Warranty Void If Regenerated

(nearzero.software)

178 points | by Stwerner 4 hours ago

36 comments

  • neilv 2 minutes ago
    When I saw this the other day -- and it just went on and on, like a good human author who was going to write this kind of story probably wouldn't -- I looked for a note that it was AI-generated, and I didn't find it.

    All I founnd was a human name given as the author.

    We might generously say that the AI was a ghostwriter, or an unattributed collaboration with a ghostwriter, which IIUC is sometimes considered OK within the field of writing. But LLMs carry additional ethical baggage in the minds of writers. I think you won't find a sympathetic ear from professional writers on this.

    I understand enthusiasm about tweaking AI, and/or enthusiasm about the commercial potential of that right now. But I'm disappointed to find an AI-generated article pushed on HN under the false pretense of being human-written. Especially an article that requires considerable investment of time even to skim.

  • donatj 1 hour ago
    I'm trying to sort out my own emotions on this.

    I did not realize this was AI generated while reading it until I came to the comments here... And I feel genuinely had? Like "oh wow, you got me"... I don't like this feeling.

    It's certainly the longest thing (I know about) I've taken the time to read that was AI generated. The writing struck me as genuinely good, like something out of The New Yorker. I found the story really enjoyable.

    I talked to AI basically all day, yet I am genuinely made uneasy by this.

    • _dwt 54 minutes ago
      It's a major bummer. When I first read the story (a few days ago, maybe?) I thought it was an interesting metaphor that didn't quite line up with the observed details of software development with AI. I assumed the writer was a journalist or author with a non-technical background trying to explore a more "utopian" vision of where trends could go.

      Without the inferred writer, it's much less interesting to me, except as a reminder that models change and I can't rely on the old tics to spot LLM prose consistently any more.

      • nikkwong 48 minutes ago
        What is it about it that makes the story less interesting to you? It's the same story, down to the same delicate details. When AI-slop stops being, well, slop, and just is everything that humans do, but much better, and much more efficient—will we have the same repulsion to it that many of us do now?

        I find it interesting to ponder. We look at the luddite movement as futile and somewhat fatalistic in a way. I feel like the current attitude towards AI generated art will suffer the same fate—but I'm really not quite sure.

        • devin 35 minutes ago
          What is your understanding of the luddite movement? I ask because I don't believe many are aware that luddites were not anti-technology. It was a labor movement which was targeted at exploitation by factory owners. Their issue was with factories forcing the use of machines to produce inferior products so owners could use cheaper, low skill labor.

          https://www.vice.com/en/article/luddites-definition-wrong-la...

        • bjt 41 minutes ago
          You can get some good guesses from the comment itself.

          > I assumed the writer was a journalist or author with a non-technical background trying to explore a more "utopian" vision of where trends could go.

          If you assume you're reading something from a person with intention and a perspective, who you could connect with or influence in some way, then that affects the experience of reading. It's not just the words on the page.

        • kevin_thibedeau 12 minutes ago
          People had a revulsion to eating refrigerated foods. The developed world got over it. We're comfortably on the path to becoming Eloi who will trust everything the magic box does for us.
        • the_axiom 30 minutes ago
          the story is bad in itself and doesn't add anything to the reader

          but if you knew it came from a human it would be interesting as a window to learning what the writer was thinking

          since there is no writer such window doesn't exist either

        • jplusequalt 43 minutes ago
          >What is it about it that makes the story less interesting to you?

          Read my comment below for a perspective.

    • _carbyau_ 41 minutes ago
      Humans build friendships and relationships on shared experiences. There is an element of relationship-through-experiencing-a-thing. Whether it's going for a walk together or the classic first date template of dinner and a movie. The shared experience is the thing.

      With stories that shared experience is between author and reader. Book clubs etc will try to extend that "shared experience" but primarily it is author <-> reader relationship.

      Remove that "shared feeling with the author" and what meaning does it have?

      • CamperBob2 3 minutes ago
        ...and what meaning does it have?

        It means, "Wow. Cool. I'm a member of a species that taught rocks to think. Holy fuck. That's pretty insanely fucking awesome. Wow. Wow, wow, wow. Fuck."

