• IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    I do industrial automation for a living, and I just want to point out that automating things that exist purely in the digital domain is far easier than automating things like ship breaking.

    • TruthAintEasy@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      Cant imagine how it even could be automated without advanced robotics. Those ships are freakin HUGE! Maybe a collection of robotic snakes with cutting lazers attached to their heads and some little scuttle bots to pick up the pieces the snakes knock off? Just cut the whole thing into 1’ disks or maybe hexagons is better

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Maybe a collection of robotic snakes with cutting lazers attached to their heads

      • Riskable@programming.dev
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        9 months ago

        It can be automated it would just never be worth the cost. Every ship is different and has its own requirements.

        If they were all 100% exactly the same, using the same hardware in all the same places then it would be cost effective to automate their disassembly. Otherwise every single ship is a one-off edge case.

        Even if they’re mostly the same many will have had upgrades, repairs, and changes over time that could literally throw a wrench (that someone accidentally left inside an interior area) into the whole (automated) operation.

        I think the best case scenario is to enforce shipbuilding standards and deny ships entry if they don’t follow them (for loading/unloading, anyway). Then you setup standardized dry docks with robotic arms that are already preprogrammed to disassemble these standard vessels. They may need human guidance for some areas that are allowed to be non-conforming but as long as the majority of the ship adheres to the standard it’d make the whole process much smoother and more environmentally friendly.

        From an environmental standpoint the real issues from these vessels isn’t even the difficulty of (environmentally friendly) disassembly. It’s their emissions over their working lifetime and super toxic things like anti-fouling coatings that where we have no good way to remove or dispose of them. Like, even if you rip off the outside of a ship what do you do with that toxic waste? It’s nasty stuff.

    • ALostInquirer@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      […] I just want to point out that automating things that exist purely in the digital domain is far easier than automating things like ship breaking.

      Not that you’re saying otherwise, however isn’t that even more of a reason more developers and resources should be allocated toward automating complex and risky physical processes?

      • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        Honestly, I don’t see how you would do it without general AI, which is something that will be solved in the digital domain first anyway.

        • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Eh, it could be done with non-general AI. There are a finite number of different types of things to handle, so as long as it’s not thrown off by some bent steel or some missing consoles, I’d be amazed if they couldn’t automate at least specific ship designs.

          • epyon22@programming.dev
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            9 months ago

            They still manually build ships right now what makes you think they could automate taking one apart

            • Riskable@programming.dev
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              9 months ago

              Firstly, much of shipbuilding is automated. They use robots to paint them and apply anti-fouling coatings. They also use loads and loads of automated machinery to create the steel parts that make up most of the ship. Do you think some dudes are forging rivets, beams, and pipes by hand? No, those are made by machines that make zillions of them.

              Secondly, nearly every ship–even ships that seem generic like big container ships–is a custom, one-off thing. They’re all bespoke (for the most part), being engineered for specific purposes, routes, and they even have “upgrades” for companies that pay extra (e.g. nicer quarters, extra antenna masts, more and special equipment mounting options, etc).

              • QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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                9 months ago

                They use robots to paint them and apply anti-fouling coatings. They also use loads and loads of automated machinery to create the steel parts that make up most of the ship. Do you think some dudes are forging rivets, beams, and pipes by hand? No, those are made by machines that make zillions of them.

                The missing piece here is assembly, and disassembly is like 95% of what goes into recycling from what I understand.

          • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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            9 months ago

            Automation requires very high precision/consistency in the parts you want to work on. I seriously doubt that after many years of wear, tear, and impromptu repairs, those ships would be anywhere near consistent enough.

            • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              That’s why I said, “eventually with non-general AI”.

              Even a well written algorithm could work with something that’s mostly in expected shape. How in the flying fuck is everyone so brainless that they cannot understand non-general AI can still adapt to things? Fucking hell.

              I’m not talking about current industry practices. I’m talking about combining existing technology with unlimited bidget to create a factory that could kinda’ do the task.

              “Possible” and “practical” are two extremely different things, and you goons pointing out that most obvious basic fact are adding nothing.

            • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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              9 months ago

              In fact they cannot automate the disassembly of cars even though their construction is highly automated. We just grind them up in a big grinder and separate the materials. So basically the same thing as with ships just on a smaller scale.

