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"Technology reveals the active relation of man to nature" - Karl Marx
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Not reporting is bourgeois


File: 1755139966457.png (8.38 KB, 389x129, ClipboardImage.png)

 

The other thread hit bump limit and I'm addicted to talking about the birth of the ̶a̶l̶l̶-̶k̶n̶o̶w̶i̶n̶g̶ ̶c̶o̶m̶p̶u̶t̶e̶r̶ ̶g̶o̶d̶ the biggest financial bubble in history and the coming jobless eschaton, post your AI news here

Previous thread: >>27559
143 posts and 14 image replies omitted.

>>31164
Anubis is not meant to stop it, just to rate-limit it. Scrapers used to clearly identify themselves or at least come from a single source, so you could rate limit them after they misbehaved. But these AI scrapers do not identify themselves as such and come from a wide range of innocuous sources, which makes it impossible to rate limit them with the traditional tools. That's why Anubis does the limiting upfront. Every time the scraper changes its identity (user-agent or IP address or whatever), it will have to solve Anubis, slowing it down.

>>31170
why even complain? this means more jobs for you professionals

>>31167
It's an interesting contrast between the effectiveness of AI which seems to be a -20% productivity improvement, and the projections of task completion. Though crucially this is for experienced developers in codebases they're familiar with and who however, are not familiar with LLMs. One is mostly tempted to reject this study.

>>31170
The monopoly is just in the IP no? LLM haven't yet wiped that out; though ideally would do.

>>31165
>>31175
METR's metrics of AI exponential improvement in human labor hours automated at 50% accuracy by AI [^1].
METR's metrics on programming tasks failing to increase productivity for experienced programmers with no LLM experience in repositories they're deeply familiar with [^2].
A Stanford study documenting some of the decline in the job market of entry-level positions exposed to artificial intellegence [^3].

:[^1] https://metr.org/blog/2025-03-19-measuring-ai-ability-to-complete-long-tasks/
:[^2] https://metr.org/blog/2025-07-10-early-2025-ai-experienced-os-dev-study/
:[^3] https://digitaleconomy.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Canaries_BrynjolfssonChandarChen.pdf

>>31174
i think IT professionals have mostly made their living within this little speculatory tech bubble that formed with the release of the iphone and opened tons of new avenues for profit, that is, if you're like 30 and a programmer, all your existence in the job market has been in this little comfy boom of healthy tech investment. so c-suites are not hiring now despite tons of investment because LLMs are nominally meant to reduce head count, that's what's different today. when LLMs burst there's going to be 0 capex, c'est fini.

>>31176
>programmers with no LLM experience
Look at the acceptance rates here: https://github.blog/news-insights/research/the-economic-impact-of-the-ai-powered-developer-lifecycle-and-lessons-from-github-copilot/
Six months of using Copilot makes you go from around 28% to 34%. That's barely anything and even then it's not clear if it is due to better use or just getting bored of having to review Copilot's code. Tellingly inexperienced developers are more likely to accept what Copilot generated for them… I'm sure it's not because they have lower standards…

>>31179
Interesting, does the volume scale also, or just the acceptance rate? A remaining plausible variable is the contrast between greenfield development, and maintenance (for experienced programmers). And of course none negate the exponential growth in ability to solve problems in terms of labor power at 50% accuracy, or the decline of 20% in entry-level employment.

I'm not even sure if reported speed-ups are just because of LLM autocomplete or because higher-ups are using LLM as a cudgel to pressure their employees into delivering more, faster and shittier, if you're employed you probably are feeling the pressure. There's a very odd thing happening in silicon valley, and that's that the AI revolution is incensing an old silicon valley-brand stakhanovism, at some point we will have to come to terms with AI making our lives miserable in the exact opposite way that it was purported it was going to do, it's going to make us work a lot more for less, at least for the next two years.

>>31181
Could see there being an anticipatory crunch (paired with lower quality output)… And then a longer following crunch… (with profound changes to society)

>>31181
that's what's happening where I work, big boss man was like "no of course we won't mandate using AI tools but we expect everyone to be 50% more productive because of them"

Knowledge work seems dead within fifteen according to conservative estimates. Gommunism inevitable.

>>31193
Anyone have AI plans, not sure what to do for work now. Minor role as a "family employee" is what seems plausible at the moment, trying to sneek into a programming gig at dusk didn't seem to be working.

>>31194
Other alternative is try to start a tiny programming business of some sort.

>>31193
that's never happening, not with this shit

At risk of starting a fight, why does Deepseek chug balls?

