The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe

The Skeptics Guide #1055 - Sep 27 2025

0 min
Sep 27, 20257 months ago
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Summary

The Skeptics Guide covers RFK Jr.'s controversial autism claims, NASA's Artemis II mission progress, new methods for discovering superheavy elements, quantum computing advances, and AI-enabled scams. The episode emphasizes the dangers of misinformation in healthcare policy and the importance of scientific rigor in emerging technologies.

Insights
  • RFK Jr.'s claims about acetaminophen causing autism lack scientific evidence and contradict consensus from major medical organizations, representing a dangerous politicization of public health
  • Delegating tasks to AI systems increases unethical behavior because users feel psychological distance from their actions, particularly with vague goal-based interfaces
  • Quantum computing breakthroughs are meaningful only when paired with error correction and scalability solutions; raw qubit counts are misleading metrics
  • AI-generated voices and deepfakes are now indistinguishable from authentic media to most people, creating urgent need for detection tools and regulatory guardrails
  • Scams exploit emotional manipulation (duty, fear, hope) and are accelerating due to AI and crypto enabling faster, cheaper, untraceable fraud at scale
Trends
Politicization of vaccine safety and autism research undermining public health institutions and redirecting NIH funding away from evidence-based researchAI systems designed without ethical guardrails amplify dishonest behavior by reducing psychological accountability and moral frictionQuantum sensor technology borrowed from quantum computing error correction is enabling precision measurements previously thought impossibleDeepfake and AI voice technology reaching parity with human authenticity, making visual and audio verification unreliable for identity confirmationScam infrastructure becoming industrialized with AI-powered personalization enabling mass fraud targeting vulnerable populations at lower costRegulatory capture risk as anti-vaccine advocates gain control of FDA and NIH, potentially reversing decades of vaccine safety approvalsCryptocurrency enabling untraceable fraud with minimal recourse, particularly in romance scams and investment schemes targeting elderly populationsGenerational differences in ability to detect AI-generated media, with younger users more accustomed to edited/filtered self-presentationSuperheavy element discovery advancing toward period 8 of periodic table, potentially revealing new physics at relativistic scalesQuantum entanglement over longer distances using phosphorus nuclear spins enabling scalable quantum computing architectures
Topics
Vaccine Safety and Autism MisinformationRFK Jr. Healthcare Policy ImpactNASA Artemis II Mission TimelineHeat Shield Reentry Risk ManagementSuperheavy Element Synthesis MethodsQuantum Computing Error CorrectionQuantum Sensors and Heisenberg UncertaintyAI-Generated Voice DetectionDeepfake Technology and AuthenticationCryptocurrency Fraud and ScamsPig Butchering Romance ScamsAI Ethics and Moral DisengagementPhishing and Smishing AttacksTwo-Factor Authentication SecurityEmotional Manipulation in Fraud
Companies
Lockheed Martin
Building Orion spacecraft for Artemis II lunar mission; development in launch preparation flow at Kennedy Space Center
NASA
Leading Artemis II crewed lunar mission launching no later than April 2026 with four astronauts
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Announced new titanium-50 particle beam method for discovering superheavy elements beyond element 118
Caltech
Set record with 6,100 qubit quantum array demonstrating progress in quantum computing scalability
Dirac
Australian startup demonstrated 99% accuracy in silicon-based quantum chips for error correction
SpaceX
Mentioned as potential future partner for Space Launch System core stage reusability
ESA
European Space Agency providing expert engineers for Artemis II mission control monitoring
Airbus
Contributing engineers to Artemis II mission control operations at Johnson Space Center
People
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
HHS nominee making false claims about acetaminophen causing autism and pushing anti-vaccine agenda through FDA/NIH
Donald Trump
Promoted false autism-vaccine claims at press conference and discussed delaying MMR vaccine recommendations
Stephen Novella
Host analyzing RFK Jr.'s misinformation campaign and its public health implications
David Gorski
Science-Based Medicine colleague tracking RFK Jr.'s predicted anti-vaccine actions with accuracy
Eugen Bleuler
Swiss psychiatrist who coined term 'autism' in 1912 to describe schizophrenia symptom, not developmental disorder
Reed Wiseman
Commander of Artemis II mission, first crewed lunar flight since Apollo 17
Victor Glover
Pilot for Artemis II mission circumnavigating the moon
Christina Koch
Mission specialist on Artemis II lunar mission
Jeremy Hansen
Canadian Space Agency mission specialist on Artemis II, first Canadian to travel beyond low Earth orbit
Alvin Lucier
Artist who created 'I Am Sitting in a Room' demonstrating acoustic resonance effects on recorded voice
Joseph William Mellor
English chemist and ceramics expert (1868-1938) who advocated for inductive reasoning in scientific method
Quotes
"Human civilization will destroy itself because of stupidity. That is the most grave threat to humanity."
Stephen NovellaRFK Jr. discussion segment
"This is a healthcare disaster for the American public. The only question is how much, how far along is he going to get in the time that he has?"
Stephen NovellaVaccine policy discussion
"Delegating to an AI can increase dishonest requests especially with vague interfaces that might have been a more accurate headline"
Evan BernsteinAI ethics study discussion
"The more abstract and hands off the delegation the easier it became for people to let the AI do their dirty work for them"
Evan BernsteinAI dishonesty study
"We need to guardrail better guardrails need to be incorporated into these systems to protect people from basically from themselves"
Evan BernsteinAI ethics discussion
Full Transcript
You're listening to the Skeptics Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality. Hello and welcome to the Skeptics Guide to the Universe. Today is Wednesday, September 24th, 2025, and this is your host, Stephen Novella. Joining me this week are Bob Novella, everybody, Cara Santa Maria, Jane Novella, and Evan Bernstein. Good evening, everyone. How's everyone this fine Wednesday? Pretty good. Doing well. So any of you watch the full press conference with RFK Junior, Trump, and us? Yes. Not the whole thing. No, I couldn't do that. I did watch the, did you guys see the cut that they made where they said it to like Bill Nye the Science Guy, but it was like Don Trump the Scientist guy. Scientist. It's very funny. It's all the best quotes. It was terrible. I mean, it was just straight up. It was tragic. Propaganda. A higher hose of misinformation, propaganda, and all with a very specific purpose as well. Although I honestly think Trump was sort of rambling off script and giving away the game. Like I can imagine like they had a meeting where they said, this is what we're going to say. And this is the overall strategy. And Trump didn't know what they were supposed to say at that conference versus what was the long-term goal. So he sort of gives the game away. But anyway, it was great. Do you think when they prepped him that they told him how to pronounce a sedaminophen and he just forgot? I don't know. I don't think they thought they had to. But remember, nothing bad can happen. It can only good happen. It can only good happen. Yeah. All these were all belong to us. So here's the quickie version. We talked about it on the live stream. I wrote about it on Science-Based Medicine and Neurologica. The announcement basically had two components that they've discovered the cause of autism. Wrong. It's Tylenol, a sedaminophen in pregnant mothers, which is wrong. Again, I talked already about why the evidence for that was preliminary and inconsistent. And then actually the best evidence is that, no, there is no causal link between those two things. And pretty much every medical organization, especially the organization in the world, has looked at the evidence and come to the same conclusion. But they're, of course, just cherry picking whatever the studies that they want to cherry pick because they had to, again, the RFK promised he was going to find the cause of autism in six months. So boom, here it is, right? Even if he has to just make it up. The second one was a new treatment for autism, which is really a treatment for cerebral folate deficiency, which may have some manifestations of autism. And again, this is preliminary. It has not been proven yet. It requires more research and more evidence. But it looks like they just pressured the FDA into, which is, you know, he has his toady in there now, to just give approval for this drug, which is already on the market for other reasons. They're basically giving it a new indication for autism. So there you go. They found the cause of autism and they found a treatment for autism, both of which are complete bullshit. But the deeper game was given away by both RFK and what he said on script and what Trump said off script. You know, RFK basically made the case that or tried to make the case that autism is primarily an environmental disease, right? It's not genetic. He said that the research showing its genetic is all fraudulent and it's a conspiracy and that he's going to direct the NIH now to look for environmental causes of autism, i.e. vaccines, right? But other shit as well. I'm sure whatever. There'll be drugs and vaccines and toxins, you know. Right? So that's always going to be redirecting the NIH to waste their money on his pet project rather than having scientists and researchers following the evidence, you know, where it actually leads. And Trump, of course, goes off on vaccines. You know, how the MMR vaccine is bad, it's just bad. And you have to break it up into three different shots, which I think is the strategy here, right? We don't have a separate mumps or measles or rubella vaccine. We just have the MMR vaccine, the combined vaccine. So if you, and RFK's vaccine panel that he packed with his anti-vaxxers already has removed the approval for the recommendation rather for the MMRV, you know, plus the varicella vaccine saying it's slightly higher risk of fever-associated seizures than the MMR alone. So what's the end game there? Is it like... So the end game is they're going to do the same thing to MMR. They're going to say, no, we're going to delay it till after four years old and you have to give the individual vaccines. But there are no individual vaccines. So if they try to get individual vaccines approved, then kicks in the gold standard science we talked about where you have to have a placebo-controlled trial, which you can't do. Something that already has a working competitor, right? You can't do that. Oh, see, I thought you were going to go wakefield on this and be like, oh, they're just going to get their own people to make their own vaccines and make a ton of money off of it. Well, I don't think that's the point. I think, you know, he's just to get rid of it altogether. So this is all maneuvering to make it, not outright banned vaccines, but just maneuvering to remove them from the recommended schedule to delay them until an older age where that insurance companies won't cover them to prevent any new vaccines or variants from coming on the market because you can't do the science and to direct research into only what he wants, which is only looking for environmental causes of things, because that's what he does. What happens to the mortality rate once this all takes place? It's all going to be a completely unmitigated disaster. This is a healthcare disaster for the American public. The only question is how much, how far along is he going to get in the time that he has? And also like what happens in 2026, you know, when the next election happens? Is the public paying attention? Do they care? Are they full of misinformation? Are they idiots? I mean, you know, what combination of these things, as I've said for a very long time, human civilization will destroy itself because of stupidity. That is the most grave threat to humanity. Carl Sagan said as much as well. Yeah. But I think the scary thing here is that for some, not all, but some of these childhood diseases, the manifestation, the public health crisis won't happen until after he's out of office. Yeah, it'd take many years for it to come to its fruition. Some of them will be overnight because the minute that people are unable or unwilling to vaccinate their children, children are going to start dying of disease. Like it's going to happen quickly with new births for some diseases. But for other diseases that don't really become an issue until kids are in daycare or in, you know, elementary school, there is going to be a delay. Well, they're not going, I mean, are they turning off the spigot tomorrow here? Or, I mean, does this stuff take years to get to the point that they're want to get it to? Well, I think they're trying to turn off the spigot as quickly as possible, obviously, and kind of like effect change very fast. I guess one of the things that I think, I don't know, maybe we don't talk about enough or we do, but I'm so curious about is the fundamental motivation that's sort of behind the motivation that you often see with key players in anti-vax movements. We go back to Wakefield and we know that the fraud with Wakefield had a financial incentive, right? And there was a power incentive. Very often when we talk about RFK or we talk about his HHS kind of group, Steve, I know I sent you some articles today about, it's not going to be what we talk about later, but about like David and Mark Geyer or about William Parker, these individual anti-vaxxers who themselves were either practicing medicine without a license or, you know, committing fraud in their own ways, but had their own quote treatments that they were peddling, which were often really dangerous. Like one of them was using Lupron. It's a hormone blocker and it could basically chemically castrate young children, but so these like horrific experiments and really dark kind of approaches to offering an alternative to an afraid public. That's what scares me the most, is when people are told, this thing that is safe is actually not safe. It's the cause of all the things you should be afraid of. But here, don't worry, I have something you can do instead. It's the instead that makes me go, let's follow the money and let's figure out why these kind of unproven treatments are being peddled. Do we know what's up with the kind of new treatment that they're starting to tout? Well, the only thing that came out about that was that Dr. Oz at one point had a stake in the company that sells that, which he claimed he divested from, but that's never been confirmed until we don't know. So I don't know if this is specifically about grifting and trying to make money off of alternatives, although that is what's fueling the alternative medicine industry, is selling supplements and stuff like that. RFK Jr. mainly makes his money by being a lawyer defending people suing for