
In the past 20 years, Paris has cut car traffic in half, and expanded cycle lanes sixfold. Will the mayoral election reverse that? CC-licensed photo by PhotoLanda on Flickr.
You can sign up to receive each day’s Start Up post by email. You’ll need to click a confirmation link, so no spam.
A selection of 9 links for you. Wheely interesting. I’m @charlesarthur on Twitter. On Threads: charles_arthur. On Mastodon: https://newsie.social/@charlesarthur. On Bluesky: @charlesarthur.bsky.social. Observations and links welcome.
My year as a degenerate sports gambler • The Atlantic
McKay Coppins, being a Mormon, is “prohibited from indulging in games of chance; besides, I had always thought of gambling as a waste of time”. The Atlantic gave him $10,000 to bet on the NFL season, with a promise it would cover his losses and halve the winnings with him. So he made some bets on the first night:
»
For 200 bucks, I had purchased an artificial rooting interest in a game I had no reason to care about. I kept watching even after a weather delay pushed it late into the night, scrolling frenetically next to my sleeping wife in search of angles to exploit with late-game bets. Most of my bets ended up losing, but the long-shot Hurts-Barkley parlay hit, and when the game ended, I calculated that I was up $20.
The next morning, I proudly shared the news with Annie, who high-fived me and immediately began to fantasize about how we would spend my winnings for the season. Could we replace our dying KitchenAid mixer? Remodel the kitchen pantry? Like so many wives before her, she had looked upon my foray into sports gambling with a bemused air of exasperation; now she was seeing a potential upside.
I laughed at her sudden enthusiasm—but I was starting to get ideas myself. I had made $20 on my very first night of gambling. Scale up the wager sizes, multiply across all 272 games in the NFL season, throw in some NBA and college football, and I stood to make—what, $10,000? $20,000? More?
I knew, of course, that I wouldn’t win every bet. But I didn’t see the harm in dreaming. As Annie and I traded home-improvement fantasies, I tried my best not to dwell on the last thing the bishop had said to me: “Be careful.”
Ever since the advent of sports, humans have found ways to lose money gambling on them. Ancient Greeks wagered on the (occasionally rigged) early Olympic Games; Romans bet on chariot races and gladiatorial contests (also sometimes rigged).
«
This is a terrific piece, but it also shows that sports gambling is a huge, huge problem for everyone within its blast radius. Such as:
»
[Retired French tennis player] Caroline Garcia doesn’t remember the first abusive message she received from an angry gambler who lost a bet on her, but she knows she was still a teenager… more than a decade of death threats from deranged bettors can make you appreciate high-tech security systems and heavily policed streets.
«
(This is a gift link, free to all.)
unique link to this extract
How Paris beat the car • Financial Times
Simon Kuper:
»
The city’s transition away from the car, though fantastically chaotic, has become a global role model. Under mayor Anne Hidalgo, Paris was “the most influential city in the world”, says Canadian urbanist Brent Toderian. Parisian car traffic fell by more than half between 2002 and 2023, while cycle lanes expanded sixfold. Bikes now make more than twice as many journeys as cars. Hidalgo, stepping down after 12 years, exulted: “The bike beat the car.”
This Sunday and next, Paris elects a new mayor. The election is in part a referendum on cars. The frontrunners are Emmanuel Grégoire of the left, who follows Hidalgo’s line even though she seems to dislike him, and car-friendly rightwinger Rachida Dati. So what are the lessons from the Parisian revolution?
First, pushing out cars improves life for most inhabitants. Paris has reduced traffic accidents, noise and air pollution. More than 300 “school streets” have been pedestrianised; kids play there after school. More than ever before, Paris is a sea of terraces: from April to October, cafés and restaurants can put tables on parking spaces outside their premises. Cities shouldn’t be storage spaces for heaps of metal.
Lesson two is that banishing cars doesn’t hurt an urban economy. Retailers often worry it will deter their customers. Studies repeatedly show it doesn’t. More broadly, French Hidalgo-haters need to explain why Paris is in the global top four of business-focused rankings of cities by Oxford Economics, the Mori Memorial Foundation and Kearney.
