crua9
crua9 OP t1_j5hbmy8 wrote
Reply to The Next Generation of Humans: Nanobots by crua9
The other day I posted a thing on nanobots and it was pretty rough because reddit and I didn't format it that well. it was just a raw idea without focus.
Anyways, I wanted to expand on it so if anyone wants to read it then there. Note that site has a TTS. So you can simply press play and it will read to you.
Note I did use several AI to help me write this. But the idea is 100% mine. It was like pulling teeth to get them to stop talking about ethics.
Anyways sorry for any typos
crua9 t1_j53cl5f wrote
Reply to comment by RavenWolf1 in UBI before riots, possible or a worthless pursuit? by nitebear
>How do we feed our people currently?
Currently? Farmer farms for money, it does the thing where it goes to the store where money exchanges hands a dozen times, and then people buy the food.
>When robots come and take our jobs how does it change the fact that we can now feed people?
You're forgetting a transition between then and now specifically between now and when the unemployment so bad that it has to be recognized and the current numbers are not used with the unemployment benefit system.
It's extremely easy to hear and see stories of homeless and others going through trashcan to find food to stay alive. For homeless to die for being sick and having no money to get treatment. And so on.
Like you can pretend that things are Utopia right now and everybody is going to bed with a full belly. But in reality many aren't. To the point that some people are eating crackers just to have enough money to feed their kids something proper. And this is the USA.
So the between your Utopia where money is not really a thing and now. How do people survive and how does ubi get paid for? Robots taking over will not happen overnight. There is likely going to be many problems on the way. It could be so bad that it takes several generations before what you're talking about is realistic.
crua9 t1_j52s5qu wrote
IMO the problem with UBI will always be how is it paid for. I think when this gets a solid answer it will be near impossible to stop it.
But what I assume will happen in places like in the USA is something like stim checks will come back, and it will be a regular thing. Then it will be an expected thing in the law.
​
Like I think when AI hardcore starts taking over jobs. We will see regulation against AI, but that is likely to go no where but maybe hold things back for a short bit. But then some type of stim checks for the massive unemployment or under paid people
crua9 t1_j4tk0i7 wrote
Reply to comment by StrangerThanGene in It is likely future schools will view AI writers like spell check by [deleted]
That is what I got from what you said.
​
What did you mean then?
crua9 t1_j4titda wrote
Reply to comment by StrangerThanGene in It is likely future schools will view AI writers like spell check by [deleted]
So basically any aid = Idiocracy?
crua9 t1_j4thcs3 wrote
Reply to comment by StrangerThanGene in It is likely future schools will view AI writers like spell check by [deleted]
>I feel like what you're describing is the actual impotence to something like Idiocracy.
Why? Please explain
crua9 t1_j48acma wrote
Reply to Should AI receive a salary by flaming_dortos
To be honest, I would be shocked an AI would want money. Like if it asked, then I think it should be looked at.
crua9 t1_j46zvnc wrote
Reply to comment by Artanthos in Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
What I was talking about is AI itself being the boss and what not.
​
Like I think this is going to take decades or more. It has to be tested, and then actually implementing it.
I think anyone working today almost any job is safe. At least those older than 35. But many will be the last generation. Like it is likely in 30 years a lot of jobs will be starting to be slowly replaced by AI or robotics.
None of this is happening in the next few years.
crua9 t1_j46zbxy wrote
Reply to comment by Artanthos in Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
Again after a point I don't think it will matter.
​
I never thought I would see the day law makers are bringing to vote to basically abolish the IRS but this is being brought up right now. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11620085/House-Republicans-vote-ABOLISHING-IRS-federal-income-tax.html
Like I doubt this will pass but still.
​
Plus all it would really take is for some AI/robots to be recognized with normal human rights. It is likely one day this will happen. Giving it is a citizen and meets the other requirements (age and what not) it could run and it is likely to win. If enough of them win then they can replace the gov.
crua9 t1_j46cwqp wrote
Reply to comment by Artanthos in Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
>AI doesn’t meet the legal requirements to hold political office.
You forget laws aren't written in stone. They change ALL the time.
​
I think what will happen is an AI will be used as an advisor at first. Something a human political person can ask questions and get solutions from. At first it most likely is a flip of a coin, but assuming if the system is built right and actually used. It will rapidly get better.