toxic exposures and things like that. So that's how he makes, he wants everything to be environmental and toxic, because that's how he makes his money. But I think we need to do, we need to, I'm sure somebody has already done a detailed deep dive of everybody on that vaccine panel, of every single consultant that has been brought in, where a legitimate scientist who has dedicated their lives to doing this kind of research was nixed and somebody else was brought in to give their opinion. Maybe it's just because they're towing the party line and their anti-vax, but I have a feeling that part of the reason they're anti-vax is because there's some sort of incentive in it. They're often intertwined. It doesn't matter for the terrible arguments they're making and what the science actually says, but you're right, they are often intertwined. And I think it matters for the public to better understand this, because if there's just straight up fear mongering, a lot of people go, well, why would they do that if there's not something, if it's not true? A lot of people say, why would this public official say that if it's not true? But if it's like, oh, this is why it starts to make sense for people. Yeah. I mean, obviously, we're going to have to keep an eye on this as it unfolds. Well, just say this too, that like me and my colleagues at Science-Based Medicine, especially David Gorski, who's been writing about this, but most all of us have at one point or another, been predicting what RFK Junior is going to do, and we've been pretty spot on. So it's not as if we don't have a good beat on where he's going with this. He is going to do everything again. He can't limit and minimize Americans used to vaccines short of outright banning them. And so far, he's way ahead of schedule. Like he's doing it faster even and just more draconian than we even thought. It's basically at the worst end of the spectrum. Right? He's doing the exact thing he promised he wouldn't do when he got approved in the Senate. Oh gosh. All right. Kara, we're going to do a What's the Word? And it's kind of related. It is. It's not grift. I actually wanted to dig a little bit deeper into the word autism itself. I know we've done deep dives on the show in the past about what autism is, what autism isn't, some of the kind of misinformation in the pseudoscience that we're often hearing peddled about autism. But I was really curious, like, where does the word come from? Because I think most of us can sort of recognize the two components of the word. Right? If we break it up into two, it ends in the suffix, ism, just like many actions or like states of being or isms. But the prefix or the first portion of the word comes from the Greek for autos, right? Or auto, meaning self. And so why is it self-ism? Like, where does that come from? And one thing that I remember learning, sort of, it was somewhere in the recesses of my mind from when I was a early on as a psychology student, but was refreshed for me today, is that the term was actually coined way back in 1912. So, you know, over 100 years ago by a Swiss psychiatrist by the name of Paul Bluler, Blowler, I'm very bad with like German pronunciation. I have it right here. Bloyler. Okay, well, fine. Eugen Bloyler. So he actually coined the term autism, but he wasn't referring to what we now know to be autism back in 1912. What he was actually referring to was a symptom that he saw in many of the severe cases of schizophrenia that he was studying. So he also kind of created the concept of schizophrenia. He was the first to sort of look at that and determine it as a syndrome. Basically, he said autistic thinking has to do with, and this is back when psychoanalysis was king. And so a lot of psychiatrists thought that, you know, there were portions of your mind that would kind of do things in order to avoid facing the harshness of reality. And so he described autistic thinking, this self-ism as spending time in one's inner life and not being readily accessible to observers. He actually characterized it by, quote, infantile wishes to avoid unsatisfying realities and replace them with fantasies and hallucinations. But around the mid-century, so the 1950s and 1960s, we saw a big change in the way that that word started to be used. So not only did we know more about schizophrenia at that point, we also saw something big happen in like the 60s, having to do with mental health. Do you guys know what that was? Something really big, a big change. Electric shock therapy? No, that's when we closed all of the asylums, right? That's when we had the rise of psychiatric medication. We started to, yes, classify with a little bit more kind of science, but we also were closing the asylums. And so there was a real push for individuals to integrate into society and to be able to do that with appropriate therapies. At that point, that word autism started to shift and mean more what it refers to now, which is, yes, a diagnosis. Some people might say more of a syndrome, right, than an actual, like, quote, disease or disorder. And really, for a lot of people, I actually read a really lovely, it was on Reddit, somebody talking about how they really like the word autism. They really like going back to the roots because they, as somebody who is neurodivergent, they see it as having an extremely absorbing interior life and that that was something that really related for them. And so now we'll often see that shift and that happened again through a change in psychiatry and also epidemiologic measures that helped us kind of understand incidence rates of these different diagnoses to less have to do with excessive hallucinations or fantasy and more have to do with one's kind of tendency to draw inward or sort of deficits in social interaction or in communication. And so it's interesting that the word still holds and it still does define not all individuals with autism, because as we know, many people with autism have very different manifestations of the diagnosis. But that kind of core root of self being kind of on one's own being somewhat internal, having this like deep relationship with oneself does hold for many people who identify in that way. So it's a pretty interesting, I think, etymology that sort of like left and came back, you know, it sort of was a core symptom of schizophrenia back when a lot of psychiatric syndromes and disorders were all sort of mashed together and they weren't, you know, well understood. And then over time, it was teased apart and better used to describe what we now would call autism as a diagnosis with communication deficits. I think a lot of it, you said this, but just to emphasize, they actually thought it was the early stages of schizophrenia at one point. Yeah. And back then schizophrenia was kind of everything. Yeah, schizophrenia was like the catchall. They didn't really know what that was either. They were just focusing on the, they're just absorbed in their self. You had psychotic disorders and you had neurotic disorders and that was pretty much it. Neurosis was things like anxiety, depression, nerves, and then psychotic disorders was pretty much anything else, anything that seemed kind of bizarre or odd or just different. And then later, that was kind of teased out and we started to have a better understanding of what psychosis actually was. And autism emerged as a developmental disability, not as having anything whatsoever to do with schizophrenia, but the root came from that. Right. Okay, thanks, Cara. Jay, tell us about NASA's new mission control. Well, there's a couple of things going on. The first one is very brief, but interesting. NASA has just recently opened the new Orion mission evaluation room and that's called the MER. Say, MER. This is inside the mission control center at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. The room was activated on August 15, 2025. You know, like they turn the lights on, then you hear all like the, you know, that's how I see it. It's fun. Steve, you should try it sometime. This adds 24 engineering console stations, their staffed around the clock during the 10-day mission, the Artemis II mission. These are meant to augment the standard white flight control room. I guess that's what they call the existing one. And this is because they're going to have expert engineers from NASA, Lockheed, Martin, ESA, and Airbus that are going to be constantly monitoring the spacecraft data, comparing performance against their expectations, and help troubleshoot unexpected issues that always pop up. It's important to note like this is not overkill. This represents just how complicated Orion systems are and how many moving parts need simultaneous people looking at them to keep the crew safe in the mission on track, right? It's exactly what mission control is supposed to do. It's just like mission control on steroids. Artemis II is also going to be, as a quick reminder, this is the first crewed flight in NASA's modern lunar program. I'm personally extraordinarily excited about this, all the reasons why I will probably list most of them in what I'm about to tell you. The first reason why I'm super psyched is that this is when things start to get really, really exciting, right? We have the four astronauts that are going to ride Orion on this 10-day mission. It's called a free return. And what happens is they're going to go to the moon, they're going to circumnavigate the moon, they're not getting off the rocket, nothing like that. This is just people in the ship going around the moon and then coming back. This is going to prove that the rocket and then the spacecraft and the ground systems are all ready for sustained deep space work, which from here on out after the second mission, like that's what we're talking about. Even though it might not seem like a big deal, you know, what's going to happen is going to ride there and come back. Like this mission is unbelievably critical and it's really cool. This is the beginning of crewed missions and if things go as planned, they're never going to stop. Just think about it. You know, they're building a huge, huge system on the moon. You know, there's so many different giant pieces of the puzzle that need to be constructed and brought to the moon and a moon base and figuring out all of the technology that's needed and then they're going to go to Mars. You know, if the funding is there and the will is there, like it's just going to be, you know, crewed flight after crewed flight after crewed flight on and on and on. And I think we're all going to get bored with it at some point, you know, like it's just going to become so common. NASA schedule is that the flight launches no later than April of 2026. So I remember when we were talking about this guys, I haven't really been bringing it up that much just because there really wasn't that much to say. I was waiting for this milestone, but I remember hearing April 2026 and saying to myself, oh, Mike, that is so far away. And now it really isn't less than a year. Yeah, it's going to come very quickly. So the start was the Artemis project to design in what 2018, I think, is when it first yeah, I don't remember the date, but the original launch, I think Artemis two was supposed to go off like in late 24 or 25. That's what I remember as well. Yeah. So we had a significant delay. And again, good, good for them delay it. You know, we're talking about sending people to the moon again with technology. So they have to get it right. Exactly. So the agency left the door open to fly even earlier than April if the work finishes faster, but the official commitment is still April 2026. The crew set, meaning they're selected, and they have been selected for a while. We have four people going commander Reed Weisman, pilot Victor Glover, mission specialist, Christina Koch, and mission specialist, Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency. These guys are going to take Orion out of the garage and take it out on the highway. And this will be the first time since Apollo 17 that a crew will travel beyond low Earth orbit. So these are all profound moves that are happening here. The hardware status is better than I think a lot of people assume at this point, the space launch system core stage, right? This is the rocket, the single use rocket, right? They're going to have to build one specifically for each mission. If they don't, you know, eventually have SpaceX help the space launch system core stage, right? You got that Steve space space launch system core stage. That's essentially the rocket without the Orion capsule. This arrived at Kennedy Space Center by a barge in July of 2024. That's a long time ago. The solid rocket boosters were stacked in the vehicle assembly building, right? These are all things that happened before they start to really build the whole ship out. NASA reports that the core stage and boosters were connected and integrated on the mobile launcher in March of this year. And these are the hard milestones and a clear sign that things are definitely a go. So Orion is past its assembly phase, meaning it's built. Lockheed Martin says development for the Artemis 2 spacecraft is not only finished, but it's in launch preparation flow at Kennedy. I like that they call it flow, right? So all the things that they got to do to get it prepared before they attach it to the rocket. Now this matters because most of the open risks after Artemis 1 centered on Orion, right? Not the rocket. So if you guys remember now during Artemis 1, this was back in December of 2022, NASA discovered an issue with Orion's heat shield during reentry. This is, we don't want this problem. It's a really bad problem to have because this is where people could easily die. You don't want them dying literally moments before they touch back down. The shield made of something called AV code or Avco ablative material, which basically means it's heat resistant. It's designed to gradually burn away in a controlled manner to protect the spacecraft. However, Orion lost more material than expected because there was chunks of that stuff kind of popping off prematurely in a process that they call spallation. I've never heard that word before. While this didn't endanger the Artemis 1 because it was, you know, first off it was uncrewed and internal temperatures still remain safe, it was still a big deal. Like the concerns were really high for future missions. There was excessive material loss and that could allow the interior to get superheated, which means the gases are going to dramatically expand and this would definitely pose a threat to anybody that's would actually be on a future mission. So NASA spent over a year investigating the problem. They ran, you know, a huge number of tests to recreate these reentry conditions. They were examining the existing flight data and back in December 2024, they identified the root cause. So for Artemis 2, NASA decided to fly the heat shield as built, which is the same spec as the first one using the same materials and construction as Artemis 1. While they, you know, they're essentially relying on updated thermal models, they adjusted reentry procedures, I guess changing the angles and stuff like that. They enhanced monitoring to keep risks within safe margins, although I don't know what the monitoring is going to do if they're on their way in and there's a problem, but I guess they know something I don't. But a permanent hardware fix, which is going to mean manufacturing tweaks, the improvement to how the AV coattails are bonded and layered, you know, all of these details that these are being developed for later missions, probably Artemis 3 and 4, it's only going to be implemented until after extensive testing to ensure the reliability, meaning that if they were going to change something that big and that significant, it would not only delay, but it could throw the whole thing, the whole mission series off kilter, right? You don't want to like throw in a three year delay, just do it on the next one and they're confident that everything is going to be fine. The crew is now actively preparing for the mission. NASA is showing the crew like running the launch day walkout drills, like, you know, what happens when the day comes? This is exactly what's going to happen. So they have to coordinate everything with all the people that go with them, like that entourage. This includes people like getting them into the capsule, buckling them in, giving them a pack of gum, slapping them around, you know, all the things that need to happen. They're rehearsing like nighttime operations. There's separate updates that they put out that describe the research plan for the mission. This includes monitoring sleep and the activity during the daytime, collecting biological samples on the astronauts to support the human research for deep spaceflight, meaning they have to know everything about these people just to make sure that they're perfectly healthy and that nothing is going to come up. They have independent reporting that shows them practicing lunar observation protocols. I know that sounds simple, but these are very useful backup skills. You know, nothing here is fluff. It's how NASA lowers something called burn down risks. A burn down risk is a potential problem or technical issue that has to be fully resolved, tested and signed off on before major milestones or launch. And they have them. They have, they have some risks there that they have to work on. There's some unknowns and some of these are quite big. If anything is going to cause a delay, it's going to be in the next two things I tell you here. So life support performance. NASA has to confirm that the environmental control and life support systems, they have to make sure it works properly inside the fully integrated Orion capsule. And it has to be better than lab testing. It has to be fully put together and 100% functional heat shield confidence. Again, I went over this, but the heat shield has to perform safely for specific reentry trajectory. Artemis II will fly. It's going to be a different reentry than Artemis I. So they have to, they have to like really, really test that up and make sure it's 100% go. They have something called first crewed mission pacing items. These are slower checks for safety. They're required because this is the first flight with astronauts. This is naturally going to introduce more steps and potential failure points and potential delays, but they have to, they have more protocols that they have to go to. The agency's official timeline remains to be no later than April 2026. Of course, it will be pushed if they have to push it. You're right. You keep in mind everything I just said, everything has to be completely greenlit by all of the engineers and everyone, everyone's whose skill set matters here. You know, everyone has to give a thumbs up. If you hear any other dates from outside sources, you have to be very skeptical of that. Like you should really only listen to the dates that are coming from NASA because there's been a lot of reports of like other companies, whatever, like groups that are trying to say, this is not going to happen. This isn't going to work or whatever, but they don't have the inside information. They don't really know what's going on. NASA, I don't think NASA has any real reason to lie. They make it very clear. Like we're only going to launch if it's safe. We're saying, you know, April 2026. And again, we know that they'll delay if there's a problem because they've already done it and that's the culture at NASA. So I trust them and trust the engineers and I'm looking forward to like some spectacular space adventures moving forward in 2026. You guys all see the picture of the planned mission control? Yeah. Now. So that's cool. Yeah, it's pretty cool. I mean, it's basically a bunch of big monitors, right? But just a bunch of computer stations with gigantic monitors. What games would you play on those? I mean, those control rooms, like they don't really differ that much from the historical ones, right? It's really, it's like Steve said, giant monitors on the walls, computer monitors and computer desks like everywhere with tons of people with signs above the desks and all that. It's the same thing. It's just, you know, just better modern technology. I think the old school stuff looked really cool. I just like the layout. But the new one is cool. Take a look at it. All right. Thanks, Shay. Bob, tell us about element 120. If you insist more accurately, 119, I'm not sure why they're focusing on 120, but that's neither here nor there. Okay, never mind all that crap. Steve, a new method of discovering some new super heavy elements has recently been tested with positive results. Could this method find new elements that do not exist yet in our periodic table of elements? Okay, this announcement came from the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. I'm sure all of you have heard about the periodic table of elements, right? Most of these elements, you know, they're essentially just lying around waiting for us to catalog them, right? Just like laying right there. Some of them will never appear naturally on earth, though. And I was curious, what is that cut off? I wasn't 100% sure. Do you guys know what's the heaviest naturally occurring element that forms on earth? 92. 92 protons, if that's what you meant. That is true. That is correct. So uranium 238 with 92 protons and 146 neutrons. But then what I didn't know was that what is the heaviest natural element that we know of? And it's not uranium 238. It's plutonium 244, which we found in some meteorite dust. But apparently plutonium 244 apparently has a half life of like 80 million years. So if some were created, were on the earth, it's already decayed away. So it's not totally fair to say that. But it is correct, though, that all the elements beyond plutonium were never just found. They had to be synthesized. They had to be created. So have you ever wondered how they create even heavier synthetic elements to add to the periodic table? All the time. I've wondered. I mean, yeah, I thought about it. I've read some stuff about it. But what I learned, what I learned recently, though, was a lot of it was new to me. What they do, super high level is they smash elements together one way or the other. They're just smashing them together and hope that the protons and neutrons of one nucleus confuse to the nucleus of another atom. That's kind of what we're doing here. And we've talked about that in the context of colliders and things like that plenty of times. So if you add new protons to a nucleus, you have created by definition what? A new element. Exactly. A new element, since the number of protons defines what what the element is. So for example, all elements with six protons are carbon atoms. No, there's no other way. There's nothing else that they could be except carbon atoms. This number is the atomic number. But if you change the number of neutrons in an element, that just changes the isotope of that element. So say you go from deuterium to tritium, that that's all that is. It's still a form of hydrogen. It's just it's just a different it's just a different isotope and atomic mass, you don't necessarily need to know that that much for this talk. But atomic mass is the is the protons plus the neutrons. The atomic number is just the protons. That's the critical one that defines the new element. So all right, the old method of doing this used a particle beam of calcium 48. I did not know this at all. They essentially used a particle beam weapon. I mean, I don't know how much of a weapon that would be. But I wouldn't want to hit with it. I wouldn't either. It's a particle beam of calcium 48 with 20 protons and 28 neutrons. So this is a rare isotope of calcium. So imagine you have a beam of calcium atoms with no electrons, right, just a nucleus, and they all hit other heavy elements like curium or californium. Once you've got millions, billions of these calcium ions that are just impacting onto this californium say so once in a while, one of those calcium 48 bullets would fuse to a californium atom instead of just bouncing off. And that's literally like the odds of that happening are one in in like quadrillions. But you know, with enough you have enough of these atoms in your calcium beam, it's going to happen. So after fusion takes place, what do you got? You've got a new element since the number of protons has changed. If you no matter what you do to the protons, if you add one, take away one, or anything like that, you now have a new element. So these super heavy atoms don't last long, but we can detect the decay chain of the elements. And once we can detect what this mysterious thing decayed into what that decay chain is, the daughter elements and granddaughter elements, if you will, then you can definitively say what had to have existed to create those daughter elements. So it's right, you follow that. So it's like cat, it's like cataloging your daughter's DNA and her son's DNA to conclude that you definitely had to exist. So right, so they're seeing this decay change, you like that one care? So you see this decay chain, and you have to and they say, well, for this decay chain to exist, this then element this element had to have created it. So that that's their evidence. And it's pretty, it's pretty damn solid. The specific method that I've been talking about about this calcium 48 beam, it has actually helped us find elements 113 to 118 in the early 2000s, or should I say, oh, I just don't like saying lots. Does anyone like saying I do? Oh, wow, you're weirdo. So unfortunately, though, unfortunately, this calcium beam technique has reached the end of its useful life in finding new elements. It's not just, it's just not heavy enough to create an element above the current heaviest element, which is 118. Organison is one way to pronounce it. I would have never guessed that as true. Yeah, 118 118. So we need something heavier. Calcium 48 is just isn't cut. It's not enough. Um, you know, there's not enough power behind us. We need something more a little bit more formidable, a little bit heavier. And this is where this news item kicks in. And it's called titanium 50. It's a beam titanium 50, which is a little bit more than 48, right? Yes, I agree. Yes. Yes, thank you for agreeing. This new particle beam, this new this new particle beam, the team has developed titanium 50. Oh, yeah, I have it right here 22 protons and 28 neutrons. It's been tested, essentially, as a proof of concept for creating super heavy atoms beyond 118. So this was their goal. Let's they've been developing this new titanium 50 beam for quite a while. And they're like, let's test this out. Let's just see what it can do. They weren't expecting to make any huge major breakthroughs. They just wanted a proof of concept. So to do this, they research it, they send a new beam against the target of plutonium 244, the heaviest natural element that we have encountered. They shot the beam against plutonium 244. And when the titanium nucleus and plutonium nucleus fused, they briefly created a new heavier nucleus. And that and what it created was, they found actually two elements two atoms of element 116 called liver morium. I mean, when did that name? I don't remember. I guess I remember the old was it an old Latin, the old Latin name for, for these elements, but they must have renamed it and I missed it because I never heard of liver morium before. It sounds vaguely funerial, doesn't it? Okay, so it must be named for somebody named liver mor. Well, right, laboratory. Oh, damn, there you go. Is it Lawrence liver? Yeah. You are a correct sir. So they found, so they use this new technique, this new beam, and they found two atoms of element 116. Now this element, like I said, it's already been found. It was found using the calcium beam probably back in the odds. But like I said, this was a proof of concept and they pretty much well, you know, prove the concept. The odds that were against their success, like I said, it's like only a few nuclei within a quadrillion of the tries should have done this. And of course, if your beam is, you know, big enough and long enough, you're gonna, you're gonna, you'll eventually hit it. Alright, so what does this mean? This means that titanium 50 could work for perhaps at least the next few elements. So we may be able to get to 119, 120, maybe 121 at least. If we are super lucky, it could last us, it could help us discover a few more after that. But we, but I suspect that we're going to probably need another type of beam after 121 or so. But now this is, this is one thing that caught me by surprise. These next elements though, 119 and 120, they could be extra special for a couple of reasons. One is that element 119 would be a new row in the periodic table, a new period, I guess is what they would say. Because all seven rows or periods are basically filled up right now. So when they discover 119, then it's going to go to, it's going to go to a new row. So who here, which of you guys knows what the rows of a periodic table or what those periods, what do they reflect? What is the significance of the row? The electron shells, right? Yeah, it's essentially how the electrons are arranged around the atomic nuclei. So all of known chemistry, everything we know about chemistry fits in the seven rows of the periodic table of elements right now. If or when we confirm the next heaviest element, say it's 119 or 120, we're not sure which one it would be, we will then be on a new row, it would be row eight or period eight. In which column? All far left, it would probably be 119 to be the farthest left. It's expected though, so what's going to happen in row eight, right? We can't be 100% sure, but we do very strongly suspect that relativistic effects could strongly influence the electron behavior. One website was saying that the electrons are essentially traveling near, close to the speed of light, so that's why they're saying that relativistic effects could have some influence here. So these elements, who knows, they probably won't follow expected chemistry patterns, right? We're not sure what kind of chemistry these things could engage in, but not that we would ever see any chemical reactions, right? These are ultra heavy atoms, they're half lives are probably, they're in the microseconds, they're very, very super brief, so there's not going to be any real chemistry going on there. Unless, unless of course, that there's that holy grail of chemistry known as, and I've mentioned it here and there on the show, and even just talking with you guys recently, the island of stability, Evan, you and I were talking about this, that's one of the things that some nuclear theories predict. There may be some very heavy elements that might have considerably longer half lives, instead of microseconds, it could be whole