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dandanua commented on A bubble that knows it's a bubble   craigmccaskill.com/ai-bub... · Posted by u/craigmccaskill
xg15 · 17 hours ago
Self-contradictory communication seems to become his style.

"AI is an existential risk for humanity, that's why we have to dump all resources we have into building it".

"It's critically important that AI as an industry is regulated, but also we'll pull out of the EU if they try to regulate us"

dandanua · 17 hours ago
It's a feature of any fascists-like personality. "War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength."
dandanua commented on Facial recognition vans to be rolled out across police forces in England   news.sky.com/story/facial... · Posted by u/amarcheschi
somenameforme · 12 days ago
The first time I taught, it was a rather interesting experience realizing how little capacity teachers actually have to deal with e.g. a disruptive student. Yeah you can pass them along to the disciplinarian or whatever, but in the end it's often empty threats - especially if the parents themselves don't particularly care, which in the case of highly disruptive students is nearly always the case. But if a class itself, or even a significant minority of a class, simply chose to stop cooperating - there's not much of anything anyone could do about it.

But when I went to school, I somehow felt like teachers had the power of the world behind them. I imagine, to some degree, politicians have a similar experience. There are countless people that wouldn't be upset at all about their decline, or worse. Of course this has always been the case, but I think modern politicians are becoming increasingly out of touch with society, and consequently also becoming increasingly paranoid about society turning against them. And society doesn't just mean you or me, but also the police and military, without the support of whom they'd just be some rich old frail men sitting around making lofty proclamations and empty threats.

I think this issue largely explains the increasingly absurd degrees of apparent paranoia and fear of the political establishment in most countries. As well as the push for domestic establishment propaganda, censorship of anti-establishment propaganda, defacto mandating politics from a young age, imposing it on the police and even the military, and so forth.

dandanua · 12 days ago
You're shifting the blame from politicians to society because in your field teachers have lost power over students. It is a huge mistake to make such a parallel. In fact, teachers have lost power because the power has become much more centralized - thanks to the politicians. You're not allowed to punish a disruptive student singlehandedly - the government took that from you and gave it to people who don't really care. The government itself can't care less. The mass hypersurveillance is not designed to solve your problems, sorry, it solves problems of people with control buttons.
dandanua commented on Facial recognition vans to be rolled out across police forces in England   news.sky.com/story/facial... · Posted by u/amarcheschi
Shank · 12 days ago
The UK is quickly deploying surveillance state technology that people once decried China for. Whether or not this is ethical or useful, I wish the hypocrisy would be acknowledged. The OSA, the Apple encryption demands, LFR, …, it’s clearly a trend. Has society really become this dangerous that we must deploy these things?
dandanua · 12 days ago
> Has society really become this dangerous that we must deploy these things?

There is always a danger that the ruling class may not stay in power forever, unless the others are nailed to the ground.

dandanua commented on Things that helped me get out of the AI 10x engineer imposter syndrome   colton.dev/blog/curing-yo... · Posted by u/coltonv
clauderoux · 20 days ago
This article nails it. The claim 10x is in my opinion one of these tactics used by large corporations to force engineers into submission. The idea that you could be replaced with an AI is frightening enough to keep people in check, when negotiating your salary. AI is a wonderful tool that I use everyday, and I have been able to implement stuff that I would have considered too cumbersome to even start working on. But, it doesn't make you a 10x more efficient engineer. It gives you an edge when you start a new project, which is already a lot. But don't expect your whole project of 100,000 lines to be handled by the machine. It won't happen any time soon.
dandanua · 20 days ago
Funnily, you probably won't see in news the idea that 10x increase in productivity should lead to 10x increase in compensation (with the exception of CEOs and very top engineers, that get even bigger multiplier).
dandanua commented on Teacher AI use is already out of control and it's not ok   reddit.com/r/Teachers/com... · Posted by u/jruohonen
fzeroracer · 20 days ago
Teachers using AI to generate all of their lesson material, read student papers and write comments.

Students using AI to generate their papers and solve complex problems.

What are we as humans even doing. Why not just connect two shitty models together and tell them to hallucinate to each other and skip the whole need to think about anything. We can fire both teachers and students at the same time and save money on this whole education thing.

dandanua · 20 days ago
> We can fire both teachers and students at the same time and save money on this whole education thing.

