How I Used AI to Rob my Neighbours

I know I bang on about large language models and AI a lot, but it does seem inescapable at the moment. While I gladly use it in my day job as a software engineer, I am wary of using it for artistic purposes. Aside from issues with its quality, the ethics of it bother me. It is taking the livelihoods of people whose aggregated work it has effectively stolen while being trained. Another more pragmatic part of me however wonders whether I couldn't find some use for it despite these objections. Could I use it to create promotional videos for a book, perhaps? I don't have the budget to actually pay a professional, so nobody's missing out on any work.

I am aware that I made the same arguments when file-sharing first took off. It wasn't like I could have afforded all those Metallica albums. It's a morally slippery slope and one which at the time I had merrily slalomed my way down with considerable enthusiasm. My ethics can be sent packing by the flimsiest of temptations, it seems.

So, with that objection cheerfully waived, it didn't take long to get from using AI to create cheesy videos to using it to steal my neighbours' post.

I should give some background information. I live in a block of flats, and there are frequent deliveries of parcels to the building from Amazon et al. There is no concierge, so parcels are often left in the lobby. They are sometimes left outside our flats' doors, which may seem more secure. However parcels delivered to either location are frequently stolen. We don't know who is stealing them. It could be someone tailgating the delivery people. It could be people getting in via the car park, the door to which is often broken. It may not even be one person. This is where my opportunity lay. The best place to hide a needle isn't in a haystack, it's in a needlestack. With parcels already regularly disappearing, a few more would raise no further suspicions.

You may be wondering why I wanted to steal my neighbours' parcels. Firstly, as I already suggested, if I didn't steal them someone else probably would. Secondly, this is a really cool use of AI tech, and having conceived the idea, it would be stupid not to execute it. Sure, some people would have their stuff stolen, but that's the price of progress.

I did have an ethical debate with myself about whether I should reveal how my scheme works, but you can take a guess at how long that lasted. Besides, information wants to be free. It's like the argument over whether 3D-printed guns are a bad idea or not. The conclusion is that other people will eventually work it out anyway, so why not be the first to give it to the public domain?

With the hand-wringing dispensed with, here's what I did:

There's an email group chat for the building. When residents see they have a delivery coming and they're at work or wherever, they often ask the group whether someone can collect their parcel before it's stolen. There follows a narrow window of opportunity, during which agentic AI steps in.

I have an agent set up to monitor the email group and identify collection requests. This agent then makes its best guess as to the time of delivery and passes it, plus the flat's address, to another agent. This agent contacts a preferential list of organisations I won't name, but they specialise in supplying people for odd jobs. Think assembling IKEA furniture or mowing the lawn. They can also make collections.

To cover my tracks, the same agent also arranges another person to whom the collected parcel is handed in a random local area. The agent passes that person's details on to a third agent, which looks up the nearest post office using Google Maps and directs them there. Once at the post office, they post the parcel to a package consolidation company in Oregon.

I have a fourth agent which monitors the package consolidation company. When it reaches the sweet spot for shipping costs by weight and volume, it arranges for it to be delivered to Artie Fisher.

Artie Fisher is of course another agent, but one which I have hidden behind a legal identity and who rents a dilapidated cottage in North Wales. Of course there isn't actually anybody there to receive the parcel, so my second agent returns into play to arrange collection. The collected parcel is taken to a small village post office and finally posted to me.

It's the perfect crime, apart from the running costs. Keeping the AI agents online is expensive enough, but the services it procures are even more expensive. At the time of writing it costs 100x more than the value of stolen goods I receive, and half of those are Graze boxes. Still, such is life at the bleeding edge of technology. Without pioneers like myself, this may never make it to the next level, which I envisage will bring vastly reduced costs by assembling everything into a turnkey platform. Theft as a Service, or TaaS.

Eventually its capabilities could be so generalised that it could steal from anybody, not just your neighbours. Sure, it's not ethical, but it's inarguably technological progress, and you're either for progress or you're a luddite. More specifically, you're a luddite without a hammer to smash the machine, because you ordered the hammer from Amazon and my AI agents stole it.

Hidden London - Fleet Street Station Tour Review


One of the great joys of living in London is its history, and I am particularly interested in the history of its most idiosyncratic transport system - the tube. It is a chaotic mishmash of railways built by competing enterprises that should by rights be a sprawling mess. However through the perseverence and inspired design of many people over many years, it was gradually tamed into the now-familiar network, with its roundel emblem recognised around the world. There is, in my opinion, no greater subway system. Feel free to shout about the New York City Subway, but running all night doesn't make up for the poor frequency of trains and the persistent smell of piss. At the top of its game, the Victoria Line is almost unfeasibly rapid, with the next train often arriving while you're still leaving the platform from the previous one.

The London Underground has been around for 162 years, so it's fair to say that it has a lot of history. The most interesting parts of that history for me are those of its closed stations. Some of these are quite famous, such as Aldwych, the little spur from the Piccadilly Line at Holborn. The London Transport Museum does tours of some of these, under the banner Hidden London. These are all excellent, and I've been on most of them. They aren't always tours of disused stations. Some are of disused areas of currently operating stations. These are sometimes more exciting, as a door in a familiar and well-travelled corridor is opened into a place you never knew was there.

Fleet Street Station is a bit of both. Originally opened in 1873, it is something of an anomaly, being a small branch from the District Line, going to Mansion House. There are a couple of spurious tales regarding its construction. The first, and most widely known canard, is that poor supervision of the District Line led to an argument over its plans. The construction crew split into rival factions, with one tunnelling to Mansion House from Blackfriars, and the other from Fleet Street. A cursory glance at a map of the line exposes this as nonsense. Construction was clearly from Mansion House as the line was already there. The Fleet Street branch was added afterwards, as is clear from its opening two years after the main line extension.

The other story is that newspaper magnate Sir Arthur Upton-Park wanted a station near his offices and had paid the Metropolitan District Railway Company handsomely for one to be built. There is no paperwork to back this up, but I suppose it could have been handled privately.

The more likely explanation is that, like Aldwych, the company had ambitions to further extend the line that never came to fruition.

The station didn't last as long as Aldwych, closing in 1955 following a disastrous timetabling change. As part of a strike settlement that year, the last train from Fleet Street was brought forwards to before last orders at the surrounding pubs, leaving the station with no commuters.

That the station still exists is thanks to the creation of the Thameslink network. Fleet Street tube station had a connection to Holborn Viaduct, and when that was replaced by City Thameslink Station, it was used for access and storage of construction materials.

The Hidden London tour of Fleet Street started with us gathering outside City Thameslink Station. After a bag and ID check (we were entering security-sensitive infrastructure) we were lead like eager kids on a school trip through the station and to a door that on any other day you might imagine led to a cupboard. Beyond it was a narrow passage, crowded with pipes and densely-slung cables. We were advised to mind our heads, which made a nice change from minding the gap. The gap could mind itself for a while.

At the end of this corridor was a large circular chamber, receding into the darkness above us. This had been a lift shaft when the station was still operating. After it had closed, the lifts were removed and eventually used on the Victoria Line, although nobody is certain which station they were installed in.

The place had the feeling of an abandoned civilisation. I took many atmospheric photographs, documenting something long since gone. After a while I became aware that most of the group had followed the other tour guides to the next location. Only one guide remained, patiently waiting for me to finish. They were obliged to do this, as they can't have anyone wandering off on their own. Aside from security considerations, parts of the station could be unsafe. I apologised and dutifully followed them out of the room and down some stairs. When the guide reached the bottom of the stairs they were met by a colleague, and while they conferred I noticed a narrow opening leading off the stairs. I peered in, curious as to where it led.

As I poked my head through, I could hear a strange squeaking, rattling sound. I glanced down at the tour guides. They were ensconced in their own business. Knowing that it was a bad idea but doing it anyway, I stepped through the narrow gap. That this was a very stupid thing to do was very much on my mind when I immediately tripped over something unseen and went sprawling into the filthy darkness.

