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So it's national Recreational Explosives, Hand Loss and Wildfire day, and unlike 2023, there is nary a drop of rain in sight.
Despite being slapped upside the head by God, my put technically inclined neighbor has acquired TWO pallets of fireworks this year.
The state is of no help: my city police department has made it pretty clear they don't intend to respond to any fireworks calls this weekend. I've sent the pictures I took to the county tipline and received and automated email reply saying that it will take several weeks to process my case. Perhaps he will get jail time later, but this does not actually you know. Stop him from setting the neighborhood ablaze. Going up to his door the week prior and very politely asking him to move- not cancel, just relocate - his celebrations was met with calling me a "nosy bitch" and "I'll set one off in your ass!".
Sometimes God needs us to make our own miracles.
My miracle comes with several layers, and plenty of opportunities to back down without losing face. We'll see how many are needed.
The first wave has already been deployed: a psyop directed at the Visiting Mother In Law of the miscreant.
I got up at 8:30 AM this morning to make sure I'd be in the front yard of my house, casually doing yardwork with Herschel. His participation was essential.
For those of you who are new here, Herschel is the world's most charming Cardigan Welsh Crime Tube, who thinks everyone in the world is his best friend and that people come to the house to see him specifically. So at 9:04 AM when the visiting mother-in-law appeared around the corner on her daily power-walk around the block, Herschel employed his natural Corgi instinct to make friends with everyone and cheerfully tossed himself on the sidewalk in front of her, belly up for expected tummy rubs.
"OH AREN'T YOU DARLING!!" My target coos, kneeling down to pat him while he makes him like snuffling noises of glee. She is at least 70. I think her bright pink leg warmers and terrycloth headband might be original from her jazzercise days.
"I'm so sorry! Herschel you're going to trip people doing that!" I apologize, going up to greet the woman. "I'm [REDACTED], I don't think we've met..?"
"No, I'm just visiting my daughter and her family- my name is Barbara. And who is this?" She asks Herschel, whose whole back end is waggling with glee.
"This is my service dog Herschel." I explain while he rolls around on the pavement. "I just wanted him to get some time outside before the pyrotechnics start."
"Oh. Yes." Barbra grumbles and I know I've got her. "My son-in-law is planning something extravagant." She says with such disdain it practically comes out of her nose. This is a woman who loves her daughter and dearly wishes she married someone, anyone else.
"Yeah, he got rained out and sick the last two years, so I think he's compensating." I agree.
"Oh he's definitely overcompensating!" Barbra spits, then shakes her whole body like a dog. "I'm sorry, I shouldn't complain. You said he's a service dog?"
I go for it.
"Yeah! I have... Neurological problems." I say and that is technically true. "I've um. Lost a lot of things, like a sense of time, or appetite, and his job is to remind me to eat or take my meds or alerts that I'm having an episode. My personal dog-tor!" I say, patting his adorable little head, and he leans on me, equally adoring.
"Oh, is that why-?" Barbra starts to ask, gesturing at the top of her head, but stops herself.
I hadn't planned this, but yesterday I'd shaved my head to deal with the heat and now only have a quarter inch of hair, which doesn't really hide the scars from when I got run over by a minivan. They're bright red with the heat and exertion of yard work.
I decide I'm okay with lying to a stranger to prevent my house from being set ablaze.
I sort of... Crumple to the ground and drop the rake I was holding, and Herschel immediately climbs into my lap to comfort me as I start to cry.
"Oh my God." Says Barbra.
"I'm sorry!" I gasp, tears streaming down my face. I've been stressed and this is honestly very cathartic. "I'm sorry to dump on you, I'm just so scared-!"
"Oh my God. It's bad." Barbra realizes.
"D- do you know what-" a pause as Herschel tries to manually clear my nostrils like a good service dog. "-oh, Herschel... It's - do you know what an astrocytoma* is?"
*An astrocytoma is a type of brain tumor.
Barbra turns white and sits down next to me. "I'm so sorry... I- one of my friends from church had one, it was agony but she's alright now!" She tries to reassure me.
"It hurts! Everything hurts all the time!" I sob. "And- and I'm scared, so he's scared and I feel bad for hi which just makes it worse and then there's the-" I gesture at the sky. "I have surgery in a month to remove as much of it as they can and do biopsies to see if I need radiation too but..."
"-but all that noise must be Hell on you and your doggy." Barbra nods.
"It'd be fine if he went down to the lake of something but, that house's driveway is like, a hundred feet from my bedroom, I can't sleep and it TERRIFIES Herschel..." I whimper pathetically.
"Well. I may be able to do something about that." Barbra decides.
"Oh no, I don't want to intrude!" I mock-protest.
"No, we're the ones intruding dear. I'll have words with him." She growls. I get the impression she's been waiting for an excuse To Have Words With Him.
"Th-thank you. Um. It's getting hot and I'm a mess, we should probably go inside..." I mutter and Barbra very kindly helps me and Herschel to the front door and tells me she'll be by later with watermelon as we wave goodbye.
From the porch, I watch her furiously power-walk back to her daughter's house, wrench open the front door, and issue a battle cry of "HEN-RY!!!" before it slams behind her.
Now I realize that this may not have been the most honest or ethical thing to do, but I figured it's more polite and ethical than the next step, which is chemical warfare, courtesy of Bath & Body Works :)
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Power Automate simplifies workflows and enhances business processes. Discover popular use cases that improve productivity and save time.
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2024 AI Trends: What to Expect and Why It Matters

The landscape of artificial intelligence (AI) in 2024 is set to be shaped by ten pivotal trends, including agentic AI, open-source AI, and AI-powered cybersecurity. Agentic AI will revolutionize workflows by autonomously handling complex tasks and adapting to dynamic environments, enhancing productivity and operational efficiency. Open-source AI fosters innovation and collaboration, leading to the development of more robust and versatile AI applications across various industries. AI-powered cybersecurity significantly improves threat detection and response times, bolstering organizational security against cyber threats.
Hyper automation leverages AI and robotic process automation (RPA) to automate end-to-end business processes, driving productivity and efficiency. Edge AI computing processes data locally, reducing latency and enabling real-time decision-making. In healthcare, AI enhances diagnostics, personalized treatments, and patient care, making medical services more accessible and efficient. Explainable AI ensures transparency and accountability, making AI decisions understandable and trustworthy, thereby building user confidence.
These AI trends underscore the transformative impact of AI on various sectors and the importance for businesses to stay informed and adaptive. AI-driven personalization, creativity, and sustainability initiatives present additional avenues for innovation and growth. To explore how AI can Learn more...
#AI for Sustainability#How Intelisync AI solutions open up new options for your Organizations?#How will AI impact businesses in 2024?#Impact of AI in Healthcare#Impact of Open Source AI#Impact of Rise of Hyper Automation#Top 10 AI Trends to Watch in 2024#Use Cases of Agentic AI#Use Cases of AI-driven Personalization#Use Cases of AI-powered Cybersecurity#What are the most important AI trends to watch in 2024?#Why is ethical AI development important in 2024?
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I’m Declaring War Against “What If” Videos: Project Copy-Knight
What Are “What If” Videos?
These videos follow a common recipe: A narrator, given a fandom (usually anime ones like My Hero Academia and Naruto), explores an alternative timeline where something is different. Maybe the main character has extra powers, maybe a key plot point goes differently. They then go on and make up a whole new story, detailing the conflicts and romance between characters, much like an ordinary fanfic.
Except, they are fanfics. Actual fanfics, pulled off AO3, FFN and Wattpad, given a different title, with random thumbnail and background images added to them, narrated by computer text-to-speech synthesizers.
They are very easy to make: pick a fanfic, copy all the text into a text-to-speech generator, mix the resulting audio file with some generic art from the fandom as the background, give it a snappy title like “What if Deku had the Power of Ten Rings”, photoshop an attention-grabbing thumbnail, dump it onto YouTube and get thousands of views.
In fact, the process is so straightforward and requires so little effort, it’s pretty clear some of these channels have automated pipelines to pump these out en-masse. They don’t bother with asking the fic authors for permission. Sometimes they don’t even bother with putting the fic’s link in the description or crediting the author. These content-farms then monetise these videos, so they get a cut from YouTube’s ads.
In short, an industry has emerged from the systematic copyright theft of fanfiction, for profit.
Project Copy-Knight
Since the adversaries almost certainly have automated systems set up for this, the only realistic countermeasure is with another automated system. Identifying fanfics manually by listening to the videos and searching them up with tags is just too slow and impractical.
And so, I came up with a simple automated pipeline to identify the original authors of “What If” videos.
It would go download these videos, run speech recognition on it, search the text through a database full of AO3 fics, and identify which work it came from. After manual confirmation, the original authors will be notified that their works have been subject to copyright theft, and instructions provided on how to DMCA-strike the channel out of existence.
I built a prototype over the weekend, and it works surprisingly well:
On a randomly-selected YouTube channel (in this case Infinite Paradox Fanfic), the toolchain was able to identify the origin of half of the content. The raw output, after manual verification, turned out to be extremely accurate. The time taken to identify the source of a video was about 5 minutes, most of those were spent running Whisper, and the actual full-text-search query and Levenshtein analysis was less than 5 seconds.
The other videos probably came from fanfiction websites other than AO3, like fanfiction.net or Wattpad. As I do not have access to archives of those websites, I cannot identify the other ones, but they are almost certainly not original.
Armed with this fantastic proof-of-concept, I’m officially declaring war against “What If” videos. The mission statement of Project Copy-Knight will be the elimination of “What If” videos based on the theft of AO3 content on YouTube.
