Whoops! I only knew about him from the SSC situation a couple years ago, I had no idea that he was the one behind that NYT article; I guess some people never change (especially people who are living large, like journalists).
I still think it makes sense to give people opportunities to change their ways; if nothing else, so that decent researchers/interns could ghostwrite articles under Cade Metz’s name, which is a common thing for major news outlets (journalist positions are plum jobs, so they tend to get occupied by incompetent status-maximizers, who reveal their disinterest with actual work as soon as they get a position at a level they feel satisfied with; and most of the work at news outlets is secretly done by interns since there’s tons of competent college students desperate for a tiny number of positions, and news outlet staff lack the will and ability to actually evaluate them for competence).
Also, in terms of treating things as “anthropological curiosities”, that’s actually a really major tactic for major news corps; it creates the sense that all things are beneath the news outlet itself. There’s a surprisingly large proportion of middle-class people out there who buy into the myth of news outlets as the last bastion of truth. Reputation maximization is something that news outlets take very seriously, especially nowadays since they’re all on such thin ice.
I agree that, given the dynamics, it’s rare to get a great journalist on a technical subject (we’re lucky to have Zeynep Tufekci on public health), but my opinion is that Metz has a negative Value Over Replacement Tech Journalist, that coverage of AI in the NYT would be significantly more accurate if he quit and was replaced by whomever the Times would poach.
Whoops! I only knew about him from the SSC situation a couple years ago, I had no idea that he was the one behind that NYT article; I guess some people never change (especially people who are living large, like journalists).
I still think it makes sense to give people opportunities to change their ways; if nothing else, so that decent researchers/interns could ghostwrite articles under Cade Metz’s name, which is a common thing for major news outlets (journalist positions are plum jobs, so they tend to get occupied by incompetent status-maximizers, who reveal their disinterest with actual work as soon as they get a position at a level they feel satisfied with; and most of the work at news outlets is secretly done by interns since there’s tons of competent college students desperate for a tiny number of positions, and news outlet staff lack the will and ability to actually evaluate them for competence).
Also, in terms of treating things as “anthropological curiosities”, that’s actually a really major tactic for major news corps; it creates the sense that all things are beneath the news outlet itself. There’s a surprisingly large proportion of middle-class people out there who buy into the myth of news outlets as the last bastion of truth. Reputation maximization is something that news outlets take very seriously, especially nowadays since they’re all on such thin ice.
I agree that, given the dynamics, it’s rare to get a great journalist on a technical subject (we’re lucky to have Zeynep Tufekci on public health), but my opinion is that Metz has a negative Value Over Replacement Tech Journalist, that coverage of AI in the NYT would be significantly more accurate if he quit and was replaced by whomever the Times would poach.
I like Metz. I’d rather have EY, but that won’t happen.