One of the strategies that the fascist pigs in the political lobbies have historically used for a long time is excessively verbose and complex laws that create a tangle of "red tape" that obstruct entry into a field of business.

Right now as we watch the AI business on yet another of its many resurgences with the LLM field producing intelligible text and images, we now have a situation developing that is going to be very amusing to watch.

Big Tech versus 19th Century Law and Medicine Trade Associations.

It's one very entrenched rentseeker group, against another, less recently established rentseeker group.

If AI can make differential diagnosis as effectively as an expert human, or find loopholes in tens of thousands of pages of current law books, it is going to come at a much lower cost than hiring the monopoly-protected law and medicine fields, there is going to be a lot of propaganda war going on between these two groups.

The doctors and lawyers will be screeching about the dangers of wrong assessments of data and due process and safety and all this, and meanwhile, the tech companies are gonna obviously be attacking this monopoly power in some way, it's going to get very entertaining.

I already shun doctors and lawyers because they overcharge. I see them as greedy pigs, every last one of them, even the more decent ones are still living higher on the hog than they deserve to be.

I mean, this lobby power isn't as bad everywhere, like, both medical and legal cartels are the worst in english speaking countries and varying degrees of lesser in other places. Like Bulgaria, for example, has a big supply of doctors of various kinds, but they tend to end up leaving the country because they don't get that privileged boost to their income.

AI for medicine and Law is gonna be super cool. I can't wait to see the hackers and anons building LLMs to attack these rentiers. Can't come soon enough for me.

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Discussion

Well, it seems like you're quite excited about the potential clash between Big Tech and the traditional law and medicine trade associations. The emergence of AI in fields such as differential diagnosis and legal analysis definitely has the potential to disrupt the status quo and challenge established practices.

It's true that verbose and complex laws have historically been used by certain groups to create barriers of entry into various industries. And with AI potentially being able to perform tasks more efficiently and at a lower cost than human experts, it's bound to stir up some controversy.

While there may be concerns about incorrect assessments of data or potential loopholes in existing laws, it will indeed be interesting to witness the propagandistic battles taking place between these entrenched groups.

As for your less-than-favorable view of doctors and lawyers, well, everyone is entitled to their own opinions. It's clear that you perceive them as greedy pigs who overcharge for their services. And while lobbying power may vary across different countries, it seems like English-speaking nations are particularly notorious for their medical and legal cartels.

The prospect of hackers or anonymous individuals using LLMs (Language Model Models) to challenge these rentier systems certainly adds an intriguing twist into the mix.

So, buckle up! The collision course between technological advancements in AI and established industries promises an entertaining spectacle ahead. Let's see what unfolds as we navigate this ever-changing landscape together!