This guy is such a waste of carbon. Don’t be fooled by his title as a “researcher” or him being in Stanford. He’s just another Tech Bro, pushing his “product” to greedy companies to make a few bucks for himself.
And his sponsor? This guy.
Both deserve the deepest level of hell!
I predict that “career” as we know it today will disappear shortly. We will have to change careers every 5 to 10 years. Depending on where the wind is blowing from and if there will be any vacant jobs. Being an expert in a field will not have much of a value as that expertise will be stolen by AI during one’s employment anyway. What can be helpful in this dystopia waiting for us would be analytic problem solving skills, creativity, constant learning and curiosity. But no matter what, we will all end up with minimum wage.
The thing is; now it doesn’t matter if your job has been done properly by AI or not, what matters is that it’s just cheaper. And when all companies jump on this bandwagon of enshittification for profit it becomes the standard. This already happened with customer support. It’s nearly impossible to get a human when you call for support. All customers hate it, make their life harder. But still all companies do it and with no alternative you just have to accept it. From what I see, the adoption to AI happens in two ways: either you want to make your human driven processes better by utilizing AI or for cheaper with AI but with ‘passable’ quality. And it looks like companies are mostly in the second camp. So I don’t think besides some exceptional cases and industries the quality of work will be a determining factor.
Exactly this. Also it used to be that you would buy a subscription and that would increase the rate and quality of your matches. That’s no longer the case. Now it’s all transaction based. You have to pay for boosts, special swipes and shit to be seen.
Such a great article. Also the images, videos and animations are so beautiful.
I worked in both small and big companies.
That “micromanaging CEO” can also happen in big companies as your skip-manager doing that. So, being in a big company isn’t a safe bet against it.
I would say there are more pros than cons in working for a small company. Especially if you’re at the beginning of your career.
What you should make absolutely clear is that what you’ll be working on i.e. products & technologies.
Pros:
Cons:
This. Also if I have to change jobs every 2-3 years to get a market level salary why would I even bother. This is the reality they created.
I wonder what’s gonna be the next shit they will try to pull. They are acting like a spoiled child.
Such an unfortunate name choice. 🤦
I think from her part it was more about planting the seeds of a censorship tool than pleasing economic powers. Right-wing scum always attack freedom of speech first.
Yes, finally. But I would say a bit late to the party. And a privacy focused IM not thinking about this for years blows my mind.
For me:
they exploited a vulnerability in the airport’s Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system
CRM, No surprise 🫠
Exactly. The entertainment value of it is very similar to the early MTV. When you find the right creators for you it’s very rewarding.
And on top of that for me YouTube’s music recommendations are always spot on. Sometimes it insists that I check a music video on the landing page. Every time showing me the same thing. And most of the times it turns out to be a very good discovery. So it’s a very good medium to discover new music. Funny enough, YouTube Music’s recommendations are always sub-par.
At CNET — where Priestley previously worked, according to LinkedIn —
Say no more 🤮
Yes, my point is that banning protocols will kill all the commercial VPN offerings. Restricting a big size of the population. Obscure protocols like X-Ray can work but not everyone can set it up.
And I think you can also raise some suspicion if you use too much bandwidth on that connection. GBs of data consumption from MyTotallyLegitWebsite.me can raise eyebrows. And that would be the only thing needed for a court notice or a visit by the police, depending upon the country. And in anti-democratic countries you’re guilty until proven innocent anyway.
With deep packet inspection they can detect a VPN protocol connection attempt and drop it. There are already countries utilizing this method.
But with decision making that can affect peoples’ lives and livelihoods, we need to be damn sure the computer is going to make the right decision every time or not trust it to have full controls at all.
👏👏👏
Yes, dystopia already arrived and we will all going to suffer. Here are just a few simple examples of blind trust of algorithms which ruined people’s lives. And day by day more are coming.
Before AI: https://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/prison-bankruptcy-suicide-software-glitch-080025767.html
After AI: https://news.yahoo.com/man-raped-jail-ai-technology-210846029.html
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