Innovation is really a weird thing. If we could show ChatGPT to people 10, 20 years ago I'm certain most people would be amazed by this technology.
Today, lots of people heavily criticize its limitations and thinks 40 bucks/mo is too much for this kind of tech.
Reminds me about newspapers headlines being skeptical when light bulb started being sold for the first time. 99% people seems to be fundamentally conservative and can't grasp innovation properly, nor understand the fast pace of evolution some things can have.
Not saying this is good or bad, just an interesting phenomenon to observe.
I think this is mostly people being (rightly) pissed off that this technology and the kinds of resources required to replicate it are in the hands of 1-3 companies, who try to add “safety” features that hamper it.
DRMed technology is almost worse than not having it - it’s tantalisingly close, but you can’t use it for what you want because a human (not the machine!) said no.
Today, lots of people heavily criticize its limitations and thinks 40 bucks/mo is too much for this kind of tech.
Reminds me about newspapers headlines being skeptical when light bulb started being sold for the first time. 99% people seems to be fundamentally conservative and can't grasp innovation properly, nor understand the fast pace of evolution some things can have.
Not saying this is good or bad, just an interesting phenomenon to observe.