Ian H
Shaman
Yes, and despite Co-pilot's lengthy explanations, I still struggle to see a g and not a p.
The g on its own would be a puzzle, but the rest of the scrawl gives context.
Yes, and despite Co-pilot's lengthy explanations, I still struggle to see a g and not a p.
The solution must be political; therefore, fixing the symptom (bias, data extraction) is insufficient. We must confront the fundamental political form of the technology. Democratic Technoskepticism is the necessary intermediate path:
– It rejects the Technophilic idea that technological progress is inherently good.
– It rejects the Technophobic idea that we must abandon all machines.
– It demands that every significant technological choice must be wrestled away from technical experts and corporate interests and subjected to direct democratic deliberation by the citizenry. Technology must serve the polis, not the profit motive.
I doubt it will be the last. As I am also sure there are conspiracy theorists and survivalists who will be stocking up both metaphorically and physically, based upon "conversations" with an AI bot.
Important to remember the purpose of AI - purpose is to increase the wealth and power of the billionaire owners not to improve anything for society.
Some reading on the benefits that AI is unlikely to bring to those who don't own it. (beware, possibly a bit more left wing than Starmer)
https://open.substack.com/pub/phili...22nd-century?utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web
TDLR: AI is not to benefit the masses but the already mega rich.
Google AI Overviews put people at risk of harm with misleading health advice
People are being put at risk of harm by false and misleading health information in Google’s artificial intelligence summaries
...
In one case that experts described as “really dangerous”, Google wrongly advised people with pancreatic cancer to avoid high-fat foods. Experts said this was the exact opposite of what should be recommended, and may increase the risk of patients dying from the disease.
In another “alarming” example, the company provided bogus information about crucial liver function tests, which could leave people with serious liver disease wrongly thinking they are healthy.
...
But surely the benefits will trickle down...?
As used on one of my posts earlier today. Funny, not funny.