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- Feb 21, 2025
Guarantee you eat these words by the end of the decadelarge language models are NOT capable of replacing jobs nor are we close to creating good algorithms to replace jobs
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Guarantee you eat these words by the end of the decadelarge language models are NOT capable of replacing jobs nor are we close to creating good algorithms to replace jobs
LudditeLabor post automation won't be moved in a ratio of 1 to 1. If we replace a thousand jobs with 300 robots, we'll only hire 30 engineers. We'll see AI do the same thing to a lot of creative, convenience, and organizational jobs in the near future as well.
Replace a thousand assistants, sorters, bureaucrats with a few hundred slightly different AI's and automated programs, but only hire a few coders and programmers to babysit and optimize them
If technology could raise wages, then we'd have seen steady increases in income since the 1980's since tech has boomed over that same period. Except that isn't what happened. Also, I'm not pro importing cheap labor or pro robot slaves. I'm pro getting money. All yall broke niggas can starve imo. However, automation undeniably has and will continue to pressure unskilled labor while eliminating more jobs than it creates.Luddite
Even if we presumed automation will make everyone jobless, it is still preferable to not fill the nation with slave laborers beforehand to delaye the inevitable, and when automation comes, there will still be work. More automation needs more power, that requires more workers to help produce more power, more people to maintain the power grid, more people to maintain the machines, more people to oversee production, more people inspect the factories and goods.
Marx too thought that as technology advances and production simplifies wages would decrease, instead what happened was that production simply increased and diversified, leading to higher capital gain and higher wages
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19th century luddite thinking
LLMs can't put the fries in the bagGuarantee you eat these words by the end of the decade
Wages already began stagnating in the 70sIf technology could raise wages, then we'd have seen steady increases in income since the 1980's since tech has boomed over that same period. Except that isn't what happened. Also, I'm not pro importing cheap labor or pro robot slaves. I'm pro getting money. All yall broke niggas can starve imo. However, automation undeniably has and will continue to pressure unskilled labor while eliminating more jobs than it creates.
This is fucking bizzare. This is the third time this week that I've heard someone mention how everything has gone to shit since the 70s.Wages already began stagnating in the 70s
This. Who was the democrat woman a couple years ago who was saying something about how blacks and minorities literally can't think for themselves and that's why they need our help? That shit was funny as fuck when I saw that.Because Democrats have always, ALWAYS, in their heart of hearts, believed in and desired slave labor.
Bretton-Woods was ended in 1971. Since then every single currency has been thoroughly debased, and that is on top of the obvious kikery going on in the banking sector. At any rate, deportations good.This is fucking bizzare. This is the third time this week that I've heard someone mention how everything has gone to shit since the 70s.
It's really weird to see people fearmongering about stuff that happened literally decades ago. There's not much to be afraid of from automation because that boogeyman already came, went, and has since died of old age.Labor post automation won't be moved in a ratio of 1 to 1. If we replace a thousand jobs with 300 robots, we'll only hire 30 engineers.
Large dairy farms (some of them) use robotic milkers.Labor post automation won't be moved in a ratio of 1 to 1. If we replace a thousand jobs with 300 robots, we'll only hire 30 engineers.
As if automation and robotics isn't constantly evolving along side material science. Just like all technology, it's an ever-growing issueIt's really weird to see people fearmongering about stuff that happened literally decades ago. There's not much to be afraid of from automation because that boogeyman already came, went, and has since died of old age.
No, it's an ever-diminishing issue. You could replace a million ditch diggers with excavators a hundred years ago, but there aren't enough excavator operators for muh AI or whatever to have the same labor-saving effect.As if automation and robotics isn't constantly evolving along side material science. Just like all technology, it's an ever-growing issue