In the note, shared internally and viewed by the New York Times, Brin urges staff working on Google’s Gemini AI projects to put in long hours to help the company lead the race in artificial general intelligence (AGI).

Some have praised Brin’s commitment to pushing the company’s success, but others argue that his approach reflects an outdated and harmful mindset.

“The hustle-centric 60-hour week isn’t productivity—it’s burnout waiting to happen,” wrote workplace mental health educator Catherine Eadie in a post shared by LinkedIn’s news editors.

Others said they feel that hard work is essential for success, with a COO of a business analytics business writing, “Brin is just being honest—successful people have always put in long hours."

  • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    I don’t really believe private car ownership should even be allowed and should be replaced entirely by either dense cities where we can walk to our jobs or public transit, preferably trains. That way we can still have small towns, but you have to take the train now.

    Ultimately you’re right, the only way to make things better is using central planning like they do in China. There is no market reform that can save us.

    That doesn’t change the fact that commuting should be considered part of your job. You can’t work without it.

    Unless you work remotely,! Oh look, another thing that would be incentivized by paying people for their commutes.

    • boonhet@lemm.ee
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      2 days ago

      Okay, so you’re for completely tearing up all rural communities and abolishing farms, I can dig that. What about people who get mental health issues from living in the concrete jungle though?

      Then there’s people like me. I work as a software engineer, but can’t work at home for shit. Too many distractions. However, if I started commuting to work in this proposed system, my employer would have to pay me the same for fewer hours spent on the actual work, or pay more for the same amount of hours, just because it takes me half an hour to walk to work and half an hour to walk back home as I live pretty far from the city center. I imagine I’d be told to fuck off if I wanted to go to the office. Okay, technically all this no longer applies because I’m now working for myself at home (which has been a bit of a mistake), but it would have applied a few months ago.

      Also what about factories and such? They often pollute, so it’s actually better if you have them a slight distance away from major population centers. But if they have to start paying for peoples’ commutes, you’d have to have them in-between apartment buildings to save money.