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#Artificial Intelligence#Intelligent Automation#Digital Worker#AI SOlutions#Automation Solutions#Centelli#Dubai
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the new hires a little strange but they bring us coffee so it's basically whatever
#blood cw#been sooo inspired by happyhumbugs alpharetta rard i love office worker gerard#art#digital art#pierce the veil#my chemical romance#crossover#ptv#mcr#gerard way#vic fuentes#sleeping with sirens#sws#kellin quinn#king for a day#secretary gerard#rard guest appearances
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bro got his ass beat
#art#digital art#fanart#mp100#mob psycho 100#reigen arataka#mp100 fanart#pokemon#comic#serizawa katsuya#kurata tome#tome kurata#roshuto dozen#hoshida origo#pokemon crossover#The funny thing about reigens system is that if you want to battle him you have to beat his co workers#and serizawa is like#overpowered#so there is no circumstance in which you get to battle reigen#unless of course Serizawa has a sick day#the reigen cooked
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Office besties
#so THIS is Ep 5…right?#also did Ragatha get hit with the BITCH sauce this time?#the amazing digital circus#tadc#tadc pomni#pomni#pomni fanart#the amazing digital circus pomni#kinger#tadc kinger#the amazing digital circus kinger#kinger fanart#tadc ragatha#ragatha#the amazing digital circus ragatha#ragatha fanart#royalcourt#tadc royalcourt#pomni x kinger#kinger x pomni#tadc ep 5#tadc episode 5#tadc comic#office worker#fanart#comic
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FAITH





#this game's animations are so inspiring holy bananas i never liked the color blue so much#i saved half of the gifs from faith wiki after playing it#also very minimalistic for such scary experience#yk how workers get exposed to radiation for 1 second and suffer invisible damage so that happened to me when i saw the mirror john scene#first couple days playing i was like damn this guy is a loser 👎 now im like damn this guy is a loser 💙#he can be a :D he can be a 🚹 covered in blood kmp approved#kmp art#faith the unholy trinity#john ward#peekaboo demon#digital art#portrait#sketch#tw blood#eyestrain#REALLY need some music recs that have a faith vibe#faith game#art
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Bossware is unfair (in the legal sense, too)

You can get into a lot of trouble by assuming that rich people know what they're doing. For example, might assume that ad-tech works – bypassing peoples' critical faculties, reaching inside their minds and brainwashing them with Big Data insights, because if that's not what's happening, then why would rich people pour billions into those ads?
https://pluralistic.net/2020/12/06/surveillance-tulip-bulbs/#adtech-bubble
You might assume that private equity looters make their investors rich, because otherwise, why would rich people hand over trillions for them to play with?
https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2024/11/19/private-equity-vampire-capital/
The truth is, rich people are suckers like the rest of us. If anything, succeeding once or twice makes you an even bigger mark, with a sense of your own infallibility that inflates to fill the bubble your yes-men seal you inside of.
Rich people fall for scams just like you and me. Anyone can be a mark. I was:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/05/cyber-dunning-kruger/#swiss-cheese-security
But though rich people can fall for scams the same way you and I do, the way those scams play out is very different when the marks are wealthy. As Keynes had it, "The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent." When the marks are rich (or worse, super-rich), they can be played for much longer before they go bust, creating the appearance of solidity.
Noted Keynesian John Kenneth Galbraith had his own thoughts on this. Galbraith coined the term "bezzle" to describe "the magic interval when a confidence trickster knows he has the money he has appropriated but the victim does not yet understand that he has lost it." In that magic interval, everyone feels better off: the mark thinks he's up, and the con artist knows he's up.
Rich marks have looong bezzles. Empirically incorrect ideas grounded in the most outrageous superstition and junk science can take over whole sections of your life, simply because a rich person – or rich people – are convinced that they're good for you.
Take "scientific management." In the early 20th century, the con artist Frederick Taylor convinced rich industrialists that he could increase their workers' productivity through a kind of caliper-and-stopwatch driven choreographry:
https://pluralistic.net/2022/08/21/great-taylors-ghost/#solidarity-or-bust
Taylor and his army of labcoated sadists perched at the elbows of factory workers (whom Taylor referred to as "stupid," "mentally sluggish," and as "an ox") and scripted their motions to a fare-the-well, transforming their work into a kind of kabuki of obedience. They weren't more efficient, but they looked smart, like obedient robots, and this made their bosses happy. The bosses shelled out fortunes for Taylor's services, even though the workers who followed his prescriptions were less efficient and generated fewer profits. Bosses were so dazzled by the spectacle of a factory floor of crisply moving people interfacing with crisply working machines that they failed to understand that they were losing money on the whole business.
