1. Replace workers with AI.
2. Now instead of wages you pay a company for AI services.
3. Despite the likely decline in quality of the work, suppose you become dependent as a company on this service. Suppose you make it work.
4. AI is heavily subsidized by venture capital, its priced lower than the cost to provide the service to attract early adopters (and to lock companies like you in.)
5. Inevitably the AI bubble bursts, AI services jack up their prices.
How is paying rent better than wages?
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myrmepropagandist
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •myrmepropagandist
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •reshared this
myrmepropagandist and Timo reshared this.
J. R. DePriest :EA DATA. SF:
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Fire everybody.
Use genAI to produce mediocre results for less money.
When the price goes up, "fire" the genAI and rehire the desperate former workers who never found another job for even less.
Rodney
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Kobold
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •.....it is really that simple.
XCM
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •The results long term have been mediocre support, skyrocketing cloud costs, vendor lock in, and total lack of oversight as company data now is stored on someone elseβs servers.
But it looked good on spreadsheets.
plan-A
in reply to XCM • •you used A.I. and I catched you just by the copy past..
W87
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you used A.I. and I catched you just by the copy past..
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soscisurvey.de/tools/view-charβ¦
sollat
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Jefflon "SynAck" Appleberg
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •It's also seen as a way to shift blame when something goes wrong. I don't think that this is a primary motivation, but I would say that it's more prevalent than one would think.
These landlords want to be seen as "responsible owners" when things are going well but as soon as something goes poorly, they want someone/thing else to yell and scream at (whom they don't have to look in the face) to get things going. It's about being able to shift the blame and causality away from themselves when something goes wrong. And, to be frank, most business types are too dumb to realize that they've been sold on a promise of "new efficiencies" that will never be delivered.
What is that old saying, "A poor workman blames his tools?" I believe that this is one of the main ideas driving this "AI" adoption in business - what these people really want are tools for which they can take credit but then also blame as being "faulty" when their own ineptitude causes problems.
That's all that this whole "AI" bubble is about - they don't want to augment or improve human ca
... show moreIt's also seen as a way to shift blame when something goes wrong. I don't think that this is a primary motivation, but I would say that it's more prevalent than one would think.
These landlords want to be seen as "responsible owners" when things are going well but as soon as something goes poorly, they want someone/thing else to yell and scream at (whom they don't have to look in the face) to get things going. It's about being able to shift the blame and causality away from themselves when something goes wrong. And, to be frank, most business types are too dumb to realize that they've been sold on a promise of "new efficiencies" that will never be delivered.
What is that old saying, "A poor workman blames his tools?" I believe that this is one of the main ideas driving this "AI" adoption in business - what these people really want are tools for which they can take credit but then also blame as being "faulty" when their own ineptitude causes problems.
That's all that this whole "AI" bubble is about - they don't want to augment or improve human capability or even efficiency, they want automated slaves to do their bidding 24/7/365, and screw the actual human workers. Having a workforce that won't talk back and demand rights is more valuable to them than hitching their wagons to the providers of those tools.
It has never been about long-term efficiency or sustainability. It has always been about short-term, quarter-to-quarter profit and being able to get out with their money before that rent really comes due.
Hal Pomeranz
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Hal Pomeranz
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Nazo
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Darned good points. (Except LLMs are not AI and it's not ok to let them keep calling them such.)
A company that has workers who are trained and experienced in working with its needs has greater independence. By relying on another company to do everything for them, they actually not only lose that independence, but they risk that the other company now has the means to simply replace them...
Actually, I believe I have heard examples of this happening in the past (albeit not LLMs.)
Chip Unicorn
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •I have never met a C-suite executive who could think more than a quarter ahead.
You're assuming that those executives will be around for more than a quarter, and won't have cashed out and are sipping margaritas by their Olympic-sized pool.
elizabeth wormπ
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Steven Hoefer
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •wasabi brain
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •myrmepropagandist
in reply to wasabi brain • • •@virtualinanity
Automated checkout was supposed to reduce the number of cashiers needed at stores. But now they need a person to fix the machines and people to help the people using the self-checkout... meaning it didn't really reduce labor costs much at all.