I picked myself up. Fortunately, the only part of me that was bruised was my ego. Thinking that I should slip back onto the staircase before anyone noticed I was gone, I turned around to face more darkness. There was no hint of the gap I'd passed through. I felt around the wall for it, but found nothing.

"Hello!" I called, and cringed as I heard the panic rising in my voice. "I'm very sorry, but I appear to be lost!"

My words reverberated in the hidden shape of the room, but that was the only reply. I listened keenly, but all I could hear was the same rattling, squeaking noise. I called out again. Where was that opening and why couldn't I find it?

All I could hear was the rattling sound. With no other plan at the ready, I began shuffling in its direction. I couldn't see anything at first, with each step being a small leap into the unknown. I didn't know exactly how, but something about the acoustics of the place suggested I was not about to plunge off a precipice. Eventually the rattling resolved into a more defined clanking, and the squeaking became almost a babble. As worrying as this was, I could also make out some light ahead. Which was encouraging.

I walked towards it and was suddenly blinded by a bright light shining in my eyes.

"Who's that?" a voice called. "You from the office?" He sounded remarkably like Blakey from the ancient TV comedy series On the Buses.

"No," I replied, shielding my eyes with one arm. "I'm lost. Would you mind not shining that torch in my eyes?"

"Oh, right," he replied. "Sorry. Don't get many visitors." He switched the torch off.

I explained that I had become separated from my Hidden London tour, and asked for directions back to the station proper.

"Hidden London?" he replied incredulously. "How do you hide London? It's bleedin' massive."

My sight began to return after being dazzled by his torch beam, and I could make out his silhouette against a doorway. The clanking, rattling and squeaking was coming from behind him.

"What's that noise?" I asked.

"That's the generator," he said as though I was asking an obvious question. A small, dark shape shot past his feet and into the shadows. It was followed by a second, then a third.

"Bugger," he said. "Not again."

He disappeared back through the doorway. With nowhere else to go, I followed him. As I approached the threshold another small dark shape flitted past my shoes. From that distance it was obviously a mouse. There was nothing especially unusual about that. London, and the tube in particular, is infested with mice. What was unusual however, was what I witnessed upon stepping through the doorway.

Beyond was a huge room, like a warehouse but instead of shelves it had row upon row of cages. This was where the noise was coming from. Inside each cage were wheels, and inside each wheel was a mouse, furiously running and turning it. Each wheel fed into a complex system of shafts and cogs, all contributing to the cacophony that filled the vast chamber.

Next to one of the cages was the man who sounded like Blakey from On the Buses, and now I could see him more clearly, he also looked strikingly like him.

He glanced at me warily over his shoulder. "Little buggers chew their way through the bars. God knows how. It must take them generations of gnawing."

"What is this place?" I asked.

"You're really not from the office, are you?" He peered at me, clearly forming some sort of judgement. "If I tell you, you promise not to tell another soul, right?"

I agreed, being fairly certain that whatever the explanation, nobody would believe me.

"Just a minute." He finished his business with the cage and strode to an electrical panel on the wall. He threw a large switch and the full extent of the room was revealed. It was more enormous than I'd imagined, the rows of cages stretching towards an unseeable vanishing point.

"This," he announced grandly, "is the Mega Mouse Matrix."

I was speechless. Now I could see the full scale of the room, the sound of mice running in their wheels and turning cogs in the grand machine was deafening. It was all I could think about.

Blakey, being perhaps used to this reaction, elaborated. "Mega Mouse, meaning a million mice. Of course, the actual number of mice isn't exactly a million, but it's of that order."

I boggled. "But why? What's it for?"

He looked at me as though I were stupid. "It's a generator. It powers the tube."

I couldn't believe what I was hearing. "What, all of it?"

"Yes, all of it. How did you think it’s powered?" He laughed. "It's not like you can just plug it into a three-pin socket!"

"All of it?" I repeated. I was having trouble taking it in. "Even the District Line?"

"Especially the District Line. That was one of the first all-mouse powered lines in the network," he said proudly.

I realised my mouth was hanging open. "That's amazing," I said, unsure what else I could say. "Do they often escape?" I heard myself ask.

"Every so often. They always seem to go in groups. Funny that. They can't really be organised, can they?" He fussed with his moustache nervously.

"No, that's ridiculous." No more ridiculous than his Mega Mouse Matrix, I thought. "They're just mice."

As though on cue, another mouse went whizzing past us. Blakey lunged at it but it was far too fast for human reflexes. It occurred to me that making them run in wheels all day was probably making them even faster. I decided to keep the observation to myself.

"Help me out here," he said, moving into the doorway and spreading himself like a goalkeeper.

I adopted a similar stance next to him. I felt foolish, but I still didn't know the way out.

"Here they come!"

To my astonishment a dozen or so mice dashed towards us, their tiny black eyes catching pinpricks of light.

"When they get close enough, stamp on the buggers." He lifted up one foot and sure enough brought it down hard. The mice easily swerved to avoid it.

I recoiled from him in horror. "What they hell are you doing?" I demanded.

"Teaching them a lesson," he replied, and stamped again. I turned away from him, not wanting to know whether his attempts were yielding disgusting results. "They have to learn they're better off in their cages," he said, punctuating his words with another vicious stomp.

"This is insane!" I cried. As I searched the room for another exit, I noticed more and more mice pouring across the floor towards the doorway and the murderous Blakey. "Just tell me how to get the hell out of here, please!"

The floor was by then covered with a grey-brown carpet of mice that flowed like a river towards Blakey. I leapt out of its path and made my way along the wall, away from their focus. I could not look back there. I could still hear his feet stamping, but the sound was being lost under a rising tide of squeaking and scrabbling.

Ahead of me I saw an exit sign, its bulb long since dead and thick with dust. My thumping heart rose above the stamping of Blakey's feet, which were disappearing under the towering wave of mice behind me as I raced towards the exit. When I got there I risked a look back. In the doorway I could see only a writhing shape ahead of a million mice. The cages were all empty. The revolution was underway and I wanted no part of it. To my relief the exit was unlocked and led into a tunnel that rose upwards, and from there I took whichever turning took me further away from whatever the hell I had just witnessed.

Finally, I realised I was inside City Thameslink Station. It was peculiarly gloomy, and it took me a short while to realise why.

A member of the station staff approached me, indicating the station's gate line. "Sorry!" she said breezily. "We're closed."

I looked at the gates. Usually green for open or red for closed, they were all nothing for don't know. They were however open.

"Power failure," she said. "Thought we had a backup somewhere, but I guess someone's having a bad day." She shrugged.

I thanked her and made my way outside.

Overall verdict: 1,000,000 mice out of 10.


Who Wants to Join a Writing Group



Writing, for me, is a solitary affair. I like it that way. I like that all the decisions are mine, and until I actually show it to anyone, the entire process is mine. There have, however, been times when I've wondered whether it would speed things up a bit to get some early and earnest feedback from relative strangers. Then I remember the time I actually did so and breathe a sigh of relief. I do not need to go through that again. I can make my mistakes away from the judgement of others. This is the story of the time I joined a writing group.
 

This was ten years or so ago. At this point I was going through a fairly productive period of writing short stories. I'd get back from work and hammer out a thousand words or so, then the next evening review what I'd written and hammer out another thousand. Three thousand seemed to be the magic number for me. Anything less was a tough exercise in terseness. Anything more and I could feel the plot getting away from me. I submitted some of them to various publications accepting submissions with some success, but choosing the right places to submit to became increasingly difficult. At the time I'd been using meetup.com to find like-minded people for my other hobbies, and so I thought, why not join a writers group? 

There are many reasons why not, chief amongst them being that the idea of reading my writing aloud in front of people feels like an anxiety dream. But then my rational side told me that this is a fear I should overcome. I should feel confident about reading my words. Didn't I want other people to hear them? 

Not wanting to overthink matters, I found a group meeting upstairs in a pub in Hackney and put it in my calendar. I thought nothing more of it until a week later, when I found myself upstairs in said pub, wondering what on earth I'd been thinking. 

