Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
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Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
All this from research out of the notoriously pro-worker rag [checks notes] Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it
These findings have strong "reverse centaur" vibes.
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Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
All this from research out of the notoriously pro-worker rag [checks notes] Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it
@beep
> They reduced dependence on othersWhy is this seen as a positive? (rhetorical)
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I deeply hate to quote myself, but here’s me back in September: “…the technology’s real value isn’t improving productivity, or even in improving products. Rather, [“artificial intelligence” is] a social mechanism employed to ensure compliance in the workplace, and to weaken worker power.” https://ethanmarcotte.com/wrote/against-stocking-frames/
These platforms are not for you and I, and never were.
@beep oh neat to see you on here! "You deserve a tech union" was very good, I was surprised at how straightforward and readable it was
https://bookwyrm.social/user/samfirke/review/7446482/s/good-read-for-anyone-in-techit#anchor-7446482 -
@beep I think this is still WAY too optimistic about AI, but I guess what would you expect from an article written by managers who see humans as infinitely interchangeable and replaceable resources...
The problem is way more than burnout. It's shiting roles to people who complete the work faster *because* they don't have the training or experience to know if it's actually done well. So they don't do it well, they only do it fast. Designers start vibe coding, turning the engineers into testers just trying to cobble that slop together, then the testers are doing more dev and sysadmin work, and pretty soon everyone is doing every job EXCEPT the one they actually have the skills for. And then in a few years all your code is an unreadable, unmaintainable mess that nobody can work with, including the AI.
@admin @beep that's sort of buried in the article, in the bit where they say that some of the additional work includes Engineers reviewing 'partially complete' work begun by colleagues using AI... it's just that it's *buried* in the article because it absolutely doesn't want to dwell on the implications
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Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
All this from research out of the notoriously pro-worker rag [checks notes] Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it
"On their own initiative workers did more because AI made “doing more” feel possible, accessible, and in many cases intrinsically rewarding."
That's terrible, we definitely should go back to the days where workers feel they are accomplishing nothing, hard to get things done and unrewarding.
Those were the good old, pre #AIslop days.
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@beep
Indeed!"In the study, employees worked at a faster pace, took on a broader scope of tasks, and extended work into more hours of the day, often without being asked to do so. That may sound like a win..."
HA! Yes, that totally sounds like a "win" if your goal is to exploit workers.@kennypeanuts
Absolutely, in that AI is just the newest fad in neoliberal employee abuse.
@beep -
Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
All this from research out of the notoriously pro-worker rag [checks notes] Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it
@beep
Burnout in toxic tech companies is nothing new.
It’s about boundary setting and self respect.
Interestingly, people tend to respect you more when you draw a line.
I think the most concerning point of this article is people “reinventing” themselves while trusting the output of a text generator.
That’s the insidious long term risk for companies.
And by the time the adverse effects are visible it will take an enormous amount of effort to fix it. -
Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
All this from research out of the notoriously pro-worker rag [checks notes] Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it
@beep @magichopi That article bugs me deeply because it still signals to bosses that they can get “efficiencies” even if it burns people out. But it doesn’t define what productivity means, or how they measure it, or how accurate any of the outputs were, or even what work these people are having it do. What jobs were these? What responsibilities? But toss some care-crumbs to your burnouts and it’ll be fine.
Feels like a head-fake. -
@beep @magichopi That article bugs me deeply because it still signals to bosses that they can get “efficiencies” even if it burns people out. But it doesn’t define what productivity means, or how they measure it, or how accurate any of the outputs were, or even what work these people are having it do. What jobs were these? What responsibilities? But toss some care-crumbs to your burnouts and it’ll be fine.
Feels like a head-fake.@andrewhinton Yeah, extremely fair point. I read it as having some limitations to how far the critique would go, given the source.
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@andrewhinton Yeah, extremely fair point. I read it as having some limitations to how far the critique would go, given the source.
@beep Oh absolutely and the point you highlight in your post is still true! My anger about it is more about how sneaky an article like this is. Feels really dishonest about its supposed pro-worker positioning
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Whatever the output gains promised by LLMs, their initial productivity surge is erased over time, and replaced by heavier workloads—and that leads to workers experiencing “cognitive fatigue, burnout, and weakened decision-making.”
All this from research out of the notoriously pro-worker rag [checks notes] Harvard Business Review: https://hbr.org/2026/02/ai-doesnt-reduce-work-it-intensifies-it
@beep why not work as intensely as possible before the singularity, ai doesn't add that much to modern anxiety except a finish line
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