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Rachel Maron's avatar

Farida Khalaf isn't just diagnosing the problem; she's exposing the operating system behind it: unchecked acceleration, masked as innovation, powered by the extraction of trust.

This isn’t just about AI. It’s about who we trust with the future and why. When tech monopolies use our conversations, communities, and resources without consent, they’re not building trust; they’re burning it for fuel. AI isn’t running on math alone. It’s running on trust debt: our implicit belief that someone, somewhere, is thinking long-term. But no one is steering. Just optimizing.

Khalaf brilliantly reframes our cultural mythos: from Tom & Jerry’s celebration of clever domination to Pixar’s reverence for connection. But it’s more than narrative. It’s governance by story, and right now, the story being written is one of conquest, not stewardship.

At Trustable, we argue that trust isn’t a byproduct. It’s infrastructure. Every system that scales without permission, without community input, environmental accounting, or equitable design, erodes the very foundation it depends on.

This piece is a wake-up call. If we don't make trust measurable, operational, and accountable, then we will keep cheering for clever systems while they quietly strip us of our sovereignty, resource by resource, until we have nothing left but awe and no agency.

It’s not too late to flip the script. However, that requires us to stop thinking of trust as a soft sentiment and start treating it like the hard constraint it actually is.

Alex Pardo's avatar

AI is the “bitcoin” of this decade

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