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Wheatpaste's avatar

Whenever I read these 10x gains (in speed, not quality) or the idea that we will leave the average worker behind, I have to ask why.

What, exactly, is the benefit of making an app or a branded web experience or an e-commerce site, a thousand custom social ads if very few people have jobs left with which to purchase your product or service?

And what is lost when we focus on speed gains? Well, my peace of mind, for one. I can generate a mountain of writing or visuals, but I still need human spans of time to analyze, decide what is useful, and time to try things that don’t ultimately work or meet the needs of the project. The fallacy that I’m saving time using AI means I can’t do the very role you describe: be innovative, be analytical. I just become a reverse-centaur.

The fallacy that AI has hypercharged my productivity (plus the uselessness of merely being faster), has led my firm to lay off wildly talented, innovative people, as well as juniors. They’re chasing the gains their investors are told by articles like this are possible, but they’re doing it by doubling my workload without a clear picture of how I can achieve those gains in our current processes, with the requirements of our projects. I’m the pachinko machine. It’s on me to be the innovator but also I have less than no time to do that. It’s on me to purchase subscriptions if I want to try a new workflow.

The 10x gains are also nearly free today (aside from the terrifying environmental cost) But tomorrow, I expect these companies to turn on the money faucets once they have lock-in after firms fire all their talent.

The only disruption that would really be meaningful to me is one that disrupts the value of the owning class, and puts power back with workers to use AI to seamlessly collaborate while getting their basic administrative needs covered at a reasonable cost. But what even would we do, I wonder, and why? It may be that a disruption that large renders everything from custom apps to advertising to most business software obsolete. How, even with these miraculous 10x gains, would it be worth the effort to make something for a diminishingly small number of users or customers?

In my most hopeful thoughts, it becomes a value restructure where we return to smaller agencies (my small agency was gobbled up and pulverized by a large agency), and more creative, delightful, and heartfelt work, directed by the people who want to make it, and that the people who positioned themselves as extractors of my labor for their own enrichment are the ones who are irrelevant, not me.

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Enrique's avatar

I think this evades one critical aspect on the economy. How will it work if less and less people does not have an income due to lack of jobs (replaced by AI). It could also be interesting to rethink how the AI can add value to a product. As far as I know, machines don´t add value, they add cost, but in the AI scenario, they seem to do both.

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