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[-] CileTheSane@lemmy.ca 24 points 20 hours ago

My reaction to the article:

This was about fears AI will tank the economy? No shit it will.

Reads a little more

Wait, this is about fears AI will be so successful it tanks the economy? Complete bullshit but hey, whatever gets this bubble popped.

Instead of using DoorDash, developers – and civilians – code up their own food delivery apps, all of which compete, fragment the market, and destroy the margins of legacy businesses.

Complete fucking fantasy. Even if AI was so amazing it could code my own delivery app for me in seconds, the food still has to be delivered somehow. But yes, it AI was able to deliver on all of the promises we'd be fucked, when AI fails to deliver on all of the promises the bubble will burst and we'll be fucked. Either way stop investing in AI.

[-] ToTheGraveMyLove@sh.itjust.works 1 points 22 minutes ago

Also, calling doordash a legacy business is completely cursed

[-] dustyData@lemmy.world 3 points 1 hour ago

The proponent is a rather successful and rational investor. This was satire, meant to evoke the idea that, if AI was all that the con men are selling, it would collapse the economy. It is not and everyone knows it, but the point is to highlight the idiocy and try to wake up people to the absurdity. I see it akin to what "a modest proposal" was. To nudge the most radical AI ideologues into understanding the dead economy and ghost GDP concepts. If the economy becomes detached from human reality, it will crumble and collapse.

[-] Ruigaard@slrpnk.net 4 points 3 hours ago

Yeah, why wouldn't I just call or text the restaurant I want to order from, instead of coding my own app 😂. What a weird example.

[-] yabbadabaddon@lemmy.zip 4 points 5 hours ago

No but you don't get it. AI is such an amazing tool, it can do everything and replace everyone. Did you try my new model yet? It's blazing fast and can tell you to drive to the car wash to clean your car. It's will revolutionize the world

[-] RedstoneValley@sh.itjust.works 64 points 1 day ago

The scenario begins with AI agents undergoing a “jump in capability”.

Might as well stop reading there. Another fluff piece about how useful and capable AI supposedly is, disguised as a doomsday scenario. I'm so sick of reading this bullshit. "Agentic AI" based on LLMs does not work reliably yet and very likely never will.

If you complain about bugs in traditional (deterministic) software, you ain't seen nothing yet. A probabilistic system such as an LLM might or might not book the correct flight for you. It might give you the information you have asked for or it might delete your inbox instead.

As a consequence of a system being probabilistic, anything you do with it works or fails based on probabilities. This really is the dumbest timeline.

[-] magikmw@piefed.social 13 points 1 day ago

Not to mention agents not being immune to confabulation, what we'd call if human did it: "making shit up".

[-] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 121 points 1 day ago

I just..

Am I wrong here? Like, look, shame me. I work in machine learning and have since 2012. I don't do any of the llm shit. I do things like predicting wildfire risk from satellite imagery or biomass in the amazon, soil carbon, shit like that.

I've tried all the code assistants. They're fucking crap. There's no building an economy around these things. You'll just get dogshit. There's no building institutions around these things.

[-] Buddahriffic@lemmy.world 5 points 20 hours ago

If you want a demo on how bad these AI coding agents are, build a medium-sized script with one, something with a parse -> process -> output flow that isn't trivial. Let it do the debug, too (like tell it the error message or the unwanted behaviour).

You'll probably get the desired output if you're using one of the good models.

Now ask it to review the code or optimize it.

If it was a good coding AI, this step shouldn't involve much, as it would have been applying the same reasoning during the code writing process.

But in my experience, this isn't what happens. For a review, it has a lot of notes. It can also find and implement optimizations. The weighs are the same, the only difference is that the context of the prompt has changed from "write code" to "optimize code", which affects the correlations involved. There is no "write optimal code" because it's trained on everything and the kitchen sink, so you'll get correlations from good code, newbie coders, lesson examples of bad ways to do things (especially if it's presented in a "discovery" format where a prof intended to talk about why this slide is bad but didn't include that on the slide itself).

[-] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 42 points 1 day ago

Heh, that's the joke going around now.

AI works, it replaces workers, we lose our jobs.

AI doesn't work, bubble pops, we lose our jobs.

