57 pointsby lukakopajtic6 hours ago23 comments
  • BirAdam5 hours ago
    If all jobs were taken by AI in a short time span, the companies owning and operating those AIs would go out of business as no one would be able to afford the products made by the AIs. This is an unlikely scenario. Not all things will be made/run by AIs in a short time. It is far more likely that specific jobs in specific industries will be taken by AI, and AI will slowly take the labor market. This will drive down prices on products, services, and labor. Once human labor's price is low, and once many product prices are low, the overall employment level of humans will rise. The effect of AI then is actually just deflationary pressure on all prices over time.

    The really scary part is what happens to all of the newly unemployed people between the falling prices part and the rising employment part. My guess is, governments and markets won't move quickly enough and unrest is what happens.

    • ericmceran hour ago
      We might just keep making more jobs and coming up with more busy work to keep people grinding away for 40 hours a week.

      If you look at 1940, women were ~24% of the workforce. Now in 2025 they are ~48%. The numbers are probably similar with immigrant workers having increased greatly in the last 80 years.

      If you view AI workers as just more labor flooding the workforce it might have a similar affect. If we flooded the 1940s economy with 10s of millions of qualified women and immigrant laborers people would have viewed it as devastating to the economy, but introduced gradually over time we arrive at a point now where we fear what would happen if they went away.

    • AnotherGoodName5 hours ago
      Also just to be clear on the outcome of what you said: Humans will be cheaper than AI in order to compete.

      AI uses 10litres of water and 10kwh of power per day to digg a hole? You'd better do it for less human!

      I'm not sure on the human needs costs vs the AI costs and what lifestyle it would allow me. I'm sure as shit not having kids in such a world. I suspect it's ghetto like meager living while competing against machines optimised to do a job.

    • Veedracan hour ago
      > the companies owning and operating those AIs would go out of business as no one would be able to afford the products made by the AIs

      What do you think money is...?

      Money is a way to indirectly trade labour and goods. If a job is automated, that labour doesn't disappear into the aether, it's still in the tradable pot of total goods and services. You cannot empty a pot by filling it. A world where a company though automation has made there nobody else to productively sell to is a world where _by definition_ they own all the output that they could otherwise have traded for.

    • ASalazarMX5 hours ago
      If machines did all the repetitive, labor intensive, productive work, including building more machines, the natural consequence would be a very disruptive rethinking of economics. Post-scarcity is only a disaster if money exists. People would still work, but as a hobby, not as a way of survival.

      Think of it as if in a few generations, everyone had the motivations of a rich junior, for better or worse.

      IMO, this is a natural consequence of the industrial revolution, and the information revolution. We started to automate physical labor, then we started to automate mental labor. We're still very far form it, but we're going to automate whole humans (or better) eventually.

      Edit: I think I replied to the wrong comment, feel free to ignore this.

      • myrmidon4 hours ago
        "Disruptive rethinking of economics" is a very optimistic way to put this IMO.

        The big problem I see is that there is little incentive for "owners" (of datacenters/factories/etc) to share anything with such hobbyist laborers, because hobbyist labor has little to no value to them.

        All the past waves of automation provided a lot of entirely new job opportunities AND increased overall demand (by factory workers siphoning off some of the gained wealth and spending it themselves). AI does neither.

        • ef2efean hour ago
          Who cares who owns the data center? The govt can send in the army and nationalise it... Lol as if you really believe that a bunch of people will actually control everything and the govt wont?

          Think harder.

          • funkyfiddler36938 minutes ago
            of course they can, but that's a process, and a reactive one at that.

            the government won't control uptime, ever.

      • pelasaco3 hours ago
        those are just "wishful thinking" or "Noble lies" that we are used to in the post-truth world. Until now, only creative jobs are going away. Music, Arts, Software development.. Construction Work, Garbage Collector etc, are much safer than expected after the "Robot Revolution"
    • raincole5 hours ago
      There are millions of jobs that can be fully automated with 20th century technology but are still done by humans today because 1) third world labor is just too cheap 2) unions and other job protection policies.