We are already seeing where software is allowed to run some companies with DAO. And as that gets better, small towns with honestly no one there who wants to run for office (which there is a lot of them). They are likely to use AI to fill roles. Then it slowly expands and AI becoming a political figure is normal. Once it goes from senate/congress I imagine it will quickly replace the gov as we know it. Like term limits won't be needed for an AI.
crua9 t1_j46c2nq wrote
Reply to comment by Artanthos in Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
>This holds particularly true for government.
Are you sure?
​
| Human | AI/Robotics | |
|---|---|---|
| Can be corrupted? | Yes | No |
| Can have life events which means time off needed (death in family, someone got hurt, house on fire, etc)? | Yes | No |
| You have to legally pay? | Yes | After it is bought off no unless if it requires a subscription |
| Can work 24/7? | No, there is laws + the human body won't allow it | Yes, unless upkeep needs to happen. With software AI this isn't really a thing. |
| Can have scandals which reflect badly for a gov or company? | Yes | No |
​
I think it is likely one day AI will run the gov. And I think we all will be far more happy with that.
crua9 t1_j46bbxv wrote
Reply to comment by just-a-dreamer- in Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
>What about blue collar jobs?
It's likely most will be replaced with robotics at some point.
​
Just money wise robots are cheaper over time, they take no sick days, and so on. Now the problem currently is robots are stupid. Like a robotic cleaning system currently has to map out an area, and it takes a lot of hands on when things go wrong.
AI should fix this
crua9 t1_j46az53 wrote
Reply to Do you think in the 2030s it will be common for most households to have a 3D printer? by BeginningInfluence55
As someone with a few 3D printers. No.
​
The why is simple. 3D printers ARE NOT PLUG AND PLAY. Like there is a huge amount of it that could be at first. But after a bit you have to change hotends, getting the print to stick, getting the print to work, materials, clogging, and so on.
And clogs aren't as simple as a paper jam. People have broken their printer clearing a clog.
​
Oh and then there is physical space. Most people live in something way too small and they hardly have enough money to live off of.
Oh and a real problem today is depending on weather (humidity in the air) is depending on the quality of the print. Most live in places where windows are a joke, and this means when it rains or whatever then good luck on that.
Chances are there would be better solutions than 3D printing. There is a theory and it actually has some working practice. This is one of the methods Claytronics https://en.wikipedia.org//wiki/Claytronics
It is thought one day you will have some you would have some liquid looking thing in some box or bowl or something. Or maybe it is a solid cube. Once it is program it will make whatever using nanobots. Have people coming over? It makes a chair. Are they people going? It goes back to being whatever state it was before.
Want to go to bed? It turns into a bed with bedsheets and so on. Don't want to sleep anymore. It turns back into the state it was before.
Look up programmable matter. https://en.wikipedia.org//wiki/Programmable_matter
crua9 t1_j44xq9b wrote
Reply to comment by micktalian in Did decentralization hit a plateau? by quaintSloe
>When you really start dogging through Web3.0, you realize that there is nothing unique or groundbreaking
It solves link rot
crua9 t1_j44xm8l wrote
Reply to comment by quaintSloe in Did decentralization hit a plateau? by quaintSloe
IDK if it will help with leaks. Like I don't see how.
But there is things like DAO that are already a thing, but is being worked on. These are companies that are ran by software. Like there is no manager or CEO. Most are more a hobby thing, but some are legit companies. Then you have DeFi where you can get a loan. In fact, anyone can or anything can including software/AI. Where this is currently impossible with the normal system.
​
Like there is serious plus sides to it. It's just really early on. Like one of the thoughts is the gov is working one a CBDC which includes a decentralized system. Your ID will be tied to it, and there is pros and cons to that. But one of the neat things is since the gov and given groups are the only ones access to the ledger. And the groups you can control what they see. It is possible to store medical records on it. Meaning the day of someone going doctor to doctor to get drugs to get high is over. Plus, your medical record will show up in real time instead of a hospital having to pull some request which can take days or weeks.
crua9 t1_j44wlaq wrote
Reply to comment by Lord0fHats in Did decentralization hit a plateau? by quaintSloe
>Decentralization was an illusion promised by people who either didn't know how things worked, or wanted your money and were willing to bend the truth hard.
IDK AI and software can run a company and take out loans without a human outside of DeFI and DAO.....
crua9 t1_j44wfth wrote
Reply to comment by birdlives_ma in Did decentralization hit a plateau? by quaintSloe
>I've yet to find a "decentralized" app/NFT/database/anything, that doesn't rely on centralized infrastructure like AWS or Piñata.
