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Comment Re:I think it's worse than that (Score 1) 54

The only way to get AI to work on big projects (and by work I mean say 80% of the way), it requires an existing, skilled, experienced programmer. The problem is not writing the code. The problem is writing the right code at the right time in the right place. None of the people attaching their existence to this train understand this. You can tell by how easily impressed they are by LLMs in general (and how they think they represent some form of consciousnessâ"oblivious that it's just math). This is said by someone who uses these things daily as a power tool. Most, sadly, are looking at it as the Second Coming. That will be paid for in terrible, terrible ways. Both for the individuals buying in and those of us at the edges, entangled in whatever bullshit these people release on the world/convince the powers that be that, yet again, the common man needs to be the jugholder for rich people's failed ejaculate.

Comment Won't somebody think of the outages?! (Score 0) 73

It's no coincidence that as AI-driven development has become a thing, more and more critical services and infrastructure have started to have major outages. They know it doesn't work how they say it does and they know that they've already hit the plateau level where increasing compute won't magically improve inference abilities. They'll end up paying far more to beg back the developers they fired thinking they were clever.

Comment How can you tell them? (Score 1) 1

Ironically, the people who will be blindsided are people like this. They don't know what they don't know about this stuff and you can tell the magic of LLMs has entranced these people enough that they can't be reasoned with. It's really hard to watch knowing full well how this ends...

Submission + - Baker McKenzie Law Firm Sacks Hundreds of Employees Amid Pivot to AI (futurism.com)

schwit1 writes: In what might be an augury of how further AI related cuts could sweep other industries, it’s not the lawyers getting the axe, but instead hundreds of their support staff. These include “dozens of roles in London and Belfast,” and hundreds across functions including know-how, research, marketing, and secretarial, according to the reporting.

The cuts, which could affect up to ten percent of its global workforce, or between 600 to 1,000 people, were conducted after the company “undertook a careful review” of its “business professionals functions,” a spokesperson told ROF, with AI explicitly mentioned as a factor in the decision.

The law firm’s reported layoffs come after Anthropic’s new Claude Cowork AI agent sparked a panicked sell off that sent the stock market plunging last week. Investors feared that Claude’s plugin for automating some legal tasks and paperwork could lead to layoffs and outmode the expensive software that legal firms and other white collar organizations use.

Perhaps the fate of Baker McKenzie’s support staff confirms all those worst fears. Or it could be a sign of something else that’s been dominating the discourse in tech and finance circles recently: so-called “AI washing.”

More and more companies are justifying headcount reductions by invoking the tech’s dubious promises, with one report finding that AI was cited in the announcements of more than 54,000 layoffs last year. But critics say that business leaders are simply using AI to justify cuts that were driven by other financial reasons, and point to the fact that many firms don’t have serious AI replacements lined up to make up for the shortfall.

Comment Re:What are you afraid of? (Score 1) 288

That Trump will end up winning and based on the attacks that have been levied against him so far and his ability to circumvent them. That his potential for success, if this is taken to court, is a non-zero possibility. Deep down, there's a store of fear boiling that reflects the social shaming that will occur if that comes true. The over-the-top reactions and threats that people in their camp are raising (AOC and Jake Tapper are the more popular examples) are tremors of the mass, Jungian psychic death that could occur if it's realized that they were completely, entirely wrong. Drones programmed by the television lulled to sleep to prop up a world that takes complete and utter advantage of their existence.

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