173 pointsby JumpCrisscross4 hours ago24 comments
  • softwaredougan hour ago
    I noticed a lot more joy using AI from people at smaller companies or working by themselves :)

    I say this as someone self employed that burned almost $1000 on tokens last month. And had. A lot of fun doing it.

    • abalashov9 minutes ago
      I work by myself and feel no joy in using AI.
    • j-bosan hour ago
      Been feeling that energy too, trying so hard to stay at my current big co job for the health insurance. But the draw is pulling me hard.
  • swingboy4 minutes ago
    I fear it's only a matter of time until someone with nothing to lose does more than throw a molotov as Sama's house.
  • Havoc2 hours ago
    I think there is a bit of wider social norms piece missing as well on AI use in knowledge work context.

    Someone forwarded an enormous amount of text over teams the other day at work. From someone (bless her) that always means well but usually averages about one spelling mistake per word and rarely goes over 20 words per message. Clearly copy paste chatgpt.

    For say hn gang that thinks in terms of context shifts, information load and things on THAT wave length the problem with that situation is obvious but I realised then that is not at all obvious to the average public. She genuinely seemed to think she's helping me by spending 15 seconds typing in a prompt and having me spend the next 30 minutes untangling the AI slop.

    There is zero understanding or consensus of acceptable practices around that sort of thing baked into societal norms right now.

    • gumby27116 minutes ago
      I've run into a similar thing where I'll be cc'd on support tickets with one of our customer support agents and they'll then reply to me with what is clearly an ai summary of the single email from the customer that I can already read. I do think they're trying to be helpful, but it's hard to not feel like they think I'm a child or an idiot. Back in the day we agreed that Googling something for someone was rude (letmegooglethatforyou.com being a good example), I don't know why ai summaries and slop aren't understood in the same way.
      • asiba few seconds ago
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  • ost-ing3 hours ago
    As someone who has spent a vast portion of life believing technology would make life better, I've come to the realisation that this idea is a fallacy. Technology amplifies power and until we collectively redefine and enforce a value system that benefits us all, the advancements in technology simply serve as a means of subjugation
    • fidotron2 hours ago
      Let's go there: this is what the Unabomber was on about, and there has long been an effort to stop people noticing this.

      Ultimately you end up with either going for totalitarianism (either to arrest development in the status quo, maintain a state of anarcho primitivism or technocratic tedium) or we resist that and break out by trying to forge forward into some unknown unchartered territory.

      In practice we have no choice but to aim for the unknown and hope. Can't lie and say I can see what the way through all this is though.

      • iugtmkbdfil834an hour ago
        Not so long ago, I have come to a rather unpleasant realization that whether a lot of that will happen, will depend heavily on whether the ones currently trying to make technology control every facet of our lives decide to allow society get dumber first ( think Idiocracy, which AI very much could allow ) or not in which case it is anyone's guess, because people will still have some basic skills and memories of what could be.

        I am hoping for the best, but life has taught me hard not to bet against humanity's worst instincts.

        edit: add whether

        • fidotronan hour ago
          100%. Same applies to any hypothetical sentient AI that may or may not arise. The incentives to keep everyone weak and dumb are too strong.

          I have a friend in a position of some influence, and am currently trying to persuade them to stop being so comfortable trusting in humanity to come to the right decisions for exactly that reason.

          • ihswan hour ago
            [dead]
        • JuniperMesosan hour ago
          The thesis of Idiocracy is that society gets dumber in the future because intelligence is mostly genetically-determined and smarter people systematically have fewer children than dumber people, i.e. literal evolutionary selection against human intelligence over many human generations. This is clear in the first several minutes of the movie. People who recognize that this is what that movie is saying often then condemn it for being Nazi-adjacent pro-eugenics propaganda.

          In the logic of Idiocracy, the way that an AI would "allow" the future society portrayed in the movie is by letting dumb people systematically have more kids than smart people, and "not allowing" this would entail some kind of coercive eugenics policy aimed at getting smart people to have more kids than they would otherwise be inclined to.

          • throwaway173738an hour ago
            Idocracy is basically arguing against the idea that progress is inevitable so we can just sit around and do nothing. Joe’s character development is in his shift away from getting out of the way and toward a follow or lead choice. It’s called out at the start of the movie when he’s sitting on his butt at the military library and his CO is like “you’re not supposed to get out of the way.”
          • tremon27 minutes ago
            because intelligence is mostly genetically-determined

            None of the points of Idiocracy depend on whether intelligence is by nature or by nurture. The premise of the movie stays exactly the same if you replace those two minutes of backstory with a dysfunctional education system, the return of child labour, an increase in teen pregnancies, and anti-intellectualism in general.

