As a history and economics teacher, this couldn't be farther from the truth. Democratization of technology has been the iron law of history, (tech becomes cheaper has time goes on, available to more people) maybe spend a little less time browsing and more time reading up on your history, @JustBrowsing .
I actually love this reply because it tries to disagree with the point while accidentally building a working scale model of the point.
You open with “as a history and economics teacher,” then tell me that the “democratization of technology” is the iron law of history because technology gets cheaper over time.
That sounds very confident.
It is also way too broad to survive contact with reality.
Yes, some technology gets cheaper. TVs got cheaper. Hard drives got cheaper. Basic computing got cheaper. Fine.
But cheaper access to a tool is not the same thing as democratized power.
A phone got cheaper. The app stores got centralized.
Streaming got cheaper. Ownership disappeared.
Self-checkout got convenient. The cashier disappeared and the customer inherited the labor.
AI got accessible. Great. Now the question is who owns the model, who owns the platform, who captures the savings, who loses leverage, and who gets told their skill is suddenly “obsolete.”
That is the whole argument.
And if “technology always democratizes,” healthcare and pharmaceuticals are standing in the corner waving a flare gun.
Why does the most advanced medicine keep showing up behind the most obscene price gates imaginable? Why do patented drugs, biologics, specialty meds, and gene therapies keep becoming the exact opposite of democratized? Why does the shiny future so often arrive as a miracle treatment with a seven-figure price tag and an insurance labyrinth wrapped around it?
That matters here because this was never just about whether a gadget becomes cheaper after ten years.
The real question is: who controls access?
A self-checkout machine becoming cheap does not democratize grocery labor. It lets the company delete a worker and hand the task to the customer.
An AI tool becoming cheap does not automatically democratize power. It can let a hobbyist build a cool server bot, yes. It can also let management replace support staff, writers, coders, analysts, artists, moderators, and customer-service workers with “good enough” automation.
A gene-editing breakthrough becoming scientifically possible does not automatically democratize medicine. It can become another locked trader inventory item that only the people with enough Duke’s tokens get to buy.
That is the point.
Technology becoming cheaper at the device level does not mean power becomes cheaper at the system level.
And your own example proves it.
You used AI to create a custom bot economy on your server. Currency. Rewards. Automated labor tracking. Zombie-kill payouts. Time-on-server payouts. Custom gyms. Escalating difficulty. Enforcement rules. A 100-year ban if people grow Super Corn. Cash prizes. Seasonal goals.
Brother, you did not refute the concern.
You became the Duke of Navezgane.
You built a private survival economy, issued the money, designed the labor incentives, controlled the high-value activities, restricted the food source that broke the economy, and imposed punishment on anyone who violated the system.
That is not even an insult. It sounds like genuinely cool server design.
But it is hilarious that you are doing all of that while telling people, “Don’t worry, technology democratizes.”
You literally had to ban Super Corn because the miracle crop broke the market.
That is the 7 Days to Die metaphor in its purest form. The superior food source shows up, the economy bends around it, and the people running the system have to regulate it or the whole intended progression collapses.
And this is why the 7 Days to Die tie-in matters so much.
The game is not just “zombies go bonk.”
It is a whole economy of collapse.
Empty shelves.
Scarcity.
Trader dependency.
Duke’s Casino Tokens.
White River promises.
Miracle food-tech.
Bob’s Boars and Carl’s Corn.
Super Corn as the genetically modified superior food source.
Grace as the monster under the miracle.
The old world did not fail because nobody invented enough technology. It failed with technology everywhere. Labs, military sites, industrial food systems, traders, currencies, restricted zones, engineered crops, and broken institutions all over the map.
That is why “tech gets cheaper” is not enough.
Super Corn exists.
It is powerful.
It is efficient.
It breaks the economy.
So what happens?
The people running the system restrict it.
That is not democratization.
That is gatekeeping after the breakthrough.
And the “spend a little less time browsing” shot is pretty rich from someone who then says he spent 90 minutes clicking through every godforsaken page of the thread to lick the plate clean for dev posts. Apparently browsing is only intellectual decay when someone else does it.
Also, nobody serious is saying AI has zero utility. Your bot sounds useful. That is not the disagreement.
The disagreement is whether usefulness automatically equals harmlessness.
It does not.
Self-checkout is useful.
That does not mean it is neutral.
AI coding help is useful.
That does not mean it is neutral.
Super Corn is useful.
That is why you banned it.
That is the part people keep dancing around.
The concern is not that tools exist. The concern is what happens when tools become systems, systems become dependencies, dependencies become gates, and gates get controlled by whoever owns the platform, the currency, the law, or the food source.
That is why the self-checkout lane is not just a scanner.
It is a tiny little ritual of surrender.
The store cuts labor.
The customer performs the task.
The company captures the savings.
The culture calls it convenience.
Then somebody comes along and says, “Well, history says technology democratizes.”
No. History says power centralizes unless people fight to keep it from centralizing.
The middle does not magically appear.
Balance does not fall out of the sky.
You do not survive the blood moon because you believed history would average things out.
You survive because you built something, defended something, refused something, and held a line before the horde arrived.
So yes, I am going to keep saying the self-checkout matters.
Not because one scanner ends civilization.
Because every system trains people through small acceptances.
And if 7 Days to Die teaches anything, it is that the apocalypse is not just the zombies.
It is what is left after every “small” surrender finally stacks high enough to block the door.