The tech titans have picked up the phone and called the ex-president. Plus: AI
chatbots and sharing your baby’s photos
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Welcome back. Today in the newsletter: tech executives play phone tag with
Donald Trump, the liability of AI chatbots, and talking through sharing your
baby’s photos online with your family. Thank you for joining me.
The CEOs of the biggest tech companies in the world are looking at the
neck-and-neck polls, picking up their phones, and putting their ducks in a row
for a potential Donald Trump presidency. The former US president has never shied
away from threatening revenge against his perceived enemies, and tech’s leaders
are heading off retributive regulatory scrutiny.
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Tag - Silicon Valley
Apple watchers also expect new colors for the iPhone at the annual launch event,
this year titled ‘It’s Glowtime’
Apple is slated to unveil its latest iPhone and a slew of other new hardware on
Monday during its biggest product launch event of the year.
The event, held at Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, California, features the
tagline “It’s Glowtime” with the company’s logo surrounded by a colorful aura.
New colors for the iPhone and other Apple products are rumored to be coming.
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Harris’s track record, and time as California senator and AG, has tech leaders
wondering if she’d have a friendlier approach to the industry
About 700 wealthy Democratic supporters packed into San Francisco’s Fairmont
hotel on Sunday to see Kamala Harris in her first return to the city since
launching her campaign for president. Among the crowd at the fundraiser, where
the cheapest tickets cost $3,300 and went up to $500,000, was a mixture of tech
billionaires, executives and Silicon Valley venture capitalists who have quickly
embraced the vice-president in her bid for the White House.
The event, which raised more than $12m, was the latest in the Harris campaign’s
outreach to tech Democrats and an extension of a relationship with Silicon
Valley elites that goes back more than a decade.
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In 2016, some said comparisons between the rises of Trump and Hitler were
misguided. But as tech’s titans donate millions, worrying new parallels emerge
In How Democracy Ends, his elegant book published after Trump’s election in
2016, David Runciman made a startling point. It was that while the liberal
democracy that we take for granted won’t last for ever, it will not fail in ways
familiar from the past: no revolutions, no military coups, no breakdowns of
social order. It will fail forwards in an unexpected manner. The implication was
that people making comparisons to what happened in 1930s Germany were misguided.
Until a few weeks ago, that seemed like sound advice. But then something
changed. Significant sectors of Silicon Valley – which for decades had been a
Democrat stronghold – started coming out for Trump. In 2016, Peter Thiel, the
contrarian billionaire and co-founder of PayPal, had been the only prominent
Valley figure to support Trump, which merely confirmed the fact that he was the
region’s statutory maverick. But in the past few weeks, quite a few of the
Valley’s big hitters (Elon Musk, Marc Andreessen and David Sacks, to name just
three) have revealed themselves to be supporters of – and donors to – Trump.
Musk has set up and donated to a Republican-aligned political action committee
(or Super Pac). On 6 June, the venture capitalist Sacks hosted a
$300,000-a-plate fundraising dinner for Trump at his San Francisco mansion. And
so on.
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Company after company is swallowing the hype, only to be forced into
embarrassing walkbacks by anti-AI backlash
Earlier this month, a popular lifestyle magazine introduced a new “fashion and
lifestyle editor” to its huge social media following. “Reem”, who on first
glance looked like a twentysomething woman who understood both fashion and
lifestyle, was proudly announced as an “AI enhanced team member”. That is, a
fake person, generated by artificial intelligence. Reem would be making product
recommendations to SheerLuxe’s followers – or, to put it another way, doing what
SheerLuxe would otherwise pay a person to do. The reaction was entirely
predictable: outrage, followed by a hastily issued apology. One suspects Reem
may not become a staple of its editorial team.
This is just the latest in a long line of walkbacks of “exciting AI projects”
that have been met with fury by the people they’re meant to excite. The Prince
Charles Cinema in Soho, London, cancelled a screening of an AI-written film in
June, because its regulars vehemently objected. Lego was pressured to take down
a series of AI-generated images it published on its website. Doctor Who started
experimenting with generative AI, but quickly stopped after a wave of
complaints. A company swallows the AI hype, thinks jumping on board will paint
it as innovative, and entirely fails to understand the growing anti-AI sentiment
taking hold among many of its customers.
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