Things like checking ID, reversing charges all require an employee.
And in most stores they still need to have some regular checkout since some customers just CANNOT do it.
Enola Knezevic
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Suzanne she/her
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Skjeggtroll
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Dan
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •management has been aggressively pushing to opex vs. capex for at least the last 30 years.. from most employees being contractors, to magic beans, it's all the same
short term gains with terrible long-term prospects. but they've learned they won't be held accountable. at worst they might have to change jobs and probably end up making more.
Kofi Loves Efia
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Dean F.
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Light
in reply to Dean F. • • •cy
in reply to Light • • •The first hit is free.
CC: @soulexpress@musician.social @futurebird@sauropods.win
Light
in reply to cy • • •I've never interacted with either of those types of characters
cy
in reply to Light • • •It's what the stereotypical drug dealer says to get their customers hooked on whatever drug it is, by making it easy to get, then charging them up the butt once they're addicted.
"To take a hit" is colloquial for using a recreational drug.
CC: @soulexpress@musician.social @futurebird@sauropods.win
Light
in reply to cy • • •cy
in reply to Light • • •Yes, by making stuff cheap up front by lying (betting that they'll be able to pay for it tomorrow), then enshittifying once you're invested in their product (and they can't pay for it).
CC: @soulexpress@musician.social @futurebird@sauropods.win
Lorgo Numputz
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Furthermore:
Tech companies who stop using traditional means and, instead, move to using LLM services have given up their ability to do work over to the LLM vendors.
Once the subsidy from VCs ends the price will go up drastically - what choice will they have but pay it? They laid off all of their workers who knew how to make things happen.
JWcph, Radicalized By Decency
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •EVHaste
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Toni Aittoniemi
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •And thatβs the benign side of the argument, really.
Thereβs a darker side, where psychopathic & narcissistic leaders can maintain companies whose mode of operation goes way beyond anything a real human would ever work for.
The elimination of moral human agency will enable actors whose cruelty will go beyond anything ever experienced by humanity so far.
Stuff of nightmares.
OS-SCI
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Kat
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •AFAICT the answer to the riddle is that these execs are not thinking like rational businesspeople, however much they might speak and justify themselves in those terms.
It's about screwing people over, disempowering them, and replacing them with obedient machines that can't talk back. An LLM will never outmanoeuvre you in office politics, or threaten your bonus.
kamstrup
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •in many European countries (I don't know much about the US or UK), we not only have worker rights, but also the reverse: There are laws protecting the employer against unfair retaliation from the workers. Changing to renting AI throws these rights out the window.
It boggles the mind that anyone is willing to take that risk.
Much like crypto completely does away with consumer rights and protections in the banking system.
canleaf08 β β
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •5. cancel DEI, make it harder for marginalized communities to find a career.
XCM
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •24/7 availability without burnouts and ridiculous human requirements such as time off and maternity leave.
Some say AI should augment human skills.
So then we can relax while the AI does the job.
In reality, humans will just be given more work.
AzureArmageddon
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •joriki
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Roknrol
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Paco Hope #resist
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •There is this trend in business the las 30 years of rent-don’t-own. I do IT and this is “the cloud.” Rent servers, don’t own them. There’s the whole Office365 and every other software-as-a-service (SaaS) industry. Streaming music and film. Everyone wants recurring revenue, not capital investment. It drives subscription models in your products because everything underpinning your business is in a subscription, too.
There’s a principle that someone who specialises in something (computers, staffing, medical testing) will optimise it better than you can and make it cheaper, more efficient. But the myth is that they will share the resulting cost savings with you. Instead, they try to lower costs -for them- without changing the price -for you-. That’s where profit comes from, after all.
