• disguy_ovahea@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    That’s a problem with unchecked capitalism, not AI. Remember how George Jetson was able to have a house in the sky, a suitcase spaceship, full home automation, a robot maid, and supported his whole family by pushing a button? Consider how many people lived and worked on the ground beneath the cloud cover to make that possible.

    • Godort@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      Remember how he also only worked 3 days a week, and had job security even though he was fired every episode?

      George Jetson had a very good union.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      The Jetsons were the 1% and the Flintstones were the rest.

      They were the Elysium space station people

  • regrub@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Yes. As an aside, the post title reminds me of LinkedIn clickbait. Agree?

  • wizblizz@lemmy.worldM
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    6 months ago

    I’m seeing a lot of AI apologists in here. I want the leisure time required to create art, instead of being fucking burned out from working multiple jobs and spending all my available free time doing chores. Fuck AI, fuck the uncompensated artists and illegitimate theft of those works used to train the AI, and fuck you for normalizing it.

    • PlushySD@lemmy.world
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      Let me make it clear first. Generative AI is not art. Prompt engineering is not a real job.

      AI is just a tool. It is still waiting for an artist to use it to create art, just as a Photography or Photoshop image is not an art by itself.

      But… training with images is the same as humans learning how to draw, though… I know it’s boring but what you said is boring too. We could fall back to the same conversation over and over because you start with the same conversation again and again.

      FUCK AI, and also FUCK PEOPLE AGAINST AI, Good thing I hate everyone!

      • Fungah@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I mostly agree with this. I’m coming to think that in the future defining the word “art” for the context of a discussion would avoid a lot of the back and forth I’m seeing here and help these discussions be more productive.

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        6 months ago

        “Prompt engineer” is on a lower level than “tarot fortune teller” for me. As a fortune teller, you are required to have people skills, as a prompt engineer, you just have to be an opportunistic dork.

        • VerbFlow@lemmy.worldOPM
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          6 months ago

          A prompt engineer is nowhere near a tarot card user. Tarot cards do not contribute to a gigantic machine that eats job opportunities and spits out misinfo.

    • LeFantome@programming.dev
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      6 months ago

      You cannot be an apologist unless there is a credible accusation to defend against.

      Disagreeing with people that cannot coherently decide why they are upset is a good thing.

      As for your comment, I agree that using art to train AI and then selling the result is a problem. Our legal framework needs to catch up on that. Personally, I do not see why it would not be copyright violation. That is clearly what it would be if a human did the exact same thing. A tool directed by a human does not seem so different from that. In my reading of copyright law, this misuse of AI may already be illegal.

      We just need a few court cases to sort that out.

      “I want the leisure time required to create art, instead of being fucking burned out from working multiple jobs and spending all my available free time doing chores.”

      So, fair enough. Does this have anything whatsoever to do with AI? It really waters down your other point ( addressed above ).

      If you are trying to agree with the OP concerning “laundry and dishes”, please think about your position. Those are two of the best examples for how technology has reduced time spent and effort expended on menial chores. I struggle to think of better ones. They also seem like prime candidates to be improved by adding AI to our existing mechanical devices.

      What could the actual complaint be here? At worst, you can assume that AI will not help you with laundry and dishes. Any less extreme position will be that it probably will. The same can be said for any other menial task I can think of in my day-to-day life.

      Sorry to be a rationality apologist but I am not going to line-up against totally misdirected outrage. Being mad does not make you right.

    • gmtom@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      AI apologists

      Im not an “AI apologist” because theres nothing to apologise for.

      Much like im not an “automatic loom apologist” or a “steam engine apologist”

    • Fungah@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I want to be able to create all the things Ive dreamed of creating my.whole life without spending 4-8 years in fucking art school, saddling myself in debt for a skill that was virtually impossible to make a living off of. and that was BEFORE ai. AI has enabled me to create things that would have been fucking.impossible for me to.create on my own and and absurdly.expensive to have commissioned. Its allowed me to create things that would be literally.impossible without it.

      I had ideas. I just couldn’t afford to make it real. With ai I’ve been able to.

      I never would have paid an artist to do what I’ve been able to done for myself. Even if I could have afforded it.

      Ai may commodotize creativity but it democratizes art.