            • Riskable@programming.dev
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              9 months ago

              Automation does not require very high precision though it does require a modicum of consistency. Millions of vibratory bowl feeders with huge tolerances on their alignment mechanisms demonstrate this fact (“Damnit! A part got caught again… Gerry! Loosen that tolerance screw much farther out so that won’t happen again” LOL).

          • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            A single repair or modification would ruin the entire automation process. One single screw off by a single mm type thing.

            • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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              9 months ago

              Why the flying fuck do you think I said, “non-general AI”? Even a well written algorithm could handle things coming in not in perfect shape, yet everyone pretends “non-general AI” means, “execute instructions repeatedly without any input what so ever.”

              Use your brain. Even basic dumb algorithms that can run on an Arduino can respond to input. Machine learning can easily respond to dynamic input, so stop failing to imagine the most basic of basic things I say.

            • Riskable@programming.dev
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              9 months ago

              This depends on the system. Mechatronics engineers spend a lot of time learning and figuring out how to make systems that can withstand edge cases like an incorrect screw size. There’s whole engineering/mechatronics disciplines around automation reliability (though much of it involves lots and lots of sensors and cameras, haha).

              The way they test these things is by intentionally throwing bad parts into the mix at various stages of their automation. Something like a screw being too big/small is a trivial matter that won’t make it through a system or facility designed by professionals.

              The real problem that really throws a wrench into every mechatronics engineer’s carefully-planned automated masterworks is people doing things like throwing wrenches into their carefully-planned automated masterworks 😁

      • partial_accumen@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Not that you’re saying otherwise, however isn’t that even more of a reason more developers and resources should be allocated toward automating complex and risky physical processes?

        You’re solving for the wrong problem from the perspective of people with money investing money to solve these problems.

        • Shipbreaking, while dangerous for the workers, isn’t expensive because it is done in far flung countries with workers that have low wages, few protections for safety, and long term health consequences.

        • Art and writing (for western consumption) requires educated and talented people which are expensive to employ.

        People with money, looking for a return, want that return their spending, not reduce human suffering.

    • Codex@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I mean automating it would certainly be a challenge but the first step would be building tools and robotics to allow human operators to more safely and effectively manage the tasks. Then you streamline the industrialized processes. Then you think about automating things.

      But this is all really an economic problem, not a technical one. Software tools have minimal resource costs (compared to building/destroying a ship) but require skilled (expensive) laborers to operate. So to cut costs in any digital field you need to get rid of the expensive laborers. Thus the push for AI to replace any computer-bound work. Physical labor is already considered dirt-cheap in our fucked society, and no one is rushing to add expensive tools in fields where disposable people will suffice.

      I sympathize immensely with the OP image’s final point, but “working for the right company” isn’t going to fix it. Reorganizing society is necessary, rethinking what we culturally value and uphold.

    • dumpsterlid@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I think the solution for ship breakers is for the job to be a highly paid respectable job with protections. In other words the technology that desperately needs to disrupt this industry is probably… unions

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          9 months ago

          Yeah I think that’s the point. Ship breaking is apparently poorly paid so they need unions.

          I also not sure how much scope there is for automation on tasks like this as each shit will be different there isn’t going to be a huge amount of repeatable action

        • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          Honestly more unions should fight for company stock for employees or similar stake programs. As we hopefully get more automated having workers interests aligned against it seems like a losing fight.

    • gmtom@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Yeah exactly, I work in AI and robotics for medicine, and im so goddamn sick and tired of these people and their absolute god-awful uneducated takes on AI.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        9 months ago

        And this guy’s claiming to be a programmer too which makes it doubly worse because he really should know better.

        It stems from people who seem to think that having the idea is the hard part, and the implementation is just a matter of time and money.

    • thefartographer@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      Once we perfect doing it in software, then we can graduate to hardware. Today, digital paintings; tomorrow, real paintings; next year, tear down a fucking ship!

    • asteriskeverything@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      That is really cool job description I haven’t seen pop up before! Would you mind sharing what type of things you need to automate? It sounds so interesting, I never really understood why factory line jobs should exist for example * because the work is dangerous, the opposite of stimulating/engaging (works for some sure), and just generally overall depressing unpleasant places to work. We SHOULD be striving for a world where humans don’t have to do such menial unfufilling work.