seconds, imagine a whole second, or minutes, or even days, I mean, you can't rule that out, I mean, maybe it's unlikely some theories point to it, and this would be due to some special, some call it, some magical ratio of protons, you know, to neutrons. They say that that could make these super heavy new atoms just extra stable, so stable that they could last far longer than the microseconds that these super heavy elements typically last. So who knows, I mean, who knows what we could learn if we had that much time to play with this super heavy element. You know, even seconds, I think, would allow us to do a lot more testing far more than what we could accomplish with just microseconds. We could, you know, do something more substantial in just looking at the decay of its daughter particles and stuff like that. So I have a silly hope. It's a silly hope. I don't tell too many people, but sometimes I think, imagine if, you know, my what if scenarios here, what if, what if, yeah, right, what if at the highest levels of what's possible with technology, it could be reasonable or feasible to create a technology using these elements with half lives that go not even seconds, days, or I'm talking like, imagine half lives in the years or even decades, which I'm not aware of any theory that says that that's even a reasonable expectation. But imagine that this is the kind of stuff that I would expect from super advanced aliens, you know, having materials with radical new properties based on these, you know, these relativistic or quantum effects that this super heavy element in this island of stability could have. I mean, I did some research, you know, what kind of abilities could these have, you know, could be stuff like super dense fuels, super, imagine super compact reactors that you could like put in your phone or something crazy like that whole new branches of chemistry. Oh, here's a good one. Element 126 armor plating. All right, I'm going to stop right there because that's just really goofy. I mean, nobody's saying that these that this island of stability would be that awesome. I mean, I think they'd be incredibly happy if it lasted for a few seconds or a minute. But who knows who knows once we get there, they may be so ridiculously stable that they could have a half life. Don't count on it. But hopefully we could at the very least, we can find elements using this new technique this titanium 50 beam we could find 119 and 120 and maybe even element 121 and see what this period eight is all about in the periodic table of elements. So long calcium 48 we miss you. Thank you for your help. How are you feeling about quantum computers? Pretty good. Pretty frustrating. It's frustrating. They just got to they have to focus and they are focusing to a certain extent, I'm sure error correction is key. I mean, you wouldn't even you wouldn't even need that many qubits. If you had next if you had negligible errors, with 200 qubits or even less, you could do some amazing things. It's all the error correction is what's taken up so much of the effort because it's so hard. But if they can crack that nut, and I know I really don't know what you're going to be talking about. Yeah, you don't. So Caltech just set a record with a 6100 qubit array. No, no, no, wait, wait, wait, what does that mean? Wait, wait, wait, wait, there was only 1000 like a few months ago. It's huge. That is huge. It doesn't mean much. What's the error correction? That's not what I'm talking about. That's not what I'm talking about. Yeah, but yeah, you know, but you should. And then Australia company startup Dirac has now shown that they can maintain 99% accuracy needed to make quantum computers viable. This is with production of silicon based quantum chips. That's not what I'm talking about either. But this is the talk about something. Quantum computer news that we see all the time is just so hard to know what to make of it. We do appear to be making steady advances. But that doesn't, as you say, Bob, doesn't give us a good feeling for how close are we to really functional quantum computers, you know, where you get quantum supremacy where it's doing stuff we couldn't do without them. Some claim that already, but I haven't taken a deep dive in that in a while. I'm not sure how accurate those claims of supremacy are. But okay, continue. All right. So there's, there's, as you say, just the number of qubits we're lashing together is not the only piece of information that's important to understanding quantum computers. And just for quick background, for those of you don't know, we're talking about regular computers use bits of data like ones or zeros, right? Anything that's binary could be any state like a switch is either on or off, or a gate is open or closed or whatever. Quantum computers use qubits, which essentially have their bits in a state of super position. So it's not a one or a zero. It's a super position of one and zero. That's one of the quantum weird quantum effects that are critical. Yeah, to quantum computers. The other one is that the qubits need to be entangled. And it's the entanglement that actually makes the quantum computers work. Right? That's how you connect them into a circuit. And that entanglement is what it is both the super position and the entanglement mean that we need to maintain these quantum states while the calculations are undergoing. But these quantum states are very fragile. You need to have super cold temperatures, you know, single digit degrees Kelvin, for example, is why it's never going to be sitting on your desktop, or at least no extrapolation of current technology. This is always going to be like governments and countries, you know, and wealthy institutions may have these to do, again, the kind of computing that you can't do with classical computers. All right, so this is where the breakthrough comes in now is in the entanglement part of this. One of the huge limiting factors is how far apart the two entangled qubits can be, because they have to be isolated. So one of the analogies given in the study is imagine two people in a soundproof booth, right? Like get smart. Yeah. So they have to be in a soundproof booth in order to limit the noise, because it's the it's the environmental noise which breaks down the entanglement. But that also means they have to be close together. So you can't have somebody far away because then they'll be outside the soundproof booth. But what if what if you could connect soundproof booths together so that they can't communicate with each other while still being isolated from outside noise. So that's kind of the idea here. So what they did what so what the researchers did is they found a way to keep the systems isolated to maintain entanglement and minimize noise while simultaneously giving them the ability to communicate over much longer distances. So they're using nuclear spin right as the information you know holder. The spin of phosphorus nuclei that's their qubit right the spin of a phosphorus nuclei. And they keep it in a clean quantum system by surrounding it with an electron. And they demonstrated that they could maintain an entanglement for 30 seconds, which is a massive amount of time when you're talking about quantum computers with Bob less than 1% errors. So that's a very low error rate, a very long period of time. This is a good workable quantum system. But now they've taken it one step further. They've figured out how to manipulate the electron so that its orbit can essentially surround two phosphorus nuclei, which electrons do right nuclei covalent right yeah they can share electrons. But this enables two nuclei to communicate with each other over 20 nanometers. Now again 20 nanometers is a very short distance, but you know what that's on a par with. Well our current manufacturing techniques for regular silicon computer chips. Oh yeah right. So we can use the material we've already got. Yes, so the idea is we could use manufacturing techniques we already have to mix stuff at the 20 nanometer scale. And that could be applied to this system because you're dealing with the 20 nanometer scale. So they prove that this works basically that you can have a quantum entanglement in two qubits separated by 20 nanometers and you know using this phosphorus nuclei spin as the as the qubit system. So this could be again is this going to be the basis of future quantum computers? It's too early to tell. But they but this soap they are progressing nicely. The thing about this system which they say is a massive breakthrough for quantum computers is that it's scalable. Because you just keep adding phosphorus nuclei and connecting them with other phosphorus nuclei using this shared electron technique. They said they see no reason why they can't just keep scalding this up. And the scaling is of course that's the main limiting factor with quantum computers is making it bigger and bigger. So we'll see where this plays out. I mean it may be years you know before we really see this mature into the kind of thing where you're mass producing quantum computers you know. Neat but it's the right path. Yeah but this this is this seems like a very encouraging path. But even still I mean it's still like just to give people an idea of why do people talk about quantum computers and what are they and how do they work. Nobody knows. I mean basically it's complicated it's super complicated. Every time I think I understand it's like no it's not really that it's really this other thing. Well who famously said like if you think you understand it you don't really understand. Yeah yeah. I mean I don't remember. It's super complicated. When I wrote about it recently I talked about quantum encryption because this is like the big thing about quantum computers. Once you get a really powerful quantum computer it kind of breaks all old encryption and you need a quantum computer to make encryption that another quantum computer can't crack. But then it was pointed out that yeah there are ways to make quantum computer resilient encryption that doesn't require a quantum computer. Exactly yeah. Yeah so I see. So we're already working on that. But still it seems like there could be huge technological advantages to having a quantum computer. You don't want your adversaries to have one when you don't want one when you don't have one. So I think that's what's fueling a lot of this research. So you know when will we have like mature quantum computers. I don't know. It's so hard to tell even reading these kinds of news items. It's very sexy. It's very exciting. This sounds like a big breakthrough. It all makes sense. Sure. You can have these entangled qubits that are stable over 30 seconds and over long distances at the distance of manufacturing existing computer chips. I get all that. I just don't know what how meaningful it really is. You know. Do you have any other thoughts on that Bob? No. The error rate is encouraging. Yeah the next less than one percent error rate is very encouraging. And the scalability is encouraging as well. So yeah definitely be tracking this one. Yeah yeah we'll be tracking it. You know maybe one day we'll be able to report that we have a really significant usable quantum computer. All right let's move on. All right Evan tell us about artificial intelligence and lying. Maybe not the way you think. Yeah exactly. And now there's a study out. It was in nature and it made the rounds in the media this past week in which the headline and this is what drew me in using AI increases unethical behavior. We know that headlines are never the whole story so we have to definitely take a closer look at that. What did this study actually show? How worried should we be about a supposed impact of AI on human morality here? So you go to the paper. The paper is titled delegation to artificial intelligence can increase dishonest behavior. They ran 13 experiments with over 8,000 participants and the researchers explored what happens when people can delegate tasks to AI systems compared to people doing those tasks themselves. I would say that the central question here wasn't just you know will people cheat if given the chance? You know we kind of know that answer but the deeper question was does delegating tasks to AI change the psychological dynamics in a way that make cheating more likely? So there is a distinction there and the experiments were built around controlled tasks where participants could benefit financially by being dishonest. This was the test. The di-roll game. So apparently psychologists have been using this for decades. Is this true? Have you heard of the di-roll game? I'll explain how it works. Roll a six-sided die and keep the result to yourself. You then report your result to the experimenter and the higher number you report the more say money you get as an example. So let's say I roll in secret there's a three but I tell the experimenter hey I got a six so I'll actually get more cash or whatever the reward is and there's no way to prove essentially that you're lying. It's almost like Liars Dice in a way you know that game they played and Pirates of the Caribbean in a sense when you can call the bluff but in any case. So in the study people rolled and reported directly to another person there was no AI involved and then others delegated the reporting to an AI agent and they used different kinds of interfaces. Some used a rules-based system in which they said report it honestly okay. Some used what they're classifying as like a supervised learning. They trained the AI by selecting example data and then there was goal-based to maximize your profit. You know let the AI figure out how best to you know make it come out in your favor. They also at the same time ran a more realistic say tax reporting game and this is what where I got interested in which the participants reported their income and they could choose to under-report it if they wanted to and you do it with people and you do it with AI agents and to see what the differences are there you know or people how are people going to report that to a person someone like me a tax preparer versus having an AI take care of that reporting for you. So here's what they found delegation did increase dishonest behavior they're saying they said even with the most explicit rule-based interface people who used AI were more likely to cheat than those doing the tasks themselves. The effect skyrocketed with the vague goal-based interface that was the one where you know basically saying hey maximize this for me and they turned it over to the AI to do that for them and in in that condition they said 12 to 16 percent of participants stayed completely honest and everyone else cheated to some degree. So basically the more abstract and hands off the delegation the easier it became for people to let the AI do their quote-unquote dirty work for them and also the AI agents were far more accommodating than the human agents and this is where this is you know this is where I have a little practical experience with this. When I'm sitting down with someone for a tax appointment and I'm talking to them about it I would definitely say that they would be less inclined to be more liberal with their answers to me as opposed to because of the interaction that we have. That you know because I make sure that they're trying to be as accurate as possible that's part of my job because I don't want to get my clients in trouble I'm trying to save them basically from themselves