> On Dec 11, 2023, at 6:09 AM, Keith Smith via PLUG-discuss 
> <plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
> 
> I see AI being a windfall in the near term.  Example would be an affiliate 
> marketer could use AI to write articles for his/her blog. The article wold 
> need to be rewritten, however it would be so much faster and potentially more 
> comprehensive,  If one can teach AL modern SEO then that person could rock!!
> 


It’s already nearly impossible to find anything useful on Google due to abuse 
of tricks people use to get their web pages found by the search engines, and 
there are plenty of tools that are teaching people how to do this using AI 
tools like ChatGPT already that are only going to make it a couple orders of 
magnitude worse.

I’m in a class now that teaches a different approach that also uses AI for 
content, but it feeds the search engines what they’re looking for, not the same 
crap everybody else is feeding them, and it works really well. It looks similar 
to SEO, but it takes a totally different approach. It’s a manual method of 
finding keywords, with AI used to help write content. If AI could be trained to 
do the whole process, then they’d use it for that as well, but I don’t see that 
as something we’ll see anytime soon.

Suffice it to say it’s a process that looks for what’s missing, which isn’t 
something automation is very good at — you’d end up with a huge list of pretty 
much irrelevant stuff, or random selections from such a list. It takes a little 
work to figure it out yourself. I have no idea how you’d train an AI to do it.

There seems to be plenty of people using AI to create windfalls by cranking out 
content in seconds that historically has required weeks or months or longer for 
people to do. What it’s doing is putting ghostwriters out of business, and 
increasing demand for editors.

I watched a video about a 20 yo kid who has been using ChatGPT to crank out 
books in a particular niche for about 18 months. He has created a particular 
brand and creates books under that brand, and has published several hundred 
now. He says he’s already made over $1M, and can sell his biz for at least that 
much. Of course, he teaches a class on how to do it. The ultimate outcome here 
is the same as with SEO: markets are going to be flooded with generic material 
and it will be impossible to find anything specific to your needs.

I’m working on an app that generates personalized Guided Meditations (GMs). It 
does NOT use AI because AI isn’t needed, but that doesn’t stop people from 
telling me it’s a fool’s errand because there are already thousands of GM apps 
on the market, the vast majority of which are free. There’s a simple reason for 
this: every course on app development typically includes an exercise to build a 
virtual MP3 player. So people build it, then think, “Ahh, I can use this to 
load up meditations and then offer it up as a meditation app!” Another exercise 
lets you build a recorder app that creates … yes, you guessed it … MP3 files.

Last count there were over 6000 of these “meditation apps” aka “virtual iPods” 
loaded up with prerecorded personal meditations, and over half were from people 
in India. So what you have is a market flooded with generic GMs by people who 
aren’t very well-trained at creating them, about topics that are of interest to 
those individuals, and no way to search them for specific attributes. They 
started out simply as a programming exercise, but the collective effect is an 
entire market niche flooded with content and no way to search for anything 
specific. This is not an “AI problem” but a scalibility problem. Maybe we can 
use AI to fix it, but I think that’s a waste of resources with very little 
return.

The problem with flooding the market with stuff like this, be it web pages, 
books, meditation apps, videos, or whatever, is that there’s nothing in place 
to help you sift through these huge haystacks for a few needles that represent 
the intersection of qualities YOU ARE MOST INTERESTED IN. This is the same 
problem that’s affecting Google because of SEO. It will inevitably lead to the 
same problems in any market that has been flooded with content — there’s no way 
to find stuff quickly and efficiently that fits your needs other than building 
a “better search engine”, right?

What we’re doing is building huge digital garbage dumps and telling people 
looking for specific things, “Hey, dig away!” 

SEO has broken the internet, and AI will only make things worse. It’s a HUGE 
garbage dump or warehouse, and nobody has the time nor the interest to waste 
trying to find specific things buried there. 

