vagrancyand

joined 1 month ago
[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 43 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

Good News everyone, I'm now among the major terror groups.

So are 6 billion other people on the planet.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 6 points 17 hours ago

Have you ever met an executive? Have you ever met any actual capitalist?

They aren't particularly smart people. They just have no physical capability for empathy. That is how they can exist. AI is good enough to reduce workload. It is fantastic especially at correcting speech and translating.

You know what worker class needs corrected speech and translating but otherwise can be taught to do most office and entry level jobs? Outsourced workers.

Companies slowed outsourcing customer-facing positions due to backlash from obvious accents and poor cross-cultural training. AI has allowed them full steam ahead. While real time voice masking is a little expensive right now, AI chat agents are good enough to be used while having an outsourced worker listen in, feed 'correct' lines to the AI (or simply skip incorrect lines) and actually perform the actions.

GAN ML is also good enough, as it turns out, to figure out how to complete many office tasks with full desktop screen captures.

If you combine these two things, and add a little marketing spin, what you have is a very clear plan to eliminate 50-70% of labor cost in the US -- that is the majority of customer service and office administration workers.

Right now it's AI facing, (statistically) Indian outsourced agent backed solutions. Eventually those outsourced agents -- which have the totality of their job recorded, every mouse click, every key press, every single word said to their coworkers and managers, every single blink, all to train AI -- will be out of a job too.

Nevermind this ends capitalism, as without a consumer base there will be no companies, but oh wait, techbros and capitalists are pushing for UBI. . . Isn't that weird they'd be pushing an objectively socialist idea... I wonder if that's related.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 16 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago)

This is exactly why people don't associate with vegans btw. I'm entirely plant based and have been for years, but if you call me a vegan I will actually fight you.

No, husbandry and agriculture are not anywhere near slavery. Vegetarianism is no where near slavery.

If you released any domesticated animal into the wild they would die and/or destroy the ecosystem killing billions of people and animals.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 101 points 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (6 children)

They called me crazy for insisting on ensuring all of our companies files compress to 10,000 separate 64KiB xz compressed files. Well who's laughing now?!

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works -1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Tell me you live in a flat unpopulate ddesert without telling me you live in a flat unpopulated desert. If you're the 85% of humanity that lives along a coast you are not getting away with replacing your rotors any less than once every couple of years.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 days ago (6 children)

Brake rotors are $500-$1500/set, pads are $50-$200/set, Friction and rust welds are common enough to damage other parts of the knuckle over the expected life time meaning that bill can easily turn into a $2k-$5k repair, totaling the car depending on the age.

Eliminating regular maintenance costs and production costs for a system that works essentially just as well (and can work better in an emergency if you don't care about saving the associated motors) means cheaper cars, both upfront and over time, with the only downside being luddites afraid that two decades of EV data from a few dozen million cars isn't enough to prove safety versus hydraulic.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Welcome to the world of mostly solid state systems. Turns out when friction is a solved problem there's no need for cottage industries like brake pad and rotor production.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works -1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

The diseases the US has been experimenting with since the 1950s, many times on its own population e.g. the Tuguskee experiments?

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 0 points 2 days ago

...The results have been terrible for the entire world besides the US.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Actually I was exclusively talking about China and SEA, not Europe. While there are a couple of European countries that are aiming towards socialism most of Europe is pretty far right.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works 0 points 3 days ago (3 children)

I'm correcting your point. Yes, a lot of the US is conservative. Most of the world isn't. Only a US-Centric viewpoint would define liberalism as anything other than a conservative old-fashioned ideology only held by people that worship nazis.

[–] vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works -2 points 3 days ago (6 children)

How is the US propaganda source that statistically only handles a partial clean up of US military and intelligence community actions 'far right bullshit?'

If I come into your home, kill your pets, piss in your fridge, and mutilate your children, but then I pay someone to come in and give you some new food so I can print in the news paper that I am kindly and benevolently feeding a victim of a tragedy... am I the good guy?

No. I am attempting to generate positive propaganda to help people ignore the fact I caused the entire fucking situation to begin with.

There are no USAID projects that cannot directly be linked to a US military or intelligence operation. None. Not a single one.

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