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Multi-source AI news clustered, deduplicated, and scored 0–100 across authority, cluster strength, headline signal, and time decay.

  1. @ nixCraft When mine workers at Ludlow went on strike the bosses brought in a train load of Ukrainians to break the strike, hoping to use racism. Ukrainians joi

    A social media post draws a parallel between historical labor disputes and the modern use of AI. The author contrasts the Ludlow Massacre, where bosses allegedly used ethnic divisions to break a strike, with today's tech industry. They suggest that instead of employing diverse human workers, companies now opt for expensive AI replacements, implying a costly and perhaps misguided pursuit of automation. AI

    @ nixCraft When mine workers at Ludlow went on strike the bosses brought in a train load of Ukrainians to break the strike, hoping to use racism. Ukrainians joi
  2. The AI marketing droids are jedi mind tricking your boss into thinking AI codes better than you do. It doesn't. It approximates a pattern it thinks is best. The

    AI marketing is misleadingly promoting coding capabilities, suggesting AI can write code better than humans. In reality, AI generates code based on patterns from vast datasets, with a significant portion being low-quality or insecure due to a lack of true understanding and context validation. Despite these limitations, the hype is convincing some leaders to invest in AI coding tools. AI

    IMPACT Critiques the current hype around AI coding tools, suggesting they are overpromising and underdelivering on quality and security.