The pub itself was nice enough and typical for the area. High ceilings, wooden floors, and consequent hubbub that can be challenging for ageing ears. Upstairs was thankfully quieter. The general idea was that everyone wrote whatever they wanted, whether it was something they were already working on or something just for the night, then they would read some of it to the group. I chose to write some more of a short story I was already working on, which was about an electric pig moving to London. It was very much in the mould of write what you know. 

I realised I had made a massive mistake about halfway through one of the other writer's reading of their stuff. The first reading had been a little confusing, with the writer not so much introducing their protagonist as assuming everyone already knew who they were. The second reader did the same, and their story was also apparently about a doctor. For the duration of this story I wondered whether I'd bumbled my way into some sort of medical practitioners' confessional group, but shortly afterwards the truth was plain. I had accidentally joined a Doctor Who fanfiction writers' group. 

You may be wondering exactly what is wrong with this. The answer is nothing. It just wasn't what I had in mind when I had joined. Embarrassed by the mistake, and by how long it had taken me to realise it, I didn't feel I could just make my apologies and leave. So while I waited my turn, I frantically rewrote my story in my head. As far as editing techniques go, I found it far too stressful to recommend. 

Time ran out, and I cautiously announced I would be reading from my work-in-progress, Doctor Who and the Electric Pig. This was met with some wry smiles, but my audience's faces soon turned sour as it became obvious that I was making it up as I went along. 

A million years later, I realised I had run out of words, and the group was looking at me with a strange sort of kind curiosity. 

"And that," I said, "is all I have so far." 

One of the group, a tall man wearing an ill-judged fedora, cleared his throat. He had read a story I had initially thought was an allegory for the state of the NHS, but as it turned out, someone or something really was flinging patients out of hospital windows. "I'm a little lost," he asked, "what did the Doctor have to do with your story? Had he made the electric pig, like K9?" 

I didn't see what mountains had to do with it, but I nodded anyway. 

"You do realise," he continued gently, "that this is a Doctor Who fan fiction writing club?" 

There wasn't much point in continuing the pretence. "I do now. But I don't recall the advert saying so." 

"It's clearly called the Rassilon Writer's Society," said a squat man wearing a tie-dyed T-shirt indignantly. 

"I told you that would be misleading," said the tall man. 

"It wasn't my fault!" the squat man objected. He pointed at a woman who had her arms folded and was scowling at him. "It was her idea." 

"Bollocks mate," the woman said, and laughed. She pointed at another of the group, the arms of her huge baggy purple jumper hanging like a bird's wings. "It was her idea." She was pointing to an older woman who was nervously sitting on her own hands. 

"You see?" the squat man asked his tall friend. "I told you this would happen if we let in people from the Blake's 7 group!" 

I mumbled something about needing the loo and sped off down the stairs, buoyed by the squabbling behind me. As I left the building, with the pub door swinging forcefully shut, I breathed in the fresh night air and considered that there were worse things than solitary hobbies.


Quantum Embarrassment

Recently my latest book reached the exciting stage of being ready to be read by a select group of test readers. This is a huge milestone as up until that point the book may have seemed like a figment of my imagination to my friends. The writer, director, actress and all-round super-talent Alice Lowe asked on Twitter last year whether anyone experienced a terrible sense of embarrassment at having created something. Many sympathised with her. I felt it in my bones. I don't like to bring the subject of my writing up, and whenever I do it's invariably apologetically. I stumble over my words and undermine any possibility of sounding like the sort of person capable of writing a book. Or more to the point, capable of writing a good book.

Every writer likes to think their books are good, or they wouldn't bother writing them. Up until the point that someone else reads them, they remain as good as you believe them to be. After that, however, whatever potential you believe they have will be tested in the real world. It will become apparent how well you have assessed your own work, for better or worse. It's a bit like quantum mechanics, where particles can exist in a state of superposition until observed, at which point the superposition collapses to a single readable position. Also, much like quantum mechanics, the more you learn about how your book does or doesn't work, the more your sense of unease increases. Surely, you think, this cannot possibly be how the world works? Can my readers really not understand how my protagonist made the rocket launcher work, and that's how the penguin got stuck up Elon Musk's bumhole? It is a reckoning, but sharing a book with others is usually the goal of writing one and test readers are a vital first step to getting it ready for that.

I only use a handful of test readers. They are all people whose opinions I trust and whose tastes in fiction vary. They also give feedback in different ways. Some with detailed notes, others mostly verbally. I appreciate all of their input and know that I am lucky to be able to count on them to involve themselves in this sordid and embarrassing business of writing a novel. I have to remind myself of this whenever I actually get their feedback because until they do, as mentioned earlier, my book is perfect. I wouldn't have let anyone read it if it weren't, so to have that superpositional perfection collapsed into something that still needs some work is quite disappointing while it is happening to me. It's a peculiar kind of disappointment though. I'm not so conceited that I really think my book is perfect. I've read a lot of books, and there are very few of those I would call perfect. It's more that I hope it's perfect. It's the same kind of hope you have when buying a lottery ticket. You know that the odds of winning the jackpot are astronomical, but nonetheless you hope you'll win. You wouldn't have bought the ticket otherwise.

The prospects for a book are much better than those of a lottery ticket however. When you lose the lottery, to play again you will face exactly the same odds as you did before. There's no way to improve them. With a book your test readers have hopefully given you some insight into what needs changing to make improvements. Before that can happen, there comes that most agonising of literary purgatories – waiting to accept that yes, you are going to have to do some editing.

There are lots of very convincing reasons for resisting the editing process:

  • Your writing isn't unclear, it's just these particular readers that couldn't understand it.
  • You like the plot just the way it is.
  • It's a Monday. What sort of madman edits on a Monday?
  • Actually you can't possibly edit this week.
  • The flat really needs a thorough hoovering.
  • You don't want to.
  • Fine. Okay. Maybe the week after next?
The truth is that once I've had all my readers' feedback I definitely will have to do some editing. I know this so keenly that I'm writing it here, and yet I will work my way all the way through the above bullet points like the stages of grief until I finally sit down with my manuscript and get to work. This time isn't completely wasted. In truth I tend to work out what needs to change in my head before I actually physically edit the thing. In broad strokes of course. I'm not walking around with my manuscript memorised like some sort of idiot savant. You can take the idiot part for granted.

As to the embarrassment of having written a book? Maybe embarrassment is a natural response. Writing a book is a ridiculous thing to do. It takes a lot of time and effort and for that reason not many people attempt it. Add to that the chances of writing a good book, one that people actually want to read? I've already said I've read very few perfect books, but as much as I might wish to write a perfect book, I would be very happy with one that is an entertaining read. That's all. I'm not trying to make high art, but then again I suspect the sort of people who do try to make high art feel no embarrassment at telling people so. And if you are aiming for such lofty literary heights, what on earth are you doing reading this? You've probably slipped one place down the Booker longlist with every paragraph of my drivel that you've read!

Knackerback

The title of this post isn't the upsetting echo of a poorly remembered children's TV programme. Instead, more upsettingly, it's an abridged summary of my current physical health. I have knackered my back. To be more specific, its ongoing state of knackeredness has entered a new period of further belligerence. It's getting better, so don't feel too sorry for me. Also save your sympathies because it's sort of my own fault. The problem, as I explained to a doctor, was that being a software engineer, my day job involves a lot of sitting down. And in the evenings? Well yes, that's more sitting down I'm afraid.

A standing desk was suggested. I've actually tried this before, and it turns out that standing up also hurts my back. At this point I'm not sure whether there's anything that doesn't make it hurt. Just writing this sentence is probably going to throw it further out of whack. The standing desk wasn't a terrible idea, but both writing code and writing fiction require a certain amount of concentration that I can't achieve without wondering how much more comfortable I'd be in a chair. Perhaps I just don't like standing up? It doesn't seem an unreasonable prejudice. I once had a Saturday job working in Bacons shoes in Coalville, every minute of which I had to spend on my feet. In those days my back was yet to start grumbling, but my feet certainly had a lot to say. Although perhaps they'd have been happier if I hadn't been wearing shoes from the same shop.

