Hmm, I actually really like Kang Jian’s design except for the colour palette. Fits very well for the industrial powerhouse that the PRC is today. I think swaping out green for dark blue and white for yellow might look better.

Hmm, I actually really like Kang Jian’s design except for the colour palette. Fits very well for the industrial powerhouse that the PRC is today. I think swaping out green for dark blue and white for yellow might look better.



My respect for the DPRK and the PRC’s leadership just keeps increasing every time the US bombs or coups another country. Both countries beelined towards nuclear weapons the moment they were able to, then foresaw the consequences of an unfiltered internet dominated by wealthy western corporations and sought to rectify that. They then demonstrated the effectiveness of scientific socialism by developing faster than any other nation in comparable circumstances, showing how it is imperialism, not ‘authoritarianism’ or whatever, that cripples a nation’s economic development and the livelihood of their people.


Honestly, I’ve just been very confused by the whole thing. The US has so far acquired one president and his wife, but that doesn’t magically mean that the US suddenly gets to run Venezuela, because the Chavistas are still in power. Sure, they could do some follow up operations, but they’ve just given Venezuela a huge warning signal to bolster internal security and crack down on infiltrators, making the US’ job more difficult. I really don’t see how kidnapping Maduro has strengthened the US’ influence in Venezuela, if anything it’s the opposite.


The mental gymnastics is pretty silly. There’s no need to invent some convoluted scheme by Russia or China, when everything Trump has done is either for personal benefit, or makes some American oil/tech/military company a lot richer.
Is Russia and China trying to gain influence in the US? Probably, but any influence they have will always be dwarfed by the influence that the American capitalist class has, especially as they are simply the wealthiest and most powerful class in the world.
Eventually, I do think we should start moving away from GDP as a primary metric of a country’s performance. Things like life expectancy, access to transportation, fewer working hours, gender equality, etc. matter a lot more to people living there once GDP per capita reaches a certain point. But Japan isn’t really trying to do those either.
Meanwhile the Centrist: Wow, both of you are equally awful!
Ok, so when people talk about the “Social Credit” system, they usually mean some combination of two things:
The first one is Alibaba’s opt-in credit scoring system that functions similarly to the credit scores in the US, they basically measure how much you spend and borrow, and whether you repay your loans on time or not. It’s completely optional and offers discounts and other perks in Alibaba’s ecosystem with a high score.
The second is a system that is primarily designed to enforce regulations on buisnesses. Back in the early 2000s, there were a bunch of health scandals around Chinese dairy companies and other food products, as well as corporate corruption and lack of transparency more generally. So this “Social Credit” basically measures how compliant and transparent these companies are. Originally it was debated on whether it should be extended to individuals, but that basically never materialized.
These have nothing to do with each other, but people in the west often combine the two and make some weird extrapolations to make it sound all encompassing, when it really isn’t. In fact, a study (https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1461444819826402) showed that 80% of Chinese citizens approved of the Social Credit system, and only 1% expressed any disapproval at all.


AI is a cruel technology. It replaces workers, devours millions of gallons of water, vomits CO2 into the atmosphere, propagandises exclusively for the worst ideologies
Moreso even than cryptocurrency, AI is entirely nihilistic, with zero redeeming qualities. It is a blight upon the world, and it will take decades to clear up the mountains of slop it has generated in the past two or three years.
Bruh, what is the author talking about? How do they claim to take a material view of the world when they make completely unsubstantiated statements like these? First of, AI is a much broader category than LLMs or Diffusion models, and the fact that the author doesn’t seem to know that is genuinely concerning. Secondly, even for LLMs, I’ve been using it to summarise lectures and generate quizzes for me to study with. It is a genuinely valuable technology that is helping me and many other students to learn better.
Sweeping, unfounded statements like this only damages the credibility of socialists, especially when we pride ourselves on having a grounded, material worldview. I do hope this is an outlier among the community.


Almost certainly intentional, given that none of their Dall-e models nor their Sora models have a yellow tint like this. My guess is that it functions as a watermark equivalent or something.


This encapsulates my views pretty perfectly. Consumer AI (whether it’s LLMs, diffusion models, audio models etc) has been here for a while now, and is used by tens, if not hundreds of millions of people daily. Certainly, you could argue it’s overvalued or overhyped, but just as certainly it’s not valueless. And the open models coming out from China show there is a way to put control of AI in the people’s hands.
To just cede the entire field of consumer AI to liberal or right-wing groups would be a terrible strategic error, especially as Musk and co have gleefully weaponised AI to for their political purposes. At the very least, we must figure out how to counter this, and we cannot do so by shunning the technology entirely.


LLMs are pretty good at translation in my experience, often better than traditional translation services. But quality can vary highly between languages. English to French and vice versa is probably the best case scenario for Mistral models, so I wouldn’t expect the same level of quality for other languages, especially non-European and/or obscure ones.
Also, I do agree that getting more pro-communist text on the internet for LLMs to train on is something we could try and push for. Would certainly make for better data than all the liberal and right-wing stuff on the internet right now.
You’re telling me they planned a whole two quarters in advance? Impossible!