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37 votes
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China drafts world’s strictest rules to end AI-encouraged suicide, violence
22 votes -
The truth about AI (specifically LLM powered AI)
The last couple of years have been a wild ride. The biggest parts of the conversation around AI for most of that time have been dominated by absurd levels of hype. To go along with the cringe...
The last couple of years have been a wild ride. The biggest parts of the conversation around AI for most of that time have been dominated by absurd levels of hype. To go along with the cringe levels of hype, a lot of people have felt the pain of dealing with the results of rushed and forced AI implementation.
As a result the pushback against AI is loud and passionate. A lot of people are pissed, for good reasons.
Because of that it would be understandable for people casually watching from a distance to get the impression that AI is mostly an investor fueled shitshow with very little real value.
The first part of the sentiment is true, it's definitely a shitshow. Big companies are FOMOing hard, everyone is shoehorning AI into everything they can in hopes of capturing some of that hype money. It feels like crypto, or Web 3.0. The result is a mess and we're nowhere near peak mess yet.
Meanwhile in software engineering the conversation is extremely polarized. There is a large, but shrinking, contingent of people who are absolutely sure that AI is something like a scam. It only looks like a valid tool and in reality it creates more problems than it solves. And until recently that was largely true. The reason that contingent is shrinking, though, is that the latest generation of SOTA models are an undeniable step change. Every day countless developers try using AI for something that it's actually good at and they have the, as yet nameless but novel, realization that "holy shit this changes everything". It's just like every other revolutionary tech tool, you have to know how to use it, and when not to use it.
The reason I bring up software engineering is that code is deterministic. You can objectively measure the results. The incredible language fluency of LLMs can't gloss over code issues. It either identified the bug or it didn't. It either wrote a thorough, valid test or it didn't. It's either good code or it isn't. And here's the thing: It is. Not automatically, or in all cases, and definitely not without careful management and scaffolding. But used well it is undeniably a game changing tool.
But it's not just game changing in software. As in software if it's used badly, or for the wrong things, it's more trouble than it's worth. But used well it's remarkable. I'll give you an example:
A friend was recently using AI to help create the necessary documents for a state government certification process for his business. If you've ever worked with government you've already imagined the mountain of forms, policies and other documentation that were required. I got involved because he ran into some issues getting the AI to deliver.
Going through his session the thing that blew my mind was how little prompting it took to get most of the way there. He essentially said "I need help with X application process for X certification" and then he pasted in a block of relevant requirements from the state. The LLM agent then immediately knew what to do, which documents would be required and which regulations were relevant. It then proceeded to run him through a short Q and A to get the necessary specifics for his business and then it just did it. The entire stack of required documentation was done in under an hour versus the days it would have taken him to do it himself. It didn't require detailed instructions or .md files or MCP servers or artifacts, it just did it.
And he's familiar with this process, he has the expertise to look at the resulting documents and say "yeah this is exactly what the state is looking for". It's not surprising that the model had a lot of government documentation in its training data, it shouldn't even really be mind blowing at this point how effective it was, but it blew my mind anyway. Probably because not having to deal with boring, repetitive paperwork is a miraculous thing from my perspective.
This kind of win is now available in a lot of areas of work and business. It's not hype, it's objectively verifiable utility.
This is not to say that it's not still a mess. I could write an overly long essay on the dangers of AI in software, business and to society at large. We thought social media was bad, that the digital revolution happened too fast for society to adapt... AI is a whole new category of problematic. One that's happening far faster than anything else has. There's no precedent.
But my public service message is this: Don't let the passionate hatred of AI give you the wrong idea: There is real value there. I don't mean this is a FOMO way, you don't have to "use AI or get left behind". The truth is that 6 months from now the combination of new generations of models and improved tooling, scaffolding and workflows will likely make the current iteration of AI look quaint by comparison. There's no rush to figure out a technology that's advancing and changing this quickly because most of what you learn right now will be about solving problems that will be solved by default in the near future.
That being said, AI is the biggest technological leap since the beginning of the public, consumer facing, internet. And I was there for that. Like the internet it will prove to be both good and bad, corporate consolidation will make the bad worse. And, like the internet, the people who are saying it's not revolutionary are going to look silly in the context of history.
I say this from the perspective of someone who has spent the past year casually (and in recent months intensively) learning how to use AI in practical ways, with quantifiable results, both in my own projects and to help other people solve problems in various domains. If I were to distill my career into one concept, it would be: solving problems. So I feel like I'm in a position to speak about problem solving technology with expertise. If you have a use for LLM powered AI, you'll be surprised how useful it is.