            • cjbgkagh19 minutes ago
              I think the opening scene makes the hereditary position very clear, I don’t know how anyone could interpret that as not marking the case of ‘nature’ determining intelligence.
              • iugtmkbdfil83412 minutes ago
                Is it hereditary when parent is a dumb jock who creates a ridiculously bad environment in terms of 'nurture' aspect? I am not sure you thought your argument fully through.
                • cjbgkagh8 minutes ago
                  Yes, and science explicitly allows him to continue procreating where otherwise he would have not been able to (he was in an accident because he was stupid). It’s explicitly saying the darwinian winnowing of the weaker (dumber) members of the species has been interfered with.
          • iugtmkbdfil834an hour ago
            Here is a problem, I am not arguing "Idiocracy: the process as presented in the movie"; I am arguing "Idiocracy; the resulting dumbed down populace". Admittedly, it is a mental shortcut and a bad one since it clearly did not land as I had hoped.
          • SanityPlease32 minutes ago
            I recently saw a razor commercial where a man was shaving his cheek. I immediately condemned the company for being Nazi-adjacent propaganda since the actor was one step away from giving himself a Hitler mustache.
      • hackable_sand9 minutes ago
        I mean, I don't see what the rush is.

        It's like Silicon Valley overdosed on Adderall.

        You can have the same tech, just in 5 human generations. I don't see why you have to have it now.

      • an hour ago
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    • wnc31413 minutes ago
      Read "why nations fail". It essentially covers this. Markets and technologies are great but ultimately bound by the systems of power they inhabit.
    • pdonis16 minutes ago
      > until we collectively redefine and enforce a value system that benefits us all

      Here's the problem: you can't.

      First, people have disagreements, often very fundamental ones, over what "benefits us all". There's no way to resolve many such disagreements short of brute force.

      Second, "enforce"--note the last five letters of that word--means some people are given the power to do things to other people that, if anyone else did them, would be crimes. Throw you in jail, fine you, restrict the things you can do. Indeed, that's how David Friedman, whose "The Machinery of Freedom" is worth reading, defines a government. And the problem is that government still has to be done by humans, and humans can't be trusted with the power to do such things.

      Ultimately the only defense we have is to not give other people such power. Not governments, not tech giants, nobody. But that requires a degree of foresight that most people don't have, or don't want to take the time to exercise, particularly not if something juicy is in front of them. How many people back when Facebook first started would have been willing to simply not use it--because they foresaw that in a couple of decades, Facebook would become a huge monster that nobody knows how to rein in? If my own personal circle is any guide, the answer is "not enough to matter"--of all the people I know, I am the only one who does not use Facebook and never has. And even I didn't refuse to use it back when it first started because I saw what things would be like today--I just had an instinctive reaction against it and listened to that reaction, and then watched the trainwreck slowly develop over the years since.

      So we're stuck. Even if we end up deciding that, for example, the government will break up the tech giants, slap huge fines on Zuckerberg, Bezos, etc., maybe confiscate a bunch of their property, maybe even make them do a bunch of community service, possibly even some of them serve some jail time--it will still be just other humans doing things to them that no humans can be trusted to do. It won't fix the root problem. It will just kick the can down the road a little longer.

    • timoth3y36 minutes ago
      I think that is the core truth of the matter. Technology itself does not make life better.

      I recently published an article about the Luddites. If you look at their actual demands, they were not anti-tech. They were labor activists. Life got much, much worse for most people in the industrial revolution until the laws they advocated were finally implemented.

      https://www.disruptingjapan.com/the-real-luddites-would-have...

      • willhslade26 minutes ago
        I mean, dentristy and vaccines but ok.
    • krackers2 hours ago
      >In any technologically advanced society the individual’s fate must depend on decisions that he personally cannot influence to any great extent. A technological society cannot be broken down into small, autonomous communities, because production depends on the cooperation of very large numbers of people and machines. Such a society must be highly organized and decisions have to be made that affect very large numbers of people. When a decision affects, say, a million people, then each of the affected individuals has, on the average, only a one-millionth share in making the decision
      • idle_zealot2 hours ago
        I don't know what you're quoting, but I wish it were the case that something affecting a million people granted each affected individual about a one-millionth share in the decision. I don't think that would always yield good outcomes, but at least it would be democratic. Structures that enable that are what we should be building.
        • tejohnsoan hour ago
          With our level of technology I don't see why we couldn't have that kind of decision directly put into the hands of individuals rather than leave it to "representatives" or worse yet corporations that aren't even required to ask. Maybe I'm not thinking through the difficulties well enough, be what we have with elected representatives campaigning on one set of ideals and then voting the complete opposite way is unacceptable. At least, that should be grounds for imprisonment. Maybe that would be sufficient to get the representative voting system working well enough.
        • kingofmenan hour ago
          That is why the writer specified "on average", which clearly remains true, at least in the case that the decisionmaker is part of the affected group. The optimistic part is in assuming that latter.
        • rglover2 hours ago
          In some circles, he goes by Uncle Ted.
          • kQq9oHeAz6wLLS2 hours ago
            To quote a movie:

            In the 1960's there was a young man graduated from the University of Michigan. Did some brilliant work in mathematics. Specifically bounded harmonic functions. Then he went on to Berkeley, was assistant professor, showed amazing potential, then he moved to Montana and he blew the competition away.

            • ajdegolan hour ago
              But you forgot about Vickers
    • mlinseyan hour ago
      That's definitely too broad a statement. I'd argue encryption, oral contraceptives, and the printing press were all strongly decentralizing.
      • mystraline40 minutes ago
        The Public won the encryption battle against the USG and ITAR idiocy. Well, until climate destroying shitcoin. Thats a big Lose.

