Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | mig1's commentslogin

Are you asking me to give some of my profits to the workers? Are you a communist? /s


even as sarcasm and that's really not how communism works, where there's no notion of profits.


There’s also no notion of basic civil liberties all the time, and the notion of food half of the time.


There’s an assumption on HN that everyone can identify AI slop because pretty much everyone here can. But my personal experience and what I think might be more in line with reality is that the majority of social media users can’t tell or don’t care.


How do they save money by hiring people in the US with H1B? Most of these companies have compensation policies so it’s not like they can hire a person at the same level and pay a lot less…


Ex-Googler here, at least in the UK, privacy was taken very seriously by all employees, we never collected data without explicit consent and never used it for anything but what the user granted permissions for.


Also ex, for a reason, everyone with ethics left, and Google “is a conventional company” now

Edit: reference https://abc.xyz/investor/founders-letters/ipo-letter/#:~:tex...


Didn't Google release many data collection features as an "opt-out" setting (ie: without user consent)?


> privacy was taken very seriously by all employees, we never collected data without explicit consent and never used it for anything but what the user granted permissions for.

Except when you literally trick people into providing their data: https://x.com/dmitriid/status/1664682689591377923 by pretending that your dark patterns are "explicit consent"

Or except when you literally trick people into providing their data by connecting totally unrelated services https://x.com/dmitriid/status/1908951546869498085 and you don't stop until the person gives up and submits to you.

Except when your own support explicitly says that your behaviour is tracked across completely unrelated Google services: https://x.com/TeamYouTube/status/1849952594992435493

Except when you literally sign people into user accounts automatically with most data collection options turned on.

Except...


correct. An example of this is building a WhatsApp client, you need certification from Meta and that seems to legitimate.


TM


I know it feels like this might be part of a big plan against sideloading, but from my time at Google, I’d say it’s more likely to be the idea of some exec trying to get a promo.


Do you think you were in a position there to hear about any of the actual "big plans" of Google, in case such do exist? Nobody is saying that every last employee who executes on such tasks are "in" on some big secret plan.

Also the two are not in conflict. People are getting promoted for things that advance company goals. They are following rational self-interest of the company.


It literally says in the article that nothing is going to fully replace it. And the same way that it didn’t happen overnight for it to become the force that it’s today in the global economy, it won’t disappear overnight either.


America decided to politicize and weaponize the USD and so the rest of the world decided to reduce usage of USD in international trade. They can use currencies of their trade partners to trade, so that:

  1. Currency flows are invisible to the Fed
  2. US sanctions cannot ban mutual trade in other FX
these two are the major ones, so if Brazil wants to trade with China, they don't need to use USD, they can hold each other's FX as some reserve and use it for trade


I agree with the sentiment of the article but I don’t understand the point they were trying to make here:

“Before, you had to go socialize with friends; now, you can just get drunk with a bunch of strangers. Before, you had to go find a mate, create children and raise a family; now, you can just watch a lot of porn.”

I’d think more of Facebook, Instagram and Netflix or the advertising industry in general like weaponized additions than what I do of alcohol.


That line threw me too,

> Before, you had to go socialize with friends; now, you can just get drunk with a bunch of strangers.

"Before" what? I think being antisocial and/or drinking are as old as humanity.


I think it means before the author had access to alcohol. To expand it, before the author had access to alcohol [an addictive substance[0]], he had to socialise with friends, and now that he has access to alcohol, he can instead get drunk with people, which is (for some unexplained reason) a lesser activity.

Doesn't make much sense to me, but makes more sense than any other interpretation I can think of given that alcohol production is pre-historic.

[0] Personally I disagree. I think alcohol is a nice social lubricant and that also beer and wine are nice drinks. The demand for non-alcoholic/low-alcoholic beer and wine proves wrong the people that have claimed that beer and wine aren't really enjoyed by people that drink, and that people mostly just drink to get drunk.

There are people that ruin their lives in part through abusing alcohol but I don't think alcohol is to blame. Personal responsibility. If you can't handle it, don't drink. Don't ruin it for everyone else by imposing endless additional rules because some people can't handle themselves. eg. https://www.rnz.co.nz/news/national/557549/christchurch-city...


Yeah "before" - before when? Before Sumer and Ur? If anything getting drunk with strangers is way less common now than it ever was in the past. A hundred years ago it was all about spending the rest of the day at the pub when you knock off your job at the steelworks. Alcohol consumption has dropped heavily in most developed countries.


This argument that the data centers and all the GPUs will be useful even in the context of Deepseek doesn't add up... basically they showed that it's diminishing returns after a certain amount. And so far it didn't make OpenAI or Anthropic go faster, did it?


What is the source for the diminishing returns? I would like to read about it as I have only seen papers referring to the scaling law still applying.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: