this post was submitted on 29 May 2026
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Fuck AI

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A place for all those who loathe AI to discuss things, post articles, and ridicule the AI hype. Proud supporter of working people. And proud booer of SXSW 2024.

AI, in this case, refers to LLMs, GPT technology, and anything listed as "AI" meant to increase market valuations.

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[–] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 32 points 1 day ago (3 children)

Yeah its really bad. Its incredibly easy to be gaslit using gpts. And they do generate seemingly usable output. And I don't mean like, using them to analyze data. I mean just some code in an ipynb. And even there its incredibly rotten. Knowing and understanding what you are doing is the entirety of the point, and the whole AI industry misunderstands this. The code, the analyses, even the results, they're all secondary to understanding why something works the way that it does. Your individual comprehension is the part that matters.

[–] Senal@programming.dev 2 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 8 hours ago) (1 children)

Knowing and understanding what you are doing is the entirety of the point, and the whole AI industry misunderstands this.

The industry as a whole (in this case LLM's, not AI in general) isn't misunderstanding anything, their goals are not your goals.

The end users are potentially misunderstanding the goal of the capitalist infrastructure companies and supporting businesses, which is .....to turn a profit.

They aren't interested in making your life easier, giving you accurate information or providing you with a useful tool....unless doing so makes them money.

So it's really a goal alignment question :

Do you think that your goals/ethics as a professional (or personally) are in line enough with the corporations current method of value extraction to make using their offering a viable option?

And constantly evaluate this decision over time, because it might change.

The code, the analyses, even the results, they’re all secondary to understanding why something works the way that it does. Your individual comprehension is the part that matters.

As a professional in an industry, yes, insofar as that approach fulfills the criteria of success in your industry.

I also agree with this personally.


Contextual Note (in my opinion) :

With some exceptions, people as a whole are also survival driven.

So even with what i said above there aren't many people who would put "individual comprehension" over survival.

Ultimately i think it comes down to a difference in approach to something like a hierarchy of needs.

People have basic survival and then a bunch of stuff on top.

Corporations generally have survival(profit).....and that's it.

Obviously I'm speaking in generalities, there are businesses that have stated (and provably followed) goals above and beyond profit but i can't think of many.

edit: and i can't think of any involved in LLM shenanigans right now.

[–] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 1 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

I'm at least as deep in the industry as you likely are and I didn't make comment on what "their goals" are. I made that comment after watching hundreds of thousands of interactions with these systems at a range of skill levels, and am considering it from a development and leadership perspective. And youre right. Their goals aren't my goals. But they've been very clear with me about what their goals are. You could simplify them down to "turn a profit" but I think that's a misunderstanding, or that it hides deeper goals.

I don't think profit is the goal, at least, I don't think it's the goal yet, or maybe at all. I think that the goal is the collapse of the human skill set which has resulted in a wide, large, and deep pool of talented capable people. The goal isn't to be profitable per se, but the monopolize people's ability to work independently of their products.

For the past 15 years my job has not only been to develop ml technologies, but also to and mentor people into becoming programmers focused almost exclusively in ml. And within that, I work pretty domain specific. I work in the "for good" side and always have (except that stint in the US military when I was 17) and if you look through my posts you're gonna find some of the more public stuff. I work with a lot of satellite and environmental data. I work in academia, public sector and also private sector, just depending on the contract. It's mostly environmental mapping applications (water, fire and forests) globally.

What I'm seeing as an effect of these tools is an erosion of critical thinking and problem solving skills at a fundamental level. Jr scientists and developers just aren't learning the basics anymore and with that, their ability to detect bullshit or dogshit, or cat shit wrapped in dogs it is utterly diminished. And so a lot of dog shit ends up in the final product. Bit along with that, it's easy to let the hallucinating machine convince you it knows more than it does. It's practically nothing but dark patterns to do exactly that. It uses couched cautionary language to create the appearance of considering a problem from multiple sides. It asks clarifying questions, which both draws a used in but also creates the illusion of understanding.

And it sounds good. But the problem (and this is my editorial opinion as some one who was in the beta for these products) truly is that the underlying models haven't actually improved in their core capabilities in 4 years. The glitz and the glam and the tooling and the redundancy, their ability to use tools, be integrated into other things.. sure. All that has improved. But they've never been able to overcome some core issues which imo are fundamental to the architecture and can't be overcome in this current framework.

So to me the problem is two fold. First, they're putting all current developers in a acid bath which is eroding their ability to solve problems independently, or preventing them from developing those skills in the first place. And there is no way to do that learning without just putting in the time. Second, they aren't what they say they are. These tools, if you need some basic code, are phenomenal for just something small. But you need to maintain the idea or conception of what you are doing. They have no practical ability to architecture real solutions or any kind of deep critical thinking. But they'll do their best to convince you otherwise.

