• Funkytom467@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    edit-2
    9 months ago

    That’s a pretty valid point of view. You’re right on the fact most are corruptible by power, so i personally wouldn’t blame individuals, i only blame the system.

    And it’s true the better systems didn’t last… Doesn’t mean we can’t try to improve ever so slightly.

    Now i’m not sure how much we can learn from history though.

    The problem is that our paradigm is changing much too fast alongside our technology.

    So i think we can’t really predict what the gamble of technology will give us next.

    Might be bad, might be good, or something just different, but i bet we will be extremely surprised by how fast change will come.

    • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      0
      ·
      9 months ago

      I don’t see how tech will change anything? It’s just a tool, it doesn’t alter US.

      And yes, of course, we sure can and should try to better the world. Yet it should be globally clear at this point, that capital is deciding and not us. One musk might change the world. But none of those extreme moneybags will ever change it for the better. And no working-class joe will ever have the chance to change anything other than in his utopia-vision. Doesn’t mean the vision isn’t valid. Just futile.

      • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        0
        ·
        edit-2
        9 months ago

        You don’t see how tech is the only reason for the world changing like it does recently?

        Internet and digital tech for exemple, is what made Google, Amazon or Facebook…

        Their capital didn’t came from just the guys running things, pretty far from it. Without them their company would still exist, just with a different name and guy at the top, they would give the same service.

        What created those company and the capital is what was invented and developed by programmers and scientists.

        And only profit is driving it, not any one person.

        Today what is changing things repeatedly is digital techniques like AI.

        And let’s be honest gafa aren’t the one chosing to invest, they just know if it’s not them the opportunity to make billions will be to someone else, it’s just reality of technical advancement.

        And that’s what changed our society, always has been. Same could be said about coal, electricity and petrol, cars…

        The market just follows the flow of technology, and the problem is that it doesn’t care for people in the process, you just can’t miss an opportunity.

        P.S. I’d also argue it change a lot about US in some sens, it changed our vision of the world, our culture and our way to interact.

        • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
          link
          fedilink
          arrow-up
          0
          ·
          edit-2
          9 months ago

          I think you overvalue tech. At least in regard to the topic. Sure, it lays new paths. And in the case of the Internet it were gargantuan changes (i witnessed it all and loved it). But it didn’t and doesn’t change the nature of man itself. It just makes it easier and offers new ways and tools.

          Also AI won’t change that much. It’s not even intelligent. It’s “just” a titanic amount of data with no conscience or intelligence. AI is just a great buzzword. Sure it’s awesome and will change a lot in the tech-industry, but it’s no game-changer for capitalism or us.

          • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            arrow-up
            0
            ·
            edit-2
            9 months ago

            Sure it doesn’t change our nature. But i don’t think our nature is the only factor in how our society evolve. It’s not the only thing that matters to us anymore, i wouldn’t be able to talk to you let alone read (i haves glasses). Most of the things we do aren’t natural.

            Now sure AI isn’t really intelligent let alone conscious. But it is such a tool that impacted a lot industry and our daily lives. Writing or art, gaming, programming, all changed to some extent. And it seems to still have a long way to go.

            Now of course it will not change that much on its own, but in the future alongside with everything else we’re going to invent, i think it will make things change, like previous invention made our modern society.

            • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
              link
              fedilink
              arrow-up
              0
              ·
              9 months ago

              i wouldn’t be able to talk to you let alone read (i haves glasses). Most of the things we do aren’t natural

              But wasn’t this exactly my previous point? It’s “just” new tools and ways. I’m not more or less good/evil because i can read/communicate with you. I just can now. Back then i couldn’t have. Sure, all the new tech brought up even more worse shit of us, but WE are still the defining factor, not our tools.

              Yeah sure, didn’t mean to devalue the importance of the changes “AI” (i hate that word) brings and will bring. As a mega nerd i actually effing love the f out of it. We could also be proud to be part of it. Coming generations just “have it”. And i already am a lucky fucker to have been part in the creation of the internet and the rise of global communication, the smartphone, the smart home… And now AI.

              • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
                link
                fedilink
                arrow-up
                0
                ·
                edit-2
                9 months ago

                I mean, don’t you think the use of our tools can shape who you are as a person? It changes our experience of the world, our knowledge, it’s definitely a part of our construction as individuals.

                I said and done things i wouldn’t have if it wasn’t for some stranger on the internet changing mind on something.

                All the things i learned thanks to the internet definitely made me a better person overall. And it definitely could make you a bad person too.

                And yes i wasn’t quite there before the internet but as a science nerd i’m so impressed by how far we’ve got, from the logic and punch cards to internet now. Reducing the size of transistors to nanometer was a crazy journey. There’s definitely reasons to be proud.

                And i’m really looking forward what AI can do, the latest videos of two minute papers on sora just made my mind blown.

                • Dyskolos@lemmy.zip
                  link
                  fedilink
                  arrow-up
                  0
                  ·
                  9 months ago

                  But just because you dare to say things on a new medium doesn’t mean it changed you. It just allowed you to do what you usually wouldn’t, but would’ve wanted to. Or did it change you? And all you have learned changed you, sure. But you could’ve also done it with books. Or by teachers. Or however else. The internet just made it quicker and easier. YOU choosing to learn something changed you.

                  Yes, totally. I came a bit after the punch-cards, but still early enough to bask in all the glory of technologies advancements. I still get a nerd-boner when I see that my WATCH is a million times faster with a million times more RAM than my first super expensive home-computer. In times where I said things like “what do i need a 10mb-harddrive for?! i could never fill such a thing!”.

                  Aye, AI has blown my mind very often so far. Although for coding it grew dissapointing exponentionally :-) Started like “WOW”, and failing to deliver after dozens of tries of perfectly formulating a pin-point-precision-question. But still. Super amazing!

                  • Funkytom467@lemmy.world
                    link
                    fedilink
                    arrow-up
                    0
                    ·
                    9 months ago

                    I think it did change me yes, it made me grow in a way i wouldn’t otherwise. Helped me with my emotions and empathy in a way i wouldn’t have found around me.

                    And that’s the thing, making communication or information easier to get also forces you into discovery. Laziness, at least in that regard, is well anchored in our nature too. I could have learn though books or teachers, but there’s plenty i’m pretty sure i wouldn’t have.

                    An ironic example is programming, if i only had the programming course i’ve had in the first year of college i probably wouldn’t have learned much, it was boring as hell. But i learned programming by myself the summer before, with a c++ tutorial and the intent on creating 2d games. And that was extremely fun for me, to the point i took more courses on the topic later on for my own studies in maths.

                    Yeah i really can’t bring myself to understand what it was like back when drive where 10mb or less. Any software now is so much bigger it’s crazy. Latest thing i remember is downloading film with torrent and how slow that was. I’m pretty sure my 4G is faster almost in the same order of magnitude.