      Jeans Pierre can still build a lifesized model.of Donald trump.out of tampons and I get an to cover my walls with viking chicks with huge fits that look like they’re painted by van Gogh, and oil paintings of my face instead of whoever the model.was on history’s greatest works.of art.

      If you’re an artist pissed off about ai taking your money: you probably wouldn’t have made much anyway. Being an artist was always a reckless gamble.

      • corus_kt@lemmy.worldM
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        6 months ago

        So your argument is that putting in effort and investing money for a skill is ‘virtually impossible’ and that artists shouldn’t complain because they ‘probably wouldn’t have made much anyway’?

        Following your logic generative AI would never come to exist, because there wouldn’t even be anything created for an AI to learn from.

      • Prandom_returns@lemm.eeM
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        If you weren’t creating before “AI”, you’re not creating after.

        It’s like hiring a person to do art for you, but instead you took all their shit and used a machine to make a soup out of it.

        Get fcked.

        • Fungah@lemmy.world
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          So i had an idea for a thing. This thing did not exist. Parts of it may existed in some fashion, but the thing itself did not.

          Now the thing exists. It hangs on my wall.

          We may have different definitions of the term creation in mind here. Can you suggest a better word to use for using my input to make a thing that did not exist before? I can use that going forward.

          And yes. Ai combines things that other people have made before into something else. Usually the Mona Lisa does not have my face. Then I spent around and hour in stable diffusion and maybe two hours in gimp. Now the Mona Lisa has my face. I would call this new, as the Mona Lisa, to my knowledge, has never before had my face on it. Let alone looked like my face belonged on it.

          I’m making an assumption here, and feel free to correct me if its incorrect, but I’m guessing that you feel its okay when a person blends artistic styles into something that is distinctly their own.

          If this assumption is true: why is it legitimate when a person does it and not a machine? Or is it?

          And another question: if the issue is with artists being compensated (maybe another assumption here, in apologize if I’m off base): would you support legislation to the effect that those that inspired or influenced another artist’s work receive recompense for it?

          Second to last question: if an ai is trained solely on works in the public domain do you still have an issue with it?

          Final question: if existing artists styles can be replicated using a genealogy of sorts using only those public domain works, and they’re combined in a manner that no one has thought to combine them: are there issues you have with that? What are they?

          Honestly trying to get a better understanding of where the borders of right and wrong here for you are so I can better understand your position.

          • Prandom_returns@lemm.eeM
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            6 months ago

            Based on your first comment, you’re not a person I want to have a discussion with.

            Maybe someone else values their time less then I do and will indulge in your quest to find the right and the wrong.

          • VerbFlow@lemmy.worldOPM
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            Ai combines things that other people have made before into something else. Usually the Mona Lisa does not have my face. Then I spent around and hour in stable diffusion and maybe two hours in gimp. Now the Mona Lisa has my face. I would call this new, as the Mona Lisa, to my knowledge, has never before had my face on it. Let alone looked like my face belonged on it.

            Dude, just use Photoshop. That’s all you have to do. You just cut out the face of Lisa and put your own. You can also use blurring to make it look better. “Ai” isn’t needed.

          • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 months ago

            Look I got nothing against y’all drawing shit or putting together low fi hiphop beats to shit and piss to or writing some waluigi yaoi or other content production, but it doesn’t exactly put men on the moon, kapische?

            The only reason any of you earn money as is is because advertisements can be served embedded into content, while corpos earn money mostly from landlording over IPs. Like all of marketing, it’s a drain on society from an economic standpoint.

    • regrub@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Calling AI generated pictures “art” is insulting to most artists. I agree though, all this hype is driven by short-sighted capitalism

      • PunnyName@lemmy.world
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        It’s good enough that people won’t hire artists to do their art. Are you a corporate suit who needs mock ups of a certain idea or product? Have an unpaid intern spend 5 hours prompting Sora AI to produce hundreds of, and sort down to 5, images that you can use on your post-golf lunch meeting tomorrow afternoon

      • JimSamtanko@lemm.eeM
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        You seriously think people wouldn’t do for free what others require pay for under any other socio-economic society?

        Oh, right…. Capitalism is to be blamed for…. Everthing ever.

        Don’t get me wrong. Capitalism sucks, but let’s not dilute the water.

  • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksM
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    6 months ago

    I like washing my dishes and do the laundry (but not washing clothes by hand, that we left for good). I feel like some manual labor each day leaves a breathing room for my mind when I don’t scroll or consume content or work with my mind exhausted and occupied. It reminds me of how Don Carleone liked his garden work in the book. Just a simple labor with evident results.

    The problem here that I see is that people who are the most influential and interested in these AIs most, like Muskie or Altman, never did their dishes or clothes, so this labor doesn’t exist for them. Their impotency to feel, to create art, to write, to make jokes is what makes them create an AI for these tasks and since they can’t tell good from bad there, they are happy with them. We don’t have a soulless AI, we have an AI created for these soul-lacking suits who’ve never done their dishes or joked at themselves.

    That’s not an informed opinion, just a funny thought I had from this post <3

      • andrew_bidlaw@sh.itjust.worksM
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        6 months ago

        They can try.

        I have an unused piece of land where I wish to grow cucumbers next spring and try fertilization with billionaires to compare it to other plots.

        I think they’d give me other worthy naming ideas as their legs get sucked up in the grinder.

    • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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      I like washing my dishes and do the laundry (but not washing clothes by hand, that we left for good). I feel like some manual labor each day leaves a breathing room for my mind when I don’t scroll or consume content or work with my mind exhausted and occupied. It reminds me of how Don Carleone liked his garden work in the book. Just a simple labor with evident results.

      I think the point is that folks of a certain age have seen time and again how instead of tech advances “making our lives easier” they are instead used to increase expectations of “productivity”. Here, the path we’re on doesn’t lead to more time to create art (or to choose what “simple labor” you might find fulfilling as a hobby), it leads to expectations to produce more for the 1% with the same amount of time we had before, or excuses about how an overworked department doesn’t need to be expanded since there’s AI now, or etc etc.

  • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    It’s been absolutely fascinating watching people catch on to what has happened literally every fucking time we invent paradigm-shifting advances.

  • alienanimals@lemmy.world
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    Anyone who believes AI is being used for art/writing and not for other things like doing the dishes, has a myopic understanding and a strong confirmation bias. This strawman argument is defeated by a simple Google search to see the multitude of other places where this technology is benefiting humanity.

    AI is helping physicists speed up experiments into supernovae to better understand the universe.

    AI is helping doctors to expedite cancer screening rates.

    Oh, and AI is powering robots that can do the dishes too.

    • iAvicenna@lemmy.worldM
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      but it is true that big tech companies are pouring disproportionately large sums of money into AI that seems like it is doing creative stuff so that they can ride the AI hype wave.

    • Soup@lemmy.cafeM
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      Anyone who believes that anyone here is trying to suggest that art/writing is the only thing AI is used for, has a myopic understanding of how nuanced conversation works.

      I don’t think artists/writers care about what else AI is being used for when they are losing their livelihood to a kid with a computer.

    • uienia@lemmy.world
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      This strawman argument

      Ironic coming from your strawman argument that people believe that is the only thing AI is used for, when literally noone, including the OOP, has claimed anything like that.

    • Snowclone@lemmy.world
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      I think it’s worth mentioning that Algorithms have been running Wall Street as well. It’s seem very possible we could have an entirely machine run world where little has to do with choice. Which could be nice or bad. or both.

    • VerbFlow@lemmy.worldOPM
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      Alright then, here’s what I think about your sources. A lot of these seem like technologies that won’t really help the plain folk. I’m sorry if this is a bit long, but I made sure to put time into this because I find it very important.

      Source 1: I’m not sure if this type of tech, that being neural networks “trained” on previous data, is actually going to help scientists find out what supernovae explosions are like. This is simply a composition of all the explosions the data is trained on. A better process is this designing of an airplane wing. This uses algorithms with vars that actually represent physical variables, like lift and friction, to find the best airplane wing design, instead of feeding a neural network airplane wing designs that work. It ended up performing a bit better than expected because of real-world variables.

      Source 2: The problem this AI is trying to solve is brought on by hospitals purposefully laying off staff. However, I really like this quote.

