• ddplf@szmer.info
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      4 hours ago

      Nah, aside from the general look&feel - I ain’t seein it. There’s no artifacts as far as I can tell.

      EDIT: Oops, you’re right guys, there’s an explicit helper text at the bottom

      • thatsTheCatch@lemmy.nz
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        5 hours ago

        It says “Made with AI” at the bottom left. It also just looks so AI generated I would’ve bet $50 even if they’re wasn’t the disclaimer

      • samus12345@sh.itjust.works
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        5 hours ago

        “Made with AI” at the bottom aside, you need to brush up on your AI detection skills. There’s plenty of AI weirdness here.

    • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 hours ago

      For real, here is a super shitty approximation of the same image. It took me roughly three minutes to make. And most of that was simply remembering how to get ProCreate to do the things I wanted it to do, because I don’t use it regularly:

    • Crozekiel@lemmy.zip
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      8 hours ago

      And they didn’t even give it the same handle to show any kind of continuity that might at least allude to all those handles being representative of a shovel… Love the meme making fun of AI has a “Made with AI” badge on it… wtf are we doing?

  • bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Almost all billboards in the Silicon Valley area are for AI and related services, it really does look like selling shovels to shovel sellers.

    • Ajen@sh.itjust.works
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      10 hours ago

      IMO the Silicon Valley startups are the miners, and companies like Nvidia, Anthropic, and OpenAI are the shovel sellers. And from that perspective there aren’t that many shovel sellers.

      • AppleTea@lemmy.zip
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        9 hours ago

        Goes further up the pike than that. The phrase is “in a gold rush, sell picks and shovels”. The real shovel seller is NVIDIA, with their graphics chips.

        Really, this is just an extension of the graphics chip boom crypto started. A lot of “mining” server farms transitioned smoothly into renting server time for AI training. It’s always been the same bubble: overproduction of graphics cards.

        • Thales@sh.itjust.works
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          8 hours ago

          Ed Zitron has a recent post showing that NVIDIA is the only company making money in the AI gold rush.

        • Ajen@sh.itjust.works
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          9 hours ago

          I get your point, and mostly agree, but the companies developing closed models are sometimes selling data center services to the real miners - the SV startups that are building products with AI, who are burning a ton of money on tokens. The data centers are making a profit, and will mostly be fine when the bubble pops. So Nvidia is clearly a shovel seller, and SV startups are clearly miners, but the analogy starts to break down when you look at Google, MS, etc.

    • anton@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 hours ago

      They are selling shovel blades and handles, so the shovel sellers can put them together and believe they are providing a unique and valuable product.

    • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      16 hours ago

      During the “Gold Rush” era (Wild West 1800s), there were plenty of people descending onto California to try and make their fortunes by staking out land to mine and pan for gold.

      However, the first millionaire wasn’t anyone who got lucky staking out a mine. It was the largest store owner in the area selling all these prospective miners their shovels to dig with.

      The “AI industry” has a lot of parallels here, but everyone wants to be the store owner, and hardly anyone has a genuine need for their tools.

    • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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      18 hours ago

      The California gold rush. This was an actual, legit thing where there were more people trying to score bigtime selling supplies to prospectors and miners than there were prospectors and miners trying to score bigtime with striking gold.

        • hayvan@piefed.world
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          17 hours ago

          It’s not a local joke, I wish it was a joke, it’s a nugget of wisdom in tech world: when there is rush for gold, sell shovels.

          The biggest example today is proliferation of LLM services. There are some uses, some success stories, but a lot of companies are selling services, use my tools bro, you’ll save so much money bro, you’ll vibe-code the next Uber bro…

          A few years ago it was blockchains and NFTs. There is no proven use case but so many startups selling crypto wallets and NFT services to “help customers”.

          San Francisco is still relevant I guess, for being home to Silicon Valley and tons of tech companies.

          • Telodzrum@lemmy.world
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            12 hours ago

            it’s a nugget of wisdom in the tech world

            This phrase has been around for much longer than the tech sector has existed as an industry. Depending on how close you need the actual phrasing to be to the currently most common wording of the idiom, it goes as far back as the 1890s and has been common parlance in investing, manufacturing, and even the practice of divorce law for a century.

          • Encephalotrocity@feddit.online
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            17 hours ago

            It’s an astute observation. I don’t watch TV except for the playoffs and they have zero ads for AI, just for AI integration services.