▲ | motorest 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> I'd love a source to these claims. Have you been living under a rock? You can start getting up to speed by how Amazon's CEO already laid out the company's plan. https://www.thecooldown.com/green-business/amazon-generative... > (...) AI is just a scapegoat to counteract the reckless overhiring due to (...) That is your personal moralist scapegoat, and one that you made up to feel better about how jobs are being eliminated because someone somewhere screwed up. In the meantime, you fool yourself and pretend that sudden astronomic productivity gains have no impact on demand. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | huimang 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
These supposed "productivity gains" are only touted by the ones selling the product, i.e. the ones who stand to benefit from adoption. There is no standard way to measure productivity since it's subjective. It's far more likely that companies will use whatever scapegoat they can to fire people with as little blowback as possible, especially as the other commenter noted, people were getting hired like crazy. Each one of the roles you listed above is only passable with AI at a superficial glance. For example, anyone who actually reads literature other than self-help and pop culture books from airport kiosks knows that AI is terrible at longer prose. The output is inconsistent because current AI does not understand context, at all. And this is not getting into the service costs, the environmental costs, and the outright intellectual theft in order to make things like illustrations even passable. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | taormina 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Congratulations for believing the marketing. He has about 2.46 trillion reasons to make this claim. In other news, water is wet and the sky is blue. |