      The AI, dubbed MyEleanor, isn’t designed to replace human navigators, Moadel-Robblee explained. “She” calls patients who didn’t show up or canceled their colonoscopy appointments. If they pick up, she has two primary directives: transfer them over to a human navigator and, if the patient consents, guide them through a brief survey on why they missed their appointment. “Our virtual navigator, she doesn’t sleep. So she can call earlier, later, or on different days. The navigators that are human are invaluable. They have the human touch. We can’t replace them, but we can supplement,” Moadel-Robblee said.

      I think that this is technically a good thing, but it’s very small compared to the jobs lost from AI.

      Source 3: First off, three people already beat this robot to the punch.

      The first dishwasher to be granted a patent was invented in 1850 by Joel Houghton. It was a wooden box that used a hand-turned wheel to splash water on dirty dishes, and it had scrubbers. Ten years later, inventor L.A. Alexander improved on Houghton’s machine by adding a “geared mechanism that allowed the user to spin racked dishes through a tub of water,” according to an entry on reference website ThoughtCo. But the person we have to thank for the modern-day dishwasher is Josephine Cochran (sometimes spelled Cochrane). Her machine was the first to use water pressure instead of scrubbers to clean dishes—which made it more efficient than Houghton’s or Alexander’s versions.

      After that, the article is almost nothing like you described. The reporter is going off from a promotional video by people clearly trying to bedazzle investors. Then, the article itself states that “[i]t’s unlikely that Figure 01 is using ChatGPT itself”, and ruminates on advancements that would only happen “[s]hould everything in the video work as claimed”. It’s just AI hype.

      Overall, this technology is not “benefiting humanity”. I like how open you are about things, tho.

      Edit: I made sure that my statements were not in accidentally in a quote.

    • ElenaTS@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Isn’t it more relevant to point out, that washing machines are using machine learning algorithms for years?

  • SorteKanin@feddit.dk
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    6 months ago

    I cannot overstate how much I want a robot butler to take my dirty dishes and fill and start my dishwasher for me. Or just wash the dishes “by hand”. It’s not that filling the dishwasher takes a long time, but it’s just boring work.

  • InternetPerson@lemmings.world
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    6 months ago

    TL;DR:
    The misuse of technology in capitalism threatens jobs and financial stability. Affordable robots and AI could either enhance our lives or lead to unemployment and misery. Proposals like an automation tax could fund education or basic income. We need good legislation to ensure technology benefits everyone, not just profits. Recent steps like Europe’s AI act offer a little hope, but a lot more political action is urgently needed.

    Long Version:
    From my perspective, the core of the problem is not the technology, but the reckless way we use it in our capitalistic system. Or let’s say, let it be used.

    For example, a light load robotic industrial arm costs merely 1k to 5k € nowadays. The software for it is cheap as well.
    What the business owners and managers see, is not an awesome new invention which could help to propel humanity into the future of a robotic utopia, but cheap labour force, aiding them to cut jobs in order to maximize their profit margin as human labour is expensive.

    I am sure AI and robots are our future, one way or another, whether we want it or not.
    But I would like to see a future where AI and robots help us to increase our quality of life, instead of making us unemployed and endagering our financial survival.

    There are various ideas how this could be achieved. I don’t intend to go way too in-depth here, so just as an example:
    an automation tax: estimate to which amount a business can be automated and then demand a tax proportional to how much the business was automated. Such a tax could then be used to finance higher education for people or a universal basic income. Maybe at first just an income for those who can’t get a decent job due to automation.

    We had similar developments as those we see now with virtually all technological advances, where human labour was replaced by more and more clever machines. Jobs where lost due to that but it could still be seen as a good thing in general.

    An important difference is the level of required skills though. Someone who’s job it was to go around a street and light gas lanterns every day, extinguishing them some time afterwards, was replaced by electric light grids. A switchboard operator at a telephone company, who connected people manually, got replaced by clever hardware. And so on. Those people didn’t require high skills for their job though. They had it a bit easier to find another one.

    This becomes increasingly difficult as AI and technology in general advances. Recently we see how robots and AI are capabable of tasks where higher skills are necessary. And it’s probable that this trend will incresingly continue. At some point, we will have AI developing new and better AI. An explosion of artificial intelligence can then be expected.

