Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
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Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
Amazon's Mechanical Turk was, at least, open about it being humans doing the work
not that it makes it right or anything
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Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
It really is a kind of fraud, yes. One wonders how long shareholders will keep falling for this kind of trickery.
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Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
Automation and industrialisation could always have been about making people work less.
It has been about "let's give this job to someone else and pay them less" more often than not. It has been the main direction it went, pretty much since the first Industrial Revolution.
Back then it led to workers' rights movement and that, in time, shifted things for the better, despite incredible levels of pushback.
Maybe it's time for another, bigger shift.
The irony here is that regular people were able to withstand a lot of exploitation, but the rich and powerful just kept pushing, and pushing, and pushing.
History repeats itself. Hope the bloodier parts of it do not repeat themselves, but at this point I do not see it going any other way.
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Automation and industrialisation could always have been about making people work less.
It has been about "let's give this job to someone else and pay them less" more often than not. It has been the main direction it went, pretty much since the first Industrial Revolution.
Back then it led to workers' rights movement and that, in time, shifted things for the better, despite incredible levels of pushback.
Maybe it's time for another, bigger shift.
The irony here is that regular people were able to withstand a lot of exploitation, but the rich and powerful just kept pushing, and pushing, and pushing.
History repeats itself. Hope the bloodier parts of it do not repeat themselves, but at this point I do not see it going any other way.
Say what you will about old-timey industrialists, but as some points they realised they couldn't win and relented, even a little, before things could escalate even worse.
I think the rich of today are incapable of that. I am getting more "just before the French Revolution" vibes than "Gilded Age monopolies" vibes.
Again, I dearly hope I am wrong. It will not just be the rich who will suffer, if we're living in the days before French Revolution Two: Now It's Global.
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Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
@futurebird
I always thought it was odd a company named for a dwindling rainforest called its products 'kindle' and 'fire' and now they feel very torment nexus on the nose. -
Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
AI: Absent Indians
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Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
The representative from Remote was, anxious to get them into a cab and to the hotel.
"We apologize for the software issue."
RemoteMaid said the property damage was due to "a bad software update." Paul could not shake the feeling that it looked like the work of a person.
Every toy in the nursery smashed, all food in the pantry crushed, clothes shredded. The scissors still rested on the dresser.
But, then he was being hurried away, as if they didn't want him to look too closely. #soon
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The representative from Remote was, anxious to get them into a cab and to the hotel.
"We apologize for the software issue."
RemoteMaid said the property damage was due to "a bad software update." Paul could not shake the feeling that it looked like the work of a person.
Every toy in the nursery smashed, all food in the pantry crushed, clothes shredded. The scissors still rested on the dresser.
But, then he was being hurried away, as if they didn't want him to look too closely. #soon
@futurebird got a link to the article you're quoting? Curious to read it…
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@futurebird got a link to the article you're quoting? Curious to read it…
I'm riffing on fiction which is a bad habit I have. Just trying to imagine where this will all lead. Apologies for not making that clear.
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Amazon was thought it was cute to call their webservices "the mechanical Turk" after the fraudulent chess-playing robot with a person inside.
But these revelations about Waymo, and also Amazon shops... the fact they they hide and must be forced to admit "what we claimed was software is just people" isn't cute at all.
@futurebird
More & more it’s seeming like ‘AI’ is basically an abstraction-layer insulting companies from labour exploitation and accountabaility.
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