[-] GamingChairModel@lemmy.world 2 points 19 hours ago

It's funny. I see the phrase "AI doomsday scenario" and I immediately picture devastating cascading consequences caused by someone mistakenly putting too much trust in some kind of agentic AI that does things poorly and breaks a lot of big important things.

I'm just not seeing a scenario where AI causes devastating disruption based on its own ultra competence. I'm much more scared of AI incompetence.

[-] Zwuzelmaus@feddit.org 14 points 1 day ago

They're fucking crap. There's no building an economy around these things.

You are right in every serious part of the world.

But add "venture capital" to the equation and it works out stronger than anything else so far.

[-] LincolnsDogFido@lemmy.zip 2 points 22 hours ago

Your job sounds really cool! How likely is Alberta to be on fire again this year?

[-] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 2 points 20 hours ago
[-] LincolnsDogFido@lemmy.zip 2 points 20 hours ago
[-] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 14 points 19 hours ago

Well for one, that area already burned pretty recently. So its pretty unlikely to burn again any time soon.

But as part of a larger picture:

The area does experience fire-weather conditions for some portion of the year:

Here we're looking at HDWI (hot dry windy index), where a "loose" definition of fire weather is if HDWI is above 200. HDWI is based on a few factors, namely, how hot it is, how dry it is, and how fast the air is moving. Hot dry air moving quickly = fire weather.

The number of fire weather days per year has been increasing, and in very recent years (the past decade) the rate of change has increased, and become statistically signficant:

So its not a particularly fire prone area, but its getting worse, and its getting worse at a faster rate.

That would be the first part of the analysis I would run. After that, we'd look for historically "anomalous" periods. Its not enough to look at averages; that will wash over important features in the data. We need to look for specific periods where fire weather manifests.

This is another way of thinking about fire risk. Here we're going to count the amount of time, after 12 hours, that an area is in sustained fire-weather conditions. Basically, a bit of time in bad conditions isn't the end of the world, but as you stay in fire weather conditions, fire risk increases exponentially (as plants/ fuels continue to dry out).

If I were writing an insurance product for you, I would count the number of events in a given magnitude bucket and give you a risk rating. Here, licking my thumb and sticking it in the air, I would say.. "not that bad".

Much of my work is around modeling in the wilderness urban interface. You picked an almost all wilderness area. Since there are no structures, I cant do the next analysis, but it would looks something like this:

Most of my work is about figuring out what the impacts of wildfire on the built environment are going to be. Also, the free structure dataset I have access to doesn't cover Canada and I'm not going to spend money buying the structures for you (unless you REALLY want me to).

Those first figures are all specific to the coordinates you provided. The final figure is just an example.

[-] teslekova@sh.itjust.works 1 points 3 hours ago
[-] v_krishna@lemmy.ml 10 points 1 day ago

You've worked in ML since 2012 but dont think transformers have had an absolutely insane impact, for example in NLP and machine translation? (I have worked in those fields longer than that and while I dont think AGI or anything like that is coming from transformers and deep neural nets I think you are full of it if you dont admit they have revolutionized a large number of [highly technical] fields).

[-] TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world 12 points 20 hours ago

Tldr at the bottom

I'm literally submitting a transformers paper for publication this week. They're truly incredible. They're a huge step forwards from where we we at. But so was YOLO, and UNET, and lstm's (kinda, they were a bit meh).

But there is a secondary claim about llms, chat bot/agentic llm specifically, that they're doing things they simply arent. And I do pay for higher tier access so I at least think I'm using some of the state of the art of these things.

I think you are full of it if you dont admit they have revolutionized a large number of highly technical fields

I'm specifically saying they haven't, at least, that if you are using Claude or chatgpt to do those things, you aren't doing what you think you are doing. Domain experts who use these tools recognize their limitations, and limitation is a soft way of putting it. They just get shit fundamentally wrong. And sometimes, when you are working on a complex problem, if you don't have the knowledge or experience to know when something is wrong, you'll believe these machines are doing far more than they are.

Look I use them regularly. I can support up to 128gb models locally. I understand the claim that these things have utility. But after several years of working with them, I genuinely don't think they actually are capable of supporting the claims businesses are making about them.

For one, while they can help you solve some problems faster, often, they just make the situation far, far worse, and you spend an inordinate amount of time trying to get the thing to do something a specific way, but it just won't. I think this is related to the half glass of wine issue, which I'll come back to.