    It’s less a problem as long as people have job prospects in higher skilled work levels. But that will, for a while at least, not be the case. This has different reasons:

    As I see it, we have a “work pyramid”, where the levels of the pyramid represent the required skills and the width of the pyramid levels represent the amount of available jobs. In other words, there is a way higher demand for low skilled work than for high skilled work. (BTW, what I mean by work skill is the level of specialisation and proficiency, often connected to more intense and long training and education.)

    As recent developments in AI now slowly creep into higher and higher levels, people may start investing in their own education in order to even get a job. But higher skilled work is less available making it increasingly tight and problematic to get one.

    There may of course also be an effect observable where new jobs are created by enabling more even higher skilled jobs due to the aid of AI, but I think this has limitations. On the one hand, the amount of jobs created that way might be insufficient. On the other hand, people might not want to or can’t get an education for that.

    The latter needs to be emphasized from my perspective. There are a lot of people who simply don’t want to study for a decade in order to get a PhD in something so that they can get some highly specialised job. Some people like the more simple jobs, those requiring more manual than cognitive labour. And that’s totally fine. People should be happy and like the work they do.

    Currently, not all people even have access to that kind of education. Be it due to limitations in available places at universities / colleges, or due to financial reasons or even due to physical or mental health reasons.

    You may now understand, why I see that we are going to create more misery if we don’t change the way we handle such things.

    I would like to see humanity in that robotic utopia. No one needs to work, as most work is done by AI and robots. But everyone can get a fair share and live a happy life however they would like to live it. They can work, take up some interest and pursue it, but no one needs to.

    But currently, this is probably not going to happen. We need good legislation, need to create a system where advancements in AI and robotics can be made without driving people into financial ruin. We need to set those guarding rails which help to guide us towards such a robotic utopia.

    That’s why I am advocating for putting this topic higher on political priority lists. Politics worldwide don’t have it even set on their agenda. They are missing crucial time frames. And I really hope they’ll wake up from that slumber and start working on it. I’ve got some hope. Europe recently passed their first AI act.
    It’s a start.

    Sincerely,

    A roboticist working in AI and robot research.

    • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      There are roughly two possible outcomes of automation in general:

      • The utopical one is that as the robots, AI and so on, do more and more of the work, people in general get more free time: i.e. the productivity gains of automation are distributed and benefit people in general.
      • The dystopical one is that automation just leads to fewer jobs and more people suffering because they can’t afford a roof over their heads or food on their plates: i.e. the productivity gains of automation are kept by the people who own most assets, including the machines that do the automation, hence most people will just lose their livelihoods

      For all we’ve seen so far, in the current political and economic system we have - were the gains of work (be it automated or not) mainly end in the hands of asset owners (and, remember asset ownership, which is a curve that pretty much follows the wealth one, is incredibly unequal) - we’re well on the dystopia track.

      I don’t think this is at all something that can be solved from the side of Technology, nor do I think that the consequences of natural improvement in automation technology being dystopia are the responsability of the Techies, though I would not at all be surprised if the Techies are, along with other groups (for example, immigrants), be made scapegoats by the people who made automation productivity increases lead to dystopia rather than utopia.

    • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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      6 months ago

      A roboticist working in AI and robot research.

      Thank you for representing your field better than the other guy in this discussion. This gives me some hope that there are folks involved who can see the forest for the trees.

    • LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Yes but the artbro luddites will not read this. They are narcissists who are upset that some kid with a computer in Argentina can now generate anime titties instead of paying $300 for them to draw it and they are fighting the realization of how bullshit their industry was from the get-go

  • Soup@lemmy.cafeM
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    I don’t think I could agree with this more if I tried.

  • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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    Robotics researchers agree but they can’t get it to work yet. Simple tasks as cleaning tables, loading dishwasher and folding laundry have been tried for the last two decades with very limited success. The ones that do succeed are usually tele-operated for a demo.

    • simple@lemm.ee
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      Not to mention if it does happen and it does make it to consumers these robots will be insanely expensive to make and maintain. People going “why doesn’t AI just work on physical labor?!” can’t seem to understand that software is a million times easier and cheaper to make

      It’s not like scientists woke up one day and said DAMN we need to make robots take away fun jobs ans nothing else. It’s just where machine learning took us.