        That's about all it means. Nothing was removed from your life, but something optional was added.

      • smallnix 39 minutes ago
        You can look at a tree and feels things by yourself. Also there's the shared readership.
    • Aeolun 21 minutes ago
      It's full of AI generated imagery. Why would it not be AI generated?
    • jplusequalt 1 hour ago
      I think its a valid emotion to feel. I genuinely resonated with the story, but when I learned it was written by Claude it kind of left me feeling ... betrayed?

      One of the many things I love about art is when I encounter something that speaks to emotions I've yet to articulate into words. Few things are more tiring than being overwhelmed with emotion and lacking the ability to unpack what you're feeling.

      So when I encounter art that's in conversation with these nebulous feelings, suddenly that which escaped my understanding can be given form. That formulation is like a lightning bolt of catharsis.

      But I can't help but feel a piece of that catharsis is lost when I discover that it wasn't a humans hand who made the art, but a ball of linear algebra.

      If I had to explain, I guess I would say that it's life affirming to know someone else out there in the world was feeling that unique blend of the human experience that I was. But now that AI is capable of generating text, images, music, etc. I can no longer tell if those emotions were shared by the author or if it was an artifact of the AI.

      In this way, AI generated art seems more isolating? You can never be sure if what you're feeling is a genuine human experience or not.

    • travisgriggs 34 minutes ago
      I had a similar experience a few days ago with some music on Spotify. It was an Irish Pub song, rendering some political satire that seemed pretty consistent with what I figure is a predominant Irish viewpoint. Since I holidayed in Ireland a while ago and adored the public there, I really liked it. I reveled in the fact that somewhere in Ireland, there was a band singing messages in pubs that resonated strongly with me. And then it was pointed out that it was AI. I was crushed. I went from feeling connected to some people across the pond, to feeling lonely.

      And yet, in ironic counterpoint, there is a different artist I follow on Spotify that does EDM-fusion-various-world-genres. And it’s very clearly prompt generated. And that doesn’t bother me.

      My hypothesis is that it has to do with how we connect/resonate with the creations. If they are merely for entertainment, then we care less. But if the creation inspired an emotion/reasoning that connects us to other humans, we feel betrayed, nay, abandoned, when it comes up being synthetic.

    • BoorishBears 30 minutes ago
      I suspect (but don't know) that this had to be edited somewhat heavily or generated in isolated chunks: I've generated a lot of fiction with Claude and it has a chronic issue of overusing any literary device one might associate with good writing once it appears in the context window

      I think if you left it to its own devices, some of the narrative exposition stuff that humanized it would go off the rails

      • Stwerner 14 minutes ago
        Yeah, there's a lot more work and personal touch that went into this (and the previous piece) than just "write prompt -> copy/paste into substack".

        It's really interesting to hear about others that have been exploring generating fiction with Claude. I clearly need some more work based on some of the comments, but it has been really interesting discovering and coming up with different techniques both LLM-assisted and manual to end up with something I felt confident enough about to put out.

        I'd be curious to hear more about your experience!

  • helle253 3 hours ago
    that's funny, i know where this story is set (i grew up there) - or at least, the place Claude was basing things off of

    some inconsistencies that stuck out/i found interesting:

    - HWY 29 doesnt run through marshfield, its about 15 miles north.

    - not a lot of people grow cabbage in central wisconsin ;)

    - no corrugated sheet metal buildings like in the first image around there

    - i dont think theres a county road K near Marshfield - not in Marathon county at least

    fwiw i think this story is neat, but wrong about farmers and their outlooks - agriculture is probably one of the most data-driven industries out there, there are not many family farmers left (the kinds of farmers depicted in this story), it is largely industrial scale at this point.

    All that said, as a fictional experiment its pretty cool!

    • CamperBob2 2 hours ago
      I think it serves even better as a metaphor for software engineering's future than as a forecast for the future of farming. As you suggest, farmers already had to make the "transition" over the course of the 20th century. A farmer from 1926 wouldn't recognize his counterpart today. They would have nothing to talk about. Software people, though, are still twentieth-century programmers at heart, who are just starting to feel their way through the Kubler-Ross process.

