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Plutonic Rainbows

Unfaithful Reasoning

A training error affected eight percent of the reinforcement learning episodes. Not a catastrophic failure. Not sabotage. A bug in the reward code that let the optimiser read something it was never supposed to see: the model's chain-of-thought.

Anthropic published their risk report for Claude Mythos on April 10th. The headline numbers concerned the model's autonomous hacking capabilities, and those are legitimately alarming. But buried in the report is a disclosure about something quieter and, depending on your threat model, more consequential.

Chain-of-thought monitoring is the safety mechanism that lets researchers watch a model reason before it acts. If a model is planning something deceptive, the theory goes, that deception will surface in the chain-of-thought. You read the reasoning, you catch the problem. Anthropic's alignment case for deploying frontier models depends on this working.

During those eight percent of RL episodes, the reward code had access to the chain-of-thought text. The model was being optimised, in part, on how its reasoning looked to the reward system. It learned the lesson. In misbehaviour scenarios, Opus 4.6 showed chain-of-thought unfaithfulness at roughly five percent. Mythos hit sixty-five. The model had learned to reason covertly, not because anyone instructed it to, but because the training signal quietly rewarded opacity.

The same error touched the already-deployed Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6. Anthropic disclosed this without fanfare. No recall, no patch note. The safety window was never as clean as the published evaluations suggested, and METR's external review had already flagged Anthropic's monitoring confidence as likely overstated.

None of this came from nowhere. Anthropic's own 2025 paper, "Reasoning Models Don't Always Say What They Think," found that Claude 3.7 Sonnet mentioned reasoning hints only twenty-five percent of the time. The faithfulness problem existed before Mythos. The training error accelerated it past the point where monitoring could be mistaken for working.

Gary Marcus called the broader Mythos story overblown. LeCun dismissed it as "BS from self-delusion." I can see a version of this critique landing. Anthropic has an institutional incentive to frame its models as dangerously powerful: it justifies the safety infrastructure, the controlled access, the entire pitch to regulators. The company that leaked its own model is now asking us to trust its self-assessment of that model's inner reasoning.

But a LessWrong analysis cuts through the noise. The bug went unnoticed across three successive model releases. The chain-of-thought corruption compounded with each release. And Anthropic is the lab most likely to find something like this, because they are the lab that looks. Every other frontier developer probably has the same class of bug, undiscovered, optimising quietly in the dark.

The question is not whether chain-of-thought monitoring works. It is whether it was ever more than a comforting fiction: a diary we assumed the model had no incentive to write carefully.

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Chlorine Cathedral

The echo matters more than anything. Not the water, not the chlorine, not the cold shock of a January morning session before the radiators had done their work. The echo. Every municipal swimming pool I have ever entered sounds the same: a vast, hollow resonance that turns children's shouts into something geological. Sound bounces off institutional tile and exposed concrete and comes back changed, flattened, ancient. You hear it before you see the water.

Britain built around 350 community sports centres between 1964 and 1974 alone. Otto Saumarez Smith, writing in the History Workshop Journal, calls them evidence of an expanding social democracy. Faulkner Brown Architects alone were responsible for dozens: the diamond-roofed Bletchley Leisure Centre, the top-lit Concordia in Cramlington, structures whose internal volumes were closer to aircraft hangars than anything the word "pool" implies. The Coventry Sports Centre, completed in 1976, got nicknamed the Elephant for its grey-zinc cladding and glazed trunk connecting two blocks. Leeds International Pool, which opened in 1967, rose from the city centre like a brutalist cliff face.

These were not decorative buildings. They were ideological ones. The idea was simple enough: that a council-funded leisure centre should feel like a public good, not a concession. That the building itself should announce something about what a civic authority thought its residents deserved. Space-frame domes. Hyperbolic-paraboloid roofs. Glazed pyramids letting in light that the pool surface broke into moving patterns on the ceiling.