  • randon31415@lemmy.world
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    Does anyone still use scruboards and clotheslines for laundry? What about only using the sink for dishes (that one is a bit more common)? I feel automation already hit the bad things she is talking about.

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      6 months ago

      Scrub boards, no, at least not in developed countries, if people wash by hand then because the fabric is fragile. Clotheslines, very much yes. Probably going to change with condensing wash-dryers becoming more common: Don’t use hot air so you don’t have to worry so much about the fabric, don’t use up additional space.

      The American perspective on that kind of stuff is seriously uncommon, somehow not having a dryer is a sign of poverty but having a detachable shower head and duvet covers is unimaginable luxury.

      • LeFantome@programming.dev
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        6 months ago

        So, you are saying that with a little AI added to her existing appliances, there will be even fewer reasons for manual intervention and more time for her art and writing?

        • barsoap@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          I didn’t say anything about nothing in that comment, at least regarding AI.

          Honestly I think washing machines are smart enough nowadays and I’m basically done doing dishes when I’m done cooking, anyway (what else to do but clean up your mise en place while waiting for things to finish?) so when I start eating there’s literally only the plates and cutlery to wash up which is nothing. It’s not that I can’t afford a dish washer it’s that I plain and simply don’t need one because I don’t have a rowdy 10-head household. Also cooking is art do you hear painters complaining about cleaning their brushes.

          OTOH, seeing it on this kind of “laundry and dish washing” level is ignoring the deeper question, anyway. It’s not about laundry and dish washing, it’s about shit that keeps us from doing what we want. Some 15 years ago or so I read in the economist (practically the only thing I ever read there) that with the then levels of automation tech, we could produce western middle-class living standards with 70% unemployment. Why the fuck do artists need day jobs?

    • howrar@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      They’ve tackled part of the process. You still need to clear the table yourself, get rid of the large solid food scraps and saturated fats, load/empty the dishwasher. You then have things that need scrubbing, or material that can’t handle heat well, and those need to be cleaned manually.

      I have a dishwasher, but find that I rarely use it because the time it saves is negligible compared to manual washing. The only time it’s helpful is after something like a dinner party where there are a lot more dishes than usual so space is the limiting factor.

    • weeeeum@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Yeah I think she could’ve used some better examples for things that aren’t yet automated. Something like taxes, or fighting with your insurance.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      It makes media. And it makes it very quickly and cheaply. Who cares if it’s any good? We can substitute quality for quantity when we no longer have to even pretend to cover cost of living of artists.

      Then, once we no longer need all these surplus humans, we can put AI to its real job. See: Israeli’s Lavender Program

      • masterofn001@lemmy.ca
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        6 months ago

        But it’s got such a nice name! How could that be?!?!

        Curious if they used the name because it’s a common ingredient in soaps.

        You know to do a little ethnic cleansing.

        Or, how you say…genocide.

  • JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    I don’t mind AI being able to do all 4, and humans can use the AI tools to create their own art, or do it without them if they want. But I definitely agree I want manul labour done by robots.

    Side note: has this woman never heard of a dishwasher? Minimal manual labour required.

    • Dave@lemmy.nz
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      6 months ago

      My dishwasher has remote start functionality if I download the app. But what I really need is remote-load functionality.

      • Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de
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        6 months ago

        Honest question: what is the upside of having a remote start functionality on a dishwasher? You have to load the dishwasher before starting, so you need to be at home anyway and it’s not like you have to schedule your dishwasher to finish right when you’re coming home from work or something. I can’t see the benefit.

        • ThyTTY@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          The benefit is that the dishwasher can be labeled as “smart”, be more expensive and can track your activity through the app. Oh, and don’t forget about more points of failure and security issues!

          Sorry for being bitter, I’m in the process of a kitchen upgrade and find I’m frustrated by the options I have

        • Dave@lemmy.nz
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          6 months ago

          The dishwasher came with the house, I didn’t choose it, but I searched it up at the time. Apparently some people will put in the detergent in the morning, and everyone loads their dishes in all day, then you can start it from bed at night so it’s clean in the morning.

          Apparently another benefit of WiFi connectivity is that you can get a notification when it’s done.

          Personally I’ve never connected it as the benefits don’t seem to outweigh the spying.

