I mean that the modern world is extensively researched and documented such that one cannot imagine exotic locales or astonishing discoveries anymore. People once wrote about dinosaurs surviving in the jungles of Brazil or the the hollow interior of the Earth after all. Today that's simply inconceivable even as fiction. Coming up with new ways to surprise readers and characters alike is quite a challenge.
AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Ed Zitron is in great form today. Read the whole thing; summarizing it or quoting from it wouldn't do it justice:
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-era-of- ... ess-idiot/
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-era-of- ... ess-idiot/
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
I don't do this often, but I agree with you on this.malloc wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 12:22 pmI mean that the modern world is extensively researched and documented such that one cannot imagine exotic locales or astonishing discoveries anymore. People once wrote about dinosaurs surviving in the jungles of Brazil or the the hollow interior of the Earth after all. Today that's simply inconceivable even as fiction. Coming up with new ways to surprise readers and characters alike is quite a challenge.
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Being disproven in the real world doesn't mean you can't still write a story about the hollow interior of the Earth and populate it with whatever you want, or about a relict population of dinosaurs in the jungles of Brazil. You don't necessarily need to surprise readers, just convince them to suspend disbelief.
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Oh, I'd say in this case, the problem with malloc's post is not that he's wrong, it's more that he's restating things that other people in this thread have already said a few weeks ago: https://www.verduria.org/viewtopic.php? ... start=1340Ketsuban wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 3:45 pmBeing disproven in the real world doesn't mean you can't still write a story about the hollow interior of the Earth and populate it with whatever you want, or about a relict population of dinosaurs in the jungles of Brazil. You don't necessarily need to surprise readers, just convince them to suspend disbelief.
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
I think the problem is you're equating "unknown places" with "exotic places".malloc wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 12:22 pmI mean that the modern world is extensively researched and documented such that one cannot imagine exotic locales or astonishing discoveries anymore. People once wrote about dinosaurs surviving in the jungles of Brazil or the the hollow interior of the Earth after all. Today that's simply inconceivable even as fiction. Coming up with new ways to surprise readers and characters alike is quite a challenge.
for me, Yakutia, Russia is as exotic as Seattle, Washington is as exotic as Alice Springs, Australia.
as a further example to disprove your claim on both parts (unknown & exotic), I'll describe three places that I'd wager you've never heard of or knew anything about:
a. the only country ever to successfully outlaw duels.
b. a nation with a Gross National Happiness, whose prince killed his family.
c. seaside pyramids made of basalt.
and i'll reiterate: do you want help making exotic countries?
-
zompist
- Site Admin
- Posts: 4008
- Joined: Sun Jul 08, 2018 5:46 am
- Location: Right here, probably
- Contact:
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
That was good. Zitron could use an editor, but I think he's right on in his analysis of American business.Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 12:58 pm Ed Zitron is in great form today. Read the whole thing; summarizing it or quoting from it wouldn't do it justice:
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-era-of- ... ess-idiot/
The irony is that if we get rid of capitalism, it'll be because we're experiencing such a shitty version of it. The "business idiots" Zitron talks about weren't always there-- businesses used to be run by people who knew and cared about their industry. Now we have interchangeable MBAs who only know "business" and are rewarded whether they succeed or fail.
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
... They cracked down on dissent, broke strikes, stole millions, ran sweatshops, and moved jobs wherever possible to save a buck. They used any distraction they could think of to consolidate power: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dk-L4eOLl98zompist wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 7:50 pm The irony is that if we get rid of capitalism, it'll be because we're experiencing such a shitty version of it. The "business idiots" Zitron talks about weren't always there-- businesses used to be run by people who knew and cared about their industry. Now we have interchangeable MBAs who only know "business" and are rewarded whether they succeed or fail.
The complaint I commonly hear from old company men about new company men is that they are "too woke". They care about things like pronouns, the environment and (ugh) justice. In the old days, people entered companies to humbly learn how to make it successful like this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SC2eSujzrUY
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
I hear a lot of people say stuff like this:Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 12:58 pm Ed Zitron is in great form today. Read the whole thing; summarizing it or quoting from it wouldn't do it justice:
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-era-of- ... ess-idiot/
This message makes no sense to me. Of course it's mandatory for people who are trying to understand new ideas to play around with them as much as possible. What's the alternative, rote memorization like school children? Normally, you would discuss them with peers and teachers. If you don't trust them to be honest, knowledgeable or available, and talking to yourself isn't working out, the alternative is AI. The concern is not that the summarization and discussion is being done. The concerns are that the AI might not be accurate, using AI in for profit business consolidates power, energy usage needs to be capped at a level not too much higher than in 3D gaming, and so on.None of these tasks are things that require you to use AI. You can read your messages on Outlook and Teams without having them summarized — and I’d argue that a well-written email is one that doesn’t require a summary. Podcasts are not there "to be chatted about" with an AI. Preparing for meetings isn't something that requires AI, nor is research, unless, of course, you don't really give a shit about the actual content of what you're reading or the message of what you're saying, just that you are "saying the right thing."
