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this post was submitted on 15 Oct 2024
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Technology
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How much more productive does an archive need to be? Hire human beings. Celebrate fucking humanity.
Working isn't a celebration of humanity.
Productivity is not the enemy, our economic systems which takes all the benefits of higher productivity and gives it to small percentage is.
This has nothing to do with economics. It's the national archive, not a business.
Productivity is irrelevant here. A big part of archiving is accuracy and presentation. All of which should be done by human beings. Period.
Should we also insist that archives dont use photocopiers and instead have scribes copy everything by hand?
If the photocopier is smart enough to do a scribe's job then it deserves human rights, fair wages, and a pension just like the rest of us.
Given that photocopiers can do a scribes job (copy the text on this page onto a new page), more quickly and accurately to boot, I presume you are part of a pressure group to pay them pensions.
That's not a scribe's job, that's not even the entirety of an apprentice scribe's job (which also includes making paper, making ink, bookbinding, etc.)
A scribe's job is to perform secretarial and administrative duties, everything from record-keeping and library management to the dictation and distribution of memoranda.
A photocopier is not capable of those things, but if it was then it'd be deserving of the same compensation and legal status afforded to the humans that currently do it.
We have to start treating things that claim to be "AI" as deserving of human rights, or else things are going to get very ugly once it's possible to emulate scanned human brains in silicon.