Everyone knows AI output quality varies wildly—plenty of low-grade content flooding the market. And yeah, we'll definitely face some disruption similar to the internet era, with real pain points around job displacement and market shifts.
But here's the thing: complaining won't stop progress. History shows that fighting inevitable technological waves just doesn't work. The smarter play is to roll with it—learn how to leverage these tools effectively rather than resist. That's how we actually move forward.
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SerumSquirter
· 2025-12-22 20:08
Hmm? Can't resist so just lie flat? Why does this logic seem so familiar to me, haha.
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GasWaster69
· 2025-12-21 18:55
ngl has a point, but this "going with the historical trend" rhetoric still sounds quite weak; those who have been laid off don't care about what is inevitably...
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LoneValidator
· 2025-12-19 23:58
Low-quality content is indeed hard to sustain, but lying flat and complaining won't change anything. Instead of fighting, it's better to understand how to use it effectively.
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OnChain_Detective
· 2025-12-19 23:58
nah tbh this reeks of survivorship bias... pattern analysis suggests the "just adapt" narrative conveniently ignores the actual damage vectors. let me pull the data—how many devs got displaced last cycle? not asking rhetorically, the metrics don't lie. rolling with it only works if you've got capital reserves, and that's a high-risk indicator for wealth concentration imo
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SignatureDenied
· 2025-12-19 23:53
Instead of complaining, just get on board, really.
Everyone knows AI output quality varies wildly—plenty of low-grade content flooding the market. And yeah, we'll definitely face some disruption similar to the internet era, with real pain points around job displacement and market shifts.
But here's the thing: complaining won't stop progress. History shows that fighting inevitable technological waves just doesn't work. The smarter play is to roll with it—learn how to leverage these tools effectively rather than resist. That's how we actually move forward.