PS. As for "I’d argue that a well-written email is one that doesn’t require a summary," what's the complaint there? That everyone should be a better writer? Surreal.
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Some day, I'd like to visit the parallel universe that "leftist" commentators seem to live in.a flagging AI ecosystem that cost billions to construct, but doesn’t really seem to do anything
Edit: For context, Google just used AI to find a bunch of new math proofs: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGCmu7YKgPA
Possibly the major misunderstanding of 21st century "leftists" is that neoliberalism believes things. It's more like the social system based on finance capitalism is self-selecting for actions that concentrate money through donor networks.The broader point I’m trying to make is that neoliberalism is inherently selfish, believing that the free market should reign supreme, bereft of government intervention, regulation or interference
PS. "Leftist" commentators have been predicting for a while, based on "theory" from the humanities, that AI is somehow impossible. After being decisively proven wrong, it seems like they have moved past shock. Some of them are in denial. Others are in anger, denouncing it as the Great Satan.
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Yeah, that sentiment has always perplexed me. It never made sense to me unless one assumes implicitly that human intelligence requires supernatural mechanisms that computers cannot use. If one accepts a purely materialist worldview as most leftists claim, then one must logically accept the possibility of artificial intelligence.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 9:02 pmPS. "Leftist" commentators have been predicting for a while, based on "theory" from the humanities, that AI is somehow impossible.
More like defending the interests of humans against an interloper. I realize you greatly dislike humans but most people, whether left or right wing, disagree. Quite honestly I have come to share your misanthropy to some degree, although I really don't think far right billionaires should be the ones to design what comes after Homo sapiens.After being decisively proven wrong, it seems like they have moved past shock. Some of them are in denial. Others are in anger, denouncing it as the Great Satan.
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
The rational kernel is that the social system is a constitutive factor in the emergence of intelligence as we understand it. This is true, and it plays a large role in the perceived alienness of AI. AI models that were not embedded in societies at some point can't possibly understand the meanings of the terms they use. That is, unless someone manages to reduce society to a manageable set of axioms. I'm not holding my breath.malloc wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 10:06 pm Yeah, that sentiment has always perplexed me. It never made sense to me unless one assumes implicitly that human intelligence requires supernatural mechanisms that computers cannot use. If one accepts a purely materialist worldview as most leftists claim, then one must logically accept the possibility of artificial intelligence.
1. The party line is that AI does nothing. I quoted the article, and that's what it says.malloc wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 10:06 pm More like defending the interests of humans against an interloper. I realize you greatly dislike humans but most people, whether left or right wing, disagree. Quite honestly I have come to share your misanthropy to some degree, although I really don't think far right billionaires should be the ones to design what comes after Homo sapiens.
2. I'm not promoting misanthropy. I think genocidal ideology spreads when people think they understand reality. They should stop believing in their sanity and carefully examine the world, reformulating their theories from first principles where possible.
...
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
given the rarity of human-level intelligence in anything other than humans, and the absence of anything more intelligent than humans, then one must either accept that AI will not equal - much less surpass - human intelligence, or that AI will not occur...depending upon what minimum one posits AI must be capable of.malloc wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 10:06 pmYeah, that sentiment has always perplexed me. It never made sense to me unless one assumes implicitly that human intelligence requires supernatural mechanisms that computers cannot use. If one accepts a purely materialist worldview as most leftists claim, then one must logically accept the possibility of artificial intelligence.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 9:02 pmPS. "Leftist" commentators have been predicting for a while, based on "theory" from the humanities, that AI is somehow impossible.
against an interloper? you refuse to defend the interests of humans against bad people, so why should we believe you would defend human interests against a nonhuman?More like defending the interests of humans against an interloper.After being decisively proven wrong, it seems like they have moved past shock. Some of them are in denial. Others are in anger, denouncing it as the Great Satan.
don't worry, they aren't.although I really don't think far right billionaires should be the ones to design what comes after Homo sapiens.
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Clarification:
I'm referring to the simulated environments I mentioned a long time ago.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 10:40 pm AI models that were not embedded in societies at some point
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
I agree with some of his points -- CEOs and top executives are, if not idiots, at least disconnected from reality, and increasingly so.Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 12:58 pm Ed Zitron is in great form today. Read the whole thing; summarizing it or quoting from it wouldn't do it justice:
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-era-of- ... ess-idiot/
On Satya Nadella; well Satya Nadella is selling a product (in that case, Copilot), so of course he's promoting it; going as far as to make absurd claims, sure, but that's marketing for you.
There is of course the 'quirky CEO doing quirky things' trend, which I think can be traced back to Steve Jobs.
The thing is, using AI to summarize email actually makes sense -- the volume of email an executive receives is staggering.None of these tasks are things that require you to use AI. You can read your messages on Outlook and Teams without having them summarized — and I’d argue that a well-written email is one that doesn’t require a summary. Podcasts are not there "to be chatted about" with an AI. Preparing for meetings isn't something that requires AI, nor is research, unless, of course, you don't really give a shit about the actual content of what you're reading or the message of what you're saying, just that you are "saying the right thing."