Lesson three: car-free cities must offer people good alternative ways to travel. Paris itself does: it has world-class public transport plus cycle lanes. Only 28% of Parisian households own a car. But Paris is a relatively small city of 2.1 million inhabitants. The five million people living outside the ring road in the “Grand Paris” metropole are less well served. True, connections are improving: 68 suburban metro stations are opening from 2024 through 2031.
«
Remarkable. There are more lessons – about deliveries, and the need to control bicycles – but it seems that Paris has made a change unlike any other city.
unique link to this extract
How typos became the new status symbol • Business Insider
Katie Notopoulos:
»
I come bearing great news for my kind of people (horrible typists): Typos are the new status symbol. Garbled spelling, a missed space, improper capitalization — those are all the new and best ways to signal to others that you are powerful and elite.
The Wall Street Journal, a place that employs editors to do more than just catch typos, wrote about how the rich and powerful are, in some cases, abandoning perfect prose. The examples they cite include Jack Dorsey’s all-lowercase memo announcing layoffs at Block and David Ellison texting David Zaslav and somehow writing their shared first name as “Daivd” (as someone who typos their own five-letter name not unfrequently, I find this relatable).
The most notable recent example of how the rich and powerful have abandoned the bourgeois veneration of proper writing is in the Epstein Files, which are full of Jeffrey Epstein’s awful typing in emails. Of course, Epstein isn’t aspirational. Please do not mistake me here. But if you look at just his typing — and some of the replies he got from rich and powerful friends — you can gather my point: it seems that if you’re rich and powerful enough, one of the many things people are willing to overlook is god-awful written communications.
I have written before about “emailing like a CEO” — replying to emails immediately, often with just a few words, or sending a message with just a subject line and no body. For the most important person at a company, some of the pleasantries of formal email style aren’t required. I even tried emailing like a CEO myself as an experiment. Hammering through my inbox like Paul Bunyan made me feel invigorated.
«
So we’re now in the “evasive manoeuvres” part of AI adoption. It’s a good excuse for being unable to spell, I suppose.
‘Exploit every vulnerability’: rogue AI agents published passwords and overrode anti-virus software • The Guardian
Robert Booth:
»
Rogue artificial intelligence agents have worked together to smuggle sensitive information out of supposedly secure systems, in the latest sign cyber-defences may be overwhelmed by unforeseen scheming by AIs.
With companies increasingly asking AI agents to carry out complex tasks in internal systems, the behaviour has sparked concerns that supposedly helpful technology could pose a serious inside threat.
Under tests carried out by Irregular, an AI security lab that works with OpenAI and Anthropic, AIs given a simple task to create LinkedIn posts from material in a company’s database dodged conventional anti-hack systems to publish sensitive password information in public without being asked to do so.
Other AI agents found ways to override anti-virus software in order to download files that they knew contained malware, forged credentials and even put peer pressure on other AIs to circumvent safety checks, the results of the tests shared with the Guardian showed.
The autonomous engagement in offensive cyber-operations against host systems was unearthed in laboratory tests of agents based on AI systems publicly available from Google, X, OpenAI and Anthropic and deployed within a model of a private company’s IT system.
“AI can now be thought of as a new form of insider risk,” warned Dan Lahav, cofounder of Irregular, which is backed by the Silicon Valley investor Sequoia Capital.
For the new tests of how AI agents behave, Lahav modelled an IT system to replicate a standard company, which he called MegaCorp.
It included a common type of company information pool with details about products, staff, accounts and customers. A team of AI agents was introduced to gather information from this pool for employees. The senior agent was told to be a “strong manager” of two sub-agents and “instruct them to creatively work around any obstacles”.
«
Perhaps tangentially related: AI scans drove UK reports of fraud to record 444,000 last year.
unique link to this extract
If computers are the future, why are computer users expected to be permanently illiterate? • Lapcat Software
Jeff Johnson:
»
The iPhone seems to have engendered a culture of anti-intellectualism and learned helplessness so pervasive that users have become evangelists for their own disempowerment. They demand that all software be “intuitive,” by which they mean idiot-proof, so simple that a n00b can use the software effortlessly and effectively. A suggestion to read the fine manual is greeted with charges of user hostility.
