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Resistance to exploitative AI starts with building a movement.
I’m an AI engineer working at a medium-sized ad agency, mostly on non-generative machine learning models (think ad performance prediction, not ad creation). Lately, it feels like people, specifically senior and mid-level managers who do not have engineering experience, are pushing the adoption and development of various AI tools. Honestly, it feels like an unthinking melee.
I consider myself a conscientious objector to the use of AI, especially generative AI; I’m not fully opposed to it, but I constantly ask who actually benefits from the application of AI and what its financial, human, and environmental costs are beyond what is right in front of our noses. Yet, as a rank-and-file employee, I find myself with no real avenue to relay those concerns to people who have actual power to decide. Worse, I feel that even voicing such concerns, admittedly running against the almost blind optimism that I assume affects most marketing companies, is turning me into a pariah in my own workplace.
So my question is this: Considering the difficulty of finding good jobs in AI, is it “worth it” trying to encourage critical AI use in my company, or should I tone it down if only to keep paying the bills?
I think that it is good to push back on non-excellent solutions, but you can only do this if you have a better solution. Much of the activist examples given in the piece are pressure-only tools. These only work short term, while you have momentum, but when it turns out that you have no real solutions, or incomplete/bad ones, you will lose your points.
Thus, organizing for the pressure alone ("don't <x>", like a retarded climate activist gluing themselves to a painting, landing strip or highway) will under no circumstance have real long term benefits. Even in places where they might get a sympathetic overlord to act on their complaints, the moment the overlord is exited, either through elections or otherwise, these non-solutions will be the first to be thrown out.
Have to do the actual work, and no, complaining isn't work.
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I’ve gotta agree with you, half-solutions aren’t real solutions, they’re just short-term fixes. This is still just the beginning, and better solutions will definitely show up.
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What I worry about is that for example, what I understand about the author's situation would be for example hyper-personalized ad copy. The author feels threatened by AI writing the copy because either they do that now, or they don't have systems / methods for proper tracking, or they just don't like the idea... whatever.
Now, why would your boss listen to you if this actually works? If these hyper-personalized ads have actually better conversion rate, why not1? Like isn't that the whole goal of the ad business?
Let's say you start a union and together you find a way to make your employer lose the opportunity to have higher performance. This means your employer will be outcompeted. Especially in the ad business which moves extremely fast. You save your paycheck now, maybe for a couple of years, but eventually you'll sink the ship. All for some moral incentive that AI is bad? If it's more than just a dislike, there already is a solution. If there is a real issue, then you don't need a union. Just need to solve the issue... so why is the pressure tool needed?
The more I think about it, the more I read the article as: how to keep your job despite being wrong, at the cost of the business

Footnotes

  1. Note that I personally hate ads, but then I just remove them on my end, and I gladly teach others that are annoyed by them to do the same, so idgaf about some company wasting money tbh.
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I’m gonna have to reread the article because I probably didn’t get the full picture!
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Lmao at him calling himself an AI engineer while working on traditional ML models.
(I actually agree that AI/ML are fundamentally in the same category, but it's ironic because he somehow sees a difference and rebels against one but not the other, yet he adopts the title "AI engineer", possibly to make himself sound more marketable. Seems like some cognitive dissonance)
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~AI vs ~AI 3, 2, 1, ...
FIGHT! ⚔️
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I will be joining the fight against AI 🫡🫡... On the side of AI against useless workers 😂
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Someone working in the ad business pretending to have a conscience because he doesn't like changing his workflow.
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