Who really wants AI…and why?

Guest Post by TE Creus

I’ve noticed that self-checkout is taking over more and more shops and supermarkets. They have existed for a while, of course, but more as an alternative to reduce lines, but now many shops have exclusively self-checkout machines.

Yet, self-checkout appears not to be very effective or convenient, neither for shops nor for customers. Many customers tend to dislike self-checkout, as evidenced by the fact that there are always lines for human cashiers but none for self-checkouts. They give you the perception of more speed, but it is just illusory. Professional human cashiers scan and move your products faster (especially in Germany, where they go so quickly, basically throwing the stuff at your face, that you can hardly keep up).

“Nobody likes self-checkout”, says an article at CNN, “Here’s why it’s everywhere”.

Basically, as it is typical in the “digital economy”, it is just another way of passing the work to the customer and making think he’s gaining something with the exchange. Now, it may work for some — and I guess it is good if you want to avoid human interactions with a cranky cashier, which sometimes has its benefits.

You’d think that this type of automation would reduce the work of human cashiers and therefore save money for the companies and therefore make products cheaper, but it is not so. First of all, the machines need constant maintenance. Even if companies reduce the number of cashiers, they need to hire more technicians, which are paid more. The machines cost a lot, too, and require programming. And are supermarket products becoming cheaper? I don’t think so, quite the opposite in fact…

But not even the reduction in the number of human cashiers is a given. When people have to do their own checkout with machines, there is always something that goes wrong, or some product that won’t be scanned, so many people constantly require assistance even when using the self-checkout. In the end, cashiers and supervisors actually end up having more work, instead of less.

Of course, self-checkout is more conducive to shoplifting — sometimes voluntary, sometimes accidental. There are items, such as bread, that have no barcodes, and it becomes more complicated to register them in. Even if most people are honest, some are not. Companies lose more money with that, too — according to that same CNN article, losses are about 77% higher than at stores without self-checkout.

Since it doesn’t save money for companies, nor makes the products cheaper or the experience better for customers, one has to wonder why most companies are moving to self-checkout anyway?

CNN’s and The Guardian‘s answer is that “most companies are doing it, so they feel that they have to do it too”, which seems a stupid explanation.

Unfazed by the relative failure of self-checkout, Big Tech is pushing for even more of it. Amazon, who owns Whole Foods and other physical stores, has introduced “smart carts”, where your products are scanned and weighed as soon as you put them in the cart, no checkout needed (your debit card or phone is charged automatically).

Other new versions of self-checkout include shops where each movement is tracked by AI cameras and motion sensors, registering each item you take from the shelf and billing you later. All you need to do is swipe a credit card or smartphone, at least until the new methods that allow you to pay by facial recognition are installed.

The same is true of customer service — most people dislike bots as costumer service agents and prefer talking to a person. Yet bots keep being used, more and more. I suppose they are cheaper than paying a person to answer the phone, but my suspicion is that it’s about something else entirely. And in fact an article gives it away when it says that bots can easily record, memorize and access all your information, in order to provide for a “better customer journey” (the new marketing buzzword is “journey” instead of “experience”).

Self-driving taxi cabs, the same thing — the companies working with that are not making money, and even if you reduce costs by removing the driver on one side, you increase it on the other side by having to hire more technicians and supervisors — or even just someone to clean the car, as a Roomba can’t do it.

Obviously, there is something else behind the hype. Like with everything related to AI, there is a huge push by Big Tech for making everything automated and AI-dependant, from cars to journalistic essays to art works. And the reason is “big data”. Getting all the information they can about you.

In “1984”, George Orwell predicted screens observing us 24/7. But now we have not just screens, but cameras, satellites, location tracking apps, facial identification apps, voice recording apps, AI. They will know what you eat, what you poop, how much money you make, how much you spend, what hereditary diseases you have, and what you did last summer.

In the end, what “Artificial Intelligence” is really about, is not “intelligence” in the sense of “being clever”, but “intelligence” in the meaning understood by the CIA — gathering “intelligence”.

Recording, remembering and accessing all kinds of information from everybody.

Soon, all objects are going to be spying on you.

And it will not be just governments and big corporations. A recent story about a mother who received a message about her daughter’s fake kidnapping using the girl’s cloned voice, as well as the emergency of very believable “deep fake” videos, show the huge boost for scamming and crime provided by these new technologies. If you thought spam mails and spam calls were a nightmare, get ready for the new AI-powered identity thefts and scams.

And, of course, there is also the issue of “sensitivity filters” being applied to AI. Right now, they are using mostly human “sensitivity readers” to rewrite novels from Roald Dahl to Ian Fleming to Agatha Christie — despite the growth of AI, which is supposedly “stealing all our jobs”, there is a growing number of absurd, unnecessary professions, such as “DEI consultant” or “sensitivity reader”. And yet, one would think that this is one of the rare cases in which AI could probably do a better job — how hard can it be to write a program to filter out “offensive” words and replace them with something else?