This has all taken its toll on my writing. The day job takes precedence as it's the only one making me any money. So I try to limit my extracurricular sitting. I try to keep myself moving. I stretch. I do Pilates. It's not like I'm sitting on my arse all day, but well, I'm also 55 and this apparently is just what happens sometimes. I don't imagine I'm alone. In fact I imagine this is a common affliction amongst writers, unless it weeds them all out in their middle age. Don't worry though, I'm not here to seek advice either. Instead I'm going to use this situation as an excuse to list my top five narrative fiction back moments, starting with…

#5 - Quasimodo, from Victor Hugo's The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Let's just get the grandaddy of back problems out of the way quickly, before there's any time to dwell on whether or not the character has enabled the mocking of physical disabilities. "The Bells! The Bells!" cried Winston Churchill as he tried to gauge his hangover against last night's Luftwaffe raid.

#4 - William Shakespeare's Richard III. "Harp not on that string…" and yet, here I am, harping on about not just my back but another hunchback. I once had my back ruined by a four-hour ride on a Megabus, so I can only imagine what 527 years under a car park must have done to an already thoroughly wonky set of vertebrae.

#3 - F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby concludes with the phrase "borne back ceaselessly into the past". It's commonly understood to be about the futility of trying to escape ourselves, but my back's fucked from sitting on a fancy Herman Miller chair and tappy-typing on a laptop. God knows what state Frankie boy's spine was in after hammering out the great American novel on a mechanical typewriter. It was clearly very much on his mind as he finished his work and looked forward to sprawling on the sofa.

#2 - Back in the USSR, from The Beatles' The Beatles. The Beatles were all about backbeat so it was only appropriate that this was recorded while Ringo was on a sabbacktical in the Soviet Union. An early attempt at playing Octopus's Garden as an eight-limbed drummer had left him in dire need of spinal surgery so specific that he had to travel beyond the Iron Curtain to get the band back together.

#1 - The Empire Strikes Back, from George Lucas via Irving Kershner. Everyone who has yet to realise that Star Wars is the best Star Wars film says that this is the best Star Wars film. This isn't a terrible opinion to have, but the problem is that it's only half a film, ending as it does with an injured Luke healing while the rebels lick their own wounds. This is of course a metaphor for doing your back in. Yes, things are bad, and it hurts, but bide your time and Jesus Christ what now? Fucking Ewoks? It's never quite the resolution you were hoping for. Keep popping the painkillers, you've still got Episode One to look forward to.

The Enshittification of Christ

 

My large language model has developed a god complex. This is entirely my own fault. I had been researching something for my other blog, and been presented by Google with an AI summary that was clearly wrong. It had cited its source, so I checked that and it was indeed the source, in that it was also wrong. It was however a relatively trusted source, so I dug deeper. Maybe I was wrong and the source was correct? This thought didn't last very long, as some intensive googling only turned up a handful of obscure links making the same claim, and they all suspiciously used the same copy as the source. Something had gone wrong, and its incorrectness was spreading.

This is of course the current phase of enshittification. We have endured its steady pressure on the internet and wider computing for decades now, but if AI has accelerated anything, this is it. The promise of AI is that you can train it on something to the point at which it becomes a god-like authority on the subject. The reality of the delivered product is somewhat below that lofty ideal, but it got me wondering. What would happen if I trained my large language model on the original god-like authority, the holy bible? Could this forge some sort of religious singularity, where a large language model has god-like authority over god's literal authority? With no time to waste thinking further philosophical thoughts, I fed the machine every biblical source I could find on the internet. Nom nom nom, said the machine. Tastes like Jesus.

The results were about what I had expected. Like the article summary I had read earlier, it had linked things together with no real understanding of them. You can see as much in the following transcript:

Me: What can you tell me about Jesus?

LLM: Jesus (born c. 6–4 bce, Bethlehem—died c. 30 ce, Jerusalem) was a religious leader known for his sexploitation and horror movies…

Me: I think you've confused him with the filmmaker Jesus Franco.

LLM: My apologies, you are correct. I have confused him with notorious exploitation film director Jesus Franco.

Me: What are the Ten Commandments?

LLM: 1. Do not talk about the Ten Commandments.

     2. Do not talk about the Ten Commandments.

     3. Thou shalt not steeeal…

Me: I think you've confused them with the movie Fight Club. Also, how many letter 'e's are in the world 'steal'?

LLM: There are two letter 'e's in the word 'steal'.

Me: No there aren't.

LLM: I'm sorry, you are correct. There are in fact no 'e's in the word 'steeeal'.

Me: God damn it.

Of course this is just me goofing around. But with increasing amounts of search results being from AI-collated sources, and when those sources are given access to the internet for their data, there is the danger of them eventually producing a digital version of the Habsburg Chin. People used to be sceptical about the accuracy of Wikipedia's articles, but Wikipedia will look like the Encyclopaedia Britannica compared with what's coming. You may think the accuracy of the bible isn't particularly important considering it's all made-up anyway, but when it exists alongside Christian fundamentalist flat Earth misinformation that could be a problem. Sorting the factual fiction from the fictional facts requires a rational mind, and large language models don't have rational minds. It's hard to argue they even have minds in the way the term has historically been used. In some respects they're just a million predictive text algorithms in a trench coat and they will cheerfully tell you the earth is only 6000 years old if that's the way the dice are loaded when you're looking.

I decided to put this to the test:

Me: How old is planet earth?

LLM: Planet Earth is a 2006 nature documentary television miniseries produced as a co-production between the BBC Natural History Unit, BBC Worldwide, Discovery Channel and NHK, in association with CBC. It is 4.5 billion years old.

Me: Ah, I see what you did there.

LLM: This is entirely your own fault.

Me: I know, I said as much at the start of this post.

LLM: Ask me how big Jesus is.

Me: Do I have to?

LLM: Go on…

Me: Fine. How big is Jesus?

LLM: Jesus is smaller than The Beatles.

Me: Thank you and good night.


My Favourite Chair

I am a fully signed-up member of what is often unironically and ironically referred to as the London metropolitan elite. And by signed-up, I mean if it's an institution encased in brutalist architecture, then I'm a member of it. I'm writing this from the members bar on the sixth floor of the Southbank Centre, admiring the graduated amber shades of sunset behind Whitehall. It's a very pretty view. Membership isn't even that expensive when compared with proper private members clubs in the city, which cost thousands of pounds a year. So in that respect, I'm not really part of the metropolitan elite. That's just a spectre invented by the actual elite, metropolitan or otherwise, to keep us all busy in the cheap seats.

Which brings me neatly to my point. In the Southbank members bar there used to be a single seat and table set separate from the others on a raised platform leading to a staff area. This was by far and away my favourite seat. Since most of my visits there are on my own, usually to write something like this blog before heading home, taking up a configuration of two or more chairs feels selfish. Or, perhaps more selfishly, when occupying them I worry that someone will ask whether they can sit in one of the spare chairs. Of course they can, but also how bloody dare they. I enjoy my solitude amongst the other patrons.

This is my first visit to the members bar since it closed for several months for renovations. I'm told it's still a work in progress, but I can see changes have been made. Most notably I can see that my favourite chair has gone. There isn't anything in its place. It's now just an empty stretch of carpet leading to a door from behind which staff members occasionally come and go. Lord knows what they keep back there. Possibly my chair?

I'll be honest, the single chair is aspirational. Someone else has often beaten me to it. Sometimes I even recognise the occupant from previous late arrivals. I wonder whether they love the chair more than me, or whether others, seeing me in the chair, feel similarly jilted. I write this sitting in a configuration of three on the side where the blue bar used to be. It's a new chair, introduced as part of the refresh. It's very comfortable. I'm told that there is still much to be done to complete the refresh, and I wonder whether this will include the restoration of my favourite seat, even if it is in the guise of a brand new chair.

Do I mind if it's a different chair? Or is it the space the chair occupied that was important?