      *very superficially, all the nuance that makes it continue to be necessary and exist I understand)

      • IrateAnteater@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        I work in the auto industry, so programming the machines that make the car parts. Humans are still involved because getting machines to handle changing conditions is very slow, expensive, and still winds up unreliable in a lot of cases. The simple process of picking a randomly oriented part up out of a bin and placing it accurately on a fixture is actually very difficult for a machine to do, when compared to how easily a human can accomplish the exact same task.

  • Stovetop@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    This is kind of a dumb argument, isn’t it?

    I have to imagine someone centuries ago probably complained about inventors wasting their time on some dumb printing presses so smart people could write books and newspapers better when they could have been building better farm tools. But could we have developed the tractor when we did if we were still handwriting everything?

    Progress supports progress. Teaching computers to recognize and reproduce pictures might seem like a waste to some people, but how do you suppose a computer will someday disassemble a ship if it is not capable of recognizing what the ship is and what holds it together? Modern AI is primitive, but it will eventually lead to autonomous machines that can actually do that work intelligently without blindly following an instruction set, oblivious to whatever might be actually happening around it.

    • Zorque@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      The argument isn’t against the technology, it’s against the application of that technology.

      • hansl@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Path of least resistance. It is harder to build a robot who can disassemble ships with its hands than it is to pattern match together pictures.

        This XKCD comes to mind: https://xkcd.com/1425/

    • EldritchFeminity
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      9 months ago

      This isn’t even close to what they’re saying. It’s closer to complaining about how the Yankees replaced their star pitcher with a modified howitzer.

      It’s not about people “wasting their time on some dumb invention,” it’s about how that useful invention is being used to replace jobs that people actually like doing because it’ll save their bosses money. It’s not even like when photography was invented or Photoshop came out and people freaked out about artists being put out of work, because those require different skill sets and opened up entirely new fields of art while also helping optimize other fields. This stuff could improve the fields that they’re created for by helping people optimize their workflow to make the act of creating things easier. But that’s not what they’re doing. It’s being used to mimic the skills of the people who enjoy doing these things so that they don’t have to pay people to do it.

      Even ignoring the ethical/moral aspect of this stuff being trained without permission on the work of the people it’s designed to replace, the end goal isn’t to increase the quality of life of people, allowing us more time to do the things we love - things like, you know, art and writing - it’s to make the rich even richer and push people out of well-paying jobs.

      The closest example I can think of is when Disney fired all their 2d animators and switched to 3d. They didn’t do it because 3d was better. In many ways, the quality was much worse at the time. But 2d animators are unionized and 3d animators aren’t, so they could get away with paying them much less. The same exact thing happened with the practical effects vs. digital effects guys in Hollywood right around the same time.

      • Grimy@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Society has always been losing jobs, the population just pivots to other specialisations. The only reason we fear it is because of our economic system that preys on it and turns it into profit, but that’s an other conversation entirely.

        On the subject of losing creative venues, both your examples(photography and Photoshop) show how technology didn’t detract from the arts but add to it, letting the average person do much more. The same will be true for AI, I can see an inevitable boom happening in the filmmaking and animation industry, not to mention comic books and most of all indie gaming. It’s in the long run empowering for the individual imo.

        • EldritchFeminity
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          9 months ago

          The economic system is what he’s talking about here. That was my point. The entire conversation from the side against this stuff has always been about the economic situation of it. Without that factor, I think the only thing people would care about is whether or not their work is being used without their permission/maliciously.

          As for Photoshop and photography, that’s actually why I brought those up specifically. Because they were feared as things that would destroy artists’ jobs and actually brought about entirely new fields of art - and also because they’re the two people bring up when people argue against LLM replacing people’s jobs, acting like they’re just some Luddites afraid of science.