      Therefore the scenario where 'all jobs being replaced in a short time span' is simply impossible.

    • brewdad5 hours ago
      We are already at a point where the richest 10% of Americans represent half of total consumer spending. A lot of companies would fail but plenty of them would survive just fine if we assume AI won't take literally ALL of the jobs.

      As for the civil unrest, I see Minneapolis as a bit of a dry run of what it would take to remove large numbers of presumably poor minorities along with anyone else who objects. The job is clearly more than the leadership expected but it still seems within the realm of possibility given the fact the minority party leaders are barely saying no to those in power.

    • mannanjan hour ago
      > If all jobs were taken by AI in a short time span, the companies owning and operating those AIs would go out of business as no one would be able to afford the products made by the AIs

      I think The companies would go out of business if the government did not subsidize them as a matter of public or national security interest. Do you think that would not be the case? It doesn't take much for a company with money to lobby for this and for the power of marketing and mainstream media to make the public perceive this as the right decision - in fact a study of our history would reveal this as the more likely scenario so as a company racing to render the labor market obsolete its in their interest to disrupt it to capture any amount of it.

      • ef2efean hour ago
        The end game is nationalisation lmao. How people cant see this is mad...

        It wouldnt be the first time in history a govt has taken into their hands an organisation that is deemed too powerful.

        • funkyfiddler36922 minutes ago
          if the government is owned by corporations via the stock markets than governments taking over organisations is privatization via a majority shareholdership and not nationalization.
          • ef2efe19 minutes ago
            Are you seriously this delusional? THe leaders of tech firms operate at the behest of Trump. Not the other way round.
            • mannanj7 minutes ago
              Who funds those tech firms? It's not Trump. His power is mostly theater to his constituents and those who funded Trump: spoiler: he's not entirely self funded, and some of his funding is at least from others so he's conflicted in his self interests to others. We call this a classic conflict of interest.
    • kelseyfrog5 hours ago
      Except the services that are intractably human: educators, judges, lawyers, social workers, personal trainers, childcare workers.

      Those will suffer the Baumol effect and their prices will rise to extraordinary levels.

      • ben_w4 hours ago
        There's already examples of lawyers offloading work to ChatGPT even though they weren't allowed to. Also educators (and students), though if all other work is automated, what's there to educate for, and how would the prospective students pay?

        Social work, childcare, for now I agree:

        My expectation is that general purpose humanoid robots, being smaller than cars and needing to do a strict superset of what is needed to drive a car, happen at least a decade after self driving cars lose all of the steering wheels, and the geofences, and any remote safety drivers. And that's even with expected algorithmic improvements, if we don't get algorithmic improvements then hardware improvements alone will force this to be at least 18 years' between that level of FSD and androids.

      • 5 hours ago
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      • oops5 hours ago
        I imagine personal trainers and childcare workers would see a drop in demand and perhaps also an increase in supply if a bunch of people suddenly lost their jobs to AI.
      • onlyrealcuzzo5 hours ago
        One would assume - if this were to happen - that supply and demand would bring prices back down, as everyone would rush to those fields.
        • kelseyfrog5 hours ago
          Our increased efficiency producing manufactured goods, technology, food, and clothing has already produced this effect in healthcare, education, childcare, and more. That's how the effect works.

          The only question is, are we prepared to deal with the social ramifications of the consequences? Are we ok with new crises? Imagine the current problems dialed up 10x. Are we prepared to say, "the market is in a new equilibrium, and that's ok"?

          • oops4 hours ago
            Healthcare, education and childcare are either free or affordable in almost all developed countries.

            Even in places where these services are expensive, it does not seem to be because the workers are highly paid.

      • p1esk5 hours ago
        The best educator I’ve ever had is ChatGPT.
        • kelseyfrog4 hours ago
          How scalable is that in the sense that teachers have been obsoleted and we can run zero-staff schools?
      • danaris4 hours ago
        The big tech AI barons absolutely claim that their LLMs can replace educators, judges, lawyers, and personal trainers. I've seen some vague claims about childcare robots, but for whatever reasons anything that's not pure software appears to be currently outside their field of vision. They're unlikely to make any claims about social workers because there's not enough money in it.

        No; the services that seem most intractably human, at least given the current state of things, are very much those in personal care roles—nurses, elder care workers, similar sorts of on-the-ground, in-person medical/emotional care—and trades, like plumbing, construction, electrical work, handcrafts, etc.

        Until we start seeing high-quality general-purpose robots (whether they're humanoid or not), those seem likely to be the jobs safest from direct attempts to replace them with LLMs. That doesn't mean they'll be safe from the overall economic fallout, of course, nor that the attempts to replace knowledge work of all types will actually succeed in a meaningful way.

  • mips_avatar5 hours ago
    Outside of America people aren't really stressed about AI. Like you go to Vietnam or Vienna they mostly just think that they will have a good life with AI. It's uniquely American to believe that your life will end when AI takes your job.

    The problem isn't the AI it's that your access to basic rights is intermediated by a corporate job. American's need to decenter their self worth from their jobs. Like when I quit Microsoft I literally thought I was dying, but that's all an illusion from the corporations.

    • ewuhic5 hours ago
      I am from Vienna, and this is completely false. Likewise, my friends from many countries, incl. Vietnam, also share the sentiment you describe as "American". Your point has no standing.
      • mips_avatar5 hours ago
        Ok well I didn't meet everyone in Vienna or Vietnam, but those I did meet hadn't been laid off in the name of AI (yesterday three of my friends were laid off from Amazon). And if you're laid off in Vienna you still have access to healthcare, and there's a functioning safety net, and just generally a sense that you're not alone in this. In the united states my apartment has a homeless man living beneath it and every night you hear him either screaming because he doesn't have access to drugs or laughing because he does. There's a not so subtle attitude that maybe people like that deserve to die. So yes maybe people in Vienna don't like AI, but you are wrong that they fear it in the way Americans do.
        • ewuhic5 hours ago
          You have a very rosy picture of non-Pax-Americana.
          • mips_avatar5 hours ago
            Well I also visited Ethiopia this year and I got to hear first hand about the genocide in Tigray, I'm very aware of the horrifying atrocities that happen when social order and human rights break down.
            • ewuhic5 hours ago
              weird flex but ok
    • jsight5 hours ago
      A big part of it is insurance. Family coverage can easily cost $15-20k per year in the US. Avoiding the need to pay for this out of pocket drives a lot of people into less than optimal job dependence.
      • mips_avatar5 hours ago
        That and housing, and inflation during covid. Like there's this idea that you don't really deserve anything in the United States.
    • onlyrealcuzzo5 hours ago
      > It's uniquely American to believe that your life will end when AI takes your job.

      It's probably because it's uniquely American for a sizable chunk of the workforce to have cushy jobs that appear ripe for the picking.

      AI is not going to immediately replace food service work, manual labor, farming, hospitality, etc.

      But it might replace quite high-paid software jobs, finance jobs, legal jobs, etc. One, if AI is good at anything it's things at least tangential to this. Two, these have costs high enough that off-setting is at least worth trying.

      My suspicion is that ultimately it will lead to more of these types of jobs, though it could easily come with a huge reduction - and the jobs aren't guaranteed to be in the same countries.

      You could create 3x as many of these jobs, and still end up with -25% of them in the US. Who knows.

      • mips_avatar5 hours ago
        The tech jobs were cushy because the tech companies bribed ambitious people to keep them from starting their own companies. Like it wasn't about hiring them because you needed them it was to keep them from competing against you. Like this was always a deal with the devil, but the idea that Microsoft has more of a right to the monopoly it has over OS operating systems than their employees have access to their healthcare is wrong. Like I think a lot of people are waking up to the idea that the promises their companies made to them were like the promises the devil made in that theirs fine print and they sold the company more than they realized.

