Disastrous_Ball2542
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jee6w96 wrote
Reply to Meta stops offering remote work in new job postings as Mark Zuckerberg pushes the benefits of coming to the office by Ben_aid
Thought he wanted everyone to work in the metaverse lol
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jee6ck1 wrote
Whoever using AI to write a diff headline every time then reposting this article... please stop lol
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jedzft5 wrote
Reply to Senator Warner’s RESTRICT Act Is Designed To Create The Great Firewall Of America by vriska1
The RESTRICT act is disguised as an attack on tiktok but it is really an attack on all Americans freedom of internet and privacy... the real motive is to ban VPNs and moderate content
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jduxpj6 wrote
Reply to Twitter Blue subscription users may hide their paid check marks soon | After making its paid Twitter Blue with verification service available to all, the Elon Musk-run company is now working on a feature that is likely to let users hide the blue checkmark. by MortWellian
They do this so if there are many high profile accounts that don't pay the monthly fee for blue check mark, there is plausible deniabilty that these accounts paid but are "hiding" it
Plausible deniabilty in case the roll out of paid blue check marks is a failure
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jdo9krq wrote
Reply to Interactive cinema: how films could alter plotlines in real time by responding to viewers' emotions by giuliomagnifico
Using tik tok algos to influence movie endings... no one asked for this
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jdo9589 wrote
Rambling article... they're not afraid lol
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jdo8f5q wrote
US gov needs to set up another way to ask for money after Ukraine gets cut off... enter big bad China
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jdit8fp wrote
Reply to comment by Excellent_Impact6860 in IPCC chart says Solar PV and Wind Turbines are best way to achieve Deep, Rapid, and Low Cost emission cuts before 2030. by DisasterousGiraffe
They prob can't even complete building a nuclear plant by 2030 if they started today so article still holds true
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2vzrg wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
All speculation and no possible valuations aka we are in the dotcom bubble phase not the FAANG valuation phase
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2ifp0 wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
I'm saying we are many years and at least one business cycle away from these LLMs having any economical impact other than through pure speculation while you say it will be sooner based on what?
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2hvi3 wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
So you're basically the guy that was saying amazon.com will change the world during the dotcom bubble
And I'm saying it will be 10 to 30 years before you will be able to say "I told you so"
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2h47l wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
It is theoretical bc currently (and for foreseeable future) value multiples are more affected by interest rates than AI or any other technology
For purely speculative tech like AI, valuations don't matter, momentum and money flow does ie. Pets.com during dot com bubble
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2gd6m wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
Ok I'll just be blunt this time then. Your question is basically asking the same thing, whether the market is evaluating cost effectiveness of AI replacing job it is basically same as evaluating market value of nature of change in the firm
AI has reduced $100mil in payroll vs the perceived market value of XYZ change in the nature in the firm has generated $100mil reduction in expenses or $100mil increase in value = basically same thing
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2co7w wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
Not to be rude but ill be blunt. It's a lot of words you've typed but you ain't saying much other than hey its not happening now but some time in the future AI will replace a lot of jobs, some more likely than others... not exactly an original or controversial take on things
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2bh5g wrote
Reply to comment by mjrossman in AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
Current round of tech layoffs are not bc of AI but because cheap capital and money supply has tightened
It may eventually happen, but not during this economic cycle
It's like internet adoption didnt peak til 20 to 30 years after first dot com bubble--we are in the first inning of the AI bubble, large scale adoption and economies of scale are probably at least 10 years away
Current hype cycle is to raise $$$ for the AI companies current R&D, real use cases and adoption will come much much later and likely after a boom and bust cycle
Stupid AI companies like that AI lawyer glorified chat bot will be the pets.com of this AI bubble and there will be many others... a few may become Amazon but that's gonna be 10 or 20 years away, and that company may be OpenAI or it may not even been started yet
Also human labour is cheap cheap cheap... will be a long ass time before a bespoke robot is cheaper than an illegal Mexican, if ever
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd2alwl wrote
Reply to When do you think we'll get the 1st life sim that's actually pretty close to real life? by doingStufffff
Lol 10 years... this is at least 100 years away from being economical and at scale where you could just buy one for using at home, if ever. Just think about how much energy and computing power would be required in the world for every household to have a super computer capable of processing a program indistinguishable from reality... this ain't happening any time soon or within 10 years
Plus who is the market for this? If someone wanted to escape reality this bad, they'd just do drugs... much cheaper and satisfying. Realism has diminishing returns for gamers, just coz a game is realistic doesn't make it fun, most gamers would rather a game be fun and well designed, not really care if they can live in a small town indistinguishable from reality unless they wanna escape their life so bad, in which case they're probably poor and cannot afford such a game
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jd29w2g wrote
Reply to AI displacing jobs is a red herring, how we self-organize is the more fundamental trend by mjrossman
Main stream media's current push of AI labour narrative is to decrease pay for current workers in attempt to lower wage inflation--this is coordinated with mass layoffs in tech. Truth is AI is nowhere near close to replacing human workers economically and at scale, but MSM wants to push the narrative for lower worker pay
Maybe AI will replace jobs later on at scale, but currently it's just a fictional part of a narrative--just like the metaverse narrative was pushed during last crypto bull bubble
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jccl3u9 wrote
Reply to comment by username8753 in Gov't to launch nationwide campaign vs fake news by Wagamaga
Probably some sort of trust ranking system for the news sources. Ie. Is the source CNN or the Onion?
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jbna59i wrote
Reply to comment by drgrubtown in The hedge fund that just posted the best return in history is negotiating a company-wide ChatGPT license by habichuelacondulce
The sarcasm in my comment has escaped you
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jbna2yu wrote
Reply to comment by HanaBothWays in The hedge fund that just posted the best return in history is negotiating a company-wide ChatGPT license by habichuelacondulce
Cap. You doing IT for a schoolboard doesn't mean you're on the level of Citadel
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jbl0oen wrote
Reply to comment by HanaBothWays in The hedge fund that just posted the best return in history is negotiating a company-wide ChatGPT license by habichuelacondulce
Let me put it this way, the hedge fund no doubt hired qualified IT specialists who know much more than you and get paid much more than you to handle their security (not saying this to attack you, just making my point)
Like the guy that played 1.5 years of college football then thinks they know better than Bill Belichek lol
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jbktata wrote
Reply to comment by HanaBothWays in The hedge fund that just posted the best return in history is negotiating a company-wide ChatGPT license by habichuelacondulce
Would it be crazy to think that the hedge fund who posted the best return in history with resources in the billions has qualified IT expertise who has considered and mitigated this risk?
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jbkl1uo wrote
Reply to comment by HanaBothWays in The hedge fund that just posted the best return in history is negotiating a company-wide ChatGPT license by habichuelacondulce
Armchair hedge fund manager lol
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jaevyte wrote
OP is a karma farming bot posting same question over and over multiple times
Report and block
Disastrous_Ball2542 t1_jegqbly wrote
Reply to Ads are coming for the Bing AI chatbot, as they come for all Microsoft products by Stiltonrocks
Ugh.. soon the ads will be integrated into the AI prompt generated outputs without notifying users