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throwgfgfd25 | 1 year ago
Or is this one of those fundamental attribution error things:
- MY product is a powerful tool for creators who wish to save time
- THEIR product is just a poorly-though-out slop generator
Does it occur to people to instead be part of something real and visceral, and not just blame social media's ad-driven impression model, not pretend they are only part of a trend for which they can't be totally blamed?
ahmeneeroe-v2|1 year ago
You talk about being a part of something "real and visceral" but you're complaining about the demise of being able to sit at your desk and see pictures of wildlife. Maybe it's okay that google image search dies and makes people go out and find the wildlife they want to see.
The internet, even in its best format (e.g. ad-free, free access information for all; and communication with all of humanity) has a ton of real downsides. It's not clear to me that AI should be strangled in its infancy to save the internet (which does _not_ exist in that "best" format).
ziddoap|1 year ago
I don't think that is what will happen if google images dies.
dang|1 year ago
- I am a thoughtful technologist, building real things for real people, concerned about others and the social impact of my work;
- they are greedy and ignorant, destroying society for short-term personal gain, no matter what the consequences.
It's human nature to put badness on an abstract them, but we don't get anywhere that way. It's good for getting agreement (e.g. upvotes), because we all put ourselves in that sweet I bucket and participate in the down-with-them feeling. But it only leads to more of what everyone decries.
sgdfhijfgsdfgds|1 year ago
I did not make any claims about myself at all, until I was separately accused of being something or other by someone projecting onto me whatever it was they needed to feel better about themselves.
Second, you have rate-limited me with the "posting too fast" thing so I couldn't reply to your comment or other ad hominem, even though I was posting at a rate no faster than the discussions about OpenSCAD and FreeCAD I had been involved with earlier (considerably less, I would say).
It's IMO really classless to use your administrative privileges to silence people after you accuse them of something but before they can respond, but I am not surprised to see that.
I will repeat again: I think it is really clear to me, and really to everyone I have me outside this bubble, that there is no fine distinction to be drawn between content generating AI projects that are "good" and those that are contributing to "slop". It's all slop-generation; e.g. NotebookLM is no better or cleverer than Midjourney.
Every tool HNers are excited about is going to be used to make the world's culture, and the web, worse.
I'd encourage you and those reading to consider this.
Sure, you can't make much of a change by yourself. But you don't have to be part of what amounts to inflicting automated cultural vandalism on an unprecedented scale.
Goodbye.
doctorpangloss|1 year ago
You could say what you say about anyone at any time. Where do you draw the line? I guarantee you'll be guilty of the exact same thing. I don't want to generalize, but IMO this sentiment of yours, I hear most loudly from software engineers far removed from ordinary non-technical end users: is making beautiful new LISPs and CNIs and Python package auditing tools the only valid work with seemingly no tradeoffs?
throwgfgfd25|1 year ago
I am absolutely not far removed from non-technical end users. They are my client base, ultimately. As a freelancer I focus on building real things that make things better for people whose faces and voices I get to know. GenAI will be useless to them, because it is antithetical to what they do.
And that focus is only getting keener; I want nothing to do with the AI-generated web.
add-sub-mul-div|1 year ago
No, everything is not the same as everything else.
griftwood|1 year ago
rachofsunshine|1 year ago
That said, I don't really think this is a tide any individual market actor can reasonably stem. It's going to require some pretty fundamental changes in the way we use the internet.
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
CatWChainsaw|1 year ago
Sick and tired of giving parasites benefit of the doubt they've long sucked dry.
add-sub-mul-div|1 year ago
carabiner|1 year ago
darajava|1 year ago
throwgfgfd25|1 year ago
Sure. And THEIR products are just thoughtless slop generators.
unknown|1 year ago
[deleted]
elliotec|1 year ago
dang|1 year ago
https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html
griftwood|1 year ago
[deleted]
throwgfgfd25|1 year ago