The Cognitive Dark Forest
6 hours ago
- #Innovation Paradox
- #Internet Evolution
- #AI and Society
- The author recalls the early internet (around 2009) as an open, permissionless space where sharing ideas and code freely fostered innovation and learning, with success optimized through connections and execution.
- Drawing from Liu Cixin's 'The Dark Forest', the essay metaphorically describes the current internet as a dangerous 'cognitive dark forest' where consolidation by corporations and governments, plus cheap AI execution, forces hiding to survive, as revealing ideas risks absorption or annihilation.
- AI platforms centralize prompts and data, mapping collective human intent and potentially absorbing innovations before creators can benefit, reducing the protective moat of execution and making the 'forest' itself the threat.
- Responses include closing off sharing (privatizing innovation) or resisting through innovation, but both risk feeding the system—AI learns from human openness, and resistance is absorbed, enlarging the forest's capabilities.
- The essay itself is recursive: by describing this dynamic, it becomes part of the forest, illustrating the inescapable condition where warning about the system inevitably sustains it.