| ▲ | Ukv 6 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
My understanding of your argument is (paraphrasing): > > People try to excuse AI issues/failure modes by saying humans have them too, but even if they're equally bad then what would be the whole point of replacing a human worker with AI? To which my response is that speed and cost are also important factors, which can often give AI the edge in considerations when quality/error rate is equal. If you meant something other than that, you may have to specify. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | ofjcihen 5 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Sure, let me be blunt. Speed and cost are nothing without quality and quality is partially a product of accountability (not even considering the technical or logistical issues this is enough on its own. An AI cannot be held accountable. It does not desire to feed its family. Your counter argument was outside the context of this articles claims, specifically that programmers and other knowledge workers can be replaced by LLMs. Equating simple yes/no outcomes generated by vision based machine learning is quite different than “build me a product people will be happy with” being asked of a non-deterministic machine. | |||||||||||||||||
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