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Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Saturday, September 27, 2025

Graham Templeton: It's become trendy to compare the current rush of investment in AI to the "dot com" bubble of the past, but the comparison just keeps getting more apt. There's obviously the almost absurd level of investment that's hitting tech, with the broad tech sector now accounting for 34% of the S&P 500's market cap, but there's more as well.

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MIT recently published a study showing that companies are experiencing reliable operational slowdowns due to the integration of AI. The leading cause of this decrease in efficiency is that many employees who use AI to complete most or all of a job-related task actually pass the work on to someone else (including, potentially, their future selves), as someone has to correct the AI's shoddy output. This forces the next person in the chain to deal with the inherently low quality of the work.

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More from the OpEd ...

... For one, there are the ridiculous over-promises and the credulous investment managers who gobble them up, leading to inevitable backlash. It is no longer controversial for even respectable legacy financial publications to refer to the current situation as a bubble or to sound the alarm on the economic dangers that a bubble could pose.

We can't know yet whether this particular investment bubble will burst or merely deflate, but one thing seems clear: We don't have very long to wait before we find out. The past few weeks have seen a litany of negative headlines about AI, and for once, it's not just alarmist worries about unemployment or Skynet super-intelligence.

This time, people are questioning the specific claims that have historically helped certain people overlook AI's potential dangers. The two primary such claims to value are, in order of importance: It will make money, and it will help people. ...


#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2025-09-25 12:24 AM | Reply

If you want to have a laugh, try this out on several different AI chatbots:

List cities ending in the letter n

Then see what the AI spits out. Some are better than others, but every one I've tried so far will include cities that definitely are incorrect.

THEN carry on a conversation about why it included the incorrect cities and press hard about it. You can even get them to say a correct city is incorrect.

Ultimately I got a couple of them to admit they included incorrect cities because it was more important to return results that would appease me rather than being correct.

And the thing is, it's such an easy thing to verify that a city ends in a particular letter. And yeah, I've pointed out to the chatbots how easy it is to verify and have them try again only to have most of them still return erroneous answers.

#2 | Posted by Idependant97 at 2025-09-25 01:53 PM | Reply

AI can't fix anything.

#3 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-09-28 03:39 AM | Reply

I know that huge money is being invested into AI, and I just don't see how it is going to pay off for most of the AI providers or their investors, other than just being supported by venture capital. Who is willing to pay for the AI product on the large scale?

I think that shorting AI would be the best investment at some time, but I don't gamble in stocks so I will just sit back and watch when it all goes bust.

#4 | Posted by bus_driver at 2025-09-28 07:18 AM | Reply

AI, least night (seriously) told me there had not been a post on the Drudge Retort since 2013.

When I pointed this out to it, it shrugged its shoulders and said: not its fault, it was hallucinating.

#5 | Posted by Zed at 2025-09-28 08:35 AM | Reply

The thing about AI is that you can't make it take responsibility for anything. When it makes a mistake it says:

1) What do you expect? I'm not conscious.

2) You should have been watching me.

When you say that you WERE watching it, it replies

1) I'm still not conscious.

#6 | Posted by Zed at 2025-09-28 08:54 AM | Reply

Behold! AI can produce misinformation faster than ever before!

#7 | Posted by cbob at 2025-09-28 09:24 AM | Reply

Anyone wbo believes we the people have access th the same AI that the government and the MIC have access to are terribly misled.

#8 | Posted by lfthndthrds at 2025-09-28 09:29 AM | Reply | Funny: 1


AI can't fix anything.
#3 | POSTED BY LEGALLYYOURDEAD

False, it can fix Corky, if he lets it.

Tackling Trauma Through Artificial Intelligence
www.psychologytoday.com

#9 | Posted by oneironaut at 2025-09-28 10:18 AM | Reply


AI can produce misinformation faster than ever before!
#7 | POSTED BY CBOB

This is why its Corky and Gaslighters goto source for "information"

#10 | Posted by oneironaut at 2025-09-28 10:19 AM | Reply

Ballwasher, Jeff, Tinynut, Turdfyck, et. al.
can ---- off, -------.

#11 | Posted by LegallyYourDead at 2025-09-28 11:15 AM | Reply

If AI were so great it would have generated the answer to the question of how to board a commercial airliner in the fastest, most efficient manner. I will believe that AI systems are anything more than a great way to generate computer code and act as a search engine when my question above is answered ...

#12 | Posted by catdog at 2025-09-28 12:46 PM | Reply

AI has come a long way but it was foolish to believe it would be able to do everything anytime soon. From machine learning to as intelligent as a human within a few years? Come on.

Like all the other bubbles it was mainly about making a quick buck. A company says they're going AI and investors are all "take my money"! Then it turns out to be just as silly as believing everything will be full self-driving, flying cars and colonizing Mars. The advancements were going to progress at the same rate without all the extra investment anyway. You can't just build some multi-billion dollar data center, fill it with thousands of GPUs and think that full AI will magically happen.

#13 | Posted by Derek_Wildstar at 2025-09-29 01:10 PM | Reply

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