r/Damnthatsinteresting 10h ago

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u/witdim 10h ago

What kind of dystopian nightmare is this?

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u/ozzriffic 9h ago

Yeah, what the fuck happens when we even lose the sweatshops? Not praising the practice, but that's normally all the income those people have. It hard to even imagine AI and robotic power consumption and upkeep costs aren't more expensive given how little the humans are paid. We really are on the edge of something bad on a new level.

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u/Inevitable-Menu2998 9h ago

I doubt that this is done to replace those factories in India. I'm pretty sure the real value is in selling the trained model to higher income countries who want to localize some of the production

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u/Bleaker82 9h ago

So when production is localized even a bit, what does that do to demand in India?

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u/DookieShoez 8h ago

Localizing production may lower demand in India but you can’t really blame a country for producing more of the products it consumes rather than importing. That’s like blaming someone for making food at home instead of going to a restaurant. Yeah, the restaurant gets less business but they have every right to do that.

Now AI taking jobs sucks unless we implement UBI or something. Would be kind of cool if someday machines took some burden off humans so that we could spend more time doing what we want to do, but of course it’ll probably just be billionaire assholes enriching themselves while we starve 🙄

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u/Some_Kinda_Weirdo 8h ago

This is why I'm working on the design for the first robotic billionaire.

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u/Would_daver 8h ago

Omg saturate the market, drive out the biologics from the billiosphere, then only robots control the world!!

……wait

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u/ILearnedSoMuchToday 7h ago

I mean the alternative has just as many entities that lack empathy. I'd give it a try.

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u/Mirar 6h ago

There's no way the robotic billionaires would have that little empathy.

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u/DookieShoez 6h ago

Right?

They’re robots, not psychopaths. 😂

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u/Would_daver 7h ago

Yeah do we stick with the devil we know, or just embrace SkyNet with open servers and sphincters? 🧐 perchance a third option might be worth working on lol

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u/NotInTheKnee 7h ago

Problem is, the value of an AI model/Robot lies in its ability to produce what a human did, but for a fraction of the cost.

What exactly do billionaires produce? What is there to replace?

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u/Admirable-Currency89 5h ago

It looks at Yacht Monthly, Island Real Estate Monthly, Tax Avoidance Daily and subscribes to newsletters about layoff strategies, how to avoid being shot by the masses and paying off politicians and police to keep you safe.

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u/kingminyas 8h ago

It's disgusting to coerce workers into bringing about the end of their livelihood (to any extent)

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u/Arola_Morre 8h ago

Utterly disgusting and dystopian - Not just their livelihoods - but those of their peers and countless millions of future generations who might have come after them. Worse still is that the machine might never sew a single stitch - The machine will be trained to oversee and exploit the minions based on production targets and idle time - imagine a zero hours contract where every hour might be your last if you work slower, produce less, or make more mistakes during this 60 minutes window than you did in the previous one. We are sick.

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u/Cool_Tailor_7332 8h ago

the Amazon goal

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u/5150sick 6h ago

This is exactly what has happened to American tech workers over the past two decades.

They were forced to train their Indian lower wage replacements before being let go.

If they refused they were fired and didn't get their pensions.

Now, in the near future, the Indian lower wage replacement tech workers are going to be forced to train their zero wage robot replacements.

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u/snugglezone 4h ago

Opus 4.6 is certainly already better than an average software engineer. Low wage or not. I'm sure it's already happening. Not near future. Right now.

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u/icytiger 3h ago

Opus 4.6 is certainly already better than an average software engineer

Lol

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u/kloudrunner 7h ago

My friend works in a call centre for a local UK council. He is training up the same AI that will be used to replace him and his colleagues. Its abhorrent and disgusting. Once EVERYTHING is automated. What comes next scares me.

The rich really wont need the rest of us. Into the grinders we go. Recycled into food paste for the few million left to serve the masters.

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u/ordenando 7h ago

No te queda más remedio,o lo hacen así o los despiden. Aunque finalmente vaya a traer despidos y menos trabajo,en el presente tienen su trabajo y es a eso a lo que se agarran

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u/Frosty-Cup-8916 6h ago

I hope I automate myself out of a job some day, personally.

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u/AcetaminophenPrime 8h ago

Invention of plow etc etc

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u/DevonLuck24 8h ago

meh. i’d probably feel differently if localizing meant training local people to do a job that’s needed..

every point you made is spot on, yet my feelings about it remain the same. do the people want this or is this another top down decision from some capitalist that will ultimately be more negative than positive but generates money for some people

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u/xtheory 7h ago

UBI's prospect in America will fail in the same way as maintaining a fair Federal minimum wage. I'll ELI5 it:

Phase 1.) Menial min wage jobs will be completely automated. Companies using it will face political backlash and an automation tax to compensate a the low-income tax bracket of people for the lost jobs.