And finally, into the profit motive. I think we should take Musks purchase of twitter as a cautionary tale. The internet regaled in how stupid Musk was for doing so. How he was overpaying for something that wasn't profitable. And on and on. I'm sure you remember. But that unprofitable decision allowed them to steal an election. Even years later it's probably still questionable if that decision was ever directly profitable for Musk, bit that was never the point for them. Theirs was a calculus of power, and they did get their considerations right in this regard. Likewise, I think if you narrowly focus on profits for these companies, you'll miss the forest for the trees. Profit is a pathway to power, but it's now power itself, and money asymptotes with its ability to exercise power. Power is ultimately power, and I believe that is the game these companies, acting in coordination, are pursuing.

[–] Senal@programming.dev 1 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago) (1 children)

I’m at least as deep in the industry as you likely are and I didn’t make comment on what “their goals” are. I made that comment after watching hundreds of thousands of interactions with these systems at a range of skill levels, and am considering it from a development and leadership perspective. And youre right. Their goals aren’t my goals. But they’ve been very clear with me about what their goals are. You could simplify them down to “turn a profit” but I think that’s a misunderstanding, or that it hides deeper goals.

I don’t think profit is the goal, at least, I don’t think it’s the goal yet, or maybe at all. I think that the goal is the collapse of the human skill set which has resulted in a wide, large, and deep pool of talented capable people. The goal isn’t to be profitable per se, but the monopolize people’s ability to work independently of their products.

I perhaps didn't go into enough detail about what i think their motivations are, when i say profit i should have said profit/power/control, they aren't all the same but they could be considered different faces of the same rough concept.

i did imply that they were only in it for the money and that i think is where a miscommunication is coming from.

For the past 15 years my job has not only been to develop ml technologies, but also to and mentor people into becoming programmers focused almost exclusively in ml. And within that, I work pretty domain specific. I work in the “for good” side and always have (except that stint in the US military when I was 17) and if you look through my posts you’re gonna find some of the more public stuff. I work with a lot of satellite and environmental data. I work in academia, public sector and also private sector, just depending on the contract. It’s mostly environmental mapping applications (water, fire and forests) globally.

What I’m seeing as an effect of these tools is an erosion of critical thinking and problem solving skills at a fundamental level. Jr scientists and developers just aren’t learning the basics anymore and with that, their ability to detect bullshit or dogshit, or cat shit wrapped in dogs it is utterly diminished. And so a lot of dog shit ends up in the final product. Bit along with that, it’s easy to let the hallucinating machine convince you it knows more than it does. It’s practically nothing but dark patterns to do exactly that. It uses couched cautionary language to create the appearance of considering a problem from multiple sides. It asks clarifying questions, which both draws a used in but also creates the illusion of understanding.

And it sounds good. But the problem (and this is my editorial opinion as some one who was in the beta for these products) truly is that the underlying models haven’t actually improved in their core capabilities in 4 years. The glitz and the glam and the tooling and the redundancy, their ability to use tools, be integrated into other things… sure. All that has improved. But they’ve never been able to overcome some core issues which imo are fundamental to the architecture and can’t be overcome in this current framework.

I fully agree with all of that and i wasn't arguing against it.

I was simply arguing that countering all the problems you mentioned isn't the goal of the companies/corporations selling the pickaxe infrastructure.

ML (and AI) in general hasn't been the kind of problem we are seeing now until the introduction of the current incarnation of LLM's, it's why i specifically mentioned LLM's as the target of my thoughts.

There have been AI winters and bubbles before but the scale and cultural penetration of this wave seems different (though i suppose we'll see over time if i'm right about that)

It's not only a difference in scale/scope but it seems to be one of those problems that's cumulative and feeds off of itself once it's hits a critical threshold of adoption/usage.

It happens to be wildly profitable(fiscally and in terms of power/control) for the companies involved, which doesn't help.

By profitable i don't mean that the companies are making money on the P&L sheets, i mean the few individuals who are accumulating power/wealth/control from the shenanigans that are ongoing.

So to me the problem is two fold. First, they’re putting all current developers in a acid bath which is eroding their ability to solve problems independently, or preventing them from developing those skills in the first place. And there is no way to do that learning without just putting in the time. Second, they aren’t what they say they are. These tools, if you need some basic code, are phenomenal for just something small. But you need to maintain the idea or conception of what you are doing. They have no practical ability to architecture real solutions or any kind of deep critical thinking. But they’ll do their best to convince you otherwise.

Also agreed.

I would further argue that the possibility of the erosion of skills being something of an active goal is non-zero. \ mid to long term power/control/profit can only be helped by fostering a dependence on throwing more and more tokens at a problem because the developer no longer has the ability to solve it themselves.

