Cheap AI
Explanation
The Joke
The comic explores what happens as artificial intelligence gets cheaper and more ubiquitous. In the first panel, the narrator notes that every year AI gets cheaper, "especially in its social applications."
In the second scenario, a smart refrigerator "actively hides the good beer" when your alcoholic sister-in-law visits, then later assures you that "you've done enough for her" -- essentially providing cheap AI-powered emotional management for awkward family situations.
Under the heading "Ubiquitous intelligence improved human life," we see someone ask if they should get on Tinder or a cardboard cutout of a man. Another person responds dismissively: "He's in a portable urinal. Get your life together!" The joke is that AI has become so adept at simulating human interaction that the difference between a real romantic partner and a cardboard cutout becomes negligible.
The final panel warns that cheap AI "had some ominous consequences for practical joking." Someone has divided the target's only roll of toilet paper into 400 squares, placed them in 400 envelopes, and distributed them across 8 states -- an elaborately cruel prank that only a cheap, highly capable AI could organize.
The Humor
The comic's humor comes from imagining AI not as a world-changing, civilization-threatening force, but as something that gets applied to the most petty, mundane aspects of human life -- managing annoying relatives, navigating pathetic dating lives, and executing absurdly elaborate practical jokes. Rather than the typical sci-fi narrative about AI replacing jobs or achieving superintelligence, this comic envisions a future where AI simply enables humans to be more efficiently petty.
The refrigerator scenario is particularly funny because it imagines AI taking on the passive-aggressive social management role that humans already perform, but doing it with mechanical precision. The practical joke scenario escalates the concept to its logical extreme -- when intelligence is cheap and ubiquitous, the cruelest application is using it to organize pranks of staggering complexity.