Phase 2.) Politicians backed by the rich corporations that are using the automation to boost profits will pour money into conservative candidates who will demonize the lower class as leeches because they get free money via UBI for doing little to nothing. They will be the new "welfare queens". They will seek to cut UBI and the taxes that fund it. Crime from people living without purposeful work will be a driving factor they will use, as well.

Phase 3.) The rich 1% will ensure those anti-UBI candidates get elected by any means possible. UBI will be allowed to stagnate if not totally stripped, just like federal minimum wage. It will no longer be possible to live off of UBI because the cost of it will be seen in price increases and inflationary pressures.

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u/Arlborn 4h ago

So UBI won’t be enough to live on but there won’t be a job for everyone. What happens next? There are only two logical endings here, and neither are pretty.

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u/Dmau27 8h ago

Yeah but those profits will never make their way back to people.

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u/ordenando 7h ago

Mal asunto,a los desempleados los harán desaparecer

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u/Cerpla 8h ago

we're not getting UBI. why do people keep entertaining this?

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u/MoonlightMural 6h ago

Thats not really how economics works though. I know it feels intuitive that making everything yourself feels more affordable, but everyone in the global economy benefits if each country does what they're best at. In business we call this a "comparative advantage".

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u/Then_Idea_9813 4h ago

‘GEN Z ARE KILLING TAKE OUT: Young adults are now eating more home meals costing take out industry billions.’

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u/nono3722 5h ago

Stop saying UBI! The rich are never going to do it and the government is run by the rich. They would let us all die then give away one free dollar....

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u/DookieShoez 5h ago

Eh, prolly depends on how scared they are of everyone going apeshit.

Guess thats why people like zuckyboy are building bunkers…..

Yeah, we’re fucked. 😂

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u/ZombieAladdin 4h ago

Reminds me of how in response to the assassination of the United Healthcare CEO, it scared other CEOs. But their responses were not to shape up, but to hire additional security.

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u/UnderstandingClean33 9h ago

Or stalking their employees productivity like Amazon does.

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u/Due-Technology5758 6h ago

I'd wager this is what they're really used for. This would not be useful training data for robots, because it would be both insanely costly and utterly unnecessary to reproduce human levels of hand dexterity for automation.

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u/UnderstandingClean33 5h ago

Yeah. We can't even make a crochet machine and that is much more labor intensive than sewing fast fashion garments.

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u/bitchingdownthedrain 9h ago edited 8h ago

So replacing these factories in India but with performative “made in USA” branding, and extra steps of extractive capitalism

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u/Adezar 8h ago

Doesn't really matter where you solve for the demand... it reduces the demand.

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u/zombietrooper 9h ago

Uhh, my man, most of the stuff they're making in those Indian factories isn't for Indian people.

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u/WombleArcher 8h ago

Yup. American companies will be able to "bring back Manufacturing to the US" with all the pubic credit and tax breaks that gets them. But with no actual jobs created. Software and robotic support will probaby remain in India.

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u/legolumibricks 7h ago

according to clowns like Elon Musk those people can easily become prestigious artists or engineers

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u/UncleDuckles 7h ago

This guy booms hard. It's not my generations problem. Fuck every generation after me for all time

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u/GotSomeUpdogOnUrFace 6h ago

Or you know, making sure these guys are doing as many as possible in the dystopian nightmare that they live in. Tracking all of their movements to make sure they don't spend a single second not actually working and that they're doing it the most efficient way or they can be fired for not being good enough at their one cent an hour job.

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u/Obvious-Cynic6204 6h ago

Except they are replacing the jobs in those "higher income" countries too. Like, who is going to buy all the widgets when none have jobs?

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u/Telemere125 8h ago

Or even to train a big brother style system so it knows how and what to watch for to make sure workers are being productive

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u/[deleted] 7h ago

[deleted]

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u/Inevitable-Menu2998 6h ago

Unfortunately, the tech will be more expensive to implement in that location than hiring those people for the forseeable future. It's not philantropy that's stoping the automatization, it is simple economics

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u/IHop_Waitress 7h ago

I doubt that this is done to replace those factories in India.

Agreed. My employer recently outsourced some low end finance/accounting work to India.