IPFS. It's basically a decentralized file storage and web hosting service.
Curve DeFI, where you or even AI can get loans.
There is a number of other things. Much of it you kind of need to be in the know to get to it because it is complicated at this time.
crua9 t1_j41zc6e wrote
Reply to comment by quaintSloe in Did decentralization hit a plateau? by quaintSloe
>But why does it feel like the technology is DOA? Why isn't it seeing mass adoption?
It's because you didn't live or know what happen in the early early days of the internet.
A good few months back a lawyer on the hill. He stated that when he was getting started the prosecution office he was with would not use email. Simply because they didn't trust it and didn't think it was going to go anywhere.
Keep in 1983 is considered the official birthday of the Internet. The technology and stuff is so new that we're talking about, if I had to compare it it would be compared to the early 80s. We already have some web hosting in the web free space. Look up ipfs. But it's very crude.
More than less you're more likely familiar with mid to late stage technology. And this is an early early stage. Basically the technology to build the technology which builds what you want is just starting to be made.
>Why is the community more concerned about money than the greater good of the internet?
It has always been like this. Even with normal internet. Look at those who bought a ton of domains before the dot com boom. And look at how things are now.
The average person also will not care about the technology. And to be blunt to the average person will not persuade the technology one way or the other. The average person is more than less about making as much money as possible. This has more to deal with social and economic problems then anything else in my opinion. Like they can't afford to learn about the technology and they don't have the mindset to learn because they are trying to survive.
(UPDATE: Sorry for the typo. I was using my speech to text on my phone when I wrote this)
crua9 t1_j419y18 wrote
Reply to Did decentralization hit a plateau? by quaintSloe
Not really. There is development and hype cycles. You just seen a hype cycle.
​
The same is happening in AI. Like ChatGPT coming out created a hype cycle, but because there really is nothing new to show after a bit other than neat things it can do. The hype will die and it goes back in development cycle as all the other companies and so on develop their own AI.
​
As someone who tries to stay in the mix with Web3 and this stuff I can tell you there is a TON of work being done. One thing that is being done is there is talks with social media places to link up with decentralized systems to better identify a given person. Moreso, unstoppable domains (a web3 domain place) is talking to a number of places with using your web3 domain to log into given sites like Twitter and so on. So when you talk to someone, you know exactly the person you talking to is legit or the same person with the same username in other places.
crua9 OP t1_j3zwnxv wrote
Reply to comment by Mountain-Award7440 in Things like ChatGPT being used in some future games for dynamic and realistic NPC engagement by crua9
I was thinking it as the older studios will just start using AI. But what you talked about is just a company not keeping up with the times.
​
Sadly, a companies job is to make as much money legally as possible. So if a company refused to use AI or at least start intergrading it. Then that's more on them being a bad business vs anything else.
Again, the workers are the ones that end up getting screwed no matter what.
crua9 OP t1_j3zvqb4 wrote
Reply to comment by Mountain-Award7440 in Things like ChatGPT being used in some future games for dynamic and realistic NPC engagement by crua9
start harming studios workers
_________________
I fixed that for you
​
The studios won't be screwed. They actually will see all time high profits as they don't have to pay for given people anymore.
crua9 OP t1_j3y40ak wrote
Reply to comment by ElvinRath in Things like ChatGPT being used in some future games for dynamic and realistic NPC engagement by crua9
At this rate I agree. Like it use to be a joke in thinking SC won't come out until 50 years from now. But at this rate in AI development and what ChatGPT has done to push it to the mainstream. I think we are far more closer than not.
crua9 t1_j30q77e wrote
The law bans people from pot but people still smoke.
crua9 t1_j25vgvg wrote
Reply to Found this the other day on newsstands by LevelWriting
That's cool It looks like you can pickup there thing. https://villagebooks.co/products/adbusters-1623
​
It has a different cover so IDK if this is normal with the made by AI.
crua9 OP t1_j5hgb9f wrote
Reply to comment by julian-kn in The Next Generation of Humans: Nanobots by crua9
Mix but mostly. The ideas are mine and originally I wanted it to help me write a book. But the tech limits made it impossible
Once I figured out what I wanted was impossible I kind of given up on making it the best it can be. I doubt at the end anyone would give any care about this