🔱 And What It Means For Public Affairs
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3 Minute Read

ChatGPT's Three Year Birthday: And What It Means For Public Affairs

Only three years ago yesterday, ChatGPT was first released to the public. We will not attempt to catalogue here the countless ways that AI has impacted life in this brief period of time, both good and bad. Here's a worthy attempt at that exercise by one of preeminent AI journalists if you're up for that journey. But let's focus today on why the pace of AI change feels so dizzying, and why this Gravitron is only likely to increase in speed.

 

One of the peculiar features of this era that ChatGPT inaugurated to the public, is that AI-driven tools keep arriving faster than expected. In 2016, researchers predicted AI wouldn't match human performance on the Putnam math competition until 2099—it happened in 2024, seventy-five years early. AlphaFold's protein folding breakthroughs arrived decades ahead of expert predictions. Image generation went from barely coherent to photorealistic in three years instead of ten. These aren't small timing errors—even many AI boosters are consistently off by decades, not months when it comes to predictions about their own field.

 

This phenomenon has dramatic implications for public affairs. Today we explain why this time compression is happening, and what it means for your work.

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The Feedback Loop That's Changing Everything

 

Hofstadter's Law states that everything takes longer than you expect—even when you account for Hofstadter's Law. It's the planning fallacy with a finer point that we can all relate to—your kitchen renovation stretches from one month to three, even when you accounted for two.

 

But AI development increasingly operates under the opposite principle. There are several reasons for this, but the best explanation is that AI itself is becoming the primary driver of its own acceleration.

 

AI Building AI: The Self-Reinforcing Cycle

 

The breakthrough isn't just that AI can code—it's that AI is now accelerating its own evolution.

 

Here's how AI development used to work: a researcher would dream up a new AI architecture, then spend weeks writing the code to test it. Debugging took months. Running experiments took longer. Analyzing the results and starting over added a few more months. Building AI required small armies of engineers to translate ideas into working software. Now, researchers describe what they want, and AI writes the first draft of the code. Debugging that took weeks now takes hours. Experiments that needed months of setup are running in days.  

 

This creates a compounding feedback loop. Better AI helps researchers build better AI faster, which helps them build even better AI even faster. Each generation of AI doesn't just advance the technology—it accelerates how quickly the next generation can be built. The result is progress arriving years ahead of even many of the most optimistic predictions. 

 

How This Should Drive Your Public Affairs Strategy

 

It comes down to one simple point for every public affairs practitioner—adopt new tools, or get left behind. In the past, you could stick with a technology product for years. But AI years are like dog years. The tool you adopted last year may already be obsolete. If the tool was available three years ago, before the modern AI era? You're working with Stone Age materials. 

 

And critically, your competitors probably aren't standing still. While you're evaluating whether to adopt new AI tools, your competition may already be using them against you. And because AI keeps getting better at building AI, that advantage compounds and accelerates over time.  

 

The AI race is not like other races. In most technology adoption cycles, being six months behind meant you could still catch up in a year. With AI, being six months behind might mean never catching up at all. 

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Three Ways To Operationalize This Email

 

🔱 Review your tech stack. If any of your tools are more than three years old, re-think them. Immediately.

 

🔱 Audit your organization's AI adoption timeline plans. Stress-test those assumptions against the recent rate of AI progress. When technology timelines consistently compress, rigid long-term plans become liabilities. Focus on adaptable frameworks rather than point-in-time plans.

 

🔱 Start monitoring AI developments more actively now. Staying ahead starts with staying up to date.

🔱 If you're enjoying this content, please consider forwarding this email to a colleague or friend. 

 

🔱 If you're not already a subscriber, please sign up here to stay up to date on the latest developments in political technology.

 

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