Pretending?? It is the reality with devastating consequences.
Companies after companies after seeing AI as a way to replace employees and not as a tool to make our lives easier.
AI will run 24/7, no sick leave, no salary, can do some tasks better than humans if you like it or not.
In IT that is already a reality with high consequences, AI deleting entire production database with no rollback.
Developers being replaced with AI, ask Google with its "over 30% of our code is AI generated" and yet, suffered a massive outage worldwide due to AI slope.
Ask Klarna, aimed to reduce operational costs by 75% with AI but got a $99M net loss instead having to hire people again. Good luck with that.
Many companies are spending a lot of money into AI tools, not all of them can afford to go back, it is all in.
Other companies are seeing value with AI with others following suit.
Things will get a lot worse before getting any better.
There is a bright side tho, freelancers are being hired to fix slope caused by AI tools, so some people are living their best lives.
The issue people seem to stick to is "AI will never be as good as humans at X" ... even if that was true, or it was going to take 50 years or whatever to do ... what everyone seems to miss.. companies are more than willing to have a AI that does X shittier but without a salary, than to hire a guy that does it amazing and pay him a salary. The math was never is AI better than a Human, its is AI cheaper than a human for a passable product. This can be seen by companies deploying AI to do shit and firing people with some of the shittiest models lol, people were losing jobs already when fuckin GPT 3.5 was out lol.
The other thing is and AI lovers say it and they aren't wrong, the AI we have today is the worst it will ever be again, the big issue with Klarna and the others is they jumped the gun they went from 0 to replace everyone.
The company that deleted a DB was an AI issue, but it was also a company issue... no backups? Really? No sandbox for the AI? Really?
People give companies way too much credit for making smart decisions.
Edit: I imagine a lot of coding jobs will drop and come back and eventually be a lot fewer in 2-3 more versions of claude. I imagine we'll see jobs like Tier 1 call center jobs, and answering services, and stuff like drive through attendants at restaunts go away pretty rapidly in the next 3-4 years
> companies are more than willing to have a AI that does X shittier but without a salary, than to hire a guy that does it amazing and pay him a salary.
To understand this better, people should look at their own purchasing behavior. High quality goods are always replaced by "good enough" items that are significantly cheaper. Amazon, Temu, Shien etc are all great examples of those marketplaces.
Also, programers are aware of "The Rise of Worse is Better" paper for 30+ years - the inferior but simpler solution wins, and over time the issues are fixed by lots of people putting lots of work into it.
It is like outsourcing, but even better, for business.
Similar quality, which most business have already proven they don't actually care, as long as it is cheaper than in-house.
With AI the numbers look great on the spreadsheet, now there aren't neither in-house humans, nor contractors/consultancies to worry about, only little digital gremlins like in any automated factory line.
Will AI always be better? I thought it gets worse the more it eats its own output. And more and more of the public web is being produced every day. Supposedly AI companies are paying experts more often and cheap labelers less often.
Google Search was once good. Now it struggles to keep up with SEO and now AI slop.
> Will AI always be better? I thought it gets worse the more it eats its own output.
This isn't a real issue, there's just a large cohort of people who want to think it'll go away on its own. They like saying things like this because it's a very convenient belief for them.
Companies after companies after seeing AI as a way to replace employees and not as a tool to make our lives easier. AI will run 24/7, no sick leave, no salary, can do some tasks better than humans if you like it or not.
In IT that is already a reality with high consequences, AI deleting entire production database with no rollback.
Developers being replaced with AI, ask Google with its "over 30% of our code is AI generated" and yet, suffered a massive outage worldwide due to AI slope.
Ask Klarna, aimed to reduce operational costs by 75% with AI but got a $99M net loss instead having to hire people again. Good luck with that.
Many companies are spending a lot of money into AI tools, not all of them can afford to go back, it is all in. Other companies are seeing value with AI with others following suit. Things will get a lot worse before getting any better.
There is a bright side tho, freelancers are being hired to fix slope caused by AI tools, so some people are living their best lives.