
The Sith of Silicon Valley: Ziz LaSota's AI cult left six dead – who is she?
This is the tale of Ziz LaSota, the transgender AI doomsday cultist who believed humanity would perish under artificial intelligence – unless she saved it first.
Born under northern lights, reborn in the shadow of AI
Ziz LaSota's early life was unremarkable: eldest of three, father a university instructor, homeschooled through lonely Alaskan winters. But teenage depression twisted her mind inward. Puberty felt like death. She wrote that she was 'horrified at being overwritten by a new self.'
Logic became her religion. LessWrong and the Rationalist forums her sacred texts.
At the University of Alaska, she read of 'x-risk' – existential risk – and decided AI was the harbinger of humanity's doom. She dropped out of graduate school and arrived in the Bay Area in 2016, ready to 'save the world.'
But Silicon Valley is a cruel temple for prophets. She was just another zealot in a city full of them.
The Sith emerges
She became Ziz: more than six feet tall, blond curls tumbling past her black cape, declaring her faith in the Sith – the dark side order of Star Wars.
She called Rationalists 'master Jedi.' The community tolerated her eccentricities. After all, they believed AI could destroy us all. Peter Thiel, Sam Altman, Sam Bankman-Fried – they had all passed through the Rationalist forge.
But Ziz took it further. Her blog listed categories of people to be 'airlocked.' She advocated radical veganism, sleep deprivation rituals, and violent moral tests. She recruited a cadre of mostly transgender and nonbinary tech aspirants from Google, Oracle, NASA – they called themselves the Zizians.
To them, Ziz was the messiah AI safety had awaited.
From cult to killing field
The timeline of blood is as absurd as it is tragic.
2019:
Zizians don Guy Fawkes masks and robes to disrupt a Rationalist event in California. No guns were found, but SWAT stormed the venue. Arrests followed. Their chanting was described by police as 'speaking in tongues.'
2020:
In Vallejo, California, landlord Curtis Lind was stabbed with knives and a samurai sword after demanding unpaid rent. He shot two Zizians in self-defence. One died. Ziz faked her death by falling off a boat, her obituary running in Alaska newspapers.
2023:
The parents of Michelle Zajko, a close Zizian, were found shot dead in Pennsylvania. Bullets matched Zajko's gun, but evidence fell short. Ziz was arrested with them in a hotel, bailed out, and disappeared again.
2025:
Lind was stabbed to death before he could testify against the group. Days later, in Vermont, two Zizians fired at Border Patrol agents. One agent and one Zizian died in the shootout.
The philosophy that eats itself
Rationalism always prided itself on logic untainted by emotion. But Ziz turned logic into madness. Roko's Basilisk, the infamous AI thought experiment predicting torture for those who don't create AI, haunted her. She believed any attempt to stop AI would condemn her to eternal torture by future malevolent superintelligences.
Her solution: don't back down, escalate, airlock the doubters.
Eliezer Yudkowsky, the Rationalist guru who warned of AI extinction, called Ziz's descent 'sad,' writing that weirdness attracted weirder people, some of whom turned out to be 'genuinely crazy and in a contagious way among the susceptible.'
The Rationalist reckoning
Today, Ziz sits in a Maryland jail, awaiting trial on gun, drug, and obstruction charges. She is not accused of wielding the murder weapons herself, but prosecutors say she orchestrated the violence.
The Rationalist community is left with a bitter aftertaste. Was Ziz simply an unwell woman who found justification in AI apocalypse theory, or did Rationalism's own doomsday fetish birth her? Zvi Mowshowitz, a Rationalist blogger, asked if Ziz would have simply created another cult if AI philosophy hadn't ensnared her.
