@AmesFisher@EinhornGabe No I wouldn't. People say weird sht and turn out to be off all the time. Do you believe we should make everyone famous who says some racist things in private?
@AmesFisher@EinhornGabe Why would I want that drama as a CEO? Maybe if my product needed engagement there is a cynical case for it but normally why would jeopardize my business because I was mad about some rando's opinion.
@FromChicagoland@AustinFranco123 As someone who thinks he should not have been doxxed - that it looks worst for the CEO than OP - this post is right on. From Chicago's post is the right advice for OP to take.
He said in a private communication, right. He didn't use the word hate - he said he doesn't like to work with them. You were recruiting him hard so he did you a favor - I'm a Jew btw. - maybe I got something wrong please correct me.
How is doxing him standing up against it? All you've done is create more anti Jewish sentiment. How did this help the Jews? Yeah he could have kept it to himself, II agree it was rude of him. He could have just said no and left it there but ... doxing , getting into his business... that seems pretty insane to me - thin skinned and it's tone deaf as can be.
It's not reading it's rote.
Rote needs to make a comeback, kids need to learn to be bored for an hour or 2 a day and deal with that feeling. They will finally learn their times tables, be able to read a novel and do long division - guarantee this method works and has for 1000s of years and still works for musicians, athletes and anyone who is very good at something.
It starts waaay before reading novels. You can't start with that. You need to start with them sitting down and doing rote- doesn't matter what - cursive, memorizing dates, multiplying ...
Oh and the academics caused this with their ridiculous 50 year vilification of rote.
I think the academics that guided us away from rote in the last 50 years should be ridiculed. They helped create a real mess. It's one of the ways academia has destroyed itself. There are names and people who caused this and they are feted (in educational circles) to this day and they shouldn't be.
Here is an AI answer that I massaged in order to make a point about rote - the primary reason for the decline:
the "Enjoyment" Trap:
The insistence that kids need to "enjoy learning" at every step has led to curricula that prioritize engagement activities over the rigorous, repetitive practice required for mastery. While engagement is valuable, academics often mistake entertainment for learning.
Ignoring the Foundation:
By rejecting rote learning entirely, schools often skip the automaticity phase. Just as a musician cannot improvise without scales, a student cannot solve complex algebra if they are still counting on their fingers, nor can they comprehend a text if they are still laboriously decoding every word.
Evidence of Failure:
Recent analyses show that states and districts that have returned to phonics-based instruction (which relies heavily on rote decoding practice) and explicit math drills are seeing improvements, while those sticking to purely "conceptual" or "inquiry-based" methods continue to struggle
I know, I pause before I type these types of responses.
You don't want to make it worst but honestly I'm drawn to engage because I want to reflect something right and in terms of some of our conduct - it's not right.
That chinless 24 year old kid CEO should pay a social cost(maybe even economic) for bullying a prospective hire like that.
@Theothercohen@nypost I agree - not sure what we can do. Our brethren are dead set on proving the stereotypes. But I don't get triggered from being disliked for being a Jew. Everyone has the right to an opinion. And our overreaction is lunatic. So insecure and ugly.
In the days of horse-drawn carriages, horses’ hooves often DASHED mud onto passengers in wet weather.
To block the mud, people installed wooden BOARDS up front.
They called them ‘dashboards.’
So, a lot of us have already figured out that we need to go incrementally and read the prompt responses and at least scan the code. As well as set up many guard rails, be wary of missed context and mixed concerns...
But that wasn't what the AI bros said - they said it was best to let it do its thing, speak plain english and it was replacing you anyway. So it's sort of goofy that AWS now comes out with best practices similar to what a lot have been doing but contra the whole point of the LLM.
It diminishes confidence in the technology when the best practices goes from one extreme to the other.
It's obvious now that this was not lab tested tech. That they had something that wow'd with some parlor tricks(ai video, writing composition) and they used that to create this 5 trilion dollar industry.
Of course it's still mind blowing amazing technology. Too good at first glance unfortunately.