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What's the point of arguing with any of this.
It's like someone arguing that cheese isn't real. Yes I can go to the grocery store and take a picture of cheese and show it, but what's the point? They can live in their own world. It doesn't change any of our lives. The world is what it is.
Ed Zitron speaks to a particular type of angry tech conservative. He’s not speaking truth or exposing anything. He’s the soothing voice the tech nerds of yesterday year are yearning for.
The angry polemic that goes on and on and on with cuss words used liberally is just meant to evoke emotion and cathartic resolution to the type of people mentioned above. Not truth.
The thing is, there are a lot of people that find comfort in what he’s writing - primarily because it’s a coping mechanism against how quickly things are moving and a way to deal with being left behind. When you spend time, years, building institutional knowledge and making a whole identity out of it, you obviously will feel bad with the threat of it being commoditised.
I would write against the content of the article but I find it easier and more illuminating to write what he has said before instead. Then it shows how incorrect the guy has been and with what confidence he keeps speaking with.
As WIRED reported[0], despite constantly writing about how an AI collapse is just about to come, Zitron privately does PR for AI firms on the side. The man is an obvious hack, and it's disappointing that he has become one of the mainstream faces of AI skepticism.
Some people seem to see the world only through bubbles. But if you look at human history, despite the ups and downs, we have a trajectory; generally speaking, human-created systems evolve toward ever-increasing complexity, impact, and efficiency.
The current wave of AI unlocked language - the tools are now speaking and understanding. This, on its own, is astonishing progress. Language is the foundation of our culture and society; it is the very technology that got us, as a species, to where we are today. To have tools that can understand, manipulate, and produce it is a massive leap forward.
Once you see things that way, it is clear that we are not in a bubble; we are in a transition. Yes, there is tons of hype and over-investment, but the demand is real, and so is the impact. Unless you are deep in the tech and have that structural depth, it is easy to dismiss. This is like the invention of the personal computer, but with 100x the impact and speed.
It's possible that AI is the greatest technological leap forward since the Industrial Revolution, and simultaneously a bubble that will pop in the near future.
I don't know much about the economics side; TFA gives a barrage of stats that seem to make a compelling case for bubblehood. OTOH, the claims about the utility of LLMs being unmeasurable are weak (the same criticism applies to hiring programmers, or indeed most office workers) and the metal spider straw man is frankly embarrassing to anybody who has actually used recent frontier agents for programming and seen what they can do.