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oblio 9 hours ago

Yeah, like Windows in 2026 is better than Windows in 2010, Gmail in 2026 is better than Gmail in 2010, the average website in 2026 is better than in 2015, Uber is better in 2026 than in 2015, etc.

Plenty of tech becomes exploitative (or more exploitative).

I don't know if you noticed but 80% of LLM improvements are actually procedural now: it's the software around them improving, not the core LLMs.

Plus LLMs have huge potential for being exploitative. 10x what Google Search could do for ads.

verdverm 7 hours ago | parent [-]

You're crossing products with technology, also some cherry picking of personal perspectives

I personally think GSuite is much better today than it was a decade ago, but that is separate

The underlying hardware has improved, the network, the security, the provenance

Specific to LLMs

1. we have seen rapid improvements and there are a ton more you can see in the research that will be impacting the next round of model train/release cycle. Both algorithms and hardware are improving

2. Open weight models are within spitting distance of the frontier. Within 2 years, smaller and open models will be capable of what frontier is doing today. This has a huge democratization potential

I'd rather see the Ai as an opportunity to break the Oligarchy and the corporate hold over the people. I'm working hard to make it a reality (also working on atproto)

oblio 6 hours ago | parent [-]

Every time I hear "democratization" from a techbro I keep thinking that the end state is technofeudalism.

We can't fix social problems with technological solutions.

Every scalable solution takes us closer to Extremistan, which is inherently anti democratic.

Read the Black Swan by Taleb.

verdverm 3 hours ago | parent [-]

Jumping from someone using a word to assigning a pejoritve label to them is by definition a form of bigotry

Democratization, the way I'm using it without all the bias, is simply most people having access to build with a tool or a technology. Would you also argue everyone having access to the printing press is a bad thing? The internet? Right to repair? Right to compute?

Why should we consider Ai access differently?