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  3. Writing this up again so I can pin it: AI is literally a fascist project.

Writing this up again so I can pin it: AI is literally a fascist project.

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  • gyrosgeier@hachyderm.ioG gyrosgeier@hachyderm.io

    @jens also, hallucinating assistive technology is a really bad thing, especially if it is deemed "good enough" by abled people, and deployed instead of actually reliable assistive technology, because it is cheaper.

    For example, the availability of image description software is used to justify no longer describing images. That is a step up from "helpfully" running image description software on your own site and not verifying the result (because it is obvious that no description exists), but still a lot worse than actually providing good descriptions that put the image into the context of the site, and highlight important points.

    jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
    jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
    jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
    wrote last edited by
    #26

    @GyrosGeier I actually find it difficult to write good image descriptions. The ones I write zero in on the point I want to make, but often omit details. In a way, that's a writing faux pas. In creative writing you learn "show, don't tell", and I do the opposite.

    This isn't a counter-argument (nor an argument). All I want to do is acknowledge how hard it is to do well with assitance of this kind.

    gyrosgeier@hachyderm.ioG 1 Reply Last reply
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    • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

      ... things are done, so spending on individual people or groups of people is significantly less effective than spending on the population at large.

      The result is that democracies and service oriented economies go hand in hand, and support each other rather than work in opposition.

      Marx would not have used the words "service economy", but would have said "labour". Both are synonyms for "people".

      Now cryptocurrencies and AI have one thing in common, other than using insane amounts of resources.

      jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
      jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
      jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
      wrote last edited by
      #27

      There's an aside here that I sometimes found worth pointing out: "replacing people" doesn't necessarily mean firing people.

      It may simply mean lowering their "worth" in salary negotiations, because you can use the threat of replacement with AI.

      Sometimes chains of logic are as simple as "A because B", and sometimes there are several intermediary steps.

      You can do a step further: even if YOUR job is not threatened by AI takeover, if the average salary drops (locally), you're also affected.

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      • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
        wrote last edited by
        #28

        @condret Your mental model is not my mental model.

        In my mental model, hypercapitalists - billionaire oligarchs - have no more need for extra capital. They'll pursue it, but it has absolutely lost meaning other than as a number. This is also the suggestion the very few insider views we get suggest: those people care only that their number is bigger than the other person's, not about money as such.

        So any model that reduces this to a capitalist need to extract more capital is, IMHO, wrong. 1/n

        jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ 1 Reply Last reply
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        • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

          @condret Your mental model is not my mental model.

          In my mental model, hypercapitalists - billionaire oligarchs - have no more need for extra capital. They'll pursue it, but it has absolutely lost meaning other than as a number. This is also the suggestion the very few insider views we get suggest: those people care only that their number is bigger than the other person's, not about money as such.

          So any model that reduces this to a capitalist need to extract more capital is, IMHO, wrong. 1/n

          jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
          jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
          wrote last edited by
          #29

          @condret What the involvement of e.g. Thiel, Musk, Zuck and Bezos in politics instead demonstrate is that those people care about power.

          You don't need to amass capital to have power. That's where the game is currently at, sure. But real power is enslavement.

          Slaves either do not buy products, or they buy products you tell them to buy, with the money you give them, carefully adjusted so that they will never have enough to break out of enslavement.

          This is the game.

          And what better... 2/n

          jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ 1 Reply Last reply
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          • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

            @condret What the involvement of e.g. Thiel, Musk, Zuck and Bezos in politics instead demonstrate is that those people care about power.

            You don't need to amass capital to have power. That's where the game is currently at, sure. But real power is enslavement.

            Slaves either do not buy products, or they buy products you tell them to buy, with the money you give them, carefully adjusted so that they will never have enough to break out of enslavement.

            This is the game.

            And what better... 2/n

            jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
            jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
            wrote last edited by
            #30

            @condret ... way to play it than to make your future slaves dependent on something you control entirely? Make them dependent not only for their livelihood, but for their information - their education?

