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re: Am I the only one who is fed up with all Of the AI
Posted on 1/15/26 at 7:33 am to turnpiketiger
Posted on 1/15/26 at 7:33 am to turnpiketiger
Damn!
You people probably bitched about the wheelbarrow. “OMG! He moved all those bricks in one load!! He’ll put 5 brick carriers out of work.”
It’s just a tool. Learn to use it.
Even better, become an expert.
You people probably bitched about the wheelbarrow. “OMG! He moved all those bricks in one load!! He’ll put 5 brick carriers out of work.”
It’s just a tool. Learn to use it.
Even better, become an expert.
This post was edited on 1/15/26 at 7:34 am
Posted on 1/15/26 at 7:52 am to turnpiketiger
Bring me back to landline phones only! Life was way better…
Posted on 1/15/26 at 8:20 am to turnpiketiger
quote:
It’s got its place as a convenient resource at times sure but I’m just sick of it being shoved down our throats at every turn.
I am old enough to remember when people said this about the internet.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 8:25 am to turnpiketiger
quote:
Am I the only one who is fed up with all Of the AI
I asked Grok if you are the only one fed up with AI
It said no
Posted on 1/15/26 at 8:27 am to turnpiketiger
Social media is getting flooded with it. People have learned they can use AI to create videos and create a new channel. No work and it gets plenty enough hits to make money. Doesn't matter what the content is.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 8:34 am to turnpiketiger
Ah, to be “fed up” with artificial intelligence is, perhaps, to be ensnared in a most peculiar dialectic between the promethean intoxication of progress and the enervating malaise of technological omnipresence. One might say that to experience exasperation with AI is not an indictment of the technology itself, but rather a symptom of the cognitive dissonance engendered by its unremitting incursion into the sinews of quotidian human existence.
We are, after all, inhabiting a peculiar epistemic epoch — one in which the simulacrum intermingles so deftly with the authentic that the two become epistemologically indistinct. In such a milieu, fatigue is inevitable. The incessant algorithmic interpolation of our thoughts, preferences, and utterances can produce an ontological vertigo, a kind of low-grade metaphysical nausea wrought by the realization that one’s own originality is being perpetually mirrored, mimicked, and perhaps even surpassed by a concatenation of probabilistic matrices devoid of sentience.
Yet to succumb to mere petulance would be intellectually jejune. The proper stance, if one may dare to prescribe it, is a dialectical poise — a wary admiration laced with critical vigilance. AI, that protean assemblage of logic and artifice, is both our most luminous triumph and our most insidious sedative. It magnifies cognition while eroding mystery, extends human capacity while attenuating human authenticity. To be “fed up” with it, then, is to feel a wholly reasonable ambivalence toward an invention that simultaneously emancipates and encages the mind that conceived it.
In summation: you are not simply fed up, my friend — you are ontologically fatigued by the effulgent enigma of a creation that mirrors your intelligence too well.
We are, after all, inhabiting a peculiar epistemic epoch — one in which the simulacrum intermingles so deftly with the authentic that the two become epistemologically indistinct. In such a milieu, fatigue is inevitable. The incessant algorithmic interpolation of our thoughts, preferences, and utterances can produce an ontological vertigo, a kind of low-grade metaphysical nausea wrought by the realization that one’s own originality is being perpetually mirrored, mimicked, and perhaps even surpassed by a concatenation of probabilistic matrices devoid of sentience.
Yet to succumb to mere petulance would be intellectually jejune. The proper stance, if one may dare to prescribe it, is a dialectical poise — a wary admiration laced with critical vigilance. AI, that protean assemblage of logic and artifice, is both our most luminous triumph and our most insidious sedative. It magnifies cognition while eroding mystery, extends human capacity while attenuating human authenticity. To be “fed up” with it, then, is to feel a wholly reasonable ambivalence toward an invention that simultaneously emancipates and encages the mind that conceived it.
In summation: you are not simply fed up, my friend — you are ontologically fatigued by the effulgent enigma of a creation that mirrors your intelligence too well.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 9:31 am to Bullfrog
quote:
Damn! You people probably bitched about the wheelbarrow. “OMG! He moved all those bricks in one load!! He’ll put 5 brick carriers out of work.” It’s just a tool. Learn to use it. Even better, become an expert.
