"We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter..." -- Sam Altman
https://x.com/TheChiefNerd/status/2032012809433723158
There you go, there it is. Yup.
"We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter..." -- Sam Altman
https://x.com/TheChiefNerd/status/2032012809433723158
There you go, there it is. Yup.
I'm not claiming that they're right, that you are actually buying "intelligence" from them by the meter, I think that's misleading.
But also, the fact that that's the *framing* goes to show to you that they absolutely, completely want it to be, and want to sell intellectual slavery, as far as they can get it.
@janantos @lykso Marx explained how capitalists exploit workers. Marx thought that once the entire world realized how bad capitalism is for workers, the world will be ready for socialism. But socialism must come after the revolution. Before socialism, first all workers of all countries must unite, as Marx famously said.
Lenin who was a big fan of Marx said, frustratedly, that he had a couple of conversations with workers, but nobody wanted to believe what Marx said. Lenin thought that people were too stupid and too indoctrinated to realize how they are exploited. The workers had no class consciousness. So Lenin introduced the authoritarianism to Marx's ideas. The stupid workers didn't understand Marx, but he and his intellectual friends understand Marx, so he decided that he and his group of intellectuals should be in power and make all the decisions for all the stupid workers who shouldn't be allowed to make decisions for themselves because they didn't even read Marx or didn't understand him if they did.
Stalin who was a big fan of Lenin said, after Lenin had died, the authoritarianism sounds great! But rather than a group of intellectuals (the party), it should be him and him alone in power. So Stalin turned Lenin's already authoritarian ideology into a full-blown dictatorship. And Stalin also broke with both Marx's and Lenin's idea that the workers should first *want* socialism (revolution) before they get socialism. Stalin said let's give them socialism even though there was no revolution yet. So Stalin took everything away from the poor Russian farmers and had those who resisted killed.
Also, Marx (a German) had always said that the revolution must begin in rich, advanced, already industrialized countries. Lenin (a Russian) said fuck that, who says the revolution can't start in piss-poor Russia that is centuries behind and is not at all industrialized?
I can understand that as an Eastern European you are traumatized by Stalinism and rightly say it was evil. But Stalin went against everything that Marx had taught.
If you hate on communism, please get the facts straight. Marxism, Leninism and Stalinism are three distinct ideologies. Even though people throw them all in the same pot and label all three as #communism.
@janantos @lykso You experienced Stalinism or forms of government inspired by it. Again, I agree that those were horrible, but I'm talking about Marxism and that is different from what traumatized you.
About centralized production and development destroying all innovation:
In all countries there are thousands of bakeries. The "production" of bread is decentralized. In the West we never had to stand in line (for more than 5 minutes) when buying bread, which was not the experience in the Soviet Union, right? In the West (and all countries since 1989), different bakeries could even charge different prices for their bread because they operate independently from each other, whereas in the East, the centre that made all the decisions even determined the price of bread, for all bakeries in the country. Right? That's how people in Eastern Germany (DDR) ended up having to wait years for a Trabant car.
Now look at Apple's iPhone. There is one single factory in the world, producing all iPhones in existence. (Edit, since you miss my point: Even if there are two or three factories in the entire world, it's not that every town in every country has its own iPhone factory like it has its own bakery.) All iPhones are shipped to world-wide customers from that one centrally producing and developing factory. The iPhone is designed in California, one central location in the world. There aren't iPhone factories all over the world, decentralized. No, it's just one factory at the center. And yet the iPhone was a huge innovation. Capitalism (the West) does central production all the time and it doesn't kill all innovation and progress. So, central production doesn't have to suck.