Using the web in the age of AI feels like being the last human wandering around a city after the zombie apocalypse.
-
Using the web in the age of AI feels like being the last human wandering around a city after the zombie apocalypse.
-
Using the web in the age of AI feels like being the last human wandering around a city after the zombie apocalypse.
@overholt Weird - I feel like that's not been the case for me. Yes, if I go some of the more common places - just as if you go into a downtown core in the US after 4PM. But when I go places like here, blogs (they still exist!), and well-curated social media follow lists it's not like that at all. It's even less so when I add in things ppl participate in in real time: zwift, my online book club (zoom-based), etc. They're not gone - they've just moved.
-
@overholt Weird - I feel like that's not been the case for me. Yes, if I go some of the more common places - just as if you go into a downtown core in the US after 4PM. But when I go places like here, blogs (they still exist!), and well-curated social media follow lists it's not like that at all. It's even less so when I add in things ppl participate in in real time: zwift, my online book club (zoom-based), etc. They're not gone - they've just moved.
@toddtyrtle @overholt I notice it more on big social media, but also just on web searches for information, like if I want information for say a game walkthrough I'll probably be getting 2:1 AI generated results which will often be wrong.
-
@toddtyrtle @overholt I notice it more on big social media, but also just on web searches for information, like if I want information for say a game walkthrough I'll probably be getting 2:1 AI generated results which will often be wrong.
@JubalBarca @toddtyrtle Yeah, that’s what I was thinking about, in particular trying to find a solution for my malfunctioning dishwasher this weekend.
-
Using the web in the age of AI feels like being the last human wandering around a city after the zombie apocalypse.
The premise to BLAME!
According to the prequel manga NOiSE, the City began as a much smaller structure erected on Earth by the robotic "Builders". Humanity controlled the Builders through the Netsphere, an advanced computer network whose access was restricted to human use only, and authenticated by a genetic marker known as the Net Terminal Gene. Anyone who attempted to access the Netsphere without the marker was eliminated by an automated security force known as the Safeguards. However, a terrorist cult known as "the Order" released a retrovirus that deleted the Net Terminal Gene from all humans, thus cutting off their access to the Netsphere and their control over the Builders. Without specific instructions, the Builders began to build chaotically and indefinitely, while the Safeguards' programming degraded into a mandate to kill all humans without the Net Terminal Gene, whether they wanted to access the Netsphere or not.
-
R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic