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Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: March 23rd, 2025

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  • The question is what did she consent to (as in, what was the thing she did expect that this checkbox created)?

    “Cameo” doesn’t exactly evoke “allow people to create fetish porn with my face”.

    If the button was labelled with that or some other more clear text, I don’t think there would have been a need for this article.

    And that’s pretty much the point of this article: “Beware of corporate double-speek, this harmless word here means ‘allow fetish porn with your face’”, and that kind of warning article is not only important but pretty much essential in today’s world, where “autopilot” doesn’t mean that the car is fully self-driving, and where even “full self-driving” doesn’t mean “fully self-driving”.

    And the only indication one has that words don’t mean what they mean is a multiple hundred page long terms of services full of legal jargon that most people can’t understand but that legally protect the corporation.

    As Marc-Uwe Kling said: “Die Welt ist voll von Arschlöchern. Rechtlich abgesicherten Arschlöchern.”

    “The world is full of assholes. Legally protected assholes.”






  • I think you are a step further down in the a/b problem tree.

    The purpose of society is that everyone can have a safe, stable and good life. In our current setup this requires that most people are employed. But that’s not a given.

    Think of a hypothetical society where AI/robots do all the work. There would be no need to employ everyone to do work to support unemployed people.

    We are slowly getting to that direction, but the problem here is that our capitalist society isn’t fit for that setup. In our capitalist setup, removing the need for work means making people unemployed, who then “need to be supported” while the rich who own/employ robots/AI benefit without putting in any work at all.


  • I agree with the sentiment, as bad as it feels to agree with Altman about anything.

    I’m working as a software developer, working on the backend of the website/loyalty app of some large retailer.

    My job is entirely useless. I mean, I’m doing a decent job keeping the show running, but (a) management shifts priorities all the time and about 2/3 of all the “super urgent” things I work on get cancelled before then get released and (b) if our whole department would instantly disappear and the app and webside would just be gone, nobody would care. Like, literally. We have an app and a website because everyone has to have one, not because there’s a real benefit to anyone.

    The same is true for most of the jobs I worked in, and about most jobs in large corporations.

    So if AI could somehow replace all these jobs (which it can’t), nothing of value would be lost, apart from the fact that our society requires everyone to have a job, bullshit or not. And these bullshit jobs even tend to be the better-paid ones.

    So AI doing the bullshit jobs isn’t the problem, but people having to do bullshit jobs to get paid is.

    If we all get a really good universal basic income or something, I don’t think most people would mind that they don’t have to go warm a seat in an office anymore. But since we don’t and we likely won’t in the future, losing a job is a real problem, which makes Altman’s comment extremely insensitive.






  • Hmm, the law begins with “Given enough eyeballs”. So it’s explicitly not about small-language Wikipedia sites having too few editors.

    It also doesn’t talk about finding consensus. “All bugs are shallow” means that someone can see the solution. In software development, that’s most often quite easy, especially when it comes to bugfixes. It’s rarely difficult to verify whether the solution to a bug works or not. So in most cases if someone finds a solution and it works, that’s good enough for everyone.

    In cultural fields, that’s decidedly not the case.

    For most of society’s problems, there are hardly any new solutions. We have had the same basic problems for centuries and pretty much “all” the solutions have been proposed decades or centuries ago.

    How to make government fair? How to get rid of crime? How to make a good society?

    These things have literally been issues since the first humans learned to speak.

    That’s why Linus’ law doesn’t really apply here. We all want different things and there’s no fix that satisfies all requirements or preferences.