            I don't think mere capitalist logic applies here at all.

            /3

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            • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

              @GyrosGeier I actually find it difficult to write good image descriptions. The ones I write zero in on the point I want to make, but often omit details. In a way, that's a writing faux pas. In creative writing you learn "show, don't tell", and I do the opposite.

              This isn't a counter-argument (nor an argument). All I want to do is acknowledge how hard it is to do well with assitance of this kind.

              gyrosgeier@hachyderm.ioG This user is from outside of this forum
              gyrosgeier@hachyderm.ioG This user is from outside of this forum
              gyrosgeier@hachyderm.io
              wrote last edited by
              #31

              @jens that is a good description though: the details aren't important, but the point is. If you can't show because the recipient is vision impaired, then you need to tell.

              My point is that while AI has its uses in assistive technologies, it is also inherently limited, so it's not a good direction to take research in assistive technologies in.

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              • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

                ... scarcity, in which - by whichever proof scheme - those who participate early in the system benefit off those who come later (aka pyramid schemes). The proof algorithm guarantees scarcity; it's the whole point of blockchain vs. any other distributed system that there is a chokehold on resource creation somewhere.

                AI is doing much the same thing, but it doesn't advertise this artificial scarcity as part of the solution. Instead, it simply guarantees that those who already own the most...

                nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                nielsa@mas.to
                wrote last edited by
                #32

                @jens The way the global stock market works is an interesting progenitor for cryptocurrencies, too. It used to be traded mostly based on earnings paid for holding the stock, but has in recent decades transitioned into being traded speculatively, which makes each stock into its own little proto-ponzi scheme.

                jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

                  @nielsa I think you need to read the entire thread 🙂

                  nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                  nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                  nielsa@mas.to
                  wrote last edited by
                  #33

                  @jens I read the thread, it's a good thread.

                  I guess I'm just delineating the caveat of what kind of LLM can be neutral technology. Which *is* a minor footnote in what is currently happening.

                  Thanks for writing this up 😁

                  jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • nielsa@mas.toN nielsa@mas.to

                    @jens The way the global stock market works is an interesting progenitor for cryptocurrencies, too. It used to be traded mostly based on earnings paid for holding the stock, but has in recent decades transitioned into being traded speculatively, which makes each stock into its own little proto-ponzi scheme.

                    jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                    jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
                    wrote last edited by
                    #34

                    @nielsa Oh, yes.

                    My understanding of financial products isn't exactly complete, but my take is that they all fall into two categories.

                    I mean, buying stock is a bet on future earnings. You can lose that bet, so one category is to aggregate things in such a way that - hopefully - losses in one are offset by gains in the other.

                    The other category is a layer of indirection, i.e. bets on something other people are betting on.

                    All of this multi-layered to the point where you can't know what...

                    jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

                      @nielsa Oh, yes.

                      My understanding of financial products isn't exactly complete, but my take is that they all fall into two categories.

                      I mean, buying stock is a bet on future earnings. You can lose that bet, so one category is to aggregate things in such a way that - hopefully - losses in one are offset by gains in the other.

                      The other category is a layer of indirection, i.e. bets on something other people are betting on.

                      All of this multi-layered to the point where you can't know what...

                      jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                      jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
                      wrote last edited by
                      #35

                      @nielsa ... you're betting on, which makes ponzi schemes and insider trading so much more effective, as the costs are externalized to the average shareholder.

                      And people think this is serious business.

                      The only thing that seems serious about it is that it seriously affects us.

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                      • nielsa@mas.toN nielsa@mas.to

                        @jens I read the thread, it's a good thread.

                        I guess I'm just delineating the caveat of what kind of LLM can be neutral technology. Which *is* a minor footnote in what is currently happening.

                        Thanks for writing this up 😁

                        jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                        jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                        jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
                        wrote last edited by
                        #36

                        @nielsa And frankly, as a neutral tech or tool, I do find the whole thing interesting!