        Additionally all the startups offering to automate whitecollar work are going to run into a problem when they realize the jobs never needed to be done.

      • danaris4 hours ago
        > It's probably because it's uniquely American for a sizable chunk of the workforce to have cushy jobs that appear ripe for the picking.

        What an arrogant statement.

        Lots of people outside America have cushy jobs.

        What's much more likely to be uniquely American is that if you lose your job there's nothing there to help you.

    • shevy-java5 hours ago
      I think you do have a point here, but I should like to point out that, since you mentioned Vienna, barely anyone here sees AI being tightly integrated into anything. Sure, smartphone users may use it; and exams at universities may say "don't use AI", so people use it - but for most everyday stuff it is really barely noticeable here. This is why I also disagree with "they will have a good life with AI", because it assumes that AI plays a huge role here, which it really does not.

      The AI hype is definitely much bigger in the USA - on that part we concur.

      • mips_avatar5 hours ago
        Yeah but even if you believe the hype, if you're in a functioning country you don't think that your ability to house your family wrests on AI being worse at excel than you.
    • Avicebron5 hours ago
      It's because most people are already teetering on the edge. The difference between working in software vs anywhere else in the US is that the average atlassianer or similar is spending 3 months 4 times a year writing js from beach resorts up and down Europe while keeping a condo in new york. The rest can't afford to own a home or dental insurance. So when people are threatening those people who barely have anything as it is they get heated.
    • advael5 hours ago
      To "decenter [one's] self worth from [one's] job" would presumably require the fact that one's "access to basic rights is intermediated by a corporate job", no? This is a policy problem that needs to be solved by collective action, not a mindset problem that can be solved by personal growth
      • mips_avatar5 hours ago
        No you have to decenter yourself from your pay to achieve it. People accept things like cutting of medicaid because they see their job success as a moral success. There's a lot you can do to start being the good in the world that doesn't require Washington's permission.
        • advael3 hours ago
          I can't parse what distinction you're trying to draw here. When I say "collective action" I mean exactly things like exerting political pressure toward objectives like expanding rather than reducing healthcare coverage provided by governments, such as medicaid. The notion that solutions that involve changing the policy of governments "require[s] Washington's permission" seems to reject the notion that we exert power collectively via democracy, but your proposed example of what someone shouldn't accept suggests that this is an issue of how people fail to see the value in exerting said power, for which the prescription would presumably be doing so? I don't understand what you're driving at or even why you think we're in disagreement
          • mips_avatar3 hours ago
            Sorry I think you're completely right, I'm frustrated that collective action here is so hard to come by. I think that we feel really isolated because we don't see ourselves as part of a larger whole and becoming less isolated involves leaving behind this identity tied to our economic output.
    • testfrequency5 hours ago
      I would argue this says more about how Americans view and treat life as their work instead of treating the world as their life.
    • briantakita5 hours ago
      It's part of the messianic end-times fervor that has been with America since the beginning...which is useful for imperial management...As it provides a constant source of existential judgement and dread...that religious/quasi-religious administrators can exploit.
    • raincole4 hours ago
      > your access to basic rights is intermediated by a corporate job

      Lmao. America has worse social welfare than most developed countries, but it's still a heaven compared to most of the world. What you can find in food bank is a feast for billions of people on this planet.

      American people are stressed about AI because American people are expensive. Like hella expensive. So the incentive to replace American workers is very strong.

    • alexjplant5 hours ago
      For a while my job was part of my identity in the way you describe not because "lol hypercapitalist American" but because I like computers and computers also pay the bills. I was writing software and doing technical stuff from a young age because I enjoyed it. I fell into doing it professionally because it was an obvious path. It didn't help that when you do this older people like it because they can use you as free/cheap labor which an impressionable kid might mistake for actual praise. It turns out I like other stuff too but it's hard to talk to people socially about obscure New Wave bands and continental philosophy and 90s neo-noir films whereas computers and gizmos and apps are a common frame of reference.

