Nefasto — Symbolic Discourse in the Age of Statistical Language

Nefasto — Symbolic Discourse in the Age of Statistical Language

In 1989, two people were writing programs that generated language out of structure rather than meaning. One of them was Tim Berners-Lee, who that year circulated a memo titled Information Management: A Proposal — the document that became the World Wide Web. The other was a professor in a hallway in Medellín, who wrote a hundred lines of Turbo Prolog to make fun of his colleagues. I knew about the second one. The first I only read about later, the way everyone did. But the two were closer in spirit than the distance between Geneva and the Universidad de Antioquia would suggest. Both were betting that if you got the relationships right — between documents, between words — the content could take care of itself. One bet built the modern internet. The other got pinned to a cork board and read by people who never realized they were the joke. …

June 19, 2026 · 9 min · 1819 words · Gonzalo Contento