      Really a great story, and to the extent it was AI-written, well... even greater.

      • arcanemachiner 1 hour ago
        Kubler-Ross process -> "A model outlining emotional responses to terminal diagnosis or loss: Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, and Acceptance"
        • CamperBob2 1 hour ago
          Exactly. The stages don't always occur in order, or at all, but you can see the general progression play out any day, all day on here.

          I'm happily surprised (frankly amazed TBH) that the submitter didn't get bawled out by people flagging the post and accusing him of posting slop.

      • selimthegrim 1 hour ago
        > As you suggest, farmers already had to make the "transition" over the course of the 20th century. A farmer from 1926 wouldn't recognize his counterpart today. They would have nothing to talk about.

        Can you elaborate on this?

        • CamperBob2 42 minutes ago
          Automation and technology in general have made it possible to do more farming with fewer people: https://www.gilderlehrman.org/history-resources/teacher-reso... . In the US job market, agriculture accounted for 51% of workers in 1880 and less than 3% in 1980. It now appears to be closer to 1% depending on which source you reference.

          Hard to imagine many occupations that have undergone more radical change in the recent past than farming. The profession is now utterly technology-dependent, and a few companies like John Deere have hastened to take unfair advantage of that. Hence the growing advocacy of right-to-repair laws.

  • furyofantares 1 hour ago
    I guess I'm an expert on LLM-isms somehow, I thought they were still plentiful. They're plentiful at the start but get significantly worse near the end, so I'm guessing you spent more time polishing up the first 2/3rds or so.

    But I was able to get through the text, it's pretty good, you did great work cleaning it up. There's just a bit more to do to my taste.

    The story is good.

    • Stwerner 44 minutes ago
      Thanks! Yeah there were a couple I decided to leave in rather than try to rework as I wasn't trying to hide that it was written with AI, more trying to add more variety to the storytelling. I'm sure as I do more of these I'll be able to recognize them a lot easier. I have been toying with the idea of working them more into character's dialogue in the future, as I've already noticed some people I know speaking in LLMisms.
      • furyofantares 38 minutes ago
        I'm particularly allergic to LLM-isms, if you look at my comment history I'm constantly complaining about LLM-written text. I am genuinely quite surprised to have read that much LLM-generated text and been happy to do so.

        I am also extremely interested in thinking about where software development is going, so I really appreciated the ideas that went into this.

        Since you seem open to feedback, I want to add that I felt the generated images were a negative addition. Maybe they wouldn't be if they also got a little polish - the labels in them were particularly bad.

  • nativeit 1 hour ago
    > The milk pricing tool consumed the feed tool’s output as one of its cost inputs. The format change hadn’t broken the connection — the data still flowed — but it had caused the pricing tool to misparse one field, reading a per-head cost as a per-hundredweight cost, which made the feed expenses look much higher than they were, which made the margin calculations come out lower, which made the recommended prices drop. “You changed your feed tool,” Tom said.

    “Yeah, I updated the silage ratios. What does that have to do with milk prices?”

    “Everything.”

    He showed Ethan the chain: feed tool regenerated → output format shifted → pricing tool misparsed → margins calculated wrong → prices dropped → contracts auto-negotiated at below-market rates. Five links, each one individually innocuous, collectively costing Ethan roughly $14,000.

    Ethan looked ill.

    --

    I've re-read this a few times now, and can't work out how the interpreted price of feed going up and the interpreted margins going down results in a program setting lower prices on the resulting milk? I feel like this must have gotten reversed in the author's mind, since it's not like it's a typo, there are multiple references in the story for this cause and effect. Am I missing something?

    [Edited for clarity]

    • cluckindan 1 hour ago
      The entire story is AI slop. Tasty and enjoyable slop, but slop nonetheless.
    • cello305 58 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • girvo 2 hours ago
    I will say this is one of the few pieces of prose I've read that was AI generated that didn't immediately jump out as it (a couple of inconsistencies eventually grabbed me enough to come to the comments and see your post details which mention it - I'd clicked through from the HN homepage), so your polishing definitely worked! Quite a neat little story
    • robot-wrangler 2 hours ago
      I think this passes the sniff test only if you're not too familiar with this neighborhood of the training set. Not that the writing is bad but it's just derivative. I listen to stuff like "Lost Scifi" podcast almost daily for example, but there are many similar ones which are focused on reading classic stuff from the golden-age zines because it's all public domain.