But what if it was quicker to just create what you need in 5 minutes instead of 
searching for it in a huge warehouse?

Here’s the thing I see this situation inevitably leading to: people who love to 
read will soon be able to go to something like a vending machine where you give 
it a few details about yourself and what you like and dislike, push a button, 
and it generates a personalized eBook, meditation, video, or whatever you want, 
tailored just for you. It’s a one-off thing and yours to do what you want with 
it. Why not clothing? Or blog entries? 

People keep speaking of this in terms of ways to replace what people are 
already doing. But these approaches are limited by our current abilities and 
resources. That’s not very useful and it’s not where AI is going to really 
shine. Why use AI to create more of the same garbage that nobody can find? 
Google has lost its ability to find stuff, and has turned into a way of 
generating money simply from people searching for stuff that’s getting harder 
and harder to find, making their search sessions longer and hence generating 
more profits for Google. At some point, people will realize it’s a huge waste 
of time!

What people are missing about the value of AI is that it’s going to allow the 
large-scale creation of PERSONALIZED CONTENT. 

This is the beginning of mass customization and personalization of virtually 
everything! 

The digital world will be first, and before long it will lead to using 3D 
printing to create personalized physical stuff as well.

For example, I have arthritis in my thumbs, and it makes it hard to pick up 
normal drinking glasses. I prefer those with a handle, but I like one that’s 
big enough to fit my four fingers in so I don’t need to use my thumb for 
leverage. Lots of mugs have small handles on them that are hard to get even two 
fingers into. Some are larger, and some handle shapes work better than others. 

However, consumers are stuck buying things that the manufacturers have decided 
to make based on a lot of criteria that have nothing to do with you or me. But 
we might want a specific configuration. So why not be able to order glasses and 
mugs with a specific design, including a handle that fits what fits us best? Or 
no handle at all?

See how this starts to shift the whole world of mass marketing to personalized 
made-on-demand goods and services? AI will help with some of it, and isn’t 
needed for a lot either. But given our current ways of doing things in the 
world, it’s impossible — so nobody is doing it. No jobs will be “lost” with 
this new approach to personalized stuff. In fact, lots of new jobs will be 
created.

In the broader scheme of things, think of the publishing biz as a way to create 
personalized “fantasy novels” or even movies that cater to an individual's 
quirks. Who’s doing this now? NOBODY! Entirely new jobs will be created! 

This is basically why Blockbuster went bust — because their business model was 
to set up big warehouses in different places around town and people would go in 
and browse for what they wanted. Netflix came along and let you browse on the 
web from home or the office, and they delivered your order to your door — a 
more personalized offering. Now you can browse and click a button and start 
watching what you want instantly. Netflix still exists, but they don’t ship out 
disks in the mail any more.

From another angle, consider something where you take a test on some topic and 
then you’re given a lesson (or series of them) designed to not just reinforce 
what you already know, but with additional material that you’re weak in or is 
the “next step” in your training. If you have consistent trouble with 
particular topics, it will give you more exercises in those areas and provide 
additional help where it’s needed. It would work more like a personal tutor 
than a teacher presenting material based on a one-size-fits-all classroom 
setting. 

This is creating a totally new realm that is far too inefficient and expensive 
for any individual to do. No jobs will be lost because nobody is doing it now, 
nor can anybody do it on any sort of scale. 

The jobs that will be lost are the ones that are doing repetative jobs making 
or doing the same things over and over again — jobs that do not lend themselves 
to personalized or customized products. Sure, there are lots of jobs like that, 
but so what? Automation is already eliminating a lot of them, not AI. And there 
will always be a market for "jellybeans”.

Consider a future where most of what you can buy online is personalized to your 
specific needs. Not like ordering a pair of shoes or clothing from a preset 
list of sizing options, but where you enter your physical measurements and 
other details and get something that fits like a glove made just for you. Now 
extend this to most other things you consume or use regularly, especially those 
that “don’t quite fit”.

-David Schwartz


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