wat0n wrote:
If you want to do away with that "culture", be my guest and report back.
Note: AI is not nearly as advanced as you think it is.
You're not getting it -- as soon as someone *turns* to face a machine, to interface with it and get it to do what it does, that person / worker has *become* a machine, so-to-speak, and then we have to ask the crucial question 'To what ends?'
If that someone is a *hobbyist*, like myself (for rendering 3D graphics), and they *own* their own computer / machine, then that's a *privilege* of sorts, societally -- arguably / depending.
If someone is a *technician*, for a *company*, then either they have some vested private interests there, or else they've been effectively *proletarianized*, and are functionally serving the interests of ownership, like any other employee.
AI *is* now as advanced as I think it is.
DALL-E can make us discover what lies outside the frame of famous paintings