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34 votes
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Two unrelated stories that make me even more cynical about AI
I saw both of these stories on Lemmy today. They show two different facets to the topic of AI. This first story is from the perspective of cynicism about AI and how it has been overhyped. If AI is...
I saw both of these stories on Lemmy today. They show two different facets to the topic of AI.
This first story is from the perspective of cynicism about AI and how it has been overhyped.
If AI is so good, where are the open source contributionsBut if AI is so obviously superior … show us the code. Where’s the receipts? Let’s say, where’s the open source code contributions using AI?
The second story is about crony capitalism, deregulation, and politics around AI:
GOP sneaks decades long AI regulation ban into spending bill
On Sunday night, House Republicans added language to the Budget Reconciliation bill that would block all state and local governments from regulating AI for 10 years, 404 Media reports. The provision, introduced by Representative Brett Guthrie of Kentucky, states that "no State or political subdivision thereof may enforce any law or regulation regulating artificial intelligence models, artificial intelligence systems, or automated decision systems during the 10 year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act
I saw these stories minutes apart, and they really make me feel even more cynical and annoyed by AI than I was yesterday. Because:
- In the short term AI is largely a boondoggle, which won’t work as advertised but still humans will be replaced by it because the people who hire don’t understand it’s limitations but they fear missing out on a gold rush.
- The same shady people at the AI companies who are stealing your art and content, in order to sell a product that will replace you, are writing legislation to protect themselves from being held accountable
- They also are going to be protected from any skynet-style disasters caused by their recklessness
28 votes -
Unexplained drones, UFOs and the state of the US Navy
10 votes -
Everyone is cheating their way through college
49 votes -
Amazon makes ‘fundamental leap forward in robotics’ with device having sense of touch
10 votes -
Covered California state insurance website sent personal health data to LinkedIn
21 votes -
All four major web browsers are about to lose 80% of their funding
55 votes -
Chinese factories are more automated
13 votes -
A 1903 proposal to preserve the dead in glass cubes
16 votes -
Apple is no longer allowed to collect fees on purchases made outside apps
81 votes -
Nail salon employee pleads guilty after holding thirteen remote IT jobs worked by developers outside of the US
22 votes -
Passing the torch - Discord is getting a new CEO
54 votes -
State Bar of California admits it used AI to develop exam questions, triggering new furor
25 votes -
Shopify required to defend data privacy lawsuit in California
18 votes -
FBI Denver warns of online file converter scam
27 votes -
Sodium-ion battery firm shuts down due to bad economics
27 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg defends Meta in social media monopoly trial
11 votes -
AI 2027
29 votes -
‘The terror is real’: an appalled US tech industry is scared to criticize Elon Musk
36 votes -
Hawaiʻi's needy wait as benefits system tech overhaul runs late, busts budget
7 votes -
Elon Musk says xAI has acquired X in deal that values social media site at $33 billion
23 votes -
Delete the workforce
11 votes -
US government workers and military planners love Signal now
30 votes -
YouTube Premium Lite: Ad-free viewing for $7.99/month
39 votes -
Dutch parliament calls for end to dependence on US software companies
53 votes -
How ‘talk pedometers’ are transforming education in Birmingham, US classrooms
18 votes -
In Memoriam: Mark Klein, AT&T whistleblower who revealed US National Security Agency mass spying
32 votes -
Investigation: We tried to buy American chips as a Russian defense manufacturer - it worked
21 votes -
US Department of Justice again files demand to break up Google’s search monopoly
27 votes -
Utah becomes first US state to pass bill making app stores verify ages - Governor has not yet signed the bill
18 votes -
Microsoft reported to be sharply reducing planned data center investment worldwide
30 votes -
Myanmar scam compounds that enslave workers apparently use Starlink for net access. US law enforcement says no company response to request for help.
26 votes -
MIT’s new AI-powered tool accelerates startup ambitions
6 votes -
Meta admits Instagram Reels featured violence, porn in graphic error
23 votes -
Some US carriers are still missing RCS on iPhone: who’s to blame?
9 votes -
Automattic hit with class action over WP Engine dispute, accused of anti-competitive tactics
14 votes -
Canada-US cross-border surveillance negotiations raise constitutional and human rights whirlwind under US CLOUD Act
16 votes -
Apple to invest $500 billion in the US in the next four years, build AI server factory
12 votes -
When there’s no school counselor, there’s a bot
18 votes -
Microsoft unveils chip it says could bring quantum computing within years
15 votes -
Silicon Valley vignettes
9 votes -
Larry Ellison wants to put all US data in one big AI system
24 votes -
Starlink, T-Mobile open their satellite texting test to all. Here’s how it works.
14 votes -
San Francisco unveils marble bust of Aaron Swartz, hero of open-access internet
48 votes -
Lexipol data leak: Hackers release US police training manuals
17 votes -
Google Maps now shows the 'Gulf of America' for US users
25 votes -
TikTok and TikTok Lite APK are available on TikTok.com
9 votes -
US documents say Project 2025’s creators The Heritage Foundation want to dox Wikipedia’s volunteer editors of pages related to Palestine conflict using powerful tools
33 votes -
How US school cyber attacks get hidden from those impacted and the public
10 votes -
Infrastructure laundering: criminals are blending in with the cloud
4 votes