我不在乎你的“人工智能”有多好。
I don't care how well your "AI" works

原始链接: https://fokus.cool/2025/11/25/i-dont-care-how-well-your-ai-works.html

## “AI”脑虫与技能贬值 本文反思了大型语言模型(“AI”)令人不安地融入创意和技术领域,并观察到即使在进步的技术社区中也出现了一种令人担忧的趋势。作者目睹了才华横溢的程序员陷入对Cursor等工具的依赖循环,体验到技能令人沮丧的贬值——这反映了其他手艺历史上经历过的转变。 虽然承认由于工作场所的期望和社会适应而采用这些技术的压力,但作者坚定地避免使用大型语言模型,担心它们对思想和自主性的根本影响。核心论点并非关于*AI运作得是否良好*,而是它的本质强化了现有的权力结构,通过消耗资源和瓦解熟练劳动,服务于资本主义甚至潜在的法西斯议程。 作者强调,写作、编码和创作不仅仅是关于产出,而是关于思想和自我发现的*过程*。最终,抵制AI不仅仅是一种技术选择,而是对晚期资本主义下自我决定和生存的斗争。行动呼吁侧重于社区支持、工会组织、有意识的消费,以及积极地在体制之外创造价值——选择*蓬勃发展*作为一种不服从的行为。

一篇由题为“我不关心你的‘人工智能’有多好”的文章引发的黑客新闻讨论,集中在人工智能可能强化现有权力结构的可能性上。 最初的评论者和其他人认为,人工智能并非关于创新,而是关于消除人类能动性——以“鸡化逆半人马”(旨在取代人类决策的系统)的兴起为例。一位用户将这个想法扩展到所有技术,认为计算机在历史上一直服务于*扩大*现有的、可能存在缺陷的系统。 一位反对者指出,这些批评存在偏见,认为许多“反人工智能”论点都落入了过度浪漫化传统编码或将新技术本质化为政治化的极端。他们认为,人工智能只是公司控制的长期技术格局中的又一种工具。 核心争论在于人工智能是否是一种真正具有颠覆性的力量,还是仅仅是自动化和控制现有趋势的延续。
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原文
View out of the window of a bus, but the window is fogged up. Light of different colors is illuminating the window.

I don't care how well your "AI" works

The other day I was sitting on the doorstep of a hackerspace, eating a falafel sandwich while listening to the conversation inside. The topic shifted to the use of “AI” for everyday tasks, people casually started elaborating on how they use “chat assistants” to let them write pieces of code or annoying emails. The situation is a blueprint for many conversations I had in recent months. What followed in most of them, almost like a reflex, was a self-justification of why the way they use these tools is fine, while other approaches were reckless.

I find it particularly disillusioning to realize how deep the LLM brainworm is able to eat itself even into progressive hacker circles.

the grind

I encountered friends who got fully sucked into the belly of the vibecoding grind. Proficient, talented coders who seem to experience some sort of existential crisis. Staring at the screen in disbelief, unable to let go of Cursor, or whatever tool is the shit right now. Soaking in an unconscious state of harmful coping. Seeing that felt terrifyingly close to witnessing a friend developing a drinking problem.

And yeah, I get it. We programmers are currently living through the devaluation of our craft, in a way and rate we never anticipated possible. A fate that designers, writers, translators, tailors or book-binders lived through before us. Not that their craft would die out, but it would be mutilated — condemned to the grueling task of cleaning up what the machines messed up. Unsurprisingly, some of us are not handling the new realities well.

A wet floor sign lying in a puddle on a brick floor

new realities

I personally don’t touch LLMs with a stick. I don’t let them near my brain. Many of my friends share that sentiment.

But I think it’s important to acknowledge that we’re in a priviliged situation to be able to do so. People are forced to use these systems — by UI patterns, bosses expectations, knowledge polution making it increasingly hard to learn things, or just peer pressure. The world adapts to these technologies, and not using them can be a substantial disadvantage in school, university, or anywhere.

A lot of the public debate about AI focuses on the quality of its output. Calling out biases, bullshit marketing pledges, making fun of the fascinating ways in which they fail, and so on. Of course, the practical issues are important to discuss, but we shouldn’t lean too much on that aspect in our philosophy and activisim, or we risk missing the actual agenda of AI.

No matter how well “AI” works, it has some deeply fundamental problems, that won’t go away with technical progress. I’d even go as far and say they are intentional.

on control

Our ability to use tools is an integral part of the human experience. They allow us to do things that we otherwise couldn’t do. They shape how we think, and consequently who we are.

When we use a tool, it becomes part of us. That’s not just the case for hammers, pens, or cars, but also for a notebook used to organize thoughts. It becomes part of our cognitive process. Computer are not different. While I’m typing this text, my fingers are flying over the keyboard, switching windows, opening notes, looking up words in a dictionary. All while I’m fully focused on the meta-task of getting my thoughts out, unaware of all the tiny miracles happening.

Our minds are susceptible to outside cues. When we read news articles we tend to believe what seems plausible. When we review code we generally expect it to behave the way it looks, even when we don’t have the context to assess that. The same is true for text: When we let a model transform notes into a blog post, a lot of context and nuance is added. We read it and believe the output to be what we thought. It’s subtle.

on a deeper level, writing is more than just the process by which you obtain a piece of text, right? it’s also about finding out what you wanted to say in the first place, and how you wanted to say it. this post existed in my head first as a thought, then it started to gel into words, and then i tried pulling those words out to arrange them in a way that (hopefully) gets my point across. there is nothing extra there, no filler. i alone can get the thought out and writing is how i do that.

Excerpt of a post by @[email protected]

on power

In a world where fascists redefine truth, where surveillance capitalist companies, more powerful than democratically elected leaders, exert control over our desires, do we really want their machines to become part of our thought process? To share our most intimate thoughts and connections with them?

AI systems exist to reinforce and strengthen existing structures of power and violence. They are the wet dream of capitalists and fascists. Enormous physical infrastructure designed to convert capital into power, and back into capital. Those who control the infrastructure, control the people subject to it.

AI systems being egregiously resource intensive is not a side effect — it’s the point.

Craft, expression and skilled labor is what produces value, and that gives us control over ourselves. In order to further centralize power, craft and expression need to be destroyed. And they sure are trying.

what’s left

A sign Way Out with an arrow to the left on a tiled wall

How can we be ourselves in this world? What we’re dealing with here are not questions about AI, but about survival under metastatic capitalism. Shit’s dire, but there are things we can do. I’m working on a post about that.

Until then, here are some starting points:

  • Be there for the people around you. Message friends and show them that they matter to you
  • Organize in a union. Together we are stronger.
  • Take care of your mind. Spend less time on social media. Use the freed capacity to educate yourself, go read a book
  • Bring something into existence that wouldn’t otherwise exist

The most disobedient thing we can do is to thrive.


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