this post was submitted on 13 May 2026
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A Google Gemini-powered AI agent was given free rein to run a coffee shop in Sweden, and is quickly burning through its budget.

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[–] SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org 8 points 3 hours ago

Just tell it to make billions instead of bankrupting the business. It's so easy

[–] boogiebored@lemmy.world 30 points 6 hours ago

“she”

oh fuck off

[–] Hackworth@piefed.ca 22 points 6 hours ago (2 children)

While it's one of my favorite words, "inexorably" does not fit here.

[–] jim_v@lemmy.world 7 points 4 hours ago

This word is new to me! From Dictionary.com:

in a way that is unyielding, unchangeable, or unavoidable.

Fate seemed to be working inexorably, relentlessly, to bring about the dictator's downfall.

[–] RIotingPacifist@lemmy.world 115 points 10 hours ago (15 children)

AI boosters crying into their computers: "but I put make no mistakes into the prompt how is this happening!!!"

[–] boogiebored@lemmy.world 6 points 6 hours ago

context window smdh let’s invest more, just a startup cost 😅😰

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[–] frongt@lemmy.zip 53 points 10 hours ago (9 children)

café barista Kajetan Grzelczak sees it differently. “All the workers are pretty much safe,” he told the AP. “The ones who should be worried about their employment are the middle bosses, the people in management.”

This shows that AI can't do that job either.

[–] MIDItheKID@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago

They said the dystopian part out loud.

I love to shit on middle management as much as anybody else, but good managers are great. My manager worked his way up as a systems architect. He's incredibly smart, very friendly, and always has my back.

What getting rid of middle management does is build a solid wall between the workers and the upper class. There's no corporate ladder to climb. If you start at the bottom, you stay at the bottom. The people on top hire their buddies and other people in their class. This is like a drone strike on the shrinking middle class.

[–] 13igTyme@piefed.social 16 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

I wonder if AI would actually be good at replacing CEO and other C-suite positions, but was trained in such a way to purposely not be good at replacing a CEO because tech CEOs are the ones in control of this bubble.

[–] leoj@piefed.social 29 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

It has the number 1 qualification for being a C-suite employee - no soul!

[–] floofloof@lemmy.ca 25 points 9 hours ago

Also endless bullshit.

[–] michaelmrose@lemmy.world 4 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

Tells me you've never used it and had it deliver extremely convincing analysis which turns out to be pants on head stupid when you dig into the nitty gritty. It is only useful if you can continually watch its output and make it redo anything that is nonsense and no the AI can't watch itself. It will happily confirm that its nonsense is great. It needs either manual and continual analysis or guardrails that tell it when its wrong.. It's why it can be used for software because tests and error messages can catch it fucking up. Real life lacks such affordances.

[–] 13igTyme@piefed.social 5 points 6 hours ago

I've used AI for work. We have something built based on claude. I only use it for finding particular lines of code, finding datadog logs, maybe identifying bugs, and finding old Jiras. It basically just saves time then the rest I do myself or work with engineering.

Your comment tells me you never worked with someone in the C-suite before. Most Chief level positions will happily confirm their nonsense is great.

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[–] tidderuuf@lemmy.world 40 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Has anyone thought that maybe training an AI on a group of people that spend the majority of their lives communicating online might not be the best group to emulate in the real world?

[–] ceenote@lemmy.world 27 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

Sure, lots of people. Just not the group of people spending the majority of their lives communicating online.

[–] hperrin@lemmy.ca 8 points 9 hours ago (2 children)

I think we are those people.

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[–] N0t_5ure@lemmy.world 17 points 9 hours ago (3 children)

God, I'm so sick of AI that I feel like a luddite. I used to be a tech nerd, and enjoy the cutting edge of developing technologies. Now I just wish we could go back in time. I think the problem isn't so much the developing technology, but rather the way it is being crammed down our throats whether we want it or not. Everywhere I look I'm inundated with AI slop. Youtube has gotten ridiculous. I used to be able to find interesting content fairly easily. Now, every search is full of an endless array of AI slop from brand new accounts with only a few hundred followers. Anything good has been buried by 10,000 AI-generated ripoffs. Maybe someday AI will come into it's own, but it is nowhere near there now, and I am so, so tired of having to deal with it. It's like the entire world is being turned into one of those automated customer service telephone lines that are completely useless; that you're stuck navigating until you're put on hold for 30 minutes when you ask to speak to a human.

[–] demonsword@lemmy.world 8 points 6 hours ago

I’m so sick of AI that I feel like a luddite

The luddites weren't against technology, the were against the exploitation of the workers enabled by technology

[–] bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works 4 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)
  1. Get kagi. I don't use the internet without it

  2. Get the huge u block ai blocklist.

  3. Get newpipe and only flow youtubers you trust

  4. Collect consoles and PCs from pre 2008 and put them in a room you can lock yourself in to be free from shitty modern tech

  5. Delete social media

[–] Zier@fedia.io 3 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

The problem is, AI is being used as a replacement for informed decisions/information, but it was never properly trained on how to be factual or make responsible adult decisions. AI is literally a global spam bot/virus that has infected Earth worse than Covid ever could. And the people pushing it on us are worse than anti-vax/anti-maskers.

[–] captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works 2 points 6 hours ago (1 children)

LLMs like Gemini have basically the exact same UI form factor as the Starship Enterprise's computer. All you need is that little tweedle "I'm listening" prompt and a Text-To-Majel-Barrett library. Thing is, on the Enterprise, it always correctly worked. If you asked it for a statement of fact you'd get a quote out of a database. Gemini will just make shit up that sounds plausible.

[–] ArmchairAce1944@discuss.online 1 points 6 hours ago

Exactly. I am a time thief at work with limited internet access at my job, but I have access to Gemini and I use it because I have nothing else to do. I often need to overcorrect it ALL the time.

[–] nyan@lemmy.cafe 10 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

No surprises here. Well, at least the items it ordered this time were kinda-sorta-maybe-almost plausible to stock at a café, unlike the tungsten cubes in the vending machine.

[–] ltxrtquq@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 hours ago

No wait, where are the tungsten cube vending machines?

[–] pennomi@lemmy.world 12 points 10 hours ago

When old memory of ordering stuff is out of the context window, she completely forgets what she has ordered in the past

Look I agree that AI is probably a terrible business manager… but this is irresponsible design on the researcher’s part. AI breaks past the context window with tool calling. If it doesn’t have a list inventory tool, it will obviously fail to do this correctly.

These techniques are built into virtually every coding harness today, if you’re not using them for a business harness, that’s negligent.

[–] felixwhynot@lemmy.world 9 points 9 hours ago (1 children)

Counterpoint: put AI in charge of big corpos immediately, drive them bankrupt. As a bonus you don’t have to pay CEO salary to do it! Win/win!

[–] mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works 5 points 8 hours ago

As a bonus you don’t have to pay CEO salary to do it!

That alone would be a huge bump in profitability. Hell, just make it employee-owned so the workers see the benefits

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