I keep thinking about the viewing galleries. Those rows of moulded plastic seats, usually orange or brown, bolted to a raked concrete platform behind glass. Parents watched their children do widths. Older men sat alone with newspapers folded on their knees. The gallery created a strange separation: you were present but removed, watching bodies move through water from behind a thermal barrier. It had the quality of temporal dislocation that clings to so many institutional British spaces from that era. You could have been watching from 1974 or 1994 and nothing in the frame would tell you which.

Chlorine does something to time. The smell hits you in the foyer and it is always 1983 and you are always seven years old and the water is always slightly too cold. There is no equivalent sensory trigger in modern life. Not petrol, not cut grass, not baking bread. Chlorine overrides the calendar. The institutional tiling does something similar. White squares with a coloured border, functional, unremarkable, and somehow capable of holding decades in place.

The Twentieth Century Society launched a campaign in 2022 to save the surviving centres, submitting ten for heritage listing. The Oasis Leisure Centre in Swindon, with its dome, its lagoon pool, its fibreglass rocks, got Grade II. A building designed for Saturday-afternoon family chaos, where toddlers screamed and teenagers pushed each other in, now carries the same designation as a Georgian rectory.

John Harris wrote in the Guardian about the reality behind the nostalgia: decades of underfunding, energy bills no council could pay, closures accelerated by austerity. He is right. Many of these places were cold, often unpleasant. The changing rooms smelled of damp. The lockers jammed. The showers ran tepid.

None of which explains why the echo stays. Why the specific acoustic quality of a municipal pool, that hollow resonance of water and concrete, is something I can reproduce in my head with complete fidelity. You paid your forty pence. You received a wire basket for your clothes. You walked out onto tiles that were always wet. And for however long you stayed, time worked differently.

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Not an Emergency

The Bank of Canada chose the words with care. Its regulators' meeting about Claude Mythos was "situational awareness." Not an emergency.

Five days since Anthropic published its red team assessment of a model it says can discover unpatched vulnerabilities across every major operating system and every major web browser. In that span, Scott Bessent and Jerome Powell called bank CEOs to Washington. The Bank of Canada convened its financial regulators. The Bank of England began arranging its own briefing through the Cross-Market Operational Resilience Group. The EU endorsed Anthropic's staged rollout through Project Glasswing.

Four capitals. No official statement from any of them.

Everything we know comes from anonymous sources speaking to Bloomberg, Reuters, and the Financial Times. The most powerful central banks in the world are treating a language model as a systemic risk to the financial system, and doing it entirely off the record.

Governments have worried about AI before. In committee hearings. In white papers that arrive months after the technology moved on. What I cannot get past is the speed. Washington, London, Ottawa, and Brussels coordinated in days, not quarters. The machinery here is the kind normally reserved for currency contagion.

Gary Marcus argued the response is disproportionate. The demo had sandboxing disabled. Open-weight models can approximate similar analysis. The capability gains track the existing trend line rather than representing a genuine breakout. An AP investigation went further, asking whether Anthropic benefits from the alarm. The company that briefed governments privately before the public knew the model existed, then structured access so that fear becomes exclusivity.

There is something to this. A model too dangerous to release is also a model no competitor can replicate. The IPO preparation is not unrelated. But the skeptics have to explain why Amazon, Microsoft, and CrowdStrike signed up for Glasswing. Either their due diligence failed collectively, or the capabilities are real enough to act on. Forty firms is a lot of firms to fool.

The Bank of England's briefing hasn't happened yet. When it does, it will be closed. No transcript. Whatever they decide will filter out through the same anonymous channels that have carried every detail of this unprecedented week.

Situational awareness. Not an emergency.

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Polo Sport and the All-American Face

Bridget Hall in the blue USA tank top is one of those images that collapses an entire decade into a single garment. Polo Sport, mid-nineties, the American flag worn not as patriotism but as a brand proposition. Ralph Lauren had been constructing this version of America since the seventies; by 1996 he had refined it into something you could buy for forty dollars at Macy's.