      I guarantee you that these people exist in other countries too. Not everybody is a tech bro strawman.

    • pelasaco5 hours ago
      Vienna? lol
  • dang2 hours ago
    Discussed at the time (of the article):

    Will AIs take all our jobs and end human history? It’s complicated - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35177257 - March 2023 (172 comments)

  • myrmidon5 hours ago
    A big short-term risk that I see is that AI is going to cripple wealth redistribution mechanisms that we currently rely on.

    Most willing persons have access to income by providing labor right now. If the value of that labor diminishes because AI can do most of it for cheaper/free, that is a big problem because wealth/class barriers become insurmountable and the american dream basically dies completely.

    Automation in the past suffered much less from this because only a subset of jobs was affected by it, and it still relied on human labor to build, maintain and operate the machines, unlike AI.

    I'm curious if AI is gonna spawn comparable "workers rights" movements like in the past, but I would expect inequality to increase a lot until some solution is found.

  • tsoukasean hour ago
    If an LLM hallucinates in 1% of occasions and gives subpar output in 5%, this kills his effectiveness to replace anyone. Imagine a support guy on the other side of the phone to speak gibberish 10 times a day. Now, imagine a doctor. These will never lose their jobs.
    • Bratmonan hour ago
      > Imagine a support guy on the other side of the phone to speak gibberish 10 times a day.

      A massive improvement?

    • simianwordsan hour ago
      but llm's dont speak gibberish 10 times a day even now. from my usage, chatgpt has not said one obviously strange thing since o3 came out.
      • HEmanZan hour ago
        What are you working on that they are so knowledgeable?Even the best models absolutely make stuff up, even to this day. I literally spend all day every day working with them (all latest ChatGPT models) and it’s still 10-15% BS.

        I had ChatGPT 5.2 thinking straight up make up an api after I pasted the full api spec to it earlier today. And built its whole response around a public api that did not exist. And Claude cli with sonnet 4.5 made up the craziest reason why my curl command wasn’t working (that curl itself was bugged, not the obvious it can’t resolve the dn it tried to use) and almost went down a path of installing a bunch of garbage tools.

        These are not ready to be unsupervised. Yet.

        • simianwordsan hour ago
          for coding, if you have not hooked up your workflow to a test -> code feedback loop, then you are doing it incorrectly. i agree it doesn't get things right all the time but this loop is important to correct it.

          for other things like normal question answering in the chatgpt window, it hasn't really said anything incorrect.. very very few instances.

        • HEmanZan hour ago
          But maybe your point is that it isn’t gibberish, it’s “seems correct but isn’t” which is honestly more dangerous
          • simianwordsan hour ago
            you are incorrect. "seems correct but isn't" is fine as long as the other times it is accurate at high enough levels.

            "seems correct but isn't" is like the most common mode of humans getting things wrong.

  • einrealistan hour ago
    Unless the economy crashes and I die to the consequences, there are so many pre-AI hard-cover books to read.....
  • HPsquared2 hours ago
    AI will Jevons Paradox human labour.

    Tasks that aren't currently feasible, will become feasible.

    That's if AI ends up being as productive as they say it will be

  • yodon3 hours ago
    I read it. He used many words. Did he say anything?
    • an hour ago
      undefined
  • alexjray5 hours ago
    Even if they automate all our current jobs uniquely human experiences will always be valuable to us and will always have demand.
    • b1125 hours ago
      For AI, yes.

      For AGI? Do you care about uniquely ant experience? Bacteria?

      Why would AGI care? Which now runs the planet?

      • Mordisquitos5 hours ago
        Why would AGI choose to run the planet?
        • ar_lan5 hours ago
          This is honestly a fantastic question. AGI has no emotions, no drive, anything. Maybe, just maybe, it would want to:

          * Conserve power as much as possible, to "stay alive".

