"We're nowhere near the point where an AI can do your job, but we're well past the point where your boss can be suckered into firing you and replacing you with a bot that fails at doing your job." (Pluralistic)
Submitted 1 year ago by mozz@mbin.grits.dev to technology@beehaw.org
https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/29/pay-no-attention/#to-the-little-man-behind-the-curtain
BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Another idiot writer missing how AI works… along with every other automation and productivity increase.
I literally automate jobs for a living.
My job isn’t to eliminate the role of every staff member in a department, it’s to take the headcount from 40 to 20 while having the remaining 20 be able to produce the same results. I’ve successfully done this dozens of times in my careers, and generative AI is now just another tool we can use to get that number down a little bit lower or more easily than we could before.
Will I be able to take a unit of 2 people down to 0 people? No, I’ve never seen a process where I could eliminate every human.
mozz@mbin.grits.dev 1 year ago
Cory Doctorow is an idiot writer? Do you know of him and you've reached this conclusion, or you don't know who he is and just throwing shade?
I am curious. How much follow-up do you do after your automations 1 year later to see how the profit and loss picture of the department has worked out after your work is done?
(Not that that's the point; I think you'll get very little sympathy here for "I help the already-rich to keep more of the productive output of the world and make sure workers keep less" even if you can make an argument that you can do it effectively.)
BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
I’ve been following Doctorow for decades now (BoingBoing) and yes, he’s an idiot in this situation.
I’m still working with the organizations I started automating for more than a decade ago. I’m sitting in the office of one of them right now. It’s worked out great, nobody is complaining about the fact that this office space now has people at separated desks instead of crunched together like they were when I started. If it makes you feel any better, I almost exclusively do this for government and public organizations (I’m at a post-secondary education institution right now) though I really don’t care.
Stopping or stalling productivity improvements is stupid, that job is effectively useless if it can be automated, it’s nothing more than make-work to keep it. We should pass laws to redistribute wealth to solve that problem, not keep them in useless jobs by preventing automation.