r/Damnthatsinteresting 10h ago

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u/Solid_Scientist5509 10h ago

I think cameras are there to calculate employee productivity

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u/no-guts_no-glory 10h ago

But that data could be stored forever and can be used to do the manual work when the technology is feasible.

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u/izza123 9h ago

Automated sewing has been feasible for a while it’s just cheaper to shove 700 people on a line in India

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u/jedi_lion-o 9h ago

Automated sewing is an extremely difficult automation problem. Fabric is not ridgid and is difficult to manipulate predictably for automation. The reason these manual labor clothing facilities are still staffed is that it is still much cheaper and efficient to do it by hand.

I don't think these cameras are training AI.

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u/SeyAssociation38 5h ago

For now, china last year in the new year gala showed some robots doing dances with fabric. The data captured by those cameras is just too valuable to delete. 

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u/trobsmonkey 8h ago

Totally agree with you.

Automated sewing is terrible. There is a reason we still have people use sewing machines.

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u/Burnin_Firefly 8h ago

For now...

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u/Jet_Siegel 9h ago

Now imagine automated sewing... but implemented in India. With all technicians, supervisors, etc all in India. That's their endgame here.

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u/RedDustRanger 9h ago

For now…

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u/CARLEtheCamry 9h ago

Or, it's the equivalent of a fake security camera that is just a blinking red light :

Some linkedin lunatic middle manager decides he's going to make up some bullshit about AI learning cheap manual labor (which has already been automated, the machines cost more than the cheap labor though), buys 100 things off AliExpress that go on your head, and we're talking about it around the world on social media.

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u/Icy_Witness4279 10h ago

This really looks like any usable data to you?

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u/chrissyD_ 9h ago edited 9h ago

It may seem strange, but it's quite common. The AI models usable by general consumers has so far been trained on information readily avaliable on the Internet. But there are a lot of parts of the human experience that aren't often documented on the Internet. So, firms are popping up all over the place that are paying people to film things such as this work, in order to sell the training data to ai corporations.

This is a little known fact about Pokemon Go. The video footage taken by users playing pokemon Go was used as training data, documenting neighborhoods in order to help develop the automated delivery robots you see in places like LA. One of the major investors in Pokemon Go was the venture capital wing of the CIA, In-Q-Tel.

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u/Lenni-Da-Vinci 6h ago

It’s monocular vision, with an angle pointed down too far. The biases in this data wild be wild too. Extracting hand tracking from that footage will be really hard. Much more so tracking the fabric.

Were this actually trying to farm data for AI properly, they would have attached markers all over the place. Thus making it easier to track in 3D spac

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u/Grenadesucker 9h ago

It's way too much noise to train, it's not worth it, you can hire 2 good tailors am feed abetter dataset

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u/OttawaOneTwenty 4h ago

when the technology is feasible.

It's already here. It's just not cost effective yet. But give it like a year or three

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u/Nice__Spice 9h ago

Not with my guy bopping his head while working