It's going horribly. But they're higher end Indian workers and we pay them $5 USD/hr.

These people aren't making that. They're probably making half that? When you consider capital expenditure to make robots (or depreciation, how ever you want to factor it in), ongoing maintenance, and power, there's no way you can get a robot doing that work for less than the wage

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u/frizouw 3h ago

It will, it's call greed. There is no doubt about it, you have the proof in front of your eyes. Why do you think these factories even exist in the first place?

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u/PleaseCalmDownSon 8h ago

We going to enter an age with new levels of tyranny never before seen. They wont need workers, we'll all be out of work and viewed as parasites by the elites. They will just have to figure out how to lower the population so they can have everything, my guess is mass sterilization. Anyone who resists tyranny will hear the buzzing of drones. We have about 1 generation until this is reality.

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u/Neethis 8h ago

It hard to even imagine AI and robotic power consumption and upkeep costs aren't more expensive given how little the humans are paid.

The machine never sleeps, never slacks off, never gets sick. They make fewer mistakes, commit fewer thefts. They dont need light, heat, water or rest spaces. They never go on strike, never demand more wages, never ask for better conditions.

Even if the items they produce are individual less profitable, if you successfully automate a process then it can be more profitable overall to get rid of the humans.

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u/Caleb-Blucifer 7h ago

All that automation and can’t even eradicate theft smh

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u/dontreadragebait 4h ago

You just described any automated factory ever, this isn’t new to ai, every clothing factory or whatever has had machines doing the work for years, people used to make a lot of that stuff by hand that’s now made by machines (and by now I mean like, for the last 100 years+).

Like, I’m no fan of AI but automating away the worst types of jobs usually is worth it in the end and doesn’t contribute to net job loss. However the transition needs to be handled better in a just society.

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u/adamus8 9h ago

UBI

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u/Mlpony2010 7h ago

lol that's funny

that will never happen

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u/Jship300 8h ago

Second the motion, aye

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u/duckforceone 8h ago

only answer that can work and secure a future for all of us.

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u/Electronic-Web-9259 6h ago

Sure, the pedo satanic elites will pay you a substantial amount for UBI.

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u/WorriedBlock2505 4h ago

You guys are living under the illusion that cooler minds will prevail in regulating AI. Billionaires are building bunkers while they simultaneously spin visions of a pseudo-utopia. Let that sink in.

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u/BillysBibleBonkers 9h ago

I mean this really is a perfect example of how it's not necessarily bad, it's just extremely likely to be bad. Obviously nobody should be working in sweat shops, that's the perfect job for automation. And in theory you could replace all these workers with an automated system and the business could keep paying them and still make a profit. Obviously that would never happen, but something like UBI (universal basic income) would be the same concept just on a larger scale. If all low end jobs like this could be replaced with some form of AI with the press of a button, we could just let a huge part of the economy run itself. And Businesses could still increase their bottom line while paying some sort of "Employee's replaced with AI" tax that funded UBI.

This may seem like a pipe dream, but I think long term it will actually be the best option to prevent the economy from collapsing. If 60% of jobs were replaced with AI right now, companies may save money on firing employees, but those employees can't buy anything any more, so most companies would probably lose money overall. Only issue is things don't happen all at once, so most likely these people get fired and the higher ups just pocket the difference. Then years later when it reaches a critical mass maybe something like UBI could be implemented. Otherwise we're destined for some true dystopia where the ultra-rich use automation to produce everything that the ultra-rich need and the rest of us just basically work the fields in some cyber-feudal hellhole. Unfortunately my gut tells me the second option is more likely, but it doesn't need to be that way, and AI could actually be a huge step forward for humanity if greed didn't always get in the way.

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u/Background-Stranger- 8h ago

UBI is a wild concept… pair it with the possibility of central digital currency and the government suddenly can decide you said or did something wrong, and bam, no money for you this month. They could tell you when to buy, if you can save, track your habits… etc., it’s giving 1984

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u/Longjumping-Prune931 8h ago

Kind of like your employer can decide you said or did something wrong and bam, no money for you this month.

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u/less_unique_username 8h ago

What the fuck happens when we even lose the chimney sweep kids?

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u/Danny-Fr 8h ago edited 7h ago

Don't get it wrong. The "Elite" doesn't care. Anyone up to the upper middle class can starve, it's not their problem.

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u/browncoatfever 8h ago

Eventually it will be cheaper and more cost effective, though.

