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by nixon_why69 40 days ago
Yes it very much does but managing humans is still very different.

Understanding your domain, setting clear expectations and understanding limitations and how much ambiguity your people/robots can handle are all good management techniques, they translate.

But the nature of working with an always-on flattery machine vs humans that can exceed your expectations while also being sources of infinite drama and frustration are still fundamentally different. The blind spot is being subsceptible to the flattery machine and forgetting how much you relied on good people challenging you. The benefit is, of course, not having to deal with humans.

1 comments

In addition, a good human knows when to ask for help or feedback. Our AIs are always just as confident whether their output is brilliant or terrible.

That's more or less the opposite of what I'd want.