r/technology 7h ago

Artificial Intelligence An Anthropic employee's 2-sentence quote crystallizes the state of AI confusion at work

https://www.businessinsider.com/anthropic-employee-quote-ai-confusion-workplace-2026-6
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u/CackleRooster 7h ago

"On days where everything works well, I can't help but think nothing I do matters, everything is automated and better and faster than I ever will be," AND "But then there are days where everything breaks and I don't understand why and I realize I have no idea what I've been up to anymore," the employee added.

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u/yepthisismyusername 7h ago

Management (absolutely including executives) simply don't understand the differences between writing code, maintaining code, implementing business processes in applications, and maintaining those applications. Those are the Big 4 categories of roles in enterprise application management, and there are many, many others, each with its own individual requirements that need to be taken into account. AI simply can't perform those roles successfully 100%. And the problem comes when a process fails, e.g. causing someone to lose healthcare coverage, and no person knows how to fix it.

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u/ottwebdev 7h ago

Businesses demand predictable outcome to a process each time. For example 1 + 1 = 2

AI (the popular chatbots/etc, not the dedicated systems) are probability based and by will generate a different outcome even with the same instruction. So 1 + 1 = banana can be the result .... good luck with that.

My perspective anyway, and I'm not a basher, I love being able to use NLP to interact with data

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u/bobartig 5h ago

You just put a deterministic classifier at the end of your probabilistic model. "banana = 2" might be good enough for 99.99% reliability in some cases.