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Lessons From My Grandmother on Technology and AI
My grandmother, Rahel Gil, died in 2001. She never owned a smartphone, never had a social media account, never got a push notification, never experienced the particular joy of being added to a group chat she didn’t ask to be in. She typed her poems on a typewriter, made photocopies, and sent thing through the US Mail. And yet, reading through the archive of her work that I’ve been digitizing over…
I constantly wish my passion to be big enough to swallow me whole. Maybe one day it will. I hope you'll be engulfed with me in this imaginary future.
I wish I had never chosen to avoid the arts because of my fear for the future.
Is there such a fear of "losing sight of reality and truth"? Cuz that‘s what I feel I‘m experiencing these days, especially with how AI keeps improving.
I sometimes see posts and before anything I judge and doubt what I see if it is valid or if I‘m being lied to, and if I could still tell if AI got any better.
Is there a fear like that?
Just before going to bed i decided to watch a video about ai that left me so damn scared.
Holy fucking shit im praying its not like that.
Im not entirely against ai, it can do good or bad like any tool, but if these are truly the odds we need to destroy it asap.
The Rise of Anti-AI Psychosis: How Fear and Paranoia Are Amplifying the Tech Debate
In the growing discourse surrounding artificial intelligence, we have witnessed an alarming rise of two opposing yet intertwined phenomena: AI psychosis and anti-AI psychosis. While AI psychosis refers to the use of AI to amplify and feed into the fantasies and deranged fears of certain individuals or groups, anti-AI psychosis represents a societal reactionary movement where people are losing…
My job has taken a liking to AI information solutions in recent years. I'm not comfortable with the recent expansions in AI technologies.
Every time someone is explaining a tool to me, they always make a point to say "See? It's just a tool, it isn't replacing anyone!"
And they happen to be correct, this specific tool won't replace me, but what they are ignoring is that this tool is the first step to replacing me. I may be the one using the tool for now, but of course they're working on a solution to run it unattended.
This has happened since (at least) the industrial revolution when manual processes originally performed by artisans were replaced with machine-tooled processes which resulted in a greater output per capita than traditional artisans can achieve.
As supply increases, demand decreases. Suddenly, the producer with the most supply is positioned to produce for a disproportionate amount of demand and smaller producers' customers have moved on to a more productive supplier.
People will argue that AI tools are not replacing us. I argue it's only step one.