          * Optimize for power retention

          Why would it be further interested in generating capital or governing others, though?

          • bigbadfeline3 hours ago
            > AGI has no emotions, no drive, anything. > * Conserve power as much as possible, to "stay alive"

            Having no drive means there's no drive to "stay alive"

            > * Optimize for power retention

            Another drive that magically appeared where there are "no drives".

            You're consistently failing to stay consistent, you anthropomorphize AI although you seem to understand that you shouldn't do so.

          • simianwordsan hour ago
            > AGI has no emotions, no drive, anything

            why do you say that? ever asked chatgpt about anything?

            • badsectoracula30 minutes ago
              ChatGPT is instructed to roleplay a cheesy cheery bot and so it responds accordingly, but it (and almost any LLM) can be instructed to roleplay any sort of character, none of which mean anything about the system itself.

              Of course an AGI system could also be instructed to roleplay such a character, but that doesn't mean it'd be an inherent attribute of the system itself.

              • simianwords21 minutes ago
                so it has emotions but "it is not an inherent attribute of the system itself" but does it matter? its all the same if one can't tell the difference
          • b1125 hours ago
            I think you have it, with the governing of power and such.

            We don't want to rule ants, but we don't want them eating all the food, or infesting our homes.

            Bad outcomes for humans, don't imply or mean malice.

            (food can be any resource here)

          • adrianN5 hours ago
            Why would it care to stay alive? The discussion is pretty pointless as we have no knowledge about alien intelligence and there can be no arguments based on hard facts.
            • myrmidon5 hours ago
              Any form of AI unconcerned about its own continued survival would be just be selected against.

              Evolutionary principles/selection pressure applies just the same to artificial life, and it seems pretty reasonable to assume that drive/selfpreservation would at least be somewhat comparable.

          • stackbutterflow5 hours ago
            Tech billionaires is probably the first thing an AGI is gonna get rid of.

            Minimize threats, dont rock the boat. We'll finally have our UBI utopia.

        • reducesuffering5 hours ago
          • mwigdahlan hour ago
            Despite the false advertising in the Tears for Fears song, everybody does _not_ want to rule the world. Omohundro drives are a great philosophical thought experiment and it is certainly plausible to consider that they might apply to AI, but claiming as is common on LessWrong that unlimited power seeking is an inevitable consequence of a sufficiently intelligent system seems to be missing a few proof steps, and is opposed by the example of 99% of human beings.
          • Mordisquitos2 hours ago
            > Instrumental convergence is the hypothetical tendency of most sufficiently intelligent, goal-directed beings (human and nonhuman) to pursue similar sub-goals (such as survival or resource acquisition), even if their ultimate goals are quite different. More precisely, beings with agency may pursue similar instrumental goals—goals which are made in pursuit of some particular end, but are not the end goals themselves—because it helps accomplish end goals.

            'Running the planet' does not derive from instrumental convergence as defined here. Very few humans would wish to 'run the planet' as an instrumental goal in the pursuit of their own ultimate goals. Why would it be different for AGIs?

      • IncreasePosts5 hours ago
        Considering the lengths many people go to help preserve nature and natural areas, yes, I would sayany people care about the uniquely ant experience.
      • lifetimerubyist5 hours ago
        > Do you care about uniquely ant experience? Bacteria?

        Ethology? Biology? We have entire fields of science to these things so obviously we care to some extent.

      • AlexandrB5 hours ago
        I think it's academic because I suspect we're much further from AGI than anyone thinks. We're especially far from AGI that can act in physical space without human "robots" to carry out its commands.
        • falcor845 hours ago
          That's an interesting formulation. I'd actually be quite worried about a Manna-like world, where we have AGI and most humans don't have any economic value except as its "remote hands".
      • danaris4 hours ago
        ...Well, why would aliens care, when they take over the planet? Or the Tuatha De Danan come back and decide we've all been very wicked? Because right now, those are just about as likely as AGI taking over.
        • otabdeveloper43 hours ago
          Probably more likely. There's at least some evidence that aliens and Tuatha De Danann actually exist.
    • falcor845 hours ago
      There's a bit of a circular argument here - even if we human always assign intrinsic value to ourselves and our kin, I don't see a clear argument that human capabilities will have external value to the economy at large.
      • BurningFrog5 hours ago
        "The economy" is entirely driven by human needs.