          Right now, the way I see it with AI is that there are 2 distinct groups benefiting from it: those whose workflow has been improved from the use of AI, and those who think AI can get them the result of work without having to either do the work themselves or pay somebody else to do it. And thanks to the economic issues that are at the heart of this whole thing, that second group is set to harm the number of people who can spend time creating things simply because they now have to work a job that isn’t creating things and no longer have the time to put towards that. So I can see AI creating a whole new art boom or a bust in equal measure. That second group is of concern to the art communities as well because they only see the destination and don’t see that the journey is just as important to the act of creation, and that is already causing schisms between artists and “prompters” who think that they’re just as skilled because they used a generator to make some cool stuff. People are already submitting unedited, prompted work to art and writing competitions.

    • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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      9 months ago

      I get the sentiment, but it’s a bad example. Transformer models don’t recognize images in any useful way that could be fed to other systems. They also don’t have any capability of actual understanding or context. Heavily simplifying here, tokenisation of inputs allows them to group clusters of letters together into tokens, so when it receives tokens it can spit out whatever the training data says it should.

      The only actual things that are improving greatly here which could be used in different systems are natural language processing, natural language output and visual output.

      EDIT: Crossed out stuff that is wrong.

      • MrConfusion@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Well, this is simply incorrect. And confidently incorrect at that.

        Vision transformers (ViT) is an important branch of computer vision models that apply transformers to image analysis and detection tasks. They perform very well. The main idea is the same, by tokenizing the input image into smaller chunks you can apply the same attention mechanism as in NLP transformer models.

        ViT models were introduced in 2020 by Dosovitsky et. al, in the hallmark paper “An Image is Worth 16x16 Words: Transformers for Image Recognition at Scale” (https://arxiv.org/abs/2010.11929). A work that has received almost 30000 academic citations since its publication.

        So claiming transformers only improve natural language and vision output is straight up wrong. It is also widely used in visual analysis including classification and detection.

        • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          Thank you for the correction. So hypothetically, with millions of hours of GoPro footage from the scuttle crew, and if we had some futuristic supercomputer that could crunch live data from a standard definition camera and output decisions, we could hook that up to a Boston dynamics style robot and run one replaced member of the crew?

  • lledrtx@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    “AI” researcher here. The only reason there are models that can “write” and “create art” is because that data is available for training. Basically people put massive amounts of digital text and images on the Internet and the companies scraped all of it to train the models. If there were big enough datasets for ship building, that would happen too…

    • apemint@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Besides, what the guy is yapping about it is 80% a robotics problem not an AI problem. It’s apples and oranges.

      He’s essentially saying why can Will Smith finally eat pasta normally while we still don’t have the robotic workforce from the 2001 Will Smith movie “I, Robot”.

    • rektdeckard@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Not really. You would still need to, you know, build drones or automated factories to actually perform the salvaging. But the point is that nobody DID, because capitalism values profit over human life. Nobody who “matters” is interested in solving that problem.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        9 months ago

        Actually that’s not true at all, there’s lots of interest in robotics (check out Boston Dynamic) but it’s a really really hard problem. The main issue is developing a controlling intelligence sophisticated enough to be able to use the robot to do a diverse range of tasks. The actual physical mechanical building of the robot isn’t that hard.

        Of course the way you get that controlling intelligence is AI. So he is complaining about people developing a solution to the problem he’s demanding that they solve. He’s not happy because they’re not magically skipping steps.

        This idiot wants fully sapient robots without developing AI in the first place, not sure how on earth he expects that to happen.

        • ScreaminOctopus@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          I think you’re underestimating the mechanical and chemistry problems that still need to be solved before autonomous robots that can perform a task like ship salvage effectively. There’s a very good reason that basically all industrial robots spend their lives plugged into a wall socket.

          • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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            9 months ago

            I feel like maybe you didn’t understand the point I was making, which was the hardest part is the AI. Since everything else is easy because once you have the AI you automatically have all your other problems solved.

          • Richard@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            Ah you’re right, Boston Dynamic’s Spot robot tours entire factories and refineries all while being plugged into a wall socket!

      • lledrtx@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Not true. We have capable robots now. See Boston Dynamics like the other commenter said. Plus we have had industrial robots making cars and stuff forever now. To make robots that can handle a wide variety of things (every ship is bound to be different) is hard and we don’t have data to train such models (see reinforcement learning, imitation learning, “sim2real” problem etc)

  • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    I get the sentiment, but that is a really dumb take. Software automation is a hell of a lot easier than creating robotic automation to disassemble ships of all shapes and sizes. That’s why art automation has been done, and industrial freighter recycling automation has not been.