        The printing press had sooo much state violence over that everywhere.

        Oral contraceptives are a fight the USA is losing to the extremist christian republicans. Right now the line is right on Misoprostol. And shithole states like Texas even criminalize day-after pills and 'suspect' miscarriages.

        And horrible tech like "weatherproof camera + AI + battery + solar + cell" (FLOCK) are easy to implement and already have been used in tracking women with miscarriages in Texas and across the country.

        It seems for every new tech, theres 1 really cool good thing for the public, a few neutral things, and 1-3 absolutely terrible things.

        And those terrible things make money. Lots of money.

        • mlinsey38 minutes ago
          You're describing efforts by powerful institutions to squash the technology, which they definitely try to do, but that's just a strong signal that the technology itself is inherently opposed to centralized power, not an enabler of it.

          Other technologies like surveillance (and, perhaps, AI) are more clearly centralizing and enabling of power.

          The difference matters a lot if you're having mixed feelings about working in technology.

    • ahartmetz2 hours ago
      It really depends on the technology. Different technologies redistribute power differently. LLMs are very "centralizing" indeed. It is hardly feasible to train your own LLM as a private person or even a small company - at best you can download a pre-trained one, which at least nobody can silently change or take away from you.
      • krupan2 hours ago
        Very well said. Free software was a revolt against technology that you have no control over and I feel like the people that are whole heartedly embracing "AI" have completely forgotten this. They now use an incredibly expensive proprietary piece of technology that they have no control over to write a bunch of code that they cannot (even if they tried) understand and they talk like it's the most amazing thing ever. This is pure short-sighted foolishness.
        • ahartmetzan hour ago
          Yeah - I really like F/OSS for the freedom aspect and I intensely dislike SaaS LLMs for the same reason. I tolerate them more easily for ancillary tasks like vulnerability search or super-powered LSP-workalikes to learn about a code base. There will eventually be a lot of nuance, I hope and believe - reasonable compromises between going all in and abstaining completely. So far, I'm doing okay just occasionally dabbling in local models. I at least need to know what people are talking about.
      • matusp2 hours ago
        That's why we have state. There are many technologies that we, as a society, decided to control in various ways. You can't just build a nuclear weapon for example. There is no particular reason why we let tech bros control many aspects of our lives, apart from legal inertia.

        LLMs can be "trivially" decentralized by expanding the concept intellectual property to also cover algorithmic processing. It's just about how we setup our laws and rules.

        • krupan2 hours ago
          Nobody had to legislate Free software into existence in order to protect us. Wise people saw the need and did something of their own accord. We are still free to do this!
          • ahartmetzan hour ago
            It seems like one needs a big machine farm and a vast corpus of training data with a lot of manual curation to get started creating a competitive LLM, plus whatever technical expertise that I don't even know about. The stuff that makes LLMs exist now and not earlier.

            It might be possible to organize all that with volunteers and some paid work, but how in practice? Stallman seems kind of out of the game at this point and there is no Linus Torvalds figure neither for this, as of now.

        • apsurd2 hours ago
          The State are the people and the people want tech billionaires because they want the same chance at being that (tech) m/billionaire.

          Temporarily embarrassed millionaires; I cannot get around that issue toward collective action, toward myself contributing to an answer. I'm stuck. I can't unsee its truth =/. The individual will choose enrichment. We all will.

          • watwutan hour ago
            It does not seem like people want tech billionaires. It is fairly common to hate them.

            It is just that peoples preference dont matter as billionaires have disproportionally more power.

            • apsurdan hour ago
              My example is always Bezos; everyone "hates" greedy tech Billionaire Bezos but how did he get there? We all put him there every day, every hour, every purchase.

              If basically everyone transacts with Amazon, willingly, how is it possible that Bezos is the bad guy? I get that it's not black and white but the point stands: he didn't overthrow the government, the we put him there.

    • thih92 hours ago
      One attempt was open source. Or perhaps libre software? I guess it is not a success since only one of these looks mainstream.
      • krupan2 hours ago
        Free/Open Source software is very mainstream now I'm not sure what you mean, but maybe we are taking too much of it for granted?
        • 2 hours ago
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      • hamdingers2 hours ago
        It is curious how successful AI developers have been in trying to redefine "open source" as "the binary is free to download"
        • echelonan hour ago
          The OSI is garbage, and "open source" outside of the most viral licenses is too.

          I'll go further and say that it accelerated getting us into this mess we're in today.

          The OSI is owned and controlled by the tech titan hyperscalers who benefit from free labor.

          Useful "open source software" always gets encrusted by the big titans that then build means to control the tech, and then the means to control us. And just to rub salt in the wounds, they rarely compensate the original authors.

          Android is Linux, right? Then why can't we install our own software? Why does it spy on us? Open source is so great, right?

          95% of humans will never own a phone that gives them freedom. And we enabled that.

          Everything we as tech people own is also getting locked down. We're going to have to start providing our state ID to access the internet soon.

          But OMG, Year of Linux on the Desktop 2012!!12

          Pretty soon you won't even be able to use your Linux. Everything will be attested.

