I've been reading Jorge Luis Borges' short stories recently.
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I've been reading Jorge Luis Borges' short stories recently.
One in particular about a lottery that quietly took over everything, and another involving a library where everything is available but nothing is findable, felt a bit too close to how AI is reshaping decision‑making, governance, and “optional” tools for nonprofits.
So I wrote about it

https://blog.dougbelshaw.com/the-ai-lottery/ -
I've been reading Jorge Luis Borges' short stories recently.
One in particular about a lottery that quietly took over everything, and another involving a library where everything is available but nothing is findable, felt a bit too close to how AI is reshaping decision‑making, governance, and “optional” tools for nonprofits.
So I wrote about it

https://blog.dougbelshaw.com/the-ai-lottery/@dajb I’ve been meaning to dig out labyrinths again. Just for fun, I had not thought of these parallels! Fascinating post.
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@dajb I’ve been meaning to dig out labyrinths again. Just for fun, I had not thought of these parallels! Fascinating post.
@johnjohnston Thanks! It really made me think while I was on holiday!
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I've been reading Jorge Luis Borges' short stories recently.
One in particular about a lottery that quietly took over everything, and another involving a library where everything is available but nothing is findable, felt a bit too close to how AI is reshaping decision‑making, governance, and “optional” tools for nonprofits.
So I wrote about it

https://blog.dougbelshaw.com/the-ai-lottery/"Where do your decisions end and the algorithm's begin? Can you tell?"
Good question. Better have an architecture and a (Wardley, for example) map to help answer that one. -
R relay@relay.an.exchange shared this topic