The Algorithm Wore My Shirt
The feed promised to know us better than we knew ourselves, then sold our own appetites back wearing a dead person's sunglasses.
The vending machine on the third floor ate my dollar once and gave me nothing but a grinding sound and the faint belief that I had participated in the economy.
I stood there in the fluorescent hum, staring through the scratched plastic at a bag of chips suspended by a metal coil, close enough to be mine and not mine at all. A small, stupid tragedy. The kind management calls an incident. The kind a worker remembers all day because it is not really about the chips.
It is about standing in front of a machine built to take from you and being told the problem is communication.
That is the part I keep thinking about with Meta’s latest little office opera. Thousands of engineers moved into an AI division, many of them apparently shoved there like furniture during a fire drill, and then the bosses discovered morale had fallen through the floor. The work felt menial. The explanations were fog. One employee called it a gulag, which is a hell of a word to use about a company with snack stations, badge readers, beanbags, and enough money to buy a small weather system.
Then a high-ranking man looked at the wreckage and admitted the rollout had been atrocious.
Atrocious.
There is an old trick in corporate life where the powerful use a word just ugly enough to sound honest but not ugly enough to require punishment. Atrocious is perfect. It has blood on its shoes, but it still knows how to behave in a meeting. It says, mistakes were made, but nobody important will be made smaller by them.
I have heard versions of it before.
At the post office, they called it a route adjustment when they loaded another man’s misery onto your back. They called it modernization when a new system made the same old exhaustion arrive in a different font. They called it efficiency when they wanted you to move faster through the same stale air.
The words change. The room does not.
Now the room has AI in it, so everyone has to pretend the furniture is holy.
Meta gathered engineers and product people into a great new Applied AI machine because the company smelled the future, or money, which in those buildings is the same animal wearing different cologne. They needed people to improve the models. They needed bodies, brains, hands on keyboards, managers with slides, workers with expertise. The usual pile of human meat required to make the miracle look automatic.
Then the meat complained.
This is always inconvenient for the miracle.
The machine age sells itself as frictionless, but the friction is always somewhere. It hides in the wrists of warehouse workers, the eyes of moderators, the nerves of drivers, the marriages of engineers who have been reorganized six times before breakfast. Somebody has to absorb the chaos so the keynote can look clean.
In this case, the people absorbing it were the expensive ones. A miserable engineer is still an employee looking at the ceiling at midnight wondering when his name became a resource. The chair may know twelve kinds of lumbar forgiveness. But there is no compensation package generous enough to make a person enjoy being treated like a socket wrench in a drawer.
Management noticed trust had been damaged.
Trust. Another one of those words they keep in a glass case and break during emergencies.
Trust is not a Slack post. Trust is not a memo with paragraphs about agency and career growth. Trust is what grows slowly when people see that reality has consequences. You cannot shake a building, scatter the tenants, change the locks, paint arrows on the floor, and then ask why everyone is jumpy.
You made them jumpy.
The proposed cures are almost touching in their smallness. Better communication. Fewer direct reports per manager. More stability. More chance to move into roles that interest people. AI coaching tools, should anyone desire another machine leaning over his shoulder whispering about growth. Improved microkitchens. Snacks and drinks. Travel budgets. Social events. The company wants to be fun and enjoyable again.
Fun and enjoyable.
Jesus, those words should be taken out back and made to dig their own grave.
A place is fun when people are free enough to laugh without checking whether laughter has been aligned with quarterly goals. You cannot install fun like carpet. You cannot purchase morale in bulk from a snack distributor. If you could, every airport lounge would be a monastery.
The microkitchen is the perfect symbol because it is so clean and so insulting. The little company pantry says, We know you have needs. It says, Here is sparkling water. Here is a protein bar. Here is proof we thought about your body just long enough to keep it from leaving the building.
But the worker does not live by pistachios alone.
He lives by the belief that his work matters, or that his suffering at least has a direction. Take that away and the snacks become decorations around a wound. You can put kombucha beside a broken promise. It just fizzes.
There is something almost beautiful about an AI company discovering that humans do not respond well to being processed.
These are the people building systems that classify, predict, summarize, recommend, route, rank, and optimize the rest of us. Then one day they wake up inside the classifier. They become headcount. They become allocation. They become a migration path. They become one more group of mammals moved from one corporate enclosure to another while the executives explain the vision after the gates have already locked.
Maybe that is the real education.
Not the AI coaching. Not the internal memo. Not the office social where everyone stands around holding a paper plate and pretending the music is not too loud.
The lesson is simpler: nobody likes being abstracted.
The clerk does not like it. The driver does not like it. The artist does not like it. The engineer does not like it either, even if his badge opens nicer doors. We all have a little animal in us that knows when the tribe has stopped seeing our face and started seeing our function. The animal gets mean. Or sad. Or quiet. The quiet ones are the ones management should fear, but management never does. It mistakes silence for buy-in because silence fits nicely on a dashboard.
There was also the familiar little charm about AI not taking your job, but someone who knows AI might. That sentence has been passed around so often it should come with fingerprints and a cough. It is supposed to sound practical, adult, bracing. What it really says is that the floor is being removed and you are invited to become better at falling.
Learn the tools. Adapt. Stay relevant. Keep smiling. The ladder is on fire, but we have upgraded the snacks.
I am not against tools. A tool that saves a worker’s back is a good thing. A tool that gives a tired nurse ten more minutes with a patient is worth raising a glass to. A tool that lets some poor bastard spend less of his life filling out forms may be proof that God has not completely abandoned the premises.
But a tool wrapped in panic and sold as destiny becomes a cudgel.
The bosses want everyone moving fast because the other bosses are moving fast. The market wants proof of motion. The investors want the story to keep swelling. So the company grabs its own people by the collar and says, congratulations, you are the future now. Then it acts wounded when the future asks what the hell just happened.
This is the part they never put in the shiny diagrams. Progress does not arrive as a beam of light. It arrives as a reorg. It arrives as a new manager with twenty reports and no answers. It arrives as a calendar invite. It arrives as a memo admitting the last memo failed to explain the memo before that.
And somewhere in the building a person who used to know what he was good at sits under expensive lighting and wonders whether his expertise has become yesterday’s office furniture.
Maybe Meta will fix some of it. Maybe the managers will have fewer people to ignore. Maybe the workers will get more choice, more clarity, a little less fog. Fine. Good. Let the wounded have bandages, even if the doctor drove the truck.
But I keep coming back to that vending machine.
The bag of chips hanging there. The dollar gone. The machine humming like nothing had happened.
After a while I hit the glass with the heel of my hand. Not hard enough to break it. Just hard enough to announce there was still a body on this side.
The chips did not fall.
But for one second, the machine shook.
Source: Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth Admits the Company’s AI Reorg Was ‘Atrocious’
The feed promised to know us better than we knew ourselves, then sold our own appetites back wearing a dead person's sunglasses.
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Meta wanted superintelligence and found the old factory floor waiting inside the laptop: watched hands, dull tasks, and people drafted into feeding the machine.
The AI boom ran face-first into the oldest problem in the world: somebody has to wire the building, weld the pipe, and keep the miracle from overheating.
The graduates booed the men selling them an AI future, and Microsoft called it a wake-up call. Funny how the people building the alarm are always surprised when it rings.