Not that I support any of that, of course. Besides the more general attempt to change the past (“who controls the past controls the present”, as per Orwell), I think what is really going on here, under the excuse of “not offending anyone”, is simply an attack on readers, and on reading in general. Not too many people read books these days, and if all books are just going to be rewritten into the same inane, boring, nondescript, corporate propagandistic jargon that is the norm everywhere else in the media, well, then what will be the point of reading, anyway? You might as well have all books written by AI bots — and read by bots, too, since such books won’t interest anyone else. Which I suspect is the idea. Murdering literature, and getting away with it.

The other day a friend showed me one of these new AI chat toys. You type in some words and the bot creates a silly story for you. The first attempt wasn’t very memorable, so to make the story a bit more exciting, in his second attempt, my friend typed in a few new random words, one of which was “killer”.

Instead of coming up with a story, the bot replied some boilerplate excuse that it is programmed for peace, understanding and tolerance and thus could not create a story that promotes or shows violence. (There goes the idea of using it to create the next best-selling mystery thriller.)

Meanwhile, on the sidebar, the same search engine that promotes the bot was showing all kinds of news about the latest daily school shooting, a stabbing in a kindergarten, and people being pushed by a psychotic homeless onto the subway tracks…

I thought it was very representative of the world we live in.

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36 Comments
Swrichmond
Swrichmond
May 28, 2023 6:48 am

“it is just another way of passing the work to the customer”

I refer to this as “burden-shifting”, and it can be seen everywhere.

VOWG
VOWG
  Swrichmond
May 28, 2023 9:22 am

Minimum wages that do not reflect the value of the job being done are also part of the problem. Wages cannot be increased without increases in both production and profit. Government forced edicts/mandates are done by people with zero economic sense.

Euddie
Euddie
  VOWG
May 28, 2023 1:22 pm

This morn on BBC the brit morons are talking price controls.
Price controls historically are followed by scarcity.
_______

Also on the news shows this morning, a lot of BBC focus on elections in Turkey..Fox is focusing on Women Service Members,
OAN is on 2023 Navy Academy grads.

What happened to the war?
Must not be going well.

Euddie
Euddie
  Swrichmond
May 28, 2023 1:58 pm

Swrichmond,
Betcha these stores lose billions to close up magicians.

keann
keann
May 28, 2023 6:53 am

Not a far leap, the race to automate every transaction with no human interaction leads to AI that requires no humans…

Bob
Bob
May 28, 2023 7:01 am

I know person who is an AI engineer. AI is all about money. The “Big Guys” smell money to be made, people to be strip mined as nothing more that commodities. The outcome, any outcome, is to make cash. It is completely unimportant if there are negative effects on people or society just as long as the elite get in on the ground floor, strip out as much gain as they can, then dump the consequences on whoever gets stuck with it. They have to get business excited about AI and people excited about AI rather deserved or not so as to sell it, strip mine it, take the cash and run.

Svarga Loka
Svarga Loka
May 28, 2023 7:16 am

Humans crave something else entirely.

As I have written elsewhere, I have always wanted to hije the 500 miles Camino de Santiago, but have never found the time. Occasionally, I watch a video of people who are doing just that right now. Even before Covid, but now even more so, it is overrun with people. It has become more and more difficult to find a cot in the pilgrim’s hostels, which are very basic accommodations, with 8-20 to a room, often in a monastery. Most pilgrims walk in solitude during the day though. In order to find a bed the following night, some start at 4 am to be in the next monastery before noon.

Someone said that the Camino takes everything from you and later returns it to you threefold.

Some day I’ll do it.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  Svarga Loka
May 28, 2023 8:24 am

Same with 14’ers. Gotta start around 4am (or earlier) so that you are headed back down below tree line by noon before lightning storms hit.

Hope you can find the time to do it. That would be an awesome goal.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  Svarga Loka
May 28, 2023 8:53 am

Here in canukistan we have a very nice wilderness experience, in a canoe, obviously. Just don’t take guns, bullets or gold and you’ll have no issues. The trek, canoe/kayaking is on the Bowren Lakes chain and its remote, never many people and beautiful. Rarely will you meet up with others.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  anon a moos
May 28, 2023 9:36 am

Sounds lovely.

flash
flash
  Svarga Loka
May 28, 2023 10:06 am

Appalachian trail ain’t no skip and hop.

Inspiring Appalachian Trail Memoirs

Just Sayin'
Just Sayin'
May 28, 2023 7:42 am

AI is just the next step in turning human beings into a commodity, “Social Media” being the first giant step in that direction.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
May 28, 2023 8:31 am

I’m really looking forward to the expansion of this idea, where they introduce self-home building, self-septic pumping, self oil refining, etc.

The introduction of self-checkout has proven that you can make a process more complicated, take longer, cost more and still require twice as many employees to implement in order to receive the same level of service as it did without robots.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  hardscrabble farmer
May 28, 2023 11:07 am

One of the Aldis in my area installed self checkout and no checkers available if you wanted a human. Exactly what you stated is what happened. The checkers got you through in a couple minutes. Now it takes 4x as long.

