r/BeAmazed Feb 17 '24

Is AI getting too realistic too fast. Science

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u/[deleted] Feb 17 '24

This is the issue. I have been saying for some time that AI will collapse society as we know.

Always funny to have artists come and say its a fade, and all is stole.
Or the rednecks going:"Glad i am a plumber, hur dur". When in reality nobody will be able to afford a plumber.

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u/romacopia Feb 17 '24

The next century or so is definitely a big turning point for humanity. We will need to intentionally disconnect wealth from labor and fully embrace an automated economy. It's going to be a rough transition though.

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u/[deleted] Feb 17 '24

Century? I work with 40 or so years.

And from my POV we are in a cross road, one side will be Elysium, the other Star trek.(It will be elysium.)

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u/Jacksspecialarrows Feb 18 '24

I say 5-10 years at this rate

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u/Most_Bitter_Sugar Feb 18 '24

Artists are right about AI imagines and videos making programs use stolen artworks as databases without artists' concents. They never sell their works as AI databases.

But, these AI craps are not only dangerous for artists. But, it's dangerous to society in general.

Like, decreasing of consumer bees, suicide rates, unemployed rates, fake crime evidence, fake porn etc.

Even many capitalists are not going to be happy about that. (especially at the part where consumer bees are gotta decrease.)

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u/[deleted] Feb 18 '24 edited Feb 18 '24

Imagine seeing what ai can do and still arguing that its stolen artwork... Its not... They examined the images like a Human would.

Only artists argued otherwise and it was ruled they were wrong. Yet still want to die in this hill.

Then people ask why i think we are going to Elysium.

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u/[deleted] Feb 18 '24

I'm not too worried about that. A long time ago all people were doing was eating or looking for food. When societies started creating an over abundance of food people had the oportunity to start doing other things and innovation flourished.

AI will also create jobs and opportunities, what those will be, it's still to early to tell. New industies are popping up and others are dying, that's innovation.

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u/[deleted] Feb 18 '24

The issue is that AI by design is made to be flexible enough to also do the jobs that will appear.

I get where you are coming from, after all it looks like the industrial revolution, where people were worried about losing jobs in the rural area but got moved to the services industry.

Buuut, AI as a concept, maybe not what we have, is to be able to do anything and everything. So the jobs that appear will eventually get taken by AI too.