I'll give it this, it's definitely more human like than ChatGPT. It perfectly emulates talking to another human being, where you ask a question and they respond by talking around the topic and/or answering a different question that they would have preferred you'd asked. We've invented true artificial stupidity, and I don't know why people are so impressed with it.


>>31206
why do they force it if everyone hates it

>>31201
>why does Deepseek chug balls?
I dunno you tell me, it's not like you explained why you think this in your post lol

>>31207
>Why do the [masters] force the [early power loom] if [many] hate it.

>>31209
bait used to be believable

>>31211
I mean why is it bad vs ChatGPT or whatever

>>31201
Tried kimi yet? It's considerably more direct than deepseek.

LLMs aren't that impressive of a concept really, it's just the final form of search engines before the web inevitably goes back to surf-ability oriented design. If you come at it like that it's not that bad. It'll never be like the Sci-fi AIs if that's the koolaid you bought.


>>31214
It's nothing like search engines. I'm starting to think that most people never actually had to search for anything or they would not make this obviously retarded comparison.

>>31220
It's becoming truly human…

>>31176
>https://metr.org/blog/2025-03-19-measuring-ai-ability-to-complete-long-tasks/
This is a 1024 fold improvement in power (task labor time at 50% accuracy) in five years roughly no?


>>31229
One of the earliest if not first

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>>31228
these numbers are meaningless to me, they simply do not match the reality of SWE jobs.

>>31236
As in you don't think it can do a two hour task with fifty percent reliability? Or a twenty minute task with eighty percent reliability?

>>31237
I dont think they can meaningfully do any sort of detailed requirements without sort of whiffing it and getting it wrong, these sort of tests work because they lack precise requirements, so they can spend two hours making a saas dashboard that is functionally useless, but is still technically a finished product.

>>31238 (me)
how does amazon or whatever work around these sort of limitations is that they make a suite of tests that attempt to translate business requirements into a means for the AI to "check its work" but this is just a roundabout way of working, to the point where it gets rather absurd to work this way. if you need detailed prompts, break down problems into discrete tests, and handhold your AI into outputting what you expect, then it stands to reason that this technology is not saving you time, you're doing the same work in a roundabout way, because most senior roles aren't even vomitting code all that much.

>>31237
>>31238
I don't want to spam this thread anymore, but the issues SWE-benchmark are sourced from that feed the metr study are all sort of like this: https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/issues/13314

That is, they have a clearly defined problem statement, with a very straightforward acceptance criteria, and instructions for how to repro. The repo itself has great test coverage too, so the machine can know if it's fucking something up by just running the tests, most SWE is just not like this, not in my experience, maybe some of you have worked with amazing QAs, I dunno.

Me trying to find that $5 💵 in my backpack while at the cash register when there's other customers behind me

They're cramming AI into the Minecraft website so kids can find out how much agentic AI sucks as fast as possible, Microsoft business strategists, I bow

>>31237
Is it considered a success when it introduces new security vulnerabilities?

>>31244
lmao why the fuck would you do research grade software depending on multiple nobel prize winning serious scientists carefully written scientist code on anything other than a VM not on other people's servers that can be nuked if it goes wrong, or better on a cluster of airgapped compute

rotflmao, unless you're asian, then it's fine; get the compute do the paper audit properly; black people also good, wypipo messy coders, western education shit

American Communist Party is teaching American People how to use tape measures
This is bad for science and technology, just saying

>>31245
is this about the king's college data loss? did you fuck up the thread

>>31231
My expectations are so low now that I would have been impressed by the answer "The letter R has one third of a strawberry".

Very interesting article on the economics of GenAI and how much of a delicate balancing act it'd take to make it a profitable industry.
I've long observed various problems like "more users means more costs and it isn't always a good thing for them", but this one is more detailed.

https://gauthierroussilhe.com/en/articles/how-to-use-computing-power-faster


A.I. Valuations Reach La La Land
https://www.moonofalabama.org/2025/09/ai-valuations-reach-la-la-land-1.html

About the $300B openai/oracle deal

>>31304
Do you think Sam Altman will be jailed when people finally find out he's a scammer?

>>31305
Depends on how much of other rich people's money he took and lost, like the silicon valley bank guy.

This interview with Sam Altman feels like something out of the Robocop universe.

>>31308
Please, God, let me live to see Altman and all his ilk get everything that's coming to them. Amen.

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>>31308
lol the power of asking even basic follow up questions
hilarious that it takes Tucker to do it, absolute state of US media

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>>31308
>4:30
>I feel his family should be shown more respect than I feel here
>I'm asking you at the behest of his family
holy fucking shit lmao


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