To the extent they noticed that their revenues were declining after implementing Taylorism, they assumed that this was because they needed more scientific management. Taylor had a sweet con: the worse his advice performed, the more reasons their were to pay him for more advice.
Taylorism is a perfect con to run on the wealthy and powerful. It feeds into their prejudice and mistrust of their workers, and into their misplaced confidence in their own ability to understand their workers' jobs better than their workers do. There's always a long dollar to be made playing the "scientific management" con.
Today, there's an app for that. "Bossware" is a class of technology that monitors and disciplines workers, and it was supercharged by the pandemic and the rise of work-from-home. Combine bossware with work-from-home and your boss gets to control your life even when in your own place – "work from home" becomes "live at work":
https://pluralistic.net/2021/02/24/gwb-rumsfeld-monsters/#bossware
Gig workers are at the white-hot center of bossware. Gig work promises "be your own boss," but bossware puts a Taylorist caliper wielder into your phone, monitoring and disciplining you as you drive your wn car around delivering parcels or picking up passengers.
In automation terms, a worker hitched to an app this way is a "reverse centaur." Automation theorists call a human augmented by a machine a "centaur" – a human head supported by a machine's tireless and strong body. A "reverse centaur" is a machine augmented by a human – like the Amazon delivery driver whose app goads them to make inhuman delivery quotas while punishing them for looking in the "wrong" direction or even singing along with the radio:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/08/02/despotism-on-demand/#virtual-whips
Bossware pre-dates the current AI bubble, but AI mania has supercharged it. AI pumpers insist that AI can do things it positively cannot do – rolling out an "autonomous robot" that turns out to be a guy in a robot suit, say – and rich people are groomed to buy the services of "AI-powered" bossware:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/01/29/pay-no-attention/#to-the-little-man-behind-the-curtain
For an AI scammer like Elon Musk or Sam Altman, the fact that an AI can't do your job is irrelevant. From a business perspective, the only thing that matters is whether a salesperson can convince your boss that an AI can do your job – whether or not that's true:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/07/25/accountability-sinks/#work-harder-not-smarter
The fact that AI can't do your job, but that your boss can be convinced to fire you and replace you with the AI that can't do your job, is the central fact of the 21st century labor market. AI has created a world of "algorithmic management" where humans are demoted to reverse centaurs, monitored and bossed about by an app.
The techbro's overwhelming conceit is that nothing is a crime, so long as you do it with an app. Just as fintech is designed to be a bank that's exempt from banking regulations, the gig economy is meant to be a workplace that's exempt from labor law. But this wheeze is transparent, and easily pierced by enforcers, so long as those enforcers want to do their jobs. One such enforcer is Alvaro Bedoya, an FTC commissioner with a keen interest in antitrust's relationship to labor protection.
Bedoya understands that antitrust has a checkered history when it comes to labor. As he's written, the history of antitrust is a series of incidents in which Congress revised the law to make it clear that forming a union was not the same thing as forming a cartel, only to be ignored by boss-friendly judges:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/14/aiming-at-dollars/#not-men
Bedoya is no mere historian. He's an FTC Commissioner, one of the most powerful regulators in the world, and he's profoundly interested in using that power to help workers, especially gig workers, whose misery starts with systemic, wide-scale misclassification as contractors:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/02/02/upward-redistribution/
In a new speech to NYU's Wagner School of Public Service, Bedoya argues that the FTC's existing authority allows it to crack down on algorithmic management – that is, algorithmic management is illegal, even if you break the law with an app:
https://www.ftc.gov/system/files/ftc_gov/pdf/bedoya-remarks-unfairness-in-workplace-surveillance-and-automated-management.pdf
Bedoya starts with a delightful analogy to The Hawtch-Hawtch, a mythical town from a Dr Seuss poem. The Hawtch-Hawtch economy is based on beekeeping, and the Hawtchers develop an overwhelming obsession with their bee's laziness, and determine to wring more work (and more honey) out of him. So they appoint a "bee-watcher." But the bee doesn't produce any more honey, which leads the Hawtchers to suspect their bee-watcher might be sleeping on the job, so they hire a bee-watcher-watcher. When that doesn't work, they hire a bee-watcher-watcher-watcher, and so on and on.
For gig workers, it's bee-watchers all the way down. Call center workers are subjected to "AI" video monitoring, and "AI" voice monitoring that purports to measure their empathy. Another AI times their calls. Two more AIs analyze the "sentiment" of the calls and the success of workers in meeting arbitrary metrics. On average, a call-center worker is subjected to five forms of bossware, which stand at their shoulders, marking them down and brooking no debate.
For example, when an experienced call center operator fielded a call from a customer with a flooded house who wanted to know why no one from her boss's repair plan system had come out to address the flooding, the operator was punished by the AI for failing to try to sell the customer a repair plan. There was no way for the operator to protest that the customer had a repair plan already, and had called to complain about it.