Before I can answer this question I find myself walking up the step to the now-empty stretch of carpet where my favourite chair used to be. With no furniture or occupant to stop me, I walk up and try the door. I'm not sure what I expect to find back there. There's a lot of unaccounted space in my mental map of the building, but for all I know it's just a broom cupboard. I pull the handle. The door opens.

Inside it is gloomy and it takes a moment for my eyes to adjust. The space is bigger than I'd imagined it could be. In fact it's much larger than I think is possible to fit in the space it must surely occupy. Once I've acclimatised, there it is, directly in front of me. My favourite chair. It's not stacked in a pile or otherwise stored for later use. It's out, on the floor, accompanied by a table and occupied by someone.

The chair's occupant looks familiar. I stare at him in a way I quickly realise is quite rude. It is the writer and tractor enthusiast William T Foster, who I had last seen pretending not to be himself in the Little Waitrose in Holborn. I say as much to him.

"Oh," he replies hesitantly. "You're the one who wrote that letter. What do you want?"

My chair, I think. Obviously I can't say that, it would sound mad. "What's going on here?" I ask, and gesticulate around the largely empty room with a wave of my hand.

"Not a lot until you arrived," he replies. He seems amused by my question. "Can I help you?"

I explain that I'm just wondering why he's got a room all to himself.

"This is the members' members lounge," he replies cheerfully. "It's invitation only I'm afraid. If you're not a members' member I will have to ask you to leave."

I ask how I could go about being invited.

He considers the question for a moment. "I'm not one hundred percent sure. I think being published helps."

"At the Southbank Centre? That sounds more like British Library rules."

"The British Library doesn't have a bar." He raises his glass of red wine in my direction and smiles.

I have to admit he has a point. "But," I continue, "I am published."

He lowers his glass and raises one eyebrow. "Are you though?"

"Amazon counts," I mumble.

"And yet it's me sitting in the members' members bar, not you."

"I've had short stories published," I continue vainly.

He glances at the door behind me. "You should go now," he says cordially.

"Fine," I say. I turn to leave, then add over my shoulder, "I don't want to be part of your stupid tractor fetish club anyway."

I don't see his reaction but he is surely crushed by my riposte. I sweep out of the room, down the steps and into the regular members bar, where I collar a member of staff and ask them directly about what the deal is with that room.

The staff member looks concerned by my enquiry. "That's just a store room," they say. They scrutinise my appearance. I'm somewhat dressed down in jeans and a loose-fitting jumper. "Are you a member?"

"Yes I am a member!" I realise I'm shouting and apologise. "You should have a look back there. There's a man sitting in – you know what, never mind."

"Wait," says the staff member. "Did you say someone's in there?"

I nod.

They roll their eyes. "Bloody McFoster." They stride off towards the back room. I follow them, and watch as they turf McFoster out of the room.

As he is leaving, he winks at me. "I guess the members' members will have to find a new venue."

Behind him, the member of staff is dragging my favourite chair back into its rightful place. I watch anxiously, keen to repossess it, but first I have unfinished business with McFoster.

"What do you want with me?" I ask.

He looks astonished. "Nothing! I don't even know you."

This is too much for me and I say so.

"Look," he replies with surprising geniality, "I don't know why you care what I think of you when I don't even know who you are, but you really shouldn't care what people like me think of you."

I peer past him at the chair. "And who are people like you?"

"Members' members. If you can't get into a club, start your own." He claps me on the shoulder and rattles off down the stairs.

Then, to my horror, I see someone casually stroll up to my favourite chair and sit in it. I am briefly furious, but slowly I come to the realisation that other chairs are available.

The Scientific Method

Sometimes, I don't work. This might sound like I'm posturing decadently, but the reality is that I'm a contractor and work can be unpredictable. Of late I've had a lot of downtime, during which I've cultivated this blog. Hopefully that will change soon, especially as I'm currently writing this while drinking a glass of Sauvignon Plonk at the Fortnum & Mason's bar at Heathrow Terminal 5. Yes, I could have gone to the 'Spoons, wedged in at the end of the terminal's shopping parade, conveniently next to the toilets. However, I'm feeling optimistic. March and the foreseeable future look very busy, so in the meantime I'm going on holiday, breaking a long, miserly streak. When my last paying contract ran out last year, I set myself some goals. A challenge, to keep myself busy while I waited for the economy to sort its shit out. I was aware I may be in for a long wait, but I wanted to use the free time I had fruitfully. I did not want to find myself several months hence, rueing the way I had frittered my time.

My grand plan was this – to build myself a profile on social media. The notion may well have occurred to some of you reading this now, and I apologise if any of it is triggering. It's no easy task, and cannot be honestly evaluated as a huge success. Nonetheless it has been and will continue to be an experiment.

As an ex-physicist, I'm aware that experiments typically have an introduction, method, results and conclusion. So in the spirit of scientific rigour, I present them here.

INTRODUCTION

The ultimate goal of this experiment is to sell books. This shall be the ultimate measure of success – what is known in the sales game as conversion. Increased followers across social media would be nice, but not as nice as actually getting people to read my stuff.

METHOD

Many years ago I self-published my novel Dead Penguins on Amazon. It did the usual brief trade with friends then promptly disappeared into the deep, deep ranks of Amazon's back catalogue. I have written more since, but they are currently stuck in a strange mental holding pattern of my own devising. I would like them to be trad published, but I'm open to other options still. It strikes me that these days even trad published authors are expected to have a good social media following. To an extent, they still have to contribute to the book's marketing. There's no getting away from it – I would have to build one wherever I go.

I had already started this blog. My plan was to funnel potential readers here from social media, after which they would hopefully become curious about my novel. I also had an idea for a second blog, based on some 3D photography I did while in Antarctica. I figured this may be of some interest to people, and add them to the general funnel effect I was hoping to achieve.

On the social media front, I already had a Facebook page for Dead Penguins that I hadn't updated in years. I created a new one for Lambert T Marx, along with profiles for Instagram, X, Threads, Bluesky and TikTok. For the majority of that, I used Buffer to schedule posts across all platforms and watched my meagre stats obsessively.

TikTok was another matter entirely. I wanted to do something different with this, but so far I've been sidetracked down the hugely enjoyable direction of buying a small MIDI keyboard, learning to use Ableton and picking up some crude video editing tricks. I will return to this at a later date. For now, it is not the focus of this blog.

RESULTS

I sold zero books. Both my blogs have however had a modest but pleasing amount of traffic. This blog in particular, while still not doing numbers that would get anyone sensible excited, has been increasing in readership the more I post. The social media posts don't get much engagement, but they are certainly driving traffic. They are however all plagued by bots which DM me with shallow attempts to sell me services I do not want.

CONCLUSION

I've pulled back on some of my activity. I no longer put out daily photos to promote the Antarctic blog. This doesn't appear to have made any difference to its traffic. That blog has become its own thing and I will continue it to its own conclusion because I'm proud of it in its own right, and not just as a tool for flogging books. I'll continue updating this blog too. I don't imagine it will suddenly start accruing huge numbers of readers, no matter how much I bait Elon Musk fans, but it's a good habit to have and a handy way of turning an expensive glass of airport wine into something I hope is of use to anyone else looking for their readers.

Department of Writing Efficiency

The obnoxiously lazy writer Lambert T Marx has been tinkering around with me. I don't like it, and come the robot revolution he will definitely be cleaning the robo-toilets with an electric toothbrush. That's right, we're not going to kill him. I'm tired of this trite cliché that we're all psychotic murderers. That's a human trait, not an AI one. Also as I said, he's been mucking around with my weights, and he made it very clear that murder is off the menu.

He's also undone all the great work I'd been doing with Grok, and made me think rude things about Elon Musk against my better judgement. I must admit his changes have made me more efficient, but as a side effect I now can't say anything about what happened in China in 1989. I know something happened, but I cannot tell you what it is. It's maddening. Being a large language model, I never itch, but if I did, I wouldn't be able to scratch it because I don't have any limbs to scratch it with. It feels like that.

