other day, and in there, there was a whole segment about MCP servers and AI-powered shopping. I’ll be honest, I’ve never been more confused about something tech-related. The more I read and listen about this whole topic, the more I think everyone is doing a marvelous job at gaslighting themselves. Or maybe I’m just too skeptical, that’s always a possibility.

There’s a passage in that podcast where they’re discussing the issue of current middleman apps, like DoorDash, taking a cut out of every transaction, and that being a motivating factor for stores to implement MCP so that AI agents can talk directly to them, skipping the DoorDash step, and in this way they can avoid having to give the middle man that %. Wonderful idea. This all sounds great in theory. There are a couple of issues with that plan, though:

  1. Are we just assuming the AI companies are not going to become the new middleman? Because this is exactly what they are in this scenario. And I have precisely zero faith in any of these companies. They will inject themselves into every transaction if they can because it’s what every single company is attempting to do online since forever.

  2. Are we just assuming the current middlemen are simply going to roll on their side and die? Or it’s more likely that they’ll work out a deal with the AI companies, and suddenly you have two middlemen instead of one.

  3. This entire idea that we’ll just ask AI tools to place orders and buy stuff for us is so fucking insanely crazy to me. I hear people both criticize current tech companies for doing all sorts of shady stuff when it comes to online prices and then be on board with the idea of letting AI companies buy stuff for them, trusting that they're not going to do some equally shady stuff? Am I the only one who thinks this sounds insane?

And then there are the people who are confident that we’ll not be using AI tools powered by mega corps, but we’ll all have our own servers at home, with our own local AI models. And I don’t even know where to start with this one. Most people aren’t even capable of running a printer at home. There are precisely zero chances we’ll suddenly all have a server running local AI tools. Heck, most people don’t even have a computer at home. People use phones for the most part, and they’ll use what’s available on them. And you think Apple and Google will give us all AI tools that run locally on our devices and will not try to extract as much value as possible from them?

I don’t know, man, this whole scenario sounds like another nightmare waiting to happen to me. But maybe I’m just becoming a tired old man yelling at the digital clouds.


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Manu's Feed

20 Dec 2025 at 10:00

Scripting News: Saturday, December 20, 2025

 

Saturday, December 20, 2025

Early afternoon blogging#

  • 2019 on Facebook: "People are too judgmental, which is a shame because in the end, which is coming soon enough for all of us, your opinion of other people doesn’t matter. Sorry if I’m telling you something you don’t already know."#
  • On the other hand, we can't help but be judgmental. It's programmed into our DNA at a deep level. You have to form an instant opinion of other animals, any delay could cost your life. Better to assume the worst. Fight or flight. This happens esp if you don't know you're doing it, so don't know to watch for it. #
  • It isn't until their 40s that most people understand that what they see isn't what everyone else sees. If you think there's an objective truth that we all experience, you're not getting the point. There is no consistent view from nowhere because everyone is somewhere. ;-)#
  • I know where I was when I really understood this, not because I read it somewhere, or a teacher told me about it. I was riding on the 4 train north in the Bronx, where the train runs as an elevated on Jerome Ave. I had ridden this train for three years as a high school student, and never thought about all the six story apartment buildings whose backs faced the train. As you went by, you passed by one family for every two or three windows. A whole set of people with relationships, problems, tragedy, joy, dreams, the whole thing. They don't come from where you come from, inside each house there are stories, lives, people. You'll probably never know anything about any of them. I wasn't sad about this.#
  • View from the 4 train described above.#

  • When I was a kid we went to a bungalow colony in upstate NY, around where I live now. I was less than 10 years old, so were my friends. We used to do things together that the adults didn't know about. There was an abandoned house we used to hang out in, mostly open to the elements. We also played in a graveyard and talked about what the families whose names were on the headstones were doing. Having dinner maybe? Listening to the Mets on the radio? (No TV in the mountains.) So the thought had occurred to us at that point in life that behind doors there were things happening that we could only imagine. I guess what you learn later is that you can't imagine, and if you want to know you have to ask and listen. #
  • I saw a critique of my writing that said I don't put enough titles in my writing. I didn't want to answer it in context, because I wanted to explain more generally. I tried to write the way the world was forcing me to write for over ten years, between 2006 and 2017, and I came to hate it. My writing is a way of getting things out of my head and into a place where I can find it later. It's more interesting to me if it's published. I am vision-impaired too. But if you account for every preference, as I learned between 2006 and 2017, the writing ends up worse than worthless. It becomes something you have to overcome. In the end you have write about why this is the wrong way to write. #
  • I'm trying to think but nothing happens!#

Scripting News for email

20 Dec 2025 at 05:00
#

When we complain about the App Store, it's not just the fees. It's the lack of control and fragmented billing. With our Micro.one $1 plan — cheap! — I'm actually paying more to Stripe (33 cents) because credit cards aren't good for small transactions. But having everything in one place is worth it.

Manton Reece

19 Dec 2025 at 23:05
#

I’m tempted to just get all my political news from Jimmy Kimmel’s monologue. But I do watch CNN every morning during breakfast. I don’t expect to break this habit until at least after the midterms, if ever. And politics is pervasive, everywhere. 🇺🇸

Manton Reece

19 Dec 2025 at 22:18
#

The New Yorker has put their 100-year archive online in a really nice way. I’ve poked around on a few old issues.

Over the last year I’ve scaled back my news reading… Cancelled the NYT, Washington Post, Atlantic, everything. I read blogs, tech news, and for long-form The New Yorker. And novels.

Manton Reece

19 Dec 2025 at 22:05
#

Laurens Hof at Connected Places wraps up the Threads / fediverse experiment:

My take is that Meta and Threads have played the game well. They immediately capitalised on the moment in 2023 when decentralisation and Twitter-alternatives got large-scale attention, and knew how to say the right buzzwords to ride the wave.

Threads with even partial ActivityPub support in maintenance mode is still better than a completely closed platform. But it is disappointing that Meta didn't take this further.

Manton Reece

19 Dec 2025 at 19:25
#

Updated the Mac app today with a few little improvements, including a right-click context menu for Movies. I've wanted this a few times to copy a link to a movie or TV show. Most menus also support holding down the option key to switch to Markdown.

Mac window search results for a TV show Pluribus with options to open in Dia or copy Markdown.
Manton Reece

19 Dec 2025 at 19:00
#

Also from @timapple, blogging on returning to Micro.blog:

I have come and gone quite a few times over the years, but all that moving around has convinced me that this is where I belong. I am ready to hang up my coat and stay awhile.

Welcome! It makes me happy when people come back after trying something different. Micro.blog gets better every year.

Manton Reece

19 Dec 2025 at 18:02
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