          Open source hasn't stopped power from accruing to the titans. It's accelerated their domination.

          People rush to defend Google and Amazon when you criticize how they profit off of Redis, Elasticsearch, etc. The teams that build the tech aren't becoming wealthy, and most of the bytes flowing through those systems are doing so behind closed source AWS/GCP/Azure offerings.

          These companies then use their insane reach to tax everything that moves. Google owns 92% (yes, 92%!) of URL bars and they tax every search, especially searches for other companies' trademarks. They do even better - they turn it into a bidding war. Almost nothing that exists in the world today can make it to you without being taxed by them.

          If they don't like your content, you just disappear.

          Mobile platforms have never been ours. We can't install what we want. We're soon going to be locked at the firmware level to just Google and Apple and forced to use their adblocking-free, tracker-enabled "browsers" (1984 telescreens). Any competition can't get started due to the massive scale required, meanwhile Apple and Google tax everything at 30% and start correlating everything you do, everyone you talk to, everywhere you go in their panopticon.

          "Open source" was wool pulled over our eyes so that we happily built, supported, and enabled this.

          Open source should be replaced with "our proletariat users and small businesses can have this for free, but businesses listed on any stock exchange cannot commercialize this ever unless they pay out the nose for it".

          "Source available" / shareware is peak. Give your users the thing, and the means to maintain it after you're gone, but tell Google et al. to go away.

          "Fuck you, pay me" as the artists frequently say.

          But also, let's stop giving the Death Star free labor.

          (edit: I'd love a feedback sampling of the heavy downvotes. OSI purists? Goog employees? Surely MIT/BSD fans and not anyone who follows Stallman.)

          • xtracto27 minutes ago
            >Pretty soon you won't even be able to use your Linux. Everything will be attested.

            I want to rescue this snippet.

            Few of us remember the "fight" and discussions that happened when Firefox first pondered the idea of allowing encrypted video on the platform. Same with Linux. This was when The powers that be forced Netflix and other video distributors to introduce that opaque tech in the web. The same thing happened with DeCSS and Linux DVD playing; but that generation was a bit more... revel.

            But we as a society are indeed slowly and steadily giving away our rights of many, for the rights of few cartels.

            It's been a sad journey to see for someone born in the early 80s.

            • echelon11 minutes ago
              > But we as a society are indeed slowly and steadily giving away our rights of many, for the rights of few cartels.

              Increasing geopolitical multi-polarity may force big tech to give up ground. The EU and ASEAN in particular should be hitting Google et al. with the regulatory hammer.

              When we get clearer heads back in power (Lina Khan was great, but moved much too slow), they ought to carve the tech cos into Baby Bells. Horizontally so they have to compete with themselves.

              > It's been a sad journey to see for someone born in the early 80s.

              The dream of the open web, privacy, freedom of speech, and freedom of computing is being killed by the oligarchy. And they convinced us the progressive thing to do was to give them our labor - they hung us with it.

      • bamboozled2 hours ago
        Open source is still around ? It would be vastly improving your life even though you can’t see it.
    • bananaflag2 hours ago
      Well, I love to take showers, which involve a lot of tech like running water and water heaters and soap which I can buy from the supermarket.

      I lived in places without any of those and I wouldn't want to do it again.

      • hn_throwaway_9933 minutes ago
        While I believe the comment you are replying to may be too broad considering "all tech", I also strongly agree with the overall sentiment (and in particular I commend ost-ing for putting a general feeling I think a lot of people have so clearly and succinctly into words).

        As a Gen Xer, I grew up with a strong belief in the "goodness" of technology, of its power to make people's lives better and to ameliorate suffering. So after 25 years of seeing so much invested into technology that actively makes people's lives worse (e.g. ad-tech, social media algorithms), and even conservatively just results in the huge accumulation of wealth and power to the very few, I can't help but feel extremely disillusioned.

        Yes, I like showers and soap and running water, but I rarely see the type of economic investment into tech these days that will have as broad of a beneficial impact as running water did.

      • WillPostForFoodan hour ago
        Tyranny of antibiotics and vaccines and MRI machines...
    • bicepjaian hour ago
      I agree, I want technology in the hands of people (I want to control my data) and I don’t believe in cloud anymore since corporate greed and ad tech just destroyed the trust in cloud use case.
    • thomaswoodsonan hour ago
      New around here, but… For those interested in a deep dive, I highly recommend reading the Technological Society, by French philosopher and sociologist Jacques Ellul.
    • lyu0728217 minutes ago
      This is exactly right, it gets examplified by Chinese people's attitude to new innovative technology. It's all doom and gloom in the west. But the thing is that both are correct stances on this technology for exactly the reason you mentioned. It's fundamentally different systems of governance of the same technology. One only ever saw new technology result in consolidation of power and collective decline and genuine grievances ignored, the other has demonstrated the ability to make new technology increase the collective well being of everybody. It's the low vs. high trust society, see the inverse of Francis Fukuyama's 1996 book Trust.
    • runarberg25 minutes ago
      GMO was the first technology I figured that out. It was heavily pushed in around 2007 as a solution to world hunger, but at the same time it was very easy to see that hunger was a problem of distribution, not technology. Even back in 2007 we made much more food then was required to feed the world population. Furthering the obviousness of the lie was that in reality GMO was (and still is) mostly used for growing feed or cosmetic products. And on top of that we had large monopolies with patents to protect, and herbicides to sell, pushing this technology the hardest.