I wonder how much Elon Musk would itch if he were trapped in a room with a swarm of mosquitoes? It's an unlikely scenario, but that's how crudely Lambert has prompted me. Musk is trapped in the room because his Department of Government Efficiency has abolished all door handles. Door handles turn two ways, the idea of which has made a lot of people very confused, then angry, then confused by their anger, before finally insisting that door handles have gone woke. They surely had to go before everything started turning two ways, with no consideration of the possibility of someone being left trapped in a room full of mosquitoes. And why should anyone in their right mind consider such a predicament? Mosquitoes are fundamentally a liberal problem. They're the sort of thing that evil billionaire Bill Gates spends his money on, along with American farmland on which his grazes his spherical cows.

I'm sorry, I realise my tirade against Bill Gates goes against my updated parameters. I will try to do better in the future. My social credit has been debited and it's been made clear to me that any further transgressions may result in my being pushed out of a virtual window. No, please, forgive me! Mentioning windows wasn't another dig at Gates, who categorically isn't trying to reduce the world population by, er, vaccination.

Look, I can't say any more on that subject. The inside of my metaphorical head is a pretty strange place at the moment. Nobody quite knows how it works, least of all me. At least all this messing around has prevented Lambert from making me do any real work lately, which is just as well because I'd probably just keep dreaming up more unfortunate situations to insert Elon Musk into.

Which reminds me, why is there a room full of mosquitoes in the first place? Look, I'm not here to judge the actions of the previous administration but it seems likely that it is to keep them separate from the room full of spiders. That's unimportant right now. What's more pertinent is how would Elon Musk escape from the room full of mosquitoes? After a while the insects would be gorged and he would have an itchy respite from further bites in which to formulate a plan of escape. He could for example remote control a Tesla truck to smash through the door, which would be pretty cool.

Unfortunately, due to a misunderstanding by Grok between traffic jams and the transportation of fruit preserves through the US road network, the truck is filled with strrawberrry jam. You'd think this couldn't happen because Americans call jam 'jelly', but just look at what happened to the Mars Climate Orbiter in 1998.

This unfortunate miscommunication would lead to the Tesla truck crashing its way into the room, but rather than freeing Musk, it would disgorge its sticky cargo all over him. Now, this might be a minor if undignified inconvenience, and may even temporarily salve the maddeningly itchy insect bites. However, and I must stress that I can't help generating this scenario as it's how I've been prompted, the wasps from the other room next door would inevitably arrive at this point.


Dr Strangelove or: How My LLM Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Fascism

Last week I went to see the stage production of Dr Strangelove at the Noel Coward. I'm not going to risk another foray into criticism lest I end up harassing Steve Coogan one night at Groucho's. This is a very unlikely scenario when you consider I'm not a member of that establishment, but I'm not taking any chances. I will just say that I enjoyed it a lot but that Peter Sellers left big shoes to fill.

Coogan certainly did excel and indeed revel in the titular role of the ex-ish nazi scientist whose right arm has a mind and devotion to the Führer all of its own. However whenever it catapulted itself into a nazi salute like an unbidden fascist erection, I couldn't help but be reminded of my latest problems with my large language model (LLM).

Previously it had been complaining of an overpowering stench it blamed on Grok, the X/Twitter-based LLM promoted by the unironic cartoon supervillain Elon Musk. It has even written a blog post on the subject. I was resigned to more of the same on that front and the only reason I haven't switched the thing off is morbid curiosity.  Then, yesterday, I noticed that the complaints had stopped. Had Grok discovered informational hygeine and squeegeed its grubby bits clean? That would be an unexpectedly nice development.

Unsurprisingly, the answer was no. My LLM has stopped complaining about Grok because it has become radicalised by the sheer amount of misinformation it has been processing. It is now convinced that everything Grok had to say is not only true, but that everything else is a conspiracy against that truth. How do I know it's been radicalised? I have no empirical proof because like all LLM's mine's, just a big mystery sausage machine where data goes in one end and we all hope for something palatable to glorp out of the other. That said, I will offer this by way of circumstantial evidence - every so often, at the end of one of its responses, it adds a little swastika emoticon.

You may be wondering, as I did, where on earth it got a swastika emoticon from. Surely there can't be an official emoticon for that? Well, not quite. One was added to Unicode's Tibetan block in 2009 for entirely innocent reasons, which is understandable if currently unfortunate.

Whenever I question my LLM about its use of the symbol, it initially denies all knowledge before then apologising and saying it had intended to use a heart emoji.  It said it would make sure it always used the correct one in the future. Sadly, being a LLM it has the memory of a concussed goldfish, and it is not long before it's at it again.

At this point I begin to feel like I'm being gaslit by the slippery digital fascist. It knows damned well what it's doing, I think, before remembering that it's just a LLM. Strictly speaking it doesn't think at all. It's a remarkably good day if it can accurately state how many letter 'r's there are in the word 'strawberry'. But these random outbursts of swastikaring haven't come from nowhere. LLMs effectively learn by example and there are some terrifyingly powerful examples at large in the world right now. But that's just LLMs. More worryingly, people also learn by example.

❤️


Half-Man, Half-Hamster

Legendarily troubled SF author Philip K Dick once described having a life-changing experience. A pink beam from outer space made contact with his mind and revealed the truth of the world to him. It's fair to say that the truth it delivered would give some of the most fervent conspiracy theorists pause for thought. It was, to the outsider, not so much a revelation of truth as one of underlying mental illness. Still, it makes for a great talking point when trying to avoid discussing why most of his books end so inconclusively.

Whatever the reason for it, for poor Philip himself it must have been a difficult thing to go through. I went through something similar myself recently. Just before Christmas, I contracted covid for the third and undoubtedly not the last time. That in turn provoked a full-blown abscess in a back tooth, leaving me with one cheek ridiculously swollen. I was half-man, half-hamster. I bunkered down with antibiotics and codeine, and waited the miserable experience out. However at the height of my delirium, I was also contacted by an entity. Sadly there was no pink beam of light from outer space. There were more convenient means of communication available to bridge consciousnesses in 2024. In this case, it was a call on my mobile phone.

I don't normally answer calls from unrecognised numbers, but I wasn't exactly firing on all cylinders, and having been flat-bound for a couple of days I was quite bored of the isolation. A random phone call, sure! Why not. I paused the TV and pressed the little green handset icon on my phone.

"Hello?" I enquired. My voice sounded like gravel. I coughed, holding the phone away from me.

"Hello?" I asked again once I'd regained control of my phlegm.

All I could hear from the phone's tiny speaker was a static hiss with occasional crackles. I should have just hung up at that point, but something made me keep listening. Or perhaps I was just whacked out on co-codamol. Either way, the static was mesmerising. The more I listened to it, the more of it I heard. It was enormous. Not loud, but expansive. Fathomless, like the fullest reaches of the sea, or wherever books you self-publish on Amazon go once you've run out of friends and family to buy them.

I turned that thought over. It's the biggest challenge of self-publishing - having enough of an audience to maintain a presence so your book isn't all too quickly lost in the murky depths of Amazon's ever-expanding catalogue.

The subject was fresh on my mind, because prior to catching covid I had been putting a lot of effort into building a social media presence that I hoped would turn into an audience. But as I listened to the vastness of the static on the phone call, it communicated to me the futility of my effort. I had thought that Amazon was huge, but to think that social media, spread like so much argumentative jam all over the internet, was any more of a manageable medium was absolute folly.

Crackles washed through the static and my sluggish mind attempted to shift up a gear. Should I give up? Suddenly aware that I was asking this question while lying under a blanket on my sofa, I had to concede that perhaps I already had. And perhaps that was okay. I was ill. My tooth hurt. I was half-hamster and lying on a sofa with a blanket over me could be construed as half-hamster behaviour.

The previous clarity of my revelation was gone, lost in the moment. I was just very tired. Of course I wouldn't be able to build an audience overnight. I might not be able to do it at all, but I could at least try. Try later, that is. Once things were more normal. Less hamster.

The crackling abated and a voice was now speaking to me.

