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REVEALED: The ai revolution is sorting people into three camps | Vintage Vibes

Three distinct camps are forming around AI: power users, doubters and resisters.

Why it matters: AI isn't just advancing — it's fragmenting how people see the world.


The big picture: The disconnect is showing up everywhere — from job-loss fears to data center protests to actual violence.

  • Doubters still see AI as glitchy chatbots and viral fails. They aren't using its full capabilities.
  • Power users run AI agents around the clock, trading tips on how to automate work and decision-making.
  • Resisters understand AI, think they know where it's headed and want no part of it.

What they're saying: "There is a growing gap in understanding of AI capability," former OpenAI and Tesla AI leader Andrej Karpathy posted on X. He added that many people let a single session with ChatGPT's free tier define their view of AI.

  • Meanwhile, Karpathy told the "No Priors" podcast that he now spends 16 hours a day issuing commands to AI agent swarms and rushes to exhaust his tokens every month.
  • "AI adoption is a tale of two cities," Box CEO Aaron Levie said on X.

By the numbers: It's a virtuous cycle. Power users have more success and more productivity boosts than casual users.

Between the lines: The third group of resisters are getting louder.

  • In Indianapolis, a legislator said his home was hit by gunfire, with a note left behind saying "no more data centers."
  • And on Friday, a man was arrested for allegedly throwing a Molotov cocktail at OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's home and had also visited OpenAI's offices before being taken into custody.
  • The San Francisco Chronicle reports that someone with the same name as the suspect has published anti-AI essays and participated in a PauseAI Discord server. PauseAI is an activist group that advocates halting AI development.

State of play: Protests are becoming more common in San Francisco, where many AI firms are based, and in communities targeted for new data centers.

  • A growing number of workers with technical skills fear AI will make them obsolete.
  • In a viral post, a Meta engineer captured a spreading anxiety. "I'm done with tech and I'm done with this unfair world," the engineer wrote.

In a post after the attack, Altman said: "It will not all go well. The fear and anxiety about AI is justified; we are in the process of witnessing the largest change to society in a long time, and perhaps ever."

The bottom line: The people building and using AI at full power are living in a very different world from everyone else.

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