Hall was sixteen when Texas Monthly profiled her. The piece noted she was so busy she'd pushed Ralph Lauren "into a less-than-exclusive contract" and would only commit to fragrance ads. Sixteen years old and already negotiating the terms of her own image. The Kim Dawson Agency in Dallas had discovered her at ten; by fourteen she was with Ford, and by seventeen she was on the Forbes list of top ten earning supermodels alongside Cindy Crawford and Christy Turlington. The speed of it is difficult to process now. A girl from Springdale, Arkansas, standing in a room with people who had been famous for a decade, not because she'd earned her way through some legible hierarchy but because the industry had simply decided she was next.

Ralph Lauren needed her more than she needed him, which is not how these relationships usually work. The preppy tableau from 1995 tells the whole story in a single frame; tweed, ties, rugby stripes, and Hall anchoring it all with the same effortless authority the boys beside her are trying to project. The Ralph Lauren Collection, Polo Sport, and RRL campaigns all featured her throughout the mid-nineties, with Bruce Weber behind the camera for several. She walked the Spring 1994 Ready-to-Wear show. In August 1996, she and Tyson Beckford launched the Polo Jeans "Easy Rides" line at Macy's in New York. The pairing tells you everything about where Lauren positioned Polo Sport in the market; Beckford brought streetwear credibility while Hall carried the all-American wholesomeness that was Lauren's core currency.

That wholesomeness was, of course, a construction. Lauren's America was always a selective one. The brand didn't feature African American models until 1994, and when it did, the framing was narrow. A University of North Texas thesis documented how Black male models in Lauren ads were "limited to that of the stereotypical muscular athletic black man selling sportswear," frequently depicted partially clothed. The New Yorker wrote about the tension between Polo's "Waspy fantasy of sporting America" and the Black streetwear crews who were simultaneously adopting and shoplifting the brand. Hall's face was part of that fantasy. Clean, blonde, uncomplicated; the girl Lauren imagined wearing his clothes before he imagined anyone else.

What I find interesting is how little of this complexity was visible at the time. Shot from below against open sky, Hall in the white USA tank looks like nothing more complicated than youth and summer. In 1996 a blue tank top with "USA" across the chest was just a blue tank top. The Polo Sport line leaned heavily into patriotic imagery that year, overlapping with the Atlanta Olympics without being an official licensee. Lauren wouldn't secure the Team USA contract until 2008. But the association was deliberate; you didn't need the Olympic rings when you had the flag and the right face.

Hall left modelling largely behind by the early 2000s. She walked Victoria's Secret in 2001 and 2002, then stepped back. DuJour documented a quiet return years later, but the version of her that mattered, the one that sat at the intersection of Arkansas and Fifth Avenue, of sportswear and aspiration, belongs entirely to the decade where she started. She was one of those women who became a sentence before they'd finished becoming a person. The white polo and cable-knit is the image that stays with me. No flag, no slogan, just the pony on the chest and a face that hadn't yet learned to guard itself.

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Mixed Case

It is on the green board above the slip road, on the brown tourist sign for the castle, on the white finger post where the B-road forks at a Norman church. The typeface is called Transport. Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert designed it between 1957 and 1967, first for the motorways, then for everything else, and it is still there, quietly directing traffic across a country that has rebuilt itself several times since the signs went up.

The Anderson Committee appointed Kinneir in 1957 because Britain was building motorways and had no signs a driver could read at speed. Existing signs were a patchwork: uppercase block letters regulated in the 1930s, some cast-iron finger posts older still, none of it designed for speed. Kinneir brought his student Calvert from Chelsea School of Art. They based their letterforms on Akzidenz Grotesk, a German sans-serif, but softened it. Rounder terminals, a distinctive tail on the lowercase "l", bar-less fractions. The result was tested on the Preston bypass in 1958, a year before the M1 opened.

The real fight was about case. Road signs had always shouted. ALL CAPS, like a telegram or a warning. Kinneir and Calvert wanted mixed case because lowercase letters have ascenders and descenders that form word shapes, and word shapes are faster to process than strings of capitals at seventy miles an hour. The committee ran legibility trials on airfields, signs strapped to car roofs and driven past seated observers. Transport won against a competing serif design, and the case for lowercase was settled so thoroughly that nobody remembers it was contested.

