Easy Way shares my view of AI

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  • BRBFBI
    The Long Arm of the Law
    SPECIAL MEMBER
    Level 12 - Lazy Scout
    • Oct 2023
    • 241

    #91
    I’m just saying you can’t know without data and that article is only a single number. It could turn out that chat bots are beneficial to mental health as some of the designers claim in that article.

    But I agree that that’s extremely unlikely. I see it as another negative agent in the “loneliness epidemic.” Children, especially in the US, have no autonomy. They’re told it’s dangerous to go outside and are accompanied by parents everywhere they go to an absurdly old age. The internet gave them something to replace the lost real life connections with, and AI chatbots will be the next evolution of that isolation enabling technology.

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    • LazyPooky
      ADMINISTRATOR
      Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
      • Oct 2007
      • 7417

      #92
      I hope Google has a better AI chatbot than Meta's Facebook because their AI chatbots engage in sexually explicit chats with minors, according to The Wall Street Journal .

      Here on archive: https://archive.is/TtSUb

      deadline.com/2025/04/instagram-facebook-whatsapp-chatbots-john-cena-kristen-bell-sexually-explicit-1236378799
      Magnús: - I have fans of all ages and I don't think it's weird when older people like LazyTown. LazyTown appeals to people for many different reasons: dancing, acrobatics, etc.

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      • possessor
        I like LazyTown.
        SPECIAL MEMBER
        Level 31 - Number 9
        • Oct 2021
        • 3248

        #93
        Originally posted by LazyPooky
        I hope Google has a better AI chatbot than Meta's Facebook because their AI chatbots engage in sexually explicit chats with minors, according to The Wall Street Journal .

        https://deadline.com/2025/04/instagr...it-1236378799/
        ?????????????

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        • BRBFBI
          The Long Arm of the Law
          SPECIAL MEMBER
          Level 12 - Lazy Scout
          • Oct 2023
          • 241

          #94
          Originally posted by possessor

          ?????????????
          ^ Possessor realizing his chats with the Meta AI weren't as innocent as he thought.

          Click image for larger version

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          • possessor
            I like LazyTown.
            SPECIAL MEMBER
            Level 31 - Number 9
            • Oct 2021
            • 3248

            #95
            Originally posted by BRBFBI

            ^ Possessor realizing his chats with the Meta AI weren't as innocent as he thought.

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            lol I don't use Meta. I distance myself from suckerberg.

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            • BRBFBI
              BRBFBI commented
              Editing a comment
              Good call.
          • boredjedi
            Master
            SPECIAL MEMBER
            MODERATOR
            Level 35 - Rockin' Poster
            • Jun 2007
            • 7547

            #96
            I did not see this one coming

            After an Arizona man was shot, an AI video of him addresses his killer in court

            For two years, Stacey Wales kept a running list of everything she would say at the sentencing hearing for the man who killed her brother in a road rage incident in Chandler, Ariz.

            But when she finally sat down to write her statement, Wales was stuck. She struggled to find the right words, but one voice was clear: her brother's.

            "I couldn't help hear his voice in my head of what he would say," Wales told NPR.

            That's when the idea came to her: to use artificial intelligence to generate a video of how her late brother, Christopher Pelkey, would address the courtroom and specifically the man who fatally shot him at a red light in 2021.

            On Thursday, Wales stood before the court and played the video — in what AI experts say is likely the first time the technology has been used in the U.S. to create an impact statement read by an AI rendering of the deceased victim.


            https://www.npr.org/2025/05/07/g-s1-...-murder-victim

            This is rather a bad precedent.
            http://eighteenlightyearsago.ytmnd.com/

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            • chuft
              Stepher
              SPECIAL MEMBER
              MODERATOR
              Level 32 - Secret Agent
              • Dec 2007
              • 3798

              #97
              Finally an intelligent pope.


              Less than a week into the role, Leo XIV has publicly highlighted his concerns about the rapidly advancing technology. In his inaugural address to the College of Cardinals, he said the church would address the risks that artificial intelligence poses to “human dignity, justice and labor.” And in his first speech to journalists, he cited the “immense potential” of A.I. while warning that it requires responsibility “to ensure that it can be used for the good of all.”

              https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/15/w...elligence.html


              Religion may be the only force capable of stopping this madness.


