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1 day agoThe horrible and dystopian part for the comment above yours is the fact that it happens in China, which is ontologically bad and oppressive
The horrible and dystopian part for the comment above yours is the fact that it happens in China, which is ontologically bad and oppressive
Your take is that changing traffic management is a violation of human rights?
Dingdingding, right answer here!
It depends. AI can help writing good code. Or it can write bad code
I’ll give you a hypothetical: a company is to hire someone for coding. They can either hire someone who writes clean code for $20/h, or someone who writes dirty but functioning code using AI for $10/h. What will many companies do?
That’s… just not real… Your understanding of Chinese policy comes from curated western sources with vested interests in putting a dystopian and totalitarian understanding of China and its government in our countries’ people (we’re both westerners). There are systems in place to prevent certain convicted criminals from freely moving around there country, but that has little to do with criticising the party.
Regardless, big data on traffic doesn’t imply knowledge about the particular vehicles and drivers inside said vehicles. You’re just going ahead and assuming “dystopian control of people” because it’s China.