Comment on Unified Theory of American Reality
sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 week agoSadly, nope, if you can read at a high school level, there’s roughly a 75% chance you are smarter than any rando you meet.
I am starting to notice this in the slop youtube throws at me that I am sometimes dumb enough to click on.
Somebody reading some article to give commentary on it, and you can just tell they are reading one word at a time, misunderstanding what 15% of them mean, have to actually stop on 5% of the words because those ones they’ve never read before, and then they start complaining that the author must have just been using a thesaurus… because a few of the vocab words in the article are 8th grade or above.
… I picked up reading quickly, so quickly that when I was in 2nd grade, I was assigned to go out into the hall when I was done with my classwork (I always finished rapidly) and then go help a 4th or 5th grader who was behind in reading skills, go sit with them and have them or me read aloud, help them with words they didn’t know, etc.
Everyday, even on the net, I encounter more people who… are beyond graduating high school age, who barely read better than 5th graders with dyslexia.
Capricorn_Geriatric@lemmy.world 1 week ago
I love how today literacy isn’t even a thing. No one talks aboit teaching things (in the EU, at least). It’s all about financial literacy, digital literacy, social media literacy, hell, even (and bear with me here) AI literacy. Yes, really. There’s prpbably 800 of these literacies floating around.
Whoever thought of this is an idiot. The word literacy means one thing: the ability to read and write (and understand what you read/wrote). Nothing more, nothing less.
It isn’t just stupid, it’s also malicious. Kids all over the globe are suffering from poor literacy, and instead of fixing the problem you quite literally shift the goalposts.
sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 week ago
When AI services enshittify by raising their price barriers, or when just… infrastructure generally collapses to a serious degree…
Much of Gen Z and A, either reliant of or just raised on using AI to do their thinking and work for them…
They will basically go feral, they won’t be able to get their fix, a part of their ‘brain’ will have been ‘removed’, and they will literally be dysfunctional.
And I shouldn’t just single out younger people, though its more prevalent and severe with them, there are certainly many millenials and older who’ve also just given up good chunks of their thinking abilities to AI, which is largely a proprietary service that go undergo a price hike just like Xbox or Netflix.
… I used to think the ending to DX Human Revolution was a tropey cop out, that broke from basically the rest of the game’s narrative and gameplay themes, just a zombie apocalypse at the end of your spy thriller.
Now I realize that was the point, maybe still a bit hamfisted or over the top, but… yep, yep, people become reliant on things they aren’t actually 8n control of for just basic day to day living, and then you actually break that, take it away from them?
Yep, zombie apocalypse is not too far off from what would actually play out.
LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 days ago
Bro what are you smoking. Gen-Z is getting up their 30s, they’re by far the most vocally anti-AI group out there. The only ones who willingly and readily outsource their brains to it are boomers.
sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 days ago
By most definitions, the oldest Gen Z would have been born in 1997 and would thus be 28, the youngest Gen Z would have been born in 2012 and would thus be 13.
So uh… yeah, yeah, younger Gen Zs are very susceptible to what I described.
And also… sure, a lot of Gen Zs are very anti-AI.
A lot of them are also the very techbro douche bag types that jump from tech scam to tech scam, tell people how AI will make it so much easier for them to do some … thing they have no idea how to do.
Its polarizing, but we have actual data.
read-vip.variety.com/html5/reader/…/default.aspx?…
The people who most often use AI tools every day are Gen Z.
Millennials may be more likely to use them in some professional work capacity, but its Gen Z and younger that… literally just do all their homework and college work with AI tools and thus never learn anything.
Millenials are, you know, too old to have been able to take that shortcut.
Now they use those tools at work, yes, but… take them away, and they will still have some of those core mental capabilities, whereas people who never learned those core abilities… won’t.