Ask HN: What has been bothering you lately?

julienreszka 44 points 130 comments June 17, 2026
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Vent out. Maybe one of us will find a fix. I'm mad that economic policies in France aren't based on what models say is best next action but on elections. Democracy really sucks. I'm also very annoyed that models are censoring stuff without even clarifying what's wrong with the prompt. I don't like that content distribution is still mostly owned by a few platforms. Something is deeply odd with that.

Discussion Highlights (18 comments)

fsuts

Profit margin of authentication providers. They must be ridiculously high

vintagedave

The role AIs may play in censorship in future - simply by 'not knowing' or refusing to speak of something - bothers me a lot. That aligns with your worry. I used to think their main risk was spam or propaganda. Now I think it's curation of knowledge, history, and thought.

khoury

The combination of outsourcing to India and AI and how it's destroying western job markets to squeeze out more profits to a few on top.

adlpz

Wealth concentration beyond a point which would have resulted in widespread revolution 150 years ago, but that is now being tolerated because we've grown accustomed to a level of comfort we don't want to risk losing.

aureate

Assuming your two uses of "model" have the same meaning, I'm mad that people are seriously suggesting we scrap representative democracy in favour of government by LLM output.

reactordev

Aside from politics, the current state of corporate paralysis is killing me. I make my living by building solutions. Companies usually are chock full of problems that need solutions. Companies are still full of problems that need solutions but they are completely paralyzed because they think if they wait a quarter or two, a model will come along and solve all their problems.

iberator

Unemployment and forced downshifting. From 200k programmer to McDonald's worker and call centre worker in just 4 years... Its brutal. Once you are out at 35+ for an even year or two - it's impossible to go back. AI takes jobs faster than creating new ones. ps. Just got laid off from the Temu call(chat) centre. AI IS taking our jobs. completely devastated

mezod

- General lack of integrity at higher spheres (and where this can lead the world to) - The current situation where distribution matters way more than product quality - Lack of clear personal goals

maplethorpe

The fact that anything I post online will now get slurped up by a machine and regurgitated for people who have no idea it was my work that made their prompt come to life.

one33seven

The infinite growth of capitalism is bringing us to the edge of climate collapse, a real existential danger and nobody seems to care

DrAwdeOccarim

The state of "Scientific AI". I know LLMs are accelerating at doing computer work, and I've experienced the acceleration of using LLMs to do science, but it's more along the lines of debugging and stitching together pipelines of classical in silico tools. I see a ton of value here along that entire pathway for LLMs, it's basically digital process development: take each step, make it better, repeat, repeat, repeat. But the ceiling are the unit operations themselves, which sure LLMs can improve the code of those tools next. But if science was held back by simply people not doing the same things faster, maybe this will really push us forward, but I have a nagging feeling of "is this it?". I think what I'm really looking for is a model like GPT Rosalind, which has been steeped in "science" post-training, but with more randomness. Like, I think I'm looking for a GPT Mullis--Rosalind Franklin was careful, deliberate, and serious; Kary Mullis ate a bunch of acid, drove on the PCH, and invented PCR. Like, we need to invent psychedelics for LLMs. Some way to let them relax their weights, explore new pathways, and come up with some absurd ideas by connecting random ass dots from the natural world. I want the model to say, "hmm, that's weird". This isn't just changing the temperature, we're missing something deeper. I think frontier science has always come from serendipity: a bright thinker, listening to a presentation after having stared at some small experiment, but having trained for years on "biochemistry" so the foundation and loose guardrails are there. I don't know, I'm feeling adrift. Does this resonate with anyone else?

pradeep1177

Overuse of the AI agents as a concept and the mental burnout it creates.

alimhaq

It's shocking to me no one is talking about how Claude Fable is essentially a confirmation of the death of intellectual capital, and that it's happening now. Not 10 years from now, not 5 years from now, but literally right now. We used to romanticize stories of people born into lower socioeconomic conditions (say in the third world) and rising out of it through their intellect. That story, that ladder of social mobility, is completely dead now.

jerome-jh

I will be on the job market soon I will change decade this year I still have not found my passion nor encountered the big project if my life. I am interested by too many things and have too little agency or perseverance.

iamacyborg

Performative work. People doing things because other people do or because “that’s the way it’s done”, even when that approach is clearly fucking wrong.

chistev

My parents are getting old (I see it when I look at them), and I feel like I'm running out of time to be financially successful so they can enjoy my success while we are all still alive. Yes, I know we can enjoy each other's company without much money, but it sucks seeing those you love struggling with something and being unable to help them financially. Whats bothering me lately? Anxiety about my future. Not being where I want to be. Fearful that I might not get to where I want to be. But I take daily steps to ensure I come out alright since hope is not a strategy. All I can do is be consistent and hopeful.

yewenjie

Finding a job in tech that would genuinely excite me.

josh_p

- My country's descent into fascism. - The rights of my children being legislated away. - The people that could do something about it have chosen not to. - Any time I talk about the above, I feel like I'm shouting into the void and no one cares, either in-person or on the internet. - I still have to go to work tomorrow.

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