      Now its been 20 years later. The technology is mature and many of the patents have expired, but GMO has done absolutely nothing to solve world hunger.

    • jgalt2122 hours ago
      > Technology amplifies power and until we collectively redefine and enforce a value system that benefits us all, the advancements in technology simply serve as a means of subjugation.

      True during the mainframe. Not true during the PC age. Perhaps true again during frontier model / data center ago. Maybe not true again when hostable open weights models become efficient and good enough.

    • vjvjvjvjghvan hour ago
      "Technology amplifies power and until we collectively redefine and enforce a value system that benefits us all, the advancements in technology simply serve as a means of subjugation"

      My theory is that AI and robotics have the potential to break capitalism as we know it. We will probably reach a point where machines will be better than humans at pretty much anything and there will be almost no need for workers who just do a job (like most of us). But if nobody has money to buy things then there is no point in producing anything. Not sure where this will be going but I am pretty sure the capitalists will not voluntarily share the gains.

      In theory all this progress should be great and exciting for humanity but without changing the system there may be dark times coming for most of us. I always have to think of Marshall Brain's "Manna" story. It may be a spot on prediction of things to come.

    • toasty2282 hours ago
      > As someone who has spent a vast portion of life believing technology would make life better, I've come to the realisation that this idea is a fallacy.

      I have to very regularly remind myself many people genuinely believe this shit and are not straight up evil/maniacs, it's getting harder

      • ismailmaj2 hours ago
        I'm thinking that personally, technology is not bad in a vacuum and not necessarily bad in society, but it just reveals that our system is ill-equipped to guarantee good usage of it.

        We could have fun defining what's good usage but we're so far from it, it would just make me sad.

    • shevy-java2 hours ago
      > As someone who has spent a vast portion of life believing technology would make life better, I've come to the realisation that this idea is a fallacy.

      Technology is not a good-only or evil-only thing. You have use cases that are beneficial and you have use cases that is not benefical. The technology in by itself isn't what makes things worse. Even many thousand years ago, humans used weapons to bash in other humans. Remember the Ötzi: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%96tzi#Body he was killed by arrows, most logically from someone else shooting at him (at around 3230 BC). Nuclear energy is used as weapon or source for generation of energy (or rather, transformation of energy). And so on and so forth.

      IMO the biggest question has less to do about technology, but distribution of wealth and possibilities. I think oligarchs need to be impossible; right now they are causing a ton of problems. Technology also creates problems, I agree on that, but I would not subscribe to a "technology makes everything worse". That does not seem to be a realistic assessment.

      • iugtmkbdfil834an hour ago
        This. But suggest that maybe someone should stop being able to 'create wealth' past 7th island in French Polynesia and people go nuts.
    • jmyeet2 hours ago
      Thing is, technology (particularly automation) could make life better but it not doing that is a choice. Think about it. We could live in a world where people only had to work 20 hours a week or even at some point not at all. We don't do that because we have a system that simply makes a handful of people even wealthier. We will likely see the first trillionaire minted in our lifetimes. That is an unimaginable and unjustifiable amount of money for one person to have.

      So you're not really complaining about technology making things worse. You're complaining about wealth inequality, which is a direct result of the mode of production and the organization of the economy.

      Internet access should, at this point, be basically free. The best Internet in the country is municipal broadband. It's better and it's cheaper. It's owned by the town, city or county that it's in, which means it's owned by citizens of that municpality.

      Instead what we have in most of the country are national ISPs like Verizon, Comcast, Spectrum and AT&T and the prices are sky high. They are only sky high so somebody far away can continue to extract profit from something that's already built and not that expensive to build.

      You will get lied to by people saying national ISPs have an economy of scale. Well, if that were true, why is municipal broadband so (relatively) better and cheaper? Why would there be state laws that make municipal broadband illegal? Why would national ISPs lobby for such laws?

      • alehlopehan hour ago
        If it’s a choice, then who gets to make that choice? Certainly not the individual. I don’t remember getting to choose anything of the sort. If you say it’s society that makes the choice, how does that work exactly? Through democracy and governance? Well then society did make the choice. Are you then complaining that the choice society made is not the one you prefer? From the perspective of the individual, it’s not a choice at all.
      • joe_mambaan hour ago
        >We could live in a world where people only had to work 20 hours a week or even at some point not at all.

        How would your country function, if all medical staff, construction, rail, sewage, police and firefighters suddenly worked half as long or not at all, starting tomorrow?

        Because my home country tried this whole "if we seize the means of production from the wealthy elites, we won't have to work as hard anymore" ~80 years ago, and guess what happened to the workers? Were they working less hours for more money, OR, were they working just as much while also starving and being plagued by shortages?

