this post was submitted on 25 Nov 2025
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Microblog Memes

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A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.

Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.

RULES:

  1. Your post must be a screen capture of a microblog-type post that includes the UI of the site it came from, preferably also including the avatar and username of the original poster. Including relevant comments made to the original post is encouraged.
  2. Your post, included comments, or your title/comment should include some kind of commentary or remark on the subject of the screen capture. Your title must include at least one word relevant to your post.
  3. You are encouraged to provide a link back to the source of your screen capture in the body of your post.
  4. Current politics and news are allowed, but discouraged. There MUST be some kind of human commentary/reaction included (either by the original poster or you). Just news articles or headlines will be deleted.
  5. Doctored posts/images and AI are allowed, but discouraged. You MUST indicate this in your post (even if you didn't originally know). If a post is found to be fabricated or edited in any way and it is not properly labeled, it will be deleted.
  6. Be nice. Take political debates to the appropriate communities. Take personal disagreements to private messages.
  7. No advertising, brand promotion, or guerrilla marketing.

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[โ€“] Godort@lemmy.ca 37 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (3 children)

It would be great, but it could never happen. All the marketing of AI is around speculation of what it could do.

Investors know what a train is, what it does and how much it costs. They don't know any of those things when it comes to AI, so they're willing to spend a lot, because they were promised a lot.

[โ€“] HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org 21 points 2 months ago (6 children)

But what about this promise makes it so uniquely seductive?

There are a million guys with ideas for cars that will go 750km on a thimble-full of Fresca, robot butlers that can't turn evil because they don't have red LEDs in the eye positions, and 200:1 data compression as long as you never have to decompress it. They must all be looking at Altman and company and asking where their bubbles.

I sadly suspect the charm is "we can sack some huge percentage of workers if it delivers"

[โ€“] AmbitiousProcess@piefed.social 19 points 2 months ago

But what about this promise makes it so uniquely seductive?

Part of it is, as you pointed out, just the elimination of costly labor. That's a capitalist's wet dream. But the main thing that makes it attractive as a slick, highly marketable investment vehicle is that AI models are inherently black boxes.

There are ways you can examine the ways they work (for example, researchers found that the parts of an LLM that "understand" one topic, like money, can also simultaneously "understand" other different, yet related things, like value, credit, etc), but we can't truly comprehend everything about them. It would be like looking at a math problem billions of equations large and assuming we could hold the whole equation perfectly in our brain and do the mental math to solve it. We can't.

That means that instead of seeing "here's our robot that is currently capable of this, but these are the components that could be upgraded/replaced, X is an issue it faces because of Y" and so on, instead you get "It's not good at this yet, but it will be if you just throw a few billion dollars more compute at it, we promise this time."

Problems are abstracted away to "something that will fix itself later," or something that "just happens, but we'll find a way to fix it", and not any kind of mechanical constraint a VC fund manager might be able to understand.

[โ€“] Godort@lemmy.ca 10 points 2 months ago

I sadly suspect the charm is "we can sack some huge percentage of workers if it delivers"

It's that, and a really impressive working prototype.

[โ€“] FishFace@piefed.social 4 points 2 months ago

It's that LLM output looks like human writing, so it looks like they might be able to do anything a person can.

[โ€“] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 2 points 2 months ago

And because the rest of the market is really slow and barely above inflation so not really worth much to invest in while AI is going like it's the good ol' days. That's how the money boys see it anyway.

[โ€“] Bronzebeard@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 months ago

A technology that, according to the marketing that heavily leans on sci fi media to prop up its glorified autocorrect tech, could, in theory, replace almost all non manual labor, while still helping alleviate a portion of that, would be a technological milestone that would effectively define a new age of humanity... Is an incredibly seductive concept. Especially to capitalists who hate having to share company revenue with the people actually doing things that generate that revenue.

Although LLMs are unlikely the avenue to general AI they claim to be...

[โ€“] sqw@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 2 months ago

if firing people is the ultimate good, maybe we can get the corpos behind UBI so nobody cares too much about getting fired?

[โ€“] Serinus@lemmy.world 13 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Do you know what good mass transit could do though? Imagine cities without parking lots and garages. Imagine having spaces that are much safer and more comfortable to walk. Imagine solving the housing crisis, since you can now build downtown complexes where those parking garages were.

Imagine getting most semis off the road and reducing road repairs by more than half.

Trains could do a lot, and it doesn't take much imagination.

[โ€“] Bronzebeard@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 months ago

Yeah but if you no longer need workers, you don't need downtowns anymore, so screw the plebs /s

[โ€“] los0220@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago

I mean there was a train bubble once, simpler times tho

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