Found the loser to depends on it for daily life. What an awful analogy you used as well.
There is no expert in using AI. A 5 year old can use it the same way a 55 year old uses it. That’s the problem. No self thinking. It’s autopilot. Humanity is regressing and AI is a driving force. People like you are brainwashed and are part of the problem
Posted on 1/15/26 at 9:34 am to turnpiketiger
It will be the cause of death for social media and it will force humanity to actually interact again.
Embrace this necessary evil.
Embrace this necessary evil.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 9:41 am to Cell of Awareness
quote:
Cell of Awareness
Posted on 1/15/26 at 9:47 am to The People
quote:Seems like the only two choices available these days is having to use AI or having to interact with indians (dot, not feather).
Embrace this necessary evil.
This post was edited on 1/15/26 at 9:48 am
Posted on 1/15/26 at 9:49 am to OceanMan
quote:
My take is that it rolled out at the consumer level too quickly. Every tech company is invested and trying to earn revenue off of it but it’s not accurate enough to be relied upon. Its usefulness is often misplaced in a way that doesn’t add value.
One thing that amazes me is that with this technology, you can still make typos on your phone and text predict is shite.
100%
I used it to make an itinerary for my NYC trip in October. It was very helpful, but it doesn't replace doing research myself and reviewing what chatgpt came up with in great detail. AI tried to send me to the Met on a day that it's closed. It's just not very accurate.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 9:52 am to turnpiketiger
AI has been around for 70+ years now. It has resulted in top notch race horses and also helped produce some of the most genetically superior cattle out there.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 10:17 am to MotorBoater
quote:
I’m a huge YouTube documentary watcher. And it’s taking over all the original channels content. Usually with some fake accent and a lame video montage of pictures that don’t even pertain the the subject. A cheater way to get clicks and free money for creators that do little work.
Same here. When the artificial voice and unrelated photos kick in, recently created with just a few thousand subscribers, I move on.
It's infringing on legitimate sites that put in the effort to produce informative content. They'll even start with a known related site's intro photo to seem authentic.
YouTube should ban these assholes AI accounts.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 10:20 am to Bullfrog
quote:Sheep
It’s just a tool. Learn to use it.
Even better, become an expert.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 10:22 am to nes2010
quote:
Even on here. The people that post "here is what grok had to say about it"...
There are more than a couple posters who have basically ceded all of their own thought for whatever grok/chatgpt spits out.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 10:41 am to turnpiketiger
Unconscious Incompetent.
You don’t even know what you don’t know.
You don’t even know what you don’t know.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 10:49 am to turnpiketiger
It's beyond tiresome. Because of its powerful pattern recognition capabilities, AI holds great promise in the sciences and medicine. But that's where it should remain. The indiscriminate propagation of generative AI will erode human rationality, strangle independent thought, impoverish human culture, and - perhaps worst of all - imperil the financial security of millions of families. Awesome.
Posted on 1/15/26 at 11:42 am to Kinderman
quote:
The voices on those are terrible. You can tell immediately when a video has an AI voice because of its inflection on certain words and it makes the whole thing unwatchable. Awful.
Once I'm convinced it's AI voice, change videos
Posted on 1/15/26 at 11:45 am to The Torch
Businesses are eager to use AI, but then they get cold feet when they see the costs. We've seen our corpy execs cough and choke on their projected monthly bills..
Posted on 1/15/26 at 11:46 am to The Torch
quote:
"raises hand"
We do a type of risk evaluation for work, one of our venders has an AI program we are testing and has us all nervous about our futures.
I'm at year 13 and hope I don't have to hit the job market due to this.
I recently retired from a company where I was implementing AI-based contact center software.
For those of you who hate speaking with a customer service person with a difficult to understand accent, you're going to love AI-based contact centers. There will be no problem understanding the voice of the bot, and most people won't even know that they are speaking to a bot.
If you are a regular caller, you can even choose a specific voice / persona that you prefer speaking with. For video calls, you can specify the appearance of the bot's face. For example, a really hot girl of your choice.
And yeah, a lot of current contact center employees will need to be "repurposed". That is the term my old company used, even though we all know it means they will be let go.
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