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@midnightspire @eniko I've noticed that there's an almost-perfect overlap between "people who claim that AI is perfectly fine for writing code" and "people who have a history of showing disregard for the quality of their work and how much work they create for others in the process"

@janamarie They need to remove the CO from it so that it has enough capacity to absorb the new CO that it needs to tell you about

AI is dogshit. And the more contact people have with AI, the more they'll realize it's dogshit and turn against it as tacky. The only reason anyone's doing any of it is because billionaires and multinationals are telling them "AI is the future!" and cramming it into everything

Even with all this they still can't get *most* people to give it more than a passing glance. Because people can instinctively recognize that it's dogshit, that it's useless insipid vapid bullshit with no intrinsic value

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@eniko I've noticed that "AI" has a much better reputation in software development circles than virtually anywhere else working-class, and I wonder if it's just because software developers believe that it'll lift them to the top of the hierarchy

I say this because

1. I know some people do look up to me in that way

And

2. It is imo very important to create a culture of shame around the use of AI

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If you're a coder and you look up to me in any way as a programmer, please know that I cannot respect and in fact have a very poor opinion of people who voluntarily use any kind of cloud based LLM for coding with any kind of regularity

A short comic about a witch writing down a spell to summon demons, but due to dropping some soup on her spellbook, it makes the spell summon demons that are smooching.

Some kids rediscover the spellbook and keep accidentally summoning two queer demons in the middle of a makeout session. For some reason, it's always the same couple.

The queer demon couple just work in a Hell soup kitchen.

@elilla yeah, I sit here and ponder all this stuff nearly every day lately, how little I can focus, but without changing something tactile my hands just go ctrl t social.p return again.

it is so tiring to deal with this package deal of 'fascinating discussion' and 'no attention span'

@ckie @elilla I've started cutting out more and more 'connected' things lately for the same reason. I do actually need the web for various of my projects, but do I need *all* of the web? I don't think so.

So I've been trying to create more... 'physically distinct' environments, despite reusing the same hardware? Because I also don't want to buy entire new hardware just for this purpose (which would, after all, contribute to resource consumption again).

Some of my most recent changes around this:
- Picked a visually distinct editor theme for my own projects, the ones that do not try to meet the standards of capitalism
- Created a new browser profile for "focus", which has LeechBlock installed and perma-blocks all sources of endless distraction, so that it becomes progressively difficult to access them
- Set up an out-of-browser RSS reader following some of the blogs I actually *enjoy* reading
- Setting aside time to read in bed, before sleep, with no connected anything to distract me. E-reader technically has a browser but it's slow and awkward and only really useful for web fiction, which is a good thing in this case

What is it called when you un-fix a problem that was previously fixed?

The American left needs to get organized. I know you're out there. I meet so many people who self-identify as socialists. Recent rallies in Vermont had tens of thousands of people come out, but at every other kind of organizing, be it a meeting, canvassing, strike support, phone bank, etc., there are the same few dozen people every single time.

People in power know this. They used to get nervous when they saw huge rallies, but they've learned that they don't represent an organized threat.

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A reminder that the anti-Iraq-war protests were some of the largest demonstrations in human history and they failed. The "carrying signs and yelling at empty buildings" theory of change comes from a sanitized retelling of past movements.

Today, every group with a twitter is calling for a demonstration in their town, but movements that don't cause power to feel pain and don't have the institutional capacity to negotiate if/when they do are doomed to failure.

@mynameistillian Also worth noting (I believe this is policy basically everywhere, not just NL) that you can withdraw consent as a donor pretty much until the moment you're on the operating table.

Ever seen an ad for ground.news and wondered where they get their data? Well, they too get it from Dave. Depending on the metric, they average his scores with either 1 or 2 other so-called "trusted ratings systems."

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He uses a comically naive rubric to generate the data. It is the exact political theory that just-some-guy-named Dave would have. Had the site been DavesOpinions.com, no one would use it. Transmorgify them into data, pick a neutral name, and make a UI, and researchers use it credulously without even knowing who Dave is, yet upon him rest the conclusions of hundreds if not thousands of studies (>500 on arxiv alone), representing unknowable amounts of computation and thousands of hours of labor.

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