Everybody knows Ubisoft's NFT games and NFT initiative crashed and burned and they had to stop talking about AI, but one other thing I'm noticing is every game with generative AI elements is absolutely slated by consumers - e.g.
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Everybody knows Ubisoft's NFT games and NFT initiative crashed and burned and they had to stop talking about AI, but one other thing I'm noticing is every game with generative AI elements is absolutely slated by consumers - e.g. these are a sample of comments on the Catly trailer from The Game Awards across different channels.
It's exciting to see a new generation just outright reject this stuff.
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I still think the most incredible moment of the Ubisoft NFT saga was when they rolled out the exec in charge of it to the media and he basically said that their customers are dumb dumbs who don't understand it. And then the whole thing trundled off a cliff as nobody wanted it.
You can see similar vibes emerging from big tech companies too with AI, e.g. Microsoft had people vibing on 'our customers are luddites and morons' with Recall at first.
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If you want a similar one, go read the comments on Recall and Copilot+ PC videos on YouTube. It's eye watering. You can see the future.
Apparently nobody at Microsoft is willing to tell Microsoft's CEO that people don't actually want the product - so the customers will.
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@GossiTheDog As much as I get the backlash - you can just, not enable it? And if someone can use it for malice, they already have access to your system and password, and could install any spyware they want anyway? Am I missing something?
(Not sure I’d put much stock in hate-watching YouTube commenters anyway - those types just spent the past week saying “see?!” to the false headlines that Microsoft removed the TPM 2 requirement.)
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@kirb @GossiTheDog That's a great idea, until you realize that each endpoint with recall enabled is effectively compromising all emails to/from it, all communications visible, all interaction.
It isn't a vacuum.
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@GossiTheDog @NosirrahSec Not arguing it isn’t of course. But if you’re not aware of what your users are enabling/installing on endpoints, they may well be leaking confidential data anyway. It’s only one of many ways they can, yeah?
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