←back to thread

321 points jhunter1016 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.245s | source
Show context
cynicalpeace ◴[] No.41882321[source]
I'm betting against OpenAI. Sam Altman has proven himself and his company untrustworthy. In long running games, untrustworthy players lose out.

If you disagree, I would argue you have a very sad view of the world, where truth and cooperation are inferior to lies and manipulation.

replies(17): >>41882351 #>>41882366 #>>41882502 #>>41882707 #>>41882720 #>>41882775 #>>41882946 #>>41883233 #>>41883261 #>>41883435 #>>41883475 #>>41883560 #>>41883612 #>>41883665 #>>41883825 #>>41883868 #>>41884385 #
KPGv2 ◴[] No.41883261[source]
> In long running games, untrustworthy players lose out.

Amazon and Microsoft seem to be doing really well for themselves.

replies(1): >>41883387 #
Barrin92 ◴[] No.41883387[source]
Because they're trustworthy. If you buy a package on Amazon or Craigslist, who do you trust to deliver it to your door tomorrow? People love the trope that their neighbor is trustworthy and the evil big company isn't, but in reality it's exactly the other way around. If you buy your heart medication you buy it from Bayer or an indie startup?

Big, long lived companies excel at delivering exactly what they say they are, and people vote with their wallet on this.

replies(2): >>41883429 #>>41884618 #
1. cynicalpeace ◴[] No.41883429[source]
I don't know if Amazon or Microsoft are trustworthy or not.

But I agree with your point. And it gets very ugly when these big institutions suddenly lose trust. They almost always deserve it, but it can upend daily life.