• VeryVito@lemmy.ml
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    2 hours ago

    The problem is the tech is no longer addressing and solving existing problems. It is only being inserted into working systems to collect data and fees, breaking the processes.

  • randyyy@lemm.ee
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    2 hours ago

    Ah look, it’s in Antwerp. Wolstraat to be exact.i used to work in front of that place.

  • rektdeckard@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Author is one step away from the realization that Capitalism is the culprit, and technology is just the vector.

  • surph_ninja@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    Tech isn’t the problem. It’s the people in charge of it. It’s the capitalism/neo-feudalism controlling the politics.

    • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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      3 hours ago

      Exactly. I would extend that and the article’s premise to say, tech isn’t innately good or bad, it is just a tool that can be applied in good or bad ways. For example at his cafe, a QR code ordering system could have been optional for those who prefer it, and could be easily implemented without collecting any personal data. And that could actually be a positive thing for those who want to reorder without getting up or who have social anxiety. But by forcing all customers into this confusing and privacy invading system, the tech becomes a bad thing.

      The villain of that story is not tech. The villains are the online ordering company that decided to make a data grab, and the cafe owner who decided to buy tech so he wouldn’t have to pay servers.

  • ABetterTomorrow@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    Consumer technology I can see being very toxic and also toxic for the environment because people don’t know how to recycle or purchase correctly. Commercial tech like IoT is going to help save the planet and support the majority with them knowing.

    • sudneo@lemm.ee
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      5 hours ago

      Open source analytics tools are still pushing for ad-driven business models that make the world (and the content) worse. Open source LLMs still waste computational power and pollute. And the list continues. Some open source technologies serve a good goal, some contribute to make the world as bad as some non-OSS.

    • InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      People forget that technology is agnostic to morals and ideals. Which is a big part of why I support FOSS. It is tech with goals that do aim for accessibility and making the world better. I am not a huge donator as I don’t make much money, nor can I code well, but I donate and contribute where I can.

  • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 hours ago

    technology has the potential to make life so much better, there are two problems.

    Tech that makes life better, usually doesn’t create much value. Because it’s either, already been created, and if it has, it’s probably enshittified by now.

    Go use open source FOSS tech, it’s great. Contribute to the improvement of society by not using terrible technology and begin using good technology, it’s free!

  • Xed@lemm.ee
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    20 hours ago

    Technology absolutely helps advance science and helps the disabled, It’s greedy fucks that destroyed good tech

    • comfydecal@infosec.pub
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      17 hours ago

      Yeah I think blanket statements either way are misguided. Some tech does help the disabled, other tech makes their lives much more difficult. It’s like any other tool, when it’s used at scale by something aiming for optimizing profit it will have terrible side effects

      • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        15 hours ago

        sure, some tech makes life more difficult, but it’d be weird to require it’s use, so you’re either going to go through a bad government structure (different problem) or choose to use bad products for some reason.

        I guess the secret third answer is working somewhere that requires you to use shitty tech, but like, same problem as no 1.

        I find the bigger problem to be implementation and support, shit like QR codes and phone based payment taking over things like paper, and card based payment, that’s objectively worse. Though both QR codes and phone based payment are in isolation, explicitly good and beneficial things.

  • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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    18 hours ago

    I had an Amazon bot lie to me. I told it some item didn’t show up and I wanted a replacement. It said it would send one and it would show up in my orders. It never did. So I requested a refund later. So tedious.

      • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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        2 hours ago

        Oh I’m so sorry someone asked for an enamel pin from Amazon. Maybe next time someone asks me for a gift from somewhere I’ll subject them to a purity test.

    • comfydecal@infosec.pub
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      17 hours ago

      You see, it actually did still save you time from finding a local shop that sells it and interacting with your neighbor

  • x4740N@lemm.ee
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    23 hours ago

    I prefer the saying “technology is a tool and a tool can be used for good or evil” or something like that

    You can use a hammer to hammer nails or to injure someone

    Technology can make the world better if its in the right hands for example open source hardware & software

  • ricecooker@sh.itjust.works
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    19 hours ago

    I think this headline is slightly misleading. Here are some better ones:

    • Reclaiming Humanity in the Age of Overbearing Technology
    • When Convenient Tech Becomes a Burden: A Call for Human-Centric Design
    • How Modern Tech Erodes Human Interaction
    • qarbone@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      This is weird take on an op-ed. OP didn’t alter the title. The only ways I can conceive of a headline being “misleading” is when it declares a falsity (this doesn’t; it’s an opinion) or doesn’t match the content of the titled text (this doesn’t; it matches the text).