I Need Your Help
I am acutely aware that I cannot accomplish this on my own. There are many moving parts in this system that simply cannot be completely automated – like the selection of YouTube channels to feed into the toolchain, the manual verification step to prevent false-positives being sent to authors, the reaching-out to authors who have comments disabled, etc, etc.
So, if you are interested in helping to defend fanworks, or just want to have a chat or ask about the technical details of the toolchain, please consider joining my Discord server. I could really use your help.
------
See full blog article and acknowledgements here: https://echoekhi.com/2023/11/25/project-copy-knight/
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"But don't let its beauty fool you. This plant can be processed into a powerful neurotoxin which can cause near permanent madness unless treated!"
Professor Calculus, upon developing a state-of-the-art automated hydroponics and pesticides delivery system, has been invited to judge a prestigious international flower show at the largest botanical garden in Belgium.
Botany experts and amateurs from around the world attend - Professor Zalamea is there to showcase his bizarre genetically modified bioluminescent blue oranges, Nash is displaying some of his explorations into living sculpture, and Castafiore is geared up to perform in the evening. Most controversially of all, Professor Fang Hsi Ying, a world leading expert on mental health, is showcasing his research on the Rajaijah plant, a plant historically used to produce madness poison.
It's this exhibit that causes a stir at the event. Security is on high alert. After the poison was used a few years ago in several high profile drug smuggling cases that were embroiled in politics, the plant is anticipated to be a subject of fear and Orientalism. Protestors calling for its destruction flock the event, and there are rumours of a plot to steal the rare plant. The organisers hope that the controversy will generate ticket sales and revenue.
Tintin and Chang are there to report on the goings on, having just confessed their feelings for each other. They're not sure what they are just yet - but even without a madness poison, Tintin's head is in a spin!
I had the idea to bring back Rajaijah juice for some time and was intially going to set it at a garden party, but I received this message from anon some time ago:
And I just loved the Drama of a botanical garden a whole lot more!
Because of the time it takes for me to make stuff and the planning that goes into my posts I do take a very long time to respond to messages, and sometimes multiple people send similar messages anticipating stuff I already have planned, so if I come across as standoffish I apologise, I just have a lot on my plate (by my own design tbh)!
I love every message I receive, I started this blog intending to respond to every message but that's becoming unrealistic ;_; I keep your messages to read back whenever I need motivation, so from the bottom of my heart, thank you if you've sent me an ask!
#tintin#adventures of tintin#animation#2d animation#snowy#milou#captain haddock#archibald haddock#ramo nash#professor calculus#cuthbert calculus#castafiore#bianca castafiore#chang#fang hsi ying#gifset#my stories#gif#the house of glass#fanart#botany#botanic garden#greenhouse#tinchang#long post
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#power automate consulting#power automate services#use power automate#power automate use case#power automate online#power automate examples#power automate apps#benefits of power automate#power automate tasks
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Cleantech has an enshittification problem

On July 14, I'm giving the closing keynote for the fifteenth HACKERS ON PLANET EARTH, in QUEENS, NY. Happy Bastille Day! On July 20, I'm appearing in CHICAGO at Exile in Bookville.
EVs won't save the planet. Ultimately, the material bill for billions of individual vehicles and the unavoidable geometry of more cars-more traffic-more roads-greater distances-more cars dictate that the future of our cities and planet requires public transit – lots of it.
But no matter how much public transit we install, there's always going to be some personal vehicles on the road, and not just bikes, ebikes and scooters. Between deliveries, accessibility, and stubbornly low-density regions, there's going to be a lot of cars, vans and trucks on the road for the foreseeable future, and these should be electric.
Beyond that irreducible minimum of personal vehicles, there's the fact that individuals can't install their own public transit system; in places that lack the political will or means to create working transit, EVs are a way for people to significantly reduce their personal emissions.
In policy circles, EV adoption is treated as a logistical and financial issue, so governments have focused on making EVs affordable and increasing the density of charging stations. As an EV owner, I can affirm that affordability and logistics were important concerns when we were shopping for a car.
But there's a third EV problem that is almost entirely off policy radar: enshittification.
An EV is a rolling computer in a fancy case with a squishy person inside of it. While this can sound scary, there are lots of cool implications for this. For example, your EV could download your local power company's tariff schedule and preferentially charge itself when the rates are lowest; they could also coordinate with the utility to reduce charging when loads are peaking. You can start them with your phone. Your repair technician can run extensive remote diagnostics on them and help you solve many problems from the road. New features can be delivered over the air.
That's just for starters, but there's so much more in the future. After all, the signal virtue of a digital computer is its flexibility. The only computer we know how to make is the Turing complete, universal, Von Neumann machine, which can run every valid program. If a feature is computationally tractable – from automated parallel parking to advanced collision prevention – it can run on a car.
The problem is that this digital flexibility presents a moral hazard to EV manufacturers. EVs are designed to make any kind of unauthorized, owner-selected modification into an IP rights violation ("IP" in this case is "any law that lets me control the conduct of my customers or competitors"):
https://locusmag.com/2020/09/cory-doctorow-ip/
EVs are also designed so that the manufacturer can unilaterally exert control over them or alter their operation. EVs – even more than conventional vehicles – are designed to be remotely killswitched in order to help manufacturers and dealers pressure people into paying their car notes on time:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/24/rent-to-pwn/#kitt-is-a-demon
Manufacturers can reach into your car and change how much of your battery you can access:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/07/28/edison-not-tesla/#demon-haunted-world
They can lock your car and have it send its location to a repo man, then greet him by blinking its lights, honking its horn, and pulling out of its parking space:
https://tiremeetsroad.com/2021/03/18/tesla-allegedly-remotely-unlocks-model-3-owners-car-uses-smart-summon-to-help-repo-agent/
And of course, they can detect when you've asked independent mechanic to service your car and then punish you by degrading its functionality:
https://www.repairerdrivennews.com/2024/06/26/two-of-eight-claims-in-tesla-anti-trust-lawsuit-will-move-forward/
This is "twiddling" – unilaterally and irreversibly altering the functionality of a product or service, secure in the knowledge that IP law will prevent anyone from twiddling back by restoring the gadget to a preferred configuration:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/19/twiddler/
The thing is, for an EV, twiddling is the best case scenario. As bad as it is for the company that made your EV to change how it works whenever they feel like picking your pocket, that's infinitely preferable to the manufacturer going bankrupt and bricking your car.
That's what just happened to owners of Fisker EVs, cars that cost $40-70k. Cars are long-term purchases. An EV should last 12-20 years, or even longer if you pay to swap the battery pack. Fisker was founded in 2016 and shipped its first Ocean SUV in 2023. The company is now bankrupt:
https://insideevs.com/news/723669/fisker-inc-bankruptcy-chapter-11-official/
Fisker called its vehicles "software-based cars" and they weren't kidding. Without continuous software updates and server access, those Fisker Ocean SUVs are turning into bricks. What's more, the company designed the car from the ground up to make any kind of independent service and support into a felony, by wrapping the whole thing in overlapping layers of IP. That means that no one can step in with a module that jailbreaks the Fisker and drops in an alternative firmware that will keep the fleet rolling.
This is the third EV risk – not just finance, not just charger infrastructure, but the possibility that any whizzy, cool new EV company will go bust and brick your $70k cleantech investment, irreversibly transforming your car into 5,500 lb worth of e-waste.
This confers a huge advantage onto the big automakers like VW, Kia, Ford, etc. Tesla gets a pass, too, because it achieved critical mass before people started to wise up to the risk of twiddling and bricking. If you're making a serious investment in a product you expect to use for 20 years, are you really gonna buy it from a two-year old startup with six months' capital in the bank?
The incumbency advantage here means that the big automakers won't have any reason to sink a lot of money into R&D, because they won't have to worry about hungry startups with cool new ideas eating their lunches. They can maintain the cozy cartel that has seen cars stagnate for decades, with the majority of "innovation" taking the form of shitty, extractive and ill-starred ideas like touchscreen controls and an accelerator pedal that you have to rent by the month:
https://www.theverge.com/2022/11/23/23474969/mercedes-car-subscription-faster-acceleration-feature-price
Put that way, it's clear that this isn't an EV problem, it's a cleantech problem. Cleantech has all the problems of EVs: it requires a large capital expenditure, it will be "smart," and it is expected to last for decades. That's rooftop solar, heat-pumps, smart thermostat sensor arrays, and home storage batteries.
And just as with EVs, policymakers have focused on infrastructure and affordability without paying any attention to the enshittification risks. Your rooftop solar will likely be controlled via a Solaredge box – a terrible technology that stops working if it can't reach the internet for a protracted period (that's right, your home solar stops working if the grid fails!).
I found this out the hard way during the covid lockdowns, when Solaredge terminated its 3G cellular contract and notified me that I would have to replace the modem in my system or it would stop working. This was at the height of the supply-chain crisis and there was a long waiting list for any replacement modems, with wifi cards (that used your home internet rather than a cellular connection) completely sold out for most of a year.
There are good reasons to connect rooftop solar arrays to the internet – it's not just so that Solaredge can enshittify my service. Solar arrays that coordinate with the grid can make it much easier and safer to manage a grid that was designed for centralized power production and is being retrofitted for distributed generation, one roof at a time.
But when the imperatives of extraction and efficiency go to war, extraction always wins. After all, the Solaredge system is already in place and solar installers are largely ignorant of, and indifferent to, the reasons that a homeowner might want to directly control and monitor their system via local controls that don't roundtrip through the cloud.
Somewhere in the hindbrain of any prospective solar purchaser is the experience with bricked and enshittified "smart" gadgets, and the knowledge that anything they buy from a cool startup with lots of great ideas for improving production, monitoring, and/or costs poses the risk of having your 20 year investment bricked after just a few years – and, thanks to the extractive imperative, no one will be able to step in and restore your ex-solar array to good working order.
