←back to thread

369 points surprisetalk | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
tibbar ◴[] No.45067795[source]
I recently did a round of interviews at various AI companies, including model labs, coding assistants, and data vendors. My first takeaway is that, wow! the interviews are very hard, and the bar is high. Second, these companies are all selecting for the top 0.1% of some metric - but they use different metrics. For example, the coding assistant interview focused on writing (what I felt was) an insane volume of code in a short period of time. I did not do well. By contrast, another company asked me to spend a day working on a particular niche optimization problem; that was the entire interview loop. I happened to stumble on some neat idea, and therefore did well, but I don't think I could reliably repeat that performance.

To reiterate - wow! the interviews are hard, every company is selecting for the top of a different metric, and there's really no shame in not passing one of these loops. Also, none of these companies will actually give you your purpose in life, your dream job will not make you whole:-)

replies(10): >>45067896 #>>45067976 #>>45068096 #>>45068140 #>>45068480 #>>45069599 #>>45069894 #>>45072206 #>>45073603 #>>45075897 #
margalabargala ◴[] No.45067896[source]
> Also, none of these companies will actually give you your purpose in life, your dream job will not make you whole:-)

Some people really do find a whole lot of personal meaning from their work. And that's okay. It's their life.

If someone is the sort of person who might find meaning working for Anthropic, they would find that meaning at a lot of other jobs as well. I think that's a better emssage; not that "you shall not find purpose in your work", but "the purpose you may find from work is not limited to a single or even small number of AI companies".

replies(4): >>45067945 #>>45067996 #>>45070645 #>>45071168 #
tibbar ◴[] No.45067996[source]
That is fair. I suppose what I meant is, the idea of working at one of these companies can be really exciting, almost a fantasy, but in practice: it might actually hurt you in many ways. 'Look what they make you give', as a certain character once said. With that said, obviously I think it's cool and worth doing, but there are significant and painful downsides, too.
replies(1): >>45069051 #
1. QuantumFunnel ◴[] No.45069051[source]
If the past 25 years of tech companies is any indication of the future of these new AI endeavors, working there will be directly contributing to the enslavement of mankind in ways we can't even begin to imagine yet.

The greenfield projects arising from this leap look benign now, but I can almost guarantee that won't be the case in the next decade once these technologies optimize their revenue generation engines and enshittification takes hold. Humanity will be at the whim of the AI compute overlords much more so than we are now, and that's an inevitable nightmare dystopia that I'm not looking forward to. The gilded age will look like child's play by the time we figure this out as a society.

I suppose that if your ambition is to be on the winning end of that hellscape, then by all means, go for it.

replies(1): >>45070461 #
2. rurp ◴[] No.45070461[source]
I mean, if there's going to end up being a hellscape it'd be better to be on the winning end than the losing one, right?