▲ | Fade_Dance 4 days ago | |||||||||||||
It is addiction media, or dopamine hacking media. Meta's recent earnings report was great partially because AI was used to boost engagement on ads by 5% to 10%, which was enough to get investors on board for the massive capex. ("Datacenters the size of Manhattan" as per Zuckerberg). Datacenters the size of Manhattan and dedicated nuclear power plants, for an 8.5% boost in advertising engagement. The world is in a very sad state in some respects. The ideal end state of this optimization process is quite literally zombie consumers. I would think that heading off outcomes like this is partly why we create rules and guardrails as a society, but despite the occasional pushback, I do think that for now we are generally embracing this dystopia. I'm a positive person and think AI is incredible and will do many great things, but Meta's earnings report got to me. | ||||||||||||||
▲ | matthewdgreen 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||
I realize this is a dumb question, but: all of these advertising supported business must be downstream of the “real economy” (of products and goods) in some way. After all, for ad revenue to rise continuously it must be the case that product and service companies are continuously spending more on advertising. And yet in the stock market, nearly all growth comes from these ad-supported companies and earnings elsewhere don’t increase by as much. How sustainable is this? | ||||||||||||||
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▲ | adidoit 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||
Yes. I do genuinely think AI can be amazing and I quit my job to build something that I hope will be a positive use case of AI But these stats are troubling Not to mention a backlash is brewing amongst people who both don't want to use AI and don't want their world to change so quickly. |