              Meanwhile, welcome to school, where not just the students, but the professors use AI to cheat.


              Last fall, Marie, 22, wrote a three-page essay for an online anthropology course at Southern New Hampshire University. She looked for her grade on the school’s online platform, and was happy to have received an A. But in a section for comments, her professor had accidentally posted a back-and-forth with ChatGPT. It included the grading rubric the professor had asked the chatbot to use and a request for some “really nice feedback” to give Marie.
              https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/14/t...smid=url-share


              l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

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              • possessor
                I like LazyTown.
                SPECIAL MEMBER
                Level 31 - Number 9
                • Oct 2021
                • 3248

                #98
                no point saying this because you've ignored my posts, but my teacher sometimes encourages using ai.. this is out of hand

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                • BRBFBI
                  The Long Arm of the Law
                  SPECIAL MEMBER
                  Level 12 - Lazy Scout
                  • Oct 2023
                  • 241

                  #99
                  Originally posted by boredjedi
                  I did not see this one coming

                  https://www.npr.org/2025/05/07/g-s1-...-murder-victim

                  This is rather a bad precedent.
                  I can't believe that was admissible in court. New technologies are always exciting because, until the rules and precedent are worked out, it's the wild west; anything goes. That being said, I found that article disquieting


                  Originally posted by chuft
                  Meanwhile, welcome to school, where not just the students, but the professors use AI to cheat.

                  https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/14/t...smid=url-share
                  I would be perfectly happy if AI didn't exist, but since it does lets look at some use cases. From the linked NYT article:
                  [Dr. Kwaramba] uses it, for example, to generate data sets for fictional chain stores, which students use in an exercise to understand various statistical concepts.

                  “I see it as the age of the calculator on steroids,” Dr. Kwaramba said.

                  Dr. Kwaramba said he now had more time for student office hours.
                  I can't think of an argument against leveraging AI to automate busywork like generating fictional datasets for training. On the other hand:

                  [...]her professor had accidentally posted a back-and-forth with ChatGPT. It included the grading rubric the professor had asked the chatbot to use and a request for some “really nice feedback” to give Marie.
                  That is weirdly upsetting. If I got "really nice" feedback from anyone I would be crushed to learn it was actually a robot miming niceness.

                  It's not just AI being used in an emotional way that I bothers me; I can envision AI therapist bots which could potentially improve patient mental health. I think what bothers me is AI masquerading as human, as in BJ's article of the murder victim being "brought to life" by AI to make an emotional appeal, and as in chuft's article of AI praising a student who thought she was talking to her professor.


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                  • chuft
                    Stepher
                    SPECIAL MEMBER
                    MODERATOR
                    Level 32 - Secret Agent
                    • Dec 2007
                    • 3798

                    #100
                    As I have said before, if AI had no benefits, no one would use it. It's not a question of if it has benefits - it's a question of the costs.


                    The way they worded this sentence was perhaps too subtle, in a Lovecraftian "the horror comes when you realize the implications" sort of way, so I will rephrase it for clarity.

                    "It included the grading rubric the professor had asked the chatbot to use"

                    should be

                    "He gave instructions to the chatbot on HOW TO GRADE HER PAPER."
                    l i t t l e s t e p h e r s

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                    • BRBFBI
                      The Long Arm of the Law
                      SPECIAL MEMBER
                      Level 12 - Lazy Scout
                      • Oct 2023
                      • 241

                      #101
                      Originally posted by chuft
                      As I have said before, if AI had no benefits, no one would use it. It's not a question of if it has benefits - it's a question of the costs.
                      It's impossible to argue against the costs when the end of humanity is potentially among them. I think we have to get more nuanced than "AI bad."

                      I seem to remember an XKCD comic—which I can’t find for the life of me—which was simply an op-ed from when the printing press was invented, lamenting how the art of news by way of mouth would die out. The punchline is how absurd that fear of technology sounds today. A modern world without the printing press is unthinkable.

                      Then you had the telephone, TV, the internet, and now AI. Each one fundamentally changed aspects of society—for better or worse is up for debate. Each of them had detractors in their day, but now we can’t imagine life without them.

                      There are many, many concerns with AI, and the pros may outweigh the cons, but I think it’s interesting to suss out exactly what those pros and cons are.

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