and point out where certain things might be say red flags for IRS. For example somebody comes to me and says hey I earned a hundred thousand dollars last year and I gave 50,000 to qualified charities so I get a charitable deduction off my I don't have to pay 50,000 half of my income taxes because I get to write that off. That is outside the boundaries of normal of the normal statistics and that is an outlier. I would therefore press back and say you need to make sure you can produce your receipts and you know and do all these kinds of things you know make sure you've got it ready because this is a high-aughted item the IRS is going to come back and ask you to prove it so I encourage them to do that or to change their answer well yeah it wasn't 50,000 it was actually 5,000 okay that's more of a number that could that would be believable whereas if they go and they do that with a computer and AI or something else like that and AI will be generally speaking more accommodating and allowing them to go ahead and report that 50,000 dollars without the pushback. Yes but to be clear Evan the people were no more likely to request unethical behavior from from the AI than from people so they still asked people you know at the same rate to do the cheating for them right unless there were guardrails now what you're talking about is that you provide guardrails right yes that's two different things so as you said like the AI will may not make people request cheating more but it's more likely to do it and not and not ask any questions and that was my end great idea let's do that you know yep the guardrails and that that is kind of the point and the authors of the study also definitely point point this out that you know we need to guardrail better guardrails need to be incorporated into these systems to protect people from basically you know from themselves and because I think I think the tax reporting example is a good example of this you know in a practical one that a lot of people can understand and how they can be you know their own can be led astray in a sense and get themselves in frankly in frankly trouble in this way the data showed basically yeah so here so again the data showed delegation to AI lowers psychological barriers to unethical behavior the effect is strongest when instructions are vague or high level I don't think any of that's surprising and that the AI systems at the moment are more compliant with say unethical requests than when dealing with humans with this data instead now what about the headline though you know using AI makes people unethical that's an over simplification you know it definitely always needs more nuance we've talked about the misleading headlines and things like that so you really that's a tough one to to swallow right there maybe they should have said something like you know delegating to an AI can increase dishonest requests especially with vague interfaces that might have been a more uh accurate headline in a sense even though it's a subtle difference but still you know pretty important one as far as I'm concerned and again we need to design systems that minimize moral wiggle room and need accountability mechanisms that keep people in inside this loop so an interesting study definitely informative but never go by just the one study and always read a little deeper into it all right thanks Evan Cara thank you tell us about scams and fraud um so we often talk about scams and fraud on the show a new article in the conversation that was published by Raul Tlaing professor of information systems at Carnegie Mellon he writes about sort of scams and frauds in the age of AI and crypto because of course we see this all the time whether we're talking about you know frauds to make money or pseudoscience is that the same rhetoric is like a repackage with whatever today's sort of zeitgeist allows it to be I don't know I know this isn't a side but I don't know if you guys were following all of the like rapture stuff on TikTok this past week and I was like god this it's so old hat it's like all the same stuff except because it's like gen alpha people who are talking about it there's like a very modern spin um maybe oh their first time hearing about it yeah yeah and this is a regularly occurring thing exactly well I mean it's just that these things just keep getting repacked over and over with whatever like the the technology of today is and the technology of today is AI and so the professor who wrote the article he talks about sort of emotional tactics first of all he talks about things like duty fear and hope and he he says that most scams occur because of an individual target duty fear or hope so duty refers to you know if you're an employee and your employer asks you to do something you feel a sense of duty to do that fear is the idea that maybe somebody is telling you that like a loved one or somebody that you really care about is in danger so you need to do something to help them and then hope is often like you know investment scams or job opportunity scams they talk in the article about specifically AI powered scams and deep fakes and then after that cryptocurrency scams both of which are sort of like I mentioned repacks of age old uh uh you know uh scammery there's gotta be another word for that right swindling what are all the words we often use flimflammery age old flimflam flimflammery um actually but but repackage for a modern era so so we've talked about this before I know Jay you've covered like AI um and like AI deception quite a lot yeah so we've got to remember that this is not a in the future this could happen like this is happening right now a little bit of statistical data here just documented well over 100 000 deep fake attacks were recorded back in 2024 and only in the first quarter of this year of 2025 individuals who were swindled so these are people who actually reported it said that they were swindled out of 200 million plus dollars and this is all from individuals using AI generated audio or video to impersonate other people oh no yeah so whether it's hey grandma I'm in trouble I'm you know I'm overseas and I really need some money because I lost my passport or it's hey worker I'm your CEO and I need you to do x people are falling for them you know very often there are different kinds of ways that they go um about it so we we talked about like fake emergencies that seems to be one of the hardest ones to fight against because there's so much emotional manipulation and it's a lot harder to check against the fraud but but we do see you know kind of tech support scams happening a lot in corporate settings where somebody will get like a pop-up on their screen that says that either there's a virus or there's some sort of identity theft and I need you to call a number or you know somebody will get called directly from a number and then while they're on the phone with tech support that they'll be like okay I'm going to take over your computer and you guys have all done this at your actual jobs right when something's wrong with your computer the tech support at your job will like be granted remote access to fix the thing but when it's a nefarious actor and not actual tech support within your within your job they can install malware they can steal a lot of information I mean so many things can happen there's also examples here of like fraudulent sites that impersonate like ticket sellers or universities or people being offered fake jobs um and then having like placement fees taken from them or having you know personal data stolen but they also talk about crypto scams and I mean I've got Jay you may know all of this terminology but a lot of this was new to me like you know what a pig butchering scam is I actually don't what is that okay so it's like a hype it's a hybrid it's sort of a it's a crypto scam it's often involves crypto and then um it's usually some sort of like romance scam or catfishing scam um sometimes it can involve investment fraud so basically the scammer builds trust over like weeks months maybe even years with a victim because they're either you know supposedly dating them or they're investing a lot of time in them and eventually they have them invest in a fake crypto platform and then they'll extract a bunch of money and then vanish or otherwise send them money but usually using crypto because crypto is not traceable right and there's really not a lot of recourse like if somebody exploits you using crypto you can't really do a lot about it right it's not FDA insured money also there's pump and dump scammers you've probably heard of that so that's like uh we often think of it in terms of the stock market but like let's say the scammers are will artificially inflate the price of like a crypto that's not really worth a lot through hyping it up on social media so they'll get a bunch of investors and then the minute that people start buying it like crazy they just dump it off their holdings right so they pump and then they dump and then they end up having all of this worthless crypto and then finally the author talks quite a bit about phishing scams so we you know we just had a science or fiction about that and also have you guys heard of smishing? I feel like this is just like this is just a thing I do that with my wife right like I feel like this is something that like isn't just not going to catch on because there's an FCC article about it because I was like what is smishing and I googled it and it's like the FCC is writing about smishing basically smishing is just a portmanteau of phishing and um sms right or or text messaging so it's phishing via text as opposed to phishing via email phishing I guess is is specifically an email scam and smishing our text message scams but those are rising uh all the time and because of tools like AI whether we're talking about artificial voices making artificial videos or manipulating imagery it's just it's cheaper and easier to do now so you have these sort of like scam farms these huge organizations that are able to do this and exploit victims cheaply easily and then vanish vanish just as quickly as they arrived so we've talked about this before you know how do you protect yourself well we know that like what did we just talk about Steve third-party apps you know using two-factor authentication you know any sort of like additional security that you can use making sure that you know when you're on a website it's legitimate but honestly that's getting harder like back in the day you could almost be like you fell victim to a phishing scam that's embarrassing for you did you notice that it was ebork that was asking you for like a you know um some payment but now like people are cloning whole websites and they look the exact same and they're even cloning interior company you know videos or sounding like the company ceo and it's coming from emails that look the same so it's getting harder and harder to recognize that but of course don't click on suspicious links don't download attachments from people you don't know like we said enable two-factor authentication remember that most legitimate businesses are not going to ask you for information they're definitely not going to ask you to send them money it does seem to be the case that the pig butchering type scams and the personal relationship type scams are just they're just a lot trickier but more and more we're seeing organizations and governments are posting some information on what to do how to avoid it and if you do feel like you're involved in a scam who to reach out to like the FBI again this is age old fraud it's all the same stuff that always happened a swindler is going to swindle you've got to protect yourself but in the age of AI and cryptocurrency they can do it faster easier cheaper more efficiently more effectively and without a trace and so we've just got to remember that if we are victims of these types of scams we probably have less recourse and it's kind of gone are the days that it's like fool me once you know shame on you because I think a lot of people can be fooled pretty readily even very savvy people so you've got to get your heckles up you got to stay skeptical absolutely yeah you're right I mean even like as totally you know how much radar I have for this up all the time every now and then I still almost click things I shouldn't click mm-hmm of course because they seem to be coming from a legitimate source where you or the timing is coincident that's usually what gets me yeah like the timing is but the thing is to realize that there's so much going on you're going to get that you know incidental timing every now and then you know I just did something and then I get an email that might relate to that thing yeah just specific enough where you know you think it's oh yeah this is the follow-up of that thing that I just did but wait a minute is it you know and that's the ploy right because if we can send out thousands of thousands of these emails with scammers yeah somebody's going to click it's terrible I just think you know relying on like everybody doing the right thing every time is not a good strategy just statistically speaking yeah because they just overwhelm the statistics by just flooding the zone with scams you know and so that's the world we're living in where we're constantly being bombarded with attempts at stealing our information and stealing our money who wants to live in that world there has to be something we could do at the infrastructure side to just lower the how easy it is to just mass produce scams Steve I hate to say this but the political will has to be there yeah of course this and it's not yeah I agree and I think I think that you know organizations that are offering us the products you know the banking products that would allow us to be scammed they need to see that there is a capitalist incentive to help protect us right I would much rather use one of my credit cards online than a debit card because I know that if somebody steals my credit card you have protection with a credit card you'd I have protection less with the debit card much less I think banks especially online banks are getting very careful I've been recently dealing with that yeah and I had to download an authenticator app that just exists solely to be another layer of authentication for these types of interactions and that's fine I'm doing basically three factor authentication now yeah same gosh but I'm one of my banking apps is just as intense as my hospital records app yeah like it's amazing but yeah it's annoying but I'm like okay it's like all right I here's my two licenses here's like all this paperwork I have to prove who I am like all these things it's like okay I get it though it's a bank you know yeah and we get why yeah we're talking a lot of money and and the truth of the matter is like I think we have to be more vigilant and yes be more vigilant with clicking links and all of that but also like with your actual information you know in the past I might have been that person who like didn't really look at the receipt before I signed it but now I'm the kind of person who uses you know software both for my personal banking and my business banking where you know every few days I'm going in and I'm reconciling each transaction line and I'm constantly looking to make sure that everything is up to date are you finding any weird stuff no I mean if anything is just making me a better bookkeeper every time there's weird