My company is strongly pushing AI. There are lot of experiments, demos, and effort from decently smart people about integrating it into our workflows. There are some impressive victories that have been made with AI tooling producing some things fast. I am not in denial about this. And the SE department is tracking improved productivity (as measured by # of tickets being done, I guess?)
The problem is I hate AI. I hate every fucking thing about it. Its primary purpose, regardless of what utility is gained, is spam. I think it's obvious how google search results are spam, how spam songs and videos are being produced, etc. But even bad results from AI that have to be discarded, IMO, are spam.
And that isn't even getting into all massive amounts of theft to train the data, or the immense amounts of electricity it takes to do training and inference, as well as run, all this crap. Nor the psychosis being inflicted onto people who emplace their trust into these systems. Nor the fact that these tools are being used to empower authoritarian regimes to track vulnerable populations, both here (in the USA) and abroad. And all this AI shit serves to enrich the worst tech moguls and to displace people like artists and people like myself, a programmer.
I'm literally being told at my job that I should view myself basically as an AI babysitter, and that AI has been unambiguously proven in the industry, so the time for wondering about it, experimenting with it, or opposing it is over. The only fault and flaw is my (i.e. any given SE's) unwillingness to adapt and onboard.
Looking for advice from people who have had to navigate similar crap. Because I feel like I'm at a point where I must adapt or eventually get fired.
AI is a tool, just like a hammer. You could use a rock, but that doesn't give you the leverage that a hammer does.
AI is also a machine, it can get you to your destination faster, like a car or train.
Evil people have used hammers, cars, and trains to do evil and horrible things. These things can also be used for useless stupid things, like advertising.
But they can also be used for good, like an ambulance or to transport food. They also make us more efficient and can be used to save resources and effort. It depends on who uses it and how they use it.
You can't control how other people may misuse these things, but you can control how much you know, how you use it, and what you use it for.
One aspect that analogy doesn't work for is hammers and cars weren't built with the mass theft of intellectual property, they aren't being leveraged to put people out of jobs, and they aren't the driving force for building insane numbers of data centres that increase power bills for locals and ravage their water supply.
It's not necessarily the pure usage of AI that I don't like, as much as what has been and is being used to create it.
Cars have their own problems of course, and cause more issues with the direct use of them than what went into building them.
I read someone leave a different comment where they said something like "If human meat was the healthiest, least environmentally damaging, and cheapest food, they still wouldn't eat it." In this case AI doesn't really match those benefits anyway
IP itself needs to be abolished, so that part isn't as important. Further, cars did put people out of jobs that used to draw horse carriages and maintain them. The original commenter is correct with their analysis.
If IP is abolished, that would to me imply that use of AI should be free for everyone, as it's based on everyones collective knowledge.
Sure, I don't see a problem with that.