    How would that even be possible? Presumably, you’d need to break the ships down into pieces first, and even then, you’ll be dealing with huge numbers of oddly shaped and sized components of varying materials. It makes a lot more sense to have people do that, though it is likely very dangerous.

    Seems more like a job for unions and workplace safety regulations than for robots

    • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      more like a job for unions and workplace safety regulations

      Yes. That’s why they do these things in third world countries. The people there are cheaper than robots will ever be.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I get the sentiment, but that is a really dumb take.

      $13B invested in OpenAI feels more and more like malinvestment and graft, incentivized by our disastrous energy policy and enormous tech subsidies.

      This isn’t purely software automation. Its also an investment in physical media and machines, new or renovated energy infrastructure, and enormous volumes of potable water.

      Seems more like a job for unions and workplace safety regulations than for robots

      The Role of AI in Union Busting: How Employers Use Artificial Intelligence to Keep Workers From Unionizing

      In 2020, a leaked company memo detailed Amazon’s use of a new technology — the geoSPatial Operating Console (SPOC) — to analyze and visualize data sets pertaining to threats to the company, including unions. Reported by Jason Del Rey and Shirin Ghaffary at Vox, some of the data points related to unions include:

      Amazon-owned Whole Foods’ market activism and unionization efforts.
      Flow patterns of union grant money.
      The presence of local union chapters and alt labor groups.
      

      The approach is an obvious attempt by the company to use more passive means of identifying and neutralizing union sympathizers in the company.

      “Amazon’s tracking of workers’ micro-movements, decision points and searches and then linking all of that data to that of unions, community groups and legislative policy campaigns is union busting on its face,” said Stuart Appelbaum, President of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (RWDSU) in a statement at the time.

      • ALoafOfBread@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        That is very true, but my critique was more focused on the difference between automating software tasks vs mechanical tasks, especially with non-uniform inputs and not the economic investment required. Some tasks are better suited to automation - and plagiarizing art is far easier than deconstructing and recycling massive industrial freighters.

        Not on the side of the AI art generators here - that was just low hanging fruit compared to something like was suggested in the original post. Definitely need extremely strong labor law to protect against AI union busting (and union busting generally)

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          my critique was more focused on the difference between automating software tasks vs mechanical tasks

          Somewhat paradoxically, we’ve been much more successful automating mechanical tasks than digital ones. We’ve had steam looms and automotive assembly plants far longer than server farms and super computers.

          And I might argue this kind of automation has been far more fruitful. I can point to a lot more in my daily life that has benefited from the industrialization of steel and plastic fabrication than what I’ve received from Google Search Results.

          To say the millions of man-hours and trillions of dollars sunk into the advertisement and entertainment industries couldn’t be put to better use… Come on, man. The latest Marvel movie wasn’t so good that I wouldn’t have traded it for a globalized 1980s British NHS.

      • Ainiriand@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I think you absolutely nailed the analysis. Another small point to keep in mind is that for Microsoft, all the investment in OpenAi comes back as a revenue figure when the system works operating on top of the Azure platform.

    • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      Software automation being easier seems like a reason to not have so many people doing it, then? Like, the harder problem is the one that could really use all of the focus?

      But the harder problems aren’t as obviously profitable for a large number of tech CEOs, and they’re not ripe for being a “winning glittery ticket” for a large number of comp sci students looking to be the next big thing in Silicon Valley.

  • glibg10b@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    Making art and writing just happens to be easy to automate with neural networks and machine learning, neither of which was originally researched for the purpose of replacing artists and writers.

    Good luck disassembling a ship with a neural network. And maybe do some research about the difficulties of application-specific robotics.

    • Sprokes@jlai.lu
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      9 months ago

      I think it is just a matter of where you put resources. I am sure if you put resources into improving recycling ships some advancements will be done (it won’t be done using neural network probably).

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        But that’s true of everything. This guy is explicitly angry about AI not being used in ship decommission, which is just weird.

        • elephantium@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          It’s not about the ships.

          Shipbreaking is the author’s example, but it’s not the author’s point.

