Comment by _ttg

3 months ago

I want to sympathize but enforcing a moral blockade on the "vast majority" of inbound inquiries is a self-inflicted wound, not a business failure. This guy is hardly a victim when the bottleneck is explicitly his own refusal to adapt.

Survival is easy if you just sell out.

  • It's unfair to place all the blame on the individual.

    By that metric, everyone in the USA is responsible for the atrocities the USA war industry has inflicted all over the world. Everyone pays taxes funding Israel, previously the war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam, etc.

    But no one believes this because sometimes you just have to do what you have to do, and one of those things is pay your taxes.

    • >unfair to place all the blame on the individual.

      I'm mostly blaming the rich.

      >everyone in the USA is responsible for the atrocities the USA war industry has inflicted all over the world.

      Yeah we kind of are. So many chances to learn and push to reverse policy. Yet look how we voted.

      >sometimes you just have to do what you have to do, and one of those things is pay your taxes.

      If it's between being homeless and joining ICE... I'd rather inflict the pain on myself than others. There are stances I will take, even of AI isn't the "line" for me personally. (But in not gonna optimize my portfolio towards that either).

      >

    • It's unfair to place all the blame on an individual, not on the individual. Each individual is responsible for their share of the blame.

    • >By that metric, everyone in the USA is responsible for the atrocities the USA war industry has inflicted all over the world. Everyone pays taxes funding Israel, previously the war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam, etc.

      I mean, the Iraq War polled very well. Bush even won an election because of it, which allowed it to continue. Insofar as they have a semblance of democracy, yes, Americans are responsible. (And if their government is pathological, they're responsible for not stopping it.)

      >But no one believes this because sometimes you just have to do what you have to do, and one of those things is pay your taxes.

      Two things. One, you don't have to pay taxes if you're rich. Two, tax protests are definitely a thing. You actually don't have to pay them. If enough people coordinated this, maybe we'd get somewhere.

    • Honestly yeah. You are complicit and it is your fault. Either donate significant amounts, protest, or move.

  • Selling out is easy when your children have no food.

    • Bingo. Moral grandstanding only works during the boom, not the come down. And despite being as big an idealist as they come, sometimes you just gotta do what you gotta do. You can crusade, but you're just making your future self more miserable trying to pretend that you are more important than you think. Not surprising in an era of unbridled narcissism, but hey, that's where we are. People who have nothing to lose fail to understand this, whereas if you have a family, you don't have time for drum circles and bullshit: you've got mouths to feed.

      1 reply →

Surely there's AI usage that's not morally reprehensible.

Models that are trained only on public domain material. For value add usage, not simply marketing or gamification gimmicks...

  • How many models are only trained on legal[0] data? Adobe's Firefly model is one commercial model I can think of.

    [0] I think the data can be licensed, and not just public domain; e.g. if the creators are suitably compensated for their data to be ingested

I wonder if there is a pivot where they get to keep going but still avoid AI. There must be for a small consultancy.

> "a self-inflicted wound"

"AI products" that are being built today are amoral, even by capitalism's standards, let alone by good business or environmental standards. Accepting a job to build another LLM-selling product would be soul-crushing to me, and I would consider it as participating in propping up a bubble economy.

Taking a stance against it is a perfectly valid thing to do, and the author is not saying they're a victim due to no doing of their own by disclosing it plainly. By not seeing past that caveat and missing the whole point of the article, you've successfully averted your eyes from another thing that is unfolding right in front of us: majority of American GDP is AI this or that, and majority of it has no real substance behind it.

  • I too think AI is a bubble, and besides the way this recklessness could crash the US economy, there's many other points of criticism to what and how AI is being developed.

    But I also understand this is a design and web development company. They're not refusing contracts to build AI that will take people's jobs, or violate copyright, or be used in weapons. They're refusing product marketing contracts; advertising websites, essentially.

    This is similar to a bakery next to the OpenAI offices refusing to bake cakes for them. I'll respect the decision, sure, but it very much is an inconsequential self-inflicted wound. It's more amoral to fully pay your federal taxes if you live in the USA for example, considering a good chunk are ultimately used for war, the CIA, NSA, etc, but nobody judges an average US-resident for paying them.

    • >They're not refusing contracts to build AI that will take people's jobs, or violate copyright, or be used in weapons.

      They very well might be. Websites can be made to promote a variety of activity.

      >This is similar to a bakery next to the OpenAI offices refusing to bake cakes for them

      That's not what "marketing" is. This is OpenAI coming to your firm and saying "I need you to make a poster saying AI is the best thing since Jesus Christ". That very much will reflect on you and the industry at large as you create something you don't believe in.

      2 replies →