  • OrteilGenou@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I understand the complaint, but the big picture of tech has a ton of upside.

    Tech itself is not the issue. How it’s applied is the issue.

    Once tech takes hold, there is massive pressure to monetize the asset.

    That’s where this complaint lives. Amazing advance becomes ubiquitous, then two things inevitably occur. Companies are formed that apply the technology on unnecessary and unpopular ways (parking app is a perfect example) or the pressure to make more more MORE MONEY triggers the enshittification spiral, where “wow, you can print wirelessly now!?” becomes “my printer won’t take any cartridges but brand name, and I have to watch an unskippable 30-second ad every time I print now??!!!”

    It follows that as tech saturates our lives, the inevitability of enshittification will also saturate our lives.

    The year is 2044, you don’t feel old but the ticker is starting to skip several beats a day. Your doctor is forced to use the product at his disposal to help you, which is the PaceXMaker produced by the Tesla-Cola conglomerate. The device is a true miracle of modern science. The size of a fingernail, it pulses electricity into your heart in carefully measured bursts to support proper function of all valves, and ensures that any plaque is dissolved harmlessly away. Your iEye tracks the device status, and alerts you when it starts to run low on fuel, a proprietary enzyme designed by Tesla-Cola. When the iEye app notifies you that the enzyme is running low, simply crack open an ice cold, refreshing can of Tesla Cola Zero to refuel your device for another two hours. Need to sleep? We got you. Hook up the Tesla Cola Zero-Venous BeautyRest to your ArmDock (patent pending) for up to five hours of relaxing enzyme replenishment. You can remove the arm dock after you confirm six ad-watch minute credits on your iEye.

    Tesla-Cola: We Got You

    • FIbynight@lemm.ee
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      21 hours ago

      I would say Tech with a capital T includes not just physical or cloud tech, but the whole process, down to shitty Product Owners and business teams, delivery crap features to customers.

    • andros_rex@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Transmetropolitan had in-dream advertising. I think you got it from breathing in some sort of gas when walking around in public.

      The most unrealistic thing about the Transmetropolitan series was the fact that Spider was able to make a living as a journalist.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Tech itself is not the issue. How it’s applied is the issue.

      At this point, I would argue that technology is the issue. Or, at least, the current iteration of it.

      Internal Combustion Engines, always-on internet connections, and digital financial systems are generating real physical hazards that stretch beyond their benefits. This isn’t just an issue of use. There is no “proper” method of employing - for instance - cryptocurrency or single-use plastics or a statewide surveillance network that doesn’t result in a degradation of quality of life for the population at large. To take a more dramatic angle, there’s no safe application of a nuclear bomb.

      When the iEye app notifies you that the enzyme is running low, simply crack open an ice cold, refreshing can of Tesla Cola Zero to refuel your device for another two hours. Need to sleep? We got you.

      Except this isn’t a technological innovation, its a Science Fantasy. iEye isn’t a real thing. Tesla Cola Zero isn’t a real thing. Not needing sleep isn’t a real thing. You’re not a cyborg and you will never be a cyborg.

      But the science fantasy is still having its own cost. People are making real material nationally-transformative (or de-transformative) decisions based on the fantastic promises we’ve been sold about Tomorrow. We’re underdeveloping our mass transit infrastructure and relying entirely too much on unregulated air travel to speed up travel. At the same time, we’re clinging to old bunker-fuel laden container ships and decimating the aquatic ecology, because we refuse to adapt proven nuclear powered shipping that’s over 60 years old at this point. We’re investing more and more and more money in digital surveillance and personal tracking. We’re off-loading our ability to collect and process information to unreliable digital tools (LLMs being only the latest in overhyped AI as a replacement for professionalized human labor). And then we’re trying to justify the bad decisions we make as a result by claiming secret wisdom inherent in machines.

      We’re eating our seed corn after being told technologists will eliminate our need to eat ever again.

      This is a direct result of technological developments we have made (or promised to make and failed to deliver) over the last twenty years. Revolutions in racial profiling, viral marketing, planned obsolescence, military expansionism, and genocide have not improved our quality of life in any material sense.

      The cow has not benefited from industrial agriculture. And the prole has not benefited from de-skilling of labor.