I make the majority of my living from books, which means that my pay is very "lumpy" – I get large sums when I publish a book and very little in between. For many years, I've used these payments to make big purchases, rather than financing them over long periods where I can't predict my income. We've used my book payments to put in solar, then an induction stove, then a battery. We used one to buy out the lease on our EV. And just a month ago, we used the money from my upcoming Enshittification book to put in a heat pump (with enough left over to pay for a pair of long-overdue cataract surgeries, scheduled for the fall).
When we started shopping for heat pumps, it was clear that this was a very exciting sector. First of all, heat pumps are kind of magic, so efficient and effective it's almost surreal. But beyond the basic tech – which has been around since the late 1940s – there is a vast ferment of cool digital features coming from exciting and innovative startups.
By nature, I'm the kid of person who likes these digital features. I started out as a computer programmer, and while I haven't written production code since the previous millennium, I've been in and around the tech industry for my whole adult life. But when it came time to buy a heat-pump – an investment that I expected to last for 20 years or more – there was no way I was going to buy one of these cool new digitally enhanced pumps, no matter how much the reviewers loved them. Sure, they'd work well, but it's precisely because I'm so knowledgeable about high tech that I could see that they would fail very, very badly.
You may think EVs are bullshit, and they are – though there will always be room for some personal vehicles, and it's better for people in transit deserts to drive EVs than gas-guzzlers. You may think rooftop solar is a dead-end and be all-in on utility scale solar (I think we need both, especially given the grid-disrupting extreme climate events on our horizon). But there's still a wide range of cleantech – induction tops, heat pumps, smart thermostats – that are capital intensive, have a long duty cycle, and have good reasons to be digitized and networked.
Take home storage batteries: your utility can push its rate card to your battery every time they change their prices, and your battery can use that information to decide when to let your house tap into the grid, and when to switch over to powering your home with the solar you've stored up during the day. This is a very old and proven pattern in tech: the old Fidonet BBS network used a version of this, with each BBS timing its calls to other nodes to coincide with the cheapest long-distance rates, so that messages for distant systems could be passed on:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FidoNet
Cleantech is a very dynamic sector, even if its triumphs are largely unheralded. There's a quiet revolution underway in generation, storage and transmission of renewable power, and a complimentary revolution in power-consumption in vehicles and homes:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/12/s-curve/#anything-that-cant-go-on-forever-eventually-stops
But cleantech is too important to leave to the incumbents, who are addicted to enshittification and planned obsolescence. These giant, financialized firms lack the discipline and culture to make products that have the features – and cost savings – to make them appealing to the very wide range of buyers who must transition as soon as possible, for the sake of the very planet.
It's not enough for our policymakers to focus on financing and infrastructure barriers to cleantech adoption. We also need a policy-level response to enshittification.
Ideally, every cleantech device would be designed so that it was impossible to enshittify – which would also make it impossible to brick:
Based on free software (best), or with source code escrowed with a trustee who must release the code if the company enters administration (distant second-best);
All patents in a royalty-free patent-pool (best); or in a trust that will release them into a royalty-free pool if the company enters administration (distant second-best);
No parts-pairing or other DRM permitted (best); or with parts-pairing utilities available to all parties on a reasonable and non-discriminatory basis (distant second-best);
All diagnostic and error codes in the public domain, with all codes in the clear within the device (best); or with decoding utilities available on demand to all comers on a reasonable and non-discriminatory basis (distant second-best).
There's an obvious business objection to this: it will reduce investment in innovative cleantech because investors will perceive these restrictions as limits on the expected profits of their portfolio companies. It's true: these measures are designed to prevent rent-extraction and other enshittificatory practices by cleantech companies, and to the extent that investors are counting on enshittification rents, this might prevent them from investing.
But that has to be balanced against the way that a general prohibition on enshittificatory practices will inspire consumer confidence in innovative and novel cleantech products, because buyers will know that their investments will be protected over the whole expected lifespan of the product, even if the startup goes bust (nearly every startup goes bust). These measures mean that a company with a cool product will have a much larger customer-base to sell to. Those additional sales more than offset the loss of expected revenue from cheating and screwing your customers by twiddling them to death.
There's also an obvious legal objection to this: creating these policies will require a huge amount of action from Congress and the executive branch, a whole whack of new rules and laws to make them happen, and each will attract court-challenges.
That's also true, though it shouldn't stop us from trying to get legal reforms. As a matter of public policy, it's terrible and fucked up that companies can enshittify the things we buy and leave us with no remedy.
However, we don't have to wait for legal reform to make this work. We can take a shortcut with procurement – the things governments buy with public money. The feds, the states and localities buy a lot of cleantech: for public facilities, for public housing, for public use. Prudent public policy dictates that governments should refuse to buy any tech unless it is designed to be enshittification-resistant.
This is an old and honorable tradition in policymaking. Lincoln insisted that the rifles he bought for the Union Army come with interoperable tooling and ammo, for obvious reasons. No one wants to be the Commander in Chief who shows up on the battlefield and says, "Sorry, boys, war's postponed, our sole supplier decided to stop making ammunition."
By creating a market for enshittification-proof cleantech, governments can ensure that the public always has the option of buying an EV that can't be bricked even if the maker goes bust, a heat-pump whose digital features can be replaced or maintained by a third party of your choosing, a solar controller that coordinates with the grid in ways that serve their owners – not the manufacturers' shareholders.
We're going to have to change a lot to survive the coming years. Sure, there's a lot of scary ways that things can go wrong, but there's plenty about our world that should change, and plenty of ways those changes could be for the better. It's not enough for policymakers to focus on ensuring that we can afford to buy whatever badly thought-through, extractive tech the biggest companies want to foist on us – we also need a focus on making cleantech fit for purpose, truly smart, reliable and resilient.
Support me this summer on the Clarion Write-A-Thon and help raise money for the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers' Workshop!
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/06/26/unplanned-obsolescence/#better-micetraps
Image: 臺灣古寫真上色 (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Raid_on_Kagi_City_1945.jpg
Grendelkhan (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ground_mounted_solar_panels.gk.jpg
CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/deed.en
#pluralistic#procurement#cleantech#evs#solar#solarpunk#policy#copyfight#copyright#felony contempt of business model#floss#free software#open source#oss#dmca 1201#interoperability#adversarial interoperability#solarization#electrification#enshittification#innovation#incumbency#climate#climate emergency
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DAY 6273
Jalsa, Mumbai Apr 19, 2025/Apr 20 Sat/Sun 1:12 am

words of wisdom from Shweta , sent to me 👆🏼 .. her repertoire of books and reading is immense .. as is of Navya .. it is such a delight to sit in their presence and company and be educated about aspects of life and the world .. it is astonishing ..
And that is what eats us elders up .. there is the desire to do and be a part of what this GEn thinks and does .. but the limitations of time barricade the impulse and the intent ..
Life did not move so rapidly in our time or in the time of our elders .. now the rapidity is so volatile that the wishes to accomplish all is overwhelming .. you do not want to miss out a single day, in case you miss something that you had wished you would want to do, or be a part of ..
The excitement of what the World does to day and the speed with which it does it is unbelievably attractive .. and one wants so desperately to be a art of it .. or many parts of it .. but time is not with us .. at our age we lament the time .. and we feel let down .. for the wish to be having the time to be involved , to test, to apply, to discover, to invent, to admire and enjoy that spectacle .. is huge ..
But the hugeness hits a wall .. the timeless wall of limitations ..
"एक घड़ी ख़रीद कर, हाथ में क्या बांध ली;
वक़्त पीछे ही पड़ गया मेरे ~ "
पूज्य बाबूजी के शब्द
My wishes as ever .. and the great battle of invention that percolates our lives persists to be in its excel ..
The excel of AI ..
So, I asked and it replied :
"Artificial Intelligence (AI) is the simulation of human intelligence in machines designed to think, learn, and make decisions. It powers technologies like voice assistants, recommendation systems, and autonomous vehicles. AI works through algorithms that process data, recognize patterns, and improve over time through machine learning. It is transforming industries by automating tasks, enhancing productivity, and enabling innovative solutions. From healthcare diagnostics to personalized education, AI’s potential is vast. However, it also raises ethical concerns about bias, privacy, and job displacement. As AI continues to evolve, balancing innovation with responsibility will be key to ensuring it benefits society as a whole."
The clarity of social implications is a massive debate , engaging thinkers and artists and writers and indeed all creative talent ..
For the creative content of a writer are his words .. and if the AI data bank consumes that , as a part of a legacy to be maintained over time infinity, it can be used by ChatGPT to refer or use that extract for its personalised usage .. making it the property of ChatGPT ... NOT the property of the writers or the artists, from where it originally came ..
So the copyright of the artist has been technically 'stolen' , and he or she never gets the benefit of ts copyright, when GPT uses it for its presence .. !!!!
The true value of an artists creation will never be restored to his credit, because technology usurps it .. gulps it down deliciously , with an aerated drink and finalising its consumption with a belch 😜🤭 ... END OF CHAPTER !!!
End of discussion .. !!!
In time there shall be much to be heard and written on the subject ..
Each invention provides benefits .. but also victims ..
बनाये कोई - लाभ उठाए कोई और, जिसने उसे बनाया ही न हो
Love

Amitabh Bachchan
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What exactly *are* the angels, in your opinion? Are they in fact Eridan's consorts? What do you think their purpose was supposed to be in the game?
ok, let's be super clear about this, the angels are NOT consorts.
