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Comments
Ahh tru dat. I keep getting blindsided by accountants, lawyers, CEOs, doctors etc. I am my own kind of idiot.
Sure you do, you're a clever guy no doubt. And you spit your coffee when admins joke, hilarious! (now I'm joking).
I did a comment within parentheses no less, about the energy consumption Bitcoin consumes and therefor I need a lecture in other things that consumes energy - I did spit my coffee but not with laughter. Let's leave it, if you don't mind.
All those remarks weren't directed at your brief remark but at stuff that has come up in the thread more generally; sorry if it seemed otherwise to you. If that was not apparent I imagine the fault is mostly mine.
"Let's leave it"
No problem; get a towel and wipe up your coffee and things will be better in the morning.
BTW I don't think your original remark was wrong. It is factually correct and unimpeachable as far as I can tell.
Thats the funniest internet post I’ve read in years!
Thanks for that! It was strangely comforting.
Very nicely done.
I am in awe.
Personally - i realise of course that your reply wasn’t just referring to myself but to others who have commented as well - i don’t use generative apps like Piano Motifs or Logic’s Session Drummer because such things don’t sit well with me as they just feel like cheating to me.
I’m not going to pretend that i don’t use AI at all though - that would be disingenuous and i guess that makes me a hypocrite if you want to take a hardline ‘if you believe one thing, you have to subscribe to your belief absolutely otherwise it has no validity’ approach? I don’t use generative AI, but i have used machine learning within graphics apps to help to quickly select an object or to enlarge images without degradation. There must be countless software features which involve some sort of machine learning without me realizing it. AI can be very helpful, of course it can, but i just think there are huge potential downsides coming along the road and on balance I’m not sure the benefits will outweigh the negatives in the long run.
I do use drum machine and synth apps and also sample based machines but i simply don’t agree that they are akin to AI such that if you criticize one you should therefore logically criticize the others too. Drum machines/synths/samplers are very like traditional instruments in a sense: if you touch them in the right way they’ll make a musical sound. I think that is fundamentally different from simply asking for a finished track or clip to be generated for you by AI. Plus, AI encompasses and will affect most areas of life in a way that drum machines don’t!
It’s funny that you pulled me up by saying that i should ‘make sure they said it first’. If you’d read my posts here, you would realise that I’ve not been saying how AI lacks the human touch and therefore dismissing it. It may currently lack the human touch in its results but I have consistently been banging on in my posts that people should not judge it, and the threats it poses, based on its current abilities but rather should be considering what happens if/when it really can flawlessly mimic the human touch (in this example).
Of course the worst flaws of AI exist because it’s been created by human beings, how could it be anything else?
Your last sentence sums it all up nicely. A.I. was created by people, so it's only natural that these systems will exhibits characteristics which we might ascribe as "almost human."
Humm ... more and more AI is being used in AI development. As the human element fades could it not diverge from that "imperfection"? Could it not all spin away from us? Or, if we're imperfect by nature, would that mean it would become less and less like us? Or is success defined as perfectly recreating those imperfections? In that case, it certainly could succeed.
Those are mostly a flippant thoughts, but ... I confess this has got me thinking.
^ post of the day! 😂
Score
What will all this will look like in 250 years?
Well, the achievement of artificial general intelligence if it ever happens would suggest that the software could come to its own conclusions and then only it will be able to define what success is and what to do about human flaws - both its and ours!
Fiction is often a very good barometer. I recently re-read Orwell's 1984; it kicks you in the teeth.
"While he is waiting for Julia, he recognizes a song that a prole woman below the window is singing, which is a popular song written by the versificator, which is a machine that writes songs with no human input." -George Orwell Nineteen Eighty Four (1949)
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Maybe trying to make AI more human is the worst possible mistake.
Turing 2.0 comes for me when AI murders someone for its own gain if that is ever possible.
Or just wait for the Dune Messiah movie, coming to theaters in 2026.
Machine learning systems don't independently "feed" themselves with sounds, images and information. They rely on people, who are all flawed and have individual preferences and biases, to train them.
And I still don't see any validity to this "horrible for the environment" claim. If anything, these systems reduce pollution by leapfrogging real-world human activity which would be required to gather the equivalent amount of information and result in an identical amount of productivity. For example, movie (or TV productions) which involve hundreds or thousands of individuals, transportation, energy, waste production, etc. are essentially being eliminated now that generative video exists.
I just stumbled into this article via Google News. Talks about AI systems being fed with their own output as it happens.
https://www.theregister.com/2025/05/27/opinion_column_ai_model_collapse/
Link to UNEP article on the environmental impacts of AI.
https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/story/ai-has-environmental-problem-heres-what-world-can-do-about
I don't think it's at all safe to assume that will always be the case, or even that it's the case for unknown actors right now. There is no technological barrier to cross and no legal barriers yet either. The only supposed limits are non-compulsory adherence to common sense practices, and those are wildly subjective.
Did a little research.
The UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2024 (UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2024) notes that global emissions, including China's, are not on track to meet the Paris Agreement's 1.5°C target, with projections suggesting a temperature rise of 2.6-3.1°C if current policies persist. Additionally, reports of illegal trade in ODS, such as HCFC-22 seizures in 2023, indicate enforcement issues, with actions like fines and confiscations documented (China Ozone Profile).
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The two largest polluting countries on earth are China and India. And believe you me that neither of them will give up their best attempts to gain preeminence in AI to satisfy UNEP recommendations. Just looking at the issue with a sense of reality with regard to what’s at stake.
Simplifying things a bit for the sake of discussion, you can have full employment, little reduction in pollution and energy consumption or you can have less employment, less human activity and reduced energy consumption. You cannot have human activity and not have pollution. Both are permanently linked.
I’ll take the future where things can be managed and I have no illusion that the entire planet is going to die if there are more computer servers and fewer Hollywood productions.
I don't know if you're from the US or not, but the two largest polluting countries (China and India) don't follow the recommendation of this UN group. That should mean something to you.