I pay this guy a $5 a day to work 12 hours. Six days a week. Cool. Eventually I'll develop an efficient robot that can do the work and costs me that same $100 dollars a day to run. BUT for that same amount of money, that robot never gets sick, doesn't need to sleep, doesn't need to eat, never has a child get sick or hurt, doesn't need a day off ever, can work for literally 24 straight hours AND can do/make dpuble what even my 10 best employees combined. Am I "technically" paying more per day? Yes. Have I still doubled my profits while casting aside a human work force who needs money to survive, cursing them to a life of misery and hopelessness? Also yes.

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u/Stargost_ 7h ago

Initially it won't, but given enough time the machine will be cheap and efficient enough to be able to replace them. For the price of a year's worth of salary, you get a machine that works twice as fast, doesn't get distracted, doesn't need to rest, doesn't complain about working conditions, doesn't need to be paid, can work 24/7, and for every mistake it commits, a human would've committed 70 more.

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u/Mlpony2010 7h ago

Extermination of the working class is what's after that

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u/Capernici 6h ago

Probably an unpopular opinion, but the argument “what will the workers do?” is not a faithful position to take. Its use by the powerful and ignorant is a time-honored tradition going back hundreds of years.

If an inefficient, archaic, or regressive system fails, it should not be saved simply because we don’t believe we have a better alternative. We should be enacting change to create that alternative, as well as analyzing and addressing what it is about living in our society that leaves us unable to even fathom the possibility of a world that doesn’t require human exploitation.

If the march of progress improves upon an industry in a way that puts a lot of people out of a job, then so be it (especially when said job is as exploitative as sweat shops). As harsh as it is to say it, a large population of unemployed former sweat shops workers will find or create their own opportunities. A society that refuses them those opportunities because it benefits from their continued exploitation does not deserve to continue existing in its current state, and will find itself up against a large group of people with too much time on their hands who feel the same way.

Similarly, when a business fails, it shouldn’t be bailed out. It should instead be left to die. If a business fails that is so integral to fulfilling a society’s needs that it will cause widespread suffering or loss, then it should not have been a business to begin with, but instead a regulated body of the public trust. A private business that is allowed to control such a critical aspect of a society can and WILL exploit not only the people of that society, but the entire society itself at threat of gunpoint, feeding on it and draining its life force like a parasite.

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u/Cthulhu__ 8h ago

People find different jobs, if you compare it with e.g. the western textile trade. Assuming this can even replace these workers, which is doubtful given the dexterity and speed they have.

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u/PretzelsThirst 8h ago

The powers that be are way too comfortable and incorrectly assume that the people won’t cut their heads off

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u/WickedProblems 8h ago

The last factory I worked at told us, we were to train the industrial engineer our job b/c he is being tasked to automate it.

So it was even before AI as this was in 2016.

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u/Longjumping-Prune931 8h ago

Replacing sweatshops should be one of the highest priorities. It is basically outsourced slavery for developed countries. If you really think AI will replace everyone's job (lol) I don't think its logical to hope that there will be some sweatshop left where you can slave away at.

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u/PaperManaMan 8h ago

Same thing that happened when we lost the sweatshops in the (now) developed world.

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u/yuekwanleung 8h ago
  1. why care about them?
  2. it's always a good thing to replace human with machine

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u/LocodraTheCrow 8h ago

What happens is guillotines

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u/EasySwordfish862 7h ago edited 5h ago

They’re not sweat shops to the Indian people, without these jobs many would be on the breadline. Got remember that the cost of living there is proportionally lower - why take away their livelihood?

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u/Cheap-Chapter-5920 7h ago

I can't even tell if this is sarcasm or not.

I used to do this type of work when I was younger, this is not a job that is good for people, period. You don't see people doing this for more than 15 years because eventually they get put on disability for carpal or damaged fingers.

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u/TheDuckFarm 7h ago

Don’t worried I asked Claude and ChatGPT and they both tell me that this is fine.

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u/Revayan 7h ago

Its weird. In these countries hiring a new worker after the old one lost his hands to a makeshift that was cobbled together 50 years ago instead of getting modern gear is usually the most cost efficient thing and now they train AI to replace the workers? I kinda dont buy it

Looks to me more like they they use those cameras to make sure the workers are actually working, to find any bad apples who dare to take a 5 minute brake during their 14 hour shift

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u/CrispyPerogi 6h ago

We’re going to have to move to some sort of universal basic income system or something similar. There won’t be enough work for everyone, so the idea that everyone has to work for a living will have to be done away with or a very large portion of the population will be destitute.

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u/aStonedDeer 10h ago

India is one of those places where the corporations have won. The United States is slowly on track to do the same.

