High functioning autists must have other traits which blend-in into their level of autism. Take a look at Steve Jobs... clearly autistic but had a drive and charisma in order for his level of autism to be (for lack of a better word) supercharged.
I dunno if Steve was autistic or no but there's a subtype of people who develop a "special interest" in reading, influencing and manipulating people and get quite good at it. They study people carefully - each encounter is a new way to find out how people tick, their motivations and levers. They tend to have unusually good memories of specific encounters and conversations. They can quickly and reliably size people up. You need many many encounters to build this kind of intuition up, so there are specific professions they cluster in that give them lots of practice, cops / detectives, sales, even retail - but you need lots of (ideally non-trivial) interactions to supply the intuition pump.
This is why we built nOne, a permission/consent layer underlying the engines/platforms/algorithms/etc.
This way OpenAI can check the permissions of the author of a particular body-of-work and then respect those permissions, so that the legality of their functionality/crawling is not questioned.
I am building nOne, the first subjective layer of the Internet, or more accurately, a permission layer underlying the engines/platforms/automation. Although it does pertain to AI, its more than that... it is a permission system for email, AI, and cognitive inputs (undisclosed automation, what you permit in your feeds, etc). It encompasses the entirety of the digital realm.
We have created a permission system within our social worlds... time to apply the same standards to the digital realm.