So people figure outsourcing is somehow good. Because they think it saves their business money and they get better service from a specialist. I’m sure that’s true sometimes. But mostly this seems like an unproven religious belief.
... show moreThere is this trend in business the las 30 years of rent-donβt-own. I do IT and this is βthe cloud.β Rent servers, donβt own them. Thereβs the whole Office365 and every other software-as-a-service (SaaS) industry. Streaming music and film. Everyone wants recurring revenue, not capital investment. It drives subscription models in your products because everything underpinning your business is in a subscription, too.
Thereβs a principle that someone who specialises in something (computers, staffing, medical testing) will optimise it better than you can and make it cheaper, more efficient. But the myth is that they will share the resulting cost savings with you. Instead, they try to lower costs -for them- without changing the price -for you-. Thatβs where profit comes from, after all.
So people figure outsourcing is somehow good. Because they think it saves their business money and they get better service from a specialist. Iβm sure thatβs true sometimes. But mostly this seems like an unproven religious belief.
myrmepropagandist reshared this.
Tom Ritchford
in reply to Paco Hope #resist • • •@paco You're mostly right, but "it depends."
For example, I pay Linode $20 a month to host a server for me, where I in turn host several dozen small sites for people (for free).
Now, I could buy a small machine, and set it up in my house, probably around the cost of a year's service, but then I'd have other issues. I'd need to get a static IP from my provider, I don't even know if they do that. The bandwidth would compete with mine.
1/
Tom Ritchford
in reply to Tom Ritchford • • •@paco If I need to upgrade, I can spin up a new machine, copy, test, and switch with little stress. (I did it once before.)
So it works for me.
On a more dramatic level, I am working on a project that needs serious GPUs. The development machine I work on is a honking great physical machine that the company owns outright, running out of someone's garage in Estonia. (It's very reliable.)
They probably save tens of thousands of dollars a year that way.
It's a good choice.
2/
RyeNCode π¨π¦
in reply to Tom Ritchford • • •What I seen in the trenches (me a dev) when the org I was with went from owning to renting (on prem to cloud) was matched transition from knowing to ... Not knowing as a service.
Competency of infrastructure dropped like a rock. If Azure or AWS didn't have a "product" to do it then "we can't do that" or solution shad to be shoehorned into a bad/costly fit.
A pilot project that I needed one of our disused desktops for was denied: must be in cloud for $2k/mo or never
Sherri W (SyntaxSeed)
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •π―. Companies have no clue what they're losing by replacing workers with AI.
- AI will never sanity check or push back on company decisions.
- AI will never tell managers: "this is confusing" or "customers will hate this".
- AI will never innovate new ideas while working on an existing one.
- AI will never identify friction for users or biases (in fact it will create them).
- AI won't be your first-round testers as something is being built.
-AI won't give u free advertising.
James π¦ #FBPE πͺπΊ
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •fmc01
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •MontyOnTheRun
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •Derek Martin
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •plan-A
Unknown parent • •the one I answered to..
soscisurvey.de/tools/view-charβ¦
plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •That is 1 flaw only to detect.
And as I saw so much responses bout A.I. i did just the roll, this is just the 1st..
plan-A
Unknown parent • •bruh..
plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •plan-A
Unknown parent • •You've hit the nail! that is the whole thing!
Whatever you use is AI today or you gotta be a wolf.
plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •I see corrections etc at soe point and it is copy/pasted..
plan-A
Unknown parent • •plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •so each copy paste is passed on to database.
plan-A
Unknown parent • •I told you Unicode or other UTF-8 encoding non printable views on Code emulator..
plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •F12 or inspect f dev options are on in browser you can see the source , it say copy.
those you filter out and do the rest.
plan-A
in reply to plan-A • •it is not fool-proof, but combined with rest you get at least a grasp..
where it matter.
XCM
Unknown parent • • •π€·ββοΈ
So I suppose the AI produces typos too, now?
Read closely.
Jon PENNYCOOK
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •veroandi
in reply to myrmepropagandist • • •