      The premise/structure/flavor of TFA is an almost pitch-perfect imitation of that kind of voice, to the point that I immediately flagged it as probably generated. I actually think a modern person would have some difficulty even in consciously mimicking it. There's an "aw shucks" yokel-thrown-into-the-future aspect to it. Plot-wise you have rural bicycle repair shop that expands operations to support nuclear reactors and that sort of thing. Substitute any of the more atomic-age stuff for AI stuff and you're mostly there. If you have some Amazing Stories from the 1920s on your shelf then you kind of know what I mean.

      • jjmarr 2 hours ago
        It is a pitch perfect interpretation and I assumed that's what OP was going for. Manna (2010) read very similarly.
        • robot-wrangler 1 hour ago
          Can't speak for them but FWIW it does not sound like OP is necessarily aware of the genre at all. They asked Claude to explain something via fiction, and then perhaps Claude made the "creative decision" based simply on the availability of the material.
      • girvo 1 hour ago
        > I think this passes the sniff test only if you're not too familiar with this neighborhood of the training set

        Which is totally fair, I'm honestly not! I haven't read much of that myself

      • BizarroLand 1 hour ago
        The only thing I noticed is that the melody of the words was not equal to the quality of the writing and story arc.

        It was the text equivalent of hearing a singer whom you know has perfect pitch sing atonal playground songs.

        Take this sentence:

        Tom had been an agricultural equipment technician, which meant he’d fixed tractors, combines, GPS guidance systems, and the increasingly complex control software that made modern farming possible.

        Perfectly fine, a nice set up for a next sentence, but then you get hit with this:

        He’d worked for a John Deere dealership in Marshfield for eleven years.

        Bad. The rhythm is all off. Minor improvement:

        For eleven years he had worked for a John Deere dealership in the nearby town of Marshfield.

        Minor change, really, but the fluidity of the language matters a lot and just that one sentence written that one way breaks the flow.

        It's almost as if a second person interjected and wrote that sentence like a friends annoying girlfriend who won't let him finish a story without adding in her parts.

        But two notes does not a music make, so let's compare that 1 minor change with a before and after of all three opening sentences:

        Original:

        Tom had been an agricultural equipment technician, which meant he’d fixed tractors, combines, GPS guidance systems, and the increasingly complex control software that made modern farming possible. He’d worked for a John Deere dealership in Marshfield for eleven years. Then the transition happened, and the dealership’s software repair business evaporated; the machines still needed repair, but the software on the machines stopped being something you repaired.

        Modified:

        Tom had been an agricultural equipment technician, which meant he’d fixed tractors, combines, GPS guidance systems, and the increasingly complex control software that made modern farming possible. For eleven years he had worked for a John Deere dealership in the nearby town of Marshfield. Then the transition happened, and the dealership’s software repair business evaporated; the machines still needed repair, but the software on the machines stopped being something you repaired.

    • ajkjk 33 minutes ago
      It was pretty obvious to me, but the train of thought was something like this:

      * this is a good attempt at a work of art, but written in a generic style that detracts from it * nobody making genuinely good attempts at art like this would also write so generically * and if they were making it generic on purpose, they wouldn't be able to do it so flawlessly * oh, it must be AI

      I guess I can discern the presence of a human artist, but only in the idea, which just means it was a good prompt.

  • TrainedMonkey 18 minutes ago
    I really enjoyed fantasy part of many small farmers. It felt rustic. However based on my understanding the modern world is moving towards megacorps and economies of scale.
  • heap_perms 1 hour ago
    I liked it. It has a similar feel to an Andy Weir "The martian" type of novel.
  • hatthew 1 day ago
    A fun read!