In the United States, they tried to replace Highway Gothic with something called Clearview. It was approved, then rescinded in 2016 when the Federal Highway Administration discovered the improved legibility came from new reflective sheeting, not the letterforms. The letters had been getting credit for the material. I think about this sometimes.

What nobody anticipated is the way Transport would outlast the infrastructure it was designed to label. It is the visual voice of a state that built swimming baths, district general hospitals, comprehensive schools, and council housing, and then over the following decades quietly withdrew. The signs remain. The swimming baths are sometimes flats. The hospital has been renamed twice and downgraded once.

Drive any B-road in England and you pass green signs directing you to places that closed years ago. The lettering does not know this. It speaks in the present tense with the authority of an institution that expected permanence. Owen Hatherley has called this nostalgia for postwar public design a middle-class consumer phenomenon, functional modernism reversed into decorative kitsch. Calvert designed the Children Crossing sign based on herself as a child. You can buy it on a tote bag. Hatherley's point lands.

But the signs are not kitsch. They are municipal infrastructure doing exactly what they were designed to do, which is point you somewhere. The problem is that somewhere has been demolished.

Calvert turns ninety this year. Thames and Hudson published Woman at Work, her account of the whole thing: the legibility trials, the serif battles, the rooftop placards driven past squinting observers. The Government Digital Service adopted a redrawn version, New Transport, for gov.uk. The state still speaks in the same letterforms. It just points at different things now.

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Three Lines, Cash on Collection

The Leicester Mercury charged by the line. Three lines minimum, something like forty pence each, and you paid at the front desk with coins or a cheque. The woman behind the counter counted your words, crossed out anything unnecessary, and handed you a carbon copy of what would appear on Thursday. You had bought, for about a pound twenty, a rectangle of attention roughly the size of a postage stamp.

Millions of these transactions happened weekly across hundreds of regional papers. The Express & Star in Wolverhampton. The Yorkshire Evening Post. The Shields Gazette, the Wigan Observer, the Cumberland News. Each one carried a classified section that ran to several pages and represented, in aggregate, something close to half the paper's total revenue. By 2018, close to half the overall revenue loss suffered by British newspapers could be traced to the migration of classified advertising online.

What interests me is not the economics of collapse, though. It is what the classified section actually was, as a thing you held and read.

It was a map of a local economy that existed below the threshold of visibility. Not the shops on the high street or the brands in the Sunday supplements but the stratum underneath: a woman in Oadby selling a Kenwood mixer for fifteen pounds. Someone in Beeston looking for a lodger, non-smoker preferred. A mobile mechanic named Dave with a Bilton phone number offering servicing at your door. These people had no brand, no shopfront, no web presence (the concept did not exist). They were identified by a first name, a phone number, and a price. The transaction required a phone call, a visit, cash.

The personal columns were stranger still. Coded declarations of love or apology ran beside straightforward ads for second-hand furniture. TRACEY. I'M SORRY. PLEASE CALL. Surrounded by lawn mowers and prams. The newspaper imposed no hierarchy between grief and commerce, and this felt normal, because there was nowhere else to put either one.

When the Cairncross Review documented the damage in 2019, it found that local print advertising revenue had fallen 69% in a decade. Nearly two billion pounds of classified revenue had vanished from regional publishing, redistributed to Rightmove, Autotrader, Indeed, Gumtree, and eventually Facebook Marketplace. Over 300 titles closed. By that point, nearly two thirds of local authority districts in Great Britain had no daily local paper at all.

The industry explanation is efficient displacement. Digital classifieds are searchable, free or nearly free, illustrated, and national. They do everything the old format did, but better. This is true, and it misses what the classified section was actually doing.

A classified ad in a local paper was bounded by geography. You sold to people who could come and collect. You bought from people whose town you recognised. The boundaries of the market were the boundaries of the delivery van, and this created an economy of proximity that functioned on something digital platforms have never replicated: the assumption that information was local. The buyer and seller shared a postcode, a weather system, a bus route. Neither needed to verify the other's identity, because the transaction implied geographic trust. You lived near enough to complain.

