This story reeks of AI, or at the very least to be made up, and it’s from 2018, 7 years old.
In civilized countries it’s illegal to fire people in that way.
And very conveniently there is no mention of either company or country.
Why is this upvoted?
theneverfox@pawb.social
on 01 May 02:47
nextcollapse
Civilized countries don’t let people die because they can’t afford to live
There’s not many of those, are there?
We’re all living in a distopia, no one is safe from the sickness… It spreads across borders
drosophila@lemmy.blahaj.zone
on 01 May 04:25
collapse
It is from 2018, but how do you imagine that this was written by AI given that LLMs barely existed at the time and weren’t accessible by the general public?
kat_angstrom@lemmy.world
on 30 Apr 09:51
nextcollapse
This is some dystopian fan fiction.
Jose has seen me come to work everyday through those doors for more than half a year. I believe this was his idea of a joke. He must have disabled the turnstile right before I was to scan my key card. I went straight to my manager to see “If everything was OK.”
Let‘s assume its true: those were so much healthier times. Covid was not heard of yet, Twitter was still Twitter. Today it‘s normality that AIs are making the decision if you work here or not (certainly deciding during recruting if your CV is forwarded, maybe also for firing by DOGE). It‘s normality that AIs decide if your content on your cloud account should trigger criminal investigation and closing your account for good. Anyway most big companies are not reachable by a customer anymore (in order to contact a real person). They have grown providing services to (and taking money from) way too many users, but paying way too few employees to handle it.
My personal opinion is that any company should be allowed to grow (by customer base) only to a size, where they can still handle customer contacts by real persons. If their product is working flawlessly it causes fewer needed customer contacts, so fewer employees can handle it. On the other hand, if the product is shit, more customer contact employees must be hired relative to customer base.
It even happened to me recently, Google nuked my (almost two decade old) YT channel for alleged “adult content” (Guess the AI hallucinated some crazy shit, since alls was on there was videogame footage) and of course, zero possibility of speaking to a human or any clue as to what’s going on, just a goodbye and thanks for all the adrev.
shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
on 01 May 00:58
collapse
I’ve been making an effort recently to replace all the YouTube channels I watch with peer tube channels. I haven’t been totally successful yet, but I’m getting there.
Wasn’t there a project to continuously mirror YouTube to a peertube instance?
shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip
on 01 May 22:15
collapse
No idea. I know individual creators can mirror their own videos from YouTube over to AP or tube instance, but I don’t know of anything on mass.
thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
on 30 Apr 13:38
collapse
I hate that I recognize the software behind the screenshot of his termination ticket.
Its situations like this, that make me happy to have made the choice to exit the private sector and deal with the bureaucracy and almost equally maddening public sector issues. But at least the public sector is dealing with people and not blind policy making workflows that are impossible to interrupt.
People can be frustrating but at least you can get something done with people.
threaded - newest
This story reeks of AI, or at the very least to be made up, and it’s from 2018, 7 years old.
In civilized countries it’s illegal to fire people in that way.
And very conveniently there is no mention of either company or country.
Why is this upvoted?
Civilized countries don’t let people die because they can’t afford to live
There’s not many of those, are there?
We’re all living in a distopia, no one is safe from the sickness… It spreads across borders
It is from 2018, but how do you imagine that this was written by AI given that LLMs barely existed at the time and weren’t accessible by the general public?
Or made up.
This is some dystopian fan fiction.
And it’s not all that well-written, either.
Desk Set did it better.
I just watched that again for the first time in a while. It definitely hits different in the age of AI driven layoffs.
Highly recommend.
Let‘s assume its true: those were so much healthier times. Covid was not heard of yet, Twitter was still Twitter. Today it‘s normality that AIs are making the decision if you work here or not (certainly deciding during recruting if your CV is forwarded, maybe also for firing by DOGE). It‘s normality that AIs decide if your content on your cloud account should trigger criminal investigation and closing your account for good. Anyway most big companies are not reachable by a customer anymore (in order to contact a real person). They have grown providing services to (and taking money from) way too many users, but paying way too few employees to handle it.
My personal opinion is that any company should be allowed to grow (by customer base) only to a size, where they can still handle customer contacts by real persons. If their product is working flawlessly it causes fewer needed customer contacts, so fewer employees can handle it. On the other hand, if the product is shit, more customer contact employees must be hired relative to customer base.
This is pretty much on the money.
It even happened to me recently, Google nuked my (almost two decade old) YT channel for alleged “adult content” (Guess the AI hallucinated some crazy shit, since alls was on there was videogame footage) and of course, zero possibility of speaking to a human or any clue as to what’s going on, just a goodbye and thanks for all the adrev.
I’ve been making an effort recently to replace all the YouTube channels I watch with peer tube channels. I haven’t been totally successful yet, but I’m getting there.
Wasn’t there a project to continuously mirror YouTube to a peertube instance?
No idea. I know individual creators can mirror their own videos from YouTube over to AP or tube instance, but I don’t know of anything on mass.
I hate that I recognize the software behind the screenshot of his termination ticket.
Its situations like this, that make me happy to have made the choice to exit the private sector and deal with the bureaucracy and almost equally maddening public sector issues. But at least the public sector is dealing with people and not blind policy making workflows that are impossible to interrupt.
People can be frustrating but at least you can get something done with people.
What’s the software?
CA Universal/Unified Service Desk