10 comments

  • AlanYx 9 minutes ago

    I disagree with this being flagged. I'd be interested in seeing more data of this type, despite how "preposterous" it is from a tech perspective. I've long speculated that in Canada we're at about a 3:1 ratio for builders to AI regulators if you include government and NGOs, and the numbers in this link from Ireland are not far off that (and this link excludes government and NGO regulatory hires).

    It's clear that outside of the US, there is an atypically large regulatory complex building compared to actual implementors.

  • goldenarm 27 minutes ago

    The regulations are not meant to be productive, they are meant to reduce negative externalities.

    It's like minimizing the cop-to-criminal ratio. Sure it would save money, but would society come out improved ?

  • shaftoe 26 minutes ago

    What the heck is an AI governance role that would remotely require these kinds of ratios? PCI compliance is critical in payments and no one would suggest you need "PCI governance" in a single digit ratio to "builders".

  • causality0 21 minutes ago

    I maintain my position that "being really, really stupid" should be added to the Guidelines for post flagging.

  • _vertigo 29 minutes ago

    Great, a totally vibe-coded website with a slop “analysis” about AI touting a meaningless ratio with zero context

  • consensus1 38 minutes ago

    Actual workers should outnumber "governance" bureaucrats by 100:1

      anuramat 29 minutes ago

      the article implies that the perfect balance is 1:1; I want to believe this is just some sort of a ragebait-based PR strategy

      pmoorcraft 32 minutes ago

      Eventually they will. But whilst we adapt, it should be low

        anuramat 28 minutes ago

        why?

          pmoorcraft 23 minutes ago

          Because there are no widely agreed upon standards for AI use. The EU AI Act still doesn't really solve this. Until we can all agree what safe and fair AI use is, companies will scramble to implement their own safeguards