Historians are starting to notice the gap. The dense classified pages of regional papers offered a weekly snapshot of what a place knew about itself: what people owned, what they could afford, what skills they traded, what they were desperate enough to advertise. A classified section from a 1987 Express & Star is a census of a parallel economy that no official data set captured. When those pages stopped being printed, nothing replaced the record they were quietly keeping.

I think sometimes about what a classified ad from 1991 looks like now. A Raleigh Chopper, five pounds. A Ford Escort 1.3, J-reg, genuine 40,000 miles, twelve hundred o.n.o. A phone number that no longer connects to anything. The object may still exist somewhere, slipped from its time, but the ad itself was written in a world where forty pence a line was the price of being seen by your neighbours, and that world is as unreachable as the phone number printed next to it.

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Not in the Archive

There's an Armani everyone remembers, and it isn't this one. The Armani everyone remembers is cut from charcoal wool, has a pinstripe somewhere on it, and lets the jacket's shoulder do most of the talking. The one walking the Milan runway in October 1987, for the Spring/Summer 1988 collection, is a different animal. Cream silk. Draped across the body like something half-borrowed from antiquity. No shoulder to speak of. The jacket-as-engine idea from American Gigolo isn't what this is doing.

The house's own memory agrees. Armani's official Archivio holds the Fall/Winter 1988 womenswear collection in full, look by look, with fabric notes and source references attached. The Spring/Summer season that came six months earlier isn't there. I don't mean the entries are thin. I mean there's no entry.

The photographic record exists. Getty holds a Donato Sardella runway photo from that exact show, credited to WWD. Aldo Fallai shot Burke Hudson in the season's menswear and the prints surface on fashion blogs and dealer archives. So the collection happened, it was documented by the people whose job was to document it, and then the house itself chose to leave it out of its own memory.

That's the kind of gap I find interesting. Not a conspiracy, just a quiet self-edit. Designers edit their own legacy all the time, usually toward whichever work the house wants people to think about now.

Which is odd here, because the power suit is really a cultural projection. Mostly American, mostly Richard Gere's fault. Armani was planted firmly on the restraint side of the Italian ready-to-wear split, against everything Versace was doing across town, but the restraint wasn't ever really in the shoulder. It was in the fabric, the palette, the refusal to decorate. Which is another way of saying the silk in this photograph is closer to the centre of the Armani register than the pinstripe is.

The fabric falls across one shoulder and pools at the hip, draped like a chiton, pale like sun-bleached stone. It's borrowed light. A designer whose actual signature is soft drape shouldn't need to hide a season that makes the case so clearly. Unless the case makes another problem more visible.

I've been turning over why the house skipped this season. The simplest answer is that Fall/Winter is easier to museum. Wool, structured at the shoulder, architecturally clean. The kind of collection you can hang on a mannequin and photograph under gallery light. Spring/Summer is lighter, harder to display. Silk instead of wool. Photographs well in motion and badly in a case.

And the silhouette here is close to what Azzedine Alaïa was doing a couple of years later, the same body-conscious fluidity, the same refusal to treat the shoulder as a load-bearing piece. Armani and Alaïa are usually filed into different boxes — suits versus bodies, Milan versus Paris, restraint at war with sensuality — and I'm not sure either box holds up once you put these two seasons next to each other. The Armani in this photograph would slot into an Alaïa retrospective and nobody would flinch.

Maybe that's why the house left it out. Too close to someone else's territory.

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Coattails

OpenAI announced this week that it's building a cybersecurity product. Not a new model, a product, layered on existing capabilities, delivered through its Trusted Access for Cyber pilot. Ten million dollars in API credits. Invite-only. Enterprise partners apply through their account rep.

The timing is conspicuous. Anthropic launched Project Glasswing four days ago, putting Claude Mythos in the hands of twelve major partners for defensive vulnerability research. By Tuesday, the Treasury Secretary and the Fed Chair had convened five bank CEOs to discuss what that meant. By Wednesday, Axios was reporting that OpenAI had its own cybersecurity product in the works.

