Late May 2024, a turbulent time.
Late May 2024, a turbulent time.
I became involved in Takahiro Yasuno's campaign when he contacted me (5/13) to say that he had read the Japanese translation of the Plurality book that Nishio had published and found it helpful. I introduced Mr. Yasuno to Haruyuki Seki on 5/13 and we had a meeting on 5/23 and exchanged a lot of information. In the chat that followed, Seki-san brought up the subject of Talk to the City, and Yasuno-san said, "Sounds really interesting. I knew about Talk to the City from Gisele Chou, but when I saw tkgshn trying it out, I left it alone and thought "that looks like a pain in the ass! Polis-like analysis of 110,000 anonymous data provided by JAPAN CHOICE. Yasuno's comment
'If you had some natural language data collected during the campaign, could you try it out?'
"I'd like to see the AI pub-commentary that got the ball rolling as a personal interest, the one that collected about 20,000 comments."
After explaining that "Polis is input by opinion vectors," I'm starting to wonder how Talk to the City does its clustering of natural sentences.
After doing some research, I wanted to give it a try and decided to give it a try with the AI pubic
Mr. Seki: "It would normally be useful to organize on the administrative side."
I tried Talk to the City by AI PubCom (5/30). I told him he could use any image in Scrapbox, and he laughed when he saw my hand-drawn picture of broad listening being used. This picture was later even used in Yasuno's manifesto and became a famous diagram.
Of course, both have given permission.
I thought people would rather use it, so I decided to go with a CC0 license around here.
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