| I'd love to hear how I misinterpreted your words about AI. Just to remind you: - "A ridiculous waste of resources sucking up all the oxygen in the room." - "I am also not at all afraid of losing my job to AI" - "I seriously doubt the competence and experience of anyone afraid of it." - "<I don't> think agents can do my job" - "humongous amount of money burned in the AI pit" My conclusion from that is that you think AI is bad because it's not useful [to be worth the cost] (bucket #1) and not because you're afraid of losing your job (bucket #2). I think that's a reasonable conclusion to draw? But you obviously disagree and found my conclusion so offensive you decided to attack my intentions, as if you know what I'm thinking better than I do. |
All facts below are true in regards on how I think of AI
- AI is useful. I use it daily. In some tasks it speeds me up greatly, in other tasks not so much. I don't question that it is useful, although I do disagree on how much AI maximalists overhype it.
- I think AI is a technology deadend. Due to limitations inherent to how LLMs work, they cannot achieve what the people selling AI claim it can do. Or at least multiple unprecedented technological revolutions would be needed for it to happen.
- AI is hellishly expensive. All companies building it are bleeding an insane amount of money in a reckless manner. At some point, the bill will have to be paid. I am concerned about this in terms of employability - I suspect a major economic downturn is brewing in the horizon, and how companies are burning money in AI will compound on it.
- Perhaps naively, I think that this technology should be built up and incorporated responsibly, instead of this FOMO-fueled "winner takes all" mentality. I recognize that the system we live in has all the wrong incentives however.
I very much disagree my opinions fit neatly in between the categories you defined.
And this brings me back to my original point: You asked your questions presuming the answers. It's not a matter of knowing what you think better than you do, it is a matter of getting the things you declared and deriving your intentions.