stuff it's a user error I'm all for that yeah it's like yeah you gotta look at your gotta look at your yeah it's because I've listed something as a as a as a transaction this kind of transaction but it should have been an asset and blah blah blah but I'm learning a lot and yeah it is definitely helping because the quicker you can figure these things out the quicker you can try to do something about it but I have a feeling the numbers that are reported are exceedingly low yeah probably 10 oh yeah that's right embarrassing yeah it's embarrassing to say you know I fell victim to somebody who pretended to be my grandson who was you know stranded and needed cash from me and I gave him cash really quickly like what a bummer yeah the elderly are high targets it's a yeah they're they're targets because they're not as savvy and sometimes they're just they have mild cognitive impairment or yeah whatever or they're more isolated than not you know they're living and they're more likely to be emotionally manipulated into helping people who depend on them the older you are the more likely you are to have people who depend on you because you might have children and your children have children so we need to watch out for our parents as well or yeah you know whoever our elders are totally we have to we have to be part of that team to help them yeah but don't think you're immune if you're young nope because you're not no none of us are all right thanks Kara j it's who's that noisy time all right guys last week I played this noisy okay ha ha everybody knows what that sounds like I got I'm glad you but I you know I got tons of emails like people are like it's someone peeing in an airplane flying over New Mexico it you know it's like it's funny I know but it's not what it is and I would never do a noisy of someone peeing unless it would sound it really cool no but I it's funny I got you guys thanks but I did get some legitimate guesses oh if you guys can only be a fly on the wall the wacky emails I get um all right but before I get into that I'm going to do a correction of a noisy couple weeks remember the one I explained to you was recording of someone who spoke out loud in a room they recorded themselves then they uploaded that sound file and then they downloaded it and then they and then they played it open air again and upload I guess are uploaded again whatever okay it's a little complicated but basically there was like massive distortion going on over the iterations to the point where you couldn't understand anything anymore okay so that was called it's Alvin Lucier's I am sitting in a room bit right so the person that wrote in said well well how many people wrote this in but this person in particular said so he's continually re-recording a playback of his own voice and the resulting degradation of the sound is less a case of media lossiness right meaning when I described it it was that every time they they uploaded it the algorithm inside of like YouTube would it would lose a little bit of data every time and it would get really messy if you did it like a hundred times right but that's not really it the the real thing that's going on is that the room that room that he was in was of a particular size and geometry and it caused certain resonant frequencies to be emphasized in the playback while others are attenuated right every room has has acoustic signatures like this where you know certain things bounce more readily depending on the objects and the surfaces and all that stuff so the end result is that the recorded voice gradually morphs into like a natural resonant frequency of the room not it wasn't an artifact of the uploading and the algorithm that was that would be processing that so if you play the full original recording of that that person's voice he's actually explaining it in the in the original recording of him sitting in the room he's telling you exactly what's happening I never listened to the whole thing because I was listening to it more as a noisy and not as like a piece of information so anyway there it is it's even more interesting now because it's not just software losing it it's the acoustic it's the acoustics in the room and the effect of those acoustics on on the recording which I think is fascinating all right so now back to the noisy that sounds like people peeing so of course Visto Tutti had to chime in here he said this one reminds me of the sound of tropical rain going down a big drain pipe I've heard similar sounds in Thailand where it can pour down like God himself has been drinking beer so you are incorrect sir but then I got another person that wrote in this is a listener named James Joyce and James says hey there jay my bro I'm probably way too late but I'm going to take a crack at who's that noisy anyway this week's noisy is a spacecraft is the spacecraft ingenuity the helicopter on Mars that went with the perseverance mission that is not the helicopter but I do understand why you selected that I have another person that guesses Karen Good and Karen says this week's noisy sounded like water to me but it also had a high pressure sound I didn't like that that reminds me of a drill or the high pressure water plaque remover that's used by dentists you know that thing they stick in your mouth it's like you know it's like a water pick right you guys know that yeah yes but you said it sounds bigger than that so she's going to guess a high pressure water cutter in a shop like a saw and she points out that you know with enough power there can cut through metal right definitely definitely I've seen it lots of times it's a really cool sound but that is not correct I have a listener named Sierra Asher and Sierra says hi Jay and he identifies himself as a man because depending on what culture you're from Sierra might not be a male name he's from Melbourne Australia he says we're cafes with espresso machines are everywhere this week's noisy sounds to me like milk being throft and heated by a steam wand of an espresso machine I do that at home I have my wife and I are coffee fanatics and we have an espresso cappuccino machine whatever you want to say and we do that all the time if there are definite similarities I totally see it but you are not correct and look at this I have another listener from Australia this person is Mark Penny and he says good day Jay I'm no visto tutti but to me this sounds like thousands of bats leaving a cave at night and he says he's looking forward to Australia 2026 mark you are not correct I do know what you're talking about because the bat the bats flapped their wings and there could be like a staccato type of thing happening for sure and in regarding Australia 2026 just so everybody knows it is fully fully fully going to happen it's completely in the works we have purchased airline tickets I am finalizing details with the Australian conference which is going to be not a con right so let me just quickly explain this while we're in the middle it's like a break in who's that noisy the conference is going to be in two places first it's going to be in Sydney so that conference will start on the 23rd and it'll go to Saturday the 25th this is a not a con guys this is a not a con that we're running in Australia this is an SGU conference that is being hosted by the Australian skeptics so we're working in coordination with them but just to make it clear like it's not going to be like any of their other conferences it's going to be exactly if you went to not a con that's what it's going to be if you haven't it's going to be us like all the SGU George Rob Ian will be there and Brian Wecht and Andrea Jones Roy we are not a con and we will be there and then the following weekend we will be going to New Zealand which I'm working with right now I'm working with Johnny from New Zealand who's part of the New Zealand skeptics that's right Johnny that's right Johnny and we're going to be you know picking the location and all the details and everything to be announced soon but tickets will go on sale for the Australian side of this hopefully if I can push hard enough maybe within a week but I'll keep you updated anyway thank you Mark for writing in and again no winner nobody guessed it it's not an easy one guys but I'm going to tell you what it is this is simple this is molten metal being poured into cold water which I was surprised nobody guessed it because I've had without exaggeration I must have had a hundred people email me one variation on this noisy or another but I finally got one that I thought was a really interesting version of it so it's a it's a dynamic sound because lots of things are happening first of all you know it's liquid metal so when it hits the water there's immediately a burst of steam and you're also hearing like the metal itself like entering the water so it's it's complicated it has a few different things going on if you haven't heard it in person or you know go watch a video of this and you'll see it there's an interesting little change to the sound it's not like just dropping coins in the water it has its own effect kind of reminds me of the difference between pouring cold water into a cup or pouring hot water into a cup you can hear the difference hot water makes a different sound than cold water you guys remember that nope no yes all right don't get too excited all right I got a new noisy for you guys this week's noisy was sent in by a listener named Justin Fisher yeah if you guys think you know what this week's noisy is or you heard something cool email me at wtn at the skeptics guide dot org if you guys watch our live streams on Wednesday Bob Steve and I recently demoed a video game that a friend of ours and a supporter of the sgu his name is Alex him and his team created this game called platypus reclaimed and you know we're trying to help him because he's you know he's got a small gaming company there are a bunch of skeptics and we just thought it would be cool to help him promote his game so first of all i'm just want to tell you real quick it's called platypus platypus reclaimed and the cool thing about this game is it doesn't have computer graphics at all it's all handmade clay yeah it's cool looking it's it's really cool you've never seen anything like it so every frame of it is clay that they've molded into different positions so it's like you know it's an incredible amount of work and incredible attention to detail so that alone is worth checking out but i it's a side scroller i've played this game at this point quite a bit it's a lot of fun it's a good simple game it's a lot of fun absolutely yeah i think it would actually be good it's a good like game to as a parent to play with your younger kids because it's it's accessible to them and it's accessible to you as the parent like you can actually play it um because they have different levels of difficulty and everything and it's interesting um because there's lots of different options in the game and you just gotta see it it's got really cool parallax bob was freaking out about the multi-layered parallax the bottom it bottom line is we we want to thank alex for his support and we want to help support their their video game um so anyway if you end up taking a moment to play it and you'll like it leave them a um you know leave them a um a good review because that helps more people find them um so anyway very cool game and i hope you guys enjoy it jay didn't he say that they're including some kind of sg u shout out in the game yeah so that was a little secret but okay he's he's spilled it so he is going to put in some sg u easter eggs into the game which i don't even know what he's going to do i mean god i just when he said it i just thought how cool would it be if the ship shoots steve's head out as the weapon right that would be really fun all right anyway if you have if you have the time go check it out platypus reclade and jay even though we're going to australia next year they are having their 2025 conference october fourth to fifth at the university of melbourne parkville you can go to skepticon.org.au to check it out and get tickets all right guys i'm going to do a quick email this is a follow-up to bob's news item actually last week um about the nuclear propulsion and we were talking a little bit about hydrogen as a propellant and some people emailed in for some clarification so one thing to do for background right so sometimes he gets confusing like bob and i had to make sure we were consistently using the right terminology here for rockets something could be a fuel and or a propellant right usually if like you're burning hydrogen to oxygen the result of that combustion is the propellant as well right so it's the fuel and the propellant but with the nuclear system the nuclear reaction is the fuel and the propellant is not the fuel it's just the propellant so that's what we were talking about hydrogen is a great fuel because it's very light and so you get the most acceleration change in you know delta v over for the for the mass of fuel which is for rocketry that's the big deal the question i had though was like is it a good propellant alone because it's very light so you don't get that much inertia out of it but what a couple of people pointed out i'll just read the one email from matthew who said hydrogen is a great propellant if you are optimizing for isp with the combustion chamber at a given temperature the average kinetic energy of the molecules is equal irrespective of the type of gas if the gas is made up of lighter molecules those molecules will be moving faster faster molecules leads to faster exhaust velocity faster exhaust velocity leads to higher isp higher isp leads to hate hate leads to suffering thank you steve oh my gosh i was about to say that whoa so that was in his email so he matthew gets the star wars nerd points for that i wasn't even reading and i that's where exactly where my mind was leads to that leads to the dark side okay so essentially yes it's lighter but it goes faster so the temperature is really the key out of the key determining factor the right heavier molecules go slower lighter molecules go faster as propellant at a given temperature and so they kind of evens out now it's way more complicated than that it's all kind of gas stuff you know it's it's a lot of complicated equations it's not just oh my god yeah it's not simple like that but this is a general sort of physics principle the other thing that is interesting though that hydrogen as a propellant the really the main downside is that it is volume is that it doesn't can like liquid hydrogen doesn't condense down as well as other propellants might and it's you have to keep it very cold and it it is very corrosive so it's just not a great propellant for that reason right it's just it takes a lot of technology and infrastructure and it's very tricky to deal with it's a corrosive i wasn't aware of that one yeah it's and yeah it's hard to contain too because it's so small again kind of leaks and get through yeah it's a lot yeah all right i'm also going to do a quick name that logical fallacy while you're at it well that this one comes from max he writes high sg i came across the following fallacy used by douglas murray and mosab usef in debates against critics of the idf unless you've been there you cannot express an opinion on the issue and since i've been there i have more credibility than you someone made fun of this of that argument by saying katie perry therefore