21 points

All the tech capitalists have been subscriptionpilled and this is the result. ARR is god now

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26 points

Oh wow, their estimates for power consumption were too low?

Damn, why would they underestimate such an irrelevant, trivial thing?

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36 points

The next time some bazinga accuses me of being “afraid” of treat printers because I don’t cheer on their proliferation or humanize them while they’re dehumanizing us, I may just say “yes, I am afraid of the worsening environmental devastation that you fail to see because of a fever dream of cyberpunkerinos waifu shit.”

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20 points

Ulysses, I have to personally thank you for really opening my eyes to the tech rabbit hole. It really is the new fossil fuels. Especially as I’ve been listening to Tech Won’t Save Us for the past week.

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14 points

I’m glad to have helped.

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45 points

Capitalists will literally burn the planet to the ground instead of just paying their workers

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31 points

And worst of all, only for the purpose of who creates the “best” crap generator (aka AI generators).

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22 points
*

They don’t even need to burn the planet to the ground to avoid that.

They’ll just burn it down because they think it’s funny. Humanity will die laughing.

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It’s less that they think it’s funny (or even think about it), and much more that the universal oversaturation of markets and their avenues for surplus-as-capital to be made active and productive (a necessary law of capitalism in order to not collapse, a component of capitalism’s need for constant growth), which is further tightened by workers’ purchasing power being in freefall due to suppressed wages in order to maintain profits, has made it so any slight opening of a new market is utterly torn asunder by the explosive rail-gun jet-stream torrent of backed-up capital starved for movement, bubble or not — but due to said saturation and capital back-up, usually bubble or inevitably made into a bubble just by the volume of hyper-invested capital that has nowhere else to go grossly over-exceeding the capacity of said market and the profits that can be wrung out of it. Which then causes an extreme oversaturation of supply compared to demand, which causes prices, and so profits, to fall into a cascading collapse. This will lead to many things, including further suppression of wages (to try to salvage lost profit) and contraction of markets, which as previously mentioned, are necessary and require constant expansion for surplus-value-as-capital to continue being made active and productive to stave off economic crisis and collapse. Rinse and repeat in the natural and inherent cycle of capitalist contradiction and its inevitable crises. This problem of total market oversaturation and capital having nowhere to go is also in large part where the root of the neo-colonial system of cyclical loans, debt, austerity, then more loans, comes from.

And worth mentioning it’s not so much that they would “rather” engage in this than not pay the workers — but that capital needs to go anywhere it can be made active; and those who don’t thin their costs as much as possible to maintain the best profit margins possible in doing so to reinvest that surplus as capital, can not compete with those who do, and will be ruined and subsumed by their competitors (those that even remain anyway). It’s not a choice by the capitalist who has any other while still remaining a capitalist, because making any other choice means not being a capitalist anymore and being cannibalized by the capitalists who “won”. They will never make a choice that ends in their ruin, and would have no material reason to, hence why they need to be not given a choice by an organized working class.

If only someone could have foreseen these contradictions and problems. Perhaps by forming a concrete analysis of capitalist laws and relations and the roles played within it by its constituent classes, then providing the world with a methodology of unmatched predictive power to expose it and awaken others in the working class to the inherently inevitable need for its forcible overthrow to overcome these fundamental contradictions.

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20 points

longtermist techbro whisperer argues that’s ok because it wouldn’t lead to complete collapse:

One finds the same insouciant attitude about climate change in MacAskill’s recent book. For example, he notes that there is a lot of uncertainty about the impacts of extreme warming of 7 to 10 degrees Celsius but says “it’s hard to see how even this could lead directly to civilisational collapse.” MacAskill argues that although “climatic instability is generally bad for agriculture,” his “best guess” is that “even with fifteen degrees of warming, the heat would not pass lethal limits for crops in most regions,” and global agriculture would survive.

also from 2023:

“We barely have enough water and you’re diverting even more for others to use,” says Yang Kuanwei, a tomato farmer bemoaning government water policies in Taiwan’s southern Tainan county, where chip giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, is building a state-of-the-art factory.

In 2021, an absence of seasonal typhoons left reservoirs so parched, chipmakers like TSMC were forced to truck in water to keep factories running.

For the third year in a row, rice farmers in southern Taiwan have not been allowed to plant their crops. Instead, the government is paying them subsidies to not grow rice this season, because it uses scarce water that semiconductor plants nearby need.

“When there is no rain, things grow at the wrong time,” says Zhang Meixue, head of one of the local farmer’s associations in southern Tainan county, once one of the island’s prime rice-growing areas. “Growing rice protects the local ecology by locking in moisture and keeping ground temperatures stable.”

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he notes that there is a lot of uncertainty about the impacts of extreme warming of 7 to 10 degrees Celsius

Well - I guess the “uncertainty” is how fast we actually get Mad Max mobiles. I’d say more but I don’t want to fed post.

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14 points

his “best guess”

Planet-affecting decisions are being made by techbro manchildrens’ “best guesses.”

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I used to think that in order to be in tech you had to be smart. Sure, intelligence =/= morality as there are many smart horrible people, but it still stings to see a “scientific” institution be so anti-intellectual.

I suppose in STEM, the S is silent.

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8 points

McAskill sounds like someone who may have never been outdoors

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