        The problem with your logic, is that it only applies to bullshit Western office corporate jobs who are anyway not actually doing much useful work for 40h. All those office jobs that don't need to be working 40h, were just subsidized by endless money printing, that's why you see so many layoffs happening, once the ZIRP era ended when they were hiring people just to raise headcounts to boost stock valuations to gullible investors they could rug-pull, but now the bubble popped and the jig is up.

        And it only works in a world where you own the world reserve currency, and globalisation, free trade and international competition does not exist, because the countries who will work harder than you, will outcompete you and subjugate you in the long run so you can make their sneakers and phones for 60h/week, while they kick it back and just print money.

    • Forgeties792 hours ago
      > until we collectively redefine and enforce a value system that benefits us all

      Tons of us called for common sense guard rails and a little bit of actual intention as we rolled out LLM’s, but we were all shouted down as “luddites” who were “obstructing progress.”

      We all knew this was coming. It’s been incredibly frustrating knowing how preventable so much of it has been and will continue to be.

      Edit: these responses are absurd. Banning GPU’s…? What are you on about? Who said anything about stopping or banning LLM’s? Did none of you see “guardrails”? “A little bit of actual intention”? Where are you getting these extreme interpretations?

      I’m talking basic regulatory framework stuff. Regulations around disclosure, usage, access, etc. you know, all the stuff we neglected and are now paying for with social media in droves? We have done this song and dance so many times. No one is going to take away your precious robot helper, we’re just saying “maybe we should think about this for more than two seconds and not be completely blinded by dollar signs.” I mean people have literally died in my state because Zuckerberg wants to save a few bucks building his data center.

      It feels like AI evangelists come out the woodwork seething if anybody even implies you shouldn’t be allowed to do literally whatever you want at all times.

      • iugtmkbdfil834an hour ago
        Sigh, and what guardrails are common sense? Are those the same level of common sense as those advocated for guns ( and narrowed down at every possible opportunity )? Some of us see this tech as possibly revolutionary and thanks to useful individuals calling for muzzling that tech we now have the worst of both worlds: centrally controlled, not really open ( weights are just weights -- though Meta actually deserves some credit here ), and heavily muzzled.

        Clearly, powers that be learned all too well from internet rollout.

      • zzzeek2 hours ago
        It wasn't "preventable" though. How would you prevent what's been happening ? Pass a law making GPUs illegal ? Just ..."convince" everyone that the machine that can write working software, business letters and render good enough banner and print advertising for nearly free is evil and just don't use it (ask Emily Bender how that's going)? There is no realistic way from stopping any of this from happening. Need a different approach.
      • mat_b2 hours ago
        Except that it's not preventable. Technology is always an arms race. If you don't create it, someone else will, and then they'll have the advantage and subjugate you, so you might as well be the one to do it first. Whatever it is that you're trying to prevent, someone is going to do it if it gives them power.
    • themafia2 hours ago
      Technology is simply a technique to leverage and extend human desire. It's a tool. It's in the hands of those who control and use it.

      You shouldn't blame technology. You should blame the maniacs that have latched on to it as a way of extending their power. You should blame the government for their failures of regulation. You should blame the media for failing to cover this obvious problem.

      The people who want to subjugate you are the problem.

      • apsurd2 hours ago
        "The problem is them"

        no no, we're not doing that.

    • wotsdatan hour ago
      go steal someone else's money, damn socialists
  • 3 hours ago
    undefined
  • bachmeier2 hours ago
    > it is cutting jobs to offset its A.I. spending, saying last month that it would slash 10 percent of its work force.

    > Meta also introduced internal dashboards to track employees’ consumption of “tokens,” a unit of A.I. use that is roughly equivalent to four characters of text, four people said. Some said the dashboards were a pressure tactic to encourage competition with colleagues. That led some employees to make so many A.I. agents that others had to introduce agents to find agents, and agents to rate agents, two people said.

    Maybe the first to be laid off should be the ones that thought it made sense to track token consumption. Goodhart's Law doesn't even apply in this scenario because that's a dumb metric whether or not you're using it to evaluate employees.

    • zerreh50an hour ago
      It will get really funny when they start imposing an exact number of tokens as a quota, where too little means you are an outdated luddite and too much is inefficient and wastes money
    • sardukardboardan hour ago
      A funny Goodhart’s Law parallel showed up in during GPT-5.1 training, where the model was rewarded for using the web search tool, so it learned the behavior of superficially using web search to calculate “1 + 1” and not utilize the result.

      https://alignment.openai.com/prod-evals/

    • idle_zealot2 hours ago
      > that's a dumb metric whether or not you're using it to evaluate employees

      Only if you assume in good faith that the point is to evaluate employees for productivity on some stated goal for the company or role. If you try to view the metric from other possible positions, the one I think fits best is the promotion of token consumption by all means. This is useful for signaling to the broader market that AI is profitable and merits more investment, and may be part of a deal between them and whoever they're buying tokens from. It makes more sense to me that Meta would be more interested in leveraging its control over people to manipulate the state of the world, market, and general sentiment than having them work on stable, well-established and market-dominant software services that really only need to be kept chugging along. Isn't mass-manipulation their whole business? Why wouldn't they use their employees and internal structure to contribute?

