@eniko Yup. Work is zealously forcing this down our throats, and I put my disgust aside long enough to give it an honest evaluation, because it's my job and because I wanted to have an informed opinion to push back.
It sucks, it's garbage, I don't want it, and it's already polluting our code base. I just had my first experience of deleting slop, a completely useless unit test. I called the person who committed it, and they admitted that Copilot wrote it and they didn't understand what it did.
Pigeons love posing for photos. They are fabulous and they know it.
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🔭 Jupiter 21M 200mm f/4
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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
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
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'
like yeah, it is kinda amazing that I get to instantly give support to my friend who [redacted]. (that's the reason I picked up the cursed obelisk this morning; there's always a good reason.)
but if we didn't have computers what would we do? analog phone lines. letters. I feel like: "I don't have time or energy to write letters", but I have infinite time to get depressed over doomscrolling. what's the use of being able to instantly support people by encrypted DMs, if you end up overwhelmed by too much people to support and the DMs end up left on read.
how does that *compare* to writing letters or calling. I don't know about you but I find the process of hand-writing about my problems, in itself, therapeutic. and later you end up with a material culture that lasts a bit longer than "5 years if the hard disk is powered periodically". I've gained a lot from reading the collected letters of artists who inspired me. I often think, all this stuff we communicate, not even the government surveillance databases will save it. you know? governments are weaker than people think, they run on keyfabe, a lot changes in 50 or 100 years, databases are expensive when resources dwindle and bits rot so fast...
sorry I'm meandering. I guess I'm just sad about the injustices done to people I can only support on Signal and how fucked up is that some mesmerising little toy keeps chaining me in place when, like, actual stuff is going down. you know? this is poor consolation, I'll go take a shower and meet some girls irl, that's actual comfort in these trying days...
I'm far from the only IT worker who has come to hate IT, I think in my queer circles at least it's more the norm than the exception. and I mean how could it not be. have you seen IT?? as computers grew more powerful they have also become so hostile, manipulative, and above all: boring. from the point of view of a hobbyist who likes to tinker, or just someone who wants a computer for enjoyment, there's no doubt in my mind: it isn't just nostalgia, IT in the early 2000s was much more joy-sparking. like, no question.
but I've become much more of a luddite than my computer-hostile friends I think. I don't just long for the days when you could repair a VGA card by replacing components yourself, I long for the complete absence of computers whatsoever. of most electronics, I think. do you know how "AI" keeps being shoved everywhere as an unasked-for solution that isn't really a solution but it's just extra complication to no real benefit? I've come to think that this is the IT industry writ large.
like I remember my friends who developed an open source system to run Linux with 4 monitors and keyboards on a single PC, back when PCs were expensive, so that public school students could have computer labs. unlike "AI" this was actually meaningful work, and at a capitalist level it certainly benefited those working class students, increasing their chance of ascension. I myself came to middle class basically because my father got a computer for the family at great effort, and I was allowed to tinker with it all night until my gender dysphoria was blunted.
but if you ask me if we are *better off* shoving computers everywhere. dunno. it feels like car culture, to me. *are* students better off with computers? lately I've been doing a lot of handwriting and paper reading and it seems to heal in me the focus, the control I thought I had lost... once I was in a camp without Internet and I was reading book after book, serially, just like teenage me—current me go years unable to commit to a book to the end, that was undone overnight merely by physical distance between me and computers... are these things worth the cost. is the cost even clear.
in São Paulo it takes more time to go from one neighbourhood to the other on cars than it did on horses. but you can't talk about it because if you ask the question, "are we actually better off with cars", someone will say what about disabled people dying of heart attack in a rainy day while chased by the mafia, you fascist. in the same way it's easy to come up with a million post hoc excuses for computer culture. but it's hard to find good enough excuses when I participated on this, I still do, I'm part of an industry whose goal is to look at the world and figure out: "how could we add a computer here". that's why I have so much money, that's why I get to provide for 4 people besides me. and isn't this the same as selling cars, isn't it blood money. are we really better off with computer culture. I don't know that my daughter lives better as a digital artist than she did when she was a physical media exclusive. I don't know if having all the bands of the world ripped off on Spotify makes me better off than when I travelled to Curitiba's Japantown to scavenge pirated enka CDs. I don't know if I like the convenience of Google Maps(tm) telling me directions to any commercial establishment at a whim, compared to getting lost and ask people for directions. I used to think I was "introvert", but decades later I have precious memories of cool or interestingly off-putting people asking me for directions. I have memories of random Japanese salarymen walking with me entire neighbourhoods to bring me to the station because they felt so proud their town was being seen and wanted to talk about it, and all I did was to say, ano, marumaru-eki e ikitain desu ga... I don't have any cherished memories of Google Maps.
my veganism lately looks at anything with electronics in it and tells me: Coltan mines. 9-9-6. ship fuel. tell me how is this different than milk cows. and I struggle with the same type of dissonance I had, splitting my brain in two trying to come up with a justification to keep consuming milk, when I understood what the production of milk entails. I look at the little tablet I'm typing this on, who has held me in place about an hour longer than I intended—everyday occurrence, for you too right—and I think: coltan. lithium. 9-9-6. 40 degrees...
I carry this thing with me like a curse. "what if we just didn't" is a thought that won't let go. every day, every day I weight under the gaze of the archaic torso of Apollo, da ist keine Stelle, die dich nicht sieht...
@loren Like.. many years ago someone on tw said that if you are looking for things that'll make you smile, think about what you liked when you were 9. I was like, birds. I liked birds. It was absolutely correct, birds make me smile and is also one of my main preoccupations now, again :D
Eupol, deportation of children
What im trying to say is we should stop looking at sexuality as this static thing, and while it's true you are what you say you are, you should be open to new experiences changing your sexuality etc
I totally agree with the concept that you're still sexuality X even if you've never had experience with (some of) the gender(s) you're attracted to
My personal experience tho, lol
I thought I was bi, then had a few experiences with men/masculine genders and realised I'm not actually attracted to them lol
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
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Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.