Consorts are a very well-defined type of game NPC. they're drawn from the same bipedal, puppet/plushie looking base model, and always describable as a type of IRL amphibian or semi-aquatic reptile (to tie in with the genesis frog) - salamanders, iguanas, crocodiles, and turtles have all been seen. they serve as the first questgivers/exposition fairies a player will usually see (except in cases where they wake up on their moon early, in which case they might meet carapacians first), and will usually provide hints as to the player's personal quest, classpect abilities, etc.
while they aren't very smart, they can follow simple commands, and will automate building the player's house (which ultimately serves to release their grist in order to create a new universe) and take over other repetitive duties like that. knowing this about consorts, it's pretty obvious that the angels are not that, though snake consorts wouldn't necessarily be out of the question, since they would fulfill the semi-aquatic IRL reptile requirement. Still, if a player did have snake consorts, they would physically resemble and function as john's salamanders. (fwiw, i like to headcanon that eridan's consorts were indeed snakes, and that karkat's were basilisk lizards)
thus, we can conclude that angels are some auxiliary NPC, like the brains on sollux's planet, the fireflies on john's, or the hummingbirds on jade's. they're still tied in with the player's personal quest, but they aren't an underling/consort/carapacian, whose roles are more defined.
hussie describes in the book commentary that angels are literally born from Hope, and we see this in action within the comic itself, as the Hope field jake summons ends up spawning a few angels itself. we also know that the angels are the source of prophetic whispers... which don't necessarily seem to be true, except as the Hope player (whose main powerset revolves around Making Fake Things Real) can make them true. they apparently whisper about their "lord" to eridan, or the "evil wizard" to cronus, though we've never heard a firsthand source.
However, i do believe it's possible to glean what the angel prophecies actually sounded like. sollux actually provides a description of angels, while he's talking to terezi, where he explains that they're "feathery demons that paradox space uses to usher in the end". therefore, we can conclude that, despite being born of Hope, they prophecize hopeless things - the evil wizard, their lord - without necessarily prophecizing hopeFUL things, like that the Hope player is meant to rise to defeat them - that this is left for the Hope player to figure out and make real, to refute the hopeless prophecy.
Their vaguely ominous nature tracks with some other stuff in the comic - that LE is described as the "angel" of double-death, that cherubs in general are named after a type of angel, and that when they show up from jake's Hope field, the other characters (who have never seen them before) are instinctively put off and wary of them. i think they're intended to be read as embodiments of narrative impotence, counterbalancing the power of Hope's ability to warp reality itself, born from especially powerul sources of it. these sorts of dichotomies and dualities are present throughout homestuck, so i don't think it's too far-fetched.
now i'm going to get into much more speculative, headcanon-y territory, so feel free to disregard this part. Personally, i like the idea that eridan was supposed to aggro and kill his angels - just not YET.
We see from his planet that it's enveloped in this blinding white light, so bright that eridan has to wear some douchey ass shades to stand outside in. this is, in all likelihood, a Hope field, like the one Jake summons - and it's where the angels are spawning from. moreover, his land is called the land of WRATH and angels, with wrath sounding suspiciously like Rage, Hope's opposite attribute. i'm personally of the belief that, had eridan done his quest "properly," as a Prince of Hope - one who destroys Hope or destroys with Hope - he would've had to learn both how to destroy the Hope field, as well as how to quell the rage on his planet.
In other words, personally, i think his quest would've been to destroy the Hope field, which would've enraged the angels, but also - the crucial step that he missed - would've prevented them from respawning. Having displayed mastery over destroying Hope, he would've then had to USE Hope to destroy the enraged angels, which would've given him the tools he'd have needed to destroy the lord they prophecized, given another thing hussie notes Hope can explicitly do is overpower forces otherwise thought undefeatable - Hope vs. sollux's eye beams, and later, jade's green sun abilities. It's likely that, fully realized and with a good enough shot, eridan would've been able to completely bypass normal game rules like god tier immortality, or even LE's unconditional immortality. unfortunately, eridan ended up giving in to the forces of narrative impotence and hopelessness, so this was never realized.
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Uncover the full potential of Power Automate through top use cases. Discover how real-world examples of automation can transform your business and drive success.
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Lessons in Desire- Part 2
Pairing: fem!Reader x Professor!Logan
Warning: 18+ MDNI, SMUT, explicit language.
Part 1
Summary: In the classroom, their power dynamics shift, drawing them closer to the edge of what’s acceptable. Caught between desire and the threat of scandal, they push past boundaries, each unable to deny the magnetic pull between them. But with stakes this high, the real question is: how much will they sacrifice for a forbidden passion they can’t control?
Word count: 7.8 k
A/N: Alright, folks, I hear you. Loud and clear. Consider this my formal apology for the emotional torment, the tension, and, yes, the blatant blue-balling of Part 1. I know some of you were ready to throw hands. But fear not—redemption is here. Enjoy.
© th3mrskory. don’t copy, translate, or use my works in any form with AI, ChatGPT or any other automated tools. I only share my stories here, so if you see them posted elsewhere, i’d appreciate it if you let me know.
The morning air was crisp, but the moment Y/N stepped into the lecture hall, a slow, suffocating heat curled around her skin.
She knew why.
Her fingers tightened around the strap of her bag as she moved toward her usual seat, keeping her movements smooth, unbothered. If she hesitated, even for a second, she knew he’d notice. And she refused to give him that satisfaction.
He was already there, of course he was, leaning against his desk, arms crossed in that effortlessly relaxed way of his, watching students filter in like he wasn’t waiting for someone specific.
Like he wasn’t waiting for her.
Y/N did not look at him.
Instead, she pulled out her laptop, her fingers poised over the keys, eyes on the screen as if she were already deep in thought. A buffer. A shield. A blatant avoidance.
She felt him smirk. Didn’t have to look to know it was there.
God, he was insufferable.
The noise in the room settled, conversations dying down as Logan finally straightened, stepping forward with the kind of slow, deliberate ease that had no right being so compelling.
“All right,” he began, voice low and steady, filling the room like it belonged to him. Because it did. “Power and consequence, a delicate balance—one often dictated by impulse rather than reason.”
Y/N exhaled sharply through her nose, already bracing herself.
“In every era, power dictates action. It shapes choices, defines relationships.” Logan’s hands slid into his pockets, his stance casual, his expression unreadable. But his voice—his voice was a loaded gun. “History is littered with stories of rulers and revolutionaries, leaders and subordinates. And in many cases—” his head tilted slightly, “—power is at its most dangerous when both sides refuse to admit what they want.”
A muscle in Y/N’s jaw ticked.
She didn’t shift in her seat. Didn’t move.
She knew what he was doing.
It was the same thing he’d done in their last encounter—teasing, testing, pushing.
He was talking about his syllabus. But he was also talking about them.
“Take Rome, for example.” Logan continued, walking along the front of the classroom, hands still in his pockets. “Julius Caesar consolidates power, and suddenly, the Senate is restless. They don’t trust him. Why?”
Silence.
Logan’s eyes flicked over the class, lingering—too long—when they landed on her.
Y/N refused to look up.
“Because they knew,” he continued, voice dipping slightly, “that once someone has a taste of power, they don’t let it go so easily.”
His words settled heavy in the air.
“And yet,” he went on, “some of the greatest conflicts in history weren’t about power itself.” His gaze swept the room. “They were about control.”
Y/N’s fingers curled into her palm, nails pressing into skin.
A few seats away, a student finally spoke up. “Didn’t power and control kind of go hand in hand?”
Logan’s lips twitched.
“Not always,” he said smoothly. “Power can be taken. Control has to be given.”
A shiver coiled down Y/N’s spine, heat pooling low in her stomach.
And Logan knew it.
His voice had dipped just enough to slip under her skin, just enough to force her to sit with the words—his words. And yet, he didn’t look at her. Not directly.
Instead, his eyes flickered across the room, casual, detached, as if he hadn’t just set fire to her nerve endings and left her to smother the flames on her own.
Another student, oblivious to the tension lacing the air, chimed in. “But doesn’t control imply restraint?”
Logan hummed, tapping his fingers idly against the desk.
“In some cases,” he admitted. “But true control—” he let the words hang for a moment, deliberate, sharp “—is knowing exactly how far you can go before you cross the line.”
Y/N exhaled slowly, her grip tightening around her pen.
Because that? That wasn’t about Rome.
“Caesar, for example.” Logan pushed off the desk, his movements unhurried, purposeful. “He understood that power was fleeting. He took what he could, pushed where he had to, but in the end?” He paused, tilting his head. “Even he wasn’t immune to the consequences.”
A few students chuckled under their breath.
Y/N didn’t.
Because she knew Logan. Knew how he played these games.
This wasn’t just a history lesson.
It was a reminder.
A reminder of that night, of the way she had let herself slip—just for a moment. The way she had let him touch her, pull her under, take something she had never intended to give.
And now?
Now, she was here, pretending to be unaffected while he stood at the front of the room, speaking in riddles that only she could decipher.
Logan finally glanced her way, just for a second.
Not long enough for anyone else to notice.
But long enough for her to see the flicker of amusement in his eyes.
Long enough for her to realize that he was enjoying this.
Motherfucker
The discussion shifted, students bouncing theories back and forth about leadership, strategy, the fine line between control and collapse.
Y/N forced herself to focus, to stare at the screen of her laptop as though the glowing words of her notes were actually sinking in.
They weren’t.
Not when she could still feel Logan’s gaze grazing her skin like the edge of a blade, deliberate in its absence, cutting in the way he looked everywhere but at her.
A girl two seats down—Emily, maybe?—leaned forward, tucking a lock of hair behind her ear. “So, Professor, would you say Caesar’s downfall was inevitable?”
Logan leaned against the desk, arms crossed, head tilting as if considering.