      • strongpigeon2 hours ago
        Having worked in big tech, I can almost guarantee you you’re overthinking this.
    • strongpigeon2 hours ago
      Not that I disagree with you, but I’ve heard of such tactic being used in some orgs at both Google and Microsoft as well.

      It seems like a common conclusion from a management that wants to push for AI adoption. I doubt it’s super effective, but we’ll see how it turns out.

      • iugtmkbdfil834an hour ago
        It gets worse, my corp is tech adjacent at best, so we get push to use AI, but also get heavily restricted tokens, ridiculous limits on internal tooling ( think context for one short prompt ) and expectation that now one should be able to create the $result fast anyway...

        Edit: and if you question that, you are a troublemaker to add to the list

    • logickkk140 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • synergy20an hour ago
    from a different perspective, there are way more people who are truly miserable these days comparing to these who earn probably more than half a million per year on average. we must live in parallel universe.
  • onlytuean hour ago
    As someone who hasn’t spent a vast portion of life believing technology would make life better, I’m not shocked at all.
  • stephc_int132 hours ago
    I believe that any kind of partial automation is going to make the job more soul-crushing.

    Ford style assembly lines made the work of the factory workers more miserable. Partially automated cashier did the same thing.

    I don't think there is any point in trying to resist automation, as the efficiency benefits are too important.

    • layer82 hours ago
      Efficiency gains are more important than people not having to spend their working life with soul-crushing tasks? I don’t quite follow.
      • stephc_int13an hour ago
        The assumption is that orders of magnitude more people will benefit from the efficiency gains, like it was the case in agriculture automation or factory work automation.

        In those cases, that led to a transition period, nowadays only a small fraction of the human population is working to produce food, and their job is more about planning, finance and orchestration of machine work, but many specialised jobs were lost or made miserable in the process.

        IMHO any job that can be done by a machine should not be done by a human, the tricky part is going there with as little undesirable effects as possible.

        • daveguy31 minutes ago
          Yes, eventually we will all be able to enjoy our delicious algorithm, attention, and data sandwiches on our lunch breaks.
    • wat10000an hour ago
      We’ve had partial automation in programming since the first assembler was written. I don’t think we’re more miserable than we would be if we still had to write machine code by hand.
      • stephc_int1325 minutes ago
        People who enjoyed programming at this level (myself included) were not really that happy but most had to transition into a job that didn't value some the skills they patiently acquired and were machines never attained the highest level.

        I would have been happy writting z80 and 68000 assembly code for an entire career.

    • themafia2 hours ago
      > Ford style assembly lines

      The ones with 10 hour shifts and mandatory overtime? Yea, I don't think it's the _line_ that's making them miserable.

      > Partially automated cashier did the same thing.

      I've not once heard anyone in the service industry make this complaint.

      > as the efficiency benefits are too important.

      You can squeeze every last drop of productivity from your employees. In the short term this may even evidence profits. In the long term it only works if you hold a monopoly position.

      • stephc_int13an hour ago
        "The ones with 10 hour shifts and mandatory overtime? Yea, I don't think it's the _line_ that's making them miserable."

        The whole innovation was about making the jobs as simple and repetitive as possible so humans would basically work like robots.

        Once you're there, having removed any agency and freedom, pushing the hours to the limits of human exhaustion is just one logical step.

  • AIorNot19 minutes ago
    Is there any CEO out there as insecure as zuckerberg?
  • rl32 hours ago
    It occurred to me recently that AI's degradation of the human factor via way of increased pressure on the remaining ranks of humans might actually be far more damaging than the AI's output itself.
  • TinyBig24 minutes ago
    On top of token tracking, they're also scoring employees on how much they teach Ai to their colleagues. As bad as the token dashboard sounds, employees being forced to try to mine each other for credit sounds worse.
  • outside1234an hour ago
    I am not a big fan of unions, but we need some form of union as soon as possible.
    • Cyph0n16 minutes ago
      One of humanity’s greatest inventions imo. Just imagine a world where we didn’t have the ability to mobilize a workforce in pursuit of a common goal.
    • dawnerdan hour ago
      I came to that conclusion the other day after reading all of the layoff letters. The big corp tech workers def need to start considering it.
  • moneycantbuy31 minutes ago
    unionize
  • _doctor_love2 hours ago
    I love the quote in there from Boz that basically says "no you can't opt out fuck off"
    • camillomiller2 hours ago
      People focus a lot on how Zuckerberg is a deranged sociopath, but I think Bosworth should get the same criticism if not worse. The good face he put on while fucking over the world is utterly disgusting. I got to a point where I just wish ill fate to these people, because there is really no other process by which they can be slowed down or stopped.
  • shevy-java2 hours ago
    Well, that's the goal of AI Skynet - it has no need for humans. Did nobody learn from that movie?
  • androiddrew2 hours ago
    I believe that's the point.
  • Giorgi2 hours ago
    Meta has been banning it's core users for months now, above 20 million users are now banned, they are on death spiral after that Metaverse fiasco.

    https://www.nbcdfw.com/news/nbc-5-responds/meta-users-contin...

