• Diurnambule@jlai.lu
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      4 hours ago

      No they aren’t they are in squeleton crew mode. Working at lax capacity with minimal staff.

  • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    tax corporations that replace workers with automations.

    citizens that don’t work, don’t generate tax revenue for local municipalities. that loss has to be recouped somewhere, and the best place is from the companies that are causing the reduction in tax revenue.

  • 𝕸𝖔𝖘𝖘@infosec.pub
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    16 hours ago

    All these corpo thigs hoping the VCs notice the “replacement” before the tower comes crashing down on them. Morons. The whole lot of them!

  • ParlimentOfDoom@piefed.zip
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    24 hours ago

    Nope. AI is not replacing jobs. That’s their excuse for cutting jobs to finance these data centers hoping this investment will payoff eventually and they’re in a position to capitalize on it. Throwing good money after bad, as the tech is just not ready for this, and does not appear to be getting any better

  • [object Object]@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    It’s not replacing jobs, it’s being used as a scapegoat.

    You could probably fire a lot of Meta and not lose any real productivity. Just look at how’s much resources they allocated to VR and stalker glasses?

    The truth is these companies spent covid playing Pokémon card collector with devs and now they’re spending hundreds of billions trying to capitalize on AI, so they need that cash flow black to pay for loans.

    But on the other side of the same stick, you’ve got employees who you can now whip harder and say “look, we can make flappy bird with an AI model, do your deep work using 100 ai agents instead of thinking”

    • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      The fact that the same tech companies that fire people en masse are balls deep into the AI ouroboros can‘t be a coincidence. It‘s essentially a cruel and stupidly risky PR campaign for their shitty product.

      • [object Object]@lemmy.ca
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        23 hours ago

        On that note, I had latest Claude Opus xhigh write me some code.

        If a user passed an empty string to the user_id field it would give them access to everyone’s data. How that worked was a check like “if user_id: # add user id to query”. Empty strings are falsy in Python, so empty user id retrieves all data.

        A function later on was filtering these results out coincidentally, but not specifically. So if this shipped, in a month when someone updated the code, we’d be allowing an empty login form to access all user data.

        This is the slop getting shipped by AI code assistants. This is why I am rewriting the whole project manually.

  • bitteroldcoot@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    So really the headline should read, “A placid and compliant press repeats ai fictions to appease their corporate sponsors. While big tech downsizes to cover their failure.”.

    • dylanmorgan@slrpnk.net
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      21 hours ago

      That’s like half of Ed Zitron’s output, although he puts more detail into identifying the specific placid and compliant reporters.

  • XLE@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    Microsoft: Windows is falling apart at the seams, GitHub is forcing people off the platform due to unreliability

    Meta: millions of people are abandoning the Facebook platform, VR didn’t pan out

    But yeah it’s AI to blame, not the last stage of the well-articulated 4-step cycle of enshittification.

    • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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      24 hours ago

      I knew VR would never pan out.

      It needs expensive special equipment in the form of a headset that has no other use.

      You need expensive powerful graphics hardware for good quality.

      You need more special equipment if you wear glasses. Prescription lenses just for the goggles that are not used anywhere else.

      It causes headaches, migraines and dizziness.

      You need wide open space to utilize it.

      I bought and returned a headset at the Microsoft store and am so glad I got that money back.

      • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        VR did not take off, but for wildly different reasons than what you state.

        A steam deck or a games console also need expensive special equipment (in form of the console) that has no other use. Still they are thriving.

        They also need expensive powerful graphics hardware for good quality. (Also, standalone VR totally exists and is pretty good nowadays, to the point where I don’t see much of a reason to pair my headset to my PC, and I am still rocking a Quest 2. Considering you are quoting “a headset at the Microsoft store”, I venture to guess that you haven’t tried VR in over half a decade.)

        You don’t need special equipment if you wear glasses for most headsets, you just wear your glasses inside the VR headset. Source: I have been doing that for years. Glasses compatible VR headsets are a thing and quite common.

        VR doesn’t cause migraines, migraines are something different. They mainly cause tension headaches and motion sickness. Headsets with better balance (e.g. ones that move the battery to the back of the head or ones that are lighter) reduce tension headaches a lot, and motion sickness differs between people and with practice.

        The wide open space is the only actual problem you identified, but also there, VR also works in sitting or stationary standing positions. Full roomscale VR is only required by rather few VR games or apps.

