I’m not anti-AI.
I like MRI machines. I like collision avoidance systems in airplanes. I like software that can detect cancer before a doctor can. I like machine vision systems that stop factory workers from getting their hands crushed in hydraulic presses.
That’s what computers are supposed to do.
Cold. Precise. Mechanical.
I don’t need a technology to “express itself.”
The problem started when Silicon Valley decided the machine should paint. The machine should write poetry. The machine should compose symphonies and generate films and imitate the human soul like a skinwalker wearing a beret.
Now every ad, every song, every image online has this faint chemical aftertaste to it. Like the entire culture is being slowly replaced with synthetic substitutes because executives realized audiences consume slop at the same rate they consume art.
And the worst part is they call this “democratizing creativity.”
No. Creativity was already democratized. A guy with a guitar and 3 friends in a garage could make something beautiful. A college kid with a cracked copy of Photoshop could make an album cover that changed someone’s life.
What they actually democratized was content production.
Factories. Throughput. Infinite generation.
A machine can diagnose my low testosterone. Fine.
I just don’t want it writing the eulogy.
The reason why RAM has become four times more expensive is that a huge amount of RAM that has not yet been produced was purchased with non-existent money to be installed in GPUs that also have not yet been produced, in order to place them in data centers that have not yet been built, powered by infrastructure that may never appear, to satisfy demand that does not actually exist and to obtain profit that is mathematically impossible.
@eriniie_@TeamVitalityVAL Faut se controller et ne pas rager sur les fans vita qui ragebait aussi, quel commu de merde on a dans les équipes FR en vrai