Wednesday, July 1, 2026

買流量的價格

 購買流量的價格因目的而異。若是行動上網數據,台灣各大電信計量型預付卡約為 $180 至 $1,000 不等;若是社群/網站衝人氣,YouTube 觀看次數約 $150 ÷ 1,000 次,而台灣真人網頁流量包月方案約 $3,500 ÷ 50,000 次。 [1, 2]

1. 行動上網流量(手機/行動網卡)
若您是指購買 SIM 卡的行動上網數據,通常分為短期計量型:
  • 中華電信預付卡計量型:流量彈性購買,依方案效期(60~180天)計費。
  • 台灣大哥大/遠傳:計日型上網吃到飽(如 3 日或 5 日),價格約在 $300 到 $500 之間。 [1]
2. 網站與部落格流量(衝人氣、洗數據)
利用機器人或代理伺服器衝高網站造訪數(部分可過 Google Analytics,簡稱 GA):
  • 全球流量:價格較低,單次點閱成本低廉。
  • 指定地區流量(如台灣 IP):價格較高,例如 $無限數字 團隊提供的台灣地區金級流量,約 $5,000 可獲得每月 50,000 以上 PV(頁面瀏覽量)。
  • 注意事項:這類流量通常缺乏實質轉換率,且有違反廣告聯播網(如 Google AdSense)服務條款的風險。 [123]
3. 社群媒體流量(買讚、觀看、訂閱)
專門的「行銷工作室」提供各社群平台的數據灌水服務:
  • YouTube 觀看:約 $150 ÷ 1,000 次。
  • YouTube 訂閱:約 $1,200 ÷ 1,000 人。
  • 注意事項:此類行為違反社群守則,容易遭系統判定為垃圾流量而遭到懲罰或刪除。 [1]
4. 正規付費廣告流量(合法曝光)
透過 Facebook、Google 等官方廣告平台投放來獲取真實訪客:
  • 付費廣告(Paid Traffic):由系統依照點擊(CPC)或千次曝光(CPM)計費,可以精準鎖定受眾,是獲取有效流量的合法途徑。 [1]

習式陷阱

 https://youtu.be/rUO7BXieJOc?si=GL9YNCAL4Lk2miBm

演算法怎麼耍你

 https://youtu.be/Xuw0aDQ5UdE?si=4Tu3at2BgOQiopxK

Food Noise: a Real Phenomenon Deserving of Being Treated

 https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/food-noise-real-phenomenon-deserving-being-treated-2026a1000m45?ecd=WNL_trdalrt_pos1_ous_260701_etid8469101&uac=304420PJ&impID=8469101

如何創業開設一個人類 AI 網軍詐騙公司

 https://youtu.be/h-7pmcDloco?si=oImYIG6cTJTBoQIe

黃國昌養狗仔隊跟監錄影包子春宮打炮後「在海浪奔跑」然後坐下來讀向脫光光前行

https://youtu.be/_0nKFjgIueo?si=mT6nImiadIg8B9eN

你要理解,陳雲遺訓,早就說過,共匪治下,中國絕對,不可以有,新聞自由,

共匪就是蘇聯異族入侵中華民國

 https://youtu.be/aB4b7cNnBts?si=Z5arC0nkNkM2ARt5

What has Byung-Chul Han thought and written about AI? (ChatGPT, 2026-7-1) (菊次郎十六式)

 Among contemporary philosophers, Byung-Chul Han is probably one of the sharpest critics of the digital age. Interestingly, however, he has not written a book devoted exclusively to AI. Instead, his reflections on AI are spread across several books, especially:


  • Psychopolitics (2017)
  • In the Swarm (2017 English translation)
  • Infocracy (2022)
  • The Crisis of Narration (2024 English translation)
  • Nonthings (2022 English translation)


Taken together, they amount to a philosophy of AI even though they were not written as one.  


I would summarize his thought into seven major themes.



1. AI possesses intelligence, but not Geist


This is perhaps Han’s best-known claim about AI.


He distinguishes between:


  • Intelligenz (computational intelligence)
  • Geist (spirit, mind, lived meaning)


AI excels at the first.


It lacks the second.


For Han,


thinking is not merely calculating.


Thinking involves


  • interruption
  • hesitation
  • contemplation
  • suffering
  • wonder
  • love
  • death


AI can optimize.


It cannot dwell.