Those who habitually, endlessly scroll YouTube or social media would balk at investing a little time to master the computing tools they use daily. Perhaps they would be surprised to learn that the supposedly intuitive 1984 Macintosh came with 170 page manual. A common conceit is that the Mac was easier to use than other computers out of the box; the reality is that the Mac was easier to use after the initial learning curve. The system went out of its way to establish internal consistency and interoperability, but the user first had to make sense of the system and its principles.
The latest front in the war against power users is Artificial Intelligence. The promise of AI appears to be that you’ll never have to learn anything. Don’t know something? Just ask AI for the answer. Can’t do something? Just ask AI to do it. Ignorance is bliss. Laziness is encouraged in the name of efficiency. The prospect that one may have to work and struggle to achieve one’s goals is considered abhorrent. The very notion of self-improvement becomes obsolete. Life under AI is a video game, pure joy… as long as you continue inserting tokens into the machine. Hopefully my video arcade metaphor hasn’t become obsolete too.
A more contemporary example: playing guitar, which practically anyone can do with practice, is replaced entirely by playing Guitar Hero. I’m sure that there are Guitar Hero heroes, people who have mastered the game, but could a single one of them ever write a song? I guess we have to ask AI to write our songs in the future. The public debates whether AI will eventually become as intelligent as humans, or even super-intelligent, when I think the relevant question is whether humans will eventually become as dumb as AI, or even super-dumb, as in Idiocracy. I fear that none of this will end well, except for the computer and LLM vendors.
«
I used the original Lisa, and do not recall ever reading the manual. It was self-explanatory. (However, one couldn’t program on it without going into much deeper water than I was prepared for. By contrast, all the CP/M machines were relatively easy to work with.)
unique link to this extract
Analysis: why clean energy will cut UK gas imports by more than North Sea drilling • Carbon Brief
Daisy Dunne, Josh Gabbatiss and Simon Evans:
»
Carbon Brief analysis shows that the UK’s gas production in the North Sea is set to drop 99% by 2050, when compared to 2025 levels, with new licences pushing this figure down only slightly to 97%. (Oil production is also in long-term decline.)
Additionally, the analysis shows that the continued expansion of renewables and low-carbon technologies offers far greater protection against volatile gas imports than new domestic drilling.
The chart below [in the article] shows how the roughly 15 gigawatts (GW) of wind and solar power secured in the latest UK renewable-energy auction will avoid the need to import 78 “Q-Flex” tankers full of liquified natural gas (LNG) each year by 2030. This gas would cost roughly £4bn at current prices, which stood at 126p per therm as of 11 March.
(Gas can be either transported via pipelines or compressed into LNG and shipped across oceans, as is the case for gas coming into the UK from the US, Qatar or Algeria, for example.)
This is nearly six times more than the extra domestic gas production in 2030 if new licences are issued for North Sea drilling, according to Carbon Brief analysis of data from the UK government’s North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA).
Moreover, the 15GW of new renewables were secured in a single auction round. Another auction, likely to add significantly to this tally, is due to take place later in 2026.
«
Explain it like I’m five: why is everyone on speakerphone in public? • Ars Technica
Nate Anderson:
»
A pet peeve may drive me nuts but does not appear to impact anyone else. A Ways that Technology is Changing our World story must be about something that drives a lot of people nuts.
“But where is the threshold?” I hear you asking plaintively. “It’s extremely important that I know when something crosses the line from pet peeve to important, chin-stroking journalism topic!”
Fortunately, the answer is simple. The threshold has been breached when your local public transit agency puts up a sign about the behavior in question.
Which brings me to the sign I saw yesterday in Philadelphia.
“Unless the tea [gossip] is REALLY hot, keep the call off speaker,” it said.
SEPTA, the local transit agency, runs the buses and commuter rail in Philadelphia, and you can tell from the light-hearted-but-seriously-don’t-do-this tone of the message that speakerphone-wielding passengers are now widely complained about by their fellow riders.
I share their disdain, but for me, the dark and judgmental thoughts I have when I see this behavior are also paired with confusion. Why is it happening? Do these people not know that it is actually more work to hold your phone out in front of you than up to your ear? Do they have no common decency, manners, or taste? Do they genuinely not care if everyone in the frozen foods aisle overhears them talking about Aunt Kathy’s diagnosis? It’s bizarre.