          He could have bemoaned the lack of tree-trimming robots or the vaporware nature of self-driving cars instead.

          The key point is the heavy investment in automating away things that bring us joy while doing nothing about vast classes of unpleasant drudgery.

          Hell, look at roofers. A lot of injuries there are from falls, easily preventable with fall harnesses. It doesn’t even require a big research investment! Our society simply doesn’t value those lives enough to protect them.

          • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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            9 months ago

            No they are developing an autonomous system to solve pretty much every possible problem, but these problems are easy problems so they’re the ones that are getting automated first. Make no mistake they will come for every job.

    • Risk@feddit.uk
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      Define art, though.

      As it stands neural networks and LLMs can’t do it, because they lack imagination. A human can use it as tool to make art though, and we don’t have these silly kinds of conversations about photoshop (anymore!).

      As for the OP, you’ve taken it a bit more literally and reacted a bit more defensively than I think is warranted. The point is about our systems priorities, not so much the specifics.

      • A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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        I have a feeling if we performed a lobotomy-like surgery on someone that eliminated their imagination and told them to just put paint on a canvas, you’d still call that art.

        I would, at least. There’s some subjectivity to the definition of art and what people think has artistic value.

        • Risk@feddit.uk
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          9 months ago

          Of course. That’s the point; it’s subjective, and yet we have people declaring that AI/LLM output isn’t art.

          I miss when Lemmings actually replied why they were downvoting…

  • arin@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Ah yes just write code for the ship fold itself neatly back into reusable materials.

    • Agent641@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Just build a grinder the size of a football stadium to shred battleships into pea-sized chunks, and sort according to metal type, how hard can it be?

      • daltotron@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        It might be more cost effective to build a concrete bunker the size of a football stadium, use placed explosives to blow up the ship inside of the bunker, and then shred the exploded ship up into pea-sized chunks

      • arin@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Teach me how to code that and which compiler will spit out the football stadium grinder

    • EldritchFeminity
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      9 months ago

      Just drop the ship off the conveyor onto a bar. The good ships will bounce higher, and the bad ones won’t. Problem solved.

      Sarcasm aside, this is how they sort cranberries and where the expression “raising the bar” comes from. The higher the bar is set, the tighter the constraints on which cranberries will bounce onto the “good” conveyor.

      • Vlyn@lemmy.zip
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        I actually had to look this up, why are you spreading misinformation?

        The idiom “raise the bar” came into use around 1900 and comes from the sport of track and field. The high jump event and the pole vault event both involve raising a crossbar incrementally to see how high the participants can jump or pole vault.

        • EldritchFeminity
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          Because I grew up in cranberry country and that’s what I had always been told. I’m not surprised to find this out though, because that makes a lot of sense.

  • kibiz0r@midwest.social
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    9 months ago

    OP: “We’ve tragically gone down a path of quantifying and min-maxing every aspect of existence, including creativity and the value of human life.”

    Comments: “OP clearly doesn’t understand the comparative efficiency of the ROI here.”

  • pixxelkick@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    This sort of ignores the fact that the advances in that technology are widespread applicable to all tasks, we literally just started with text and image generation because:

    1. The training data is plentiful abd basically free to get your hands on

    2. It’s easy to verify it works

    LLMs will crawl so that ship breaking robots can run.

    • EldritchFeminity
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      He’s ignoring it because he’s not complaining about the tech, but the way it’s being used. Instead of being used to make it easier for artists and writers to do their jobs, it’s being used to replace them entirely so their bosses don’t have to pay them. It’s like when Disney switched to 3d animation. They didn’t do it because the tech was better and made the job easier. They did it because 2d animators are unionized and 3d animators aren’t, so they could pay the new guys less.

      And these are the kinds of jobs people actually want - to the point where they don’t pay anywhere near as well as they should because companies can exploit people’s passion for what they do.

      Imagine a world of construction workers and road crews, but no civil engineers, architects, or city planners. Imagination and creativity automated away in the name of the almighty profit margin.

      • gmtom@lemmy.world
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        Yep and when we invented mechanical computers, we put human computers out of the job.

        When we invented the automatic loom we put weavers out of the job.