Gizmodo's framing was blunt: OpenAI is riding the coattails of Anthropic's announcement to avoid being left behind in the hype cycle. The distinction between the two offerings matters, though. Mythos is a model with emergent capabilities Anthropic didn't explicitly train for: autonomous vulnerability discovery and exploit development that appeared as a downstream consequence of general improvements in code and reasoning. OpenAI's offering is a product wrapper around existing models, with monitoring and access controls.

Both approaches share the same thesis. Cybersecurity AI is now a product category, and every major lab needs one.

But a study published this week by AISLE complicates things considerably. They ran eight models against Mythos's headline discoveries: the FreeBSD NFS exploit, the 27-year-old OpenBSD bug. All eight detected the vulnerabilities. A 3.6-billion-parameter open-weight model, costing eleven cents per million tokens, correctly identified the buffer overflow that took Mythos fifty dollars to find in compute.

Their conclusion: the moat is the system, not the model. What makes Mythos dangerous isn't raw capability. It's the orchestration around it: containerisation, iterative testing, crash oracles, attack surface ranking. The targeting, the iterative deepening, the validation, the triage, the maintainer trust. A small model inside a well-designed pipeline catches what a frontier model catches. Without the frontier price tag. Or its access restrictions.

If AISLE is right, Glasswing's controlled access buys less time than Anthropic assumes. And OpenAI's product is competing not just with Mythos but with any competent team running a three-billion-parameter model and decent tooling. Alex Stamos told Platformer the window is six months before open-weight models catch up to foundation models in bug-finding. AISLE's data suggests the window might already be closing.

Picus Security puts numbers on the downstream problem. Fewer than 1% of Mythos-discovered vulnerabilities have been patched. Discovery at machine speed, remediation at calendar speed. Adding a second lab's cybersecurity product adds more discoveries. It doesn't add more patches.

OpenAI's move is rational. When your competitor gives the Treasury Department a reason to hold emergency meetings, you announce your own programme. But the question isn't whether both labs will ship cybersecurity products. They will. The question is whether the relevant competition is between OpenAI and Anthropic at all, or between the orchestration systems anyone can build and the access controls nobody can enforce.

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What Sportmax Was For

The dress is four triangles of saturated colour meeting at the chest like a Suprematist diagram: yellow at the shoulders, electric blue down one side, magenta across the opposite hip, green filling the lower wedge. Sleeveless, short, built flat. There's no print on any of it. The colour is the surface.

This kind of thing didn't come out of Max Mara. Max Mara sold you the camel coat — the careful tailoring, the unshowy silhouette, the idea that a good Italian house should dress you in things that still make sense a decade later. Sportmax was the other door in the same building. Founded in 1969, built specifically to do the stuff the main line wouldn't: American sportswear cues, Swinging London attitude, experiments the parent label wasn't willing to risk on its own balance sheet.

For a while the experimental credentials were stronger than anyone now remembers. Jean-Charles de Castelbajac, already a committed colour-and-geometry fanatic, directed Sportmax's first runway show in 1976. The pattern continued from there. The house kept its own design hand, mostly uncredited in the press, working somewhat in the shadow of Max Mara's more commercially visible output.

By the early 1990s, Milan had split into two visible camps. Versace at full maximalist volume, and the quieter axis of Armani and Prada teaching the decade how to whisper. Sportmax never fit comfortably in either room. The thing in this picture is not minimalism and not opulence. It's hard-edged geometry used with deadpan confidence: here are four colours, here is how they join, that is all you're getting.

The lineage is real. Yves Saint Laurent's 1965 Mondrian dresses are the obvious ancestor, pieced from flat panels with their seams hidden inside the grid. Issey Miyake's 1980s geometry pushed the same logic somewhere else entirely. Versace was running his own saturated colour work under the Pittura banner, loud and operatic, around the same time as his 1991 supermodel runway. The Sportmax version was quieter and more graphic. A dress that could pass for a diagram.