                        It's just... pretty much like fusion is interesting. I would love for us to have cheap, safe "desktop" fusion.

                        It's just always been 20 years away, and inextricably tied up with dirty fission, so how can one *practically* support one and not the other?

                        The cost-benefit-analysis suggests to me that the cost of getting this wrong is so much higher than the cost of missing out on good stuff, though.

                        nielsa@mas.toN 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

                          @nielsa And frankly, as a neutral tech or tool, I do find the whole thing interesting!

                          It's just... pretty much like fusion is interesting. I would love for us to have cheap, safe "desktop" fusion.

                          It's just always been 20 years away, and inextricably tied up with dirty fission, so how can one *practically* support one and not the other?

                          The cost-benefit-analysis suggests to me that the cost of getting this wrong is so much higher than the cost of missing out on good stuff, though.

                          nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                          nielsa@mas.toN This user is from outside of this forum
                          nielsa@mas.to
                          wrote last edited by
                          #37

                          @jens Absolutely agree on all of that.

                          I have a few ideas I think could make good, ethical use of generalized LLMs, but only assuming no side benefits to the people largely driving their development and to some extent that the LLM itself is produced ethically... and that leaves a very narrow space and thus a significant startup cost...

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                          • jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ jens@social.finkhaeuser.de

                            Writing this up again so I can pin it: AI is literally a fascist project. Friends don't let friends use it.

                            Before I go into this, there are two types of responses to this that I have taken seriously so far.

                            One I'll call HashTagNotAllAI, which yields the obligatory "sure", but has the same smell. I'll leave it at that.

                            The other is that an anti AI stance also throws some assistive technology under the bus, making such a stance intrinsically ableistic. The easy thing to do is to refer...

                            lwriemen@social.librem.oneL This user is from outside of this forum
                            lwriemen@social.librem.oneL This user is from outside of this forum
                            lwriemen@social.librem.one
                            wrote last edited by
                            #38

                            @jens AI is too confusing of a term, especially when talking about assistance. e.g., can text to speech or voice recognition technology be called AI? It certainly doesn't a rainforest destroying LLM level of technology; it's been around for at least 35 years.

                            I don't stay abreast of all the assistive technology, but is there any that really requires LLMs at massive scale?

                            jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ mcv@friendica.opensocial.spaceM 2 Replies Last reply
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                            • lwriemen@social.librem.oneL lwriemen@social.librem.one

                              @jens AI is too confusing of a term, especially when talking about assistance. e.g., can text to speech or voice recognition technology be called AI? It certainly doesn't a rainforest destroying LLM level of technology; it's been around for at least 35 years.

                              I don't stay abreast of all the assistive technology, but is there any that really requires LLMs at massive scale?

                              jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                              jens@social.finkhaeuser.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                              jens@social.finkhaeuser.de
                              wrote last edited by
                              #39

                              @lwriemen As has been mentioned in a sub-thread, there e.g. exist things that analyze an image and provide textual desceiptions.

                              In the broader sense, translation is an assistive tech for non-native speakers of any language.

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                              • lwriemen@social.librem.oneL lwriemen@social.librem.one

                                @jens AI is too confusing of a term, especially when talking about assistance. e.g., can text to speech or voice recognition technology be called AI? It certainly doesn't a rainforest destroying LLM level of technology; it's been around for at least 35 years.

                                I don't stay abreast of all the assistive technology, but is there any that really requires LLMs at massive scale?

                                mcv@friendica.opensocial.spaceM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mcv@friendica.opensocial.spaceM This user is from outside of this forum
                                mcv@friendica.opensocial.space
                                wrote last edited by
                                #40

                                @lwriemen @jens

                                Yes. AI is a far older and broader field than just the current LLM hype. Speech recognition, handwriting recognition, chess playing, various types of expert systems, route-finding, etc.

                                But LLMs and other modern genAI does feel different to a lot of people. And it uses a lot more data and resources.

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