The current US administration has already started this process.

dandanua commented on Cube: Packing a 5x5x5 cube with Y-pentominoes   kociemba.org/themen/125pu... · Posted by u/andsoitis
dandanua · 22 days ago
Interestingly, first 3 solutions have a pack of 5 identically oriented pieces on one side of the cube, but not the other two (the last solution also has a pack of 5 on the side, but with one piece flipped).
dandanua commented on NSF has suspended Terry Tao's grant   bsky.app/profile/dangaris... · Posted by u/xqcgrek2
epistasis · 25 days ago
The past year has been utter chaos, madness, and sadness for STEM in the US. I hope that Tao's grad students don't suffer from this too much in the immediate term. In the long term, all science is being harmed greatly, and we are causing a gigantic bubble in the pipeline of the production of scientists, most severely damaging those who are graduating soon.
dandanua · 24 days ago
It's ok, USA doesn't need mathematicians after the AGI is built. If you need to compute something just ask AGI. The subscription, of course, will cost you multiple lifetimes' worth of the minimum working wage (luckily you could take a credit that will be payed off by multiple generations of your descendants), but you know, the progress can't be stopped!
dandanua commented on The anti-abundance critique on housing is wrong   derekthompson.org/p/the-a... · Posted by u/rbanffy
spicyusername · 25 days ago

    What about wealth inequality as the root cause of housing shortage? 
Keep building.

Eventually there are more houses than people who want to be in them, regardless of whether or not they're being rented or owned.

When that happens you'll see the prices fall. After all, if nobody wants to rent your house, you'll either rent it for lower or sell it.

If nobody wants to buy it, you'll lower the price.

Ad nauseum.

dandanua · 25 days ago
This will not work if there is an exponential wealth inequality in a society, which is where everything is heading.
dandanua commented on Has Brazil Invented the Future of Money?   paulkrugman.substack.com/... · Posted by u/Qem
kjksf · a month ago
I would expect a Nobel prize winner, MIT and Princeton professor and New York Times contributor to be able to construct proper arguments not emotional outbursts:

> Republicans say that they’re worried about invasion of privacy, that a CBDC would open the door to widespread government surveillance. But remember, these are the people who have handed over personal Medicaid data to ICE to facilitate arrests and abductions

Instead of providing an argument for why CBDC is not invading privacy and enables government surveillance he goes for ad-hominem of "they're bad and don't care about what they say they care about".

I don't need Republicans to care about privacy. CBDC would be a privacy and surveillance nightmare and if Republicans ban it, it's a good thing regardless of their motivations or thoughts.

Imagine a giant bank, potentially mandatory for citizens, run by government.

Today if government wants to look at your bank account and transactions they have to convince the judge to sign a warrant.

With CBDC they'll just have this information, they'll control your ability to send money which is essential to modern living.

We'll inevitably be one supermajority away from your ability to use money will vanish because you say something government doesn't like or call a politician fat.

This is not future dystopia, this is today dystopia.

In Canada during Covid protest the government gave itself emergency powers and shut down bank accounts of protesters.

In Brazil the new government just made it criminal to do and share interviews with previous president.

In Germany they're prosecuting someone for calling politician fat.

Governments will abuse any power they get so it's best to give them as little power as possible.

Politicians love it because they love every tool of control.

I don't know why Krugman loves it but you should be against it.

Sending money is not a problem and it doesn't need government to provide a "solution".

dandanua · a month ago
Every government should have a tool to check if a transaction is illegal or not. In normal countries this should be done via a judge order if there are serious suspicions. This is how governments suppose to work. And there are checks and balances against power abuse, which were invented centuries ago. If a government doesn't work like that - then this is a problem of this specific government, not the laws. "All governments are bad" is a stupid idea, intentionally put onto the masses by the current US ruling party and their enablers (Musk), who are trying to seize all the power for themselves.
dandanua commented on Has Brazil Invented the Future of Money?   paulkrugman.substack.com/... · Posted by u/Qem
evrimoztamur · a month ago
Well, I think crypto does solve a couple important problems faced by many speculative markets and casinos: Regulation and taxation. It's any scammer, grifter, and thief's paradise!
dandanua · a month ago
It's a paradise for all kinds of scum and dark people, like pedos, human traffickers, drug dealers, ransom hackers, mafias etc. And all this receives a great care from the current fascists USA government, who invested in crypto a lot, I suppose.

u/dandanua

KarmaCake day1056January 10, 2020View Original