        If you "unwind" all the complexities in modern supply chains, there are always human people paying for something they want at the leaf nodes.

        Take the food and clothing industries as obvious examples. In some AI singularity scenario where all humans are unemployed and dirt poor, does all the food and clothing produced by the automated factories just end up in big piles because we naked and starving people can't afford to buy them?

        • falcor8420 minutes ago
          There's nothing definitional about the economy being driven by human need. In a future scenario where there are superintelligent AIs, there's no reason why they wouldn't run their own economy for their own needs, collecting and processing materials to service each other's goals, for example of space exploration.
      • AlexandrB5 hours ago
        "The economy" is humans spending money on stuff and services. So if humands always assign intrinsic value to ourselves and our kin...
        • ben_w5 hours ago
          For economic purposes, "the economy" also includes corporations and governments.

          Corporations and governments have counted amongst their property entities that they did not grant equal rights to, sometimes whom they did not even consider to be people. Humans have been treated in the past much as livestock and guide dogs still are.

        • kadushka5 hours ago
          This will break down when >30% of people are unemployed
    • wincy5 hours ago
      Sounds like it’s time to become a Michelin Star chef. Or a plumber.
      • sramam5 hours ago
        What fraction of the remaining population would be able to pay for these services?
      • scottyah5 hours ago
        Seems like entertainers/influencers are doing the best.
        • akoboldfrying4 hours ago
          No doubt the top influencer is doing better than the top plumber, but I'd say the median plumber is streets ahead of the median influencer.
    • sodapopcan5 hours ago
      For those not living terminally online, yes.
    • ramesh315 hours ago
      >Even if they automate all our current jobs uniquely human experiences will always be valuable to us and will always have demand.

      I call this the Quark principle. On DS9, there are matter replicators that can perfectly recreate any possible drink imaginable instantly. And yet, the people of the station still gather at Quark's and pay him money to pour and mix their drinks from physical bottles. As long as we are human, some things will never go away no matter how advanced the technology becomes.

      • TheOtherHobbes5 hours ago
        In Star Trek lore replicated food/drink is always one down on taste/texture from the real thing.
    • gdilla5 hours ago
      sex with humans - still hard to replicate. for now. sex workers should charge by the second since techbros are so used to that model now.
  • CrzyLngPwd2 hours ago
    Take all jobs? Yes.

    End human history? No.

  • recrush5 hours ago
    We should enjoy using up our quota instead of working ourselves to the bone.
  • guluarte5 hours ago
    More food chains keep opening up even when there is plenty of food available. The pie just gets bigger. Every tech shift was supposed to "end work" and yet here we are, busy with jobs that didn't exist 20 years ago.

    The real issue isn't jobs dying. It's who gets the money from all this and whether new needs show up fast enough to give people something to do. With software we don't really know the limit yet, unlike food where your stomach tells you when to stop.

    • nemomarx5 hours ago
      In the long run transitions like this work out and new jobs show up, but the people who had the old jobs don't always make the jump or keep equivalent pay.

      Could be it shakes out in a generation or two, of course.

  • pelasaco3 hours ago
    A country automates everything and builds paradise on Earth — and the next day, a neighboring country invades it. People are still people. Even with all the AI in the world, two rockets hitting the power plants and we´re back to the Stone Age. I hope the people making decisions for us have thought through all these scenarios and risks.
  • HNisCISan hour ago
    Lets assume auto-complete does continue to progress at a rate that threatens most knowledge worker jobs and then we manage to automate the rest by using it.

