• FaceDeer@fedia.io
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    21 hours ago

    And another thing! Kids these days aren’t learning cursive handwriting. It’s the death of culture, I tell you.

    • kibiz0r
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      13 hours ago

      There’s this podcast I used to enjoy (I still enjoy it, but they stopped making new episodes) called Build For Tomorrow (previously known as The Pessimists Archive).

      It’s all about times in the past where people have freaked out about stuff changing but it all turned out okay.

      After having listened to every single episode — some multiple times — I’ve got this sinking feeling that just mocking the worries of the past misses a few important things.

      1. The paradox of risk management. If you have a valid concern, and we collectively do something to respond to it and prevent the damage, it ends up looking as if you were worried over nothing.
      2. Even for inventions that are, overall, beneficial, they can still bring new bad things with them. You can acknowledge both parts at once. When you invent trains, you also invent train crashes. When you invent electricity, you also invent electrocution. That doesn’t mean you need to reject the whole idea, but you need to respond to the new problems.
      3. There are plenty of cases where we have unleashed horrors onto the world while mocking the objections of the pessimists. Lead, PFAS, CFCs, radium paint, etc.

      I’m not so sure that the concerns about AI “killing culture” actually are as overblown as the worry about cursive, or record players, or whatever. The closest comparison we have is probably the printing press. And things got so weird with that so quickly that the government claimed a monopoly on it. This could actually be a problem.

    • blubfisch@discuss.tchncs.de
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      20 hours ago

      While i do get this vibe from the headline, the article actually closes with a call to be mindful of the shortcomings of generative AI (while using it)