    I'm mildly thrown off by some inconsistencies. Carol says "I’ve been under-watering that spot on purpose for thirty years," and then a paragraph down Tom's thoughts say "Carol didn’t know that she under-watered the clay spot." Carol considers a drip irrigation timer the last acceptable innovation, but then the illustration points to the greenhouse as the last acceptable illustration. Several other things as well, mostly in the illustrations.

    Are these real inconsistencies or am I misunderstanding? Was this story AI-assisted (in part or all)? Is this meta-commentary?

    • gunalx 1 day ago
      I also got a slight feeling of ai assistance as well (especially on the drawings), but the story was well written and really sucked me in all in all.
    • Stwerner 1 day ago
      Thanks! Yeah this was AI assisted. As an experiment I started asking Claude to explain things to me with a fiction story and it ended up being really good, so I started seeing how far I could take it.
      • dazzaji 16 hours ago
        I’m pleasantly surprised this was AI assisted so deeply that inconsistencies like that slipped by you. The writing is really extraordinary. It made me want to read for fun again for the first time in decades. Thank you!
        • Stwerner 10 hours ago
          Funny, I was talking to a friend the other day about some thoughts on branding and he commented "as someone with a background in marketing & advertising communications, it's wild to watch a software engineer learn the value of branding and marketing from first principles".

          I guess I'm also learning the value of working with an editor from first principles... over the last couple weeks before publishing I read through and made edits to this piece at least twice a day and still didn't catch this.

          • FarmerPotato 1 hour ago
            > from first principles

            I don't think that phrase means what you are trying to say here.

            What it doesn't mean: - learning by doing

            I believe it generally means: a formalization that comes after a subject is understood so well that you can reduce it to "first principles" that imply the rest. Or, the production of a hypothesis by deduction from widely-accepted principles.

  • JaxHart260 6 minutes ago
    counterpoint: this assumes everyone has the same constraints. not always true
  • jjmarr 3 hours ago
    Your polishing work made a difference! The prose is like every other work of science fiction I've read.

    It's written like this is a dystopia but billing $180/45 minutes in rural low cost of living area sounds awesome. And the choreographer billing "more than a truck" for three weeks? The dream!

    • ByThyGrace 39 minutes ago
      > The prose is like every other work of science fiction I've read.

      Well, then, you gotta move on to reading better science fiction. Because this is pretty damn bland. I gave up after 2 minutes because of it. Kinda feel vindicated after coming to the comments.

      I can see it working for casual readers, which is why it's already an editorial problem. Imagine having to sift through a growing number of faux writers sending publishers AI generated prose.

    • ghewgill 2 hours ago
      The story didn't mention what had happened to inflation in the meantime. A dozen eggs costs $32.
    • brianm 1 hour ago
      Huh, I got cottage core, not dystopia!
  • cortesoft 1 day ago
    I do enjoy this sort of speculative fiction that imagines though future consequences of something in its early stages, like AI is right now. There are some interesting ideas in here about where the work will shift.

    However, I do wonder if it is a bit too hung up on the current state of the technology, and the current issues we are facing. For example, the idea that the AI coded tools won't be able to handle (or even detect) that upstream data has changed format or methodology. Why wouldn't this be something that AI just learns to deal with? There us nothing inherent in the problem that is impossible for a computer to handle. There is no reason to think AIs can't learn how to code defensively for this sort of thing. Even if it is something that requires active monitoring and remediation, surely even today's AIs could be programmed to monitor for these sorts of changes, and have them modify existing code when to match the change when they occur. In the future, this will likely be even easier.

    The same thing is true with the 'orchestration' job. People already have begun to solve this issue, with the idea of a 'supervisor' agent that is designing the overall system, and delegating tasks to the sub-systems. The supervisor agent can create and enforce the contracts between the various sub-systems. There is no reason to think this wont get even better.

    We are SO early in this AI journey that I don't think we can yet fully understand what is simply impossible for an AI to ever accomplish and what we just haven't figure out yet.

    • andai 1 day ago
      Yeah, in the real world, Tom is already an OpenClaw instance...
      • Stwerner 1 day ago
        Funny I actually saw this tweet this morning about an Openclaw instance getting too advanced for the users to know how to control and fix: https://x.com/jspeiser/status/2033880731202547784?s=46&t=sAq...
        • Imustaskforhelp 3 hours ago
          > Funny I actually saw this tweet this morning about an Openclaw instance getting too advanced for the users to know how to control and fix: https://x.com/jspeiser/status/2033880731202547784?s=46&t=sAq...