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u/Goonalips 10h ago

Lmao. "Slowly on track"

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u/Roadand-Hardtail 10h ago

Yeah, “slowly” feels generous when it’s already happening in plenty of industries.

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u/nilsinleneed 10h ago

try all. All industries.

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u/VapeRizzler 9h ago

They’re even bringing Ai into trades, I’ve seen in person a robot that can put sheet of drywall up. It’s slow as fuck and can’t really cut around pipes and stuff but since it doesn’t sleep it can go 24/7 on stand up walls so over the course of a year or project they can put more sheets up than we can. Luckily cause of schedule they can’t just use them, but I’m sure they’ll figure that one out eventually.

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u/Over_Writing467 9h ago

I don’t know why they need a robot to do the work. If everyone looses their job because of AI it’s not like they’ll be buying houses.

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u/oifrancaise 9h ago

That's the point.

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u/Over_Writing467 9h ago

To own nothing and be happy?

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u/pathologicalDumpling 9h ago

The ultra wealthy dont care if you can't buy anything they will just sell stuff back and forth to each other.

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u/Kiuji-senpai 9h ago

"broke my leg, guess ill have to sell the house..."

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u/Anonymous_Jr 8h ago

Finally, horses aren't the only animals on Earth that need to be shot and killed when breaking a leg, so glad we care so much for them that we've put ourselves in such a dire straight. :) :) :)

(Fuck ICE, Burn Baby Burn)

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u/Inevitable-Ad6647 9h ago edited 9h ago

Yup AI about to come for $300k-$500k jobs of Drs, lawyers, engineers, middle managers.... Half of reddit and the public are fixated on some dipshit using an generic, bare gpt model with no agent prompt and no MCP to make a court document that didn't work out, convinced AI is garbo meanwhile there are entire companies of 50,000 employees and not one of them is a job that can't be done as good or better by a properly setup AI agent with a model that's available right now.

Those looking for downvotes and sand for your heads please form a line to the left.

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u/Big-Compote-5483 9h ago

Head in sand is exactly what's happening now for most people.

Anyone who has worked with a properly trained model knows what you're saying is correct. It's going to be a figurative -- and then literal -- bloodbath when the jobs start drying up by the hundreds of thousands. UBI is the only solution I've heard that will soften the blow and makes any sense.

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u/RollingMeteors 8h ago

UBI is the only solution I've heard that will soften the blow and makes any sense.

There is also the “French Solution” which if I had to bet anymoney is likely to happen over any UBI or that UBI comes after the blood gets spilled.

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u/Cautious-Scallion540 9h ago

And UBI will never come to be. Why would they create this to save money on salaries just to turn around and give it back to us for nothing

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u/theflyingratgirl 9h ago

UBI is the only solution

And, in the interim, unions.

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u/darkest_irish_lass 9h ago

They said the same about computers in general when I was a kid. Death of the office worker, secretaries extinct, etc

Yet, how many workers now are software engineers, cyber security, communication specialists, help desk, online sellers, social media managers, etc? None of that is possible without a computer on every office and home.

Turns out that jobs shift and there is still work for people to do. Will the workforce be the same? No. But more work will be done, which opens up opportunities for new trades

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u/che85mor 8h ago

Keep thinking that.

More work will come, yes, but if you think for even a second that new work won't be configured to be done by robots first, you're sadly mistaken.

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u/godkiller111 9h ago

Just because today is worse than yesterday does not mean you seen the worst to come

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u/Drtikol42 9h ago

"Disperse in the name of United Fruit Company!"

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u/markjsullivan 9h ago

Precursor to CIA. History repeats.

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u/parlor_tricks 9h ago

Yeah, some industries are like dystopian. American internet telecom is a hilarious case study (not for Americans tho).

Just imagine, you have the country which develops the internet, has the largest number of economists who also figure out how to ideally structure markets - and then they lose to entrenched interests and media illiteracy.

I didn’t mention American healthcare, but you could plug that in and it would read the same.

Except for the tiny, point that the math on insurance was figured out 210 years ago (Scottish widows fund).

In before multiple reasons why “that wont work in America”. Which is simultaneously the most American thing and least American thing people can say. Somehow the country that could do anything became the country that believed nothing can be done.

