Science
Related: About this forumAt the scientific lecture I attended today, the speaker rephrased the term "AI" in a way I appreciated and admired.
She called it "Augmented Intelligence." She clearly stated that it is unlike human intelligence, but that it can do things humans cannot do, which is to process and make sense of huge data sets so as to make them useful and subject to interpretation.
I rather liked that; I agree.
anciano
(2,213 posts)I have found AI to be an incredibly efficient tool for obtaining information, evaluating ideas, and enhancing creativity.
hunter
(40,434 posts)... students cheating on term papers, intellectual property theft, firing human customer service reps for AI reps that offer no real customer service, misleading and idiotic YouTube videos... and so on?
With any luck this AI bubble will collapse and actual scientists will be able to get their hands on these machines for pennies on the dollar.
I don't think the scientists extolling the usefulness of these machines have spent much time spelunking through the sewers of the internet.
NNadir
(37,476 posts)...context of analyzing data from 75 years of plasma physics experiments collected all over the world.
There are no human technologies that are immune from abuse.
hunter
(40,434 posts)Fentanyl has some very important uses in a medical setting but we don't have to celebrate the people who are selling it on the streets or depend upon them to stock our pharmacies.
Your "Augmented Intelligence" isn't the AI that's being sold on the streets.