Second, they, as far as I've been able to use them, are utter dogshit at returning to a codebase. If you are trying to get them to have some kind of long term comprehension of what's happening in a project, good fucking luck. You end up with a codebase of constant refactors and stupid useless "sanity" checks that creates the appearance of good practices, but is all smoke and mirrors. They seem to work ok for single shot demos, but you could never run a business or build a program that's worth keeping around where the llm is central to managing the process. And there is more to say in this because when you are building up a codebase, the most fundamental thing you are really building up is a vision of how it all fits together. When you outsource this to LLMs, you don't get the vision, and frankly they don't either. What you end up with is maybe functional at first, but inevitably unstable, and unsustainable.

Third, and maybe this is me, but I've never actually seen an llm come up with a clever solution to anything. Like not once have I seen it come up with a truly elegant, efficient solution. It's almost always the most banal, solution, and more often then not, it's not even a solution, but a work around that avoids the problem entirely while creating the impression of a solution.

And to be clear. I'm not talking about mundaun hello world statements. I'm talking about things that undergrads and graduate students miss all the time. I'm talking about gotchas and problems that you need somethings decades plus to know that the fundamental assumptions are flawed. There is something more inherent to the issues they create.

I think the half glass of wine issue has been papered over and remains the core limitation with LLMs, and represents a fundamental issue with either transformers, or maybe gradient decent, and I don't think this current architecture is going to get us past it. You are probably familiar with the issue, it got traction a while back, but the hot fixed the phenomena and it lost media attention. However, if you know what you are looking for, you'll find non image based examples of this all the time when using LLMs. They'll constantly insist they've done something they haven't. And there will be no obvious way to get them to recognize they haven't done or aren't doing the thing. I don't believe any of the philosophy explanations given in the YouTube coverage of the issue. I think the problem is likely more core, more central to machine learning that credit is being given.

The concern I have is that this is something more fundamental, and were only noticing it because image generation and natural language are something humans can comprehend and notice the issue in. But what about when it becomes something incomprehensible to humans, like a sequence of weather data or output from a sensor. We would have no ability to notice if ml model is doing the same thing that an llm is doing, effectively lying about it's about.

Long rant over shortly.

Tldr

I think don't contend the massive advances transformers represent as an architecture. But there is clearly something rotten or missing at their core which makes them practically self destructive to rely upon beyond superficial, well solved issues. I think the rot is in the math or the approach to training and I don't think there is any amount of engineering that can unbake the sawdust out of the cake.

[-] v_krishna@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 hours ago

I appreciate your response and in this long form explanation of your view I find i agree (both in theory and in practice) with most of what you wrote.

[-] juanito_the_great@sh.itjust.works 4 points 18 hours ago

Thank you for putting in the time to try to explain this. I've also been working with ML for a long time and have the intuition that there is a fundamental limit to what can be achieved with Neural Networks and probably any other Machine Learning technique.

Your cake analogy is probably better, but let me try another one. It's like having a machine that is trying to solve a gigantic puzzle with random pieces from different puzzles. Yeah, if you have enough puzzle pieces and the machine is fast enough it can give you suboptimal solutions but the puzzle will not ever be solved as it is supposed to be solved.

[-] Passerby6497@lemmy.world 12 points 23 hours ago

I think you read way more into their comment than was written. They said nothing about transformers, only that these assistants are shit. Which, let's admit, they are.

The underlying technology is cool, current implementations are trash and have no long term economical path to viability unless things radically change quickly.

[-] partofthevoice@lemmy.zip 6 points 1 day ago

I think it’s supposed to work like, “well, even if you are right about the massive utility of AI, is that still what we should be aiming for?”

It gets around the combative “you’re wrong, AI is garbage” argument. The people hoisting AI because they believe, even if it does suck, it’ll get better… those people can probably understand this argument much more easily.

[-] ageedizzle@piefed.ca 6 points 1 day ago

It sucks and its at the point now where were hitting diminishing returns so I’m not sire if it sill get better

[-] msage@programming.dev 0 points 18 hours ago

Can I subscribe to your AI posts?

[-] inclementimmigrant@lemmy.world 140 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Really reinforces my belief that the stockmarket is driven by idiots.

Reminds me of this old Kal cartoon:

Granted AI will probably doom us all but not how the substance post says it will.