        When we invented electric lights we put lamplighters out of the job.

        When we invented digital art we put many brushmakers, canvas makers, paint makers out of the job.

        This is the cost of progress.

    • sturlabragason@lemmy.world
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      Second this.

      We’re in the first days and everyday I add a new model or tech to my reading list. We’re close to talking to our CPUs. We’re building these stacks. We’re solving the memory problems. Don’t need RAG with a million tokens, guerrilla model can talk with APIs, most models are great at python which is versatile as fuck, I can see the singularity on the horizon.

      Try Ollama if you want to test things yourself.

      Use GPT4 if you want to get an inkling of the potential that’s coming. I mean really use it.

  • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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    Disappointed programmer here. I thought I could automate farming so that people wouldn’t die of hunger. Now I realise that if you automate farming, it would just make some CEO more money because his company now makes corn syrup and destroys rural communities even faster.

    I got my “contract not renewed”, for the Fortune 500 B2B CRM company I worked for.

    I can try to bust my ass to make my 2018 laptop try to render images I can’t draw, which does give me some pleasure. It’s not the AI tool’s fault humanity sucks, it’s the goddamn people with money.

  • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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    The robot dystopia will not be caused by evil AI enslaving humanity.

    No matter how advanced or how self aware, AI will lack the ambition that is part of humanity, part of us due to our evolutionary history.

    An AI will never have an opinion, only logical conclusions and directives that it is required to fulfil as efficiently as possible. The directives, however, are programmed by the humans who control these robots.

    Humans DO have ambitions and opinions, and they have the ability to use AI to enslave other humans. Human history is filled with powerful, ambitious humans enslaving everyone else.

    The robot dystopia is therefor a corporate dystopia.

    I always roll my eyes when people invoke Skynet and Terminator whenever something uncanny is shown off. No, it’s not the machines I’m worried about.

    • Clubbing4198@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Have you met people with opinions? A lot of their opinions consist of preprogrammed responses that you could train a bot to regurgitate.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      No matter how advanced or how self aware, AI will lack the ambition that is part of humanity, part of us due to our evolutionary history.

      The ambition isn’t the issue. Its a question of power imbalance.

      The Paperclip Maximizing Algorithm doesn’t have an innate desire to destroy the world, merely a mandate to turn everything into paperclips. And if the algorithm has enough resources at its disposal, it will pursue this quixotic campaign without regard for any kind of long term sensible result.

      The robot dystopia is therefor a corporate dystopia.

      There is some argument that one is a consequence of the other. It is, in some sense, the humans who are being programmed to maximize paperclips. The real Roko’s Basilisk isn’t some sinister robot brain, but a social mythology that leads us to work in the factors that make the paper clips, because we’ve convinced ourselves this will allow us to climb the Paperclip Company Corporate Ladder until we don’t have to make these damned things anymore.

      • psud@lemmy.world
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        Someone screwed up if a paperclip maximiser is given the equipment to take apart worlds, rather than a supply of spring steel

        • dwalin@lemmy.world
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          Thats the beauty of it. The maximizer would understand that creating a machine that breaks appart worlds would maximize the paperclip output. It will be a “natural” progression

    • A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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      We’re not even close to artificial general intelligence, so I’d like to see if you have anything to substantiate this claim.

      (Not saying it’s far fetched, though, just that it seems silly to be so sure at this point in time.)

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    According to this guy, only one thing is allowed to happen at a time. Sorry all, LLMs are the only option. Nothing else.

    • Wilzax@lemmy.world
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      I don’t see google, twitter, facebook, nvidia and alibaba working on AIs more than the ones designed to replace humans for content generation, and I don’t see money from anyone else of that size going into such projects either.

      • FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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        Then you should take a better look, because most of those companies are researching AI for tasks far beyond content generation - Google and NVIDIA for example have been doing a lot of research on AI for robotics.

        • Wilzax@lemmy.world
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          https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/research/ai-playground/

          This is the most public place where Nvidia discusses their projects. None of these are robotics and this is the most public place where Nvidia talks about their AI projects. Admittedly we also have models that are replacing engineers as well as artists, but I still don’t see where they’re advertising their robotics work.

          https://labs.google/

          This is the most public place where Google discusses their projects. Again, no discussion of robotics.

