• ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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    11 months ago

    There are thousands of sci-fi novels where sentient robots are treated terribly by humans and apparently the people at Boston Dynamics have read absolutely zero of them as they spend all day finding new ways to torment their creations.

    • NιƙƙιDιɱҽʂ@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Those are just brainless bodies, currently. They don’t have sentience and have no ability to suffer. They’re nothing more than hydraulics, servos, and gyros. I’d be more concerned about mistreatment of advanced AI in disembodied form, something we’re dabbling potentially close to currently.

  • sleepy@reddthat.com
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    11 months ago

    Isn’t that a part of the ai marketing though? That whole “this thing could destroy us” stuff?

    • Square Singer@feddit.de
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      11 months ago

      Totally is. Because it makes the AI look and feel much better than the smoke-and-mirrors it actually is.

      • visak@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        The current stuff is smoke and mirrors and not intelligent in any meaningful sense, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t dangerous. It doesn’t have to be robots with guns to screw over people. Just imagine trying to get PharmaGPT to let you refill your meds, or having to deal with BankGPT trying to figure out why it transfered your rent payment twice. And companies are sure as hell thinking about using this stuff to get rid of human decisionmakers.

        • Square Singer@feddit.de
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          11 months ago

          That is totally true but that’s a different direction than the danger in the marketing as discussed above.

          The media is full of “AI is so amazingly great, we are all going to lose our jobs and it will take over the world.”

          That’s a quite different message than what’s really the case, which is “AI is so shitty, that it will literaly kill people with bad advice when given the chance. And business leaders are so shit that they willingly trust AI, just because it’s cheaper.”

          • Baylahoo@sh.itjust.works
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            11 months ago

            This is my biggest concern. I’m in a position where (potentially in the near future) I see AI being used as an excuse to do work quicker so we can focus on other things more but still have to review the AI response before agreeing/signing off. Reviewing for accuracy takes just as long as doing it yourself when it’s strongly regulated and it comes down to revisions and document numbers. Much less making a sound argument that actually is up to date with that documentation. So either I trust the AI short cut and open myself up to errors, or redo all the work for them. No gain in time efficiency with shorter timelines. I’d rather make something and have it flag things that I can check so I’m more sure of my own work. What I do shouldn’t be faster, but it can be more error free. It would take a lot of training and updating of training with each iteration of documentation change. I could be the slave of change, with more expectations, with no actual improvement of the tools I have (in fact more risk of issues with the tools being used).

            • psud@aussie.zone
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              7 months ago

              I’m in agile development, in a reasonably safe-from-AI position (scrum master).

              There has already been a trial of software development by AI, with different generative AIs in each agile role; and it worked.

              Bard claims to be able to write unit tests

              I can imagine many IT jobs becoming less skilled