Workers report being sickened by this kind of surveillance, literally – stressed to the point of nausea and insomnia. Ironically, one of the most pervasive sources of automation-driven sickness are the "AI wellness" apps that bosses are sold by AI hucksters:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/03/15/wellness-taylorism/#sick-of-spying
The FTC has broad authority to block "unfair trade practices," and Bedoya builds the case that this is an unfair trade practice. Proving an unfair trade practice is a three-part test: a practice is unfair if it causes "substantial injury," can't be "reasonably avoided," and isn't outweighed by a "countervailing benefit." In his speech, Bedoya makes the case that algorithmic management satisfies all three steps and is thus illegal.
On the question of "substantial injury," Bedoya describes the workday of warehouse workers working for ecommerce sites. He describes one worker who is monitored by an AI that requires him to pick and drop an object off a moving belt every 10 seconds, for ten hours per day. The worker's performance is tracked by a leaderboard, and supervisors punish and scold workers who don't make quota, and the algorithm auto-fires if you fail to meet it.
Under those conditions, it was only a matter of time until the worker experienced injuries to two of his discs and was permanently disabled, with the company being found 100% responsible for this injury. OSHA found a "direct connection" between the algorithm and the injury. No wonder warehouses sport vending machines that sell painkillers rather than sodas. It's clear that algorithmic management leads to "substantial injury."
What about "reasonably avoidable?" Can workers avoid the harms of algorithmic management? Bedoya describes the experience of NYC rideshare drivers who attended a round-table with him. The drivers describe logging tens of thousands of successful rides for the apps they work for, on promise of "being their own boss." But then the apps start randomly suspending them, telling them they aren't eligible to book a ride for hours at a time, sending them across town to serve an underserved area and still suspending them. Drivers who stop for coffee or a pee are locked out of the apps for hours as punishment, and so drive 12-hour shifts without a single break, in hopes of pleasing the inscrutable, high-handed app.
All this, as drivers' pay is falling and their credit card debts are mounting. No one will explain to drivers how their pay is determined, though the legal scholar Veena Dubal's work on "algorithmic wage discrimination" reveals that rideshare apps temporarily increase the pay of drivers who refuse rides, only to lower it again once they're back behind the wheel:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/04/12/algorithmic-wage-discrimination/#fishers-of-men
This is like the pit boss who gives a losing gambler some freebies to lure them back to the table, over and over, until they're broke. No wonder they call this a "casino mechanic." There's only two major rideshare apps, and they both use the same high-handed tactics. For Bedoya, this satisfies the second test for an "unfair practice" – it can't be reasonably avoided. If you drive rideshare, you're trapped by the harmful conduct.
The final prong of the "unfair practice" test is whether the conduct has "countervailing value" that makes up for this harm.
To address this, Bedoya goes back to the call center, where operators' performance is assessed by "Speech Emotion Recognition" algorithms, a psuedoscientific hoax that purports to be able to determine your emotions from your voice. These SERs don't work – for example, they might interpret a customer's laughter as anger. But they fail differently for different kinds of workers: workers with accents – from the American south, or the Philippines – attract more disapprobation from the AI. Half of all call center workers are monitored by SERs, and a quarter of workers have SERs scoring them "constantly."
Bossware AIs also produce transcripts of these workers' calls, but workers with accents find them "riddled with errors." These are consequential errors, since their bosses assess their performance based on the transcripts, and yet another AI produces automated work scores based on them.
In other words, algorithmic management is a procession of bee-watchers, bee-watcher-watchers, and bee-watcher-watcher-watchers, stretching to infinity. It's junk science. It's not producing better call center workers. It's producing arbitrary punishments, often against the best workers in the call center.
There is no "countervailing benefit" to offset the unavoidable substantial injury of life under algorithmic management. In other words, algorithmic management fails all three prongs of the "unfair practice" test, and it's illegal.
What should we do about it? Bedoya builds the case for the FTC acting on workers' behalf under its "unfair practice" authority, but he also points out that the lack of worker privacy is at the root of this hellscape of algorithmic management.
He's right. The last major update Congress made to US privacy law was in 1988, when they banned video-store clerks from telling the newspapers which VHS cassettes you rented. The US is long overdue for a new privacy regime, and workers under algorithmic management are part of a broad coalition that's closer than ever to making that happen:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/12/06/privacy-first/#but-not-just-privacy
Workers should have the right to know which of their data is being collected, who it's being shared by, and how it's being used. We all should have that right. That's what the actors' strike was partly motivated by: actors who were being ordered to wear mocap suits to produce data that could be used to produce a digital double of them, "training their replacement," but the replacement was a deepfake.