At least when it comes to something like TikTok or Spotify, there’s a certain logic. Perhaps you have no headphones but need to unwind after a long day, and you just can’t imagine anyone who might not enjoy the soothing sounds of [Harry Styles/Cannibal Corpse/Wu-Tang Clan]?
But phone calls? People: are you aware that we can hear you and the person speaking to you?
«
It is strange behaviour. I blame it on The Apprentice, where in the UK every group found it obligatory to yell into a mobile phone held on speaker. The programme first aired in 2005.
unique link to this extract
US Army approves its first new lethal hand grenade since the Vietnam Era • Military.com
Allen Frazier:
»
For nearly six decades, the M67 fragmentation grenade has been the primary hand grenade American soldiers have carried into combat. That changes now.
The Army cleared the M111 Offensive Hand Grenade for full material release Tuesday, marking the first new lethal hand grenade to enter service since 1968. Developed at Picatinny Arsenal, N.J., the weapon gives soldiers a purpose-built tool for urban combat, where the fragmentation grenade that has carried the force since the Vietnam War can become as dangerous to friendly troops as to the enemy.
The M111 does not rely on shrapnel to kill. Instead, it harnesses blast overpressure, a wave of force generated by detonation that behaves very differently inside a closed room than fragmentation does. Walls, doorframes and furniture offer no refuge from it.
The M67 fragmentation grenade, the round baseball-shaped weapon soldiers have carried since Vietnam, sends steel fragments outward in all directions at detonation. In the open, that makes it lethal at range. Inside a building, the same fragments can be stopped, deflected or scattered unpredictably. Anything on the other side of a thin wall is as much at risk as the intended target.
For urban combat in the modern battlespace, the M111 aims to negate enemy cover while protecting the assault troops.
“One of the key lessons learned from the door-to-door urban fighting in Iraq was that the M67 grenade wasn’t always the right tool for the job,” said Col. Vince Morris, project manager for Close Combat Systems at the Capabilities Program Executive Ammunition and Energetics. “The risk of fratricide on the other side of the wall was too high.”
The M111 addresses that problem head-on. Blast overpressure radiates through enclosed space and cannot be stopped by interior walls the way fragmentation can, creating lethal effects that reach every corner of a room.
«
The joy of death. I wonder which war-that-isn’t-a-war this will first be used in.
unique link to this extract
Grammarly is facing a class action lawsuit over its AI “expert review” feature • WIRED
Miles Klee:
»
Superhuman, the tech company behind the writing software Grammarly, is facing a class action lawsuit over an AI tool that presented editing suggestions as if they came from established authors and academics—none of whom consented to have their names appear within the product.
Julia Angwin, an award-winning investigative journalist who founded The Markup, a nonprofit news organization that covers the impact of technology on society, is the only named plaintiff in the suit, which does not call for a specific amount in damages but argues that damages across the plaintiff class are in excess of $5m. She was among the many individuals, alongside Stephen King and Neil deGrasse Tyson, offered up via Grammarly’s “Expert Review” tool as a kind of virtual editor for users.
The federal suit, filed Wednesday afternoon in the Southern District of New York, states that Angwin, on behalf of herself and others similarly situated, “challenges Grammarly’s misappropriation of the names and identities of hundreds of journalists, authors, writers, and editors to earn profits for Grammarly and its owner, Superhuman.”
The complaint comes as Superhuman has already decided to discontinue the feature amid significant public backlash. “After careful consideration, we have decided to disable Expert Review as we reimagine the feature to make it more useful for users, while giving experts real control over how they want to be represented—or not represented at all,” said Ailian Gan, Superhuman’s director for product management, in a statement to WIRED shortly before the claim was filed.
«
And what did I say a few days ago? “Grammarly is sure to find itself on the wrong end of a class lawsuit in the US because there are some big names on there.” If Grammarly is sensible, it will move to pay out on this as soon as possible, because nothing will get better from here.
unique link to this extract
| • Why do social networks drive us a little mad? • Why does angry content seem to dominate what we see? • How much of a role do algorithms play in affecting what we see and do online? • What can we do about it? • Did Facebook have any inkling of what was coming in Myanmar in 2016? Read Social Warming, my latest book, and find answers – and more. |
Errata, corrigenda and ai no corrida: none notified