“Depends,” he mused. “Was it the betrayal that killed him?” A beat. “Or was it his arrogance?”
His words settled over the room, thoughtful. Almost careless.
But Y/N felt the weight of them like a hand at her throat.
Because that night had been arrogant.
She had known better. She had drawn her lines, kept her distance, resisted every damn pull he had on her. And yet, one moment—one misstep—had changed everything.
And now?
Now she was the one paying for it.
A quiet sigh escaped her lips as she tapped at her keyboard, forcing herself to take notes. She could feel her pulse in her throat, steady and insistent, but she pushed it down, locked it away.
She just had to make it through the next twenty minutes.
Then—mercifully—Logan moved on. The lesson drifted towards logistics, strategy, the mechanics of an empire’s rise and fall.
Y/N let herself breathe.
Until—
“Before we wrap up—” Logan straightened, flipping through a stack of papers before holding them up between two fingers. “Your midterms.”
A few groans rippled through the class. Some students slumped lower in their seats. Others sat up straighter, eyes flickering with expectation.
Y/N blinked, caught off guard. She hadn’t graded those.
Her stomach turned slightly.
She had spent the past few days avoiding him—on purpose. Dodging his glances, his emails, taking the long way around campus just to make sure she didn’t have to face him. She had expected him to push back, to try and catch her alone.
But this?
This was unexpected.
She frowned, shifting in her seat as Logan started handing them back, his expression unreadable.
She had aced that exam. She knew she had.
And yet, when Logan finally reached her desk, sliding the paper toward her with an infuriating ease, she felt something cold slither down her spine.
Red ink slashed across the top corner.
C
Her head snapped up.
Logan didn’t stop.
Didn’t look at her.
Didn’t acknowledge her at all as he moved past, handing the next paper to the student behind her.
Her fingers curled around the edges of her midterm, heart hammering against her ribs.
This wasn’t a mistake.
It was a message.
She scoffed, quiet but sharp, barely more than an exhale.
Very well.
This was not going to end here.
She could feel the heat creeping up her spine, pooling low in her stomach—not just from anger, but from something darker, something thrilling.
He wanted to play?
Fine.
She would play.
For the rest of class, Y/N barely moved, barely breathed, fingers gripping the edge of her desk, her jaw locked so tight it ached.
Logan, of course, was unbothered. Completely composed. He carried on as though nothing had happened, as though he hadn’t just tossed a match into an open field and walked away.
She didn’t react. Not then.
But when class ended, when the other students stood, stretching and gathering their things, when she heard Logan dismiss them with a low, even, “See you all next week,”—
She didn’t move.
Didn’t even pretend to pack up.
Instead, she sat perfectly still, one hand smoothing over the graded paper, staring down at the lie written in red ink.
She waited.
Listened.
And when the last of her classmates filtered out, when the door finally clicked shut behind them—
Only then did she rise.
Slowly.
Deliberately.
Logan was still at his desk, flipping through papers, pretending to be unaware of her presence.
She took a breath. Stepped forward.
And when she spoke, her voice was sweet. Too sweet.
“You’re awfully generous, Professor.”
Logan didn’t look up.
“Am I?”
She hummed, holding the exam between two fingers, twirling it slightly.
“I mean, a C?” A pause, tilting her head. “You could’ve at least failed me. That would’ve been more convincing.”
That got him.
The edge of Logan’s mouth twitched—just barely, just enough for her to see.
But he still didn’t look up.
“Maybe I went easy on you,” he mused, voice low, dragging as he flipped to another page in his papers. “Maybe I thought you deserved a little mercy.”
Y/N let out a soft, breathy laugh, stepping closer, just enough that she could see the tension in his shoulders, the way his fingers twitched slightly against the desk.
“Mercy?” she echoed. “Is that what you call it?”
Then, because she couldn’t help herself—because he had started this—
She leaned in.
Not enough to touch.
But enough for her next words to slide between them like a blade.
“Seems a little desperate, Professor.”
That got his attention.
Logan’s head finally lifted, darkened eyes locking onto hers, sharp and unreadable.
For a moment, neither of them spoke.
The air between them crackled.
“I don’t have time for this,” he said, flipping the page in front of him. “I have a meeting.”
Y/N blinked.
For a second, just a second, her breath caught in her throat.
Then, slowly, she smiled. Sharp. Cold.
“Of course you do.”
Y/N lifted her paper slightly, the red mark on it almost taunting.
Then, with a slow smirk, she pressed it against his chest.
“Enjoy your meeting,” she murmured.
And then—before he could say a thing—
She turned and walked out.
******
The restaurant hummed with warmth, a mix of clinking glasses, low conversation, and the occasional burst of laughter rising above the noise. The scent of charred steak, garlic butter, and freshly baked bread filled the air, making the already cozy space feel even richer.
At their table, tucked near the window, the girls were deep into their second—or was it third?—bottle of wine. Plates sat half-empty, dessert forks clinking as they passed around bites of Leah’s birthday cake.
“To another year of surviving this godforsaken institution,” Leah declared, lifting her glass high, eyes gleaming with amusement.
“And looking hot while doing it,” someone added.
“To Leah,” Y/N smirked, clinking her glass against hers.
“To all of us,” Leah corrected. “Because, honestly, we deserve it.”
Laughter rippled through the group. The drinks kept flowing, the conversation weaving between weekend plans, internship gossip, and the ever-evolving drama of their university’s social scene. It was easy, normal.
Y/N leaned into it, letting herself get lost in the rhythm of her friends’ voices, letting herself forget about—
“Oh, speaking of school,” one of the girls piped up, tipping her glass in Y/N’s direction. “How’s the TA life treating you?”
Y/N blinked, the shift in topic jolting her for half a second.
Leah turned to her, lips twitching. “Yeah, how is our dear Professor Howlett?”
Y/N kept her expression even, swirling her wine. “Fine.”
One of the other girls snorted, raising a brow. “That’s it?”
Y/N arched a brow back. “Would you like a full dissertation?”
“No, but I’d like a little more detail,” Leah cut in, leaning forward. “Because, from what I heard—” she paused, grinning like she had something good, “—you’ve fallen from grace.”
Y/N frowned, feigning nonchalance as she took a sip of her drink. “What are you talking about?”
“You tell me.” Leah smirked. “A month ago, you were his golden child. He actually smiled at you. Now?” She let out an exaggerated sigh. “He looks at you like you personally set his car on fire.”
Y/N rolled her eyes, but she could feel the way they were watching her.
“Oh my God, you totally pissed him off,” another girl cackled.
“I did not,” Y/N said smoothly.
“Uh-huh.”
“No, seriously, what did you do?” Leah pressed.
Y/N tapped her fingers against her wine glass, tilting her head. “Maybe he just finally realized he’s an asshole.”
A few of the girls laughed, but Leah just squinted at her, too perceptive for her own good.
Y/N held her gaze, unfazed.
“Whatever you did,” Leah drawled, sitting back, “he’s been pissed. He even started handing out graded exams himself.”
Y/N stilled, barely a flicker of reaction, but Leah caught it.
Bingo.
“Oh, so that’s what this is about.”
“Leah,” Y/N warned.
“No, no, no. Wait.” Leah grinned like she was piecing together the most delicious gossip of the year. “You’ve been helping him grade for months. And now, all of a sudden, you’re out of a job?” She let out a slow, dramatic gasp. “You did piss him off.”
Y/N rolled her eyes again, sitting back in her chair.
“Oh, babe,” Leah continued, her voice dripping with exaggerated sympathy. “Do you need a new professor to suck up to?”
Y/N smirked, unbothered. “No, but you might, considering your last paper was absolute shit.”
Leah gasped, clutching her chest in mock offense. “I am the victim here.”
“Oh, sure,” Y/N deadpanned.
The conversation carried on, laughter spilling over the table as Leah launched into a dramatic retelling of her latest attempt at flirting with her philosophy TA. Something about eye contact, Nietzsche, and an existential crisis mid-hookup.
Y/N smirked, sipping her drink, letting herself relax into the warmth of the evening. The wine hummed pleasantly in her veins, the weight of everything momentarily pushed to the edges of her mind.
Until Leah, still mid-rant, suddenly froze.
Her eyes flicked past Y/N’s shoulder, widening slightly before she smirked, slow and sharp.
“Well, well,” she murmured, swirling her drink. “Look what the cat dragged in.”
Y/N’s fingers tightened around the stem of her glass, the coolness of it grounding her, anchoring her in place. Logan.
Logan, leaning back like he had all the time in the world, one arm draped over the back of the booth, fingers absently rolling his whiskey glass. His body language was relaxed, easy. But his eyes?
His eyes were locked onto hers.
And he wasn’t alone.
The woman across from him was gorgeous, her red-painted lips curved into something lazy, knowing. She leaned in just enough to make a point, her hand brushing against Logan’s forearm as she whispered something in his ear.
Y/N didn’t hear Logan’s response.
She didn’t need to.
She saw the smirk that followed. The tilt of his head. The way his lips parted slightly, like he was amused.
Like he knew exactly what he was doing.
“Damn,” Maya murmured, her brows lifting as she took a sip of her drink. “Guess Mr. Howlett’s got a life outside of terrorizing students after all.”
Leah snorted. “And it looks like he’s got good taste.”
Y/N hummed, her expression unreadable, her blood thrumming with something sharp and tight and unbearable.
He was doing it on purpose.
Because, of course, he was.
Y/N refused to look away first.
If he wanted to play this game, fine.
She lifted her glass, taking a slow, deliberate sip, her lips curving into something that wasn’t quite a smirk. Then, just as Logan lifted his own glass in some silent, taunting toast—
She turned away.
Didn’t give him the satisfaction.