58 votes -
Nvidia-backed Starcloud trains first AI model in space
26 votes -
The paperclip problem
10 votes -
AI isn’t replacing jobs. AI spending is.
31 votes -
Science, large language models, and goal displacement
7 votes -
She fell in love with ChatGPT. Then she ghosted it.
27 votes -
Indie Game Awards rescinds Clair Obscur's GOTY wins over use of generative AI [for now-removed background assets]
29 votes -
How Sam Altman is profiting off of AI's problems
19 votes -
What I learned building pi, an opinionated and minimal coding agent
9 votes -
AI might not be coming for lawyers’ jobs anytime soon
7 votes -
AI will likely affect administrative and operational jobs in heathcare
26 votes -
AI-designed Linux computer with 843 components boots on first attempt — dual-PCB Project Speedrun was made in just one week and required less than forty hours of human work
30 votes -
Statement from Mozilla's new CEO
70 votes -
JustHTML is a fascinating example of vibe engineering in action
47 votes -
NOAA deploys new generation of AI-driven global weather models
14 votes -
How China built its ‘Manhattan Project’ to rival the West in AI chips
11 votes -
'Saturday Night Live' hit with backlash for using AI images
14 votes -
Useful patterns for building HTML tools
7 votes -
How to turn off AI tools like Gemini, Apple Intelligence, or Copilot
27 votes -
Disney inks blockbuster $1b deal with OpenAI, handing characters over to Sora
20 votes -
"Suspended" as a Doctor - AI misinformation saying I've been suspended by the medical council in June 2025. Thanks Google!
14 votes -
Weird generalization and inductive backdoors: new ways to corrupt LLMs
17 votes -
The risks of AI toys for kids
11 votes -
The Walt Disney Company and OpenAI reach landmark agreement to bring over 200 characters from across Disney’s brands to Sora
23 votes -
Home Assistant Voice Preview Edition review (FOSS alternative to Alexa, Siri etc)
16 votes -
These travel influencers don’t want freebies. They’re AI.
25 votes -
Insurers retreat from AI cover as risk of multibillion-dollar claims mounts
22 votes -
Is OpenAI today’s Netscape? Or is it AOL?
21 votes -
RAM is so expensive, Samsung won’t even sell it to Samsung
49 votes -
AI agents find $4.6M in blockchain smart contract exploits
10 votes -
'It’s time to talk about my cat. To which you might be saying, “Chuck, I didn’t know you had a cat!” and I’d respond with, “I didn’t know I had a cat either.”'
23 votes -
Prime Video pulls eerily emotionless AI-generated anime dubs after complaints
23 votes -
Is YouTube's use of AI upscaling for Shorts unethical?
17 votes -
Is “green AI” even possible?
13 votes -
Sergey Brin gifts $1.1 billion in Alphabet stock after AI rally
10 votes -
The DoorDash problem: how AI browsers are a huge threat to Amazon
41 votes -
Meet the group breaking people out of AI delusions
27 votes -
Animals versus ghosts
6 votes -
An AI company wants to clone me
9 votes -
Farms and data centers contribute to a water pollution crisis in Eastern Oregon
13 votes -
GPT-5 has come a long way in mathematics
21 votes -
A new era of intelligence with Gemini 3
39 votes -
Poets are now cybersecurity threats: Researchers used 'adversarial poetry' to trick AI into ignoring its safety guard rails and it frequently worked
28 votes -
Google must double AI serving capacity every six months to meet demand
36 votes -
LLMs are bullshitters. But that doesn't mean they're not useful.
20 votes -
MIYAGI: The First Karate Kid | What if...? trailer concept
7 votes -
Is trying to become an author insane in times of LLMs?
A simple question. I know LLMs are currently not a replacement for authors. Will that remain true in 5 to 10 years? EDIT: No. I never expected to earn a living either mostly or exclusively by...
A simple question. I know LLMs are currently not a replacement for authors. Will that remain true in 5 to 10 years?
EDIT: No. I never expected to earn a living either mostly or exclusively by selling books. There are however many "side gigs" in my country that can greatly benefit from being published by a real company. Ultimately though, I'm not in it primarily for the money. But I wonder what the future holds for fiction as a whole.
21 votes -
The worlds on fire. So lets just make AI porn.
23 votes