Re: [NetBehaviour] US air force denies running simulation in which AI drone killed operator (from The Guardian)

2023-06-04 Thread Alan Sondheim via NetBehaviour
Hi Edward, I absolutely agree with everything you say here; AI is essential to medicine and to many other areas in science as well. But the looming that's looming is rapidly getting out of control - the AI is general, is more or less accessible to anyone, and is already being used by 'bad actors'

Re: [NetBehaviour] US air force denies running simulation in which AI drone killed operator (from The Guardian)

2023-06-04 Thread Edward Picot
Hi Alan, I work in a doctor's surgery where AI is very much seen as a potential solution to the problem of overwhelming workload. The doctors are always struggling to find time to process all the incoming results (blood tests, x-ray results, urine results, dexa scan results etc). If a result

Re: [NetBehaviour] US air force denies running simulation in which AI drone killed operator (from The Guardian)

2023-06-02 Thread AGF
it appears much of "ai" news is marketing to make a new hype and gain seed money and extract value even more, a PR move to create fear response is: refuse, abolish, prevent, sabotage ii listened this nice pod about luddism the other day "not against progress but against machinary that is harmfu

[NetBehaviour] US air force denies running simulation in which AI drone killed operator (from The Guardian)

2023-06-02 Thread Alan Sondheim via NetBehaviour
Hi - I very rarely forward anything, but this is seriously prescient and I think portends an AI becoming increasingly ominous in our planetary future. Meanwhile AI seems more and more prevalent in the arts; it's worrisome. I've used it myself but keep returning to the concept of testimony