          I feel like this ultimately boils down to something similar to nocode vs code debates that you mention. (Is openclaw having these flowcharts similar to nocode territory?)

          at some point, code is more efficient in doing so, maybe even people will then have this code itself be generated by AI but then once again, you are one hallucination away from a security nightmare or doesn't it become openclaw type thing once again

          But even after that, at some point, the question ultimately boils down to responsibility. AI can't bear responsibility and there are projects which need responsibility because that way things can be secure.

          I think that the conclusion from this is that, we need developers in the loop for the responsibility and checks even if AI generated code stays prevalent and we are seeing some developers already go ahead and call them slop janitors in the sense that they will remove the slop from codebase.

          I do believe that the end reason behind it is responsibility. We need someone to be accountable for code and we need someone to take a look and one who understands the things to prevent things from going south in case your project requires security which for almost all production related things/not just basic tinkering is almost necessary.

          • Stwerner 51 minutes ago
            Yeah responsibility and accountability are also some areas I'd like to explore. I'm mostly digging through this artifact I created with Claude to look at first order and second order effects and then "traffic jams" in the "good science fiction doesn't predict the car, it predicts the traffic jam" and what kind of roles might pop up to solve those issues: https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/39e718fa-bc4b-4f45-a3d5-5...

            I've mostly been digging through my own version of that and trying to find things I find interesting and seeing what kinds of stories we can build about what a day in that job might look like.

    • cactusplant7374 3 hours ago
      > The supervisor agent can create and enforce the contracts between the various sub-systems.

      Or you can ask the agent to do this after each round. Or before a deploy. They are great at performing analysis.

    • gambiting 15 hours ago
      >>There is no reason to think AIs can't learn how to code defensively for this sort of thing.

      For the exact same reason why there is absolutely no technical reason why two departments in a company can't talk to each other and exchange data, but because of <whatever> reason they haven't done that in 20 years.

      The idea that farmers will just buy "AI" as a blob that is meant to do a thing and these blobs will never interact with each other because they weren't designed to(as in - John Deere really doesn't want their AI blob to talk to the AI blob made by someone else, even if there is literally no technical reason why it shouldn't be possible), seems like the most likely way things will go - it's how we've been operating for a long time and AI won't change it.

    • cello305 57 minutes ago
      [dead]
  • hmcamp 31 minutes ago
    I can see this future happening!
  • realaliarain74 17 minutes ago
    counterpoint: this assumes everyone has the same constraints. not always true
  • FarmerPotato 1 hour ago
    So, in the past, your stories were warrant-eed? But no longer?
  • tengwar2 1 day ago
    There's a bit of a tradition of introducing engineering ideas through stories. I remember a novella which was used to introduce something like MRP II (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Material_requirements_planning) in the 80's. One of the reasons I think it works is that it keeps a focus on the human elements - like why Tom fitted the switch in your story. I remember automating a lab system back in 1985, which would bring in £1000 per day. Two weeks later I found out that the reason it wasn't in use was that the user wanted an amber monitor rather than a green one. I fitted the switch.

    I don't know if this is what the future will look like, but this looks realistic. And if my non-existent grandson starts re-coding my business without asking, he's going to spend the next six months using K&R C.

  • nailer 44 minutes ago
    A few months ago, I asked Grok for a piece of fiction set in the cyberpunk 2077 universe. A cremated incredible story about a braindance that was actually stealthily programming the watcher through a back door in the watchers own implants to transmit a AI from beyond the black wall, allowing the AI to escape into the physical universe through the braindance’s audience. Excellent.
  • ethansinjin 12 hours ago
    A fun read. I was hoping for the title to have some more relevance to the story, like someone who had handcrafted a piece of software and didn’t want others messing with it! Was that ever part of a draft?
    • Stwerner 10 hours ago
      Ugh yeah, I had an aside about the right-to-repair fights still going on indefinitely into the future that I ended up cutting. I kept the title because it seemed like a warning the characters would see on everything they bought, even if they ignored it. I'm sure I'll explore the idea more in the future though, I plan to explore insurance and liability and law at some point too.
  • Havoc 3 hours ago
    This sort of article really needs at least a vague clue as to what it is about.