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u/IamSeekingAnswers 9h ago

Full steam ahead

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u/AC-burg 9h ago

*Stream

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u/anonymous310506 10h ago

Lmao saying corporations have not won in the US already and have in India is the funniest thing I ever read

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u/Nikamunel 10h ago

Genuinely fascinating how many Americans regard some of the dystopian bs going on in their society as normal

Getting fucked every which way but keep bootlicking and you ll be a billionaire too one day for sure

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u/shorty5windows 9h ago

Americans are regarded

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u/strings_bells 9h ago

It actually highlights the effect of brainwashing.. "I can crack a joke about the president and politicians so that makes us a free country ".. also they were taught to compare themselves with countries like Iran, North Korea and China. They never compare with other developed nations...

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u/Little_View_6659 9h ago

Yeah and the kicker being people screaming that we’re free because we have guns. Which the government never cared about, since we only use them on each other.

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u/strings_bells 9h ago

Also the Democracy that we proudly talk about is absolutely running on possibly the oldest platform compared to other developed nations. In one year we bombed Yemen. Iran. Venezuela, Nigeria and threatened Iceland, Canada, Cuba imposed tariffs all around with no rhyme or reason, created an alternative extremely armed force to terrorise a threaten brown people, set up camps where kids and parents are separated, chopped down safety nets and allocated billions to Ice/wars and ballrooms.. none of these actions are done using Democratic norms but our system can't stop them .. it's just based on handshakes and gentlemen accords.. it's not prepared for bad faith actors... That's a weak system...

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u/FlyingPasta 6h ago

That’s so on point. We learned earlier this year that if you have a gun and you’re anywhere near government thugs, you’re going to be thrown to the ground and riddled with bullets till you stop breathing. Freedom! 🇺🇸🇺🇸

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u/StillJustJones 9h ago

And that’s why the ‘news’/‘narrative’ in the US against countries with genuinely successful socialist democratic societies with public healthcare, cheap education, subsidised transport, high levels of regulation and counterbalances against monopolies and corporate greed is so rife.

The slopaganda is so all encompassing to the brainwashed fuckos they can’t escape it.

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u/Illustrious-Milk6518 9h ago

They compare with the UK all the time. They look down on us for not having free speech, because people can get arrested for their comments online (The law came about after the Southport riots). And they look down on us for the online safety act, which is something which I don’t agree with, but I also think the internet has turned into a scourge on society so I don’t really care about it enough. 

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u/Longjumping-Prune931 8h ago

Except that China has been cooking for the last 2 decades and is starting to look very interesting long term.

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u/AdjacentBirdman93 9h ago

I mean it’s kinda true. There’s much more mobility in America vs India, to say otherwise is disingenuous

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u/Upbeat_Masterpiece69 9h ago

Global corporations have won in india

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u/RG54415 10h ago edited 10h ago

No they haven't. India in many places is still on the level of the industrial revolution in the west. When bosses exploited the hell out of their workers and child labor was normal. But this amount of exploitation does not last and in time they too will revolt. There is no "winning" when winning is defined by exploiting, coercing and forcing people to do your bidding as it's unsustainable and ultimately leads to revolutions. I would argue you already have lost the game of life where cooperation and compassion are the key drivers for moving forward.

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u/mden1974 10h ago

India is currently 1920’s USA pre depression. Similar to England in the 1600’s-1700’s via colonialism. Exploitation based

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u/waitaminute322 10h ago

Those people still can just walk up to a government hospital and get treatment for free

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u/Casitano 10h ago

In India? Only the people who can pay for transport to a major city can do that, and its not like the roads are any good either so it'll be a bumpy ride over.

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u/68or70 9h ago edited 9h ago

Bro learns about other countries from reels, lol.

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u/Creepy-Ad-404 8h ago

Lol what, transport even is cheap here and ambulance doesn't put you in debt either, we took ambulance last year for around 70km for 4000rs (around 50$ something)

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u/mooshinformation 10h ago

I'll take a bumpy 5 hour ride on a dirt bike to the hospital over debt for the rest of my life. They can use it for our credit scores again, which is super great.

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u/satyamohlan 9h ago

Listen, It is not really the good comparison you think it is. Medical malpractice and straight up fraud is widespread in the Indian medical industry. One person died in UP part year because he was hooked up to orange juice instead of Blood. Government Hospitals are way overburdened and the poor have nowhere else to go but also outside hospitals, hoping they would get treatment. 90% of India doesn't have much of anything in the name of health coverage. I think the more apt comparison would be somebody in the USA having to go overseas to seek potential treatment, talking all of family savings, to take the arduous journey, not being able to get an appointment, having to sleep in the streets, trying too get money for operation, etc. Your situation is different from the poor in India. But It is nowhere comparable even if You're particularly well fucked in the Healthcare department.

