Post AhyHpOFUfXmOooBDgO by cda@malt.social
(DIR) More posts by cda@malt.social
(DIR) Post #AhyHpMkGGBCc9eYlMW by cda@malt.social
2024-04-15T17:49:03Z
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While I suspect this is true, I also suspect there's an even more immediate effect. I posit that people can generally detect low-effort.Just one example: this idea that people should have machine-agents ("AI" *gag*) writing their emails. It's currently obvious. "Why should I spend effort reading something no one took the effort to write?" ... In turn, if all sides employ it, it has the very silly outcome of email becoming this zombie infrastracture for machine-agents to chat with eachother. (maybe this is becoming an aside)https://hachyderm.io/@danilo/112272033186120383
(DIR) Post #AhyHpOFUfXmOooBDgO by cda@malt.social
2024-04-15T18:02:47Z
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That said, it does seem limited to people who pay attention.One disturbing trend is the degree to which clearly ai-generated images have been passed around unflinchingly or placed prominently on the landing web page for what is actually a high-value, high-effort product.Like very earnest product pages where if you spend two seconds looking at the details you'd notice things such as: people having two right hands, people have teeth that don't make sense, things that should be mechanical (right angles) or extremely regular, like LEGO bricks, are organic and irregular, etc.I can't tell if this stuff is passing because it's still considered cool that software can generate it, if people just aren't noticing this stuff, or if they're just under pressure to ship it anyway.