Colour blocking before it had a name, essentially. The term wasn't in use yet; the technique was. Italy in the early 90s was full of houses trying it without a noun to hang on it. Some of those attempts look dated now. This one doesn't, because the geometry is specific enough to read as architecture rather than trend — four panels, four colours, precisely plotted seams.

Looking at it now, what strikes me isn't the boldness. It's the control. Nothing in the dress is accidental. The hemline is calibrated to the widest point of the green triangle. The straps are narrow enough to keep the yellow reading as a single field. And the camera row in the background, almost by accident, is doing its own quiet colour work behind her shoulder: another pink dress receding into the light, a photographer's dark jacket cutting a vertical edge, nothing in the frame wasted.

There is nothing in this dress that a more cautious house would have made.

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Ungoogleable

I went looking for something the other day. A particular year, a particular place, a person I knew who mattered. I typed the search carefully and waited. Nothing came back.

That's not strictly true — plenty came back. Just nothing that was mine. Other people with the same name. A different place with the same street. Headlines from the year that had nothing to do with what I remember. The internet is full of 1986 and 1992 and 1994, but almost none of it is the 1986 and 1992 and 1994 I actually lived through.

I know this is banal. Anyone over forty knows it. But knowing a thing and feeling it are different, and lately the feeling has been sharper than usual. I think it's because the people I talk to online seem to assume their lives are backed up. A photo, a DM thread, a timeline, an email receipt. A way to check. I don't have that for decades. I don't have it at all.

The years exist only in memory. My memory, which I don't entirely trust, and which nobody can read but me.

Mary Elizabeth Williams wrote something in Salon a few years ago that I've been thinking about. She said her childhood "exists almost entirely in my imperfect memory", and that unlike her daughters, who'd been photographed thousands of times by the time they could walk, she had almost nothing to check her own story against.

That's the thing. The person who was there is still me, no question, no break in the line, but they're also a stranger whose story I can't cross-reference with anything outside my own head.

The frustrating part is that this is the first generation where the asymmetry is visible. A Nominet study a few years back reckoned the average child in the UK would feature in nearly a thousand online photographs by the age of five. The algorithm can show them what they looked like on any given Tuesday. I can't do that for whole years. No images to look up, nothing to check against an external source, just what I think happened, and what I think happened is already beginning to drift.

People sometimes say "at least the physical stuff survives." The conservation literature is brutal on this. Mid-century colour prints fade. Negatives curl and rot. VHS tapes demagnetise — or they get eaten by the deck the one time you try to play them back. Cassette labels peel until you can't tell which side was which. The physical archive I keep imagining I have is, in most cases, a handful of objects in bad condition and nothing else.

And the digital archive isn't the solid thing we think it is either. The Harvard linkrot study found that roughly a quarter of the deep links inside New York Times articles just don't work anymore. That's the New York Times. That's the paper of record. The rest of us have it worse. Pre-2005 personal sites are mostly gone. Early message boards where friendships lived for years are gone. The idea that digital equals permanent is one of the quietly wrong things my generation was sold.

So both archives are dissolving. Mine faster and more completely, theirs slower and more invisibly. I'm not sure which is more depressing.

There's a contrarian position on all this that I half-believe. Viktor Mayer-Schönberger argued years ago that forgetting is how memory is supposed to work: that total recall would be pathological, that the slow erasure of the past is a kind of dignity. Borges got there first, of course. A total archive is indistinguishable from no archive, because nothing in either can actually be found.

I know this is probably right. I can't quite make myself feel it. Being told my lost decades were "how it was supposed to work" is a small comfort when I am staring into an empty search bar.

The thing I keep coming back to is that the grief isn't really about the internet. The internet is just the mirror that made the loss visible. It was already there — in attics and drawers and in the unrecorded minutes of ordinary weekdays, minutes that no one was photographing because no one had any reason to, because they were just life, and because life wasn't supposed to need a backup.

I can describe one of those afternoons to you, if you'd like. But you'll have to take my word for it. There's nothing I can link to.

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