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AI isn’t just spying on us. It’s tricking us into spending more.



Photo above - not photoshopped. An actual California gas station. imagine what AI pricing will try and pull if you have this gas station's ap installed on your smartphone . . .

In yesterday’s press conference, Microsoft warned shareholders that it needs to spend “hundreds of billions” more to have a competitive AI system. Their CEO did not explain how the company would generate profits from this. The master plan is to build as many large data centers as quickly as possible, and hope that "scale" wins the race?

If Microsoft Copilot was going to make money, it would already be doing that. But it’s mostly free. Copilot writes 8th graders' homework, fixes typos, and gets the date of the Brandenburg concerto wrong by 700 years.

Microsoft has a solution for this problem – the money losing part, not the Brandenburg concerto hallucination. CEO Mustafa Suleyman says Microsoft’s advertising division will carry most of the water. It will guide our shopping decisions.

Wait . . . it turns out that’s not how it works at all. According to the link below, AI’s main advertising weapon is to trick us into paying more than we would have. It will do this by gathering vast amounts of our personal data, correlating it, and deciding what each of our personal shopping vulnerabilities are. Stores using this AI will charge us more for the stuff we are most likely to buy.

Think of demand-based pricing. This is already how some soda machines work. When the temperature rises above 85 degrees, the cost of a coke goes up by a buck on newer machines. It goes back down in cooler weather. AI is going to pull the same $hit, but by examining all our past retail purchases, subscriptions, uber eats deliveries, and the GPS coordinates on your phone as you drive around all day. It will probably know if you prefer cheese fries or old bay seasoning. And price each accordingly.

Someone will point out that “opting out” of cookies can stop all this. According to the link below, it won't. We surrender our privacy when we download free aps for our phones. The reason you download the store ap is that a discount or freebie is included. If your phone is already full of grocery store aps, amazon, McDonalds, pharmacies, gas stations, doordash, Bank of America, Spotify, even Planet Fitness, you’ve already signed up for more cookies and tracking than you can possibly conceive.

Now imagine the next part – the pump price at the Swell Gas Station goes up the moment you pull in. Because your phone told the station’s AI that the Swell gas ap is installed. You’re a regular Swell customer, and will pay more right now instead of driving on for a possible 10 cents per gallon savings.

If you’re okay with this, then Microsoft is indeed going to make billions.

I’m just sayin’ . . .

AI isn’t just spying on you. It’s tricking you into spending more.
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idontcareok · 70-79, M
in 3 years you posted 1100 posts, all about money, politics, etc. how do you come up with all that stuff? no way are you able to posts comments about all those issues, who are you really, and who is actually making those comments, promise i won't tell anyone
Must all be AI 🤣 @idontcareok
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@idontcareok i post one column a day. it appears in Redditt too.

I imagine that you've already run posts through a filter, and it's told you that these are not AI generated. Whenever I use an AI picture as part of my post, I properly attribute it, however.

my background:

- I have a dual degree in English Literature and Cultural Anthropology (BA - no advanced degree)

- I have worked in banking, insurance and food service mostly since graduation

- I currently own the following: A 2025 Honda Civic Hybrid Sport Touring; a Samsung S25 phone (not the oversized/lux model); a 55-gallon aquarium populated only with angelfish; about 50 books I'm intending to read but get through quite slowly (not recommended: "The confidence man", by Herman Melville)

- I'm typing this on a $399 HP laptop with an I-3 core.

funny post script - someone ran the US Declaration of Independence through an AI filter. It decided - with 98.51% confidence - that this was AI generated text. Here's the link:

https://www.forbes.com/sites/jodiecook/2024/07/04/ai-content-detectors-dont-work-the-biggest-mistakes-they-have-made/
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I enjoy reading what you post. Thank you. @SusanInFlorida
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@jackjjackson thank you for your compliment. you're a breath of fresh air
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@idontcareok public schoolteachers have a new "tool". there are online programs which can "process" a students homework assignment, to determine if it was composed by AI.

the problem is that all kids are going to get social promotions, whether AI wrote their homework or not.
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