I don’t think people hate AI per se - they hate big tech, and what big tech is doing with it. That’s a legitimate gripe, but it’s not the same thing as the technology being bad.
AI used well can be genuinely useful. I’ve dropped a couple of examples in other threads I won’t rehash here, but the short version is: there are real world uses for this tech (world modelling, medicine, robotics).
Remember, the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to the team behind AlphaFold. That’s the AI that cracked protein folding, a problem biology had been stuck on for 50 years. It’s already being used by over two million researchers to accelerate drug discovery for cancer, Alzheimer’s, and antibiotic resistance.
Hell, my dumb ass built a clinical notes pipeline that takes the tedium of charting from 15-20 mins down to about 3, with a policy gate that rejects LLM output before it ever reaches me if it fails criteria I defined. None that looks anything like the slop-firehose corporate rollout most people are reacting to.
Worth noting too: taking a black-and-white position on anything is just less cognitively expensive than arriving at a nuanced one. That’s not a character flaw, that’s called “being human”. But that doesn’t mean the nuanced position is wrong.
PS: The electricity/water data centre stuff is maybe more complicated than the headline takes suggest. This might be worth actually reading before treating it as settled.
https://blog.andymasley.com/p/a-cheat-sheet-for-conversations-about
YMMV and ICBW






Hope it helped.