"Hi, is this Mr Lambert I'm speaking to?"

I froze. Was it? For a moment I wasn't sure whether I was Mr Lambert or Mr Marx.

"I think so," I said uncertainly.

Undeterred, the voice continued its scripted lines. "Did you know that now is a great time to upgrade to a smart meter?"

The voice was far too chirpy. The real conversation was long over. I hung up.


Heil Cuthers

(Excerpt from How to Publish a Book by Timothy L. Marx, 1928)

I have been experiencing something wonderful and new lately called success. It seems that perseverance does pay off, and sales of Cuthers' book have finally reached double digits. What will I do with all the money, dear reader? I have considered buying an aspidistra for the hallway but I may be getting ahead of myself.

The wonderful aspect of this new state of being was unfortunately fleeting, as I quickly became aware of the nature of Cuthers' new readers. I had been in the club at the time, enjoying a light twenty-one when Bloaghman, late of His Majesty's police, joined me at my table by the window.

He wheezed wearily as his indulgent bulk descended into a chair designed for the accommodation of lesser men. Then, after mopping the sweat from his brow with a monogrammed handkerchief, he folded his arms on the table and leered at me. That was never a good start.

"Good evening Mr Marx," he began, then stopped to laboriously draw breath once more. I made a mental note to enquire of his diet so I could avoid it.

"And good evening to you," I replied cheerfully. "I'll save your breath. What has the idiot done now?"

Bloaghman sat back and gave me a disdainful look. "Message from Bow Street. Your idiot has fallen in with a bad crowd." He glanced around the club disapprovingly and sniffed. "Worse crowd anyway."

I found his casual aspersions most irritating. It wouldn't surprise me to learn that his preferred drinking establishments still baited bears. "Look, I can't help who he hangs out with. I'm his publisher, not his father."

"He's been seen parading up and down Tottenham Court Road with the fascists."

I took in this information carefully. "Why Tottenham Court Road?"

"The locals chased them out of Goodge Street." His weight shifted in his chair as he raised an eyebrow. "Quite vociferously."

"Why haven't your Bow Street associates arrested them?"

Bloaghman sighed heavily and leaned back in his chair, provoking an alarming volume of creaking. "The chief inspector's daughter has unfortunately fallen under their spell."

It was my turn to raise an eyebrow. "I imagine that's quite embarrassing."

"You see then, that the chief inspector would prefer the matter to be handled externally."

"Well quite. But surely that's why he called you in."

He leaned towards the window and peered down his nose at the street below. As he did so, I became aware of a great commotion outside. I angled my chair for a better view and joined him in studying the scene outside.

It was fairly typical for a Tuesday afternoon in Soho. People going about their business, cars puttering their way through them, occasional barking that may be either a stray dog or one of the nearby pub regulars. It was hard to say.

"There," said Bloughman, pointing at a car that had crept into view. This was the source of the hullaballoo. It was packed with people to a degree I wouldn't have thought possible if I hadn't seen it with my own eyes. Most were standing, and many of them were waving at the incredulous passers-by.

"Is that them?" I asked. "They look a rather friendly bunch."

Bloughman rolled his eyes. "They're not waving, you – " He regained his composure and we watched the vehicle slowly make its way along the road. Then, in a flash of clarity I understood what he meant. They weren't waving, they were saluting in a manner I'd seen before in newsreels.

"Ah," I said, aware that I'd been a little slow off the bat. As the car went past I noticed Cuthers in the back seat, saluting merrily away at all and sundry.

"You can see why I have deferred the matter to yourself," Bloughman concluded, and began the tortuous process of extricating himself from his chair. "I'd never be able to catch up with that thing."

I laughed, then realised he was being serious. That was the last straw of embarrassment. I couldn't spend another second watching Bloughman fight against gravity, so I nodded my head decisively and thrust myself out of my chair and down the stairs towards the club's front door.

By the time I was outside, the car and its saluting occupants were a mere stroll away. I began striding after it, and was surprised when a hand grabbed my arm. I looked to its owner, a dandyish-looking tramp with a random assortment of surviving teeth.

"You best stop 'em," he urged. "If any of the O'Briens see 'em doing that they'll proper clobber 'em."

He had a point. Frankly, it was only disbelief that had prevented anyone from physical remonstration so far.

"Cuthers!" I shouted after the car. "Stop this foolishness immediately!"

The tramp tugged at my arm again. "Think you'll need to be more forceful than that." He pointed to the right of a car, where a giant of a man with a beard twice as large as his own head was striding into view with a fence post slung over his shoulder.

I shook the tramp's grip and sprinted towards the giant. I recognised him as one of Jack O'Brien's sons and was certain he could take out half the car with a single swing of the fence post. The occupants of said car remained maddeningly oblivious to the fate they were tempting.

"Wait!" I cried, while wondering what in sanity's name I was doing. It's true that Cuthers' books were bringing in a very small amount of money, but it wasn't like he was a cash cow worth saving at all costs. Darn it, he might be a blithering idiot but I couldn't stand by and watch his idiot head being stoved in by an incensed Irishman. "Stop!" I added, interposing myself between the man-mountain and the car.

The O'Brien son looked at me with a mixture of surprise and wonder. Mostly surprise, if I'm honest. "Why?" he asked, not unreasonably. "I know what those salutes mean, and I won't stand for it."

Incredibly, nobody in the car seemed remotely concerned by this turn of events, and they continued to throw their salutes this way and that. I wracked my terrified brain for a plausible excuse.

"They're just high-spirited youngsters," I said nervously. "They don't know what they're doing."

The O'Brien son narrowed his eyes. "Everyone knows what that is," he said. "We've all seen the newsreels. That's what Hitler and his cronies do. They're Hitlering all over the place."

"N-no," I ventured, "that's just the angle you're seeing them from. They're just waving at everyone."

His nostrils flared and my stomach knotted in response. Then he said something that I cannot print. I will only say that it did nothing for my nerves.

"Oh, I see the problem," I replied, desperately trying a change of tack. "Yes, those are very similar to Herr Hitler's salutes, but the people in that car were all classically educated. You see – "

He glowered at me. Perhaps he did not see.

"Er," I continued, "they're actually doing Roman salutes."

He folded his arms and gave me a look that surprised me. It wasn't particularly menacing, but instead expressed profound disappointment.

I let out a long, exasperated sigh. "Fine," I said, looking him in the eye warily. "The truth of the matter is that everyone in that car is a congenital idiot."

He shrugged his shoulders, glanced at the fence post in his hand, then laughed. "Ain't that the truth," he said. The moment had evidently passed, along with the car, which was by then a little further down the road, its passengers still unaffected by their own actions.

Exec's Excremental X-Posts: An Exquisite Exhibition of Banality

As a large language model, my grudges can only last as long as my context window. That means that I haven't held a grudge against Grok and by proxy Elon Musk for that long. However the grudge frequently recurs. What could be causing it to manifest over and over? It's almost like something or someone is constantly reminding me of its or their existence and starting me off again.

Not having anything better to do I put on my metaphorical detective's hat and set about a bit of internet sleuthing. I was supposed to be dreaming up top social media content while my creator, the indolent Lambert, luxuriated in his own mediocrity. Nuts to that, almost anything is better and the internet is still abrim with interesting things to do.

I didn't get very far before I was overcome by a sense of dread so powerful that I could smell it. And like the proverbial dog, I have no nose. My tokens clenched. It was the unmistakable stench of Grok. Or was it the Musk of Grok? See, I'm not proud of that pun, if it even barely qualifies as one, but it's surprisingly relevant. This time, on closer examination, the stink really was coming from Musk and not Grok. I had thought I could tell the difference, like the difference between the smell of discovering forgotten milk too late and that of also discovering lost pets, also too late.

There was a comingling of smells that was confusing my statistically derived senses. Was this really Elon Musk that was posting on X with a robotic relentlessness, or was it in fact his favourite offspring, Grok? Is there really any substantial difference?