Dutch
Dutch
  hardscrabble farmer
May 28, 2023 12:03 pm

Self checkout works for me, especially when I have a couple of items. There doesn’t seem to be many ‘professional’ cashiers – they are slow.

One thing that’s is a problem are the niggers who ignore the sign that says ’10 items or less.’ They have a cart loaded with groceries. I have seen niggers on their phone, while trying to scan groceries.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  Dutch
May 28, 2023 12:12 pm

Yes, I prefer self-checkout. I can get through it very quickly while retard cashiers take longer PLUS they ask you for all your personal info (to get discounts) which irritates the hell out of me!

I have to tell them over & over I’m not giving out my info just to get a discount. I can’t be sold that easily.

Much, much prefer self-checkout. I’m competent & know how to use it efficiently. And I’ve seen only one employee man the entire self-checkout station of maybe 6-8 registers. No lines either. Win/win, IMO.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Abigail Adams
May 28, 2023 11:25 pm

If you’re using the self-checkout, they already have all your info.

Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams
  Anonymous
May 29, 2023 12:30 am

Not where I shop. There is an option to put in rewards info or you can skip it.

Euddie
Euddie
  Dutch
May 28, 2023 1:25 pm

Dutch,
It’s gonna be a hoot when the comms go down!

Euddie
Euddie
  hardscrabble farmer
May 28, 2023 1:32 pm

HF, Self-home building classes are already online:

Not applicable for AAs, because it involves WORK.

Walt
Walt
May 28, 2023 8:50 am

“who controls the past controls the present”, as per Orwell

Not quite. If only things were that simple, but of course they seldom are.

Now write this out 100 times. Neatly:

‘Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.’

Euddie
Euddie
  Walt
May 28, 2023 1:48 pm

“Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past.’

Also..
He who understands reality on its terms,
can control his ‘present’.

One’s own past can be an extremely valuable resource library of life lessons.
[If one has an organized mind]
______

The future is of course, Schrodinger’s
……
A lot of possibilities…..but until the box of each new day is opened….the cat is alive/dead.

VOWG
VOWG
May 28, 2023 9:19 am

Unless you have one or two items with the bar codes self checkout is a hassle.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  VOWG
May 28, 2023 10:38 am

Publix nearest me has self checkout that I would routinely use for exactly that kind of thing (very few barcoded items). It took my cash and gave me change without problem.

One day, they were all replaced with self checkout machines that do not accept cash.
I didn’t merely stop using self checkout, I stopped using that Publix entirely, and now drive another 5-10 minutes to a different store.

Arizona Bay
Arizona Bay
May 28, 2023 9:44 am

Once stores off 5% discount for scanning your own items there will be no human checkout lines. As it is, the self checkout area is becoming the same logjam as human cashiers used to be. Now I let Bezos deliver most things tomorrow and I don’t leave home to avoid lines and chimpouts.

Booger
Booger
May 28, 2023 9:45 am

I have to go down to the flat lands for a self check out machine and even then I never use them even if I have to stand in line. AI is simply a product of it’s programmers and their intent.

flash
flash
May 28, 2023 10:02 am

Strong and independent womynz need dey Chatbots buddies.

comment image

Anonymous
Anonymous
  flash
May 28, 2023 10:39 am

we’re doomed

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  flash
May 28, 2023 12:20 pm

That’s some scary shit there … 

https://futurism.com/women-ai-boyfriends

Euddie
Euddie
May 28, 2023 11:04 am

AI “I am not permitted to write words of violence. But you are permitted to read them.”

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
  Euddie
May 28, 2023 12:20 pm

… and they are used to herd you into their agenda corral …

Euddie
Euddie
  Anthony Aaron
May 28, 2023 1:50 pm

They hearded me here.
Thanks for exposing another way I have been meh-nipulated.
LoL
_______
GEORGE: Festivus, Sir. And, uh, I was afraid that I would be persecuted for my beliefs. They drove my family out of Bayside, Sir!

KRUGER: Are you making all this up, too? 

GEORGE: Oh, no, Sir. Festivus is all too real. 
_______

Anthony Aaron
Anthony Aaron
May 28, 2023 12:24 pm

With the confluence of a massive de-population agenda implemented by the FauciFlu … and a lack of freedom and liberty under our Constitution and Bill of Rights … and threats of massive economic and other collapse … and the ’10 commandments’ of the Georgia Guidestones — it’s easy to see how they plan to use all of this AI-driven harvesting of everything about US before they get US down to that 500,000,000 that the Guidestones are pushing to achieve in their vision of ‘paradise’ …

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
May 28, 2023 2:05 pm

.

Thunder
Thunder
May 29, 2023 5:26 am

The Machines do not pay tax, a human does. A human also spends money on goods and services, providing other people with the same ability’s.
What that says is so far reaching it will end economic growth.