    It's a long article and from skimming I see chat of farming, software, GPS. I can't tell whether this is worth investing time to read if I can't even tell what it may be about

  • the_axiom 33 minutes ago
    this was a ridiculously pointless story, I stopped after the second paragraph and came here to ask politely what was the point of it

    what was my surprise when I read it was AI-generated

  • neversupervised 2 hours ago
    I don't oppose reading AI generated content in principle, but because it's free to generate, I always am less likely to read super long prose that is AI generated. So the question is whether someone has taken the time to keep it as long as necessary but not longer. Or if there are ways to make it easier for me to commit to the experience, with a sort of TLDR
  • jumpalongjim 1 day ago
    Often suggested by optimistic podcast guests these days: the as-yet-unknown new careers that will replace the familiar old ones and thus give employment in the AI era. I think your story is more a commentary on the current AI goldrush than an insight into future careers.
  • SeriousM 1 day ago
    This is such a good written fiction story. Well done. And the best part: I can see myself as Tom.
  • andai 1 day ago
    I enjoyed this very much. But I have to wonder, was this written by Claude?

    Edit: got it right!

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47419681

    • Stwerner 1 day ago
      Haha well it was me and Claude ;)
      • Syntonicles 1 day ago
        I wonder if it was de-indexed from HN for this reason.

        30 minutes ago it was on the front-page, now I can't find it listed in the top 200.

        • cluckindan 1 hour ago
          And now it’s #1 on the front page.
        • Stwerner 1 day ago
          Yeah I was wondering the same thing. I didn’t realize there was any kind of rule against this kind of stuff
  • AndyKelley 44 minutes ago
    it's crap. you all need to go outside
  • cactusplant7374 3 hours ago
    There are always bugs in software. The question is do you have enough eyes on the data to spot them or do they linger for years.
  • recursive 1 day ago
    I used to live in Marshfield WI. It's kind of jarring to see it mentioned "in the real world", the the extent that HN resembles that.
  • benj111 41 minutes ago
    I'm disappointed, as the Google result showed "warranty void if regenerated" in the description and I thought HN had started serving witicisms for the desciption
  • bstsb 1 day ago
    excellent story, it was both interesting and mildly terrifying. to think that one day software could be malleable seems so wrong to me - you would think having deterministic results is important for programming - and yet with "vibe coding" that really seems to be where it's going.
    • sanex 1 day ago
      The whole reason it is called software is because of its malleability :)
  • chse_cake 1 day ago
    this is such a beautiful essay. thank you op for posting. made my day :)
  • lelandbatey 1 day ago
    Who can know what the world will look like as we "transition"? I sure don't, but I'm thankful the author here has taken a stab at it. I feel like this is one of the first stories I've seen to try to imagine this post-transition world in a way that isn't so gonzo as to be unrelatable. It was so relatable (the human-ness shining all the brighter in a machine-driven world) that I cried as I finished reading. I've felt very anxious about my own future, and to see one possible future painted so vividly, with such human and emotionally focused themes, triggered quite an emotional reaction. I think the feeling was:

    > If the world must change, I hope at least we still tell such stories and share how we feel within that change. If so, come what may, that's a future I know I can live in.

    • Stwerner 22 hours ago
      Thank you for this comment, I'm so glad it made you feel a little bit better about the future, if even for a little while!

      This is really the whole idea behind this project with Near Zero. I think there's a lot of anxiety out there around AI and the future, I was there for a while too. Ultimately I've ended up pretty optimistic about it all, and inspired by what the group at Protocolized is doing, found science fiction a great way to help express that.

