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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 9th, 2023

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  • There is absolutely nothing inevitable about technological change. We think that way because of the specific place we are in history. A specific place that is an aberration in how fast those changes have come. For the most part, humans throughout history have used much the same techniques and tools that their parents did.

    You also can’t separate AI technology from the social change. They’re not dumping billions into data centers and talking about using entire nuclear reactors to power them just because they think AI is a fun toy.


  • Was there anything in the posts above mine that suggest this was a technical issue, or did you read that in as an assumption?

    Every time a significant change in technology comes about, there is a significant impact to jobs. The printing press destroyed the livelihood of scribes, but it made books dramatically cheaper, which created new jobs for typesetters, booksellers, etc.

    Take a look at the history of the first people called “Luddites”. They were early socialists focusing on the dismal working conditions that new automation would bring to the workers. And they were correct.

    Not every technological change is good. Our society has defaulted to saying yes to every change, and it’s caused a whole lot of problems.



  • These models are trained on human creations with the express intent to drive out those same human creators. There is no social safety net available so those creators can maintain a reasonable living standard without selling their art. It won’t even work–the models aren’t good enough to replace these jobs, but they’re good enough to fool the C-suite into thinking they can–but they’ll do lots of damage in the attempt.

    The issues are primarily social, not technical. In a society that judges itself on how well it takes care of the needs of everyone, I would have far less of an issue with it.



  • Right, Dolphin had an encryption key in there for the Wii that was hardcoded in. That is apparently the one bit of legal leverage Nintendo has to keep it off Steam, though being Nintendo, they would likely fight it, anyway.

    In any case, the key could be a user provided configuration option, or tools for ripping games could do the decryption on their own. Either should keep the code safe from Nintendo being able to win a case. Though again, doesn’t stop Nintendo from trying and exhausting your ability to fight it.