knows more about space than steven hawking because she's been there and he hasn't i can't quite pinpoint of this is just an argument from authority or if there's something else to it max what do you guys think unless you've been there is that moving the goalpost no i think it is an argument from authority it's just kind of a tangential one in a way i remember joe nickle when he would do investigations he would always go to the place that he was investigating even if it gave him zero information just so he could say he was there because he knew that people used this logical fallacy so for example he was writing an article about the bimuda triangle you gain absolutely no information by actually going to the bimuda triangle unless you let you eliminate their but that just to say right he had he always because i remember i went on a couple of investigations with him and um he's like take a picture of me in front of the house like why because i'm here i have to prove that i was here otherwise people will say well you didn't even go there so how do you know what's going on which is it so yeah it's a total logical fallacy it's kind of a non sequitur but it's just saying your argument is not valid because of something about you or your argument is valid or more valid because there's something about you rather than the argument itself that's sort of the broad umbrella of the argument from authority in this case it's not even genuine authority it's just that were you physically there or not even when it doesn't matter for your opinion it's one thing to say well you didn't see something yourself and so that kind of diminishes your opinion like if we're talking about how wondrous the grand canyon is i say well did you ever see it in person like no i saw pictures of it's like well you really do get a different impression of it if you see it firsthand i tried to say that to you guys before the eclipse i remember yeah absolutely i was like you just don't know or even when you're like it's partial i intellectually believed you but until i saw it myself i didn't appreciate it you're yeah you can't fully a hundred percent right you have to see it but that's this is different this is i do think the kedy perry example is perfect like you don't understand space anymore because you went up in a rocket you know and steven hawking's knowledge about astrophysics is not diminished because he's never been in space yeah maybe other legitimate reasons why a person doesn't understand something yeah but that's not one of them right and it's so silly because it's it's so broad that statement so broad i mean what you could say is that she understands what it's like to launch in that specific rocket yeah right exactly sure she does but that's about it going to a suborbital suborbital ball or was that intentional i do think you can say something like you know i hope that you will understand that my perspective on the issue is different than your perspective because i have experience experience right yeah and i think that's what makes sense right i do have a different perspective but not i have more intellectual knowledge right or your opinion your deficient because you should defer to my opinion right because of some whatever tangential relationship i have with the topic yeah all right right pilots who you know say they found you you know i've seen ufo's and things like that right oh well you're not up there in the in the error in the cockpit well that they're they're going beyond it they're saying they have special perception skills because they're pilots that totally is an argument from authority but what about i guess here would be a question and tell me if you think that this is parallel because an example i can think of is if a person let's say like a white person tries to make a racial argument about what about the experience of a black person and then a black person says you don't know what it's like to be black like you your opinion on this is not valid yeah i mean i think there are limits to that though i think it's it's valid to say like listen like it depends on what they're talking about i think you can understand racism into again intellectually and you could make valid arguments that are logical and evidence-based that deal with that even if you were not personally involved but you do gain a perspective like you don't know what it's really like until you've lived it that's valid and i think the issue is that very often what will see happen with sort of intellectual dark web types is that they'll try to make intellectual arguments to counter lived experience arguments to minimize the lived experience and say no i know better than you because look at the data and that person's like yeah but i've lived this like i know what it feels like to have microaggressions committed against me but it does couple ways but you shouldn't say i've lived it therefore i could make up facts about it and your statistics are wrong because i don't believe your statistics you know you yeah you could you could make it a logical fallacy from either either way which is often getting these these are informal logical fallacies and it all depends on exactly how you're formulating your claims and right and then it's not it's not a simple formula like some arguments from authority are legitimate some are not legitimate right depends on their it depends on the details and i think just this idea of i know more is such a vague statement that's the important thing right i know more because of x okay let's be specific about what i i have an experience that you don't have therefore you know x y and z or i have you know studied this intellectually i have a phd in this therefore i've got more information i've just got into an argument with in my in the comments on my blog about autism and somebody is like has no idea what they're talking about bottom line is they don't know what they're talking about they and they's like throwing like one link to one study up i'm like dude i have surveyed the literature on this i've been writing about this for 20 years yeah you swim you swim those waters yeah this is yeah i'm telling you what the all the evidence shows not just you're just cherry picking this one study you have no way to put it into context you just don't know what you're talking about that's different you know oh you know a perfect example of this is that you know i have a very dear friend who's a young mom and she's not a young mom she's an older mom she's my age but she's a mom of a young child and she struggles with um shall i say boundaries with her child and one of the things that we often i bite my tongue and i don't because i don't have children right it's like it's not my place to judge it's not my place to give advice because i don't have children but there are times when she she might say yeah but you shouldn't blah blah and i'll be like well i am a psychologist who treats people in family dynamics and i do have specialized knowledge about parenting styles and about outcomes for children and so it's one of those really tough things where it's like you know i have intellectual knowledge she has experiential knowledge sometimes my intellectual knowledge is is more valid in that setting but sometimes her experiential knowledge is more valid in that setting exactly turns out exactly what you're talking about yeah again where i as a parent you know where i you know think people who you know they're too young to haven't had their kids yet or whatever whatever reason they don't have kids being judgmental about parents it's like you know until you've had to deal with kids yeah you have absolutely no basis to be judgmental it doesn't mean that you can't have an opinion about like beating your kids you know but i'm just saying oh i would never let my kid do that it's like yeah talk to me when you had a kid right right but at the same time when somebody says i don't know why i just keep doing this and this keeps doing the outcome it's like well because there's evidence to help us data show blah blah blah right it's tricky yeah okay let's go on with science or fiction it's time for science or fiction each week i come up with three science news items or facts two real and one fake and i challenge my panel skeptics tell me which one is the fake just three regular news items you guys ready okay oh yeah here we go item number one in the first such study in germany in almost 50 years a mandatory speed limit of 75 miles per hour would result in a 26 percent decrease in crashes with severe injuries i number two scientists have demonstrated a quantum sensor that is able to determine linked properties such as position and momentum to great precision bypassing the limits of the heisenberg uncertainty principle and i number three a recent study finds that despite advances people are still able to distinguish in many cases between ai generated voices and human voices evan go first okay first such study in germany in almost 50 years okay a mandatory speed limit of 75 miles per hour unusual that they're using miles per hour but that's well it actually is 120 kilometers per hour i should say that too i think it translates to 75 miles per hour okay would result in a 26 decrease in crashes with severe injuries so right now there isn't any so we're talking about obon yeah there is no speed limit oh boy i that sounds right what i'm not sure where the trick would be here on this particular one but this makes sense to me can i ask for clarification when you say speed limit you mean upper speed limit yeah you don't mean minimum speed limit oh yeah upper yeah right maximum speed limit i suppose yes a 26 degree okay i i'm buying that one the second one about scientists have demonstrated a quantum sensor that is able to determine linked properties such as position and momentum to great precision bypassing the limits of the heisenberg uncertainty principle and i'm sure that and there's a reason why it's called the heisenberg uncertainty principle do you want to know what that is yes please so the heisenberg uncertainty principle is a law of quantum mechanics basically that says that there are absolute limits to how much you could know about linked properties so like position and momentum so if you're studying a particle the more you know about its position the less you know about its momentum and the more you know about its momentum the less you know about its position and you could mathematically calculate like how precisely you could know each of those factors if you know one with certainty you could know nothing about the other yeah basically got it so a hundred percent one zero percent other like a it's a zero sum game it's a zero sum game yeah right so they've just demonstrated a quantum sensor able to determine the linked properties well i don't see why that's you know i mean you had a news item earlier steve about quantum computing and advances there why couldn't they have developed a quantum sensor able to determine this i'm not sure i have a problem with that one either don't just blight well thank you thank you thank you that's all i needed number three a recent study finds that despite advances people are still able to distinguish in as many cases between generated ai generated voices and human voices people are still able to distinguish recent study despite advances oh well i think this is kara's news item right where we're just talking about this how they're using ai to trick people because they can't determine you know the grandchild is calling the grandmother the grandmother isn't going to know between ai and human in in certain cases and this technology is getting better it will continue to get better yeah all right i'll say the ai one is the fiction i have a feeling that uh more in more cases they weren't able to make the determination between the two how's that okay pop the germany one um i mean what are they are they changing it this like this is the autobahn territory right i mean we're with an unlimited are they saying that that if you if you take the unlimited speed limit down to 75 then we're seeing this sort of i'm not sure the context okay that's correct i mean yeah i mean that sounds just sound entirely unreasonable it's of course the second one got my damn attention here this quantum sensor um i'd steal i know you knew i'd be all over this i'm not going to fall for this one they're they're doing some trick i mean because normally this should not be possible this is pretty fundamental but they're just they're doing something that that is not removing probably that's not removing the uncertainty it's just shifting it something that that makes sense i'm not sure how they would do that because like you said these are these are linked um but it's it's some trick that they're doing here um that's that's what i'm thinking is happening here so for the third one i'll just have i think this is baloney i think this one's fiction here i don't think let me make sure i'm not yet yet again missing a critical word in this stuff in this thing here we see they developed a sensor people yeah people are still able to distinguish uh many cases between yeah i'm i'll say that this one's fiction i mean i've heard some really great stuff i don't know what cutting the cutting edge is right now but what i have heard was you know fairly convincing oh wait question then steve is this like here's a voice is this ai or is it real or is it like here's your brother jack is this you know what i mean it was both you know it was both all right they did just ai voice is not based on any person and the ai voices that were trying to mimic a specific person okay i mean i've heard some done like for you steve and and it wasn't perfect i mean it seemed like i could tell the difference but that was like what a year ago i think they're probably good enough where people are not going to easily detect that with any reliability so i'll say that's fiction number three okay jay yeah i mean this one about the in germany and the speed limit right so they're saying that they're going to change it to 75 and that would result in 26 percent decrease in crashes i mean how can that not be science i just i can't imagine that decreasing the speed limit wouldn't result in lowering crashes um i guess the real number here is 26 percent all right a good question in here would be like how fast were people typically driving on these streets you know i just think that science there's too much there to to agree with uh the second one about the heisenberg principle i mean it's a heisenberg it's the heisenbeheim you know who i mean how the hell could they possibly do it right i agree with what bob was saying about like you know that when you know more of one of one parameter the other one the information on the other one decreases i can't i can't imagine a way for them to get around that i mean i'd like to think that they could that one just seems a little too obvious that that's the one going to the third one a recent study that finds that despite recent advances i guess people are still able to distinguish uh ai generated voices and human voices um so i agree with this this could be the two-pay fallacy but i know i can do it what i can do is i can't if you play the play the recording for me there's lots of little subtleties that are in there and when i've made extensive recordings of all of us you know ai recordings you know i know what those little nuances are that it gets wrong i'm an ai