Great Moments in Unintended Consequences: DoorDash, Google AI, and French Wikipedia (Vol. 16)
Good intentions, bad results.
HD DownloadGreat moments in unintended consequences—when something that sounds like a great idea goes horribly wrong. Watch the whole series.
Part One: We Knead Dough
The Year: 2019
The Problem: Restaurants aren't signing up for DoorDash.
The Solution: Prove its value by adding restaurants for free—without notification or permission. Once presented with the sales data, restaurants will sign up in droves!
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, people don't like it when you mess with their business. Restaurants that never offered delivery were suddenly getting complaints and bad reviews about orders arriving cold. The owner of AJ's Pizzeria in Kansas was surprised to find his restaurant on the app, and that his $26 specialty pizza was being sold for just $16. So he ordered some. A lot, in fact. He even filled boxes with plain dough to increase his profit on each transaction (unlike DoorDash, which lost $668 million dollars in 2019).
Like most jokes, it's all in the delivery.
Part Two: Prompt Replies
The Year: 2024
The Problem: Google's search dominance is being challenged by ChatGPT.
The Solution: Develop an AI to provide helpful summaries and answers to Google queries.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Turns out, the internet is…well, the internet. The AI began to parrot facts and tips from sites like The Onion and Reddit—insisting that former President Barack Obama was Muslim, that gasoline can be used in cooking, and recommending eating rocks as a vital source of vitamins and minerals. It even suggested adding glue to pizza, a tip internet sleuths tracked down to a decade-old Reddit post by a user named "Fucksmith."
But that does lend credibility to its assertion that parrots can cook.
Part Three: Wikipedi-duh
The Year: 2013
The Problem: There's a Wikipedia article about a classified French military radio installation!
The Solution: Demand Wikipedia delete the page.
Sounds like they've never heard of the Streisand effect! What could possibly go wrong?
It turns out, that's not how Wikipedia works. Since facts in the article were sourced from a publicly available interview with an Air Force Major stationed there. Wikipedia balked at the idea that the page contained classified data and refused to delete it without further clarification. At which point French authorities said, "Oh, that makes sense, never mind."
Just kidding.
They summoned the president of Wikimedia France and threatened him with arrest and imprisonment. He deleted the entry but made sure to alert others that reposting the page would be a crime. The next day a Swiss contributor restored it—and the ensuing controversy briefly made it the most-read page on French Wikipedia, which is now available in 38 different languages.
And yeah, we added a link.
Great moments in unintended consequences: good intentions, bad results.
Do you know a great moment in unintended consequences? Email us at comedy@reason.com.
- Producer: Austin Bragg
- Producer: Meredith Bragg
- Producer: John Carter
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Fun that the series has branched into non-government actions.
And not particularly well.
The DoorDash one, sort of unintended consequences, but more like unintended revenge rather than a direct and predictable natural consequence.
The Google AI one is nothing related to classical unintended consequences.
The final one with the French government is more properly known as the Streisand Effect, a subset of unintended but predictable consequences and better handled as that.
Also the point of unintended consequences is that it's something you didn't see comming. On a lot of these the consequences were well known and pointed out by many people. they were ignored, or deemed an acceptable tradeoff. Thus a trade off not an unintended conequence
The owner of AJ's Pizzeria in Kansas was surprised to find his restaurant on the app, and that his $26 specialty pizza was being sold for just $16. So he ordered some. A lot, in fact. He even filled boxes with plain dough to increase his profit on each transaction (unlike DoorDash, which lost $668 million dollars in 2019).
"Who knew that renting Scooters for $1 to drunk people who throw them in a canal at the end of their ride wouldn't be a profitable business?"
We're going to see a huge reckoning of all these 'decentralized' business models.
Funny thing is the TV show Silicon Valley detailed this exact scenario a year earlier, in 2018, right down to the product in question being pizza.
At some point, they will simply run out of cash and no one will lend them money.
Not true. As long as the push dei and esg bs vanguard and Blackrock will give them money (usually gotten from them stealing from tax payers or insider trading)
The fed has a strong interest in supporting the stock market. That's why they give major banks and investors an unlimited credit line to take money and invest it in sketchy businesses. That investment drives stock market rallies which "create wealth" and decrease the need for higher rates.
The money is being burned to fight inflation.
Yes, this will end exactly how you think it might.
Do you know a great moment in unintended consequences? Email us at comedy@reason.com.
Yes, back in the late 90s, they started this harm reduction thing in Seattle and... well.
I dont see any good intentions here. You're being very generous
I'm glad I'm not the only disappointed fan.
What are the intended consequences of the Democratic Party?
The destruction of the United States of America as a free nation.
cite:
https://democrats.org/where-we-stand/party-platform/
Their platform plank on COVID:
Instead of recognizing the danger and confronting it head-on, President Trump lied to the American people about the disease’s severity, its transmissibility, and the threat it posed to lives and livelihoods. Make no mistake: President Trump’s abject failure to respond forcefully and capably to the COVID-19 pandemic—his failure to lead—makes him responsible for the deaths of tens of thousands of Americans.
It's like they never heard of Operation Warp Speed. Odd, for people clamoring for a vaccine, to not give credit where credit is due.
Democrats will act swiftly to stand up a comprehensive, national public health surveillance program for COVID-19 and future infectious diseases. We will recruit at least 100,000 contact tracers with support from trusted local organizations in the communities most at risk to help state and local health departments use culturally competent approaches to identify people at risk of contracting or spreading the coronavirus.
How'd that contact tracing work out for you?
That entire screed reads like one long, unhinged rant from my very liberal neighbor (tm) who watches too much Rachel Maddow.
The creation and perpetuation of a permanent victim underclass they can promise free stuff to, more numerous than the actual victim class who will pay for said free stuff.
It turns out that French Wikipedia is working on a prototype AI interface you can just ask questions of, and it will peruse the French Wikipedia database to give you the answer. Here is the first Q and A I tried on it:
Q (me): "Why do people make so many jokes about the French being surrender monkeys?"
A (French Wikipedia): "I give up."
That their 'secret' military installation has been around since before WWI, and has its info (and geolocation) plastered all over Wikipedia (EN) is funny enough, but apparently the French were butthurt enough to make Google Maps blur it out:
https://www.google.com/maps/place/45%C2%B039'11.2%22N+3%C2%B048'30.2%22E/@45.6530939,3.8080336,1533m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m4!3m3!8m2!3d45.6531!4d3.8084?authuser=0&entry=ttu