• madcowoncrack@lemmy.nz
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    4 days ago

    Not a tech bro but have watched a few channels of people who are:

    First off a lot of people have jumped on ai in comments. So I will too. But to the question raised - if you are taking about “establishment/established tech bros” and if by ‘jump on’ you mean innovate then I say nothing. If you look at a lot of leading lights in all sort of fields a person often gets one idea and that makes their fortune - and the rest of their ideas are shit. Zuckerburg’s metaverse anyone? This is true of companies too that appear to become ossified. Because, like you know - Widows 11 is orgasmic. So what orgasmic idea will come to the fore from some unknown: it is not possible to say because it will come from the unknown. All the sci-fi of 70 years ago thought it would be talking watches, no one guessed the phone would be the utilitarian tech.

    However there are fads and forcing use and so on. So tech bros will jump on whatever is the next fad or thing that is forced into use (implanted microchips for id, 24 hour tracking, payments… social credit scores anyone? I mean its what the mobile phone is doing anyway).

    To ai: imo we need to separate general ai, ie Chat GTP, deepseek etc from more narrowly trained ai use cases. The general ai have (almost) run out of data to (freely) train upon: in fact there is a worry that it’s starting to eat itself - that is, ai is consuming ai generated content to train itself (ie mad ai): also the line on the graph is flattening as far as performance is concerned. AI that is trained for specific tasks however I feel is a different animal: think material sciences or cancer research. However in everyday use with a few years I can see you asking for a song that “is heavy with a punkish sound using violins about the folly of using a rotating wire brush as a masturbation tool” and there it is (though is it here now? I can’t keep up). Depending on where these are (freeware, open commons, closed propriety) depends on what happens: Spotify/the music distributors could become totalising monopolies of music, or they could implode. In ten years you could be saying “make a film about a man scarred for life by said wire brush”: sure it’s take days and only be 360p to start ---- to start. Again creative commons or monopolies?

    So: “It’s a bit hard” DIY on personal computers, or “easy as the cloud” and marketed and convenient and just pay a monthly subscription: I think we all know the answer - because we are lazy and stupid:

    That is why we will welcome the chip into our wrists.