Comment by andai
9 days ago
Cost of goods and services drops by orders of magnitude at every point in the supply chain.
That being said we already have relative superabundance and we're more miserable than ever, so it's not clear that more of it will cheer us up.
Unemployment rampant. All production remains in the hands of a few. All power (tokens) remains in the hands of a few. Goods are cheaper but no one can buy them. Path to the upper class now guarded closely by tokens, potential avenues for entrepreneurs diminish rapidly. Own an AI or compute, get someone to give you tokens, or live in poverty.
Distribution of abundance in current time is close to evil, America reducing entitlements and support (not expanding). Rampant waste. No reason to think any of this will change.
I'm voting for your future.
This is the kind of commentary that is completely detached from reality: people want housing, people want food, people want gas.
It's not great that we can buy iphones (and AI is going to cause all electronics to be scarce, so much for abundance there)
I'm confused. It seems the parent comment is saying AI proliferation could make cost of goods drop orders of magnitude and you say it's detached from reality because people don't want goods, they want housing food and gas?
Housing food and gas are goods...
Or did you mean something completely different?
Did you try reading their second paragraph? The one where they claim we already have an abundance of said goods?
4 replies →
> Cost of goods and services drops by orders of magnitude at every point in the supply chain.
That sounds great, but how are LLMs supposed to achieve this? You can't just say "AI will make a utopia". You have to present a vision for how it will get us there.
I'm tired of hearing about how AI will solve all the worlds problems. I want to see actual progress towards achieving these goals. And for the most part that hasn't manifested. Most people would consider AI to have had a net negative impact on their lives.
How? The biggest cost of most products comes down to energy cost and the profit margins of each proccess and middleman. Actual labor costs are already a pretty small portion of most products and even if you mine and smelt twice as much material per worker with AI somehow, that is at best a few percentage off the final price. And adding in AI processing isn't going to reduce energy costs or increases wages.