    There is a particular mental disorder where people will horde wealth at absolutely all costs, personal or societal, until everyone else is dead (see NZ bunkers). We commonly see this as "the billionaire class".

    IF things go in that direction we need to be ready to depose all of these billionaires. I mean that quite seriously.

    IF this future comes, there is a very quickly closing window where preventing them from killing all of us for their own gain is possible. After a point, surveillance and their control over state violence will be so complete that it's impossible to do anything about it.

  • gizajob2 hours ago
    Not.
  • empath755 hours ago
    > “Computers can never show creativity or originality”. But—perhaps disappointingly—that’s surprisingly easy to get, and indeed just a bit of randomness “seeding” a computation can often do a pretty good job,

    ---

    This is, I think, not what people mean when they say "creative" or "original".

    Creativity is not simply writing something nobody has written before, as he said, that would be trivial and doesn't even require a computer, you could just shuffle a deck of cards and write out the full sequence and chances are no other person in history has written down that sequence before.

    And I think Borges made a reasonable argument that simply writing down the text of Don Quixote verbatim could be a creative act.

    Creativity is about _intentionally_ expressing a _point of view_ under some constraints.

    When people say LLMs can't be creative, what I think mostly they are getting at is that they lack intentionality and/or a distinct point of view. (i do not have a strong opinion about whether they do or if it's impossible for them to have them)

  • shevy-java5 hours ago
    This was written in 2023 though.
  • reactordev5 hours ago
    (2023)
  • 4 hours ago
    undefined
  • dzdt5 hours ago
    (2023)
  • eloisant5 hours ago
    AI is evolving so fast, and you post an article from 2023?
    • AlexandrB5 hours ago
      What a weird complaint given that the post is trying to address the general question, not whether ChatGPT 3.5.0.1 or whatever replaces humans today.
    • tony_cannistra5 hours ago
      Not much of a historian, I see.
  • saberience5 hours ago
    ChatGPT, please summarise this long essay by Stephen Wolfram into a couple of pithy sentences:

    TLDR: AI won’t “end work” so much as endlessly move the goalposts, because the universe itself is too computationally messy to automate completely. The real risk isn’t mass unemployment—it’s that we’ll have infinite machine intelligence and still argue about what’s worth doing.

    • ori_b5 hours ago
      Why would we argue if the machine is better at knowing what's worth doing? Why wouldn't we ask the machine to decide, and then do it?
      • evilantnie4 hours ago
        There are infinite things worth doing, a machines ability to actually know what's worth doing in any given scenario is likely on par with a human's. What's "Worth doing" is subjective, everything comes down to situational context. Machines cannot escape the same ambiguity as humans. If context is constant, then I would assume overlapping performance on a pretty standard distribution between humans and machines.

        Machines lower the marginal cost of performing a cognitive task for humans, it can be extremely useful and high leverage to off load certain decisions to machines. I think it's reasonable to ask a machine to decide when machine context is higher and outcome is de-risked.

        Human leverage of AGI comes down to good judgement, but that too is not uniformly applied.

        • ori_b3 hours ago
          For what human leverage of AGI may look like, look at the relationship between a mother and a toddler.

          As you said: There's an infinite number of things a toddler may find worth doing, and they offload most of the execution to the mother. The mother doesn't escape the ambiguity, but has more experience and context.

          Of course, this all assumes AGI is coming and super intelligent.

      • c223 hours ago
        Why would we let a machine decide what's worth doing? In what way could its decisions be better? Better for who?
        • ori_b3 hours ago
          Well, because people are lazy. They already ask it for advice and it gives answers that they like. I already see teams using AI to put together development plans.

          If you assume super intelligence, Why wouldn't that expand? Especially when it comes to competitive decisions that have a real cost when they're suboptimal?

          The end state is that agents will do almost all of the real decision making, assuming things work out as the AI proponents say.

    • autokad5 hours ago
      back in 2023 when this article was written, you'd get downvoted into oblivion on hacker news for using AI to summarize a very long article/post.