this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2024
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That's military logic in some sense. That ecosystem makes many people dependent on it. The "I use it like everyone else, but I hate it and I'll stop if it crashes" argument is wrong. The whole mass of that ecosystem is comprised of such people.
It's an old story. Most of this thing's optimization potential lies in a few niche areas. It can't be put where you need precision or reliability. It can't be put where a statistical guess about human decision is insufficient. And it can't be put where you need a human because of, sorry, smiles and nice bodies being required.
It won't be like the industrial revolution, because that optimized real production, very solid basic necessary jobs. This is optimizing billboard ads and newspaper boys, and people who make things we already try not to pay attention to.
It may make some other workplaces a bit more efficient. And I agree that oligopoly, every piece of base (territory and natural resources) being already owned and technological progress, combined, lead to a bleak future.