I agree that well-written emails would help a lot; but email is, sadly, rarely well-written.
Have they? I don't recall any such predictions. Unless this means AGI, which is still, um, unlikely.PS. "Leftist" commentators have been predicting for a while, based on "theory" from the humanities, that AI is somehow impossible. After being decisively proven wrong, it seems like they have moved past shock. Some of them are in denial. Others are in anger, denouncing it as the Great Satan.
I'm not sure there is really a party line; more of a tendancy towards opposition, which itself ranges from skepticism to rejection.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 10:40 pm
1. The party line is that AI does nothing. I quoted the article, and that's what it says.
Personally, while I don't think AI does nothing, I do feel there is something of a bubble around.
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
It might be safer to use text to speech. When I asked ChatGPT to summarize a Marx quote, the result was accurate, but I felt like it left out too many of the subtler points. But maybe a busy CEO wants brief notes anyway. Anyway, the discussing podcasts task feels safer to me.
On the other hand, I'm not sure "leftists" these days realize how spoiled they sound when they expect tired people to do tasks better. Studying theories of "agency" seems to have made them believe people fail on purpose. A lot of today's "leftists" don't seem to understand that most people are doing the best they can given the circumstances. Humans generally suck at tasks that don't involve hunting through shrubs to find berries. That's a job we can do for hours and feel fulfilled afterwards. Hence the popularity of sandboxes like Minecraft.
The people who had hard predictions of impossibility often interpreted Godel's incompleteness theorem the way Godel himself did, to mean that intelligence transcends formal systems. Godel intended this to be a direct attack against Turing. Some humanities theorists saw this as a limitation of the STEM approach. However, this is not what the incompleteness theorem states. (Edit: And Godel's alternative to the Turing Machine was later reduced to the Turing Machine.)
Pretty sure the mainstream leftist commentator line today is that AI can't do any real task right, fails on everything and is also conveniently evil. Here in America, the first inclination of leftists is to cancel any project that uses AI in any capacity whatsoever. I speak from personal experience.
Wouldn't surprise me. A capitalist economy is 50% bubbles for structural reasons. The internet's bubble burst BEFORE it really took off.
Last edited by rotting bones on Thu May 22, 2025 3:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
-
rotting bones
- Posts: 2836
- Joined: Tue Dec 04, 2018 5:16 pm
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Pre-rendered images and video is the right comparison for training. 3D gaming is the right comparison for prediction.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 8:37 pm energy usage needs to be capped at a level not too much higher than in 3D gaming
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
Err, what? How so? Are you arguing that things that are rare can't exist? Are you arguing that what is currently rare must stay rare? Are you arguing that what currently doesn't exist can't exist in the future?keenir wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 11:35 pmgiven the rarity of human-level intelligence in anything other than humans, and the absence of anything more intelligent than humans, then one must either accept that AI will not equal - much less surpass - human intelligence, or that AI will not occur...malloc wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 10:06 pmYeah, that sentiment has always perplexed me. It never made sense to me unless one assumes implicitly that human intelligence requires supernatural mechanisms that computers cannot use. If one accepts a purely materialist worldview as most leftists claim, then one must logically accept the possibility of artificial intelligence.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 9:02 pmPS. "Leftist" commentators have been predicting for a while, based on "theory" from the humanities, that AI is somehow impossible.
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
You're conflating two issues here: 1) the question of whether some kind of AI is, in principle, possible. On that, of course, you are right.rotting bones wrote: ↑Wed May 21, 2025 9:02 pm
PS. "Leftist" commentators have been predicting for a while, based on "theory" from the humanities, that AI is somehow impossible. After being decisively proven wrong, it seems like they have moved past shock. Some of them are in denial. Others are in anger, denouncing it as the Great Satan.
2) the much more currently urgent question of whether any of the stuff that currently gets pushed on the public under the label "AI" is anywhere near being that AI. On this, you are wrong, and Zitron is right, because the current forms of AI are pathologically incapable of telling truth from falsehoods, and that incapability is built into their very structure, which makes them mostly useless for anything else than playing around.
As jcb pointed out a few posts ago here, if you ask them for book recommendations, they'll make up books that don't exist. As other people pointed out in the past, they once sent tourists asking for restaurant recommendations to a food bank for poor and homeless people. Shortly ago, I saw a post by someone who had asked a new AI chatbot that's supposed to answer any questions people in California might have about fires and fire safety what the phone number of the fire department is, and couldn't get an answer. Yeah, AIs are clearly ready to replace human beings.
Last edited by Raphael on Thu May 22, 2025 5:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
I don't see what's supposed to be wrong with that line.rotting bones wrote: ↑Thu May 22, 2025 3:18 am
Pretty sure the mainstream leftist commentator line today is that AI can't do any real task right, fails on everything and is also conveniently evil. Here in America, the first inclination of leftists is to cancel any project that uses AI in any capacity whatsoever. I speak from personal experience.