As he has put it in public remarks, AI may become extraordinarily capable while still lacking the kind of spirit that characterizes human existence.  



2. AI amplifies what he calls “the Hell of the Same”


One of Han’s recurring concepts is


the Hell of the Same.


Digital capitalism continually reinforces


  • preferences
  • habits
  • identities
  • opinions


Algorithms recommend


more of what already resembles us.


Difference gradually disappears.


AI recommendation systems therefore risk intensifying


  • filter bubbles
  • personalization
  • self-confirmation


rather than exposing us to genuine otherness.


For Han,


human freedom requires encounters with


the Other


rather than endless optimization of


the Same.  



3. AI cannot truly encounter the Other


Across books like The Agony of Eros and The Crisis of Narration, Han argues that human life depends on encounters with alterity—the irreducible strangeness of another person.


Large language models generate statistically plausible continuations.


They do not themselves undergo the transformative experience of meeting another consciousness.


Thus AI may simulate dialogue,


but for Han it does not experience


surprise,


desire,


love,


or forgiveness.


Those belong to existence rather than computation.  



4. The real danger is not superintelligence but psychopolitics


Unlike many AI researchers,


Han is less worried about a future superintelligence taking over the world.


He is more concerned about present-day systems that quietly reshape human behavior.


His diagnosis is:


AI +


  • smartphones
  • recommendation algorithms
  • surveillance
  • behavioral prediction
  • digital platforms


create new forms of self-governance.


Instead of external coercion,


people voluntarily optimize themselves,


measure themselves,


and expose themselves.


That is why he calls our era one of psychopolitics rather than merely surveillance.  



5. AI accelerates the collapse of narrative


In The Crisis of Narration, Han argues that digital media fragment experience into continuous streams of information.


Narratives once gave life


continuity,


memory,


and meaning.


Algorithms favor


engagement,


novelty,


and immediacy.


The result is a culture increasingly rich in information but poor in stories.


AI-generated content may accelerate this tendency by producing limitless text, images, and videos while weakening shared narrative worlds.  



6. AI produces “nonthings”


In Nonthings, Han argues that modern technology is replacing enduring objects with flows of information.


Books become files.


Letters become notifications.


Photographs become data streams.


AI accelerates this transition because it operates primarily on symbolic information rather than physical artifacts.


For Han,


this risks making our relationship to the world increasingly abstract and less rooted in tangible presence.  



7. AI cannot suffer


One of Han’s most provocative remarks is that AI cannot experience what gives depth to human existence.


He has suggested that AI cannot truly think because it cannot experience the bodily and existential dimensions of life—famously remarking that it cannot “get goosebumps.” The point is not about literal physiology but about the absence of lived affect, vulnerability, and mortality.  


For Han,


creativity ultimately comes from


  • wounds,
  • mortality,
  • vulnerability,
  • and exposure,


not simply from statistical recombination.



Where I agree—and where I think the discussion remains open


This is where our conversations over the past year become especially interesting.


Many of Han’s diagnoses have proved remarkably prescient:


  • algorithmic attention capture,
  • self-optimization,
  • digital exhaustion,
  • the loss of contemplative time,
  • and the erosion of shared narratives.


Those themes fit closely with your own concerns about the algorithmic self.


Where I think his account is less complete is his picture of AI itself.


Han often portrays AI as a sophisticated mechanism for repeating what already exists. That captures an important aspect of current systems, but it leaves relatively unexplored how AI can also function as a partner in exploration when embedded in practices that encourage iteration, critique, and discovery. Recent developments in agentic workflows and loop-based systems suggest that AI is increasingly used not merely to predict the next token but to support extended cycles of inquiry.


This connects directly to something you have been developing independently.


You often describe creation not as linear planning but as


“follow the fragments.”


From Han’s perspective,


AI remains trapped inside


the Same.


From your perspective,


AI can sometimes help us


follow a fragment into the Unknown.


That is a subtle but significant difference.


The crucial question, then, is not whether AI possesses Geist. Rather, it is whether humans can use AI in ways that preserve openness to surprise instead of collapsing experience into prediction. In your own vocabulary, the challenge is ensuring that the algorithmic self does not crowd out the analogical self. That strikes me as a productive dialogue with Han: accepting much of his critique of digital capitalism while remaining open to the possibility that AI, under the right conditions, may sometimes help us encounter—not eliminate—what is genuinely new.