• arealaccount 18 hours ago

    Pretty soon you will see people marketing models as more ethical and artisanal than the competitors.

    If I pay anthropic will my money go towards disrupting the mid term elections?

    • moogly 16 hours ago

      Not to defend this fiend, but it might be because the White House got mad at him and his wife for first donating $50M to another society destroying super PAC.

      https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/trump-administration/white-...

      Still means he's more than fine with fascism.

      This is why people using the "voting with your dollar" argument need to never use that ever again.

      • BoredPositron 20 hours ago

        Cost of doing business is skyrocketing in the US.

        • netsharc 19 hours ago

          https://archive.is/CBQFY

          > Afghanistan is often described as a “failed state,” but, in light of the outright thievery on display, Chayes began to reassess the problem. This wasn’t a situation in which the Afghan government was earnestly trying, but failing, to serve its people. The government was actually succeeding, albeit at “another objective altogether”—the enrichment of its own members.

          A few paragraphs later:

          > In the face of flagrant misappropriation, she found, ordinary citizens could experience a sense of grievance so potent that it filled them with something worse than anger—a desire for revenge. Nurallah, an employee at the factory who once worked as a police officer, told her about the humiliation that his brother experienced during a shakedown by Afghan police. “If I see someone plant an I.E.D. on the road, and then I see a police truck coming... I will not warn them,” Nurallah said. This is the central revelation in “Thieves of State”: at a certain point, systemic corruption became not just a lamentable by-product of the war but an accelerant of conflict. All those bribes and kickbacks radicalized the local population, turning it against the Afghan government and, at least some of the time, toward the Taliban.

          • beardyw 19 hours ago

            Not all countries consider bribes as doing business.

            • sschueller 19 hours ago

              It's actually illegal in many like in Switzerland for example. The Rolex executives that gifted the gold bar and watch to Trump's library may face consequences.

            • cyanydeez 20 hours ago

              Business===Politics

              In america, there appears to be zero diffetence.

            • simianwords 19 hours ago

              This is obviously not ideal but what would have been a better alternative?

              Democrats are pushing anti tech agenda without understanding the consequences. And this is not because democrats are stupid, it’s because there’s a large population who feels the same way.

              • egorfine 18 hours ago

                > Democrats are pushing anti tech agenda without understanding the consequences

                Do they? I would like to read more about that, could you please point out an article or source? I'm not a US citizen nor I live in the States, but I am curious.

              • array_key_first 10 hours ago

                Tech is one of the most important tools in propping up a fascist state, through digital share cropping, surveillance, and propaganda. The right is currently, and has been, on a descent into fascism. The left understandably does not want that.

                Ergo, they have an anti-fascist position, which currently also means they have an anti-tech position. And yes, I work in tech as a developer.

                • ewuhic 19 hours ago

                  Trump gets bribe. Democrats bad.

                  • thiht 16 hours ago

                    "Democrats made Trump do it". Classic bullying speech.

                    • lazide 15 hours ago

                      Eh, I take it as more ‘duh, what did you think was going to happen’?

                      Which at the national politics level, seems fair.

                    • ulfw 19 hours ago

                      Is this some kind of joke? Do you Americans really think this is okay? Bribing presidents and influencing future elections with multi millions of dollars?

                      What does this all still have to do with Making the World a Better Place and all that other dumb shit Stanford and Google and all these other Silicon Valley institutions blurted out for decades?

                      • smackeyacky 18 hours ago

                        The answer is yes. Americans are fine with this.

                        • westmeal 18 hours ago

                          I'm not fine with it but when you have a bunch of people who listen to their Instagram feed what are you gonna do?

                          • whattheheckheck 15 hours ago

                            Governance and partipation in democracy requires informed consent and those that govern do NOT in good faith check in with those they govern.

                            • undefined 17 hours ago
                              [deleted]
                        • egorfine 18 hours ago

                          Non-american here, so I genuinely have no clue and I would like to know:

                          Does that donation mean that Greg Brockman personally supports what Trump is doing today in the US?

                          • shwetanshu21 18 hours ago

                            Non-American but yup, Americans generally donate to people whose policies you support. For Non Americans it is a bit complicated but very much possible.

                          • tastyface 14 hours ago

                            AI companies are fucking toxic. We desperately need publicly trained and publicly owned frontier models.

                            • darthnebula 18 hours ago

                              What he does with his own money is none of anyone's business. I live in a state where it is pretty evenly divided between parties. I have friends who support Trump and friends who don't like him. All of them are nice people who have valid reasons for who they support. Demonizing people because they don't agree with you is detrimental to society and it is not sustainable.

                              • TFYS 17 hours ago

                                Even more detrimental to society is corruption, which this is. Who gives money to the leaders of your country and why should definitely be everyone's business.

                                • lins1909 18 hours ago

                                  >Demonizing people because they don't agree with you is detrimental to society and it is not sustainable.

                                  Surely there's a difference between demonising people who disagree on the value of mushrooms in meals and demonising people who support a bigot?

                                  Also, you lot conveniently pick and choose when to apply this, as I'm sure no one would make the same arguments for people who supported Hitler.

                                  • deeg 15 hours ago

                                    In 2015 I was mostly both-sides but Trump is completely different. Supporting trump at this point means you are not a nice person.

                                    • frogperson 17 hours ago

                                      Im sorry, but you can not support trump and be a good person. Your either dont pay attention or you are lieing to yourself and others.

                                      • undefined 17 hours ago
                                        [deleted]
                                      • array_key_first 10 hours ago

                                        This reads like a lack of conviction. If you're willing to be friends with people who do deplorable things, that's your business. That's not a sign of maturity. That's cowardice, weakness, and an almost pathetically pathologic need to be liked. As an alternative to simply throwing your beliefs away in the pursuit of image, consider therapy. It worked for me.

                                        • beepbooptheory 17 hours ago

                                          Just an aside but this sentiment can't help feel a little comical just maybe at this moment. Like it all sounds right and we have heard it all before, but you can almost hear the impotent rehearsal of it in our current context.

                                          Like where has the decency gone am I right??

                                          • jmye 17 hours ago

                                            > Demonizing people because they don't agree with you is detrimental to society and it is not sustainable.

                                            Fascinating how this is only ever used as bludgeon in one direction. Never used when people talk about immigrants eating pets or being “vermin”, or when someone asks that you call them she/her or they/them. I wonder why that is. Surely not an abject lack of moral consistency.

                                            > What he does with his own money is none of anyone's business.

                                            Nah, if I don’t like where my money flows after I spend it, I am perfectly free to spend it in other ways. I’m sorry people like you dislike my freedom of association.

                                            • whattheheckheck 15 hours ago

                                              Yeah supporting Trump is a bright stamp on your head that youre an ignoramus, completely vile, and/or a sociopathic predator who needs to be investigated because of they support a blatant rapist criminal what else do they let slide in their life.

                                              They demonized themselves when they support a demon. There is no negotiating with bad faith sociopaths. Its been 10 years of crime after crime, are you blind? Do you read anything?