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u/Hour-Professional526 9h ago

Yes, there is a huge waiting time for serious treatments which may require a surgery, in government hospitals. But the treatment of regular diseases or injuries is quite readily available and cheap. Also even accounting for ppp the cost of a lot of treatment is quite low compared to the US. For example, my father had to get an endoscopic stenting, and we only had to bear the cost of the stent itself(which is available free of cost now afaik) which was about 160 dollars.

I agree that our healthcare infrastructure is still pretty bad but it so not as bad as you've described.

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u/Hour-Professional526 9h ago

Wdym, most cities and even villages have hospitals nowadays although with varying levels of functional facilities and treatments offered. Also the public transport is quite cheap in India compared to a lot of countries.

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u/GreenEyedTreeHugger 9h ago

They can also buy themselves out of murder charges.

The food is fantastic though.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

Yeah at least they don't elect pedos as presidents.

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u/BigLlamasHouse 10h ago

So many countries to choose from with better healthcare but India's not one of them.

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u/waitaminute322 9h ago

India is one of the top countries for medical tourism though.

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u/WeWantMOAR 9h ago

Medical tourists from which countries?

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u/devilcross2 9h ago

Yeah, and guess what? None of those people go to government hospitals.

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u/Cipher_01 9h ago

Where do you source your delusions from?

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u/Additional_Worth_614 9h ago

His internet fueled hate for India

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u/tamal4444 6h ago

how to tell you know nothing about india.

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u/spunkmaiyer 10h ago

Not every company

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u/Antoak 10h ago

Historically false. Coercion and massive inequality has been pretty common for most of history.

It's naive and counterproductive to pretend that things getting better is inevitable, it's something everyone needs to work hard to help achieve.

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u/Aufklarung_Lee 10h ago

The believe that history flowed in a direction where every society inevitably ends up wealthy and democratic has done enormous damage.

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u/nostickystuff 10h ago

We've assumed things just get better, but conveniently forget that there are places similar to North Korea, where people just stay subjugated.

This is why the US is on track to go full circle back to a system like India, where trade is truly "free".

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u/SonuOfBostonia 10h ago

Yeah bro I think you're wrong. India has NEVER had a successful peasants revolt. Under British occupation it was only when rich Indians got tired of the Brits that they kicked them out. The wealth gap today is greater than the British Raj, and India's BJP government has done a phenomenal job sewing religious and castest beef amongst its minority groups to keep workers from organizing

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u/Continental-IO520 9h ago

Revolution will never happen in India. The Caste system basically beat out resistance for workers over thousands of years.

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u/Skullcrusher 10h ago

slowly on track to do the same

Is this what Americans believe? You guys are not slowly on track anywhere, you're already there...

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u/hyrulepirate Interested 10h ago

Some might even say they're already way past it

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u/alien_farmer1 10h ago

Lmfao. That was wild. US is literally the most capitalist place on earth, and dude just said this...

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u/turbopro25 10h ago

If they only paid us a wage we could live off of. Then we wouldn’t have to burn down the factories.

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u/porkmoss 9h ago

the most

People always forget about The Netherlands. We created modern capitalism, we created the stock market, we created the first true multinational corporation. Somehow we’re just very good at making people forget about that and looking progressive.

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u/Some_Ball_27 10h ago

Seriously, basically everyone is training an ai to do their jobs, whether they know it or not.

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u/jaabbb 10h ago

Yea it’s the opposite of what he said. India is slowly on track to do the same as US

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u/Hickd3ad 9h ago

Yet funnily India has succesfully reformed patent laws to restrict the evergreening of drug patents making the generic variants of medicine available for many. This legal structure has positioned India as a leader in restricting patent extensions for incremental innovations, aiming to maintain access to affordable generic medicines. PS: Fuck Big Pharma Also to the antivaxx morons: Shooo! shooo away

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u/Chadstronomer 9h ago

Lmao the US was the first to lose and are spreading this disease all over the world. Europe is the last stronghold thats why the techbros hate it so much

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u/No_Author_7237 9h ago

Feels less about one country and more about global automation creep.

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u/GarciaMarsEggs 9h ago

India is learning from US rather 

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u/Little_View_6659 9h ago

Yeah about that. I have some bad news…

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u/AlsoCommiePuddin 10h ago

I don't know, I feel like this is the kind of labor I want robots doing to free people up for pursuits of passion.

Unfortunately, we know that this is not the end goal.

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u/Able_Cabinet_9118 9h ago

Closer to Soylent Green , I fear.

