Why Isn't Everything Different Yet? (AI, where are you?)
dxs
14 points
8 comments
April 10, 2026
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Discussion Highlights (5 comments)
chipsrafferty
A lot of words to not say much of anything to defend the actual point - what can AI actually do that we couldn't do before? Is it just that we can make new tech startups faster? Is that a good thing?
chrisjj
Someone standing at a station wonders why the train isn't here yet. It's a soda station.
9rx
> Most people consider it to have genuinely transformed commerce sometime around 1999–2001. Because that is when tax and "munition" laws finally caught up. Internet commerce was already well understood before that time. The major online commerce players we think of today had already been in business for years. But an outdated legal system made scaling a challenge. What's getting in the way of AI? It seems lawmakers have actually been afraid of holding innovation back here like they did with the internet and are allowing AI to do just about anything, even things that would normally be under intense scrutiny (e.g. copyright violations).
nitwit005
This is trying to counter "anti-AI arguments" (term they used), but I suspect a lot of AI proponents would see the idea that changes might take decades as being an anti-AI argument itself.
sp527
(1) We already automated the critical path of a great deal of processes, where that made economic sense. The long tail exists, but it's not replete with as much juicy low-hanging fruit that makes for splashy use cases. Rather, AI will likely produce a tremendous number of marginal improvements over time, which are likely to aggregate and eventually show up in improved top line performance. This could certainly accelerate if agentic AI becomes a true 1:1 replacement for certain types of labor. (2) Outside of automation, AI is faster search. The information was there and now we can find it more quickly. This helps a great deal, but it's not fundamentally transforming access to information, which was already free and effectively limitless. But there's still value here. I think one key advantage of AI on the search side (for now, prior to meaningful degradations that might ensue) is that it can help push back against exploitative information asymmetry in insurance, consumer goods, health, etc.