        The real issues are:

        • VR doesn’t have advantages for working. Like, none at all. Meta focussed a lot on working in VR, and that just doesn’t work. No advantage means no reason to do it.
        • VR works for games, but the inability to develop cross-platform between VR and other platforms means that it’s almost completely restricted to VR-exclusives. There are a few non-VR-exclusives with a VR mode, but they usually don’t actually take advantage of VR, since they have to work on a flat screen too. This means, not a lot of games and the ones that exist are super low budget.
        • Local multiplayer is very difficult for VR. If I want to do local multiplayer on a flat screen console or PC, I need another controller and a place for the second person to sit. For VR I need to buy a second console (headset) and need more floor space. VR multiplayer in the same room often leads to people hitting each other, so to play together it’s best to separate between rooms.
        • Gaming is often used as a relaxing, chill experience. That doesn’t really work in VR, since VR games require you to move. You usually can’t just chill on the couch while playing VR.
        • VR software and UX is still in its infancy. Compare that to flat screen games, which took about 20-30 years to actually become really good in therms of UX and gameplay. VR hasn’t had enough time yet to get there, but it’s also not something that can just be forced with more money.
      • GreyEyedGhost@piefed.ca
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        21 hours ago

        You just described everything wrong with cars when they first came out. Large, uncomfortable, slow, needed expensive infrastructure/hardware. And look at cars now. Size hasn’t improved, but everything else has (well, the infrastructure is in place now), and you can’t get away from them.

        Im saving up for a Steam Frame. Even if it just operates as a screen for my Steam Deck, that’s enough for me. Add in some freestanding VR, and maybe a new computer that can handle VR in the future, and I’m as happy as can be.

        I’m not saying your opinion is wrong, just not universal, and we are still very early on in the VR/AR market.

        • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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          21 hours ago

          Cars didn’t give people migraines or require custom lenses to use.

          They also get you from point A to point B and without them you had no other choices beyond a horse, bicycle or paying someone else to produce something.

          VR gives you a headset you have to wear that is uncomfortable and the end result is that you see the game you’re playing on the screen in front of you.

          We already have screens in front of us that we play games on.

          This is more like a motorcycle in America. Nobody uses them really, so you have to really commit to it to get use out of it. There’s loads of downsides and the upsides is that it can be fun from time to time. They can technically take you from point a to point b, but odds are you’re gonna want something with walls and a roof when weather sucks or when you need to do something serious like haul some supplies for a home project. Just like how certain things are just better with a mouse and keyboard or with a controller.

          Your car analogy fits computers or smartphones better. We already have those, so an accessory computing thing is a frivolous add on for most anything you’d want to do with it, but it can be fun if it works for you. Sure, in Asian countries bikes are cheaper and more common so everything is more suitable to them, but I suspect they will never catch on here to the same degree…. Like VR.

            • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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              19 hours ago

              Windfarms produce clean energy with minimal environmental impact and cost.

              VR headsets… don’t quite have the same kind of impact. You can easily spend $2000-$3000 and find that your purchase is not at all what you envisioned.

              Windmills are exactly what they look like, cheap energy machines that will lower our total cost of energy and reliance on burning substances that people are literally killing each other over, including the current war partially to raise prices for the venezuelan spoils to make investment sense.

              • ∟⊔⊤∦∣≶@lemmy.nz
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                14 hours ago

                Way to miss the point.

                I spent $1000 on a VR headset, and it wasn’t what I envisioned. It was way better. Having played in VR, I don’t even bother with flatscreen games anymore. It’s not just putting the screen closer to your eyes. It’s an entirely different paradigm. And it’s fucking kickass.

                Everyone I’ve seen whining about how VR isn’t that great and isn’t going to catch on and various problems that they imagine etc is acting like a boomer complaining about cellphones. Or Texans trying to say electric cars are worse than ICE cars

                • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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                  18 minutes ago

                  Congrats, i’m glad you like it and doesn’t give you the issues it gave me.

                  The headset I bought was the original HTC Vive, which was $800 at the time which adjusted for inflation would probably be close to $1500 today. At the time had a 1080ti which was the fastest gpu. I spared no expense, did drill in wall mounting and the whole nine yards, and devoted an entire room to it. Total waste of time, but glad I tried it to realize just how bad it was for me.

          • LostCarcosan@lemmy.today
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            19 hours ago

            Cars absolutely require special lenses for some people to operate and exhaust fumes will give you headaches and worse

            • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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              19 hours ago

              Ah yes, all those glasses people made for each and every car they ever drove! That was so inconvenient!

              And the deaths from carbon monoxide poisoning just by driving early cars! OH MY GOD SO MANY DEAD. BILLIONS! more than have ever died before!

          • GreyEyedGhost@piefed.ca
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            21 hours ago

            It might surprise you to learn, but we were getting from point A to B for a long time, and there are people even today who get headaches from cars, and not even from the noise, which was much worse with early cars. Do you think sitting near an engine with almost nothing between it and you was a relaxing experience, or risking death just starting it was a big sell?

  • tinsukE@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The headline (as in AI replacing jobs) is as real as the CRAP (Computer Rendered Artificial Picture) it uses.

  • 1984@lemmy.today
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    21 hours ago

    The stock market is going up despite all this. I think investors think that profits will continue to go up while jobs are being cut. Which means these corps must now do more with less people. And the market thinks thats going to lead to more profits still.

    I guess they think the future will be much more automated and need people less. And they could be right.

    • leoj@piefed.social
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      1 day ago

      I think it is AI, who stands like that with all their faces magically in focus, and in view?

      Also, the building looks a lot like the Zuckbook building… But it taint at least according to my hunts

      • texture@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        yeah i shouldnt have said photo. i agree it IS ai. i meant to say that it even looks like it is. a goofy choice for this article.

        innovative tech corp LOL