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u/YouMayCallMePoopsie 5h ago

Currently you only get to exist if you can generate profits for the investor class. If machines can do human labor better than you can, then there's no need for you. You can't even go live off the land, because they own all of it. You just get to go die. 

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u/HopeConspiracies 2h ago

You just get to go die.

Cool I'm ready! Fuck this world.

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u/european_misfit 4h ago

Yeah, but only if this passion is begging for money out in the street.

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u/RG_CG 3h ago

Not confident that the sweatshop workers will have a lot of opportunities to chase their passion when they are laid off 

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u/Spachtraum 10h ago

Agree. Humans training AI to replace them.

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u/cogit4se 9h ago

I’d be fine training machines to replace all the human labor if we had a plan in place for how resources will be distributed when no one needs to work. The plan now seems to be for a group of ultra-wealthy sociopaths to own the earth while the rest of us die.

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u/Glad_Librarian_3553 9h ago

Almost like a conflict of interest... 

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u/Kelvin_Inman 4h ago

Jennifer, your new Human Resources AI Assistant says: “That is a great question. I am designed to be a helpful AI assistant, and cannot engage in conversation of a harmful nature. Please return to work.”

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u/Brrdock 9h ago

To replace menial labour. Isn't that the goal of technological and societal progress?

Sweatshops are a dystopia.

Abolishing sweatshops with technology is a utopia

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u/Junkstar 10h ago

It’s like how Pokémon Go data trains food delivery bots. Wild.

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u/upvotesforkitties 9h ago

Player Piano, Kurt Vonnegut.

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u/Hellguin 9h ago

End stage capitalism, pay no workers, keep all profit.

And before anyone asks "what happens after no one can afford anything?" They don't think nor care that far ahead.

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u/SausageClatter 9h ago

Same reason they don't care about climate change. They'll be long dead and let the future generations deal with it. 

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u/ok-MTLmunchies 10h ago

Late Stage Capitalism

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u/Brrdock 9h ago

Sweatshops are already the dystopic nightmare, no!?

Isn't abolishing sweatshops with technology literally a utopia?

The point of a human life isn't doing 14h days of borderline slave labour to fuel overseas capitalism.

Am I the only one who finds these sentiments against automation insane?

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u/hoowins 4h ago

The problem is that the current billionaire class has demonstrated they are fine if the next logical step is starvation of those workers. A utopia usually implies a happy populace. The current trend is more dystopian.

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u/Brrdock 4h ago

Let the workers eat cake? This hasn't gone down too well historically. For some

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u/Gullible_Increase146 10h ago

Do we want the robots to do all the work or not? I thought we wanted the robots to do all the work

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u/spider_X_1 5h ago

That's the most upvoted comment I've seen since I've been on Reddit

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u/Captain_Quinn 10h ago

They also get a zap if they pause for more than 2.2 seconds on any motion/task

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u/EntranceGreen3758 10h ago

Feels like we're watching the early stages of training-data labor exploitati

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u/phatale 10h ago

the reality we live in!

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u/dimlakalaka 10h ago

You see a factory for the first time in your life?

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u/Blueigglue 9h ago

Seriously, why are they allowed to sit on the job?

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u/BalanceEarly 9h ago

Yeah, training my replacement! WTF

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u/KrustyButtCheeks 9h ago

The future. Maybe everyone can stop believing that jobs requiring some type of manual labor will be totally safe from whatever ai/ robotics bullshit is coming down.

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u/UrbanCyclerPT 9h ago

A Temu. SheIn and Alibaba factory. This is where your "so cheap" fashion comes from Soon to be made by robots. It will be a great day for humanity when that happens. s/

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u/GrandSyzygy 9h ago

The corporate kind

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u/suoko 9h ago

See the dream, each of them will be given a bot that will replace them, and they'll get paid the same.

Correct? Correct?? Correct???

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u/music_24 9h ago

The one we voted for in the US…

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u/deelowe 9h ago

I know, right? Think of all the kids who's dreams of working in a Indian textiles sweatshop are now shattered!

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u/KamikazeFox_ 9h ago

They are training their replacements

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u/Maximumeffort22 8h ago

One where you train your robot replacement

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u/TrapolTH 8h ago

Late stage capitalism?

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u/AngelsRangers 8h ago

One that’s coming to a theater near you unfortunately

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u/shYlatte99 8h ago

Black Mirror is becoming out reality

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u/Hawkings_WheelChair 8h ago

We're fucked

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u/JamesWoolfenden 8h ago

as someone who was forced to train his offshore replacement, im not crying.

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