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The AI Backlash Could Get Very Ugly. Imagine what happens if jobs actually start disappearing.
(www.theatlantic.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Yeah - there's a fairly significant game of The Emperor's New Clothes going on, as the new set of impossibly wealthy assholes insist on pretending they're not impossibly wealthy assholes and instead try to force society into accommodating them, apparently entirely unaware of the simple fact that all they're doing is hastening the demise of the civilization that birthed them and on which they're little more than grossly destructive parasites.
And that's not an opinion - either mine or anyone else's. It's a simple fact that's been borne out by history over and over throughout the ages, and will be again, no matter how many comforting lies people tell themselves and each other.
I just don't get the lack of vision, these massive data centers are just such incredible wastes you have to be so deluded to think they are a good idea at this point in time, but here we go, these guys are all in on them. I hope it leads to their downfall since no one but them really wants them no matter how many emerging markets they get hooked on using their slop machines. Time will tell though.
The thing with the data centers is that the goal is entirely different from anything we've been told.
The key is that Google is implementing a system that allows people to get the information they're after directly from them rather than clicking theough to a website. That's undermining ad revenue, which not only threatens the existence of the websites but threatens Google's existing ad-based business model.
So it can only be the case that they're pivoting to a new business model.
And the key to that is the data centers.
Their goal, I grow more certain nearly every day, is to effectively privatize the internet by driving independent sites out of business, so that they (and their handful of more or less equally wealthy and powerful competitors) become the only source for all of that data they've already stolen.
That seems like a goal for like, 10 or 15 years ago but nowadays apps have pretty much destroyed it anyways, although I suppose one could see the attractiveness of an all knowing information portal, to me half of the fun was always the research and digging in and finding things because you come up with happy accidents and surprises along the way, when everything is curated or there are strict rules in places, the quality of the content suffers enormously and originality and unique ideas die.