GNU social JP
  • FAQ
  • Login
GNU social JPは日本のGNU socialサーバーです。
Usage/ToS/admin/test/Pleroma FE
  • Public

    • Public
    • Network
    • Groups
    • Featured
    • Popular
    • People

Embed Notice

HTML Code

Corresponding Notice

  1. Embed this notice
    Anthony (abucci@buc.ci)'s status on Sunday, 14-Jul-2024 02:56:35 JSTAnthonyAnthony
    • Paul Cantrell
    Regarding that last boost from @inthehands@hachyderm.io ( https://hachyderm.io/@inthehands/112777125024725589 ):

    I've been consulting on and off in the tech sector since 2013 or so, and did occasional consulting projects as far back as 1995 when I freelanced as a web developer (!). For as long as I've been doing this, there have been people, many people, who thought they could create a piece of technology that would exponentially increase the speed of a process that was bound by some physical constraint and could not increase at that rate. I've commented on this phenomenon a few times before, for instance here: https://buc.ci/abucci/p/1705675509.136902 . Many times I've started a project, come to the conclusion that it could not achieve the desired goal with a piece of technology, and told the person this. Generally speaking people don't want to hear this.

    It's a pernicious ideology, this belief that exponential growth is always just one discovery away.

    I think #GenerativeAI and the current hype cycle is this phenomenon writ large. This pattern of reality-denying irrationality may have taken hold across a large segment of the economy, in other words. Furthermore, if this analysis is to be believed then the irrationality has turned into anticipation that is now reflected in artificially-high stock prices. One way to think of a company's stock price is as a reflection of anticipation about the company's future earnings. If investors believe companies will become remarkably more productive, and therefore more profitable, because of #AI, then the stock price is artificially high. I think it's probably more subtle than that, having to do with other factors such as how investors favor technology companies over companies that do or make stuff. The belief may also be that companies will shift away from doing or making stuff towards becoming more technology oriented. Such a shift would not necessarily be reflected in profits, but instead might manifest in layoffs and other shifts in personnel makeup, which we're also seeing.

    Either way, it's an illusion because of the pesky uncooperative nature of physical reality. I don't know if there's a crash coming--though it seems there may be--but I do think it's likely the nature of (large) companies might change significantly in a bad way. Think GE turning into a globe-spanning financial company under Jack Welch ("The Man Who Broke Capitalism") and then mostly imploding ( https://www.investopedia.com/insights/rise-and-fall-ge/ ). Sam Altman idolizes Welch, and tech companies have resurrected some of Welch's worst practices like stack ranked layoffs.
    In conversationabout 10 months ago from buc.cipermalink

    Attachments

    1. No result found on File_thumbnail lookup.
      Paul Cantrell (@inthehands@hachyderm.io)
      from Paul Cantrell
      IOW, they think the entire stock market is already priced as if the alleged AI miracle is guaranteed to materialize. And if it doesn’t, well…then everything, everything is overpriced. “Outside of the most bullish AI scenario…we forecast that S&P 500 returns would be below their post-1950 average.“ Even I, an AI cynic, am skeptical that AI hype has managed to overprice the •entire stock market• that severely. But then again, maybe I’m overestimating investors. 4/
    2. Domain not in remote thumbnail source whitelist: buc.ci
      Anthony (@abucci@buc.ci)
      The encroachment of LLMs into medical research and medical practice is really concerning to me. It is so obviously a bad idea, yet so many seem to be enthusiastically embracing this trend. I have to say, though, that this is not surprising or new to me. I recall pretty vividly a conversation I had with someone I was consulting with, probably circa 2014 (hard to remember), about an application of technology to a health care problem. This was not about LLMs, just a conventional software application with fancy

  • Help
  • About
  • FAQ
  • TOS
  • Privacy
  • Source
  • Version
  • Contact

GNU social JP is a social network, courtesy of GNU social JP管理人. It runs on GNU social, version 2.0.2-dev, available under the GNU Affero General Public License.

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 All GNU social JP content and data are available under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 license.