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Skeptical Sociopath's avatar

A very good read. I lack any real sense of trust in these companies to do what is right/best for humanity. Its interesting to learn how companies are progressing - for me, the social implications are what are most important and still remain frankly terrifying.

mikolysz's avatar

We also need to consider mainstream media companies as those self-sustaining power structures.

Not pandering to journalists was big tech's biggest mistake. The shift from "big tech as the cool guys inventing shiny new things" to "evil Silicon Valley overlords trying to get our kids addicted" was largely driven by mainstream media, who felt sidelined and threatened after Facebook destroyed their distribution advantage. The (extremely overblown and since fully debunked) Cambridge analytica scandal, and others like it, were just fodder for the New York Times's guns. This shift had a major impact on antitrust policy and the public's perception of tech at large.

I think if anything is going to slow down Big AI, it's this. It's not going to be just the media either, if too many people get their therapy, politics and legal or medical advice from Chat GPT, people who can regulate that behavior out of existence are going to act.

Most countries are essentially run by lawyers; legislators are often former lawyers, judges are current ones. If AI takes (some of) their jobs, they'll be predisposed to be unfriendly towards AI companies. I don't see those companies getting in front of this and trying to address the problem while they still can, which suggests to me that they're making the exact same mistake that big tech did.

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