New York University
“The important thing is not to stop questioning,” Albert Einstein once said. “Curiosity has its own reason for existing.” In this series, we turn to NYU faculty—specialists in their fields—to address the general questions that we wonder about as we move through the world. Here, Meredith Broussard, assistant professor at the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute, describes the possible perils of relying too much on artificial intelligence.
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2 thoughts on “One Question: What if AI isn't actually so intelligent?”
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The problem with self-driving cars is human drivers in other cars. When all cars are self driving their predictability of what will happen will make them better than human drivers. The chaos of human thinking for areas that require creativity won't be duplicated by AI . Example there are services now sell computer generated music and the music I've heard is as boring and mechanical as you'd expect a machine to spit out, but it is used as background music for equally boring endeavors like vlogs, corporate videos, low budget commercials. When they just want something to keep things moving when no one is speaking. So AI for repetitive work and especially AI interfacing with other AI will work, it will put a lot of people out of work, but it will work. But for creative thinking it can only mimic it, but never equal the human brain.
Why would you let a Journalist speak about this shit? Maybe get someone who actually understands AI and does not say such idiotic romanticism like "love cant be explained with maths". She does not make good Points and sounds terribly underinformed.