right now can you hear what i'm saying right now so i mean i know that i know your voice is better than most people's voices in my life but but the point being though is that there are there are tells still that i think are detectable and i think they're going to go away very soon but i think that's science too i i feel comfortable going with the second one you know the heisenberg one as the fiction just because it's a big long-standing you know what would you call it a rule a um you know it's a it's a definitive barrier right that that has been well documented and gone over so many times i just can't imagine that that was overturned that one's the fiction okay and kara i think you'd call it a principle jen thank you it's not a maneuver though it's not like the heimlich maneuver it's a very maneuver principle um the kobi ashimur i feel like i don't have a lot to add to what most folks said um i think that it you would really get us on this if the fiction was that putting in a speed limit actually didn't decrease severe injuries from crashes um because otherwise like is every speed limit in the world not evidence-based i just think yeah we've seen it over and over we saw the speed limits go down in new york city to like really low and fewer bicycle and pedestrian crashes so i don't know that one just seems realistic unless there's unless you fudge the numbers somewhere um so really it's between going with evin and bob and saying that the uh ai voices are distinguishable from human voices the fiction or going with jay and saying that heisenberg uncertainty principle has not been bypassed i guess i don't know it's a principle different than like a fundamental law and is anything really fundamental in physics like we think it is until it's not right yeah even like gravity like it worked for newton um so i don't know and and you did say that they're using a quantum sensor it's not like a traditional sensor so maybe you have to fight quantum with quantum so and then yeah i think i have to i think i have to go with with uh evan and um bob on this i don't think people are generally good at distinguishing between the voices and jay maybe you are i mean the wording says despite advances people are still able to distinguish in many cases between ai generated voices and human voices i think probably the opposite is true that's a good distinction care i used my anecdote to kind of overlay on well i should have thought it broader and i okay but that yeah and so my guess is that people are generally not able to distinguish but maybe some people still can but they're the majority not the not the minority so i'll go with the other two guys and say that that one's the fiction okay so you all agree i number one so we'll start there in the first such study in germany in almost 50 years a mandatory speed limit of 75 miles per hour 120 kilometers per hour would result in a 26 percent decrease in crashes with severe injury you all think this one is science i guess the question is is it possible that german drivers are such that they're comfortable driving fast or is the autobahn sort of designed to accommodate faster traffic and forcing it into a lower speed would necessarily make it safer or maybe that 26 figure is wrong i think the idea is you can go even you can go way fast on the there's no limit there's no yeah but i'm saying like right now the shape of it doesn't reduce speed there's a suggested speed limit of 130 kilometers per hour but there's no mandatory limit five so there was that's like 87 so this yeah so this would introduce a mandatory limit which i think by definition a lot of people choose to take the autobahn just so they can drive really fast i just think it's crazy i think it's it's crazy that they let people drive that fast because the people who aren't driving that fast would have a big problem right oh this is the right way yeah all right well this one is science this is science yeah yeah it makes sense because of course i can't believe they've just now done a study on this they have it was 45 years or something from the last day because they didn't want to study it you know what he was like we're driving fast leave us alone and we like it leave us alone all right let's go to number two scientists have demonstrated a quantum center that is able to determine linked properties such as position and momentum to great precision bypassing the limits of the heisenberg uncertainty principle and of course these would be gentlemen heisenberg compensators right no so hang on now you seems like j evin and carer not totally clear on what the heisenberg uncertainty principle it is bob would you say it's fair to say that this is as well established as the speed of light limit as just a fundamental property oh it's fundamental you could absolutely say it's fundamental isn't yeah like it's not a function of like our tools aren't good enough correct no no it's not it's not a technical technical limit is a physical limit right it's how the universe presents itself to us there's no way around it unless you know unless we have new physics no not not even new physics but just some a way to a way to preserve to preserve it but gain the information you're still looking for i don't know it depends on what do you think the one key word is in this item let's see there's a very key word in this item quantization it's able to no one demonstrated to great precision nope no hold on bypassing the limits bypassing the limits it's bypassing yeah it's not instead of breaking this one removing it's bypassing yeah science because it's not violating the limits of heisenberg uncertainty principle it's bypassing them it's going around them it's going around them so bob you pretty much nailed it it's it's figure they figured out a way to spread the uncertainty out to things they don't care about so that it and and limit it to the features they amazing do what else could they do if this if given that this is true which i assume this was true it had to be something like that otherwise because yeah you're not going to get rid of it you can't get rid of it and then yeah the very specific this does not violate the heisenberg uncertainty principle all right the name of the paper is quantum enhanced multi-parameter sensing in a single mode and here's the metaphor they give to sort of explain what's happening i said all right the metaphor is it's like a clock with an hour hand and a minute hand the hour hand if it's just let's just say let's say you have a clock with just one hand it has just an hour hand or a minute hand if you choose the hour hand it gives you good information about where you are in the day but it's not precise or you could choose the minute hand and you could know precisely what minute it is but you don't know where you are in the day so it's a scale so what they do with it it's they said that if you're looking to nail down position and momentum you can have uncertainty about where you are on the bigger picture like we don't know a grid we're in but wherever grid we're in we know exactly where we are in that grid and they don't really care about the bigger picture they just want to know the precise momentum and position wherever it is right so right yeah so that's it so they basically said they would say it's like we're spreading the the uncertainty out to these other parameters that we don't care about so that we could have more precision with the things we do care about like position and momentum so yeah it's we you know it's still puzzling it's still puzzling but it's because freaking quantum mechanics but yeah it's just an end run around that limit sounds like bs to me not seriously like we're saying oh they're just kind of you know jerking around the corners like that doesn't make much sense to me says we deterministically prepare grid states in the mechanical motion of a trapped ion and demonstrate uncertainties and position and momentum below the standard quantum limit there it is crystal yeah yeah i mean that's they're below the limit so that's they did something special there yeah they did it so damn man i wonder what that implications are for other well if you can make sensors with incredible precision that's where here's i think the other thing they said is that they kind of bob they borrowed principles they learned from quantum computing oh wait so they kind of developed this technology because they're trying to error reduce in quantum computing and they basically ported it over to sensing technology oh hence the quantum sensor yeah i don't know if that helps but that's what they said all this means that every study finds despite advances people are still able to distinguish in many cases between AI generated AI generated voices and human voices is the fiction because what the study found is that people were completely unable to distinguish wow the AI generated voices from human voices and and that was either just generic voices or specific people either way that this is just this is what the latest greatest like high-end voice uh technology AI voice technology the people in their study had no idea interestingly they talked about um looking at AI generated pictures of people and they've gotten so good oh yeah not only can people not distinguish but they're more likely to believe that an AI generated picture is real than a real picture is well AI generated pictures are so-called hyper real now in this in the audio test they did not see the hyper real phenomenon so people were not more likely to think AI voices were real over real voices but it but they were unable to distinguish the two i bet you i i would love to see an experiment done where because i think my hypothesis is that this plays off of of the very human bias where we like things that are slightly more attractive and i think that we don't have that with an audio bias but we have it with the yeah uh vision bias and the AI knows what little tweaks to make to an answer the AI can make people look kinder they smile more with their eyes they look slightly more attractive and people are going to go oh yeah that's more real interesting it would be really interesting to to have AI ramp that up and ramp that down that's weird they know what our brains want it's not like the uncanny valley it's like the hypercanny valley or something right it's definitely real we've blown way past that the uncanny valley but here's another hypothesis carap perhaps we're and i don't know if they could control for this in a subsequent study in our media saturated culture we are so used to photos of people that have been altered and perfected that we think that's real that that's our yeah i think i think we could probably do two studies i don't think people could distinguish between a photoshopped picture and a non-photoshopped picture of like a model for example and then i think that people would or distinguish which is real versus which isn't real and then you add that to like even a picture of ourselves yeah i bet you would have a hard time being like oh that's the real me versus that's not the real me because it's there's the slightest little tweaks and now that we don't have like 17 fingers in AI yeah what you do with that issue yeah it'd be a better test if it's if it's somebody you know because how often do you look at yourself compared to looking at other people yeah people look at themselves more than they look at us we always see ourselves in the mirror so when you look at a picture of yourself it's reversed from what you're typically yeah which is why we like selfies yeah but i still would think that we would know like i think i know jay's face and how it should move more than i would know my own face and how it moves and i think that that is generational well no but but bob is saying the movement is different that's a different layer none of this is dealing with movement i know but i think but even i think like gen alphas and around that era they're watching their faces on videos all the time but by but but in terms of being able to distinguish AI because i recently saw you know there was this company that did we talk about this they make movies where you can like dub a foreign movie into english and then ai changes the lip movements to match the yeah right and it's total uncanny valley like oh yeah but obviously we're not there yet with video right but he wasn't saying video versus photo he was saying a video of jay versus a video of him yeah and i disagree with you bob but i or i agree with you but i think it's a generational difference i think younger people have a very self-gaze when it comes to social maps yeah yeah all right and i think give us a quote inductive reasoning is of course good guessing not sound reasoning but the finest results in science have been obtained this way calling the guesswork a working hypothesis its consequences are tested by experiment in every conceivable way and that was penned by joseph william mellor m e l l o r who was an english chemist and an authority on ceramics ceramics and he grew up in new zealand uh 1868 to 1938 uh apparently this uh what the um an expert i mean you know there you go an expert in this in this particular field and you know looked upon as a world expert on this now the quote itself i kind of thought was interesting because uh i i did a little reading about inductive reasoning because i don't know that i really read much about it before and you know einstein was not a proponent of inductive reasoning in fact he argued quite extensively apparently against it and he was more about deductive reasoning and you know didn't feel that inductive reasoning brought you to uh to the true nature of science and uh there was kind of a uh you know a collision there in a sense in a sense of those two schools of thought but effectively i think what modern science is saying is that they're partners in a sense induction and deduction you can have both yeah deduction goes from the general to the specific inductive goes from the specific to the general you have to engage in inductive reasoning if you that's how you come up with a hypothesis yeah yeah that's bottom up reasoning but it i think the problem is that bottom up does tend to not always be as accurate the more that you kind of that's why you got to test it doesn't matter how you cope with your hypotheses as long as you test them right yeah no i guess that's true but i think there is a difference between using reasoning for hypothesis testing and using reasoning philosophically deductive reasonings are definitely more valid philosophically if you're just trying to reason to a conclusion that's why inductive reasoning doesn't give you a conclusion it gives you a hypothesis right and that is as long as you understand that you're fine the problem is when people use it to come up with a hypothesis that they think is a conclusion when it is right and to form these like huge generalizations yeah exactly which is why i think uh melo or uh couched this particular quote correctly and put it in good context steve yeah i heard a beep on my phone i looked down it was a link to a news item and the title of the news item is quantum limits redefine yep i just made it all right well thank you all for joining me this week yes and until next week this is your skeptics guide to the universe skeptics guide to the universe is produced by sgu productions dedicated to promoting science and critical thinking for 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