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Fair enough.

I was talking mainly about tech workers though (this website target audience), and I didn't made that distinction in the comment you replied to, but I did make it down the thread way before you replied.



I think categorizing Tech Workers as a whole as being synonymous with this website's target audience isn't a correct assumption.

There's some social circles I frequent that are made up of folks that anyone here would qualify as a "Tech Worker" that - and I mean this without any exaggeration - abhor the community of commenters at HN. And I don't mean just folks outside of SV or other major tech hubs. There are people that very much believe the commenters here are the worst people in the industry.

And just to be clear, I'm not of that belief, but it's worth pointing out that the population of Tech Workers on HN isn't going to be indicative of Tech Workers as a whole.

Going back to the previous topic however; Those same people I'm referring to often have a complete overlap with those that are burned out by AI in any form (usage, discussion around it, being advertised to, being forced to use it).

And to some of their concerns, I genuinely empathize with them. That's probably best gone into via something like a blog post or anything else that lends itself to long form writing.


> the population of Tech Workers on HN isn't going to be indicative of Tech Workers as a whole

That's why I'm asking for a real world example outside of the internet? It's all weird bubbles here.

Your comment actually strenghtens my critique.


>...without any exaggeration - abhor the community of commenters at HN

How come? We seem a mostly harmless lot?


We missed our opportunity to actually organize during the boom as everyone thought their work was above unionization. Now layoffs are weaponized even more than before and the few left over tech jobs are valuable commodities that you hold onto for dear life.


Before, you said:

> The actual "new luddites" have been screaming on here for years complaining about losing their careers over immature tech for the sake of reducing labor costs.

Implying that there is a critical organized mass that was aware of the possibility of layoffs.

You also said:

> Data centers are better guarded than some government institutions. New luddites can't exactly go in smashing the servers.

Implying that the only thing stopping this organized mass is the level of security in datacenters.

---

Now you changed your opinion, and you portray a scenario with unhappy disorganized people that missed an opportunity.

I don't understand. It seems that you're just freestyling words.

I stand by my original assessment. This idea of a massive iminent backlash is mostly a fantasy, and although the layoffs are real, they're most likely due to the economic problems the US is facing right now.

Write that down: AI is going to settle into a disappointing miracle (like the microwave), and people will be mostly indifferent to it.




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