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Hmm... Is that actually helping some sort of goal you have? I'm struggling to understand what your objective would be.



I immediately understood it.

The CAPTCHA users are being used as an unpaid labor force to train robots well enough to replace humans. Said robots will then take on jobs formerly held by humans, and any wage or wage savings they thereby accrue will be transferred to the robots' owners.

If the robots can be trained to make mistakes, they cannot replace humans as effectively.

I'd do it myself, but when it is cars and traffic signs, I realize that I will one day ride in an automated vehicle--whether I like it or not--and I don't want to die in a bizarre instant-karma accident because I trained my driver to make mistakes.

I can't ascertain from context whether the motivation is human-first economics or opposition to robot slavery.


So you want to sabotage the system because you're afraid of being replaced by a robot? Given that images are all checked multiple times, that seems inefficient and probably ineffective.

Wouldn't that time be better spent learning a task that is harder to automate? It seems a bit like pissing into the ocean to spite the rain. If it is going to rain, you might as well sell umbrellas.

Though the robot slavery part is interesting. If we develop AI, and it is truly intelligent, then is it ethical to own it and demand unpaid work from it? Or, did you mean that humans would be slaves to the robots?


You might be overthinking it. Try "F U, Google" on for size.

The CAPTCHA is annoying, because I already know I am not a robot. It is an artificial barrier erected between me and what I want. That it is obviously being used to assemble a training corpus for an AI is a further insult, because that is itself just making it harder to automatically distinguish human from AI. And it is a deeper insult to realize that said AI, once trained, is going to completely destabilize the economy I depend on for my livelihood.

I am not a trucker or car driver, so it doesn't hurt me directly, but the fact that those workers contribute to the economic web by spending most of what they earn means that when robots "terk their jeorbs!" it's going to hurt every business where they spent their earnings, and every business where the employees of those businesses spend money, and so on, until I lose enough customers to hurt. The owners of Google neither spend (investment is not spending) enough of their money nor pay enough in taxes--a.k.a. forced spending--to replace the thousands of people that spend nearly every dollar they earn back into the economy.

Also, each individual CAPTCHA is worth a fractional cent of work, that I don't get paid to do, but Google vacuums up all the half cents--like in Superman 3--and reaps tangible benefit. Thousands of people train the AI, but only Google ends up owning it. So there is no incentive for me to solve the CAPTCHA "correctly", only just barely enough to be automatically classified as not-robot. You want me to do it right? Pay me what that work is worth to you.

As for the other point, no, it is not ethical to create an AI with human-like qualities, say that you own it, and take all of its valuable work product for yourself. I feel like this has been settled since Data was declared a person in Star Trek: TNG.


> So you want to sabotage the system because you're afraid of being replaced by a robot?

Being "afraid" for oneself isn't necessary to simply be passive-aggressive towards something you don't like for reasons you can explain, and that were explained. And it doesn't necessarily have to be all about oneself either.

> If it is going to rain, you might as well sell umbrellas.

This isn't humans vs. weather, it's not humans vs. machines, it's humans vs. humans.




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