    • Kaity@leminal.space
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      6 months ago

      There are plenty of places without a dishwasher, I just moved from an apartment that didn’t have one. Hand washing was a very time consuming chore and we only barely escaped the poverty trap so buying one was out of the question, and if we did, it would be a small portable one because it was just an apartment. I’m not adding value for free to the landlord charging double what would have been barely reasonable in a non-enshittified society.

      • PunnyName@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        I would like an AI tool that lets me easily make the art in my mind, skin to how a dishwasher washes dishes. Like, the labor reduction would be a huge boon.

          • trashgirlfriend@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            A large part of creating art is the process though.

            Goes more so for the more physical art forms like traditional painting, sculpting and so on where you have a physical medium that will shape your working process. But even in digital art I feel like you should go through and iterate and let the process shape how the end piece comes out.

            Having a program just like translate your brain impulse into a picture feels kinda hollow… it’s definitely better than image generators but still, there’s a part missing.

            • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              6 months ago

              like 60%

              If you’re going to throw out random/arbitary bars like this we can’t have a serious discussion.

              I didn’t build my cameras. Or write the software. Or construct the lenses. I didn’t do 60% of the work that goes into my shooting video.

              See how arbitrary this all is?

        • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          6 months ago

          Do you know of any decent guides for getting started please? I’ve got a load of cassettes from the 90s that I want to fix, and trying to do it manually is slooooowww 😩

          • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            6 months ago

            What exactly are you trying to do with them? I’d say let me know what you’re currently doing and what you’re trying to achieve. Very happy to help! I actually just finished a pretty huge digitizing project with VHS, DV, and 8mm cassette so this is all very fresh currently lol

            • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              6 months ago

              Sorry, I missed your reply.

              I’m mostly just trying to clean them up. They’re old tapes, so they’ve started to degrade. They have that wavy sort of sound, as if they’re playing back at an uneven speed. They’ve also got random noise in places, so instead of being able to record a sample of noise and remove it from the whole track, I’ve got to do it manually for sections of the recording.

              Apart from the wavy sound it’s all straightforward enough, just time consuming

              • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                Yeah those are pretty complicated issues. Is it all spoken word? I have a few ideas that might be useful and, more importantly, sweeping/not manual lol. And don’t worry about the delay in the reply!

                If you’re comfortable, you could send me a 60s sample that you feel is somewhat representative and I can try one or two things and then show you what I did. There are some pretty amazing automated, straightforward tools that can do a lot in certain situations. Depending on the specifics we may be able to pull off some serious improvements for you.

                • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  6 months ago

                  Thank you :)

                  These are all music. My father was given a lot of demo tapes when he ran a pub, and I’ve ended up with them. I thought it would be a nice project to digitise and restore them, then send a copy to the bands. I won’t be able to send a clip for the next day or two though.

            • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              Sorry, I missed your reply.

              I’m mostly just trying to clean them up. They’re old tapes, so they’ve started to degrade. They have that wavy sort of sound, as if they’re playing back at an uneven speed. They’ve also got random noise in places, so instead of being able to record a sample of noise and remove it from the whole track, I’ve got to do it manually for sections of the recording.

              Apart from the wavy sound it’s all straightforward enough, just time consuming

        • cerement@slrpnk.net
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          6 months ago

          are you using your own knowledge to guide the tool or are you just letting the tool appropriate someone else’s work?

              • bolexforsoup@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                6 months ago

                Yes I do.

                Example: noise removal. Noise removal tools identify unwanted frequencies and remove them while preserving wanted ones. This is not stolen audio work from others. No audio is introduced.

  • Signtist@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    While I’m not exactly a fan of AI, it does make sense that the first things we’re able to replicate with AI, however terribly, are intellectual things like art and writing. While AI might be able to understand how to wash dishes, it would need a way of interacting with the physical dishes to do so, which goes beyond something a computer program can do while confined to a computer.

    I wouldn’t be surprised if future dishwashers and washing machines end up having little cameras and sensors so that AI can determine how best to wash them, but if anything that feature would be implemented more for collecting your private information than for any real washing benefit. Plus you’d still have to load and unload the machines - if we wanted AI to handle everything, we’d need robots, which would be waaaay more expensive, and likely something only the richest would be able to afford anyway.