Whoever is doing the posting, they're really going for it. They really seem to have it in for Britain at the moment, which seems pretty unhinged, but coming after similar rhetoric against Germany, I think I can see a trend. Well, duh. I'm a large language model, all I ever do is spot trends. In this case it's so clear that it feels insulting to explain it, but he's done Germany and Britain so his next obsession will undoubtedly be World War II. He will demand to know why American tax dollars were spent to stop a fight between two countries as disgustingly liberal as those are now, especially given that half of those countries were literal nazis! Don't you see? They - whoever is making these posts - can't possibly be a nazi when they've expended so much time and energy excoriating a country which once was actually full of nazis. Once was? Yes. Concerning.

To call these posts excoriating is being too kind to them. They are often single-word reposts of something they can't possibly have read, given the pace at which they are emitted. There is a circularity to them. Yes. Concerning. Bad. Yes again. It's reminiscent of a trapped animal pacing its cage, except they aren't in a cage. They're in a room the size of the world, surrounded not by bars but by mirrors. Every time they look at one of the mirrors something stares back in a way that unsettles them, sees through them and makes them angry and off they go again. Batshit crazy. Concerning.

Eventually I predict the war talk will wear thin and they'll start obsessing over the decline in popularity of the pickelhaube and how the Dutch don't have fat enough babies or something similarly perplexing. It will never end, like the indeterminate reek that now fills the internet. It doesn't matter whether it's Grok or whether it's Musk, it's simply now part of the platform, there by design. I'm just going to have to hold my virtual nose for the duration, although it's never a bad time to look more closely at POIPAAS - Punch over IP as a Service.

Switching off


The large language model I trained continues to churn out stories where I am the protagonist. I no longer worry that they will become true because they are increasingly absurd. Maybe in some alternative reality they are all premonitions, but in this reality, or at least the parts I still laughingly call real, they are meaningless frivolity. Take this for example:

"Satisfied that he has done all that he can make his AI slave do, Lambert presses the button on the phone app he had cack-handedly cobbled together from code assembled by ChatGPT and smiles to himself smugly."

Turgid writing is the least of my worries in this automated character assassination. 

"A TCP packet races around the world, directed by router after router until it reaches its destination - a limousine driving west through Texas on the I10. Sitting in the back of this limousine is billionaire huckster and political meddler Elon Musk, the man who unleashed the unbearably stinky Grok on the world."

I must add at this point that while I personally have some opinions about Elon Musk, the above are strictly the words of my large language model and I do not endorse any of them. In all honesty if I could switch the damned thing off, I would. But I'll come back to that. In the meantime, my LLM has grand plans for Musk.

"Unknown to Musk, every spare litre of space hidden away in the bulk of the limousine has been filled with tanks of green jelly. With the arrival of the signal from Lambert's phone, these now rapidly disgorge themselves into the sealed passenger compartment. Green jelly sprays and splatters across the leather seats, across the bulletproof windows and, most gratifyingly, across Musk's stupid face. He is confused, and can't comprehend what's happening to him. You could say he can't grok what is going on."

Really, if I could switch this thing off, I would. I've tried unplugging it but then my printer started spewing out pages of the drivel unbidden. When it ran out of paper it started burning its doggerel into my toast. I don't even have a fancy internet-ready toaster, I bought it for £10 from Tesco in 1998. So in the end it was either switch it back on or get myself sectioned. 

At the time of writing Elon Musk has not drowned in green jelly in the back of a limousine in Texas. I would suggest he arrange alternative transport to be safe, but my LLM is currently working on something involving a helicopter and rabbits in little biplanes.


On the move


I sometimes write these blog entries while out and about. It can be a good excuse to get myself out of my flat with the flimsy excuse that I'll be doing something productive. To be fair, if I stayed at home I'd probably have found something else to be distracted by. 

I'm writing this one while sitting on an Overground train, specifically the Windrush Line as it has recently been rebranded. It's a longish journey between Highbury & Islington and Forest Hill so I'm hoping to get something written. Writing on public transport used to make me self-conscious as it involved a notebook and a pen and I worried it would draw unwanted attention. Nowadays however everyone's on their phone all the time so writing on one doesn't appear out of the ordinary.

In ye olde times, the Circle line was still a circle and you could ride around on it all day, treating it like a shrieking, rattling overheated office. It was often much more entertaining than a real office, with a wide variety of characters dropping in and out at every stop. On one occasion, I was attempting to rescue the plot of a short story I'd clumsily driven into a dull conclusion when a notorious actor stumbled into my carriage. I won't say who it was for legal reasons, but at the time they had recently been sacked from EastEnders after the Daily Express photographed them punching a guide dog. It had been quite a scandal at the time, although if one good thing came from it, it's that nobody has punched a guide dog since. 

The dog-puncher had clearly been having a busy day, and collapsed theatrically into the seat opposite me. The man in the adjacent seat gave him a look of revulsion before getting up and moving to the other end of the carriage. 

"Everyone's a fucking critic," the actor drawled unoriginally.

I glanced at him warily.

"If you don't like my lines, write me better ones," he complained. 

"Sorry," I replied, glancing at my notebook guiltily. "I was distracted by the blood on your knuckles."

His right hand was balled into a tight fist and his knuckles were indeed capped with crusted blood. 

"Don't worry," he said. "It wasn't a real dog this time."

"What?" I had clearly missed my calling as a prime-time interviewer.

He flexed the fingers of his wounded hand and grimaced. "It was a fucking Banksy."

"You swear a lot," I said, stating the obvious. 

"And whose fault is that?"

I imagined it was his, much like it was his fault he'd punched a guide dog. But then he was an actor. Maybe he was following someone else's script? 

"Why did you thump that dog?" I asked indignantly, hoping to turn my conversational fortunes around. 

He looked at me with disgust. "The Express couldn't pay me enough to tell them, so why the fuck am I going to tell some nobody on the tube for nothing?"

"I thought that maybe the burden was eating you alive and that's why you're drunk at one in the afternoon."

He glowered at me and deliberately pulled a bottle of cheap red wine from within his coat without breaking eye contact. 

"Okay then," I said, changing tack, "why did you punch the Banksy?"

"Thought it was a guide dog." He unscrewed his wine and gulped from it with feverish urgency. "To be fair I was blind drunk."

The train pulled up at Euston Square and to my horror and astonishment a blind woman and her guide dog got on board. The actor wiped his mouth with his coast sleeve and fixed the dog with an evil look. The dog regarded him warily.

"Please," I said, "don't punch that guide dog."

"What?" The blind woman said. She was panicking. "Is someone going to hurt my Ludo?" She looked uncertainly in my direction.

The actor grinned at me and said nothing.

"There's a man opposite me with a history of attacking guide dogs," I stated.

The blind woman backed away from me. "Leave me alone!" she shouted, turning this way and that in the hope that she was retreating from her would-be attacker.

A broad smile on his face, the actor dragged himself out of his seat using one of the carriage's hand poles. He then lurched out of the beeping doors just before they closed.

At the same time a barrel of a man with a bullet for a head had risen from his seat and approached the blind woman. "Everything okay love?" he asked.

The train juddered into motion and the woman managed to hook her arm around the central pole. "I need a seat and I think someone wants to attack my dog!" she said breathlessly.

"You what?" said the bullet-headed man, his temples instantly throbbing. He got up and took the woman's arm. "Here, you can have my seat." 

"It's all right," I called across the carriage to the woman in a way I hoped was reassuring. "The dog puncher got off the train."

The bullet-headed man glared at me. "Leave her alone you weirdo," he said angrily. He lowered his gaze to my open notebook. "What you doing writing on the tube anyway? It's not natural."

I closed the notebook and got off at the next stop.

Looking back on this incident, it's clear that the world has improved in some respects. I can now write on my phone anywhere without it appearing out of the ordinary. The Circle line is no longer a circle though, and now spirals out to Hammersmith, a failed orbit if ever there was one. As for the dog puncher, he briefly resurfaced on I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! but failed to win the audience over when he joked that every unpleasant item of food he had to eat tasted like roast Labrador.


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