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Jai Rai's avatar

If I'm being frank, I think this is ridiculous, and scary. Efficiency is not everything. I'm probably going to sound like a Luddite here, but AI should be used for scientific & material advancement, not to create mega-Sundars. The Silicon Valley tech narrative of efficiency seems dystopian. It also ignores how much of the modern world is a result of consumer demand. So many innovations, it is because there was consumer demand. When you replace a Google engineer, you might increase Google's bottom-line, but you also replace a source of demand for rest of the economy. And considering Google is dependent on advertising revenue from other corporations, Google is indirectly hurting its own bottom-line too. Sure a world with AI firms might distribute the surplus back to human beings, but where does demand even come from this world?, and if we can find a way, do we want this? Work also provides meaning, lessons to us, as human being. It grounds us as human beings. It's what makes us human. And the world you are describing does not have a place for most humans. Maybe this happens, but I hope it doesn't. We need norms to deal with this.

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Jaroslav Sýkora's avatar

I am working as computer electronics hardware engineer in a 300k-employee corporation. I have 30 years of experience with software coding as well. We have MS-Copilot and an internal chat-GPT system in place which allows us using the AI even for confidential data.

And I like reading sci-fi. And I am just running deepseek 14b on my home pc under linux.

With that said, based on my experience, I find this article as convincing as the second coming of Jesus should happen tomorrow. (No insult meant to Christians.)

I just can't get over the idea that some computer system should ever work so well as to viably replace humans doing non-trivial jobs. I just can't get it. Sorry.

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