…These tools have the potential to lower the cost of producing cultural artifacts, thereby increasing humans’ power to create things or maybe even create value.
“While cognitive offloading with AI reduces people’s higher thinking abilities, thoughtful integration of ‘extraheric AI’—which nudges, questions, and challenges users—can substantially improve critical thinking.”
There are hard parts in navigating a new culture, language, and cuisine. They feel like situations where the learning curve looks steeper than I’m sure I can handle. To help get me over some of these more challenging moments where I’m not an expert (yet), I’ve occasionally tested what AI assistants can do.
OpenAI has been taking some serious flak in the past weeks about its “synthetic courtesy” to the point that Sam Altman has said that, due to how “annoying” GPT-4o has become, the upcoming update will address GPT’s excessive pandering.
Long-term evaluation strategies can help determine whether candidates possess a genuine understanding of their field, weeding out individuals who depend excessively on AI to complete their tasks.
This has instilled a great fear of any kind of non-human entity that can seemingly think for itself, so large language models perfectly prey upon that fear. Both the fear of the unknown and the fear of a threat to humanity come together incredibly well to cause a fear of AI for those who don’t…
This particular course charted my course toward engaging meaningfully with my colleagues at AlignIQ. We’re constantly building discourse around how AI can be applied in the workplace…
…a nice balance of enthusiasm and skepticism for AI risks, digestibility, timeliness, and humanity…
When you create a book using AI, who owns it? What about a picture or a video? These may seem futuristic issues, but the future is already here.