this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2025
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[–] very_well_lost@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

This has sadly been the norm in the tech industry for at least a decade now. The whole eco-system had become so accustomed to quick injections of investment cash, that products/businesses no longer grow organically but instead hit the scene in one huge developing and marketing blitz.

Consider companies like Uber or AirBnB. Their goal was never to make a safe, stable, or even legal product. Their goal was always to be first. Command the largest user base possible in the shortest time possible, then worry about all the details later. Both of those products have had disastrous effects on existing businesses and communities while operating in anti-competetive ways and flaunting existing laws, but so what? They're popular! Tens of millions of people already use them, and by the time government regulation catches up with that they're doing it's already too late. What politician would be brave enough to try and ban a company like Uber? What regulator still has enough power to reign in a company the size of AirBnB?

OpenAI is playing the same game. They don't care if their product is safe — hell, they don't even really care if it's useful, or profitable. They just want to be ubiquitous, because once they achieve that, the rest doesn't matter.