Gloves are off.

Opening the biggest can of worms ever.

One thing is becoming clear in how AI is being developed.

Companies are releasing things that, in a conservative sense, should not be released.

By conservative, it means things that have the potential for obvious misuse. Technologies that create risk by their very existence.

A few years ago, a phone company had to disable its infrared camera. People noticed it could be used to see through some clothes. The feature was removed.

That was the mindset back then because companies did care about their image.

If something can clearly be abused, it should not be shipped.

But that mindset is now fading.

Today, Google has launched a feature that lets you put any dress on anyone.

This is the normalization of deepfake logic.

It shows how quickly the idea of restraint is being discarded.

Soon, this shift will escalate.

Right now, we are releasing tools that are not conservative.

But what comes next will go beyond that.

We will start releasing things that are openly destructive.

Tools that people believe are outright evil.

And even then, they will not be stopped. They will be made public.

I am not implying which companies will do it, but for whichever ones do…

We are already setting up field for them with precedents and justifications.

Once that line is crossed, everything will move very fast.

The tools will be ridiculous in what they can do.

A new vector of actions will be possible.

Because tools that never existed before enable actions and speed that never existed before.

In that scenario, you must be the one commanding the ship.

A software arms race with code empowering malice and evil you need to be antifragile.

If you are not the captain of your own ship in this phase, you are not going to have a great time.

You will be surrounded by tools that move faster in vector of morality that is not expected or anticipated by you.

You will not get a warning. You will only see effects.

The only protection is control.

The gloves will be off. That part is coming.

When it does, you must already be steering.