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| | Ask HN: Why are certain communities like Reddit so anti-AI? | | 4 points by ronbenton 85 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 11 comments | | I was surprised to get such a negative reaction in the programming subreddit when I made a comment about AI being a productivity boon for me. I went searching for some AI-related discussion in that subreddit and it’s strongly negative. Additionally, Reddit-wide the sentiment appears to be very negative. Is there some kind of phenomenon that results in communities like Reddit being unreceptive to AI whereas places like hacker news are more receptive (or at least open)? |
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I'm not negative about AI within the things it's currently useful for and the constraints of what LLM's can help with.
I'm pretty negative about the massive over-hyping of AI with wild assertions and completely underwhelmed by the current implementations of it - I also half suspect they are going to crash the financial markets when reality and hype catch up with each other.
Who knows, I might be wrong, they might discover machine intelligence and make AI actually be AI in the next 5-10 years which would be quite the achievement since we don't have a good grasp of what intelligence even is including our own.
It's not really anything new though, hot new technology gets early adoption, salespeople move in, becomes massively over hyped, will change everything turns out to not change everything but be useful for some things, gets used for those things and the world continues.
I'm even old enough to remember when OOP was spoken about as "The Next Big Thing That Will Change Everything".
Gartner even has a name for it https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gartner_hype_cycle