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RE: What's a Hive mind without an AI?

in LeoFinance2 years ago

I abhor the term AI regarding the current stage of heuristic algorithms.
They are hugely complicated, but not intelligent. Rather they are approximators, or aglomorators, which collate data and present options which fall within a set of given parameters, and they do that with no comprehension of how accurate, appropriate, or desirable the response may be.

The looser the parameters placed on the use of these programs the more risk of things moving to the realm of farce.

Heck, with such parameters last months use of such a program to give interview 'responses' for Michael Schumacher by a magazine show extreme care should be taken as idiots are already running amuck

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That's fair, but the fuss has got to be about something, right? For example, when I write, I sometimes go in too many directions, trying to contain ideas in a single sentence when they deserve 2 or 3. I find Gepetto has helped with that in this very write up.

Ever since the modern age, people have been obsessed with saving time. From the dishwasher to the ubiquitous vacuum, spending less time on domestic chores has had a cult following, to say the least.

The idea that this can be done to white collar tasks like writing or creating imagery boggles the mind.

There may never be a system that qualifies as intelligent with your criteria and quite frankly, let's hope so!

So, using a program to do the job of an editor is one thing.
To enact the role of creator is of a different order.

However that is the trajectory. So, as two hundred years ago all glass was handmade & expensive and today most is mass produced with little human input, and bespoke pieces are appreciated more, so it is likely to become with written work.

Algorithms will produce adverts, copy, and churn out bog standard thrillers, romances, and the like which will be perfectly suitable for many occasions.
But there will be people who want to know a human wrote the thing.

I hope so, I'm working on my next write up about image generators. As a visual artist I am unsettled to say the least. Automation taking blue collar jobs is one thing but to steal a trade that is famously pleasurable to humans and part of the Follow your dreams category of jobs is another entirely!

Interesting. With a majority of people falling into the field of 'blue collar' whereby that means jobs which do not necessarily require extensive qualifications (although training & experience), then losing those jobs to automation is the bigger tragedy as it moves a huge amount of people out of employment which is essential for families, communities, and regions. See US rust belt, or UK coal towns.

It takes decades to recover, if recovery happens.

However. Yes, hopefully enough appreciators of the actual written word will remain in a way that cant happen with other industries.