With a Trump administration on the horizon, the future of the FTC is in doubt. But the coalition for a new privacy law includes many of Trumpland's most powerful blocs – like Jan 6 rioters whose location was swept up by Google and handed over to the FBI. A strong privacy law would protect their Fourth Amendment rights – but also the rights of BLM protesters who experienced this far more often, and with far worse consequences, than the insurrectionists.
The "we do it with an app, so it's not illegal" ruse is wearing thinner by the day. When you have a boss for an app, your real boss gets an accountability sink, a convenient scapegoat that can be blamed for your misery.
The fact that this makes you worse at your job, that it loses your boss money, is no guarantee that you will be spared. Rich people make great marks, and they can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent. Markets won't solve this one – but worker power can.
Image: Cryteria (modified) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:HAL9000.svg
CC BY 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en
#pluralistic#alvaro bedoya#ftc#workers#algorithmic management#veena dubal#bossware#taylorism#neotaylorism#snake oil#dr seuss#ai#sentiment analysis#digital phrenology#speech emotion recognition#shitty technology adoption curve
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Scarabella redesign 🐞
#alya cesaire#scarabella#ladybug miraculous#mlb#miraculous ladybug#ml ladybug#mlb redesign#mlb fanart#miraculous redesign#outfit redesign#et radio art#my art#drawing#digital illustration#artwork#artists on tumblr#kwami swap#miracle workers au
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Dumb idea I had and it made me giggle enough to go through with it
#artists on tumblr#small artist#murder drones#murder drones fanart#digital art#rythm heaven#glee club#redraw#serial designation n#serial destination v#serial designation j#md n#md v#md j#worker drone n#worker drone v#worker drone j#worker drone#butler n#maid v#maid j#tessa james elliot#md tessa
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I think a lot about how Worker ENA's outfit was inspired by a kids edutainment show, and am surprised no one has played with that idea! I'LL DO WHAT I MUST.
ENA and Froggy are roommates, and both are cast in this kids show, lots of dancing and musical numbers and keeping fit, etc. Coral is like. stage director/some sort of middle managerial position tasked with keeping things running smoothly. Generally does well but has to get on Ena for her silly antics holding up production. (or getting on her case for trying to push through a health flare up. ENA sounds difficult to work with.)
#i got lazy and need to work on other things than finishing lines/colors on the rest of the sketches so scuse my blue lines LOL#very inspired by how fucking ripped/fit many stage performers are to keep up with shows like that#augh i love a show!!!!!!!!!!!! i love puttin on an act!!!!#an au but perhaps its breaths of a previous life......who knows............#ena#ena dream bbq#ena au#worker ena#froggy ena#coral glasses#coral glasses ena#gingersn4pp art#i do enjoy digital inks over my sketches.......
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Uzi intro redraw thingy :D
#uzi murder drones#md uzi doorman#uzi md#murder drones uzi doorman#md uzi#murder drones uzi#uzi doorman#murder drones glitch#murder drones fanart#murder drones art#murder drones#fiizzieguy#fiizzieguy art#digital art#art#murder drones episode 7#murder drones intro#md art#md uzi art#md uzi fanart#md fanart#glitch productions#murder drones fanart uzi#i dunno#murder drones glitch fanart#murder drones fandom#glitch productions md#worker drone#worker dones md#murder drones intro episode 7
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#Artificial Intelligence#Intelligence Automation#Automation Solutions#Digital Worker#centelli#Dubai#AI Solutions#Technology
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I think the destruction of the smoke machine is one of my favorite parts of the game. There's such a strong sense of wrongness in it. And it's a great conclusion to the buildup of examples of Ena's ruthlessness throughout the chapter
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#diamondwolfart#my art#digital art#artists on tumblr#illustration#artwork#original art#ena fanart#art#ena joel g#ena dream bbq#joel g ena#worker ena#ena dbbq#hangover ena#fanart#fan art#enafanart
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In their shoes
Thought it be silly and cute if lil Silho was wearing her dads shoes
Ugh I wanna draw more but all i can do is post this silly story im not done with my sonic movie 3 drawing idk when i will be done
#also he was at work thus added random co-worker in background I think im gonna stick to shadow working for g.u.n just to keep en eye on them#I like the idea of him still being a weapons specalist#his co-worker could be one too maybe under a different title#digital art#digital drawing#artists on tumblr#drawing#small artist#art#artwork#fanart#digital illustration#sonic#sonic the hedgehog#shadamy#amy rose#shadow the hedgehog#YouthLegacy AU#silhouette rose#GGhosteArt#amy the hedgehog#sonic fankid#sonic fanchild#shadamy fankid
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more Cyn doodles (big surprise I know) she's just so fun and easy to draw for me sooo
#murder drones fanart#murder drones#digital art#artists on tumblr#murder drones cyn#md cyn#md cynessa#art doodles#the goober has taken over my life#worker drone n
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