          They very well could still be doing robotics work, but I don’t care if they are because they haven’t advertised it to the public and tried to get us excited about it anywhere near the level they have all advertised their generative AIs.

          I honestly don’t care about the extent to which they’re investing in one application of AI or the other, I care about the culture war these companies are washing against us, trying to make us all okay with AI generated content that displaces humans from doing the work they enjoy so that they can make money. If they’re making robots with AI too, why aren’t they talking about it nearly as much?

  • Kedly@lemm.ee
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    I mean, you can still write and make art? AI isnt taking that away from you? If you’re upset that its replacing you career wise, maybe you’re just upset that you need a job to live and that livelihood is at the whims of capitalists?

    • mriormro@lemmy.world
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      It can be both. Why is the first thing we’re seeking to automate with this current generation of ai the creative careers that humans can do?

      • Donkter@lemmy.world
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        We’re not “seeking” to do anything. Ai art is a pretty logical and inevitable step in our progress in this recent breakthrough in machine learning. But we’re making AI out of everything for which there is a large amount of data on the internet. The same tech that is creating AI art by stealing assets off of the Internet is also combing through sequenced DNA to find patterns and analyzing telescope data to find anomalies.

        And none of this new AI tech has anything to do with robotics or ship dismantling so it makes sense that that isn’t the field being advanced by it. Although I bet you could fiddle with AI to analyze data around ship dismantling to make it more efficient.

      • Kedly@lemm.ee
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        Its another tool. For me one that has allowed me to access my creativity FAR MORE than any artistic tool previous. Did photoshop destroy photography? Did Photography destroy realistic paintings? If you dont like the tool personally, all previous artistic tools humanity has created are still available to you

        edit: for those downvoting me, Pandora’s box is opened, you can either adapt with the times, or align yourselves with the Luddites who burned down the textile factories when lace became able to be mass produced, and are now synonymous with being out of date with current technology

        • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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          Photography actually did destroy photorealistic painting as a career. All those painted portraits you see in museums were basically the old timey version of selfies. Photography replaced that job.

          • Kedly@lemm.ee
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            As a career yes, but there are still artists whom that medium speaks to. As time marches on jobs will get replaced, and we can either try and adapt society towards not NEEDING jobs to live, or we can keep having peoples livelihoods wiped out because of advancements in tech, instead of lives improved.Or do you think we should get rid of camera tech?

      • JohnEdwa@sopuli.xyz
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        Because they happened to be the fields that got there first. It’s not like these are recent trends, ELIZA and AARON are from the 1960’s. But it really is just the perfect example of “They were so preoccupied with if they could they never stopped to think if they should” spread over 60 years of technological advancement.

    • trainsaresexy@lemmy.world
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      You use the word upset as in there is no rational reason to care about this and emotions are invalid or lesser.

      Anyway, cameras and paintings…

  • cm0002@lemmy.world
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    I remember years ago everyone was saying that art would probably be the last thing AI would be able to handle and menial jobs would probably be the first.

    Now look at where we are!

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      It’s because people like to think that art is some unique human ability. They never really explain why they think this, they just say it.

      But really it’s just about looking at the world and creating representations of it in various styles. None of which is some ineffable thing. It’s all electrons moving around a system at the end of the day, it is all physical. If it is physical, then it can be simulated.

      • A_Very_Big_Fan@lemmy.world
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        They never really explain why they think this, they just say it.

        But- muh 'magination! Robo cain’t do dat!

  • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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    This is a kind of bad take really. Just because AI can make art does not mean that’s the only thing that it will be used for.

    Realistically though it’s blindingly obvious why AI isn’t being used for ship breaking, and that’s because it’s not a purely software problem, it requires interfacing with robots and humanoid robots at that because a standard mechanical arm attached to an assembly line won’t cut it in this scenario. So it’s an incredibly difficult problem to solve and being angry that someone hasn’t solved it yet is stupid.

    If this guy is really a programmer he should know that.

  • fsxylo@sh.itjust.works
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    Big reason why I just build cute little games as a hobby instead of writing spreadsheet software for a megacorp to optimize the lowest quarterly earners out of a job, or develop AI to optimize myself out of a job.