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It's a retrospective analysis of an assertion made by NYTimes. The original headline wasn't clickbait, just presumptive, and even so, it's a pretty significant publication that spends a lot of time on the HN front page (alongside you, I'll add). I think it's perfectly fair, and nowhere close to a strawman, to deconstruct that claim a year later.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/16/magazine/using-ai-hard-fo...

"Everyone Is Using A.I. for Everything. Is That Bad?" - subheading: "Either way, let’s not be in denial about it."

It's clearly intended as rhetorical hyperbole - like "everyone's on their phone at the movie theater" or "everyone's fed up with AI hype".

If you read the actual transcript it makes it very clear that it's not claiming "Everyone is using AI" almost immediately:

> ChatGPT is the sixth-biggest website on Earth. Something like 43 percent of Americans in the work force use generative A.I.


They are a self-described 10x coder who moves AI slop, so almost certainly the latter.

I think we might be facing a cultural reckoning on what being "productive" actually means. Creating more products doesn't mean more production.


Amen

That might be an even more naive take.

Can you show me one space, historically, in any industry, where a company climbed to the top of a market solely on altruistic intentions?


I mean this earnestly: is this copy?

I mean, I agree with your general point that copyright might need to be reconsidered, but this doesn't seem like an attempt to reconsider it. It's rather transparently enabling further cronyism.

Never gotten any emails from lawyers, I see.

Copyright laws are heavily enforced, only selectively.


Yes, so what this does is centralized that selective enforcement directly under politicized control, so that it can be weaponized against political enemies.

I believe that machines could potentially be conscious, and don't buy for a second that chess algorithms or LLMs could be themselves.

Interestingly (and anecdotally), as a 10-year+ experienced college dropout, I still see challenges getting hired for jobs that list degrees as a requirement. The only time I get a call back on "front door" applications is with the fateful addendum of "OR relevant work experience". (I wonder if agents and their lack of human discretion is amplifying this.) The article's assertion that a college degree still offers an edge beyond entry level still seems very much true.

If you haven't got a degree on your resume, it just gets autodropped at the application stage by an ATS. No human sees it. Same if you're missing keywords.

Which is why night school for someone in that position can be useful - just to get the keyword "degree" on there.

But the people you meet at night school are likely to be even more useful. Connections rule the world.


I know it seems awkward, but you can just lie on your resume. Most employers lie on their job ads, most applicants lie on their resumes. This is why the whole recruitment process is so broken.

You're correct, and I've long been aware. I just... won't.

Principles haven't done much good so far, but my sleep is bad enough as is.


Have you worked for corporations long?

> their product is struggling to do your daily job functions for you

So what's the value prop?


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