Leah exhaled, shaking her head. “Must be nice,” she muttered, tipping her glass toward Logan’s date. “Imagine being wined and dined by that.”
Y/N just smiled, feigning boredom, indifference.
But she could still feel his eyes on her.
Still feel the weight of his gaze, burning against the side of her face.
It was subtle—calculated. The way his deep, rough laugh suddenly cut through the restaurant’s hum, just loud enough for her to hear. The way his fingers traced absent circles against the table’s edge, slow, deliberate. The way he leaned in just a fraction closer to the woman across from him, speaking low, lips almost brushing her ear—
Almost.
She let her friends’ conversation wash over her, grounding herself in their presence, their laughter, their easy, carefree energy. She refused to let Logan pull her into whatever game he was playing.
It was almost amusing.
Almost.
Maya gestured to the waiter for another round of drinks, grinning. “Alright, I say we hit a club after this.”
Leah groaned. “I have a quiz tomorrow.”
“And?”
“And I’m not trying to fail.”
“God, you’re so responsible,” Maya sighed, rolling her eyes before turning back to Y/N. “What about you? You coming?”
Y/N took another sip of her drink, letting the question linger before answering, “Why not?”
Logan stiffened.
It was brief, nearly imperceptible. But she caught it.
And so did he.
Y/N turned, meeting his gaze head-on.
His jaw tightened.
Her lips twitched.
And then, as if he was nothing more than a fleeting thought, she rose from her seat, gathering her things.
“Alright,” she said to Maya, tossing a few bills onto the table for the check. “Let’s go.”
She didn’t look back.
She didn’t need to.
Because as she walked away, she felt it—the weight of his stare, the frustration rolling off him in waves, thick and heavy and burning with something he hadn’t quite tamed yet.
Good.
Let him simmer.
******
Logan was late.
A rare thing. An unacceptable thing.
And it was because of his damn car, which decided this morning—of all mornings—that it wasn’t going to start. He’d wasted fifteen minutes trying to fix it himself, another five debating if he should just put his fist through the hood, and another ten waiting for a uber to show up.
Annoyance curled hot in his chest, pressing against his ribs like a vice.
Fine.
It wasn’t the first time the universe threw obstacles in his way.
At least he had someone reliable to handle things.
So as he sat in the back of the uber, Logan pulled out his phone and sent a quick, no-nonsense text.
Tell them I’ll be late. Start the lecture.
Short. Clear. He didn’t need to say more. Y/N would handle it.
Except—
She didn’t.
The second he stepped into the lecture hall, his mood went from bad to worse.
The room was chaos. Conversations rang out unchecked, students still standing, still filing in, notebooks tossed onto desks with all the urgency of a lazy Sunday morning.
Logan’s gaze flicked toward her usual seat.
Empty.
His jaw tightened.
He let the pause stretch, let his frustration settle in his bones, before he strode down the steps to the front of the class.
When he spoke, his voice cut through the noise like a blade.
“Sit.”
The command landed with immediate effect. Conversations died. Chairs scraped against the floor.
A few students exchanged wary glances, picking up on the fact that their professor was in no mood for patience.
Logan set his bag down on the desk a little harder than necessary. The silence stretched, thick and expectant, but he didn’t give them anything—not yet.
Instead, he rolled up his sleeves with slow, deliberate movements, exhaling through his nose before finally speaking.
"Last class, we talked about power. About control.”
He turned to the whiteboard, uncapping a marker, and dragged the words across the surface in sharp, precise strokes.
“Today,” he continued, voice smooth, “we’re shifting to influence.”
Another slow line drawn beneath the word.
“How it’s used. How it’s abused. And—” his voice dipped lower, his gaze cutting through the room— “how those who think they have it often don’t.”
A beat of silence.
Logan let it linger, let the weight of his words settle over the students before he turned back to face them.
“Influence,” he went on, stepping forward, “isn’t about brute strength. It’s not about who yells the loudest or who has the biggest army.”
His hands slipped into his pockets as he paced.
“Real influence is quieter. Subtler. It’s knowing exactly what someone wants—” he tilted his head slightly, “—and deciding whether or not you’re going to give it to them.”
He caught a few students exchanging glances, intrigued.
They had no idea.
Because Logan wasn’t talking about history. Not really.
He was talking about something else entirely.
Something sharp. Something frustrating. Something that had the nerve to not show up today.
Y/N.
His fingers flexed at his sides.
She had never missed a class before. Not once. Not even when she had every reason to.
And yet—here he was, staring at an empty seat.
His grip on the marker tightened as he forced himself to keep going.
"History is full of people who thought they had influence,” he said, dragging his attention back to the class. “People who assumed their power was absolute. That they had control over those beneath them.”
A slow, measured breath.
“But control is a fickle thing.”
He turned back to the whiteboard, scrawling another word beneath Influence.
“Perception.”
“The truth is,” he continued, “most of history’s so-called ‘great leaders’ weren’t actually in control. They were at the mercy of perception. The illusion of power. And illusions—” he capped the marker with an audible click, “—can be shattered.”
A few students scribbled in their notebooks, nodding along. Others sat back, watching him with quiet focus.
But Logan wasn’t watching them.
He was watching the damn clock.
Waiting.
Expecting.
The door never opened.
She never walked in.
His jaw ticked.
Fine.
If she wanted to play games, she’d have to try harder than this.
Logan finished the lecture with practiced ease, but his patience had thinned to a knife’s edge. By the time class ended, he was done pretending.
As students packed up their things, Logan leaned back against his desk, arms crossed, gaze sharp as it swept over the room.
Then his eyes landed on her friend.
She was taking her time, slow in the way only someone deliberately avoiding something could be. Flipping through her notebook, adjusting the strap of her bag—stalling.
Logan wasn’t in the mood for patience.
“Where’s Y/N?”
It wasn’t a casual question, no matter how level his tone was.
The friend stilled for half a second before flicking her eyes up to him. A knowing look. Curious. Wary.
“She didn’t say much last night,” she said eventually, shutting her notebook. “We left the club, and then… she was gone.”
Logan’s jaw ticked.
Gone.
He didn’t like the sound of that.
Didn’t like that they hadn’t seen her after.
Didn’t like the way the friend was looking at him now, sharp and assessing, as if putting pieces together.
“I let her know I’d be late this morning.” His voice was calm, but the words had an edge. A reminder. A fact.
The friend tilted her head, considering him. Then, with something just shy of a smirk, she said, “Guess she had more important things to do.”
A slow exhale through his nose.
Logan held her gaze for a beat longer before pushing off the desk, his movements controlled, precise.
He didn’t respond.
Didn’t need to.
If she was trying to make a point—
Message fucking received.
******
Logan didn’t leave the classroom right away.
He lingered.
The students had cleared out, their chatter fading down the hall, but he stood by the desk, arms crossed, gaze fixed on the empty chair where she should have been.
She hadn’t shown up.
Not for class. Not for him.
His jaw ticked.
The room was still, save for the faint hum of the overhead lights. He exhaled sharply, reaching for his coffee. The cup was empty.
Great.
With a muttered curse, he grabbed his things and strode toward the door. The sound of his own footsteps echoed in the now-empty hallway, steady, controlled.
Controlled.
Power can be taken. Control has to be given.
The words from his own damn lecture slithered back to him, unwanted. He scowled, pushing through the building’s heavy front doors and stepping outside. The air had cooled, the lingering heat of the day fading into a crisp breeze.
He barely noticed.
His mind kept circling back to her absence, to the night before. To the moment she had downed her drink, barely even looking at him as she walked away.
She knew he saw her. She knew he was watching.
And yet she hadn’t given him the satisfaction of even a reaction.
His fingers tightened around the strap of his bag as he made his way across campus, past clusters of students, past the coffee cart where she sometimes stopped between classes.
The cup he usually found sitting on his desk—her order, slid across with an offhand comment about him needing it more than her—hadn’t been there today.
It was nothing.
So why the fuck did it feel like something?
By the time he reached his office, his patience was worn thin. The door swung shut behind him with a quiet thud, and he dropped his things onto the desk, rolling his shoulders back.
A heavy exhale.
He should be grading. Preparing for the next lecture.
Instead, he reached for his phone.
No messages.
Nothing.
His jaw clenched.
Fine.
He leaned back, rubbing a hand along his jaw before pulling out a test paper—the one she should’ve been helping him grade. The one he had deliberately marked lower than it deserved, just to watch her reaction.
Except there hadn’t been one.
He scoffed under his breath, tossing the paper aside.
This is ridiculous.
His gaze flickered to his laptop, fingers already moving before he fully decided.
If she wouldn’t come to him—
Maybe it was time he sent for her.
Logan wasn’t the type to chase.
Not students. Not women. Not anyone.
And yet—
His fingers hovered over the keyboard, the email cursor blinking like it was mocking him.
Subject: Need Your Assistance
Y/N,
I need help reviewing the material for next week’s class. See me in my office in an hour.
He stared at it, jaw tight, his other hand gripping the armrest of his chair.
It was a weak excuse. He knew it. She would know it.
But it was better than nothing.
With a quiet exhale, he hit send—and sat back, arms crossed, waiting.
One hour.
Two.
Nothing.
He scowled, checking his inbox again like the email would magically appear.
His hand moved to his phone before he could think better of it.
She had never ignored him before. Not really. Not like this.
He tapped her contact. Called.
No answer.
Logan exhaled through his nose, setting the phone down with more force than necessary.
Fuck this.
She wanted to play games?
He pushed back from his desk, grabbed his keys, and left without another thought.
Why did this bother him so much?
Was it the fact that she had ignored his email? His call?
Or was it the way she had walked out of that restaurant without a second glance—without giving him the satisfaction of a reaction?
His fingers curled around the steering wheel.
It didn’t matter.
What mattered was that he was done waiting.
******
The hallway was quiet, the fluorescent lights above buzzing faintly. Logan exhaled slowly, rolling his shoulders back as he knocked. Once. Twice.
A pause. Then, soft footsteps on the other side of the door.
When it finally opened—
He didn’t know what he was expecting.
But it sure as hell wasn’t this.
Y/N stood there looking… put together.
Not sick. Not disheveled from a long night. Not the wreck he had pictured, curled up in bed nursing a hangover.
No.
She looked like she had just come from a class—not his, obviously, but somewhere.
Somewhere else.
His fingers curled slightly against his palm.
Her brows furrowed just a little, eyes flickering over his face. Like she wasn’t expecting him.
“…Professor?”
Logan exhaled sharply through his nose. “You didn’t show up.”
Y/N blinked, adjusting her bag strap. “I know.”
His jaw tightened. She wasn’t even offering an excuse. No flimsy I wasn’t feeling well, no Sorry, I lost track of time.
Just—I know.
He stared at her for a beat before tilting his head. “You’re my TA.”
She nodded. “I’m aware.”
Logan let a slow exhale drag through his teeth. “Then you should also be aware that skipping your job isn’t an option.”
Y/N’s expression remained infuriatingly unreadable. “I’ll make up the hours.”
He huffed a humorless laugh, shaking his head. “Not how it works, sweetheart.”
Something flickered in her eyes at that—something sharp—but she didn’t take the bait.
Instead, she lifted a brow, crossing her arms. “Would you like me to submit an official apology?”
Logan’s lips pressed into a thin line.
She was playing with him.
“I’d like you to do your damn job,” he said evenly.
Silence.
She held his gaze, unwavering.
Then, slowly, she leaned against the doorframe, tilting her head. “You’re upset.”
His fingers twitched. “I’m annoyed.”
“Because I missed class?”
His jaw clenched.
Yes. No. Maybe.
Logan inhaled deeply, steadying himself. “Because you didn’t even have the decency to let me know.”
Y/N’s expression remained infuriatingly calm. “I didn’t realize I had to report my every move to you.”
Logan stared at her, eyes dark.
That tone. That dismissive little tone.
Like he was just another professor. Like he was someone who could be ignored without consequence.
Like she hadn’t walked away from him last night without a second glance.
His grip on the doorframe tightened.
“Fine,” he said, voice low, smooth. “I’ll just make sure the department knows you’re too busy for this position.”
It was an empty threat. They both knew it.
Still—her brows lifted slightly, like she was finally paying attention.
She exhaled slowly, tilting her head. “I’ll be there next class.”
Logan held her gaze for a second longer.
“Make sure you are.”
They just stood there, neither moving, neither speaking.
Y/N’s fingers curled slightly around the edge of the doorframe, but her expression remained unreadable. Logan’s jaw was tight, his eyes dark, unmoving.
She should’ve closed the door. Should’ve ended this.
But she didn’t.
And neither did he.
The hallway was too quiet, the seconds stretching thin between them. Something unspoken hung in the air, thick and heavy, like a breath held just before a storm.
Then, slowly, Y/N exhaled, tilting her head.
“…Is there something else you wanna say?”
Logan didn’t blink.
Did he?
Maybe.
Maybe he wanted to ask if she had gone to that damn club just to make a point.
Maybe he wanted to say that she should never ignore his calls again.
Maybe he wanted to take a step forward, close the space between them, just to see if she would move.
But he did none of those things.
Instead, Y/N let out a quiet hum, eyes flickering over his face. “Or can we renegotiate my grade?”
Logan’s fingers twitched.
That smart mouth. That fucking attitude.
His lips pressed into a thin line. “Watch it.”
Y/N only lifted a brow.
And for a second, just a fraction of a second, his gaze dropped—to her mouth, to the curve of it, the way her lips almost parted like she had caught the motion and dared him to look again.
But Logan forced his eyes back up, breathing slow through his nose.
“I’ll see you next class,” she said smoothly.
He didn’t answer.
Didn’t nod. Didn’t move.Neither of them moved.
Y/N stood there, her chin tipped just slightly, the sharp glint in her eyes something between defiance and amusement. She knew exactly what she was doing. Exactly what kind of fire she was playing with.
And Logan—Logan was this close to forgetting every goddamn rule.
His fingers flexed at his sides, jaw tight, breath slow and measured. The logical part of his mind, the one that still had a grip on reality, told him to leave. Turn around, walk back down that hallway, pretend this conversation had never happened.
But the other part—the part that had spent the last week stewing in frustration, in her absence, in the way she had looked right through him at the restaurant and walked away like he was nothing—wasn’t listening.
His eyes dragged over her, slow, deliberate.
She looked perfect. Effortless. Put together. Like she hadn’t ignored his calls, his emails. Like she hadn’t left him waiting.
That got under his skin more than it should have.
“I’ll see you next class,” she repeated, voice smooth, tilting her head like she was dismissing him.
Logan didn’t fucking move.
Something in the air shifted.
Tension thickened, curling, twisting, stretching taut like a wire about to snap.
She didn’t step back. Didn’t shut the door.
And Logan—Logan didn’t walk away.
Instead, he took a slow step forward.
Just one.
Her breath hitched. Not much. Just a fraction of a second. But he caught it.
His head tilted, studying her.
Waiting.
Daring.
Logan exhaled, slow and steady.
He should go. He should.
His lips parted, but whatever he meant to say—whatever line he still thought he could hold—
It disappeared.
Because Y/N took a step too.
Closer.
Not much, but enough.
Enough that he could smell her perfume, light but intoxicating. Enough that the heat of her skin seemed to seep into him. Enough that her lips—soft, parted, waiting—were just there.
And Logan—Logan wasn’t a man of patience.
Not when it came to her.
His hand moved before he could stop it.
Fingers curling around her wrist, tugging—just slightly, just enough.
And Y/N—Y/N didn’t pull away.
Didn’t protest.
Didn’t do a goddamn thing except look at him, pulse fluttering under his grip, her lips parting as her breath caught—
And that was it.
That was all it took.
His mouth was on hers in a second, rough, desperate, furious, like he had been holding himself back for too long and finally let the dam break.
And fuck, she kissed him back.
She met him, matched him, fingers threading into his hair as she tugged, mouth opening under his like she had been waiting for this just as much as he had.
The heat of her burned.
Logan pressed her back against the doorframe, fingers digging into her waist, tasting the sharp bite of her earlier smirk on his tongue.
It wasn’t gentle. It wasn’t soft.
It was frustration and tension and a week’s worth of unspoken words spilling between them in gasps and teeth and heat.
And fuck, she wanted.
He could feel it in the way her hands clenched in his shirt, the way her hips tilted toward him without thinking, the way she let out the smallest, breathiest sound against his lips—
A sound that almost made him lose it.
Logan’s mouth crashed against hers like he was done holding back, done pretending this didn’t matter. His hands were already on her, fingers gripping her waist, sliding beneath her sweater to touch bare skin, hot and possessive.
Y/N gasped against his lips, but she didn’t stop him—wouldn’t stop him. Not when she had wanted this just as much.
Not when she had spent nights replaying every look, every touch, every moment he had gotten too close and then pulled away.
Not this time.
Her fingers tangled in his shirt, fisting the fabric as she yanked him closer, drinking in the low, needy sound he made in the back of his throat. His body pressed into hers, hard and unyielding, like he wanted to cage her in completely, like he wanted to remind her exactly who had been in control this whole time.
But she wasn’t about to make this easy for him.
She tugged at his lower lip with her teeth, just enough to make him groan, just enough to push him further, and fuck, she felt the way his fingers dug into her hips in response.
She had never seen him like this.
Never seen him lose control.
And it was intoxicating.
"Shit," Logan growled against her mouth before his lips left hers, dragging hot, open-mouthed kisses along her jaw, down the column of her throat. His teeth grazed the delicate skin there, and Y/N sucked in a sharp breath, nails raking over his shoulders.
“You just gonna stand there, professor?” she murmured, breathless, teasing. “Or are you actually gonna—”
Logan lifted her.
Just—effortless, like she weighed nothing, like he was done listening to her mouth. Her back hit the door, her legs wrapping around his waist as his hands slid beneath her thighs, fingers flexing against bare skin.
“I warned you to watch it,” he muttered, voice rough, barely restrained.
Y/N smirked, dragging her fingers up into his hair, tugging just enough to make his jaw clench. “Or what?”
Logan growled.
And then he tore her sweater off.
Just—over her head, tossed somewhere behind them, forgotten the second his hands were back on her, mouth covering every inch of exposed skin.
And Y/N—
Fuck.
She was gone.
She barely had the presence of mind to kick the door shut behind them before Logan was moving, walking them deeper into the room without ever letting her go.
It was desperate. Messy. Clothes lost between touches, gasps swallowed between kisses that grew rougher, hungrier.
By the time they hit the bed, she was already his.
And neither of them had any intention of stopping.
Logan wasn’t gentle.
Didn’t ease into it.
Didn’t give her time to think, to second-guess, to do anything but feel.
Because fuck, he had held back for too long.
His mouth was on her again before she could catch her breath, rough hands roaming, sliding over bare skin like he was starving—like he wanted to commit every inch of her to memory.
Y/N arched beneath him, body humming with something raw and electric as his lips dragged down, down, teeth scraping, tongue soothing—leaving a trail of heat in his wake.
“Logan,” she breathed, fingers fisting in his hair, nails scraping against his scalp.
He groaned, deep and rough, his grip tightening on her hips as he pressed her deeper into the mattress.
She felt him everywhere.