[-] baseball2020@sopuli.xyz 33 points 1 day ago

My favourite take so far is the comparison to the introduction of the microwave. Some people really believed that they’d never have to cook again. So what we got was actually a way to make crap quality meals or reheat things when we don’t have time. This is roughly analogous to the output I get from the LLM.

[-] TheBlackLounge@lemmy.zip 24 points 1 day ago

You need to learn how to use a microwave. It's way more versatile than people think. And more of a steamer than an oven. https://cookanyday.com/collections/recipes

(This is not an analogy about LLMs anymore.)

[-] toynbee@lemmy.world 3 points 21 hours ago

Until I actually got to the link, I thought it was going to be Technology Connections.

[-] JayGray91@piefed.social 4 points 1 day ago

I just wanted to have a gander at some microwave recipes, but that site bombarded me with 3 full screen promotional pop up and still didn't give me any recipes because I have to tap show more results because the first few is products they're selling. At least that's my experience on mobile, using waterfox with adblock and even a DNS filter.

[-] xep@discuss.online 2 points 21 hours ago

Yeah but let me present my counterpoint, the air-fryer.

[-] vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org 4 points 1 day ago

You can make a lot of things with a good microwave, but just putting something in doesn't work for that purpose, yes.

[-] andallthat@lemmy.world 18 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

It's almost funny how all those AI doomsday scenarios are actually meant to prop up investment in AI.

See how Amodei and Altman are usually the ones pushing these narratives on how worried they are by the incredible advancements of their respective companies' creatures. They are so, so worried about the demise of the human race and how fast it's coming.

And I sort of understand them because whatever disruption they are peddling needs to happen very fast or they will all run out of money. But what does it tell about the rest of the human race that we are actually buying into it and pouring money into creating a dystopian future?

[-] lost_faith@lemmy.ca 2 points 23 hours ago

Just re-watched Tron last night and a scene really struck me. Dumont was talking to Lora about how since the computers are able to think the humans will stop. That scene had more impact this time through

[-] ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago

It's "Iraq is using PS2s to build ICBMs" all over again...

[-] andallthat@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

It's like watching a real-life version of Avengers, but one where Tony Stark says "hey, this Thanos guy is disrupting industries here!" and teams up with... Thiel and Musk to fund his quest for the Infinity Stones. You know, we can't let China get them first!

[-] vacuumflower@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 day ago

Ads back then were so cool, it felt like real magic and it was not hard to believe PS2 is that good.

[-] sturmblast@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Anything for a dollar

[-] Gsus4@mander.xyz 23 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Lol, they sort of seem to know it's all castles on clouds and any spark e.g. a substack post could trigger the loaded spring. Yet, nobody thinks they'll be the ones holding bags of shit.

[-] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 12 points 1 day ago

They kind of know. The dot com crashed many companies, and also gave rise to Amazon. They're all just hoping they'll be the one that invested in the next Amazon.

[-] somethingsnappy@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Have they made a profit yet?

[-] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 14 points 1 day ago

Amazon didn't make any profit for a decade and made 360 billion least year. They tell investors that AI will be the same.

[-] HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org 9 points 1 day ago

The difference was that Amazon knew how to make a profit, but was reinvesting into infrastructure plays and bigger fish.

If they had to, they could have been a modestly profitable bookshop in 2002. AWS and monster logistics might not have developed to put them in the 13-digit club though.

Does any AI-centric play have that fundamental fallback? The services that seem to be most effective at direct monetization, the coding tools, are typically running at huge losses. If they raised costs to cover, precious few firms will pay basically the salary of a senior dev for an emulation of an enthusiastic junior dev with an affinity for footguns.

The less enterprise-focused products-- parasocial toys, image and video gen, will likely try to dip into consumer subs and advertising, but can that generate the cash volumes these platforms demand?

[-] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 5 points 1 day ago

If people would always demand answers for those questions, we wouldn't have speculative bubbles. For now, everybody seems to still believe the "it's the worst it'll ever be right now" and the "just more scaling bro" answers.

[-] Passerby6497@lemmy.world 2 points 23 hours ago

How much of that profit less decade was just them reinvesting in their company as opposed to burning money like you're trapped on Everest and need every bit of heat you can get?

[-] WanderingThoughts@europe.pub 1 points 22 hours ago

That's the part they didn't tell investors. Some call that the enshittification of the investment market. Lies everywhere.

this post was submitted on 25 Feb 2026
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