Though that's some full tinfoil hat speculation there on my part.

And finally, into the profit motive. I think we should take Musks purchase of twitter as a cautionary tale. The internet regaled in how stupid Musk was for doing so. How he was overpaying for something that wasn’t profitable. And on and on. I’m sure you remember. But that unprofitable decision allowed them to steal an election. Even years later it’s probably still questionable if that decision was ever directly profitable for Musk, bit that was never the point for them. Theirs was a calculus of power, and they did get their considerations right in this regard. Likewise, I think if you narrowly focus on profits for these companies, you’ll miss the forest for the trees. Profit is a pathway to power, but it’s now power itself, and money asymptotes with its ability to exercise power. Power is ultimately power, and I believe that is the game these companies, acting in coordination, are pursuing.

Also agreed, although profit has always been a gateway to power , the exchange rate is at an all time high.

As i said before, i was intentionally being simplistic when i said profit, i just didn't necessarily want to go full capitalist oligarchs/ruling class/erosion of the current version of society.

To the twitter purchase, it doesn't have to be a line item on a sheet for it to be useful investment, he was able to leverage that inflated valuation to "borrow" money against it that he didn't need to pay the prerequisite amount of tax against , which is a common tactic for people already rich AF.

It's a similar thing to what's happening with the LLM investment circle/bubble that will fully fuck over the american stock market (and tangentially everything else to some degree).

Nvidia, openAI, anthropic, microsoft etc , all trading imaginary purchases on speculative future resources to inflate the valuation of each other in a big circle is similar in concept, if more extravagant in execution.

[–] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 1 points 3 hours ago

I would further argue that the possibility of the erosion of skills being something of an active goal is non-zero. \ mid to long term power/control/profit can only be helped by fostering a dependence on throwing more and more tokens at a problem because the developer no longer has the ability to solve it themselves.

Though that's some full tinfoil hat speculation there on my part.

I think it's the conversation we should be having. I also can't say for certain that this is their case, but a certain company which rhymes with "boogle" is putting a huge amount of pressure on the industry to get people to use their alpha earth embeddings to create derivative ml products. They put on a wowfest at ForesttSAT a few weeks back, but it's clear that either a) the earth engine project is deeply unprofitable and is going to get axed, or b) they think they can run the same strat for satellite remote sensing they're doing with llms in programing.

Unfortunately I couldn't attend so it was just a coauthor who attended who reported back, but then low and behold, all kinds of non profits and "for good" organizations are finding funding (since, you know, Musk collapsed the state funded research apparatus via DOGE.. coincidence?) to build solutions off of these embeddings. It's a solution looking for a problem but it basically means all solutions using it will be built on that company's architecture and hardware.

And like.. I don't have a problem with the idea of an embedding layer. And earth engine absolutely has been a major force for good..

But there is clearly an effort to center corporations as owning information we all collectively paid for with our taxes, which is what those embeddings represent.

[–] brem@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Good times create weak people but we are also experiencing bad times so hopefully more people will become better than the ones who don't.

[–] Witchfire@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

May I recommend the book The Fourth Turning? It might give you a glimmer of hope (sprinkled with a dash of salt)

[–] SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org 4 points 1 day ago

Unscientific bullshit. It's so dumb that famous Nazi Steve Bannon made a movie about it.

[–] brem@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Speaking of a dash of salt on sweet...

"The sweet is not as sweet without the sour"

Umami or whatever. Good stuff.

[–] brem@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'm gonna check it out in a sec because I freaking love to read.. like, a lot.

But I read your comment as "The Fourth Turing" and got really excited. I'm all about that. Lol. Litmus them robots. But anyway, I'm all in. I'll check it out :) thanks for the rec!

[–] architect@thelemmy.club 1 points 8 hours ago

In a thread about AI harming the sciences y’all are falling for pseudoscience bs. Proof it’s not the fault of LLMs.

[–] SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca -2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Its incredibly easy to be gaslit using gpts

no scientist is going to be gaslit by ChatGPT

[–] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago

I just spent two weeks undoing something a scientist did while being gaslit by a a gpt. I promise they do.

[–] SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 day ago

There are guardrails, at all journals. And we now need to upload raw data. People have been fucking around in science publications since Photoshop was invented.

[–] brem@lemmy.world 7 points 1 day ago

Good guard rails are books and studies published before generative science became a thing.

Heck, even a 15 year old hard drive that sat on a shelf for 15 years with a few gigs of data and never got connected is already worth a ton.

It's like the plague or the dark ages, but electronic. And since so many people rely on this technology, it will be devastating in many ways after the inevitable implosion.

[–] dumnezero@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago

guardrails

guard towers