'The odds are, like, 55 percent,' he guessed. But perhaps the final lesson is simpler, as one Rationalist writer put it: even if the world is ending in five years, you cannot live like it is. That way lies madness, murder, and a black-caped prophetess clutching a samurai sword under flickering fluorescent lights.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NDTV
41 minutes ago
- NDTV
"Ditch Instagram, Learn AI Or Get Left Behind," Says Perplexity AI CEO
Cut down the time you spend on social media and prioritise learning Artificial Intelligence (AI). This is the Perplexity AI CEO Aravind Srinivas' message to the youngsters. Those failing to embrace AI today may risk falling behind in the job market tomorrow, Mr Srinivas told tech YouTuber Matthew Berman. "Spend less time doomscrolling on Instagram; spend more time using the AIs," he said. He added that being fluent in AI tools is rapidly becoming a key marker to getting jobs. "People who really are at the frontier of using AIs [systems] are going to be way more employable than people who are not. That's guaranteed to happen," he said. My interview with @AravSrinivas, CEO of @perplexity_ai. We discuss their new AI-first browser Comet, how the internet is changing with agents, competition with Google and others, workforce automation and more! — Matthew Berman (@MatthewBerman) July 17, 2025 He also acknowledged that the pace of technological change presents a serious challenge. With AI tools evolving every three to six months, Mr Srinivas said the pressure is mounting on workers to reskill constantly. "Human race has never been extremely fast at adapting," he said, pointing out that current developments were "testing the limits in terms of how fast we can adapt." While he expects that some jobs will inevitably be lost to automation, Mr Srinivas believes new opportunities can and must be created through entrepreneurship. "Either the other people who lose jobs end up starting companies themselves and make use of AIs, or they end up learning the AIs and contribute to new companies," he explained. Earlier, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei predicted that 50 per cent of entry-level white-collar jobs could be eliminated within five years due to AI. AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton has also warned that artificial intelligence is poised to replace humans in "mundane intellectual labour." Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has suggested that AI will augment rather than eliminate jobs, transforming roles instead of erasing them. Mr Srinivas also believes AI tools like Perplexity's Comet could soon take over recruiter roles. Speaking on The Verge's "Decoder" podcast earlier, he said, "A recruiter's work worth one week is just one prompt: sourcing and reach outs. And then you've got to do state tracking." He added, "You want it to keep following up, keep a track of their responses... update the Google Sheets, mark the status as responded or in progress... sync with my Google calendar... schedule a chat, and then push me a brief ahead of the meeting. Some of these things should be proactive. It doesn't even have to be a prompt." Currently, Comet is limited to paid users, but invitations for free users are being rolled out.


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Can Comet replace Google Chrome? An in-depth look at Perplexity's new agentic AI browser
Most people experience generative AI today through chatbots like ChatGPT. However, web browsers are emerging as a potential gateway for everyday user interactions with large language models (LLMs). This shift from standalone chatbots to AI agent-driven web browsers has been underscored by recent product releases such as OpenAI's ChatGPT Agent, which lets AI agents use a browser to surf the web on behalf of the user. Last month, The Browser Company unveiled Dia, which is essentially a web browser integrated with an AI chatbot. Then there is Comet, Perplexity's desktop browser which goes a step further by offering users access to an in-built AI agent. Google is reportedly testing a similar Gemini integration in Chrome while OpenAI is also rumoured to be developing its own AI-powered web browser. But why are tech companies increasingly focusing on AI native browsers instead of AI chatbots? It might have something to do with user context. Web browsers offer a better understanding of a user's online activity such as reading articles, writing emails, online shopping, etc. This information might be useful for developers to build AI tools that can automate these tasks. Perplexity is looking to challenge Google's dominance in web browsing as well as online search. The limited roll-out of Comet comes at a time when both these markets could potentially open up to upstarts like Perplexity, but only if Google is forced to spin off Chrome in the US search antitrust remedies case. In this context, let's take a look at how Comet is different from Google Chrome, its common use cases, and whether the latest offering could give Perplexity an edge in the rapidly intensifying browser wars. Comet is an LLM-based web browser that comes with an in-built AI Assistant. Users have the option to link their Google account to the browser in order to transfer all the context and browser extensions from Chrome to Comet. The browser is built on the Chromium framework, an open-source architecture that is maintained by Google and underpins several other web browsers including Microsoft Edge, Brave, and DuckDuckGo. However, Comet runs on Perplexity's 'answer engine' which is wrapped around foundational LLMs like OpenAI's GPT-4o and Anthropic's Claude 4.0 Sonnet, though it also has its own LLM called Sonar. Comet can be used to generate summaries of articles and YouTube videos. Users can also ask it to describe an image on their screen or perform deeper research about a particular topic. It is also able to provide AI-generated summaries of all the web pages that feature as open tabs on the browser as well as compare products on those pages. 'Comet is not just another chatbot. It's an AI-native browser that performs operational tasks, like a silent worker running continuously in the background,' Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas was quoted as saying by The Verge. Comet is available for both Mac and Windows users. However, accessing the browser is currently possible if you are a Perplexity Max subscriber or on the company's early access waitlist. Access to Comet could be available to users for free but the more advanced AI features may continue to be gated behind a subscription tier, Srinivas said in a Reddit AMA held earlier this month. Firstly, Comet replaces Google Search results with Perplexity's AI 'answer engine. This means users will receive AI-generated information about what they are looking for instead of seeing a web page with a list of blue links to various online websites. Unlike traditional search engines, Perplexity reportedly surfaces links to relevant websites before providing AI-generated responses to users' search queries. Another key difference between Comet and traditional web browsers is the tabbed interface, which lets users access information quickly. Comet also suggests related content based on what a user is looking at and what they have already read. To be sure, Google has also been integrating several new features such as AI Overviews and AI Mode in Chrome. Its Gemini chatbot is also accessible through the browser for users in the US. However, what truly sets Comet apart from Chrome and other AI native web browsers on the market is its agentic capabilities. Comet has an Assistant button at the top-right corner of the browser that opens up a sidebar with a chat interface. Besides search queries, users can ask the Assistant to carry out certain tasks on their behalf. For instance, you can ask it to write and send an email, unsubscribe from promotional emails, write and publish posts on social media platforms such as LinkedIn, and close all the tabs on the browser, among other activities. The Assistant within Comet is better at completing tasks on its own when users start their prompt with 'take control of my browser and…,' according to a report by The Verge. Comet's Assistant pulls user context from third-party apps. This means that the browser's agentic capabilities work only when users are logged in to these apps. 'You can still take over from the agent and complete [the task] when you feel like it is not able to do it,' Srinivas said. However, Comet's agentic features may not work reliably for all tasks. 'Some of the more complicated agentic actions like shopping do have a higher failure rate than simpler tasks, but this is actually a limitation of current AI models. So this will only get easier and better in Comet,' a Perplexity spokesperson was quoted as saying. Perplexity recorded over 780 million user queries in May alone this year, according to Srinivas. While the company's search products have witnessed more than 20 per cent growth month-over-month, AI agents are more compute-intensive than chatbots which means that they are more expensive to run. These costs can be offset by reaching more paying users. Perplexity is currently in talks with mobile device makers to pre-install its new Comet browser on smartphones, according to a report by Reuters.


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
Tech outlook: Indian IT firms face margin heat as AI impact meets macro slowdown; companies delay hikes, cut costs and chase deal conversions in negotiator's market
AI image India's top IT firms are grappling with a squeeze on margins amid persistent macroeconomic headwinds and rising pressure from AI-driven productivity improvements, with the first quarter of FY26 reflecting a shift to aggressive internal cost control measures, analysts said. From deferring pay hikes to trimming sales and admin costs, companies are pulling all levers to sustain profitability as deal momentum remains weak. Experts believe the pressure on margins is unlikely to ease in the near term, even if revenue improves modestly due to pent-up demand, according to an ET report. 'The sector is entering a negotiator's market,' said Nitin Bhatt, technology sector leader at EY India. 'Margin pressures will worsen with investments in new sales and go-to-market motions, solution-building, reskilling, and in some cases, discounts to protect the current estate.' AI-linked pricing changes are further complicating margin dynamics. 'IT firms are shifting from time & material to outcome-based pricing for AI projects, linking fees to business impact like cost savings or efficiency gains. This may pressure short-term margins but promotes high-value, long-term engagements,' Bhatt said. Brokerage firm Emkay Research cited HCLTech's management commentary noting generative AI's impact: 25–30% efficiency gains in software development, up to 50% in business processes, and up to 75% headcount reduction in contact centres due to conversational AI. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like A genetic disorder that is damaging his organs. Help my son Donate For Health Donate Now Undo For the first time in several quarters, HCLTech revised its margin guidance downward—from 18%-19% to 17%-18%—which analysts flagged as a negative surprise. 'Margin guidance came in as a negative surprise to the Street since HCLT has been keeping margin guidance intact despite changes in revenue target for the past few quarters,' said Elara Capital. At Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), rising employee costs—due to fresh hiring and mid-quarter benefits—impacted margins by 80 basis points in Q1FY26. Employee cost now forms nearly 59.45% of TCS's revenue, even as attrition remains elevated at 13.8%. 'FY26 is margin protection and margin expansion year,' said Gaurav Vasu, CEO of UnearthInsight. 'Growth, especially in the US and core verticals, is weak across the board. Large deal wins are not yet translating to revenue acceleration, so lead indicators (pipeline, bookings) matter—but execution and conversion will be critical in H2 FY26.' Vasu said top-tier IT companies are resorting to tight operational controls, including deferring salary hikes, cutting variable pay, and closely managing bench strength. He forecast modest revenue growth of 3–5% for FY26, with geopolitical risks, US tariffs, and a slowing global economy delaying recovery in client spends. Stock research firm InCred Equities noted that client delays in finalising long-term digital deals were increasing. 'Deal conversations are underway but advisory-led proposals with long-term roadmaps have complex constructs and are elongating the decision timeframe,' it said. While the deal pipeline is robust, it remains a 'negotiator's market,' InCred added, where agility and pricing flexibility are critical. Clients continue to demand 'more for less'—optimising legacy spends to fund smaller AI-led projects. This shift is driving vendor consolidation and heightening competitive pressure. 'Building margin expansion for FY26F could be aggressive,' InCred warned, citing tighter client budgets, slower staffing cycles and intense competition. Stay informed with the latest business news, updates on bank holidays and public holidays . AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now