Overpowering. Unyielding. A fucking force of nature.
Her breath hitched when he slid lower, lips teasing, testing, eyes flicking up to meet hers—dark, hungry, wild.
Then he smirked.
And ruined her.
Logan was all rough edges and raw hunger.
No hesitation. No pretense. Just heat.
His mouth was everywhere—dragging down the column of her throat, teeth grazing, lips soothing, hands gripping like he owned her. Like he’d finally snapped that last thread of restraint and was making up for lost time.
Y/N gasped as he pushed her back against the mattress, his weight pressing into her, solid and hot and relentless.
Her shirt was gone before she could blink.
So were his.
He wasn’t gentle when he kissed her—didn’t take his time, didn’t tease. He kissed her like he was trying to consume her, like he wanted to taste every breath she took.
His hands were rough, calloused, dragging over soft skin, fingers tracing, kneading, gripping as he slid lower.
“Fuck,” he muttered against her skin, voice gravelly, thick with something dark and needy.
Y/N barely had time to breathe before his mouth was on her again, trailing down, teeth scraping, tongue flicking—until she was whimpering, fingers tugging at his hair, thighs trembling around his shoulders.
Then he groaned, deep and guttural, hands tightening on her hips as he dragged her closer, mouth hot and wet and sinful against her skin.
“Logan—” Her voice broke, back arching, pleasure coiling tight in her stomach, dizzying and overwhelming.
He didn’t slow down.
Didn’t let up.
Didn’t stop until she was shattering, nails digging into his shoulders, gasping his name like it was the only word she knew.
And when she finally collapsed against the sheets, chest rising and falling in uneven breaths—
He smirked.
“Not so mouthy now, are you?”
Y/N blinked up at him, dazed, lips swollen, body still buzzing.
Then—slowly—she smirked back.
“Oh, I’m just getting started.”
Logan’s eyes darkened.
“Fuckin’ hell.”
And then he was kissing her again—hungry, desperate—like he wasn’t done with her yet.
Because he wasn’t.
Not even close.
Logan didn’t take his time.
Didn’t waste a second.
The moment Y/N smirked up at him, all challenge and temptation, he was on her again—his mouth claiming hers, his hands gripping, sliding, possessive.
She gasped when he flipped them, her thighs straddling his hips, hands braced against his chest. His skin was hot under her fingertips, muscles shifting, tensing—barely restrained strength, coiled and waiting to snap.
She felt the hard press of him against her, thick and heavy through his jeans, and fuck—the way he was looking at her, all dark eyes and barely controlled hunger, like he was going to ruin her—
Her breath hitched.
“You gonna sit there all night?” Logan drawled, voice low, rough. His hands settled on her hips, fingers digging in just enough to make her feel it. “Or are you finally done playin’ games?”
Y/N tilted her head, nails dragging down his chest, slow and teasing.
“You’re the one who showed up at my door, Professor.”
Logan exhaled sharply through his nose, something dangerous flashing in his gaze.
“Yeah,” he muttered, flipping them again until she was under him, caged in, no escape. “And look where that got us.”
Then his mouth was on her throat, her collarbone, the swell of her breast, tongue flicking over a peaked nipple, teeth grazing just enough to make her gasp.
Her fingers tangled in his hair, tugging, nails scraping, and he groaned, pressing his hips into hers, letting her feel exactly what she was doing to him.
“Logan—”
Her voice broke, pleasure coiling tight, anticipation thrumming under her skin.
Logan lifted his head, gaze locking onto hers—dark, heavy, unreadable.
“Tell me you want this.” His voice was low, rough, but his grip on her waist gentled, thumbs stroking slow circles against her skin. “Tell me to stop, and I will.”
Y/N stared up at him, heart hammering.
She should say no.
Should tell him this was a mistake.
That this could never happen.
But then he rolled his hips against hers, slow, deliberate—
And she broke.
“Don’t stop.”
Logan cursed under his breath, something in his expression cracking—then he was moving, shedding the last barriers between them, pressing her into the mattress as he lined himself up, the thick head of him teasing her entrance.
Y/N gasped, nails digging into his shoulders, aching for more.
And Logan—
Logan just grinned, sharp and wicked.
“Hope you know what you’re askin’ for, sweetheart.”
Logan buried himself deep, a guttural sound ripping from his throat as Y/N arched beneath him, fingers clawing at his back. Heat coiled tight, sharp and electric, every nerve in her body lighting up as he set a ruthless pace—one that left no room for hesitation, no space for second thoughts.
She gasped, nails biting into his shoulders, but Logan only groaned in response, dragging his teeth over the curve of her throat, sucking a mark into her skin like he wanted to brand himself into her.
“Fuck,” he muttered, voice raw, strained. His hands slid beneath her thighs, hitching them higher around his waist, and the shift had her choking on a moan, her body bowing into him.
The smirk that curled his lips was devastating. “That good, huh?”
Y/N barely had the presence of mind to glare. “Shut up.”
Logan fucked her like he was making up for every moment he’d held back. Like he was claiming something that had always been his, something he’d spent too long pretending he didn’t want.
And Y/N—she let him.
Let him grip her thighs, spread her open, thrust deep until she couldn’t do anything but take it, body writhing under him, breath stolen from her lungs.
“Logan—” His name slipped out like a prayer, like a plea, her fingers fisting in his hair, dragging, desperate.
Logan chuckled—dark, low, smug as hell. But the amusement didn’t last. Not when she clenched around him, not when she rolled her hips just enough to have his breath stuttering against her skin. His grip on her tightened, bruising, grounding.
Then he was moving again, relentless, dragging her right to the edge and keeping her there, teasing, playing, testing just how much she could take before she broke.
Y/N’s head tipped back against the pillows, lips parted, breath shaky. “You’re—” She swallowed hard, a moan slipping out before she could stop it. “You’re such an asshole.”
Logan huffed out a laugh, pressing his forehead to hers, breath warm against her lips. “Yeah?” His hips snapped forward, hitting just right, and she gasped, hands fisting in his hair.
The cocky bastard smiled. “Say that again.”
She would’ve. Really. But then his fingers slid between them, pressing against that sweet spot, circling, teasing, relentless—
Y/N shattered.
It tore through her like wildfire, pleasure rolling through her in waves so intense her vision blurred, her body shuddering, nails biting into his back as she clenched around him.
Logan groaned deep in his chest, a curse slipping from his lips as he followed her down, thrusting once, twice—then stilling, his entire body going taut as he came with a sharp, wrecked gasp against her skin.
For a long moment, neither of them moved, the only sound in the room their uneven breaths, the heavy pound of their heartbeats still echoing between them.
Then—slowly, carefully—Logan shifted, rolling onto his side and pulling her with him, his arm heavy around her waist, grounding her.
Y/N swallowed, still catching her breath, and when she glanced up, Logan was already watching her—eyes dark, unreadable.
He didn’t say anything. Didn’t smirk, didn’t gloat, didn’t try to fill the silence with something meaningless.
And maybe that was worse.
Because it left room for reality to settle.
For the weight of what they’d done to creep in.
For the dangerous, quiet truth to curl between them, thick as smoke.
Neither of them had any regrets.
And that?
That was fucking dangerous.
© th3mrskory 2025 — all rights reserved.
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I’ve been rereading the late anthropologist David Graeber’s Bullshit Jobs, which persuasively makes the case that the corporate world is happy to nurture inefficient or wasteful jobs if they somehow serve the managerial class or flatter elites—while encouraging the public to harbor animosity at those who do rewarding work or work that clearly benefits society. I think we can expect AI to accelerate this phenomenon, and to help generate echelons of new dubious jobs—prompt engineers, product marketers, etc—as it erodes conditions for artists and public servants.
A common refrain about modern AI is that it was supposed to automate the dull jobs so we could all be more creative, but instead, it’s being used to automate the creative jobs. That’s a pretty good articulation of what lies at the heart of the AI jobs crisis. Take the former Duolingo worker who was laid off as part of the company’s pivot to AI.
“So much will be lost,” the writer told me. “I was a content writer, I wrote the questions that learners see in the lessons. I enjoyed being able be creative. We were encouraged to make the exercises fun.” Now, consider what it’s being replace with, per the worker:
“First, the AI output is very boring. And Duolingo was always known for being fun and quirky. Second, it absolutely makes mistakes. Even on things that you would think it could get right. The AI tools that are available for people who pay for Duolingo Max often get things wrong—they have an ‘explain my mistake’ tool that often will suggest something that’s incorrect, sometimes the robot voices are programmed to speak the wrong language.”
This is just a snapshot, too. This is happening, to varying degrees, to artists, journalists, writers, designers, coders—and soon, perhaps already, as Thompson’s story points out, it could be happening to even more jobs and lines of work.
Now, it needs to be underlined once again that generative AI is not yet the one-size-fits-all agent of job replacement its salesmen would like it to be—far from it. A recent SalesForce survey reported on by the Information show that only one-fifth of enterprise AI buyers are seeing good results, and that 61% of respondents report a disappointing return on investment for AI or even none at all.
Generative AI is still best at select tasks that do not require consistent reliability—hence its purveyors taking aim at art and creative industries. But all that’s secondary. The rise of generative AI, linked as it is with the ascent to power of the American tech oligarchy, has given rise to a jobs crisis nonetheless.
We’re left at a crossroads where we must consider nothing less than what kind of jobs we want people to be able to do, what kind of work and which institutions we think are important as a society, and what we’re willing to do to protect them—before the logic of generative AI and the jobs crisis it has begotten guts them to the bone, or devours them altogether.
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Explore the transformative Power Automate use cases that are reshaping modern workflows. Uncover how automation is revolutionizing processes, boosting productivity, and accelerating business success.
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