I once worked at a company that sold industry-specific core-business software to deep-pocketed corps who couldn’t / wouldn’t / shouldn’t roll their own.
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Again, my gen AI question: Does it matter if it’s wrong?
I mean, in some situations, yes…right? Like, say, vehicles? that can kill people?
Tesla’s out there selling these self-crashing cars that are •clearly• not ready for prime time, and trap people inside with their unopenable-after-accident doors and burn them alive. And they’re •still• selling crap-tons of those things.
If it doesn’t matter to •them•, how many biz situations are there where “fake and dangerous” is 100% acceptable?
19/
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Does it matter if it’s wrong?
In the nihilism of this current stage of capitalism, “no” sure looks like a winning bet.
/end
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@inthehands your CS lectures must be excellent if these thought provoking threads are anything to go by. I've never considered any of that before, really interesting.
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A Scape Of Goats 🍉replied to Paul Cantrell last edited by
@inthehands it's not broken, it's built that way. it is that way because the bosses, who make decisions about these things, don't have to deal with the consequences of their decisions because they don't do the work.
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Paul Cantrellreplied to A Scape Of Goats 🍉 last edited by
@diedofheartbreak
Or maybe benefit and/or harm to real actual human beings are simply not the consequences for n question. -
@tehstu
That’s kind! My classroom lectures / discussions are much more cheerful: lots more “let’s be excellent to one another and make some cool things.” -
Extend this thought experiment to political campaign funding and tech billionaires.
Silicon Valley bought an election win for a set of GOP crooks because "innovation" has been redefined as:
1. Successful scams & frauds
2. Tax evasion
3. Corporate welfare & subsidies
4. Monopolies
5. Regulatory capture
6. Pollution & climate denial
7. DeregulationSilicon Valley does not want saleable products that generate revenue.
They want Saudi cash. They want Russian oligarchs...
1/2
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2/2
...money laundering through their VC's and hedge funds.
They want their cut off Chinese IP theft & ubiquitous surveillance capabilities.
They want to preserve patriarchy & white supremacy, plus the wealth it generates for them.
https://whatever.scalzi.com/2024/02/21/the-big-idea-cory-doctorow-4/
How Big Tech Got So Damn Big
If Silicon Valley CEOs were all exceptional, you’d expect the industry itself to be unique in its success and durability. It’s not.
WIRED (www.wired.com)
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@inthehands crying that this is the shithole world we’ve created for ourselves and we can’t make it stop.
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@[email protected] @[email protected] you know we really could make it stop... it's just the rich fucks with infinitely more resources than every other human kinda don't want to stop it right now smh
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@inthehands off topic to this thread, but damn Paul, you've been posting some amazing and on point thoughts and stories the past few days. Thanks for sharing!
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🔏 Matthias Wiesmannreplied to Paul Cantrell last edited by
@inthehands well Goodhart’s law applies, even if it was a crappy metric to start with.
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Óscar Morales Vivóreplied to Paul Cantrell last edited by
@inthehands or as I usually put it, the bullshit machine looks awful nice to the folks that have made it with bullshit.
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@inthehands ...this resonates...
a thought I had the other day:
"genAI is perfectly fine for things that don't really matter,or that you don't really care about "And to your point - in a big bussines, there is a LOT of stuff that matches that criteria.
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@inthehands this is a great thread, and i think you're right: companies care about making money, not giving users a pleasant experience. but your original example has mediocre software saving companies millions. whereas LLMs are mediocre software that is basically a money pit, with no indication that they will ever become profitable.
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@Npars01 We need to destroy business school as it currently exists. It is a training academy for sociopaths.
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It's not just business schools in need of reforms.
It's a set of systemic societal issues.
1. Policies & practices of immiseration
2. Billionaires (elite overproduction)
3. Faltering institutions
4. Cascading crisesAn excess of billionaires is destabilising politics – just as academics predicted
Politicians have always courted the wealthy, but Elon Musk and co represent a new kind of donor, and an unprecedented danger to democracy, writes Guardian columnist Zoe Williams
the Guardian (www.theguardian.com)
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2024/04/peter-turchin-end-times/
The deep historical forces that explain Trump’s win
Our research shows that political breakdown, from the Roman Empire to the Russian revolution, follows a clear pattern: workers’ wages stagnate, while elites multiply
the Guardian (www.theguardian.com)
History’s crisis detectives: how we’re using maths and data to reveal why societies collapse – and clues about the future
Historian and complexity scientist, Dan Hoyer, examines why past societies collapsed when faced with crisis, while others founds ways to survive and flourish.
The Conversation (theconversation.com)
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@inthehands
The customers are just as bad.
My wife worked as a manager in a large city library in the 00s.
She was part of a group of people asked to evaluate software to manage book lendings and the catalogue across numerous libraries.They all reported back to management that it was fundamentally flawed and not fit for purpose in great detail with screenshots.
The local authority went ahead and purchased it. It was dreadful and they had to employ extra staff to manually fix errors.
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@inthehands you'll have to forgive I've not read the full thread. But up to this point I'd like to share an alternative perspective. I work with businesses that still have those 'outdated' processes today and one of the reasons they haven't migrated to more sophisticated software yet is that it offers marginal benefits. When you dig into the cost of employing people to do general admin sometimes the cost-benefit of upgrading is very tight. Often the sales and marketing is the actual 'hoax'.
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@inthehands Jesus Christ, Paul.
BANG!
*thud*