Do you think AI is going to go away? History repeats itself, the Luddites will not win. The people who can best exploit AI will be ahead of those who cannot.
It won’t go away, but LLM won’t always mean automated-cargo-cult-programming, digital serfdom, climate apocalypse and a financial speculation bubble. At some point, their cost will have to be their actual cost. Bigtech hope is some many are some hopelessly dependent at that point they will pay that cost. Also that there is little competition because few couldn’t run at those losses.
But I think at that point, efficient small language models you can own/host, train and use at will, will be a thing. No one wants to be (American) bigtech serfs.
This is consistent with how most people have technology since the PC. They want control of their devices, the ability to use open source software, self host the services they deem critical. I’m no predictor, but I can see AI going the same path as other technologies, and we will get to a more user controlled environment.
True, but printing presses errored in consistent ways and could easily be fixed by someone literate in the language being printed. The only black boxes were the cases containing letter stamps. The smashing was happening because of what was being printed, and not because suddenly statistically relevant portions of the workforce were now unemployed and possibly unemployable. The situation is a bit different…
Not that different than now. Are people pushing back against AI when it’s used to accelerate cancer research data? The pushback is when people think it’s being used against them, just like the printing press.
People are pushing back against widespread abuse of LLM technology in workflows it’s a poor fit for and generates poor results for that are being built on current cost assumptions that are being massively subsidised by those pushing LLM solutions. When they flip to the “profit” stage of the plan and costs go up 5x or even 10x those workflows are going to look a lot less attractive for the poor results they generate. It’s also being used as a smoke screen for layoffs it’s not really responsible for which isn’t helping it’s image.
That’s more of a management issue rather than an AI issue. When any technology or process improvement is introduced, it is key to be able to measure it so the company can know their roi.
People also smashed printing presses when they first arrived.
https://bigthink.com/the-past/printing-press-ai/
Printing presses made knowledge more widely available for everyone.
LLMs do the exact opposite.
People are really out here defending the billionaire’s toys and comparing them to the fucking printing press?
We are so incredibly fucked.
Do you think AI is going to go away? History repeats itself, the Luddites will not win. The people who can best exploit AI will be ahead of those who cannot.
It won’t go away, but LLM won’t always mean automated-cargo-cult-programming, digital serfdom, climate apocalypse and a financial speculation bubble. At some point, their cost will have to be their actual cost. Bigtech hope is some many are some hopelessly dependent at that point they will pay that cost. Also that there is little competition because few couldn’t run at those losses.
But I think at that point, efficient small language models you can own/host, train and use at will, will be a thing. No one wants to be (American) bigtech serfs.
This is consistent with how most people have technology since the PC. They want control of their devices, the ability to use open source software, self host the services they deem critical. I’m no predictor, but I can see AI going the same path as other technologies, and we will get to a more user controlled environment.
True, but printing presses errored in consistent ways and could easily be fixed by someone literate in the language being printed. The only black boxes were the cases containing letter stamps. The smashing was happening because of what was being printed, and not because suddenly statistically relevant portions of the workforce were now unemployed and possibly unemployable. The situation is a bit different…
Not that different than now. Are people pushing back against AI when it’s used to accelerate cancer research data? The pushback is when people think it’s being used against them, just like the printing press.
People are pushing back against widespread abuse of LLM technology in workflows it’s a poor fit for and generates poor results for that are being built on current cost assumptions that are being massively subsidised by those pushing LLM solutions. When they flip to the “profit” stage of the plan and costs go up 5x or even 10x those workflows are going to look a lot less attractive for the poor results they generate. It’s also being used as a smoke screen for layoffs it’s not really responsible for which isn’t helping it’s image.
That’s more of a management issue rather than an AI issue. When any technology or process improvement is introduced, it is key to be able to measure it so the company can know their roi.