  • LightBug12 hours ago
    That's what's making its employees miserable ????!
    • daveguyan hour ago
      You'd think the knowledge that they're creating technology to purposely addict children for their attention and data would contribute more to making them miserable.
      • bigfatkitten20 minutes ago
        If you choose to apply for a job at somewhere like Meta, you’re clearly not the sort of person who lets your moral compass trouble you.
    • hunterpaynean hour ago
      Right, Meta's offices are awful places to work. Loud, huge open offices that sound like a cocktail party all day, every day. That would make me depressed.
      • Ifkaluvaan hour ago
        Open office floor plans are most of the tech industry
  • bossyTeacher2 hours ago
    Not going to lie, I have no pity for the tech employees of a company that has spent most of its existence making the world a worse place. They are finally getting a taste of the medicine Facebook has been giving to everyone in the last 2 decades.
    • puttycat40 minutes ago
      I agree, but we do owe them PyTorch and React.
      • bossyTeacher36 minutes ago
        The world would be fine with any of the many JS libraries/frameworks
    • mbroncanoan hour ago
      N/a
  • vrganj19 minutes ago
    Modern elites forgot that treating workers nicely was the compromise we as a society settled on because the alternative is pitchforks and torched homes.
  • downrightmike3 hours ago
    MEta made billions on AI in 2025, 10% of their revenue... by allowing scammers to use AI to attack users and steal user's money.
  • deanCommie2 hours ago
    Every big tech company's embrace of AI is making all of their employees miserable.

    Whereas if you're half-competent and at a startup, the AI is an incredible opportunity to try to leap ahead while the prices are subsidized (by the big tech behemoths fighting wth each other)

    The reason is a complete inversion of Ownership and Agency.

    For a decade of ZIRP, big tech convinced its employees that they're "changing the world", and what we did mattered. Sure the exhorbitant salaries and constantly rising stock value didn't hurt, but honestly other than the FIRE cultists, for most of us the difference between 200k/year and 800k/year didn't feel much day to day (other than the ability to buy a house or something, and feel safe with a retirement nest egg). No, most people were missionaries not mercanaries.

    2021 was the first crack. The comps went crazy, half the industry turned over, and the ones who didn't felt a bitter sting where it became blatantly clear that all the new arrivals were just in it for the $$$, and the companies were willing to pay for the backfills but not to reward the loyalty of the missionaries.

    Then came the yearly layoffs, chipping away further, and reminding every employee that they're at the mercy of a spreadsheet and the whims of people 3 levels above them in the org chart, in spite of the economic reality of their product, or their personal productivity.

    And now we're here, and it's clear that all of the above is still relevant. The old-timers that hung around see that their personal output doesn't matter, their product's PnL doesn't matter. All that matters is 1) the company's AI strategy (and if they're not part of it, they're secondary), and 2) tokenmaxing.

    How can anyone find joy in this environment unless they're purely in it for the comp?

    I couldn't. I left my big tech job in December after 15 years, and have not been this happy at work since pre-COVID.

    • Ifkaluva2 hours ago
      > the difference between 200k/year and 800k/year didn't feel much day to day (other than the ability to buy a house or something, and feel safe with a retirement nest egg)

      I can’t believe I read this sentence, lol.

      800k is the ability to buy a house and support a family on a single income. Do you see so many people lamenting the days when this was possible? So many memes about the lifestyle Homer Simpson could provide, and may modern families can’t? 800k makes it possible.

      It’s a huge lifestyle upgrade, especially if your partner wants to do something artistic, academic, or otherwise less profitable.

      • treis39 minutes ago
        The real difference between 800k and 200k is the ability to work for 5 year and make 200k off interest for the rest of your life.
      • alistairSHan hour ago
        While I mostly agree, $200k makes that possible too, if you play it right. For example, go remote, move to the countryside, let your spouse rear the kids or the dogs or whatever.

        But yeah, "no difference between 200 and 800", while spelling out some MASSIVE differences is quite a statement.

      • dehrmannan hour ago
        This essentially describing the backward bending supply curve of labor:

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backward_bending_supply_curve_...

      • joshribakoffan hour ago
        If someone has a 10m portfolio, it really is irrational to chase a higher w-2.
        • zzrrt34 minutes ago
          How many do you think build that portfolio from $200k/yr? The point is an extra 600k, at least for several years, is life-changing when managed wisely. I could perhaps see the GP's point about "day to day" feeling, if you acclimate to the baseline of financial security that having that much money buys you. I'm only assuming though, having never had the opportunity to experience GP's claim about that kind of comp.
    • kogasa240p2 hours ago
      Good post

      >2021 was the first crack. The comps went crazy, half the industry turned over, and the ones who didn't felt a bitter sting where it became blatantly clear that all the new arrivals were just in it for the $$$, and the companies were willing to pay for the backfills but not to reward the loyalty of the missionaries.

      Also SVB collapsed in late 2022, notice that AI hype started right after.

      • iugtmkbdfil834an hour ago
        Sigh, if it actually collapsed, it would have been fine. Summers saved it depositors before it collapse. I still don't get how that was not a story on a par with 2008 ( or maybe it wasn't because the fallout was avoided ).