  • bethekidyouwant 1 day ago
    It’s a neat piece of writing, but not nearly dystopic enough for my taste. There will only be one farm and whoever is fixing it will be on the other side of the world.
    • Legend2440 2 hours ago
      Yawn. I'm tired of dystopian fiction. We're likely to get something that is neither dystopia nor utopia, but somewhere in between.
    • 8n4vidtmkvmk 1 day ago
      I think that's the point, and it's refreshing to see. My takeaway is that even if everything goes as good as it possibly could go, there will still be a need for that human touch.

      Just saying that everything is going to go to shit and one or two corporations will take over everything... Maybe, but I've heard that story already.

    • iwontberude 1 day ago
      Dystopians are too easy. The real challenge and reward are interesting utopian novels.
  • andai 2 hours ago
    Did this story disappear then re-appear?
    • tomhow 1 hour ago
      Yes, which is why some of the comments are from a day ago but the post is only a couple of hours old. We originally downranked it due to being AI-generated.

      But on reflection and discussion with the author, we decided that enough HN users may find that it gratifies intellectual curiosity, because it's interesting to see how a human and an AI bot can collaborate to create writing like this.

      We just asked the author to write an introduction to make it clear it's AI-generated and explain their process.

  • swordmem 2 hours ago
    [dead]
  • thin_carapace 2 hours ago
    ai photos and em dashes/directional inverted commas (so probably AI writing), sorry to be rude but i dont see the point of reading this when i could prompt an AI to generate the story myself if you shared the prompts? im not trying to be crass here, if someone could share why they think this is worth reading id be all ears. after being warned across the net to not be snarky about AI i really must iterate that snarkiness is not my intention here, im genuinely curious.

    edit: since im being downvoted, i clarify my interest to be in the human artistic input behind this mathematical model output

    • Stwerner 1 hour ago
      I appreciate the question and I think the answer is much longer and more nuanced than can really effectively fit into this form factor. I think this question is getting asked right now about all art forms because of AI and from a lot of different people.

      My short answer to “why should I care about the mathematical model output from the human artistic input” is “I think we’re all figuring that out right now!” And I’m pretty sure the answer isn’t “you shouldn’t care at all”. Especially if the mathematical model output from the human artistic input expresses what the human wants to express at a quality level that passes that human’s “Taste Gap” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91FQKciKfHI)

      I’m sure we could go back and forth about this a lot (and happy to keep this conversation going, I truly do feel like exploring and discussing, this is very interesting to me!) so happy to dig into any aspect with you :)

      I will say that I think what’s happening is that we’re seeing more people explore art forms that couldn’t before because of mechanical skill gaps, and that’s interesting in the same way that synthesizers and sampling and software instruments did to music or I imagine digital art tools did to physical art, and I imagine digital photography did to photography which did the same to painting. It’s an interesting time to be alive!

      • thin_carapace 41 minutes ago
        but ai doesn't bridge a mechanical skill gap in this instance. there was nothing stopping you writing this story or drawing those pictures. juxtaposing language models against synthesizers chopping up discrete samples is just not a fair comparison. by prompting ai, one does not even remotely serve to fully engage their imagination in producing creative output (the dictionary definition of art). yes you could be seen to be using a tool to make art. in this instance, using that tool is an act of outsourcing your imagination to the distilled creativity of humanity. at this point the definition of tool must be reduced to I/O alone.

        regarding your personal input, this is an order of magnitude less imaginative compared to tapping some keyboard keys. it's not your imagination that produced the majority of this story; it's unfair to claim any aspect of this process except your prompts. which is why i asked for the prompts. im not here to hate on your artistic expression, just as im not here to listen to the sum total of humanity's creativity that has been poked and prodded into maximising shareholder value. some people might be interested in that - frankly i doubt they would be, if they empathized with a painter or writer or producer (or had any clue how easy it is to manipulate humans). me myself, im here for your creativity and yours alone. not that of anthropic (who, like other AI companies, stole it).

        by pushing out this work, theres nothing stopping you from having inadvertently acted as a conduit for a corporation to deliver its message. how do you know that you havent accidentally pushed out a work with hidden messages embedded within? do you know how good llms are at encoding and decoding hidden meaning?

    • AlexCoventry 1 hour ago
      FWIW, I read it before I learned that it was AI-generated, and I enjoyed it and thought it's possibly insightful.