For me, I would choose computer viruses.

  • AnonymousLlama@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m not overly keen on the 15 seconds micro-content that sites like TikTok and YouTube (shorts) are pulling. It creates the most densely packed, quickly paced content I’ve seen and it feels like people are now addicted to quick bursts of info.

    It feels like that type of content is doing to reduce people’s already awful attention span, I’ve already had mates who can’t read threads, articles and comments because it’s too slow, terrible

    • -hypnotoad-@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I have to say, Vine was on to something with 6 seconds. Too short for anything nefarious so it was mostly creative new memes and humor.

  • fruitywelsh@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Sensational Advertising, and maybe just advertising in general. I would love to see what society would look like if people only used and got things because they wanted it, or because someone they talked to recommended they used it, instead of billions going to the most advance technologies and largest organizations in the world to manipulate people into buying more.

    • s804@kbin.socialOP
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      1 year ago

      i hate that they just openly try to brainwash people, they dont see them as humans but as moneybags

  • cowvin@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Social media recommendation algorithms. They are too good at showing people what they want to see. They are largely at fault for causing social media to devolve into echo chambers and radicalizing people.

    • pimeys@lemmy.nauk.io
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      1 year ago

      Meth was designed for Nazi Bundeswehr so they can fight longer. Should’ve been forgotten after the second World war.

  • tojikomori@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Blockchain technology hasn’t contributed anything of lasting value, and too much money, energy, and good will has been burned by people trying.

    Its most popular applications are cryptocurrencies, which are used for gambling, money laundering, and for collecting payments from ransomware victims. Someone once bought a pizza with them, but since that time their transactions have become too slow and their value too volatile to exchange them for anything so concrete.

    Various attempts have been made to use blockchain technology for public or shared databases, but it turns out to be worse than all the other faster and much simpler existing solutions in that space.

    Others have attempted to bolt it on to various business and social systems, but it hasn’t provided any practical benefit there either. It remains a slow and cumbersome alternative to every problem.

    Its unique superpower is that it can be used to make contracts between parties that have no trust in one another and no social or legal system of enforcement, so long as your definition of a contract is sufficiently narrow, can be reduced to terms understood by the world’s slowest logic engine, and is perfectly encoded the first time around and doesn’t require any adjustment thereafter. If one or more of those conditions fail, you’ll find yourself turning to the social and legal systems of enforcement you thought you didn’t have.

    • Parallax@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      If I could go back in time I would keep plastic, but make it seem scary/dangerous due to how it never breaks down in the environment, and in turn hopefully cause regulation over how plastic should be produced, recycled, and disposed of before it became such a massive ubiquitous problem (micro plastics, pacific gyre, pollution, etc).

      • Briskfall@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Seems like how slow-ass and inept the implementation of regulation has being going to be the main problem with all these techs. Bad intention people will always try to spun off the advancement in a money-grubbing, harmful way. Nothing is ever spared.

    • KnittingTrekker@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      That would be problematic, because the problem is not plastic itself, but its use. Plastic has allowed countless medical and scientific benefits, such as ureteral stents, stents for aneurysms, catheters… And these are just the examples that came to mind on the fly.

  • exohuman@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Advanced AI. It’s a job killer and the uses are truly dystopian. There is AI recently announced that can display someone’s thoughts on a monitor by reading their visual cortex. There are places in China where facial recognition checks if people are smiling before it allows them to proceed. Not to mention military uses straight out of a movie. There is no limit to the suffering it will bring.

    • Flyingtiger188@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I’d say AI is in a sort of weird teenage years of being not good enough to truly add value to human experiences but powerful enough to cause significant amounts of harm.

  • 52fighters@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Concrete. It is impossible to have any sort of modern civilization without concrete but you can still have education, division of labor, and a few of the things we enjoy in the modern world without ever becoming modern.

  • BarrierWithAshes@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    XaaS technology. Though I wouldn’t even consider it an advancement. Also convergence becoming mainstream. I may not give a crap about Unix philosophy but in some instances they are correct.

      • BarrierWithAshes@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Let me rephrase. I’m against taking previously paid applications and turning them into services, refusing to adhere to lifetime licenses and taking features out turning those behind paywalls. Filmora is an example of what I mean.

        All for consumers specifically. I don’t care about enterprises.

        • Parallax@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Other examples off the top of my head are Photoshop and Office. It doesn’t seem like you can really “own” them anymore, at least not current versions.

        • MattMist@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          That sounds like SaaS specifically. In any case, I agree with you, it sucks that you don’t get to actually own a piece of software, even though I understand the benefit of a constant revenue stream for the developer so they can continue to push updates (and the second reason why they do it is probably preventing piracy, even though it’s still a bit hit or miss - with Adobe CC it’s still pretty easy, but Office now can’t be cracked IIRC).

          I think the best middle ground would be to do what Sketch does with their Mac app or what Photoshop used to do, where you pay a flat fee for the app in its current version, get a few free updates on top and then after some time have to pay again to upgrade to a newer version.

    • Parallax@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think it depends on the context though. Data mining of environmental sensors might yield valuable insights. Mining anonymized medical data could improve chances of catching a disease early, etc.

      Agree on ads though. Nothing like having pharmaceutical ads stuffed down my throat while trying to watch a speedrun or whatever.